Dear Hank & John - 385: Duology
Episode Date: March 20, 2024What's a good place to put stickers? How do I convince my friends to join me in a wolf-and-bear enclosure? How does a compass work in space? How do I be less judgmental? What's happening with the econ...omy? Did astronauts know about low gravity on the moon before they got there? Â Hank and John Green have answers! If you're in need of dubious advice, email us at hankandjohn@gmail.com.Join us for monthly livestreams at patreon.com/dearhankandjohn.Follow us on Twitter! twitter.com/dearhankandjohn
Transcript
Discussion (0)
["The Daily Show Theme Song"]
Hello! And welcome to Dear Hank and John!
Of course I prefer to think of it, Dear John and Hank.
It's a podcast where two brothers answer your questions, give you the abuse advice,
and bring you all the week's news from both Mars and AFC Wimbledon.
John, did you play Wirtle today?
I did play Wirtle, and oh my god is there news from AFC Wimbledon.
Oh, sweet holy Jesus. I know we gotta save it for the end of the pod.
Yes, I played Wirtle today
The answer I don't know. I I found that it was not easy. Okay. Oh
Easy is a four-letter word. Yeah, it was a different word than easy. Yeah. Yeah. I
Also found that it was not difficult. Oh, I haven't actually done world today
No, the joke there Hank is that difficult is also not a five-letter word. Oh, you're so good.
I'm so good.
Thank you for noticing.
That's a big win.
They should really put me on the television to make dad jokes.
Hey, listen.
What?
I can't wait till the end.
Oh, God.
AFC Wimbledon beat the franchise, and I was there live and in person.
Yeah, you can. You can wait until the end. That's the whole point.
I can't. We did it. We did it. We did it for the first time at home in front of fans.
It was amazing. It was incredible. It was amazing. It was the last second goal. It was
the best moment of my whole life.
You're going to do it again at the end of the podcast.
Afterwards, I kept saying-
And I have lots to say about, we're going to talk about it. It's going to be great.
Okay.
It's like, you know what it's like? It's like when a kid comes home from school and is really
excited but the other kid is already in the car and is like telling an ongoing story and
you have to be like, I wanna hear your story, but first we have to do this other story,
which in this case is the podcast.
Yeah.
So let's answer some questions from our listeners before we get to the-
Actually, can I tell you a story about my son telling a story?
Oh my god.
Yes.
It was very cute.
We were in the car and we were listening to a song and the guy was singing about Cassidy,
this girl named Cassidy, and Catherine was like,
Cat City?
And I was like, no, he's saying Cassidy.
And Orin was like, oh, and he was sad.
And then I was like, but look, the internet is large
and I have Spotify.
So I was like, hey, hey Siri, can you play Cat City?
And it did.
And Cat, it was great.
It was a very high energy song that came out from that.
And then we got home after having listened to Cat City,
or I believe the song in there being called Kitty City
for several times.
And Orin came in and the cats greeted us at the door
as they do.
And Orin sat down with the cats and he told them the story
of how we discovered the song, Cat City.
That's so sweet.
It was very cute.
But this isn't a cute podcast, Hank.
This is a comedy podcast about suffering.
Yeah. Yeah. Well, you know, we're all going to die.
I know. But I've known the whole time and you just found out a year ago.
It wasn't even a year ago. Can you believe that?
I know. I know.
I was just thinking.
We've got two months until it was a year ago.
You sent me an email that was like, how weird is it that I got cancer or text message?
And I was like, I'm glad he said it
because I think it every day.
Yeah.
Like every day I'll be like walking or doing something
and I'll be like, Hank had cancer.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm working on a video right now that'll probably be out
by the time this episode goes up,
but I'm working on a video about the transition
from treatment to not treatment anymore.
And one thing that a lot of people say is they're like,
you're going so hard during treatment.
Like you're doing really hard stuff
and you're doing stuff you don't want to do.
You're like forcing your body to do
and it's just like an exercise in tremendous willpower.
And then it's like, all right, go back to being normal
and like have a normal life where you're not fighting
for your life.
Right.
And people are like, and then you're just like, lay there
and you're like, I have to go back to like norm.
And I'm like, yeah, this happened to me,
except instead I was like, I should keep going
the same level of hard.
I know, I know.
And I feel like I tried to talk to you about that
because you just like, it's almost like you came out of it
wanting to go harder, not wanting to like ease up
or make certain concessions.
I got used to going super hard.
Maybe, that makes sense.
You know, you-
And like the transition to like going,
I mean, I took a, I was, felt real like,
but once I started feeling better, I just like,
I don't know.
Yeah.
There's a lot to it.
There is a lot to it.
And I think you're still unpacking it.
I mean, it's important to remember that like,
you're still in the first months of post-treatment.
Yeah.
I mean, maybe it feels like a long time.
I think the reason it maybe feels like a long time is because it was so intense.
The days moved so slowly when you were in treatment that now it's just, it is just weird.
It's profoundly weird and I don't blame you
for any response that you have to it
because I think they're all healthy and normal, you know,
because like, how are you supposed to respond to that?
Yeah.
But I like that, on the one hand,
I like that you've gone so hard
because it's been great for me.
I've been like, you know, people are like,
hey, can you help out with this?
And I'm like, no, but Hank for some reason wants to.
Yeah.
people are like, hey, can you help out with this? And I'm like, no, but Hank for some reason wants to.
Yeah, I may have hit a cap.
Several people have told me like,
they've been in conversations with you and you've been like,
well, I have more bandwidth than I've ever had.
And I'm like, does he?
I now have like three front burner projects
that I'm really excited about.
And like there aren't three front burners.
I don't know kind of story you have,
you might have three front burners, but I do not.
I have one front burner project,
this big thing for tuberculosis
and it makes me sick all the time.
Like I feel vaguely nauseated wherever I go.
So yeah, I don't know how you do it,
but you know what else I don't know.
What?
The answer to any of these questions?
The answer to any of these questions.
Great transition.
Francesca asks, dear greens,
what's a good place to put stickers?
I never buy myself stickers
because I don't know where to put them.
Ideally, there would be somewhere that I could admire them
and keep them from harm.
So water bottles and stuff aren't an option.
Stickered and stuck, Francesca.
They're not?
Water bottles seem like prime sticker location.
Yeah, that's what my kids do.
I've got a water bottle right here
and it says Montana Public Radio.
My kids sticker the heck out of their water bottles.
The other thing that you can sticker of course
is your laptop or the back of your iPad or
the back of your phone.
People do that a lot.
Yep.
But I'm in favor of stickering in more unusual places.
Why get a tattoo when you could just get a sticker?
Yeah, it'll just sweat off in an half an hour.
Get a lower back sticker.
Make sure you like it for a few weeks before you move on to the tattoo, you know?
Yeah, that's great for the people selling the stickers because you have to buy them a bunch over and over again.
Apply a new one every morning.
Yeah, but you want to talk about an affordable investment? Stickers.
Stickers are not super cheap, though I feel like if you're buying multiple per day.
Stickers are the cheapest. Stickers are not super expensive, but I feel like if you're buying multiple day,
we got it. You might end up with a problem. You might end up with one of those
Wint budgets where it's like, here's my normal budget and then $10,000 on canvas.
Does this make sense? I got 1200 bucks for rent. I got 200 bucks for a car payment and I got $1,200 for rent, I got $200 for a car payment, and I got $12,000 for stickers.
What am I missing?
What, yeah.
Please help me with my finances.
I, look, I could tell you what children do,
which is they put them on everything,
and it seems to work out great.
They also can put them in their nose,
and I wouldn't do that.
Oh, that reminds me that,
for reasons I can't really get into,
I got to hold the original manuscript
for Isaac Newton's Principia.
Yeah.
And it was pretty cool.
And I also got to hold and page through a first edition
of On the Origin of Species,
which I understand is kind of a classic.
Uh-huh.
Did you slip out like a little bit
of a pizza flavored scratch and sniff. Did you slip out like a little bit of a pizza-flavored
scratch and sniff and just like slide it on there?
I went ahead and didn't sticker it,
but somebody had, somebody had stickered it.
They, like a library somewhere in England
had put on a big old sticker like over Charles Darwin's name
over on the title page, just the big old sticker that was like,
property of this library.
This is mine.
When I was at the White House, which I was once.
I mean, it's almost like I tell a story
about getting to hold Isaac Newton's Presbyteria.
Yours is way better.
Uh-oh, uh-oh, I'm in trouble here.
I need to find a way to one-up him.
Time to go to the White House.
No, there's no way that this is, obviously, this is not one-upping.
I was downstairs in the White House basement in a library waiting to get brought upstairs.
Why are you waiting to get brought upstairs?
Who are you meeting?
One of the dogs, I think.
And then, actually we did meet the dogs. And then, I just grabbed a book off the shelf
and I wrote my name on a $1 bill
and I put it into the book and I assume it's still there.
I just wanted to leave a present.
Yeah.
I feel like that might be a felony,
like a couple of felonies.
Nah, it's fine.
It's just littering.
That's definitely a misdemeanor.
I littered in the White House, if anything.
Well, you also defaced US federal currency.
No, that's allowed.
I've looked that up, obviously, as a person who does it a lot.
I'm glad that you Googled that before you did it.
That's good.
Good of you.
You always want to Google your crimes.
That's a great rule of thumb.
Right, right.
Make sure before you commit a crime to Google is blank a crime.
Yeah.
Well, maybe I wouldn't have done it otherwise.
I did take a lot of hand towels
because White House embossed hand towels,
I feel like, I don't know.
You stole from the people of the United States, Hank.
It's true.
It's true.
That's why I pay so many taxes.
I never try and cheat out on my taxes because I got to pay for those hand towels I took.
On my visit to the White House, where I did not, just to be clear, meet the president,
although I did meet the first lady, I took a matchbox, which I was surprised to know they still make.
Oh, yeah. Yeah. I don't know what people at the White House are doing with matches. I guess,
Lighton, they gotta have a lot of candles there. Yeah. So I took a matchbox. I was there for the
Christmas party. It was great. Have I told you this story before about the best part of the
Christmas party? Maybe.
I'll tell it again. I'm 46 years old, Hank. This is what I do now. I'll tell it again. This is, I'm 46 years old, Hank.
This is what I do now.
I retell stories.
I no longer have enough new things happen to me.
Yeah.
But yeah.
And you won't let me tell the story of what happened at AFC Wimbledon until the end of
the podcast.
You're gonna get there.
This US Marine walked up to me and he said, Mr. Green, I'm a huge fan of Logbrothers and
I have been for many years.
And I said, thank you so much, thank you for your service.
And he said, the event has ended.
And then ushered me out of the room.
Ah, that's very good.
And I was like, this is the best thing
that's ever happened to me.
This is my favorite fan interaction of all time.
The event has ended. That's like professional Usher stuff right there.
Right?
They're not like, all right,
we're gonna get everybody to, you know.
They're like, the event has ended.
I've started doing it at my house.
This is the people's house.
Exactly, this house belongs to the people.
And the event has ended.
I've started doing it at my own home
when I host a dinner party at like eight o'clock.
I'll stand up and say, look at my friends and say,
it's so nice to see all of you here tonight.
I can't tell you how special this evening.
The event has ended.
That's actually when I finished my coffee at the coffee shop.
I just stand up and I just announce the event has ended.
And then I leave.
Which it sort of has.
They all just, yeah.
When Hank goes to a coffee shop, it's like the mayor of Missoula has showed up.
It's not.
Hank has to like glad hand everybody, he has to kiss all the babies, he has to like greet all of the baristas by name.
The event has ended, goodbyes. That's what they love.
The visit of local royalty Hank Green has come to an end.
Shut up. No.
Thank you for attending this event. Oh God, that's the cringiest thing I've ever heard. Catherine and I do have a problem where
when we finish, when we like get wordled in two at the coffee shop, which is a very somber place,
the coffee shop, everyone's there working and Catherine and I are there not. We were there
recreating, having coffee together. We can't celebrate to the extent that we would like to
Right, I understand that is suffering. That's a great example of suffering which brings us back to our questions
Alright, hey, we've got a question from Andrea. She writes dear Hank and John
I've booked a cabin in a bear and wolf enclosure from which to watch the eclipse what now? Oh
I know the only problem is that the cabin sleeps four
and has two full bedrooms.
My partner and I want to invite another couple to join us.
How do we do that without sounding like
we're slightly unhinged and planning to feed our friends
to the wolves and bears?
Well, let me go back to the beginning of your question.
First off, you don't, Andrea,
because you've booked a cabin in,
I'm not good at prepositions,
but my understanding of in means in
a bear and wolf enclosure.
In a bear and wolf, like how do you get into it?
Is it like, is there like a tunnel that you get in through
and then you're like looking around like it's an aquarium?
No, no, no.
Like you're surrounded by the bear and wolf enclosure?
No, no, no, they give you stakes.
They give you large T-bone porterhouse steaks. And then
as you're walking into the bear and wolf enclosure, you just toss them. You toss them like crazy
while you're running to the cabin.
No, that's ridiculous, John. They catapult you into the cabin with a cartoon catapult.
That's it. And you come down through the chimney. You come down through the chimney like Santa.
You zip line in.
Yes. That's how you do it. I'm sorry. That's clearly better. You zip line in. Yes, that's how you do it. I'm sorry.
That's clearly better.
You zip line onto the roof
and then get to the cabin via the chimney.
My question is, how are you gonna watch the eclipse
when you can't leave the cabin?
Is this like a thing?
Don't know.
But if it's in a Berenwolf enclosure.
Does it have a roof?
You can't watch the eclipse.
Unless you do it with the bears and the wolves,
which I think that other couple should be concerned about.
Now, listen, I know that sometimes we overemphasize
the dangers of bears and wolves,
but nonetheless, I don't necessarily want
to be watching the eclipse with them.
Yeah, no, I mean, I don't I want to like have a nice peaceful time, not like be like one
foot in one foot out with ready to slam the door behind me if I get charged by a bear.
Bear and wolf enclosure?
How are they even bears and wolves in one enclosure?
They're not buds.
Are they?
I've never been able to speak with either of them about their feelings on the other.
It's true.
It's true.
My sensation is that they wouldn't get along in a small space.
Well you would think, I mean, the bears mostly eat vegetables and the wolves mostly eat bears,
so you wouldn't think there's necessarily an issue.
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, it might be hard, well, it certainly would be hard for a wolf to take down a bear.
It might be hard for a bear to take down a wolf.
Maybe they get along.
Maybe it's fine.
But- Yeah, maybe it's like our relationship with coyotes
where we sort of just have a begrudging respect
for each other.
We can't really hurt each other without tools.
I can't really do much about you.
You can't do that much about me.
Yeah.
Come to think of it,
that's how I feel about most people.
Andrea, however you do this,
I think that you would pitch it not like this.
So the way you've pitched it to us
is not how you pitch it to whoever you're trying to invite.
You do a better job because I'm scared.
Yeah, I think you've got to pitch it as,
do you want to have a potentially fatal adventure?
Look, you've only got one life. There might be a cancer inside of you eating you right
now.
Oh, Jesus, Hank.
You might as well face the external predators as well.
God, I love new Hank. He's just, he's my favorite Hank so far.
This next question comes from Megan who writes, dear, mainly Hank, but also John.
I take exception to this because this is a question about writing novels, which I do
know something about.
All right, continue.
I'm writing a novel set on an artificially constructed very tiny planet or ship the size
of a city traveling through space.
Why is this a question for Hank?
I know a lot about painting on small canvases.
None of my novels have more than four characters.
I want to write into the narration a joke about how the east side of the city doesn't
really have any meaning with the absence of a magnetic field, but then I couldn't figure
out if maybe there would still be a magnetic field.
How are those generated? What would a compass do if you took it onto a spaceship?
For context, I've attached a poor rendition of the ship. It's kind of like a snow globe.
The progressive particle of Meg, Megan.
Well, the-
That's a very good name-specific sign-off.
Yes, it is. There would not be a magnetic field unless there was.
But if there was, then it would have to,
we would make it.
They would be created artificially.
Oh, like artificial gravity,
like I've seen spaceships like that
where things like swing around
so that there's an experience of gravity inside the ship.
Right, and there is, it's actually,
it's probably quite easy
to create an artificial magnetic field.
Now, there's another way that there might be
a magnetic field, which is if the engines created one.
So if you've got a, there are various propulsion systems
that sort of like sling particles out at high energy,
and they do that with magnetic fields,
and so that magnetic field would also probably affect the
Area that the city is in judging by your helpful graphic that you have included
That those engines that I'm looking at are quite close to that city
But also you might intentionally artificially induce a magnetic field in order to protect the spaceship from
solar like from from cosmic radiation. So those charged particles, you want to deflect them so that they're not hurting people.
There's various ways to do that.
You can do that with water shielding or something, but you could also do it with an artificially
induced magnetic field.
And so that's my answer. You know, now that you're talking, I realize it is more of a Hank question.
HANK LAUGHS
And there might be, and there might be
yet other reasons that you would want to create
an artificial magnetic field
that we have not discovered yet.
All right.
Great. Good job, Hank.
I recommend that
the characters in the novel talk to each other
inside of both indoor rooms and outdoor spaces.
Yes, that would be good. I like an outdoor space on the inside of a spaceship.
Yes. Also good for the movie version. Got some interiors and exteriors.
This next question comes from Vivian,
who asks Dear Hank and John,
I'm a science student going into medicine,
so I love learning about evidence-based research.
My mom, on the other hand, it's a bit more spiritual.
And while she accepts common medicine,
she also likes the alternative stuff.
When we've had conversations about such therapies
in the past, I know I've made her feel dismissed,
and I also felt sad because my mom didn't want to learn
about the science that's been done in the area.
If I do go into medicine after my undergrad, I know I'll have similar conversations with
patients as well.
How can I become non-judgmental when I disagree with a person's point of view and help both
of us feel good about a difficult conversation?
Thank you, Vivian.
Well, Vivian, we need more doctors like you, so I hope that you'll stay in the game.
Just asking that question is a huge step, I think.
Yeah, and the understanding that like,
people are in all kinds of different places,
and there are reasons for that,
with their understanding of the universe
and of how things are currently working.
And that's like a reality of our existence
and has always been a thing.
We've all like, people have always had all kinds
of different conceptions of how to understand their bodies
and the world that their bodies exist inside of.
But yeah, it's absolutely tricky
and I have a hard time with it as well,
especially as I went through treatment
talking to people who, and I still deal with this some,
talking to people who sincerely want to help me
and I don't lend much credence to-
Their recommendations.
There's no evidence that their recommendations
would be helpful.
Yeah, I mean, I find it helpful to remember
that I genuinely might be wrong.
Not that I might be wrong in the abstract,
like I'm sometimes wrong, but that I actually might be wrong
even about convictions that I hold quite close.
And that also helps me to remember that they might be wrong.
And you know, it's hard to ask someone to consider that they might be wrong, but if
you come at it from a perspective of really believing that you might be wrong, it maybe
gets a little bit easier.
But the other thing I'd say about this is that I don't think we make people, I don't
think people's minds change by being shamed or by being cast out or by feeling less than.
No.
I think that hardens people's beliefs and I think we've seen that over and over again.
You would think that if it were an effective strategy, as much fun as we make of people who believe
in conspiracy theories or believe that the earth is flat
or whatever, that there would be fewer such people.
But in fact, the more we make fun of those people,
the more of them there are.
And I see that as a failure of how we engage in discourse
rather than any other failure.
When you come at something from a place
of real empathy and understanding,
then when you disagree with someone,
you can disagree with them and you can say,
I'm sorry, but I disagree.
And I think the evidence is very strong
in the other direction.
Yeah.
And when it comes to like,
doctors who are good at this,
what you hear is that they listen.
Yeah.
Is that they let the person explain
and they talk to them about their beliefs.
And that helps, and then they mirror
that belief back to them.
So they like, and this is like kind of annoying sometimes
because it's like, your mom's not listening to what you're saying and then you have to listen
to what your mom's saying, which in the context of a parent-child relationship, you should
both be doing talking and listening. In the context of a doctor-patient relationship,
the patient is the person whose body is at stake here and their mind is connected to
their body. So you like the doctor, and like this is really hard
in a lot of contexts,
because doctors don't have a lot of time.
But oftentimes in like an oncology context with cancer,
the doctor does have more time
because you're in a pretty serious medical situation.
And it is really about like understanding
where the patient is at and letting them be heard
so that they know that you respect their beliefs
and they become much more receptive to
your perspective as an expert
if you convince them of your expertise by respecting them.
Which is like, this is how that like,
you can't walk into a room and be like,
you must respect me.
Like the respect has to go both ways.
Like the doctor offering the patient respect first
is how you gain respect from people.
Yeah, it all goes back to what Ryan Reynolds taught us
on the podcast, Hank.
Mirror. It's true.
Mirror what somebody is saying, validate it, validate whatever part of it is validatable,
and empathize with them. And that ultimately is how people feel heard. And once people feel heard,
you can have a different kind of conversation. But it's something we struggle with too. It's
something I struggle with a lot. So I'm not saying it's easy. And I'm not saying that I have the answer.
And also I might be wrong genuinely.
I often am.
John, this next question comes from Autumn who asks, hi, my question is what's happening
with the economy?
Like 2023, we're supposed to be in a recession, but then Taylor Swift and maybe Barbie apparently
boosted it.
And then Good Store did really well according to y'all, which is great.
But groceries and rent are really expensive.
But experts point out that spending
and big businesses are doing good, I think.
I'm trying to decide if $2 tofu is too expensive or not.
Thanks. Tickets and tuition, autumn.
Yeah, I mean, that's a great question.
And I love the way it ended,
because that's the way most people experience the economy.
Right?
It's like, how much should tofu cost
and does it cost that much or does it cost more?
Yeah.
And, but like, this is part of what's so hard
about talking about the economy, right?
Is that there are-
This is a particularly weird time
to talk about the economy.
Yeah. Right.
Because we're not in a recession. In fact, we haven't been in a recession really. particularly weird time to talk about the economy. Yeah. Right.
Because we're not in a recession.
In fact, we haven't been in a recession really.
I mean, we had like a weird COVID related
sort of two quarters of not growing.
And then we had a weird post COVID related
two quarters of barely growing.
But like we haven't really been in a recession since 2008.
Like not only has YouTube never really experienced
a recession, like Hank and I in our professional lives
haven't really experienced a recession
since Paper Towns came out.
Like that was the only time I've ever been affected
by a recession is when Paper Towns was published
amid a collapse of the US economy.
It wasn't great for book sales, it turns out.
Yeah.
But other than that, it's been so long since we had
what I think of as like a normal standard recession
like we had in 2001, or a really extreme recession
like we had in 2008, that it's kind of hard.
It, that in and of itself is very, very weird.
It's weird to have an economy that's expanded for so long.
It's weird to have an economy that's,
where inflation has been relatively high,
not just in the US, but globally.
And all that stuff is weird.
And then it's weird how, you know,
there is sort of a disconnect between corporate profits
and cost of living or economic growth and cost of living,
especially around housing prices.
Yeah, I think it's like, it seemed like it was
an inevitability that we were gonna have a recession.
And like, it is worth saying that we didn't
and that like recessions are bad.
And nobody, I don't think that anybody really quite
gets how it happened.
Like I remember everybody saying,
there's no way that you can get out of this much inflation
without having a hard landing.
And they're like, soft landings are a fantasy.
And then it seems to like no one now thinks
that there's gonna be a recession,
which maybe means there will be like, I don't know.
Right.
It's like the Spanish Inquisition.
It happens when you least expect it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, first off, we should acknowledge
that Hank and I are not economists, nor are
we economic experts.
Yeah, that's a really good point.
But what I will say is that amid all of this economic growth, there hasn't been much change
in the percentage of American households who say that they're living paycheck to paycheck.
And when we talk about economic growth, we need to talk about that as well, right?
We can't just have one marker for whether the economy
is going well or going poorly.
Like, yes, it's great that inflation is coming down.
Yes, it's great that unemployment is low.
But if we're not seeing progress in how much people feel
like okay with their economic lives or how they feel,
whether they feel safe and secure, that's a concern to me because that
indicates to me that the economy isn't necessarily, as a system, isn't doing a good job of doing what
is its most essential job, which is to make sure that as many people as possible are included in growth and people overall over time
become more financially secure, not less.
And I don't see a ton of evidence of that
from the last couple decades.
Yeah, and it's like, the way that people are impacted
by the economy varies so much across age and wealth.
Well, and just like individuals, right? I mean like- Yeah. the economy varies so much across age and wealth.
And just like individuals, right? I mean like- Yeah.
Autumn, I think that you have definitely got your finger
on something here, which is that it seems weird.
Like it just like feels like a weird economic moment
and I don't, and if it feels strange
and it feels like unemployment is low,
but it's hard to get a job.
Like that seems to me like a true statement
that feels very strange to me.
Cause I think that it's just like strange right now.
It's weird.
And it kind of makes sense that it would be weird
after a generational shock like COVID.
The economy's never handled that before.
Like we don't know what it looks like. We don't, and We don't know what it looks like.
And we don't know what it's supposed to do.
Can we say we hope it's a generational shock
instead of saying that with such confidence?
I don't wanna have that come back to bite us, hang on.
I was looking backwards.
Yeah, because all the time people listen to the podcast
and they're like.
Oh, it was so cute when they thought that that thing
that happened wouldn't possibly happen.
Exactly.
And I don't want to create another one of those.
So I just want to be very clear to the universe.
I have no idea what's about to happen.
Please don't make it that bad though.
I know it's already bad, but please don't make it worse.
Just like, I'll just say it, Hank, and I don't think this is said enough.
One thing I love about the World Wars, really one of the only things I love about the World
Wars.
Okay.
Uh-huh.
Is that they're a duology.
Yeah, I love that.
You know?
Wouldn't want a trilogy.
Don't want a trilogy. Don't want a trilogy.
Don't think it's necessary.
Don't think I need a third installment of that story.
Which reminds me, John, that this podcast is brought to you by The Third World War.
It's out there waiting if you want it.
If you want it.
But we don't. So let's not do it.
It's like John and Yoko saying,
war is over if you try.
Instead it's like war is coming if you try.
Yeah. So let's not.
Let's not.
Today's podcast is also brought to you by the Marine
who likes Vlogbrothers and wants you to know
the event has ended.
This podcast is also brought to you by the $1 bill somewhere in the presidential library
in the base of the White House.
And of course today's podcast is brought to you by cancer.
Cancer haunting our dreams since 10 months ago.
Well, or in my case, actually much longer.
Yeah, and in humanity's case, pretty much the whole time.
The whole time.
The whole time.
We also have a Project for Awesome message from Alex to Kathleen.
Surprise!
While I've got the voice of John and or Hank to be sappy on my behalf, I'm so grateful
to have a brilliant, caring, and all-around wonderful person for a sister.
You inspire me and I love you.
Don't forget you are awesome and I'm always in your corner. Thanks
for being in mine. Okay, I've said too many nice things now. Maybe I'll throw something at you when
next I see you, hopefully soon. Oh my God, Alex, that's so lovely and it just makes me desperately
wish that my kids grow up to purchase sponsorships on podcasts to say similarly kind things to each
other. Greg has a question. Dear Hank and John, love the pod.
Did astronauts know the moon's lower level of gravity
before landing there in 1969,
or was that a surprise to them?
And if they did know in advance, how?
Yours and confused about the universe, Greg.
Don't tell me, don't tell me.
Let me try to figure it out.
You can do it.
I think they had to,
because otherwise they would have smashed that thing
right into the moon. You know what I mean? I think they had to because otherwise they would have smashed that thing right into the moon.
You know what I mean?
Like, I think they had to have a pretty good sense of the moon's gravity in order to land
that sweet little lander, just have it kiss the surface rather than like a big bump bump.
Yeah. Yeah, no, you definitely need to know exactly what the moon's gravity is to land on the moon
for a bunch of different reasons. You also need to know the moon's gravity to get off what the moon's gravity is to land on the moon for a bunch of different reasons.
You also need to know the moon's gravity
to get off of the moon.
Right.
Because you have to have the right amount of fuel
and you don't want to carry a bunch of extra fuel,
et cetera.
So.
Well, why not carry too much?
That's what I always do when it comes to packing.
Yeah, they do carry a little bit too much,
but they carry an appropriate amount too much, you know?
You want to go 20%, not 200%, because then you're just carrying
how much fuel you don't need to carry, and then you can't take
home as many rocks.
And taking home rocks is what it's all about.
That's right.
Every pound of fuel is a pound of rocks you can't have to
take home with you.
Which is a nice transition, Hank, to the news from Mars.
One day we will bring rocks back from Mars and we'll have Mars rocks on Earth just as
we currently have moon rocks on Earth, which reminds me again that it's time for the news
from Mars so that I can tell you the news from AFC Wimbledon.
Please go quickly.
Well, Jon, weirdly, one of the reasons we know that the moon has a mass and can figure
that out is because of tides and stuff and how it affects Earth.
So you can see it tugging on us just like we tug on it.
And we can understand the differences
that it causes in our planet as it moves around us.
And that's kind of part of how we figured out,
but also because of how it travels around us,
the situation with regards to the moon's gravity. But weirdly,
it turns out that Mars might also affect our climate, which seems awful odd.
Oh, Mars is tugging on us. Mars is tugging on us and we're tugging on Mars.
Maybe just a little bit. So, astronomical models have predicted fluctuations in our
climate that happen over millions of years. They're called grand cycles.
And one potential example has been the result of interactions between Earth and Mars' gravity
fields, which can affect their orbits, including potentially pulling the other closer to the
Sun, leading to more Sun and warmer climate until the Earth drifts a little bit away,
creating a cycle that repeats every 2.4 million
years.
Wow.
Wow, that's pretty mind-blowing.
It's pulling on us.
It pulls on us and it gets us a little bit closer to Earth, and then we drift away from
Earth and then it gets us a little bit closer to Earth.
Wild.
So as the Earth gets warmer, things change and we can actually see those changes and it looks as if those things
are being affected by our good old friend Mars. Wow, that's so cool. Well, you know what else is
cool. The 94th minute. A 94th minute winner against the franchise currently applying its trade in Milton Keynes.
So I think the last time we recorded the pod,
I was like, I'm going to see this game
where we're gonna play the franchise
and I assume that we'll lose because we always lose
because we dread this occasion
and feel like it shouldn't be happening
and they relish the occasion.
And I'll tell you what, we made them dread the occasion.
It was an extraordinary game.
The atmosphere inside of Plough Lane,
I would rate it somewhere between excellent and terrifying.
You know, the difference between a really warm hot shower
and a boiling shower? it was in there.
It was somewhere in there.
It was like a little too hot, but oh my God, it was amazing.
And it looked like it was gonna be a nil nil draw.
I remember turning to Rosianna and my friend Stuart,
like in the 92nd minute when we almost gave up a goal
that would have had us lose the game and saying like,
look, this is the fourth place team in league two.
We would be, we'd do great to get a draw out of this game.
And it looked like it was going to be a nil nil draw.
And that's kind of what I was just hoping for at that point.
And then, I mean, the weirdest thing happened, the ball, ball broke.
And suddenly one of our central defenders was out on the left wing.
I still don't understand how or why he got there.
He's probably the slowest guy on the field.
No disrespect, Lee Brown, but like you and
I both know, you're in your late 30s.
And somehow, somehow he sent in a cross that landed at the foot of Ronan Curtis, who put
it in the back of the net.
The celebrations went on for days, for hours, for years.
I flew home like five days later,
and I was at an Olivia Rodrigo concert in Nashville
with Alice, and I turned to Alice
in the middle of the Olivia Rodrigo concert,
and I said, I just thought about
Ronan Curtis's 94th minute goal.
Like, that's how long it's been making me happy.
All the players came out after the
game and hung out with the fans. The manager and all the coaching staff ended up in the
bar after the game having a drink. The guy who scored the goal, Ronan Curtis, was on
somebody's shoulders prancing around Southwest London drinking champagne. It was epic, epic.
I mean, it was as good a feeling as I've ever, ever had
in my life as AFC Wimbledon manager, Johnny Jackson
said to me, this is why we do it, right?
This is why we put ourselves through all that pain.
And it was just so true.
And then AFC Wimbledon, I mean, I'm happy to talk
about that game for hours if necessary.
It was, it was, I said afterwards
that it was the greatest feeling of my life.
Like in some ways it was a better feeling
than even when we got promoted at Wembley
because it felt like we'd exercised a demon.
I mean, this is a team we had never beat
at Plough Lane back home in front of our fans.
And we just, it felt like we felt like we were free from that somehow.
We were free from at least part of the horror of what happened 22 years ago.
And so it was just an epic, epic feeling.
I mean, people were crying.
People were...
And like the franchise fans make fun of us for making such a big deal out of it, but like you wish you could have that joy. Like you wish you could know
how that feels.
You don't even know what it's like to be as sad as we've been.
Exactly. Exactly. You're right. Like you haven't reached the depths. You can't reach the heights.
Then a couple of days later, AFC Lomelan played Grimsby Town to a nil-nil draw where it looked, I mean, I'll be honest, like I wasn't the only person who was
still nursing a hangover. But that was followed up by two consecutive really impressive two-nil
victories over Notts County and either Gillingham or Gillingham, only the scientists know for sure.
And now, improbably, with only eight games remaining
in the season, AFC Wimbledon are in the playoffs
as things stand.
They are in seventh place.
That would put us in the playoffs,
giving us a 25% chance or thereabouts
of being a League One team next season.
So not only is beating the franchise just beating the franchise currently playing its
trade Milton Keynes, but more importantly, it has sent us on a heck of a good run.
Now four games unbeaten, 10 points out of our last 12 points available and in those
playoff spots.
And you know, Hank, who there's a pretty good chance
we would play in those playoffs.
Wait, before you get there, I was wondering for people
who are confused about everything, let me summarize.
Great, thank you.
A football game is a soccer game.
It has 90 minutes in it, but there are extra minutes
that happen at the end because of extra time.
Injuries. because of injuries,
because they don't stop the clock during football games.
Exactly.
And so the 94th minute is like, the game's already ended
and you're just in like God's time at that point.
That's what they call it, they call it God's time.
Do they?
Look at me.
No, they don't, they call it extra time,
but they should call it God's time.
It's God's time. Not only was it God extra time, but they should call it God's time. It's God's time.
And not only was it God's time, it was the end of God's time.
You don't get much more than four minutes of God's time.
Oftentimes, it's less than four minutes of God's time.
Right. And it was essentially the last kick of the ball, was Ronan Curtis putting that ball in the back of the franchise net, then running into the fans.
I mean...
Yes, and giving that ball boy the day of his life.
And also, everyone was a little worried for the ball boy.
Also important to note, I have never heard of Ronan Curtis.
Never heard this guy's name.
You talk about AFC Ulamit and all the time, never heard this guy's name.
Oh, he's a new signing.
We signed him in January. He's recovering from an ACL injury and he's way too good name. Oh, he's a new signing. We signed him in January.
He's recovering from an ACL injury and he's way too good for League Two
and he's really only playing with us
to finish his recovery.
Okay, great.
So he's only gonna play with us until the end of the season
and there is a 0% chance that we'll be able
to sign him after that,
which is what makes this especially hilarious,
that the guy who did this, this momentous thing is going to be
an AFC Wimbledon player for all of like 14 games. It's also additionally important, AFC Wimbledon
used to be the the Dons, the MK Dons, used to be the team that Wimbledon had, but then they were
moved away by a rich guy who was like, I want a sports team. And he stole it. And so the people of the town of Wimbledon
had to start a new thing.
And they did.
And now they've worked their way up to the same league
as the old team that they used to have.
And so beating that team is a very big deal.
Additionally, when you are there,
something like eight teams,
the top eight teams in the league,
then can play to potentially move up to the next league,
which is a very big deal. Because then you get like more money for various reasons when you're
in a higher league in the sport. It's not like American sports where you buy your way into a
league, you have to fight your way in, and if you're not good enough, you lose it and you move down
to a different league. And that's awful. And that, and so there's some teams
that go automatically up.
I think the top two, is that right?
The top three go up from league two,
and then four through seven are in the playoffs.
And then four through seven are in the playoffs.
Another team that will probably be in those playoffs
is again, the bad guys.
That's right, the bad guys.
So you might have to play the bad guys again this season
in a more high stakes game.
I would vomit.
I would do anything not to play them.
I just wanted everybody to understand all of that.
First off, Hank, that's one of the most impressive.
You're a very impressive person, you know a lot,
but the fact that you know that much about League Two football
almost makes me wanna start crying.
Like it makes me feel like we were talking about earlier.
It makes me feel mirrored.
It makes me feel like you've been listening to me
all these years and I really appreciate it.
I feel mirrored, empathized with and validated.
It's a beautiful feeling, I love it.
But yeah, that is exactly right.
And all of this matters more than astrology.
Sorry, what?
No, you were on such a good roll. But yeah, that is exactly right. And all of this matters more than astrology. Sorry, what?
No, you were on such a good roll. So anyway, it's so beautiful. It's so incredible.
We're in seventh place. As it stands right now, actually, we would play Crew Alexandria in the playoffs and then potentially Milton Keynes in the final at Wembley, which would,
I guess, be better because then we wouldn't have to go
to their place to play again.
I don't know, it would all be terrible.
Yeah.
But like, if, let's get into the playoffs.
I mean, that would be a miracle result for this season.
We were picked to finish like 20th.
So if we could get into the playoffs,
it would just be incredible.
And you guys would continue to play well
even after losing Ali Al Hamidi.
I know, we've stopped scoring goals, but we've also stopped giving away goals which it turns
out is just about the same thing.
So we've been playing great and I miss Ali Al Hamidi but he's killing it in the championship.
He's crushing it up there and of course he is.
So I feel really excited for him and also for all the players that we're going to lose this summer who go up to a better league.
Like my beloved Jack Curry. But oh, I'm so excited. It's a great time to be a Don's fan.
And you don't get to say that much about the team that's lost more games in the last five years than any other English club and professional football.
more games in the last five years than any other English club and professional football. Well, that's very exciting, John.
We are going to go do our Patreon livestream, so the podcast must end.
We are already late.
That's right.
We gotta go.
If you want to send us questions for the podcast, we love those.
It's at hankandjohn at gmail.com.
That's hankandjohn at gmail.com.
This podcast is edited by Joseph Tunametish.
It's produced by Rosiana Hals-Rojas.
Our communications coordinator is Brooke Shotwell.
Our editorial assistant is Debuki Chakravarti.
The music you're hearing now at the beginning of the podcast is by The Great Gondorola.
And as they say in our hometown, don't forget to be awesome.