Dear Hank & John - 34: YouTube Freaky Friday
Episode Date: February 9, 2016Can I eat expired Mac N Cheese? What would you do if you only had 300 subscribers on YouTube? Is a kitty on my lap an excuse for tardiness? What if you dumped the sun into a massive MASSIVE bucket of ...water? What do you do when someone asks you a question that you aren't ready to answer?
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, welcome to Dear Hank and John!
Nursup, for the sake of it, dear John and Hank.
It's a comedy podcast about death, where my brother John and I, Ansy,
a question, is giving you a dubious advice and bring you all the week's news from both Mars?
And AFC Wimbledon, how you doing, John?
I'm ill. I'm unwell, Hank. I was unwell last week.
You're still sick.
My cold has settled into my chest
for a small amount of what appears to be bronchitis.
I'm just not feeling great, but I'm excited.
You know, it always lifts my spirits
to be able to podcast with you.
Oh, good.
Oh, good.
I have an update for you, John.
Last week, we discussed the peculiarity
and potential disgustingness of putting water on cereal.
Yes.
And I went to my house, got my frosted mini-weets out,
put some water on it, and ate them.
And do you want to know how I felt about it, John?
I do.
Was it delicious?
It was awful.
Oh.
It was so bad.
Oh, that's disappointing.
It's just not a good idea.
I mean, why?
You really didn't like it with water?
No.
So the thing is, like, yeah, it's milk is sweet.
Milk has a sweetness, especially the milk I drink,
which is almond milk.
And I've gotten used to that over my entire life.
And when you put a thing that is not sweet,
has no sugar onto your cereal,
it just tastes almost bitter.
And more than that, more than anything,
it tastes empty.
Like there's no richness to the flavor.
I encourage other people to try it
because maybe you will feel differently than I do
and then you can have a lower calorie,
less impactful breakfast meal,
but it's not gonna happen for me, John.
That's disappointing, Hank,
because I just, I stand by my original argument
that cereal with water is a healthy and delicious solution
to the how to moisten my cereal problem.
Right, and who knows,
maybe if everybody used water on their cereal,
all the world's problems would be solved, John, maybe.
Hank, would you like me to read you a poem about death?
That sounds like the kind of thing that you do.
It's poem is by WHO, and I've been thinking a lot
about memoriam poems, like poems written in memoriam the kind of thing that you do. It's poem is by WHO and I've been thinking a lot about
memorium poems, like poems written in memorial
to other people, just because there's been so much death.
It's January still, actually it's not, it's February.
I guess that was the least deadly,
now it's the least deadly month.
With January the deadliest month for humans,
February the least deadly month,
but only because it has so few days.
Anyway, this is a great, uh, great poem by WHO, and I apologize in advance for it not being
shorter, but, uh, it's still fairly short.
Stop all the clocks, cut off the telephone, prevent the dog from barking with a juicy
bone, silence the pianos, and with muffled drum, bring out the coffin, let the mourners come.
Let aeroplane circle moaning overhead, scribbling on the sky the message he is dead.
Put crepe bows around the white necks of the public doves, let the traffic policeman wear
black cotton gloves.
He was my north, my south, my east and west, my working week, and my Sunday rest, my
noon, my midnight, my talk, my song.
I thought that love would last forever.
I was wrong.
The stars are not wanted now, put out everyone.
Pack up the moon and dismantle the sun, pour away the ocean, and sweep up the wood, for
nothing now can ever come to any good. W-H-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O-D-O- It's actually called funeral blues. I really like that poem though.
It is a little dark.
As I was reading it, I realized that it's a little bit sad.
I did.
I felt the sadness.
It was in me.
It's still there, indeed.
You know what I like about that poem though, Hank?
Just real briefly.
What I love about it is that when people die,
when people you love die, one of the things
that I'm always struck by is that the world goes on.
So I remember like when we were burying our
Grandfather, our father's father. I remember looking out at the street and just seeing all of the cars
moving and thinking, well, that's very strange that the world is going on as if nothing has happened.
And that WHOA and poem, for me,
is that Claire and Colle of like,
this is what death should be, but of course,
like, can never be because it's something
that people do every day.
Anyway, sorry to start on a dark note.
Let's move on to questions from our listeners.
Before we get to questions from our listeners, I have an idea that we should revisit a question
we brought up of a pod past spec, which is whether or not like how much oil could have been
saved if we made DVD cases, the appropriate size for fitting a DVD inside of, and not the size that looks
in the shape of a book or VHS tape, this rectangular shape that is completely arbitrary.
We had two people write in after having done significant research and or math to determine
how much oil in fact we use.
We had a response from Alex who did this all with math. And Alex says that
there have been approximately 24 million barrels of extra oil, mostly, but though equivalent,
most of it is most plastic as apparently made with natural gas. I didn't know that. To
produce the excess plastic in DVD cases cases since the inception of DVDs.
And now of course that's a very round number,
but that's the, you know, just sort of like
back of the napkin calculation.
That is a huge amount of oil, John,
or equivalent oil.
That is a very large amount of oil.
And then Aaron did a different set of calculation.
And he came up with 200 million kilograms of oil,
which is just under 1.5 million barrels.
Regardless, it's an extremely large amount of oil that was used to produce the excess plastic and DVD cases.
And I do have to think that when future generations look back upon us,
the thing that they will be most baffled by is our inefficient use of resources.
Whenever anyone points to me, you know, some Econ 101 model of supply and demand, I always
want to reply by saying that, you know, look at the massive, massive inefficiencies in
our existing economy of goods and services.
It's just absolutely astonishing when you pause to think of it.
But yeah, I'm sure that we will be remembered for having produced so much unnecessary plastic
millions of barrels of oil that took hundreds of millions of years to make.
And we just use them to make DVD cases look like VHS tapes.
I'm curious if you want to know the reason why Aaron and Alex's numbers are so different.
And also why Aaron in his response said that it's possible that we in fact have wasted no plastic.
I am fascinated to know the answer to those questions.
It is because when you are making plastic from natural gas, there are, you are not just making plastic
for DVD cases. You
are making a bunch of different things, and all of those things have different uses. There's
different kinds of plastic that get made. There's also different byproducts that get used
in other industrial processes. There's just a ton of different things that get... So it's
basically like thinking about, instead of thinking about like, this is a ton of different things that get so it's basically like thinking about instead of thinking about like
This is a barrel of oil a hundred percent of it is gonna be turned into plastic
That's not how it ends up working because of chemistry
It's like a cow where you have a cow and some of it's gonna be ground beef and some of it's gonna be liver and some of it's gonna be
Bone meal and some of it's gonna be steaks and all those different parts are gonna have different prices based on different markets.
And basically what Aaron is saying
is according to a person that he talked to
that works in this industry, his name is Chris,
that this plastic was kind of going to be produced anyway,
because all the other things that were,
you know, necessary that were being bought of the byproducts
of this natural gas, we're going to be bought anyway.
So it's very, like, it's another way in which, like,
wow, suddenly, the world is so much more complicated
than it seemed.
Aaron also adds that there's a huge number of complexities
like the plastic wrap that goes around the DVDs,
which is not technically necessary.
There's like the fact that DVDs sometimes are sleeved in cardboard for no reason other
than product marketing.
It turns it to be very complicated.
Also, the big difference for those two numbers are so different is that Alex basically
said every barrel of oil that was involved in the creation of the plastic,
whereas Aaron only focused on the fraction that ended up becoming the plastic.
Hank, as you know, people come to our podcast largely to learn about plastic.
I'm like giddy.
I think it's so fast.
They come here to learn about plastic and to hear incredibly depressing poems about death.
And here we are already having delivered.
I mean, we've still got most of the podcasts.
It's been 10 minutes.
You can turn it off now.
Everything you ever wanted out of a comedy podcast
has been delivered here on Dear Hank and John.
That was one of the funniest summaries
of the use of plastic in DVD cases
I have ever heard in my entire life.
I for one feel that I have gotten an ab workout
just from laughing.
Okay.
Now you can ask a question.
Our first question comes from Richard who asks,
Dear John and Hank,
I have at the time of writing
336 subscribers on YouTube. I'm happy and grateful for I have, at the time of writing, 336 subscribers on YouTube.
I'm happy and grateful for all the people that make up that number,
but often find myself daydreaming about all the things I would do
if I had more than 2 million subscribers, like you guys.
So here's my question.
What would you do if in a freaky Friday-style body swap,
you woke up and you only had 336 subscribers on YouTube?
Would you still make the same kind of videos?
I think, first of all, in that situation,
my first concern would be my children and my spouse.
Like, why?
I would be like, why am I in another person's body?
Oh right, yes, I see what you mean.
And who am I now married to, and where are my children,
and are they safe, or did they also experience
a body swap scenario?
Yes, that is true. I think maybe you wanna think of they also experience a body swap scenario? Yes, that is true.
I think maybe you want to think of it as not a body swap,
but simply a channel swap.
Simply.
Ha ha ha ha.
But I do, I want to get to the mechanics of this
because I want to figure out how the script of this movie
will be written because I do want to watch it.
But I feel like that's not Richard's question
and we should focus on that.
And I don't, I think it's so fascinating to think about
because my life is so, certainly my professional life
is so focused on the existing audience that I have
and that we have.
And that community that I have and that we have.
That community that we have and like,
that they are the reason why I push myself
to make stuff why I, you know, like never don't do it.
And why, you know, and like knowing that there's
that audience there drives me to make something
that's not, that that's accurate as possible.
I'm putting this out into the world.
I'm affecting the world and I need to be responsible
about that.
And so I'm just so affected by this in so many ways
that trying to put myself into a world where
let's say everything else is the same,
but I just don't have as many YouTube subscribers,
but I'm still making content.
And I still am like, I'm still a YouTuber,
and I'm like, they still care a lot about this.
I think that I would probably make similar stuff,
but I don't think that I would be able to work
as hard on it as I do.
I think that the reason I work so hard on YouTube videos
is because the audience is there.
I would not make similar stuff.
I mean, I think that we had 200 subscribers or a little less than 200 subscribers
after our first 100 YouTube videos back in 2007.
And I think I would have finished the year.
I do not think I would have continued after that year.
I think that it would have been like a cool experiment
and I would have been really psyched about
all the neat stuff that we'd done together and how much it had brought us closer as brothers.
And I think I might have continued. In fact, we sort of did that even with the 9,000 subscribers we ended up having at the end of 2007.
We slowed way down. We went to a point where we were only making, you know, I would make a video one week, you would make a video the next week almost.
And we did not have a schedule.
And I think that it would have kind of continued down that path until we were making videos
very, very occasionally.
Right, right.
I think you probably would have made more because you were always more invested in the
making videos, part of making videos.
And I was always more invested in the audience part of making videos.
I mean, I've never been a good video editor. I've never been a particularly good YouTuber.
So I think I would have stopped. And in general, like, it's very hard for me to make stuff absent.
If I don't have an audience or the hope of an audience, it's very hard for me to make stuff.
Right. The other thing I would say,
like what you said just now made me think a different thing
about my answer, which is that,
like I would be making different kinds of content,
and it would be more focused on the audience that was there.
It would certainly be influenced by the audience
that was there.
And back when we had a smaller audience,
there was more of a feel that that, you know,
not just because it was smaller, also because it was early days of YouTube and people were really excited about it, there. And back when we had a smaller audience, there was more of a feel that that, you know,
not just because it was smaller, also because it was early days of YouTube and people were
really excited about it. But the fact that it was smaller made it easier for there to be
a stronger community. And I think that that would be like I would still be focusing on that.
Yeah. And, you know, and, and like still also focusing on growing that audience. But,
um, but having, I was just thinking today while I was shuffling my sidewalk free of all of
the white stuff that falls out of this guy.
And about how like, there was a moment in 2007 when like suddenly, and I've never said
this publicly before, there was like a week in 2007 when suddenly I realized what we were
doing was like bigger than just like people like me making content for other people and
then making content for me
and everybody's sort of on the same playing field.
When I got like four different phone calls from people
who said, did you know your phone number's in the phone book?
Yeah.
Because like freaky people could call you
and I was like, of course my phone number's in the phone book.
I'm a person.
Like that's what the phone book's for.
It's a book full of people's phone numbers.
But there were like, but something had changed
in enough people's minds that a bunch of people,
seemingly independent of each other,
looked me up in the phone book
and were shocked to find that I would be publicly listed.
And that was a thing that happened.
I mean, I remember that week
because it was the weirdest, freaky, fridayest week of my
whole life.
I remember that vividly where all of a sudden it felt like it went from this very personal
project with a small group of extremely tight-knit audience members,
who were essentially co-participants in the project
to us making something for a big audience.
And it was interesting because I think our content
got way better in terms of being appealing
to a broad audience immediately.
It was almost like the new audience inspired us
to think about making videos differently,
but it also got in terms of it being,
but yeah, it just changed dramatically.
And I remember that week more vividly
than I really almost any week of my life
because it just felt like this massive sort of somewhat
terrifying wave cresting over us.
Alright, I got another one.
This one's from Emigres, who asks, dear Hank and John, the other day I found a box of
mac and cheese in the back of my pantry.
It looked and seemed just about the same as any other box of Walmart brand mac and cheese
I've had, but it had been expired for about a year.
Since it was just powdered cheese and noodles, I ate it anyway,
but many of my friends have since told me that I'm going to die.
Am I going to die? Thanks.
I mean, you're not going to die,
but you have made a terrible, terrible mistake.
I disagree with John and so does science.
No, I don't care what science says.
They put that, they put that, they put that date there for a reason.
I feel anxious Emma, just from the overall situation,
you should not eat out of date mac and cheese.
You should not eat mac and cheese
that you have cooked and left in the fridge
for more than a week because that is a problem.
But when, what you're concerned about is bacterial growth.
This is not going to happen in dry macaroni and cheese.
What will happen is that the ingredients will oxidize,
they will taste less good.
So there will be things in there that were once one chemical
that will have become other chemicals.
Both of those chemicals are safe to eat,
but one of them might not taste as good as the other.
So you are going to lose some flavor.
That's what on dry goods, the cell by date is usually about.
Same with the sodas.
Sodas have a cell by date,
but they're not going to become unsteril on the inside.
They are going to become less tasty.
So that's what you want to watch out for.
What you want to watch out for in terms of health
is anything where bacteria could grow,
which seems extremely unlikely inside of powdered macaroni
and cheese.
The emigrants, I want to emphasize that Hank is wrong
and that you should not eat out of date macaroni
and geez, no matter how confident he sounds
in his sciency talk.
All right.
This is such a great comedy podcast, Hank.
I just, I can't tell you.
When I look at the iTunes comedy top list,
I just think like of them, we are the funniest.
Absolutely, we got a question from G, John,
who says, dear Hank and John,
My cat is a slave on my stomach and I'm late for work.
However, I don't want to move because he looks so comfortable.
Plus, it is the known rule of cat owners
that if the majestic animal decided to name you
it's bed for a period of time,
you lay there and enjoy it.
However, I am still late for work.
Does this count as a valid excuse for my tardiness?
No.
But in a just world it would.
I mean, I think this might be the difference between people who have a deep underlying affection
for cats and people who don't understand why we chose to domesticate that particular animal.
Yeah. I have a deep underlying affection for cats and I totally, totally sympathize with
you, G. This happens to me all the time. Sometimes I'll be laying in bed and I will have to pee really bad.
And then the cat will come and lay on my bladder and I'm like,
okay, I love you.
I'll just lay here with you.
Just stop moving, oh God.
But you just lay there, that's what you gotta do.
However, that's so weird.
I can't even tell you from the outside how weird that seems.
That seems weirder to me than me eating my cereal
with water probably seems to you.
I can't imagine that that's the case,
but I will trust you.
Yeah.
I think you need to try it with raisin brand.
I think that might be the issue.
I think that maybe you need to do it with like,
a good, pre-sweetened cereal
like raisin bread. Maybe the next time we do a Patreon livestream, which we did before
recording this one. We did a livestream with our Patreon patrons at patreon.com. Last
year, Hank and John, I will have that Patreon livestream while eating raisin bread with water.
Mmm. God, that just sounds delicious. What I wouldn't give for some water down raisin
bread right now. Ah. Today's podcast is brought to you by Water Down Raisin brand with water. God, that just sounds delicious. What I wouldn't give for some water down raisin brand right now.
Ah.
Today's podcast is brought to you by Water Down Raisin brand.
Water Down Raisin brand, John's number one way to eat raisin brand.
This podcast is also brought to you by the complexities of the production of plastics.
The complexities of productions of plastics, making life better for everyone through science.
And today's podcast is also brought to you by expired macaroni, expired macaroni.
I don't care what science says, throw it away.
And today's podcast is brought to you, of course, as always, by dubious advice.
Dubious advice, the specialty of a couple of guys who are obsessed with death and not being funny.
Don't forget, our advice is doobies. I just don't want to get in trouble for dispensing such terrible advice.
Hey, we have another question. It's from AJ who asks,
Dear John and Hank, my friend and I were wondering, what would happen if you had a body of water as big as a star and you dipped the sun into it. Would the energy of the sun just evaporate all the water?
Would the water put out the sun?
We are very curious.
Oh, AJ.
I love this question.
I love this question so much that I want to call a plasma physicist and be sure that
I'm going to give you the right answer, but I'm going to give you my guess.
I love the... Wow. Okay. sure that I'm going to give you the right answer, but I'm going to give you my guess. I loved, I, wow.
Okay.
So, if you had a ball of water, a body of water is biggest of star.
That would be a sphere of water in space.
And it was the size of a star.
It probably would, on its own change dramatically
before you were able to get it to interact with the star.
So the moment that this thing appeared into existence,
it would crush down the weight, the density of the gravity
pulling all of those molecules of water together.
Might be, I don't know that this is definitely the case,
but might be enough to initiate fusion
and that ball of water that you were going to try
and put out the sun with would become its own star.
Now I'm not certain that this would happen
because there's a lot of oxygen in there,
oxygen is much more difficult to fuse than hydrogen.
There's also just, it might, because of the density, contract a great deal
when plasma began, it might also, though,
I'd be interested to know the density of the sun.
I should have looked that up, but I haven't.
It might also expand in size and actually become
a larger star than the star you were trying to quench.
This is the marvelous nature of the universe
that a ball of water, the size of the sun,
is not going to be a ball of water for long.
It is going to undergo some magnificent
and truly substantial changes.
You know, Hank, sometimes I think like...
But then if you did dip the sun into that ball of plasma,
it would just become a much bigger start again.
You know, Hank, sometimes I find your genuine enthusiasm
about science actually infectious.
Like I start to glimpse how great teachers
get students excited about science.
Like you seem to genuinely love that question.
Uh,
uh,
uh,
whereas I only asked it, uh, because I wanted, uh,
I wanted to make some jokes about taking the sun to the beach.
Like I, you know, like I took the sun to the beach, but oh my, the sunburn. Yeah. Beach. Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha Oh man. All right, John, we got a question from Collette.
This is definitely an opportunity for some dubious advice.
Remember our advice is dubious.
She asks, dear Hank and John,
my older sister is currently dealing with depression
and has left high school, the same high school that I attend.
It's been hard for me to understand what she's going through.
So I haven't told anyone.
People at school sometimes ask me why she isn't at school
or if she's coming back.
I'm not really ready to start telling people
about what has happened, so I don't know what to say.
What do you do when someone asks you a question
that you aren't ready to answer?
Yeah, I mean, this is a tough one, not least,
because when you say the truth,
it only makes people ask more questions, right?
Because the truth is, I'm not ready to talk about it,
or it's a family matter, or it's private,
or it's more, I want her to be able to talk about it.
I don't feel like I should be talking in her place.
And all of those answers are only going to make people gossip
and chitter and chatter chatter and that's difficult. I mean, I took a semester off
from college partly because I had whooping cough, but partly because of mental health problems.
I suspected if I hadn't had whooping cough, I still would have had to take the semester
off. And when people ask me why, later, I was able to talk about it, but you know, that's a direct experience versus, you know, a siblings experience.
If people had asked Hank why I was taking a semester off from school, you know, it's not really my place.
Thanks place to answer, you know.
And I mean, maybe that's something that you can say is just like, I don't feel like it's my place to talk about it.
I love my sister and she's getting what she needs.
I don't know, that's tough.
It's tough.
It might also be something that'd be good to talk to your parents
about because obviously they're more familiar with the situation
than the people at school than anybody, hopefully anybody else in the situation, aside from your sister.
And also asking your parents who would be a good idea to talk to your sister about it.
The, you know, it might not be, it might just be adding stress to this already very unpleasant
situation. But yeah, I think that there is no good answer.
And the problem being that telling the truth
in this situation, which is the thing that you kind of have to do
is going to create a little bit of drama.
It's gonna make people feel a little bit uncomfortable.
And then yeah, people are gonna probably are gonna guess.
Now, I don't know how supportive your friend group is at. Now I don't know how supportive your friend group
is at school, I don't know how supportive,
supportive her friend group is at school.
But yeah, for my memories of school,
it's always difficult to deal with stuff
because people are, you know, people are all dealing
with difficult things, but.
And they are not always kind.
I mean, I think that that's one of the issues
is that, you know, if you can count on your friends
to be kind and discreet, then that's one thing,
but a lot of times you can't.
I know certainly for large swaths of my school life,
I couldn't, and that makes everything harder.
So, we're sorry. I'm sorry that you're going through that, we're sorry that your sister's
going through that and it is tough to hold on to, it can be tough to hold on to those
secrets and deal with those family struggles.
As far as empathizing with people with depression, I mean, I think that's a huge challenge. To be honest with you, I don't feel like people empathize particularly well, or even like it's possible to empathize
particularly well because depression is so specific and interior, I think, that it's really,
really hard to empathize with. And in general, I think it's hard to empathize with people's pain.
There's a great observation in this book that I was given by Micrognetta, called The Body
and Pain, Violin Scari, I think her name is.
And she says, to be in pain is to have certainty.
To hear of others pain is to have certainty. To hear of others pain is to have doubt.
Like your own pain, nothing is more certain
than your own pain, but other people's pain
is kind of inherently dubious, right?
Because like, you don't know what they're really going through.
You don't know how it hurts or whether it hurts or where it hurts really. And it's just incredibly difficult to bridge
that empathy gap. And I think like it's even difficult in art. Art is one of the places
where people connect the most in terms of finding ways into empathy. And even in art, I think
it's difficult. God, this is a funny comedy podcast. I mean, I just, we just kill it.
All right, John, I have what I think
is an important question that I wanna get to.
It's from Emma, who asks,
Dear Hank and John,
in the last episode of the podcast,
a listener, not the last one,
but in a previous episode,
a listener wondered if there was anything in the world
that wouldn't lead to widespread death
and John replied, yeah, Purell!
But in biology class that I had years ago,
we learned that overuse of hand sanitizers
could in fact be working against us.
If hand sanitizers killed 99.99% of all bacteria,
that 0.1% that survived would have some genetic property
that helped it live on and would pass that immunity
on down the generations until it evolved
and antibiotic resistant, super bug,
so no hand sanitizers in the world
would be able to combat, blah, blah, blah, blah,
you get the idea.
So in the end, couldn't Purell lead to our widespread death
after all, sorry, John.
No.
I have wonderful news, which is that Purell does not work
the way that like antibiotic soaps work.
Yes.
So the .01% of bacteria, it doesn't kill,
it doesn't kill because it doesn't touch.
Yes.
And the way that alcohol-based hand sanitizers work
is different from the way that other like antibiotics work.
And while it is possible that someday I guess bacteria could develop
resistance to alcohol, they have not shown a great resistance, a great ability to do it over
the millennia. So it's good. Yeah, yeah. It's based on how alcohol affects bacteria, the
physical way that it affects them, it's impossible for bacteria
to develop a resistance. It affects them physically. It's not most, most, like, antibiotics that you take,
or the antibiotics and antibacterial soap work in various chemical ways, but this is a physical
reaction. It's basically the same thing as boiling them, or heating them up a lot. It actually causes
their cell membranes to rupture.
And that is a, that's the thing that happens.
And that's why if you get alcohol and in a wound,
that hurts very bad because it's doing the same thing
to your cells and it will do that to any cell on earth,
unless a bacteria evolved like a cell wall
and then it would not be a bacteria anymore.
Speaking of which, Hank, we should point out
that several listeners have written in to
say that Purell does cause widespread death, of course.
It causes the extremely widespread death of bacteria.
Oh, that is a great point, John.
It's just absolutely terrible for them.
And seemingly in a way that they have no defense against.
No, never.
And never will, which is excellent news
because I am in favor of the widespread death
of infectious bacteria.
I guess I am too, yeah, I mean,
I just, I find infectious bacteria
to be one of the least likable organisms.
It's on my all time, top 10 least favorite organisms.
I mean, there is there's infectious bacteria
that damage humans.
There is some complexity here in that some of the bacteria
that cause disease also are part of healthy, balanced
microbiomes as long as they don't get out of balance
or as long as they're in the right place in your body.
So there is complexity.
You don't want all of infectious bacteria to not exist.
You know, E. coli exists in our guts all the time
and E. coli causes disease,
but also is just a normal thing to have in your body.
I also have another update.
We've had a lot of updates,
but I feel like I need to get to this one
because it's been a few episodes now
and I feel bad about it.
A few episodes back, someone asked if there were
earth eclipses on the moon.
And I waffled on that and I wasn't sure.
And I should have just said, what is the obvious truth
is that yes, obviously it does happen.
There are earth eclipses on the moon all the time.
They are what we call a lunar eclipse.
Some people said that that happens every new moon,
but that is not in fact what's happening during a new moon.
That's just when the side of the moon that's being lit up
is facing away from us.
But when a lunar eclipse happens,
that is when the shadow of the Earth passes over the moon.
And during that time, if you were on the moon,
you would be seeing the Earth come between you and the sun,
and the Earth would be blocking out the sun and that would be a
Terran eclipse, I guess, and you would be getting
You'd be you'd be shaded by the the earth and that happens like for
To like more than four times a year four to seven, I think
So it happens all the time
Just like to point out Hank is that when that question came up, I very confidently said stated that indeed
There are such eclipses and then you were wibbly wobbly waffly waffly Hank is that when that question came up, I very confidently said stated that indeed there
are such eclipses and then you were wibbly wobbly, wobbly, wobbly, and as usual, I was
right on science and you, you're wibbly wobbling, did nothing, it accomplished nothing.
All, all your wibbly, wobbly, and accomplished is you having to post this update.
And in six weeks, when you have to come back to the podcast and say it turns out that you shouldn't eat macaroni a year after it is expired.
Because some poor soul out there got botulism because if you're extremely
dubious advice, I will again look like the genius that I am.
Hank, I am in no great hurry to move onto the news from Mars and
AFC Wimbledon,
but I am afraid that we have reached the point
in the podcast when we must.
I think that is correct.
Well, I have only terrible news,
so perhaps you should give me news.
Oh no, I'm so sorry to hear that.
Well, I have good news, I think, though, of course,
as with interplanetary science,
it turns out to be complicated news
and maybe not news at all, but basically, there's been a formation on Mars that's been studied for years now because it looks
a lot like the kinds of formations that we see around hot springs on Earth. And this is probably
an area that was geologically active and that had hot springs on Mars at one point.
Hot springs, of course, are an excellent place for life to exist.
There are multiple different ways that life in hot springs can get energy.
They can get it from the heat of the water.
They can get it from minerals in the water that have themselves extracted in one way or
contain the heat from geothermal processes.
You can also, of course, just get it from the sun.
So these are very interesting areas.
They're worth, worthy of a lot of study.
There are microscopic features on some of the rocks
in this location on Mars that look, they call them cauliflower-like.
So imagine a cauliflower, a little tiny cauliflower's all over these rocks.
And they've been studying these and have been trying to find analogs of these
kind of formations that have formed on Earth through geologic processes.
And they haven't found any, but they do find at hot springs that there are very similar shaped rocks,
with shaped crystals that are formed by biological life,
by microorganisms.
And the fact that they have seen these very similar
shaped rocks on Mars and near hot springs
and around hot springs on Earth, and that we cannot find a geologic
way where those same similar structures would be formed is very exciting, as you might imagine,
and has been, is being discussed very actively right now. Of course, there's really no way
to tell for sure unless we are able to bring
a sample back from Mars, study that more carefully in a laboratory, or take a person to Mars, along
with a laboratory, with which to study those samples. But it's very exciting. And sort
of like continues to point to the, you know, what we often find in interplanetary science and what we continue to find as we look
for, as we look for and discover more exoplanets that, you know, there's obviously something very
special and unique about planet Earth and the life there and humans in particular. But things turn out to not be as rare as we think they should be.
And the possibility, and the fact that there has been, now we've seen flowing water on Mars,
and the possibility that there was once life on Mars could really be the kind of thing that we
are going to find out within my lifetime. and that is extremely exciting. So what you're saying Hank is that there is a small possibility that there are living
cauliflower on Mars.
There's definitely a small possibility, a very, very, very small possibility that there
are living cauliflower on Mars.
That's just incredibly exciting.
I don't blame you for having gotten excited
over that news.
Meanwhile, on Earth.
To be clear, when I say very small,
I mean just astronomically,
the more zeros than you could have put in your brain
after the decimal point, kind of probably.
Yeah.
No, you just described to me, Martian cauliflower,
and I guess my main concern is that it doesn't sound delicious,
but I'm suspicious of any food grown near a hot spring,
but I'm excited to find out what develops.
I will say that I am deeply concerned
if there is life on Mars,
that it's just gonna completely take over this podcast.
Ah, that's my main concern.
I think that it would be bad for our podcast
if there were life on Mars, but time will tell.
Meanwhile, on Earth, life has evolved to such an extent
that there is a species capable of
knowing itself and fathoming the universe.
That species is called Homo sapiens.
It is so far as we know unique among all the species that have ever lived in the entire
universe.
And that species is capable of intense and profound collaboration.
And one of the ways that it collaborates,
one of the most beautiful and interesting ways is football.
And the species has evolved an ability
to not only play football in a collaborative manner,
but also to own football teams in a collaborative manner.
As AFC Wilden is owned in equal parts by all of its fans you
Hank can join
The dawn's trust at a fc winaldons website you're gonna get there eventually right?
You're gonna get there. You're gonna get to the news. It's only $35 a year and you can be an owner of a fc
Wimbledon just like I am you'll own the same percentage of the club that I do I am getting to the news from a fc
Wimbledon.
It is not great.
Okay.
We played Yoville Town, which is right down.
It seems like I believe is a fictional place.
I believe it's in middle earth.
But they do not play.
They do not play.
They're not high in the table, John.
Yoville Town, they are not a...
They are not high in the table.
They were lower in the table, but then they beat us.
Oh, my gosh. It was a three two game in the table. They were lower in the table, but then they beat us. Um. Um.
It was a three two game in the end.
We led on two separate occasions, but Yoville came back
from one kneel down, came back from two one down,
and then won the game three two.
This is bad for us on many levels.
It's the kind of game that we're expected to win,
playing Yoville Town a fictional place at home.
You would expect to win that game.
It puts us 10th in the table.
Look, we're 22 points clear of relegation.
The main goal for this season is, of course, to stay in the football league,
but we're now three points off the playoffs.
So it's a definitely a disappointing result,
not what we were looking for,
but the arc of history is long-hank,
and it bends toward Wimbledon.
Well, and also, you have a lot of time
to make up those three points, right?
Yeah, but I mean, if you can't get three points
against the Yovill, it's, it's,
there's some deeper concerns.
Mm, yeah, well, you know, there's also just, you know, the universal dice.
Sometimes first seeds lose to 16 seeds, it happens.
That's right.
No, it's definitely true.
And I think we've got to stay hopeful.
I am, you know, I'm sort of perpetually in a state of concern over AFC Wimbledon.
I'm not the kind of person who, I don't know.
I'm just, I'm a warrior, Hank,
and like I can't help but look at AFC Wimbledon's
remaining fixtures and feel, you know,
for lack of a better term, deeply concerned.
We play our next game against Bristol Rovers this weekend.
That will have already happened by the time this podcast
is uploaded.
So people of the future, I can only hope that we have gotten a result
against fourth place Bristol Rovers,
but the time will tell.
Yes, that would be excellent.
You can move them down in the rankings
while moving yourself up.
It's a big game, it's an important game.
Everybody get excited about the game
and check on the results of the game
when you hear the podcast ending
as it is doing right now.
John, what do we learn today?
Well, Hank, we learned that you really try hard
to care about AFC Wimbledon, but you just need to be doing it.
I did my best.
I'm sorry.
Did I step on your news?
Was there more?
Was there more to come?
Oh, it's fine.
We learned that we waste a lot of plastic
making DVD covers, and we are an inherently
wasteful group of people on this Earth right now,
but also that due to the nature of the
manufacture of plastics, it's complicated.
And we learned that Purell is different
from antibiotic hand soap in ways that are very encouraging to John.
That's true.
And finally, we learned that while the world is not yet at a place,
where a cat sleeping on your stomach is a proper excuse for the tardiness of your arrival at your source of employment.
It may one day.
Nope.
Why are you late for work?
Oh, because an animal that we chose to domesticate several thousand years ago that weighs about
12 pounds didn't want me to stand up.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's never going to be an acceptable excuse here at the Indian app with branch of
Dear Hank and John.
Yeah, no, I mean, if a person said that to me, I would, and I believe them, I'm not
gonna, you're not allowed to have this excuse every day, but I would be like, I understand,
I absolutely understand.
So, and they're so comfortable, they look so comfy.
And they just, I mean, if anybody at the Indianapolis
office, if dear John and Hank shows up with that excuse,
they aren't just, it isn't just an unexcused absence.
They're fired.
Oh wow, wow.
Yeah, you're out.
All right.
Well, we operate our businesses very differently.
It's good to have different ways of doing things to see which way is more productive
and which place people enjoy working more.
And everybody can discuss which office is best.
Anyway, Hank, this podcast is edited by the hardworking underappreciated and
Overall brilliant Nicholas Jenkins our theme music is by Gunnarola
We're laughing because we screwed up so many times in this podcast that the hardworking underappreciated Nick Jenkins
Yeah, it's got to have the work he has had to craft a podcast from scratch using just like previous incidences of our voices.
It's molding it from the raw clay.
That's right.
That's right.
That's right.
That's right.
That's right.
That's right.
That's right.
That's right.
That's right.
That's right.
That's right.
That's right.
That's right.
That's right.
That's right.
That's right.
That's right.
That's right.
That's right.
That's right. That's right. That's right. That's right. That's right. That's right. That's right. That's right. That's right. That's right. and as we 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 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 [♪ OUT