Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - 120: Our Stories From The Road | Ear Biscuits Ep. 120
Episode Date: November 13, 2017Rhett & Link talk road stories from their ongoing Tour of Mythicality including the upside of traveling, some of their favorite sites so far, and Rhett's ongoing palm tree-related altercations with hi...s neighbor on this week's Ear Biscuits. Follow This Is Mythical: Facebook:Â http://facebook.com/ThisIsMythical Instagram:Â http://instagram.com/ThisIsMythical Twitter:Â http://twitter.com/ThisIsMythical Other Mythical Channels: Good Mythical Morning:Â https://www.youtube.com/user/rhettandlink2 Good Mythical MORE:Â https://youtube.com/user/rhettandlink3 Rhett & Link:Â https://youtube.com/rhettandlink Hosted By: Rhett & Link Executive Producer: Stevie Wynne Levine Managing Producer: Cody D'Ambrosio Production Manager: Jacob Moncrief Technical Director: Meggie Malloy Editor: Meggie Malloy Graphics: Matthew Dwyer Set Design/Construction: Cassie Cobb Content Manager: Becca Canote Logo Design: Carra Sykes To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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This, this, this, this is Mythical.
Welcome to Ear Biscuits, I'm Link.
And I'm Rhett.
This week at the round table of dim lighting,
we're gonna be telling stories from the road.
Mm-hmm.
You boys have been traveling a little bit.
We've been touring the country,
and we've got lots of experiences.
We've got lots of experience.
You know, road stuff.
Yeah, the Tour of Mythicality continues
and so as of the airing of this podcast,
we're coming off of a live stream.
Yeah.
Hopefully you were able to catch.
Hopefully there were no technical, I mean,
how ironic will it be if there were like
some crazy technical problem and that's all
we've been talking about for the past week?
No, no, no, no, no.
Maybe if I talk about it now it'll jinx it
and it won't happen.
The other thing, well, and then if you, you know,
if you didn't watch the live stream,
there's still other ways that we're packaging
the stage show that is the Tour of Mythicality,
which I think we're not gonna call
the Tour of Mythicality at that point.
We'll call the thing something real catchy.
Well, we know what it is.
You don't wanna say?
No.
Okay, that's fine.
No.
If you watch the show, you can infer what it is.
It's a stage show slash comedy show.
I don't know why I'm talking about it.
Well we're gonna be telling you some things
that have happened to us in the course of traveling together
for a couple of trips.
So.
Yeah, because as of the recording of this,
we've got a couple under our belts.
Been to New York, been to Texas,
and we're still gearing up for that.
San Francisco, San Diego, LA leg of the tour.
But yeah, we'll get into that.
But first, I just wanna give a health update.
Yeah, that's what we do now.
Since you've given a lot of health updates,
and I love them.
I'm sure you do.
I can't wait to hear your health updates.
Can I give you one?
I'm all ears.
I hurt my back, brother.
And you weren't there for me.
I went to the gym, this was two mornings ago.
And I'm in the gym and I'm down on all fours
in what they call the beast position.
And on your hands and knees,
and then if you lift your knees off the floor, so your feet. Who calls call the beast position, and on your hands and knees, and then if you lift
your knees off the floor so your feet.
Who calls it the beast position?
The instructor.
Just your instructor or instructors worldwide?
I don't know, I didn't ask him that.
I thought that'd be insulting.
No, did you make up that name?
I think they did.
That's my theory, never heard of that.
Get on your hands and knees with your toes
on the ground too, and then push with your.
Oh, the beast position?
Push with your toes so that your knees
come off of the ground, and it's a really good core workout
when then you drag a bag across the floor
underneath your torso. Ah, just like a beast.
Just like the beast, known worldwide.
Yeah, beast dragging bags worldwide.
And then, man, I am up to legit status.
What do you got, like a 60 pound bag?
What are we talking, 70?
No, it's I extended my right leg out straight.
What's that, a three-legged beast?
Yeah, it's the three-legged beast.
You need to be consultants for them to certify the names.
I will name all your positions.
It made it difficult.
Yeah.
And then something tweaked in my back,
like not on the spine, just to the right.
Definitely muscle like...
Mid-back.
Mid-back.
Yeah, mid-back.
It feels, you got these muscles in your mid-back
that you just feel like there's no way
I could activate them right now.
Right.
It's just like an unnecessary muscle,
but it's actually really necessary.
Like a deep muscle going over the rib cage
kind of thing.
I didn't think too much of it.
And pride creeps in very quickly
because I didn't want to stop.
Yeah, you gotta keep going.
So I kept going and then right after that,
I'm gonna do some squats with two kettle bells.
So I'm like.
What position is that?
I take just the kettle bell squat.
Squatting hen.
Squatting hen. Squatting hen.
Squatting hen?
The egg layer.
Oh, the egg layer.
So I scoop up these two huge kettlebells.
I mean huge kettlebells.
70 pounds each?
I'm talking like 130 pounds each.
Oh gosh.
I'm like, and I pick them up and I have them under my,
I've scooped my elbows underneath and my thumbs are against my collarbone
just like he told me.
And then I start squatting to lay another egg. Is this Chad?
Chad was doing it.
And then I start coming back up and I'm like,
ooh that spot now is really hurting
and I drop the kettle bells and I'm like.
You tapped out.
I tapped out, I was like I can't,
I've done something brother, I can't keep going.
And then I did some stretches and tried to,
he showed me, there was a correlation
between the back and the hips and I was like,
I'm too far gone, man.
I did some hip opening stretches.
Right, he tried to loosen you up.
But then I just, I had to leave in defeat
and I had a hard time leaving.
By the time I got home, I felt like I couldn't walk.
Stiffens up on you.
And I started to get really scared
because you've made me paranoid with all of the stuff
you've been through.
It's scary stuff, man.
You've been debilitated for weeks or months at a time.
And I knew that it wasn't like skeletal related.
Skeletal related.
But I was still kind of panicking.
And then I come in and we gotta shoot some stuff. And I mean, I just feel for you. I know what it's like to be in a
horrible mood because your back hurts. I mean, it's tough, man. Could you tell I was
in a bad mood? Well, you weren't there for me because I texted you on the way home.
Yeah, something happened.
Because you were coming to pick me up to carpool in.
Well, I pull up to your house and Link comes out with,
Yeah.
Like he just looks like he's just forlorn
and he's got this.
Kind of bent over and stiff, right?
He's got what looks like the kind of brace
that you would wear when you're helping somebody move
and you have it like up around the middle of your back
like kind of riding your nipples.
I'm like, what in the world is going on?
You're like, you didn't get my text.
And for some reason I didn't.
Ever since that freaking phone update,
our phones don't work at home.
The doom seed has germinated.
They want us to upgrade to the next phone,
that's what they want us to do.
And you know what I'm gonna do?
I'm gonna freaking, I'm gonna buy the new phone.
You have to.
Because the operating system, here's what happens.
Yeah, this is a conspiracy, but I fully believe it.
I mean, way back, we wrote the iPod,
dead iPod song, and we talked about the Doom Seed.
It's in there, but what it is is the programmers
get all excited about the latest and greatest technology
and what they can get their phones to do
with the new software, and they're testing it,
having a grand old time, and they'll tell you
that they test it on old phones.
But do you really think that any...
You think there's a guy at Apple who's like,
I'm the old phone guy.
Yeah, I'm gonna try...
And I don't even have a freaking old phone.
I have the previous version.
They are never going to spend any amount
of their own personal time experiencing the trauma
of running the newest operating system on an older
phone. Because they've got us trapped.
Because it's frustrating!
They've got us trapped.
It frustrates the crap out of us, so it's gonna frustrate the crap out of them,
so they're not gonna do it.
Yeah, now we have to get the new phone. Just to be normal people.
And you know what? No one there, and I'm not just talking about Apple,
I'm talking about...
I'm sure it's everybody.
Every company that has software and hardware,
they do it on, they embrace it.
They don't do it on purpose, but they just let it happen
because it benefits them for the software
to go beyond the hardware to require the purchase
of new hardware to keep up.
Yeah, that's why I didn't get your text.
Long story short. That is a doom seed.
I used to get your text from my house to your house,
but they put up a virtual wall between our homes now.
And then the text.
And we don't, texts don't work anymore.
The text said, hurt my back.
Will you please come comfort me?
Anything you can do, bring, or advise, do it.
Like I was expecting braces, shots, drugs.
I didn't know what all you had. I have all of that. But I wanted all of it. Like I was expecting braces, shots, drugs. I didn't know what all you had.
I have all of that.
But I wanted all of it.
But I did. I do carry-
And you came with nothing.
No, no. So I carry a brace in my backpack. So I did have that, but you already had that great
looking nipple brace. I thought that was-
Boosty A.
That was more than enough. You were wearing your corset. I thought-
Corset, yeah.
You look great. But I. I thought you looked great.
But I also discussed with you that... I could have worn it under my shirt, by the way,
but I kind of felt sexy.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay.
Yahweh, yahweh.
I didn't give you my brace because my brace is really...
Sweaty.
It really isolates the low back,
and you were kind of having a mid-back problem,
so I just didn't think it would be of any help to you.
And also, listen, I mean, I'm glad you mentioned that.
I went out of my way to, when you were complaining about it,
to be like, to not say, you know I felt exactly
the way you felt for weeks on end,
like seven times over the past decade.
I don't.
But I didn't say anything,
because I was like, you know what,
that's the worst thing you can say to somebody
who's currently in pain.
Is what?
Is to say, well, you know what,
I know exactly how you feel,
and I've had that pain a lot more than you have.
Oh yeah, oh I knew that.
You don't wanna say that to somebody.
But I don't feel like I complained that much.
No, you didn't complain that much,
but you were very affected.
But I completely, it's such a distraction.
When something, that core, first of all, any pain,
if you have chronic pain, I really feel for you
because it becomes this distraction that,
I mean, I do think you eventually get better
at dealing with it.
It makes good television if you're like House.
You remember that show?
That was good for a number of seasons
because of his suffering.
But especially Buddy System season one,
I had crazy back issues the whole time.
Season two, I had them for like a week.
But like, yeah, it sours everything.
So I'm glad you're doing better.
You're not wearing the corset anymore.
I'm doing better because I went to Yvonne,
a physical therapist who,
Also my physical therapist.
Christy is friends with her so then she was able to like
come in early before we had to shoot GMM.
And so from seven to eight o'clock I swung by there
and she put me in these poses and holds, it was weird.
I need to go name those positions,
because it's true, she does put you in a lot of positions.
Well, because I was expecting to lay down
and have her like massage the spot.
And I understand that different parts of your body
connected, so like she might might manipulate the hips or.
Grab your ear, you know, I mean, she's like,
you know, the back is connected.
Oh, your back hurts, let me get the earlobe.
To your left eyebrow, let me massage that.
There's lots of connections that she finds.
But at one point, I was sitting up with my arms,
with my hands clasped behind my neck
like I'm showboating.
And then I'm shirtless.
You took your shirt off, huh?
Yeah, because you gotta get access.
Well very early on I had to be shirtless
so that she could like.
Right, yeah, I forgot about that part.
There's no reason to have a shirt on
when your muscles are being specifically manipulated
in your back.
Yeah, put that on a T-shirt.
My hands are clasped behind my bare neck
and then she's behind me,
hugging me from behind.
That wasn't part of the treatment.
And then her thumb is like in my sternum
and then she told me to turn to the left,
lower my right arm, my right elbow a little bit.
She's behind me, she's looking at the ground.
And then she's like squeezing and doing these subtle things.
I don't, it's just, I didn't feel like anything.
I felt like I was posing for a weird art project.
Right, it doesn't feel like much.
And I was like, is somebody painting us right now?
Yeah, well I was.
Because nothing is happening.
Through that little peephole.
She'd be like, uh.
It's drying right now.
Look to the left a little, okay now relax.
And I would be like, I barely looked to the left.
She'd be like, I'll do it again, it's like, just like.
Oh yeah, she does the tense relax.
Tense relax, tense relax.
Minuscule stuff that if somebody walked in on it,
it's not that you'd think it was inappropriate,
you would just think it was avant-garde.
It's like wow, I bet she's charging a lot for that.
Performance art.
And she was.
She does.
But you know what, I feel better.
Well that's the thing that I like.
I applied some wet heat on my own time.
How'd you come about that?
Little hot tub action, baby.
Wet heat.
Now, I used to,
because I'm a skeptic, right?
So when she first started doing that stuff to me,
when I was dealing with my,
because I've got the back thing,
I've got hip things, I've got knee things,
it's like I'm a mess.
She does this stuff,
and like the first like three months,
I was just like, man, this is BS.
That's what I'm thinking, but I'm also like,
I'm just gonna give it a chance.
And I gotta say that,
it, whatever, I don't know how all this works,
but the stuff that she showed me to do,
that she did, and the stuff that she showed me to do,
which now I do. Like stretches.
Well, there's stretches,
but there's like getting certain muscles to be,
like basically to increase the mobility
of certain parts of your body,
and then how it's like across your body
and like this shoulder and related to this thing.
Getting all that moving,
like my back is so much better than it's ever been.
Don't say it though.
However. Don't jinx it.
However, I do currently have a pulled butt muscle.
But I think, but it's definitely not,
it's not hurting right now,
but it's just like somehow
I pulled my butt muscle in my Pilates class.
Oh.
But it wasn't, I don't know.
Put that on a T-shirt.
I don't know what to do.
I thought about calling a Vine, but then I was like,
that's gonna be a weird session,
because there would be a lot of glute massage,
which personally I'm into, but I mean,
that does get even more awkward.
We should live stream these treatments
to defray some of the cost and the awkwardness.
If you know that like hundreds of people are watching,
maybe more, I think it actually is better for everybody.
I think there's some sort of-
Like your glutes not exposed.
I think there may be like a HIPAA situation.
If you, isn't that the health people?
I don't think you can broadcast- I don't think you can broadcast.
I don't think you can broadcast.
I thought you were talking about a hip
and you just said it wrong.
Like medical situations.
Like there's no doctor that live streams
his meetings with his patients
because it violates some laws.
I think the bottom line is I still feel a tinge of pain
but I'm on the mend.
It was just, you know, it's just a pulled muscle.
It's kinda deep.
No issues there, long term.
Well I'm glad you're back, Link.
No pun intended. Yes.
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Okay, so we're gonna talk a little bit about our travels.
One of the funny things,
one of the really funny things that happened
as we were getting ready to leave
for this most recent trip that we've had
as of the recording of this was our Texas trip.
Yeah.
And we had a car come pick,
they picked you and Christy up
and then they drove to my house and picked me and Jesse up.
And then drove us all to the airport
so that we didn't have to leave a car at the airport.
And so let me just say that,
like we're sitting in this SUV
at the bottom of your driveway,
because it's like a-
You can't drive up that driveway.
You have a steep driveway,
so the guy wouldn't drive up there.
I told him not to.
So we're just parking down there at the bottom,
and then we're waiting for you and waiting for you,
and then all of a sudden I look in the rear view mirror
and I see there's a guy standing behind the SUV.
He's not immediately behind it,
he's like, I can see his full body,
and I can see that he has a dog at his foot that's sitting there.
Yeah.
And there, he's staring.
He's not looking to and fro, he's not looking at his dog.
He's staring.
At one point.
Up your driveway.
That's what he was, and it took me a while to figure it out
but I was like, he's looking like a statue,
an angry statue and he was looking up your driveway and then I told Christ, but I was like, he's looking like a statue, an angry statue, and he was looking up your driveway.
And then I told Christy, I was like, look at that dude.
And then that's as far as I got
before he started coming down the driveway.
So when I got to the bottom of the driveway
and I saw him, I knew who he was
and I knew what he was upset about.
Because I could tell that dude was upset.
You know how when someone's upset and their eyes water?
Like I could tell from a distance that like.
Well he was mad crying?
Yeah, he had a little mad cry, like his eyes were wet.
I was like, I'm not getting out of this car.
He was so, he was livid.
But I thought that he was resting his dog.
I didn't know if he was like, if his eyes were sweaty
because it was like a hot day.
I didn't, you know, I didn't know.
Well let me just give some background.
So I share a property line with this man.
And part of the property line is a fence
that he has a fence and I have a fence
and the fences, there's like a six inch gap
between the fences, no issues there.
But I will say that the way I got to know him was,
is that my kids were playing basketball,
we have a little basketball goal
on the side next to the house,
and it's easy to lose your ball over into their yard.
And so, like the second day that we were there,
like Shepherd shot the ball over there. And so, like the second day that we were there, like Shepherd shot the ball over there.
And so, I sent the boys over there
because I thought that was cool.
You know, send your kids over to the stretcher's house
to get the ball back to be like,
hey, we're new to the neighborhood and my ball's over there
just so that they would get into the habit
of throwing the ball back over, which happened for a while.
And you don't want to be the one
to have to go fetch the ball every time.
Right, right, yeah,, I wanted to be like,
hey, we got the basketball goal,
I know the previous owner didn't have kids
that were using it a lot, but we are gonna use it a lot.
A lot of our balls are gonna be up in your business.
But you sent them over
to have that conversation without you.
Yeah, and then I do remember my boys saying
that it was an interesting,
I don't remember specifically what they noted,
but I noted that it was, they said it was
a kind of a different, they weren't super warm to the boys.
I was like, hmm, interesting.
But then the lower part of the yard,
they have a lot of vegetation in their yard,
then I have a lot of vegetation in my yard,
and they kinda just come together,
but there is a clear property line.
However, right at the bottom of the driveway,
there's like this little thing that kind of juts out
where I'm sure the property line doesn't jut out,
but it kind of seems like the bottom half of the driveway
is kind of like almost going into his property line
and then there's like a bush down there
next to the side of the driveway.
So from a landscaping perspective, it feels like it's- The previous owner had landsca side of the driveway. So from a landscaping perspective,
it feels like it's- The previous owner
had landscaped around the driveway
and then when the driveway dog-legged out a little bit,
so did the landscaping.
It feels like the landscaping is in my territory,
even though it's definitely in his yard.
So when we decided we were gonna do some landscaping
and Jesse specifically had the idea
to put a palm tree on each side of the driveway. Oh.
We went and talked to him.
Okay.
And it was gonna require cutting back
this bush a little bit.
Now first of all, you've seen his yard.
It's like a forest.
It's like.
It's not intentional.
But it's, I mean, I like it.
It's very natural.
There's nothing I dislike about it, but it's.
It's not manicured.
But it doesn't make, what I'm about to tell you
isn't really consistent with the way the yard looks.
Okay.
So when Jesse talked to him, he was like,
he said, Jesse was like, can we cut the bush back
a couple of feet so I can plant this palm tree?
And he was like, why would you cut the bush?
The bush is a living thing.
That was sign one that this is a little interesting.
A living thing.
Yeah, well why do you cut grass, dude?
Because it's, I mean, we cut living things all the time.
It's just part of trim, you know.
Let's use the word trim.
Exercising our dominion over the earth.
So, but eventually he.
You weren't gonna pull up the bush.
You weren't gonna.
No, no, no.
You weren't gonna kill the bush.
It was just cutting it back a little bit
so we could plant what I thought was a very pretty tree
to match the other side of the driveway.
Like, in other words, this is beautifying the space.
That's two years ago.
Oh.
Haven't talked to the guy since.
Oh wow.
That was back when we moved in.
And so.
Let me guess, did that guy have a dog?
Yeah.
But the other day,
so like four days before the day
that we got picked up to go to the tour,
I had asked my gardener to trim some bushes
and there was specifically one
that was growing over the sprinkler
and it was causing the sprinkler to just hit the bushes
and not actually go onto the ground cover
that needs to be watered.
So it hit one living thing
but it was depriving another living thing.
Right, and so I was like,
I have to cut one living thing
to let another living thing live.
You gotta make sacrifices.
Right. So I took a saw,
I found a saw.
It's the trolley problem.
And I went right, I actually,
because I know that my neighbor is sensitive to these things,
I basically just went to where the property line is,
and I just cut the limbs at approximately where the property line is and I just cut the limbs at approximately where the property line is
so that this kind of this tree slash bush
was just invading my yard.
So I just cut it.
And then I did cut a couple of other limbs
that were making their way all the way out into my yard.
I kind of cut them a little bit further in, whatever.
But then I actually ended up with a lot more branches
than I anticipated.
And then the only place, because of the slope of my yard,
the only place that I could set them down
was on the curb in his yard.
But you've seen his, like his house is way,
his driveway is way up around the corner.
I don't even know.
And his house is way up there.
I've never seen the house.
Right, his house is way up there, up this hill.
And this is more in my domain, even though it's on up there. I've never seen the house. Right, his house is way up there, up this hill, and this is more in my domain,
even though it's on his property.
But I was like, I'm gonna set these branches here,
and then I'm gonna text my gardener and just say,
hey, I can't fit these in the bin, can you take them?
But I didn't do it immediately.
So what he was so pissed about was the fact
that I had these limbs in his yard
and he's standing there with his dog and he's like.
What's the first thing he said?
I wish I knew, but it was something like,
did you, what is this?
What is this?
And I was like, oh man, I'm sorry about that.
I actually, and this is 100% true,
I was like, I just texted my gardener
to come pick that up today.
Because that was true, because I'd done it before
because we were leaving, I was like,
I gotta get this stuff out of this guy's yard.
It was just on the curb, it was barely in his yard.
But then he was like, baloney.
I was like, hey, who says baloney?
Hold up, you got baloney? Yes. Because I'm in. And I was like, do, who says baloney? They'd be like, hold up, you got baloney?
Yes.
Because I'm in.
And I was like, do you wanna see the text?
He's like, I don't wanna see the text.
And then he says, if you wanna cut a tree
on my property, you talk to me.
And I was like, well, I cut it at the property line.
It was stuff that was coming.
He says, if you wanna, and then all of a sudden,
he went to the palm tree.
He said, and that palm tree, that's on my property.
You have one day to take it down.
Oh wow.
And I was like, well, I'm about,
I'm actually leaving to go out of town right now.
He says, I don't care, you have one day to take it down,
and if you don't take it down, I'm going to chop it down
and put it in your driveway.
And I was like. And I'm watching all chop it down and put it in your driveway. And I was like-
And I'm watching all this from the SUV.
I'm like, man, I should be filming this,
but I didn't think about that.
Now-
I'm sorry.
You know me.
Now, of course, we've talked quite a bit-
Jesse was in the car with us by now.
We've talked quite a bit on this podcast
about how we both handle conflict.
And we've also, we wrote a whole chapter
in the book about it.
Now, if this guy confronted you,
you would have been livid.
Like you would have been super mad.
And I was, but I was actually.
Except for the conversations we've had here
and I would hope that I'm a changed man,
that I would have kept my cool,
I would have done some deep belly breathing
and then I would have diffused the situation.
Here's the thing about the way
that I approach these situations.
I actually was not mad at all.
I wasn't mad at him at all.
It's like my first instinct was,
I was, it was disbelief.
I was like, is this guy really this mad about this?
Is he really saying this?
Is he really threatening me in this way?
Yeah.
Did he really say baloney?
And then my second, the second thing I was thinking was,
how do I diffuse this situation right here, right now,
and get this guy to back off?
Like, so I was like, you know, as soon as we get back,
we should have a reasonable conversation about this.
And he was like, reasonable, my ass, or something like that.
Yeah.
And just, and he was like, one day! or something like that and just, and he was like, one day!
He wouldn't and then he just.
No but before he walks off, he said something about,
he made a judgment about you, right?
He said, I'm sure you're some really special person.
And I was like, what is he talking about?
And I think.
I think he said, I'm sure you're so wonderful.
You're so wonderful.
So what he said.
What he was, well, again, again.
I heard him.
This may be me projecting onto this guy,
but I have a feeling that because he has teenage kids.
Oh gosh.
I have a feeling that they know
that I'm a YouTuber.
Oh, really?
And so they probably have said something like,
yeah, he's YouTube famous or whatever,
and of course that doesn't mean anything to this guy.
And so I think that it's sort of this like.
Or maybe he could just, okay.
No, but the way that he said it was very much like,
you think you're so special because my kids think
you're somebody or something like that.
And I was like, what does that have to do with anything?
You don't believe me that I'm gonna get
this stuff picked up.
I tried to defuse the situation.
So then I was kinda, he walked off, we get in the car
and then both me and Jesse are both kinda shaken up
and I'm like thinking, how are we gonna defuse this?
Like I gotta, I'm gonna, like we're like figuring out
a strategy for what we're gonna do when we get back.
Like what are we gonna do, take them a bottle of wine
or something, it's because I really wanna go over and say.
Here's the thing, at first it's like,
my observation was, because you were verbally processing it
with me and Christy, you and Jessie,
and at first it's like, well how do we resolve this?
What, I mean the babysitter's taking care of the boy,
she needs to drive up the driveway,
are they gonna be able to move the palm tree out of the way
if he thunks it down right there?
Right.
And so, and it's like how do we diffuse the situation?
But then I noticed a shift in your mindset.
By the time we got to the airport,
you were saying things like,
I'm going to go to his front door when we get back
with a bottle of wine.
And you had shifted your perspective.
Your objective had changed to a much higher goal.
I want to become friends with this man.
In order to.
Well, A, I want my palm tree to be there
and I want him to be okay with it.
Well, I think that's now C.
I think A is you want to,
I was gonna say kill him with kindness,
but you don't want to kill him in any way.
No, I mean honestly, it's just, I don't, the idea of-
You wanna win and define winning.
Well winning is having him to no longer feel this animosity.
No, but it's more than that.
What you want is, you want to win in such a way
that you're so nice to him that he has to be nice to you.
What he wants is he wants me to be mad back at him.
Yeah, so when you're not, your goal is for him
to have to be nice to you and say, dang,
he's taking the high road, and then go back into his house,
close the door,
and say what?
And be really mad that he's not mad at me.
And so that you have the power over him.
Well I mean.
And I'm not saying that's a bad thing,
I'm saying that's winning.
When you can be so nice to the guy
that A, your palm tree stays,
and B, he has to go in his house and grumble to himself,
but he can't do it to you anymore
because you've taken away his ability to say things like,
baloney, you think you're wonderful.
Like, he can't do that to you.
That's the power that you're taking away.
And I do also think that like, it's just,
to have a neighbor.
And when the basketball goes over,
he comes out of his house, goes downstairs,
grabs the ball, throws it over
and says something nice to your kids.
Well, sure, that would be great.
I think the thing that I want him to understand
and that I would say to his face
and hopefully we'll have the opportunity to is like,
with all the crap that is going on in the world and all the conflict
that there is, are we really having a fight over this?
Don't we both want the same things?
We want beautiful yards.
It's just like the steps that I am taking
that have caused these problems are all because
I'm trying to beautify the situation.
Right.
It isn't because I'm trying to exercise
some sort of authority over your property. And also I did get all the limbs off within the situation. Right. It isn't because I'm trying to exercise some sort of authority over your property.
And also I did get all the limbs off within the hour.
I actually called, instead of texted,
I called my gardener and I said,
I've got a situation with my neighbor,
I want you to get over there as fast as you possibly can
and get this stuff out of there
because I want to show them that I actually mean
what I say and that we're getting this stuff out of there.
And you might need to bring a bodyguard with you.
And when we got back home on Sunday,
the palm tree was still in its place.
So that actually took a little bit of the wind
out of my sails of like, I was also super tired,
which we'll talk about like when we get back
from a tour stop on a Sunday, it's like,
there's not a lot left.
And we took Jesse and Christy with us on this last trip.
So all this energy
that I had around reconciling was kind of like,
I just don't wanna do that right now
and the limbs are gone and the palm tree's still there
so I'll do that later.
But with every day that passes, it becomes less likely
that I'm going to try to rectify the situation.
Well I think.
But I still feel like I have to.
You removed the shrubbery.
No but I want reconciliation.
And you kept your palm tree.
I want reconciliation.
What if something happens, man?
What if there's an earthquake?
What if we need to rely on each other
and it's just like no we hate each other
because he threw some limbs on my yard at one time.
I mean, and what your wife said is an interesting perspective
when we got in the car, she was like,
I just feel sorry for that man
because he feels that way all the time.
He's mad all the time and you just happen to be the target
at this particular moment.
And it's true, there's a lot of people
who just live that way.
If you're mad like that, then it's a lifestyle.
You're waiting for the next person to piss you off
so that you can unload on them.
And it's just such a sad, sad way to live.
I don't understand where it comes from
and I'm sure he's got all kinds of stuff on his plate,
whatever, but it's just why?
Why is this the way that he's choosing to deal with this?
I don't know, hopefully I'm gonna be able to change that.
And you know what?
We hadn't even left your driveway yet.
That's the type of adventures that are in store for us
as we continue the tour.
You know, because I didn't know what to expect,
you know, from basically every other weekend,
sometimes weekends in a row, like devoting our weekend
to showing up at a city on Friday, doing the show,
then getting up the next morning, traveling to a nearby city,
doing two shows back to back, and then getting up early
the next morning and flying back home, I just didn't know,
having committed to it, what it was gonna feel like.
And I think it is very exhausting.
It is also very rewarding to meet you guys on the tour
and to see so many faces and to have a live interaction
that's not across a screen at the,
and then we end every show with a Q and A
and we're able to like have more of a conversational
back and forth with the audience.
It's great, I'm so glad we're doing it.
But it is also very exhausting.
And there's not really anything,
ultimately there's not anything besides the tour.
It's like, it's all about the shows.
Well there's travel, the shows,
and then the sleep that we can afford to get.
And in between shows, I mean,
just trying to preserve any energy you have
or like recharge in such a way that you can
give it your best mentally and physically.
But we're not really doing that because
in between the two shows on Saturday,
at least the last two weekends,
we've taken that time to go to a local bookstore
and we've been Instagram storying this stuff.
Yeah. The whole idea is that we go to a place we've been Instagram storying this stuff.
The whole idea is that we go to a place
where the Book of Mythicality is,
we take a Polaroid of us holding a book, our book,
and we put it into one of the books
and then you guys find it.
Yeah, someone who's in the area.
And in New York at the Barnes and Noble we did that
and we met a couple of fans in there
but they didn't see us hide the thing.
So we did get out of there.
And then we got back and we did the show
and then after the show, one of the guys
who was in the VIP line, like the meet and greet
got to meet us, brought out the book
and he had gotten the book and greet who got to meet us brought out the book and he had gotten the book
and he was like, I saw the Insta story
and I like ran five blocks
to what I thought was the Barnes and Noble
and I found the book.
Yeah, he found it, he did find it fast too.
And then he brought it back to us
and then he asked us to sign it
and I took that as an opportunity to keep it.
But we had already signed it.
No, well we signed a Polaroid.
No, but we had signed, that was the weird thing.
No, I didn't keep it, he kept it.
But that's the thing that's still the mystery
that I thought about later is that he had the book
with the Polaroid, signed, taped exactly the same way
that we had taped it inside there.
Yes.
And it was signed, but the book we signed
in the Barnes and Noble, but the book he had was not signed.
I still don't understand what happened.
I think someone at Barnes and Noble
found that book and then took the Polaroid out
and taped it to another book so that there would be
two books with something valuable to a fan in them.
That's what I think.
Altruistically, someone distributed the signatures,
so now there's a signed book and a signed Polaroid
in another book, that's what I think happened.
But then when we were in Texas, in Dallas,
we had two shows in Dallas, so we typically do
one show on a Friday night and then two on a Saturday,
and we drove from Austin to Dallas on Saturday morning,
and then in between the shows, we were like,
we're gonna go to a Walmart
because the book is being sold at Walmart.
And for some reason, the closest Walmart we could find
was like 20 minutes away, maybe more than that.
And so we drive, and so we're also gonna go to a Whataburger
because everybody is telling us that you guys-
In Texas, you gotta go to a Whataburger.
Everybody's like, you gotta go
and you gotta say whether or not
it's better than In-N-Out. So we're like, okay, in between the shows, let gotta go to a Whataburger. Everybody's like, you gotta go, and you gotta say whether or not it's better than In-N-Out.
So we're like, okay, in between the shows,
let's go do that, and wishfully,
we thought we would also be able to take a nap.
That never happened.
So again, all this is on Instagram,
was on Instagram, if you follow the stories,
but I mean, first of all, Whataburger, we tried that.
It is not In-N-Out.
Yeah.
Sorry, Texas.
We did say that on Instagram, but it is no In-N-Out.
But now whenever I eat In-N-Out, I'm like, what a burger.
Yeah, right.
That is a great burger.
You have taken the slogan.
Yeah, I mean, they, you know,
they got so many things they're trying at Whataburger.
Yeah, it's, the way you- That's a sign.
The way you put it was,
is they were kinda going the Arby's route,
which I think they're actually going the-
Carl's Jr. Carl's Jr. route.
Yeah.
In that, again- Specialty burgers
that like are fleeting.
They're there for a month and they're gone.
Oh, this one's got pico de gallo and chorizo on it.
But to me, to my personality,
to your personality, In-N-Out is like the bullseye.
It is that we do three things.
We do burgers, fries, and milkshakes,
and we do them the same way, and we've done it for 50 years,
and it'll never change.
If they broke, don't break it.
That is your bullseye.
Now I appreciate that, and I love those burgers,
but I also do appreciate like,
oh, we got a catfish burger.
You know, it's like, what, we've-
Something new, yeah.
Yeah, there's something new
with a bunch of different weird ingredients on it.
I just feel like they're searching.
Well, yeah, but I mean,
every once in a while you hit a bullseye.
I mean, every time I give you a fart in one of those games,
it helps you, right?
Four darts, four darts are better than one, right?
Well, not really.
I gave you two farts and you won.
It's a weak analogy.
I think it's actually pretty strong.
But I do.
I mean we got the normal burger and it wasn't great.
Well the problem.
We had to apologize left and right
because we were in Texas.
Well the problem with doing that many different things
is that if you're gonna stack up the variety
of one restaurant against the restaurant
who does one thing,
that's not really an apples to apples comparison
at that point.
Because if you like variety, you're like,
well I don't wanna eat the same burger every time.
But if you're just doing, we just got the Whataburger
straight, no frills, they had like a chorizo burger
and a chili burger, we said no to that.
Went with just a straight Whataburger.
It wasn't a bad burger, it just wasn't a great burger.
It wasn't bad, it was like I was satisfied as a meal,
but I don't choose to eat a lot of burgers
at this point in my life.
It's a, yeah, it's like.
And I want it to really count when I eat it.
And then we trotted across the street to the Walmart
and literally spent 15 minutes just trying to find
the book section of the Walmart.
Good gracious, I haven't been in a Super Walmart
in a long time.
And then once we found it,
it was at the front of the store.
We literally did a lap around the whole Walmart.
Boy, that was exhausting.
Yeah.
And then we get back up there,
and they've got more romance novels
than you can shake a stick at.
Yeah.
But they did not have one book of mythicality.
Now, they did at one point, so that made me feel kinda good.
I know that they had them there because we called ahead
to make sure they would have one, and then it was gone.
So they were sold out at the Walmart.
And also, this was interesting, I mean, to me at least,
is that the people of Walmart don't really have anything
to do with the books that are on the shelves.
It's just there's like a, there's a vendor
who comes in and just supplies the books.
And lots of places, like I've seen lots of the beasts
taking pictures, Target, Walmart, elsewhere,
where they just have like a handful of books.
Like that's not gonna happen as readily
at like a Barnes and Noble, that's a bookstore.
They've got more of a stock.
But some of these places that just have a book section,
they might have 10 books and those 10 books of mythicality
are getting sold so quickly
that so many places don't have them.
I mean, hopefully that's been rectified.
Well that makes me feel good,
but the problem was we're instastorying.
Right. Is that how you say it?
This whole search, because we were like,
oh, we're gonna go up and we're gonna find a book,
we're gonna sign it, we're gonna take the polaroid,
we're gonna put it in it, we're gonna get out of here.
And then by the time we were like insta-storing
the fact that we couldn't find our book,
like we had people sprinting in the store, fans.
They were there already.
And they were already there looking for the book
and it was like, there we were,
still trying to like hide the goods.
So it's kinda like when your kid comes out
for the Easter egg hunt.
He's like, I'm not done!
I'm not done hunting eggs!
Yeah, yeah, it was.
Get back in the house!
It was a little awkward and then,
after they got their picture,
then they just kinda went over to the book section.
I was like, oh, I guess they're the ones,
they're the ones who are gonna get the Polaroid,
which I didn't feel bad about.
We gotta get out quicker.
But then the interesting thing that happened.
Santa doesn't wanna be in the sack
when the kids wake up in the morning.
Oh gosh.
Then when the fans got their picture taken with us,
then the employees of Walmart,
who had absolutely no idea who we were,
just lined up, one after the other,
they all wanted to get their picture with us.
Which I gotta think put their jobs in jeopardy.
Yeah, I mean they had no idea who we were,
but one of them was like,
I think my granddaughter would care about this.
And so she got a picture and then somebody else
got a picture and somebody else got a picture
and I was like, you guys have no idea who we are.
We could be serial killers.
Of course, that probably wouldn't be why
somebody was getting a picture with us.
But.
Yeah, that would be odd.
We took several pictures with random Walmart employees
and then we were like, guys, we need to go
because we think more people are gonna be showing up here
and this is just gonna get more awkward, so we walked out.
But we did not find our book, but we did put the picture
in a book called Side Chick,
which looked like a really, really good novel.
Yeah.
It was by an author called Kat.
With two Ts.
K-A-T-T.
That was it, no last name, no first name,
it's just Kat writing things like Side Chick.
I'm sure that he or she has got other books
other than Sidechick.
I'm sure Sidechick is just one of many.
What's another adventure that we went on?
The day before that in Austin, I mean we were,
I love Austin, man, I gotta go back to Austin.
Yeah, great town.
That's a fun little place.
They got a bridge leading into downtown across the river
and that leads to a statue of Willie Nelson,
which is amazing.
And under that bridge is, according to my sources,
I think the largest urban conglomerate of bats.
Fruit bats.
Hiding, not hiding, living under the bridge and hiding.
I mean they are hiding most of the time.
At dusk every day, there's a mass exodus of bats
that I've seen on like nature shows
that you can go down to the banks of the river at dusk
and watch all these bats like
start swirling around above the river
and then take off and if you have radar vision,
it looks like a storm is coming out
from under the freaking bridge, man.
Who's got radar vision?
The people of Austin, I think.
Mm, I don't understand.
If you were looking on a radar,
it would look like a storm.
You mean like infrared? Like a weather radar. Oh, that. But if you had that on a radar, it would look like a storm. You mean like infrared?
Like a weather radar.
Oh, that.
But if you had that in your eyes,
like if you had like a Snapchat filter that is weather radar, which that's a good idea.
I think that would be really inconvenient
for someone on the ground.
It's like storms coming up.
How can you tell?
Well, the same way you can tell,
except I've got radar vision. it's not really helping me.
Yeah, it's just they look like clouds still.
I think on a radar, the bats register as a storm
is what I'm trying to say.
I doubt that.
That's what the guy, you were there when the guy told us.
He said that it registers on a radar?
Yes.
I didn't hear that, he made that part up.
Well he said it.
I just block out false information.
You hate bats so much that you didn't want
to even hear about the bats.
This is a misconception.
My wife, and first of all, my wife just,
she just, we brought our wives with us.
Don't bring my wife in this.
And it really, it changed the complexion
of the trip quite a bit, don't you think?
But one of the ways that it changed the complexion of the trip is a bit, don't you think? But one of the ways that it changed the complexion
of the trip is that my wife loves to just talk,
like typically if Link and I are in a car
and there's like an Uber driver, it's like,
I'll say like, hello, I'm nice,
but I don't get into the backstory.
I'm just, I'm an introvert.
I don't like to have that conversation,
but my wife is an extrovert.
And so it's funny. She's in the very back and he's in the very front. I'm an introvert, I don't like to have that conversation but my wife is an extrovert and so,
and it's funny.
She's in the very back and he's in the very front.
We're in the middle.
And let me tell you that your wife did this,
I think your wife did this more than my wife
but they both did it.
When our wives are, what I've noticed about them
and I noticed this about them like seven times
during the trip but your wife more than my wife,
treated people like they were the internet.
As if the internet didn't exist, right?
So it's like we've got this guy driving us to the hotel
and then your wife starts asking him questions
about like where are the good restaurants
and all this stuff.
And it's just like, I'm thinking,
well that's what Yelp is for.
It's like I don't have to have a conversation
with one person from one point of view.
We're not gonna have a conversation with like
a thousand people all at once through the internet.
Using only your thumbs.
Get the aggregate opinion of the people of Austin
without having an awkward conversation.
But then, now you got a driver who's suddenly tour guide.
Did you know he drove over that bridge twice?
He drove past our hotel, we realized later,
drove over the bridge just so he could,
because he thought, oh, these ladies are into me,
I'm gonna be the tour guide.
He's like, the fruit bats show up on the radar.
This is the largest urban population
of fruit bats in America.
And then he drives and then he goes around in a circle.
How do you know he said that?
And then he's like, this is our Willie Nelson statue.
That's a great restaurant.
And I'm thinking, like, guys, we could've, I mean, this is great. We gotta be somewhere's a great restaurant. And I'm thinking, like guys, we could've,
I mean this is great.
We gotta be somewhere.
But A, I wanna be in the hotel right now,
and B, I could get all this information from the internet.
But then it happened again.
She asked somebody else a question.
The next.
Does she do that all the time when y'all are together?
Well,
we don't typically ride with strangers in other settings.
Well my wife also does that with,
well where I was going with this is that what my wife did
with the bat guy, with the driver,
is that when he said the story about bats,
she said well he's really scared of bats.
So I was talking about me and I'm like,
I'm not really scared of bats,
there's just a bat that lives in the awning
above our jacuzzi at home.
Jacuzzi.
And I got really scared one time and fell down
when the thing flew at my head, okay?
I fell down, I'm sorry, because I'm really close to the,
I'm really close to the ceiling and it flew.
Rhett, you fell down in fear.
Of course I did, because Heather Dinklage got bit by a bat
when I was a kid, when we were all out playing.
She got bit by a frickin' bat, it landed in her hair
and it wouldn't get out.
It's like flapping all around in her hair.
Your head's up in the nest.
Yeah, and I'm like, if a bat's gonna land
on somebody's head, whose head is it gonna land on first?
Mine.
So you're like spread eagle on your patio
trying to get away from the bat.
No, I fell backwards.
Oh gosh.
I hit the deck and then she started laughing at me
and ever since then she's like, he's scared of bats.
I'm like, I'm scared of any flying mammal
that gets within a foot of my head, yes.
But I'd watch the fruit bats, but as soon as they turned,
I'd hit the deck.
You're afraid of bees too, man.
I am very scared of bees.
Yeah, and that has nothing to do with any of this.
You'll back spread for a bee at the top of a hat.
Anything that can fly and hurt you.
You're afraid of.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, there you go.
You're afraid of it.
I'm afraid of it, but not especially afraid.
It's not a bat phobia.
Actually, I don't have a phobia of bees.
I just very uncomfortable around them. Is there a difference? No! You are debilitated whenever a bat comes around.
If you had a bat in a glass terrarium and you put it right next to my face, I
wouldn't be scared. I feel like if you have a phobia you'd be scared. I feel like if you have a phobia, you'd be scared. I feel like I have an unnecessarily
You have a phobia. practical fear of these things.
You have a phobia of bat flight.
I have a phobia of flying bats that are open,
flying in the open.
Well, under an awning.
But if I took a snake and put it in this jar
and it was clear and I held it up to your face,
you'd be totally fine.
Or would you feel uncomfortable? I would feel uncomfortable. If I took a snake and put it in this jar and it was clear and I held it up to your face, you'd be totally fine.
Or would you feel uncomfortable? I would feel uncomfortable.
See, I feel like that's different.
I feel like that's like a next layer.
That's like getting into phobia.
First of all, I don't believe you.
If I had a bat in a terrarium.
You bring a bat in a jar.
And you will be uncomfortable.
You can get a bat in a jar, you bring it.
You'll get that feeling in your balls
like when you walk to the edge of a cliff. Feeling in my in your balls like when you walk to the edge of a cliff.
Feeling in my balls, what?
When you walk to the edge of a cliff
and there's that sinking feeling that you might vomit or.
Doesn't happen in my balls though.
Really? What are you talking about?
You have it in your balls?
Every time I go to the edge of a cliff,
I get a feeling in my balls.
Like a sinking feeling.
You need to tell that to your doctor.
We just had a physical today, not a physical,
a very easy physical.
He did ask me to cough but he didn't grab anything.
I noticed that, I was actually, I was on my laptop
while you were getting the physical and he's like,
please cough and I'm like, oh, what?
It's like I'm in the same room with you and I think.
Why did you look up?
Because I was like, hold on,
am I gonna have to get the balls out
right here in front of Link?
I mean, we did get vasectomies together but he,
why did he ask you to cough?
He didn't ask me to cough.
I don't know.
He must have thought I looked like
I had something lodged in my lungs.
Yeah, you have something you need to cough up
right now, sir.
So anyway, but it was great having the ladies with us.
And the thing that I was frustrated about,
I didn't wanna drive around downtown,
I wanted to get brisket.
Yeah right.
And we finally got to, what's the name of the place
that we did, I mean there's so many places you can go.
Was it Ruby's or Rudy's?
Rudy's and there's so many different places in Austin
you can go, it's.
And you're gonna offend somebody.
It's like walking around in barbecue heaven.
But we couldn't go outside of town.
And they all do it so well.
So for the sake of timing and location,
we went to Rudy's, the worst barbecue in Texas
is what their sign says and it's attached,
this particular one is attached to a gas station
which I thought was cool.
Yeah.
Oh it was so good, y'all.
I mean it was remarkable.
You get that, what's the fatty brisket called?
The wet brisket.
Wet brisket, it's the brisket with a little more fat
and then you get the pork ribs.
I mean, Christy's from Kenston, she's from down east.
They'll smoke a pork rib at the drop of a hat.
Somebody's birthday, somebody gets married,
somebody dies, let's cook a pig.
She knows some barbecue and she's like,
this may be the best pork rib I've ever had.
Well the thing that- And I concur.
Now brisket is something that we don't do in North Carolina
Yeah.
as like we don't take pride in our brisket.
But so I always gotta get that in Texas.
But I would say A, both were so good.
The brisket was as good as I've had.
Like I've had some really good brisket.
Almost wrong at so good.
That was really good.
But the ribs specifically, first of all,
you gotta, if you wanna really enjoy barbecue,
especially a rib, it's not a sauced rib.
Like when you go to Chili's or Applebee's
and they give you the baby back ribs
and they're just slathered in sauce,
like guys, that's not a rib.
A rib is a dry rubbed rib that doesn't have any sauce on it
and you're actually tasting the meat.
And it's smoked, it's not boiled, it's not baked.
Slow and slow.
It's smoked.
And there is this, I don't know how they did it.
They have it where it has the taste
and like smoke ring of a smoked rib,
but the tenderness of one that has been baked.
Like it's not quite falling off the bone,
but it comes off clean.
Oh my goodness.
They're so good, man.
It was a heavenly experience.
You know, when I'm at a low point,
I'm gonna think about that brisket.
Well, we can get some shipped here.
You don't have to just think about it.
I think just thinking about it will be powerful enough.
For me, thinking about it makes me want it.
I'm getting, I'm starving right now.
Yeah, that's not gonna make you happy.
You've just created want within yourself.
But I'm gonna go back to that moment.
And let me tell you, if you walk in a restaurant
and you look in the back corner of the main dining hall,
and there is a trough where multiple people
can wash their hands at once,
you know you're in the right spot.
And right next to that frickin' trough, they had a device that was two holes.
And you thought it was a dishwashing thing.
No, no, no, no, I thought it was a hand dryer.
Like you know how those Dyson blades,
you like, boop, you put your,
I was like, oh this is a newfangled hand dryer.
You wash your hand in the big trough sink,
and then you put your hands in these two holes,
because I saw someone with their hands in the holes. Yeah. And I was like, oh, you put your hands in these two holes, because I saw someone with their hands in the holes.
Yeah.
And I was like, oh, you wash your hands
and you dry your hands in this new fangled version
of a hand dryer.
But it wasn't, it was a hand washer.
And it was the most, it was almost sensual.
You'd stick your hands in there.
Come on.
And the water starts going and it's warm
and there's soap in it and it's spaced in such a way
that the soapy water is lower than the rinse water.
Oh really?
Yes.
So you stick it in there and there's like a,
there's a sanitizing thing happening as you go deeper.
There's jets all around the thing.
It's spinning. I would say there's about
40 jets. That's like the frick would say there's about 40 jets.
That's like the frickin' Jetsons.
Around your whole, and you can go all the way up
to your shoulder into this thing.
No, you can't go that deep.
You can go almost to your elbow.
It's not like delivering a baby cow.
But you can, I mean,
because sometimes when you eat ribs,
you know, if you hold them like this long enough,
you're gonna get drip all the way down the forearm
and they take that into account.
It was a sensual experience.
Exactly, it was just warm water and as you pulled it out,
there was like a curtain of rinse water
that just rinsed all the soap off and I was like,
and then I was like, where are the dry holes?
Where are the dryer holes?
And they didn't have dryer holes.
They didn't have dryer holes.
I mean. I think those are your pockets. dry holes? Where are the dryer holes? And they didn't have dryer holes. They didn't have dryer holes. I mean...
I think those are your pockets.
I think 2018, they'll get dryer holes there.
Well, it should...
The water should turn off, and then the air should turn on.
Well...
And then you should pull it out.
In the future, bathroom sinks are just gonna be a wall of holes.
Oh, goodness.
And you just stick your hands in these two holes, and then you stick your hands in these two holes,
and then you stick your hands in these two holes,
and that's it.
I think probably toilets will be that too.
Yeah, restaurants will just be a series of holes.
It's just a wall of holes.
And you just kinda go up against it.
We have seen the future.
We know for certain.
Wall of holes.
That's it.
You know what? That was amazing.
I got an idea.
We open a restaurant. I've not seen that anywhere else. We call it hole in the what? That was amazing. I got an idea. We open a restaurant.
I've not seen that anywhere else. We call it hole in the wall. Oh. And then people come in and go,
but this is real fancy. We're like, yeah, the hole in the wall has nothing to do with the decor. It
has to do with the bathroom. The bathrooms are just holes in the wall. So you reach your hand
in and you pull out brisket. Is it in the dining room too? Oh gosh. Yes. The whole restaurant. The
whole restaurant is holes.
Hole in the wall.
Hole in the wall.
That's how you get your food, that's how you pay.
That's how you pay. That's how you wash.
That's how you tinkle.
Yeah, it's an entirely anonymous experience.
It's just all holes in the wall.
There's no tables or anything.
But it's a very tasteful, that's the subtitle.
Hole in the wall, a very tasteful experience.
Experience, a very tasteful experience.
Everything about it is tasteful.
Right.
Hold on, we gotta write that down.
I should go back to New York.
I gotta show New York a little love.
Of course we went there first,
and before the inaugural stop on the tour of Mythicality,
which was in Huntington Long Island.
We had to make a few PR-a stops,
including the Ryan and Kelly show.
The Kelly and Ryan show?
Kelly and Ryan.
Live with Kelly and Ryan.
Yeah.
Many weeks back now, maybe you saw that.
But first time we were on there, Ryan Seacrest.
Was absent.
You know, the guy from American Idol.
I know him.
I felt like I knew him really well
because I watched a lot of American Idol
from season two to like, back in the day,
me and Christy, we would time the changing
of our kids' diapers in season two, season three of American Idol
because we didn't have TiVo and you couldn't pause it
and we were that into American Idol.
The first few seasons, yeah.
I gotta run and change the baby's diaper.
I remember that.
In a commercial break for American Idol,
that's how into it we were.
And I just thought Ryan was just,
he's always been excellent at it.
I always thought he was just great.
He is the kind of guy that you feel like you know
because you've seen him so many times.
Yeah, I think people may feel that way about us
and you know what, I'm honored to be,
I'd love to be mistaken for Ryan Seacrest one day.
Any day of the week.
Any day, every day of the week.
We didn't, you don't think you would?
No, no.
You're taller than him.
I'm a lot taller than him. We didn't meet him before't think you would? No, no. You're taller than him. I'm a lot taller than him.
We didn't meet him before the show,
and of course we met Kelly last time,
she's great, she's a personal friend now.
No, we've taken pictures with her
and her son is a mythical beast.
Yeah, we did sign a book for her son.
But we didn't see Ryan until we like walked out
and we were actually doing the show.
And I'm like, okay, this is cool.
You know, it's weird how you're,
when you're thinking things about like,
oh, I'm meeting Ryan Seacrest.
I remember I used to change babies' diapers
on the commercial break for American Idol.
I'm thinking all this while we're actually doing
the segment.
Well that.
We're on live television.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, 100%.
I know my mom's watching and I'm thinking like.
Yeah, if you ever see, his nose looks different in person
than it does on television.
I'm literally thinking that.
Oh no, 100%.
I think that, and hopefully it's not obvious.
If you go back and watch this,
it's like I'm thinking all the same things.
You're not thinking about what you're supposed
to be thinking about.
And that's no excuse for why I spilled the whole smoothie
all over the table.
I did that for comedic effect, okay?
That was purposeful.
But you're thinking about the experience
that you're having.
Well, that's good.
I feel like it's good to be in the moment
and that we can do that.
You're like, oh, I'm assessing Ryan Seacrest's nose location.
But there's things like that,
but there's also like, oh, this is interesting.
There's a live, even though this is the second time
we've been on the show, it's like, this is live
and there's an audience here right now. And like, I'm kind of interesting, there's a live, even though this is the second time we've been on the show, it's like, this is live and there's an audience here
right now and I'm kinda trying to make them laugh
but I really should be thinking about the people
who are watching at home and you're having all these
thoughts as you're doing it.
And then I like, we did the thing and then I called Jessie
and I'm like, did you watch it?
And she's like, yeah, you swayed a lot.
Swayed?
You swayed a lot.
Like?
I'm like, what are you talking about?
Like a palm tree at the corner of your yard.
She's like, you were kind of like,
Being stared at by a neighbor?
You were swaying back and forth quite a bit.
And I was like, really?
You gotta stop that, Rhett.
And I was. Bad. I was swaying. What I was doing is I was like, really? You gotta stop that, Rhett. And I was. Bad.
I was swaying.
What I was doing is I was having the thoughts
that you're talking about.
I was thinking about, oh, we're on the show
and we gotta move things along, we gotta be funny.
But I'm thinking about, oh, I'm seeing Ryan Seacrest
for the first time.
That causes me to sway, apparently.
Do a little, was it like a dancing kind of sway?
Like you're listening to REO Speedwagon?
No, it was like I'm ready for action kind of,
like I think it was my attempt to be energetic
because I have a tendency to just be pretty low key.
Oh so it was an athletic sway.
It was like a weight shifting so that you can dodge a hook.
You'd be ready for anything.
But I'm such a large individual and I had on a jacket,
so I think when I start swaying like that,
it's like a bell effect that happens.
Whoa, almost turned over my.
I mean A, I create a breeze, a noticeable breeze,
and B, you can't help but notice it.
It's like putting a ruler in front of your computer screen
and just going like this.
It's gonna, you can't, I had a pink jacket on.
Up there, almost seven feet tall,
swaying back and forth like a moron.
I'm sorry, I did it.
And you know what, when she told me that,
I'm like, that's all you got to say?
But then I was like, you know what?
No, she's like, you did great, you just swayed a lot.
I was like, I'm actually happy you told me that
because I'm not gonna sway now.
In fact, I've been going to Yvonne and I just said,
I want you to do something to my hip so I can't sway.
Oh.
You know, work the sway out.
I think she's trying to do the opposite actually.
Wants to loosen all of that up.
Yeah, she didn't.
Tension in the hips makes its way into the neighbor's
tension.
We met Ryan Seacrest's assistant who after the bit,
we got our pictures with both of them
and then I think this was afterward,
she comes in with a couple of boxes for us,
bags with boxes in them.
She's like, Ryan wanted me to give these to you guys.
And we're opening it up immediately.
It's like, oh yeah, Ryan Seacrest gonna give us something,
something nice.
And she's like, it's his skincare line for men.
And it was a box with like,
I can't remember what the brand was, it's Dr. Somebody.
It doesn't say Ryan Seacrest on it,
I just think he must have like a sponsorship deal
with this like skincare for men.
I'm like, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
I got like a skincare regimen now?
Like, Christy. Well you don't have to.
Oh, I've been using it.
You haven't been using it?
I broke this thing out and it's like.
I have my own.
There's three tubes. My own line, Link.
Well, I've made fun of Christy for years because she has this like,
here's my nighttime skin regimen
and here's my morning skin regimen.
There's like, I can't make sense of what's on her sink
and what's in the shower.
There's like, seemingly three versions of the same thing.
Then if you read the fine print, it's like step one.
Nighttime cream.
It's like step five.
Midnight cream.
Step nine.
Early morning cream.
And I didn't know I would react this way,
but then when Ryan Seacrest gave me my own skincare regimen,
I was very happy about it.
I was like, I have a three-step skincare regimen now.
I've been doing that.
I've been doing something similar for like two years now.
Really?
No, seriously.
You didn't tell me about it.
No.
The first one is like rubbing lotiony dirt
all over your face.
I was like, this doesn't feel right.
Exfoliating, man.
And then you wash that off.
And then the second step.
It's kind of funny to hear an adult man
talk about
exfoliation cream like it's a new invention.
And then the second one, oh gosh that scared me.
Did you hear that?
It was a.
It's these headphones.
If you'd have heard that it's like scraping a brisket
across Ryan Seacrest's face, that's what I just heard.
I heard it as well, I did not have his visceral reaction.
If it was a bat, I would have been on my back.
I am afraid of Ryan Seacrest brisket face,
that's my phobia.
Are you about to tell me that the third step is brisket?
Second step, man, is shave cream plus soap.
It's like face wash that then you shave off
instead of rinse off.
Are you sure you read that right?
Yes!
I have to read it every time
because they all look the same
and I don't want to do them out of order.
You shaving your forehead again?
I don't, I just, I wash the part of my face that I shave.
And then I'm most concerned about what about the other parts
and then the last thing is lotion for the face.
It's pretty revolutionary.
And it has-
We've got exfoliation cream, shaving cream,
and lotion, everybody. Plus soap, man.
And then it's, and I put that everywhere,
and it's got a SPF in it,
and it feels like I'm putting on sunscreen.
Well, because that's what SPF is.
And I just think when you're as old as we are,
me, you, and Ryan, how old is Ryan Seacrest?
Older than us, but not by much.
58.
No, I don't know, 43.
42, yeah.
He's 42, see, we gotta care about these things.
I'm like, all right, I trust Seacrest.
Seriously, I have this,
I started this a couple years ago
because, well, I get that everyone always tells me
that I look tired.
And guys, I don't look tired, I look old.
You just need to get more specific.
That's what's happening to me.
I'm aging, I'm 40 years old.
I'm not gonna look like.
Not me, I'm using my regimen, man.
No, so, but I was like, and also my eyes are like big
and buggy and also, this is a perfect example,
like on camera you got lights that are coming down
and also.
Your eyeball itself creates a shadow.
That's how much it bugs out.
And.
Push him in, talk to Yvonne about that.
Because...
Wait, she has to pull on the middle of the nose.
She just grabs your face with her thumbs.
She never does anything direct.
She'll give me a wet willy and my eyeballs will go in.
Now, because...
I'm going to partly blame you for this
because you've got glasses
and we can't have a light that reflects.
And so we have to have a light that is high enough so that it doesn't reflect
in Link's glasses and that creates this situation where I've got these bags.
And so I've got these big exposed eyeballs and sometimes the bags are
really, really kicking in.
Yeah, we have the opposite. My eyes are so deep. It's like Yvonne's
pushed them all the way in.
We need to tell her that we need a happy medium.
Right. We need to go in together.
She needs to hug both of us.
Because of that, I have a two-step process.
Oh, that's so true.
And then in the morning I do this stuff.
What's in the night?
Well I do a retin-A based thing, which is like.
Acne?
Well it helps with acne, but it helps with discoloration
and as you start getting older, you get weird spots
on your face and stuff like that,
so it keeps that from happening.
And then the eye gel keeps from the bags, man.
It's like, I gotta do it in the morning before we shoot,
and even though I still do that, it still looks,
like if you go back five years, you can be like,
oh yeah, he's getting old, he's getting old.
I see it.
All that stuff is hoodoo, man.
No it's not. Eye gel? First of all, stuff is hoodoo, man. No it's not.
Eye gel?
First of all, what is hoodoo?
Did you mean voodoo?
No, hoodoo, it's a term.
But it's, no it's not, man.
Next time you're in an Uber, ask him.
What I'm saying is that stuff is legitimate, man.
You're the one that just taught me
about your three-step process.
You think all that's hoodoo?
Yeah, but I just love to do it
because it seems like I'm proceduring myself.
There's no doubt that putting some lotion
on your skin helps stave off the aging process.
Absolutely no doubt, it's been scientifically proven.
Have you watched a commercial?
My actions and my emotions speak louder than my words.
Yeah, but I've been doing that process, man.
I swallowed my pride a long time ago.
You hear enough comments about something
and then you start doing something about it.
Next time I see Ryan Seacrest, I'm gonna be like,
Ryan, I've been using your skin regimen.
He's gonna be like, well, I don't.
Good for you.
He does.
I use the expensive stuff,
that's what he's gonna tell you.
No, I believe in my heart that I have a connection
with him every time I rub my face.
You think Ryan Seacrest is sitting around
shaving his whole face just to wash it?
He's not doing that, it's a prank, man.
There's probably a camera in that third step.
Like how many people are gonna think
that we can actually put shaving cream
and soap together in one product?
Explain the camera.
I'm saying that the whole system is an elaborate prank
on people like you and like four years from now
there's gonna be a compilation video on Jimmy Kimmel.
This is gonna be a bunch of people washing and shaving
their face at the same time and you're gonna be
the star of it.
Okay, I'm fine with it if that means I can have yours,
your box.
Well I do wanna test it.
I might add one of the steps to my two steps.
Since you had three steps, I only got two steps.
I feel like I need another step.
But I'm definitely not gonna wash and shave them.
I don't shave at all.
We could, and then you know we're gonna invent
like a mythical face regimen.
Of course. Of course.
For sad middle-aged men.
Yeah. But it's gonna involve
brisket juice.
We need to do a teen acne brisket juice regimen.
Yeah.
Step one is rubbing brisket, step two is you just
eat pork ribs just because you can.
Experience the sound of brisket rubbing across your face
just like Ryan Seacrest does.
I bet you brisket on the face would help with acne.
Something about the fats.
Something about it.
Yeah, well it'd give you a youthful glow.
All right guys, we're gonna tweak it,
we're gonna go into R&D at Mythical Entertainment
and we won't burden you with the details
until it's fully fleshed out.
Thank you for listening and thank you for letting us know
what you think about Ear Biscuits using hashtag Ear Biscuits.
I regularly go on the Twitter and look up
the hashtag Ear Biscuits to see what you guys think.
Yeah.
So thank you for doing that.
And then he tells me about it and we talk about it.
Yeah.
Sometimes I'll search it too.
That's why there's two of us.