Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - 122: Our Honest Response to Your Feedback| Ear Biscuits Ep. 122
Episode Date: November 27, 2017We're getting candid about the recent changes to GMM, our creative process in redeveloping the show, draw inspiration from Eminem lyrics, and more on this week's Ear Biscuits. Listen to Ear Biscuits ...at:Â Apple Podcasts: http://applepodcasts.com/earbiscuits Spotify: http://spoti.fi/2oIaAwp Art19: https://art19.com/shows/ear-biscuits SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/earbiscuits Follow This Is Mythical: Facebook: http://facebook.com/ThisIsMythical Instagram: http://instagram.com/ThisIsMythical Twitter: http://twitter.com/ThisIsMythical Other Mythical Channels: Good Mythical Morning: https://www.youtube.com/user/rhettandlink2 Good Mythical MORE: https://youtube.com/user/rhettandlink3 Rhett & Link: https://youtube.com/rhettandlink Credits: 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
Discussion (0)
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 will be talking about the new Good Mythical Morning,
but more specifically, the response we've gotten
to the new Good Mythical Morning
and how we as creators have been.
And as humans.
Taking.
Have been taking it.
Taking it.
We've really been taking it right in the whoop.
In the ear.
Here's the, and spoiler alert,
we haven't been taking it that well.
No, well it's an interesting thing.
We'll get into all that but,
well we should just get into it.
Yeah, but we are going to get into all that right now.
Well, okay, so after a couple of episodes,
then in A Good Mythical More,
we addressed some feedback on the show,
being longer with four videos,
with different things happening.
It's amazing how good I felt after recording that video,
but it wasn't up yet and I was just giving,
I just felt like I was honest
and I was addressing some misconceptions
and you know, it's something we've done before.
And then when it comes out,
whenever something goes sideways
and that maybe we didn't anticipate
and we get negative feedback,
if we like write a long comment and explain ourselves
or if we make a vlog or do like we did in Good Mythical More
and explain ourselves that,
we tend to get on the same page with the audience.
And in anticipation of that, I actually felt better
because I'm like, oh gosh, I just wish I could respond
to all these comments.
But I think what we're doing.
And I think this, I don't know if that,
that didn't put it to rest.
So I think this is an opportunity for us to talk
at length about it and even more episodes have come out
and more comments have come in
and the conversation continues so it's another data point.
We can put, you know, we can talk even more,
I don't wanna say candidly
because we talked very candidly in Good Mythical More
but I think we will talk a little bit more candidly
in terms of like our feelings about it
because we haven't talked about,
we legitimately, just a second ago,
we were like, oh, we gotta do an Ear Biscuit.
And we were like, well, let's just talk about
how we've been processing this whole GMM thing
and like the comments and how we've been dealing with it,
the conversation we've been having because-
For a couple of minutes.
Yeah.
But then we were like, no,
let's just take this whole time and talk about it.
Yeah, we thought we might just do the intro,
but we're gonna do the whole thing.
And so we haven't planned what we're going to say.
So again, this is one of the great things
about Ear Biscuits, I would hope, from your perspective,
is that this is like a real-time processing
of how all this stuff, and of course,
we're recording this about a week and a half or so
before it'll go up, so who knows what'll happen
in the next week and a half, but this is where we're processing
Good Mythical Morning a week and a half
into the new format, having gotten that much feedback
from people.
So.
And maybe let's take a step back in order to set the table.
I assume as a listener, you've watched the episodes
and you've even watched us give feedback
in that Good Mythical More where we said,
our response to your comments
or whatever, I think that's what we called it,
or something very similar to that.
But for many, and so some of this is by way of review,
but for many, many months, we've been planning
the expansion of Good Mythical Morning
without making an announcement about it.
And we knew from the moment that we were going to
dramatically change Good Mythical Morning
by making it longer and by breaking it up into segments,
breaking the episode up into segments,
that it was a danger,
we were in a danger zone.
Oh yeah.
You know, because if it ain't broke, don't fix it.
And you know, you hear this in the comments.
It's like, if it ain't broke, don't fix it.
I wasn't asking for anything different.
But we were convinced that we needed to expand the show.
We needed to do something different with it.
More specifically, because I think this is,
one of the things that will happen hopefully
through this conversation is those of you
who have asked specific questions about why,
why did you guys do this?
If it ain't broke, don't fix it, so why did you do it?
We're gonna answer that.
Those of you who, many, many different accusations about,
you guys obviously are just doing this for money,
and you guys didn't address that in your Good Mythical More
candid conversation, so it wasn't that candid
because you didn't just come out and admit
that you're doing this for money.
We're gonna talk about that and address that directly.
We are?
Okay, great.
Again, we have no outline, but yeah. Yeah, because I've been thinking specifically
about those things and I didn't, you know,
I didn't know that we would get a response
to our response that was that.
It was like, come on guys,
it's just obviously all about money.
So I just wanna talk very candidly about exactly why
we're doing this
and then what it has been like to process.
First of all, and I'll also just go ahead and say that,
we haven't been, when you look at this
mathematically speaking, right, let's just say
500,000 people watch a video.
Out of 500,000 people who watch a video,
a couple thousand people comment.
Out of a couple thousand people who comment,
a couple hundred people say something negative.
Actually vocalize, and that may be me being generous,
it may be less than 100, and then of course,
some people thumbs those comments up or they reply to them.
But if you just look at the percentage,
you're talking about 500,000 people
and you're talking about around 100 people
who are vocalizing something negative on a video.
From a percentage standpoint, you're still talking about
a fraction of 1% of people who are vocalizing.
So it is important for us to put those things
into perspective.
Because many of you have said very positive things.
And so I just want to say up front that,
first of all, thank you for everybody
who's been very positive.
We're not asking you to be positive.
Like that's not why we do anything.
We don't get upset when we get negative comments
and be like, why are people so hard on us?
Why can't everybody just like everything that we do?
No, we know the game that we're playing.
We've been playing it for 11 years.
We make internet videos.
So we know that this is a two-way conversation
and we know that our content is shaped by audience reaction.
We're very familiar with that.
But I think you might be interested to hear
how we process it and how we kind of balance
the emotional toll that negativity takes on a creator's work
with the sort of challenge and opportunity that it presents.
Because I think that is the job of every creator,
but especially people who create things on the internet.
So I think there's just a whole mindset that goes into this
that's kind of developed over a decade of doing this.
And there have been these big waves
that have kind of crashed on us to help shape who we are
and this is the latest wave.
And we're kind of in the midst of it crashing on us
and I think it would be sort of an interesting picture
to kind of break that down, what it's like
to have the ocean crash into your face.
Well, I think one thing is trying to identify
I think one thing is trying to identify
and as we're able to talk to each other, we're able to help sort this out.
And what is an emotional response
and what is an unproductively,
what is an unproductive response and what, you know?
So I do think that there is a knee-jerk fear response
in that we felt a handful of times
or at least articulated to each other that is,
man, is this thing that we've built in this show
that has been successful, have we killed it?
You know, we literally have asked ourselves
that that's come up conversationally.
And it's not, it's just us articulating the fear
that that could be happening, you know?
And that's a fear, honestly, that has always existed
with everything that we've done, but there's more fear.
Well, when you have one thing that has 1,000 episodes
and then you toy with it and then people say,
after you release the first video, you have people saying,
well, you lost a subscriber.
The first response to that is an emotional one
and it is a fear response.
Oh my gosh, if that person said that,
how many other people are actually saying that?
And then-
And people go further than that.
Some people qualify their commitment before they qualify,
they express their discommitment.
I have been watching with my family
for the past four years or since season X.
And now we are officially as a family
departing from the fold.
We are no longer going to watch Good Mythical Morning
if this is what it has become.
And before you- Like literally the first day.
And before you- Literally the first day.
And before you engage,
before we engage rationally with that,
we engage emotionally, like the second you read that,
especially when you're scrolling through
and your eyes stick to everything
that could be your worst fear.
And just to give you a picture of how this happens,
just legitimately, literally how this happens,
at least for me, it's last Monday morning,
waking up to my alarm at 6.30
and thinking for a second, you know, I could,
I could just get up.
The healthy thing would probably be to just get up,
take a shower, eat breakfast, go to work,
and then like process people's response.
But of course, we also had to make
Good Mythical Morning that day, right?
So the day that it released is the day
that we were making more of it.
And we knew that we had to pour over the comments
to see if there was any adjustments that we could make
for what we were about to shoot.
And, and,
well, so what it was like for me is I didn't get up.
I rolled over because my alarm is my phone,
which is probably a mistake in and of itself,
and I didn't do that for a while,
but then I went back to it.
And so I cut the alarm off and then I'm like,
oh, here we go.
And I tap in to that first video and I immediately see,
you know, the show has been up for about three and a half
hours at 6.30 our time.
And I immediately see just a very large percentage
of dislikes.
You know, we typically would get, I don't know,
if I wake up and I see more than 100 dislikes
on something traditionally, by that point,
I know that there's something's wrong.
What did we do wrong?
Did we say something?
Are the cat lovers upset again?
Whatever we've done.
Because, and you say that because
that's what you saw this morning.
Right.
Now all of the mythical beast cat lovers are just.
Not able to take a joke?
Decimated.
I won't get into that right now.
Guys, I don't wish harm upon cats.
I just think it's funny to act like I do
and get your responses.
That's for another discussion. But then turns out it's not, at this point in our emotional state, it's funny to act like I do and get your responses. That's for another discussion.
But then turns out it's not, at this point
in our emotional state, it's not funny
to get those responses.
No, it's not.
So, but I see the negativity and then I begin
to look at the comments and interestingly,
the first thing that I see is a lot of people
talking about the lighting and the color and the sound.
And I think you might be, a lot of people talking about the lighting and the color and the sound. And I think you might be, a lot of comments were like,
guys, how in the world-
Would you think this is better?
How could you let this happen?
How could this happen?
How could you be so excited about something new
and then it looks and sounds like this?
You know- That's a good question.
It's actually a really good question.
But I will say that when,
this isn't a defense, it's just an explanation. When something has so many moving parts
and has changed so significantly on the back end
in order to accommodate what we're trying to accomplish,
there are things that quite honestly fall through the cracks
and it may seem crazy that something like that would happen.
I can honestly say that due to the schedule
and the way that everything worked
that we didn't actually see what exactly it would look like
before it went up.
And I think that we got a lot of new team members
and a lot of things happened and a lot of moving parts
and not everyone
really appreciated just how important it was
for that first episode to look and feel exactly like
what you've known and loved with GMM.
We had kind of communicated that but I think that
not everyone could.
It's hard for anybody to, we've experienced that
and we anticipated that experience but it was hard to convey that. It's like you anybody to, we've experienced that and we anticipated that experience
but it was hard to convey that.
It's like you've got a favorite dish.
You've got a burger that's made by a fast food chain
in a very particular way and the special sauce
tastes a very particular way and the burger is a certain way
and then all of a sudden you show up one day
and they say the Big Mac or whatever it is is better
and you're like but you changed the frickin' special sauce.
And the meat's different now.
This isn't better.
Why did you, everyone loved it.
Why are you changing it?
All great legitimate questions.
But I think the answer is we changed a decent amount
of the equipment that we used to make the burger,
but our aim was to make the same burger.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And we just didn't, it was, I'll just say,
it's very hard to anticipate that some equipment changes
would make the burger feel and taste
and be experienced that much differently.
I think this is a good analogy which I.
And it's so frustrating when it's like,
oh my gosh, it's like, that is something
we didn't intentionally wanna change.
And now it's so, so much top of mind in the comments.
It's like, oh, you know, at least it's like,
we 100% agree and we're fixing that as soon as we can.
Well, and let me say that I think that the fast food
restaurant analogy will hold up for a number
of these aspects, including the whole money thing,
which we'll get to in a second.
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It isn't that we wanted to change the specialty burger,
it's that we wanted to introduce new menu items
in addition to the burger.
Yeah.
And in order to do that, we had to hire people
and we had to establish new systems.
And initially, the burger that you knew and loved
was compromised.
That, and we look, you know what?
Unintentionally. Unintentionally.
We learned a lot of, we have learned a lot of lessons
already, but just know that the,
and some of these, first of all,
the color has been updated.
The color is still being tweaked.
We're still dialing things in.
Again, it's new lights and it's new cameras,
which ultimately are much better
and I think can create a much better experience.
Ultimately, it's 4K and not everybody watches it 4K.
I get that.
But we're kind of sort of future-proofing the show.
But we're continuing to tweak it.
So especially that first part of the show
gets back to that place where it's like,
that's the burger that I know and I love.
But now I've got these new menu items that have been added to it. of the show gets back to that place where it's like, that's the burger that I know and I love,
but now I've got these new menu items
that have been added to it.
That is the intention, that's the plan.
But we do acknowledge that that's not exactly what happened.
The burger didn't taste as good.
Yeah, we get it.
Fact. Listen, when we watched
back the first couple episodes,
you guys think that you can see
when we're not comfortable or when there's something
that we're thinking about?
You know, I actually saw a really interesting interview
with John Lithgow talking about, I told you about this,
but talking about getting ready to film Daddy's Home 2
and how-
With Marky Mark and-
Will Ferrell and Mel Gibson
and how they all lived together for like a week
before the shooting of the movie
to become comfortable with one another because quote,
"'You cannot make great comedy if you feel threatened.'"
And I thought that was so profound
because I totally understood what he meant.
In our career, we've gotten into situations so many times,
especially if you show up on a set somewhere
and you're like, ah, this is the first day
working with this director,
this is the first time working with this actor,
like especially on like a buddy system situation.
And we're meeting somebody for the first time
and then 15 minutes later, we're acting against them
because we don't operate at the budgets
that are required to go have a camping trip
with somebody for a week before you start production,
nor do we have the time.
But I totally relate to that because if you feel
any sort of discomfort or fear, and we were on this new set
which is a lot like the old set but it's new,
and there were new people, the same old people,
but now new people in addition to them filming us.
Everything you saw was supposed to look the same.
But everything that we saw looked dramatically different.
And the day before we shot the first episode
was the first day we sat in the chairs most of the day
and tweaked through stuff.
But at a certain point you just gotta do it, man.
And it was,
we weren't as ready as I wanted to be.
Yeah, I mean I think- And you never are.
Well, in retros-
It's the first day of anything.
In retrospect, and we talked about this,
we told you guys a lot,
we talked about this on tour quite a bit,
that the combination of writing the book
and then going on tour, finishing up Buddy System,
and then starting GMM 22, we call it GMM 22
because it adds up to at least 22 minutes.
This was too much for us, ultimately,
in the way that all these things coincided
because typically, like we were coming back
from a trip to Texas, I believe,
and we basically got back, had one day looking
at the new set and then shot the show.
And that isn't ideally how we would have done things,
especially in retrospect when we look at ourselves
and we're like, we just weren't in a groove
and we didn't complete, we weren't comfortable,
we felt threatened.
That may be hard to understand
for people who aren't performers,
but you know how you act differently amongst friends
and then strangers, right?
And there's this comfort level that,
okay, these people know me and they know,
they appreciate me for who I am and I can be myself.
And I can mess up.
Those things translate into performance,
especially with the type of show that we do,
which is designed to be sort of rooted
in an authentic experience by us.
And you know what, I think a silver lining is that
I think we really grew to appreciate one of the strengths,
the strengths, I cannot speak.
We really grew to appreciate one of the strengths, the strengths, I cannot speak.
We really grew to appreciate one of the strengths of our show which is honesty.
You know, I mean, again, there's a collective wisdom
that we try to glean from the comments
and when words like sincerity or sincere or honest
or honesty come up in there, it's like, okay,
that's something that I think we embodied,
but I think we are much more intimately acquainted
with that being a cornerstone of what our show is,
like a level of honesty
in our performance that it's actually performance may not even, it is a performance but it's not,
do you know what I'm saying?
It's not actually 100% of performance.
It's like, it's honest being and it's a real,
there's a real conversation.
We're being ourselves.
There's real remarks.
We're reacting in the moment.
And you know what, we're still,
every second we shoot something,
I'm still thinking about can this be more honest?
Oh yeah.
Because we want it to be funny.
We want it to be great.
We want it to be the best.
We want it to be awesome.
You know, and you're thinking about all these things
and we're trying a lot of different things
in the different segments.
And it's a funny thing to be thinking about,
am I being honest?
Yeah.
But that's a nice byproduct of this
in terms of knowing that that's a cornerstone
of how we interact with our show.
Yeah, well, let's talk about why,
because I think that people could be still asking,
but why, why would you do this?
And we haven't even talked about what we're gonna say here.
So, I mean, let me just start by saying that
before any of this opportunity
to do this expanded GMM came along,
Link and I were having discussions about when,
what's the name of our show?
Good Mythical Morning?
Good Mystical Morning.
Good Mystical Morning.
When Good Mythical Morning would end.
Now that's, it's, you know,
if we would've talked about what we were gonna talk about
before we are now talking about it,
we probably would have talked ourselves out of you
saying what you just said.
Right.
Because I think.
And that's why I didn't tell you.
And no, I think I ultimately would have said,
yeah, we should talk about it.
I mean, I just talked about honesty
for the past couple of minutes.
So I'm glad that you said it, but again,
it makes me nervous that all of a sudden you're nervous.
What you were thinking about?
They were thinking about quitting Good Mythical Morning
or they're thinking about quitting right now.
I will tell you, quitting is the farthest thing
from my mind right now.
Oh of course.
But.
Because of what we've done.
Because of this.
But let me. And that's the because of this. But let me.
And that's the exact reason why.
And let me qualify,
because this is super candid.
So I remember over a year ago,
just starting the conversation,
and again, this is most often gonna come from me
because I'm always living in the next moment.
And I'm living in the security of something working.
Yeah, and I wanna talk about,
we're gonna get into all the money stuff and the why,
because I think it's in our DNA, right?
So the reason that over a year ago,
I was initiating a conversation just saying,
I think we should set an end date.
And I didn't necessarily throw out any times,
and it wasn't months, it was years.
An end date for Good Mythical Morning because
the nature of what we do and who we are is that we create
and we evolve and we change and we embark on new challenges
and that's what we get off on and that's who we are.
And I know that people don't wanna hear that
and people are like, but this show means this much to me
and why would you abandon us?
It's tough because we know, that's, it's tough.
Because we do understand that what we do for some people, it's almost like a service.
We're like in the service industry of what we do
in giving you guys something.
But I'll be just quite honest and say
that I'm not gonna do that at the expense
of my personal sanity,
at the expense of my family's sanity or health.
And also the reason that we started Good Mythical Morning
is because it was a new thing,
a new challenge to embark on.
And I do think that everything in life
should have a beginning, middle and end.
And I don't know when the end of anything
that we're doing is going to come,
but it's just in our nature to say,
let's not just let something just dwindle off into oblivion,
but let's do something really, really well
for a certain amount of time,
and then when it's time has come to end,
let's end it and try something new.
And I've always approached things,
we've always approached things like that.
I might initiate some of that,
but that doesn't mean that's not the way
that you also approach things.
Sometimes you just might need to be talked into it,
but it's in your nature as well.
Well, I remember one of the main conversations
we were having and if you were to guess
when this conversation happened,
well, I'm about to tell you so go ahead
and get the guess in your mind.
It was on the way back from Venice Beach
after we were shooting the roller skating scene
from Buddy System season one.
So we're talking a year and a half ago, guys,
that we were talking about how much longer,
because we had taken a break from Good Mythical Morning
to shoot Buddy System and we were really enjoying doing it.
It was like, it was super engaging for us.
It was like a new muscle was being,
a new part of our brain was being challenged and awakened.
But we were talking about what,
we had to talk about going back to Good Mythical Morning
because we had to have some preliminary discussions
about what's gonna, you know,
the conversation we normally have,
what's gonna change, what do we want to bring to the table
when we start shooting the next season?
And the energy that we brought to it was,
I just don't wanna talk about it.
I don't know if I wanna do it, you know?
And we knew we were going to do it,
but we were just being honest about
how excited we were to do it.
And it was because it was going back to the same thing
we had done so much,
and is it gonna really just be the same thing?
How much stuff can we keep eating?
Yeah.
I mean, specifically, we're talking about those things.
And this actually speaks, just briefly, sidebar, I mean, specifically, we're talking about those things.
Well, and this actually speaks, just briefly, sidebar, it speaks to the criticism that a lot of people have had
about Good Mythical Morning over the years.
And I see these comments kind of being filtered in
with everything else that's going on now.
It's like, why don't you guys go back
to what the show was initially,
just two guys, two friends talking to each other?
Well, you guys, we're way past that.
We've been past that for a number of seasons.
And the very simple reaction to that is
we didn't want to do that five times a week.
That's not what we wanted to do.
It's funny because-
And we quickly ran out of stories to tell
and things to talk about and needed things to do.
And that's why the show became-
In that same conversation,
I proposed that,
I was like, not in the fall, but then let's, in January,
let's go back and let's just bare bones this thing
and let's make it something like that.
Because at least it'll like shake us up
and it'll be, there'll be no, it won't be about anything
that we do besides the thoughts in our mind
and the words coming out of our mouth.
By the way, a lot of what we have then funneled
into Ear Biscuits.
Yeah, a lot of us.
And got excited about.
So it's not that we weren't excited
about having conversations like the one
we're having right now.
But we talked about it and then that was the conclusion.
We can't take a step backward like that.
But we also remembered what it was like to do that.
Right.
So before we get into specifically the very specific
catalyst that led to why we're doing four videos a day
and why you see YouTube originals,
everybody's like why do I see YouTube originals
on every thumbnail?
We're gonna explain all that.
But I just wanna talk quickly about our trip to DC
and how we went into the Air and Space Museum
and we spent a lot of time at the Wright Brothers exhibit
and a lot of things sort of like crystallized in my mind
about how I wanted to explain what we do.
Now let me just start right up top by saying
that us comparing ourselves to the Wright Brothers
is inherently pretentious and I'm not saying
that we're doing anything as significant
as building a plane.
We're not inventing a whole new industry.
We're just making internet videos which the ones
that get the most views are the ones in which Link vomits.
Okay this is not sophisticated stuff.
There's nothing to be commended about.
We're just having a blast on the internet
and we found a loophole and we're getting paid
very well to do this.
That's just the honest truth.
But we did play the Wright Brothers at one point
in an epic rap battle, so we have some rights.
And the first flight was in our home state.
It was, even though they're from Ohio
and we know that the people of Ohio claim them.
There's a kindred spirit there.
They did it in North Carolina, so screw you, Ohio.
But yeah, they have this room that walks you through
what they were like as people
and then the different stages of invention
that led to the first powered plane.
And all the things. The first plane,
and it's there, guys. The powered plane. And all the things. The first plane, and it's there, guys.
The literal plane.
All the things in this particular exhibit,
I think the reason that it resonates so much with us
is because you've got these two guys who are brothers
who have known each other their whole lives,
which that's a great way to describe us,
either a married couple or brothers, more than friends.
What about married brothers? Married brothers, that than friends. What about married brothers?
Married brothers, that's us, incestuous brothers.
Oh, that took a left turn.
And also working on something that doesn't have
an incredible amount of outside influence or precedent.
So yes, so it's just like two dudes in a room
kind of batting things back and forth
and constantly updating things and trying to make it better
and having a goal in mind and just working
and probably fighting a lot and arguing over that.
It was just such a compelling story.
And then we saw the different iterations of flight.
And one of the first things that they ever did,
of course they were bicycle mechanics at first,
but then they moved on from being interested in bicycles
to saying, okay, let's figure this flight thing out.
And I'm sure they were incredible bicycle mechanics.
And I'm sure that they were doing some incredible things
in the world of bicycling.
And I'm sure they had people who loved
what they did with bicycles,
but they weren't meant to just keep doing bicycles
because it was in their nature
to try to move to the airplane.
And I'm sure that when they started experimenting
with flight, there were people who loved their bicycles
who got very upset with them.
Again, this is a pretentious analogy.
I don't think that what we're doing is as significant
as moving from bicycles to flight, but just stick with me.
Stop being so pretentious.
And then when they got to this point
where they actually at one point they invented a kite
that was a bi-wing kite that was up there
on display in this museum.
And this is the beginning of them kind of figuring out
gliding and just the power of a wing
way before they got to propelled an actual plane
with a motor. Steering.
Steering or yeah, or, or a person on it.
And I'm sure that kite was super cool
and I'm sure there were people who loved that kite
and were like, this is the coolest thing,
you guys invented this awesome double wing kite.
In some ways, asking us to continue
to make the exact same show,
to make the exact same product in the exact same way
that people like.
It's like telling the Wright Brothers
to stop with the bicycle or to stop with the bi-wing.
It's in their nature to continue to iterate,
to learn, to move, to do things that could potentially fail.
I mean, they took a huge risk when they stopped doing
a very, very reliable business and started trying
to do something that was pretty harebrained and crazy
and people could get hurt and people could fail
and other people could beat them to it.
But it wasn't like they just started and said,
hey, wouldn't it be neat to make an airplane?
That's not how this whole thing works.
And I think if you're a creative person,
I think you'll relate to this.
You can't help but create and innovate.
If you're creative, you're not doing something
to try to meet some nebulous goal.
You're not doing something to try to
meet somebody's expectations.
No, you're literally doing it because you cannot help.
The reason Good Mythical Morning has changed,
the reason that we started Good Mythical Morning,
the reason that we did Buddy System,
the reason that we wrote the book,
the reason that we did a tour,
the reason that we're gonna do whatever
we're gonna do next year,
is because we can't help it.
We honestly can't help it.
That's the starting point for everything that we do.
It is in our DNA, we're built to do this kind of thing
and to create and innovate and we can't stop it.
The difficult thing is when you fail.
I mean, it was fascinating that once they,
it was after they had patented the plane
that they started meeting with people.
Of course, the first way to make money
is through military exploits of a plane.
And they were doing a demonstration
where they took a guy up who was a potential buyer from the military
and they're like flying him around
and showing him the capabilities
and they crash and kill the guy.
He died and Orville was very, very seriously injured
in that as well.
And thank goodness our failures are not life and death
but to us on an emotional level sometimes.
Sometimes they feel that way.
It's been feeling that way every day for us
because every, well, I won't say every single day,
but I would say every day we shoot,
there's at least something or that we're trying something
in a segment that is not what Good Mythical Morning
has ever been.
It's something new that is experimental
and sometimes before we do it, we're like,
we have to, we can't film this if we don't believe in it.
We have to believe in it or it'll never take off,
so to speak.
And while we believe in everything that we do,
we also firmly believe that not everything is going to work.
And some things we don't believe in as wholeheartedly
as other things and you know, it's difficult
to give it your best and then when it's done,
that's the next point, you're like, that didn't work.
And we're not at a point, because of the way we've committed
in terms of production to like building these episodes,
because of the way we've committed in terms of production to like building these episodes, we can't.
And I mean, this is not ideal, but we can't cut something.
You know, it's like, so there's a silver lining
to putting something out that's like, you know what,
this is not our best work.
And it is, we're still going to learn something.
And it can be argued that you learn a lot more from failure than from success
but let me tell you, it's hard.
Last night, Stevie sent a Slack and she was like,
fans aren't gonna like so and so, so and so segment.
And we're like, and we're, because she saw it
and we're like, we already knew that.
And then I'm like, can we pull it?
Can't pull it. She's like, can't pull it.
You know, and it's like.
So you put it out there and you learn your lesson.
Why are we, now we're inviting more critical feedback
that we already know.
And that's like walking into a burning building
where there's no one to rescue is what it feels like.
You know, it's like this is just for our own pain.
Let's come back to the whole,
like the way that we're seeing the process
of like throwing things out there and learning from them.
Because I wanna continue with the story of like why,
because I still haven't talked about money
and I know everybody wants to hear about that.
We should go back to that because,
so we've made the point that we're,
from a creative standpoint, we're compelled to remain,
we have to remain engaged, it's what we talked about
and it's just how we work.
And when we say things as audacious,
in some of your minds, as one day GMM will end
or we are having that conversation,
it's because we know that when it ends,
something else begins and that's what we live for, right?
And so, and there is a balance between wanting to do things
that make audiences happy because it's so amazing how like
there's people who do daily vlogs and then they stop
and then the people can love you so much
and the day you change the thing that you've been giving
them, they become like a druggie
who has suddenly been taken off of their supply.
And they turn, we read the drug dealers in this analogy,
and they suddenly hate the drug dealer.
And so we, I've seen it a million times
how quickly an audience will turn on you
and begin making all kinds of accusations
about how you've gotten to Hollywood, you've lost focus,
you're not rooted anymore, you forgot who you are,
you forgot where you came from, it's all about the money,
and this to begin just unloading judgment on you,
and it can be, it's, you know, I love the relationship
we have with the fans, and I love the fact that
we do take feedback, and they have made all this possible.
We couldn't, two guys just hanging out in a room
being funny with each other does not a job make
unless there are people to watch them
and then sell advertising against.
That's how this whole thing works.
But it just, just to be completely honest,
it just kinda sucks to know that the day that
you take something away or you change something,
the avalanche starts and it was never about liking you.
It was about liking what you were being given.
And I know that there's a lot of mythical beasts
who that's not what it's about at all
and have been, are gonna be supportive through everything
and kinda get this, but there's a lot of people out there
who this is a very, this is a transactional relationship.
We produce, they consume, and the moment we change
the thing they consume, they get very mad at the producer.
And it's just a reality, and I'm not complaining.
I'm not complaining about it at all.
We signed up for this.
It's just an unfortunate reality of humanity
that it's not a love relationship,
it's a consumer relationship.
And the moment that it changes,
they become very angry consumers. I get it, it's a consumer relationship. And the moment that it changes, they become very angry consumers.
I get it, it's just an unfortunate reality.
But let's talk specifically about the money.
Because I think those people who are levying
this particular accusation that, just be honest guys,
you did this to get more ad revenue.
Four times the videos, four times the ad revenue.
I think that that is, I would venture to say
that the people who have levied that accusation
are A, not particularly creative people,
and B, definitely not business owners.
It's an interesting thing to run a creative business.
When your business is to entertain people,
there are two things that you have to weigh constantly.
The first that you have to weigh is,
are you creating something that is going to be received well?
Like, are you doing a good job creating the thing
that you're supposed to use to entertain people?
But the second thing you have to ask,
and you have to ask these questions in tandem
at the same time, every single time is,
is this a financially responsible choice?
So, and especially when you get to a place
where we're at right now, where this isn't just two guys,
this is a corporation, has been a corporation for years,
for like seven years, but now it's a place where
a lot of people are working,
a lot of people are depending on their livelihood.
There's dozens and dozens of people
who work at Mythical Entertainment.
So we're not just these dudes who come in
and just say on a whim,
this is what we wanna do today, guys.
No, every decision we make weighs how our company
and the people who work here are going to be affected,
and frankly, how our futures are gonna be affected
and how my kids' college education is gonna be affected
and how my retirement is gonna be affected.
And so we don't make a decision
that we don't see as financially responsible.
That doesn't mean we don't take risks.
This whole thing was a risk.
But yeah, so when you say this is all about the money,
I would say that it's this is all about the money, I would say that it's not,
it is definitely not all about the money,
but we do believe that this was a wise financial decision
in the long term, but that wasn't what motivated it
because the creative is the first thing that gets us going
and then we make sure that this decision
is one that is financially responsible.
But the specifics of the decision,
I think we should just explain.
And I would just say, I'll explain,
from a business standpoint,
the reason why Google and YouTube wants to invest in this
is they have their interest and we have our interest.
Now, for them,
their interest is to attract sponsors
and add investment into YouTube so they can make more money.
Now, I'm not gonna say that's their only interest.
I'm not them.
But you can't, we're still at a point in the industry
where we're trying to help potential sponsors
understand that sponsoring internet content
is just as valuable or I would argue more valuable
than a television spot or a radio spot
or whatever other type of billboard spot
that people are advertising in.
Back of a bus bench spot, whatever it is.
And if you've just got these shareable videos,
like internet videos, they're just,
the people with the money are just thinking,
well I'm not gonna, they just don't quite get it yet.
But if you start to say, okay, there is original programming,
you understand that on Amazon, you understand that
on Netflix now, advertiser, well YouTube,
this is YouTube talking, we also have that.
And we're creating properties which have more engagement
and you have a more powerful opportunity to reach people
with your ad here than in those places.
But the thing that helps it click into place for them
is if it's a show, if it's like a half hour show.
And so that's why they came to us
with the opportunity to do it.
And they came to us at a time.
And let me just say, and our interest in responding
to that was, we want to continue to shape
the landscape of entertainment.
You know, I would love to fast forward years from now
and see that there are people coming up creating content
that is seen as just as legitimate a form of entertainment
as the way people think about Game of Thrones
or any non-scripted show that is,
Storage Wars or whatever the, whatever's going on in the world or any non-scripted show that is,
Storage Wars or whatever's going on
in the world of non-scripted entertainment
on cable television. Storage Wars.
That was a big one a few years back, right?
We are excited about, again, as part of experimentation
and helping to create things that shape the landscape
and I think if we just kept making those short form videos,
it wasn't gonna do what this could potentially do
in legitimately making Good Mythical Morning
what most people, not just advertisers,
would think of as a show and not just an internet video
that comes out every day.
Well, because they came to us at a time when,
like I said, we were having conversations about,
well, when is this gonna end?
Like, is this all that this show can ever be?
And then right when we're having those conversations,
YouTube comes along and says, hey, we're looking to invest
in some YouTube original programming
that wouldn't be behind the paywall like YouTube Red
so people don't have to pay for it.
That's never gonna happen with Good Mythical Morning.
That was a non-starter for us.
Good Mythical Morning is the kind of show
that will always be free.
So this isn't like, oh, the first step,
and the next step is it's gonna be YouTube Red show.
No, Buddy System is the kind of show
that is financed in a different way
and has to be behind the paywall.
Good Mythical Morning is not.
But they came to us and said,
we want to help you guys make this show
something bigger than it is.
Something that will be even more a part
of the cultural conversation.
And I think this will answer some of your questions
because people are like, well YouTube is making them do this.
YouTube has changed the color.
Somebody at YouTube said it should be yellow.
No, the interesting thing is that we are 100%
in charge of the creative.
We can't do anything that they would be like,
okay, well that's gonna piss off an advertiser,
but we don't do that anyway.
We've never, like we don't do things
that are questionable and controversial.
So that's why advertisers have always had a home
on our show.
But they said, we want to just give you guys the resources
that you need to do the thing that you want to.
So the whole four videos a day,
specifically what's going into each video,
what we're trying to do with each segment,
what we're going to continue to try to do,
it's all coming from us and our team.
And the team that has always been there.
We've supplemented that team and we've brought in
new people for more ideas.
But this is not a YouTube is sitting there waiting for,
oh, change this, let's make it sound different.
Let's make you guys sound like you're further away
because that's what we're about at YouTube.
Let's make it more yellow because yellow is the new YouTube.
No, guys, those were things that happened as a result
of a lot of things happening at once
and us kind of losing the ability
to control every single element,
but we very quickly course corrected
some of those technical things.
But we're the one who said,
yeah, so we dictated,
all the creative in the show comes from us and our team.
The same way it has always been.
Yeah.
And we said yes to the opportunity
because we wanted to develop the show
for all the reasons we talked about
and just to make it, add more to it,
to add more sides to the fast food menu
of Good Mythical Morning.
Maybe even turn it into a sit down restaurant experience.
But.
To keep pushing it.
We wanted to, we knew we had to make them segments.
You know, the original assumption was,
well you'll just have one long video.
Well we did that, it's called The Mythical Show
and we said, you're half hour of not having to click around
on the internet. Well you know what? Turns of not having to click around on the internet.
Well you know what?
Turns out people wanted to click around on the internet.
We were wrong.
It was a lesson we learned that nothing reaches out
when you have a big honking 22 minute to 30 minute video.
So we knew, almost as another non-starter,
we couldn't get in on this deal unless each segment.
Was its own video.
Was its own video.
We wanted people to be able to experience it
the same way that you experience any video
that's about one thing.
So that it can.
Wanted to also be a show that you could watch together
every single day.
So it had to, I mean, each segment had to be able to trend.
It had to be able to be shareable and commentable and to work within the ecosystem of YouTube.
Now the thing we asked from YouTube
and that we're still working on is let's make these
four videos plus one which is Good Mythical More
work in a way that doesn't.
That feels more like a show.
That feels like a show and that plays through like a show.
And those are product changes
that are still being worked on.
Just so you know, so right now we've got it set up
so that you click on the green video
and that puts you in order.
And sometimes that particular episode designation tool,
that segment designation tool is not up and running
because there's a lot of things that have to happen.
There's technical things that are being worked out.
Anytime you're innovating and trying something new,
sometimes you can find that you're a little bit ahead
of the technology.
We've seen this a million different times.
And that's gonna be frustrating for your experience,
but it's all gonna be worked out
because we're never gonna get there
if we don't start getting there.
You never get there unless you start going.
But I think that it's an interesting thing
to talk about the comments that we've gotten about that.
Like people saying things like,
guys just put it in one video.
Guys, just put it in one video and then also post
all the other videos on their own.
I like the Avett Brothers say,
people love to talk about things they don't know about.
People love to talk on things they don't know about.
One of my favorite lyrics.
And we're guilty of that a lot.
But YouTube commenters are very, especially guilty of that.
People love to start offering their opinion.
I actually saw one comment that was like,
you guys should do,
he actually laid out like a schedule
for how we were supposed to,
we should shoot our videos during the day.
Like shoot a video, then take an hour break, Like shoot a video, then take an hour break,
then shoot another video, then take an hour break.
It's like the audacity that people have
to start giving suggestions as if we haven't thought about
a lot of these things, just mind boggling sometimes.
I'm sorry to get frustrated about it, but it's just crazy.
But specifically the people who have said,
make one long video, don't split it up,
are not stopping to consider
exactly what Link just laid out.
Like, we know how YouTube works.
We've been doing this for a very long time.
We know that if you put a video up
that has a bunch of different things
and isn't about one thing,
it doesn't have nearly the reach that it could have.
Because yes, we do want it to get a lot of views
and we do want it to work
and we do want it to get a lot of views and we do want it to work and we do want it to be sustainable financially.
That's why we made the choices that we did
and we're up against some challenges with the product
but those challenges will be overcome
but it's just amazing to me how quickly people
begin to throw out things and just,
I would just encourage people to just be like,
why don't I just stop and think,
maybe they thought about this particular thing
or maybe I should pose this as a question.
Well, you can get frustrated with those comments,
but those are ones that are easy to ignore.
You can ignore those, there's no truth there.
I just don't think we should be dwelling on that.
In order to shift the conversation,
I will say that question mark amount of time down the road.
that question mark amount of time down the road.
If we, if Good Mythical Morning, this new version of the show,
is not better than the old version,
then we have failed and that is on us.
Yeah, of course. The two of us.
Now, it's definitely not guaranteed to work.
No, now the.
It's a risk.
The tough thing is,
is what's gonna happen,
how long is it gonna take for us to figure it out enough?
You know, we say things,
so that's why we're still in this scary place.
And it's weird because,
well, we say things like,
well, if we make the first video, what we call the A block,
the first segment of the show, if we just give them
basically the same experience as Good Mythical Morning,
this is what we talked about before,
I think that's coalesced more in our minds even since then.
Like, they don't, you know, if it's seven minutes,
we're getting complaints.
It's like, well, we gotta make sure that we're making,
we need to make that first video the best video it can be
and that should probably, that can,
we have an, they have an appetite for that
to be a little longer than the shorter versions
that we're making sometimes.
It's weird because we didn't intentionally
make them that short I don't think.
It just kinda happened.
I think, actually I think we did.
I think with like the weird ways to open a cereal box,
we did three before we would do four or five.
And you know, if we used to do five and now we did three,
maybe we'll do four.
Well you know, those are reasonable tweaks
that we'll be making.
And I think in the short term,
we just have to make sure that like if we're saying,
all right, the first video is gonna be
basically the old GMM experience,
and then we're adding the sides to your meal
that you didn't get before.
Then it's just a question of those other things
that we're adding,
do you find yourself wanting those over time? And if you don't, then that's just a question of those other things that we're adding, do you find yourself wanting those
over time and if you don't, then that's our problem
and that is our challenge.
Like, you know, it's frustrating to get over the speed bumps
of the transition of the technical stuff, the color,
the sound and you know, the stuff that you'll never need
to know about about the back end of how things work now,
so that you have the experience you want.
But once you get through that, it's like,
are we actually gonna create a show that's good?
I mean, is the second segment, is the third segment?
Well, let me say that I think that, well, two things.
Number one, I don't think we finished the money question.
Oh, you wanna go back to that? All right, so let's Number one, I don't think we finished the money question. Oh, you wanna go back to that.
All right, so let's pause my question.
Let's go back to the money question.
Because I was leading up to something
and they never let me get there.
All right, yeah, so.
Because I wanna adequately answer that
because people are gonna be like,
he's still dodging the question.
So we wanna make money?
No, that's not,
in order to have a sustainable company that will outlive us,
we want it to be financially sustainable.
To run a company of this size does take money.
So every decision that we make,
we make sure that it is going to ultimately
be a better financial decision than the previous decision.
That does not motivate initial decisions.
We said a long time ago, we sat down many years ago and said,
the only rule in this business
is we never make a decision just for the money.
We will never just do something just for the money.
We are led by our creative inclinations,
but then you bet your butt that we're going
to take the best offer that we get.
We go with the publisher that gives us the best deal.
We go with the provider that gives us the best deal. We go with the provider that gives us the best contract
because we're responsible business people
and that's just the way we operate.
Also given that people will let us do
what we wanna do creatively,
which is definitely the case with what we're doing
with YouTube.
But I will say that we don't go off to Calabasas
and buy $7 million homes.
That's not how we operate, okay?
There are YouTubers who do that.
We've never lived a lifestyle that was like,
hey, let's siphon as much money out of this company
and hire as few people as possible
so we can go be rich fat daddies.
That isn't how we operate.
That's not what we're into.
We make good money doing what we do,
but the vast majority of what we make,
we reinvest into this company, into other people
and other ideas and more of our ideas
to try to do the next thing.
And so while there's no guarantee that this particular move
will be more lucrative than if we had never done it,
so it's not like, okay, we made X amount of money
and we're making 10X money by doing this,
or we're making 4X money, that is definitely not the case.
If you look, and it's also a different structure
in how all this is happening.
I just think.
Well, let me just finish my thought.
Finish your thought.
So it's not like we're gonna be making
four times
as much revenue by doing this.
You can look at the numbers of how many views
that we're getting.
We didn't think that, oh, we get a million and a half views
on one segment every day.
If we make four, we'll get six million views.
We know that's not how the internet works.
We're not getting as many views on any one segment
as we would have gotten before.
So that's not why we're doing what we're doing. If this is successful, we stand to make more money
with this model than the other model,
but that isn't the motivation for doing it.
And we take all that money and we reinvest it back
into the company to continue to develop new ideas
because that's what we're in this for.
We're not in it to buy seven million dollar homes.
We're in it to make incredible things
that will leave a legacy.
That's why we do what we do.
But I also don't think it's fair
or to be in a position where we're defending our purchases.
That's true.
Or honestly critiquing how much other people pay
for their houses.
You're right, you're right. So let's not do that. That's true. Or honestly critiquing how much other people pay for their houses. I mean.
You're right, you're right.
So let's not do that.
I just don't think, I don't, I just think that that.
I'm just saying there's no evidence for saying
you guys are all about money.
There's no tangible evidence in our lives.
Even if, you can care about money if you want to.
Well I feel like if somebody, you know,
when you're making an illusion to people spending
X amount of dollars on their house
and whatever place it is, I think our point is that,
I just don't think you should scrutinize that.
This is what I think, and we've talked about this.
I just find it weird that,
for the restaurant analogy that we've talked about,
if you add something to the menu and then people show up
at the restaurant and they say,
what are they doing adding something to the menu?
They're just trying to make more money.
It's like well.
It's a ridiculous assertion.
Walk back to the chef and say,
I don't appreciate you adding this thing to the menu
for X, Y, and Z reasons,
because you're just doing it for the money.
It's like, well, if you want the new green beans,
pay for the green beans or not.
I mean, and again, these are not mythical beasts
like who are saying this.
These are like more of the casual commenter kind of thing.
But I just don't want to do to other creators
what we don't want people to do to us,
which is assess how you spend your money.
Hey, listen, you can spend your money however you want to.
I'm not judging anyone for buying a $7 million house.
I'm just saying that.
But we're being judged.
That's not, to say that this is all about money,
if I had a Lamborghini and a $7 million house,
you could be like, okay, these guys are all about money.
I don't, you know.
But could you?
I mean, I don't know.
I mean like.
If we didn't wanna, I could say,
let's not hire five more people and buy a Lamborghini, yes,
but that's not what we do, we hire five more people.
That's just, that's how we operate.
I can't fit in a Lamborghini anyway.
But so the, but yeah, it's like making that accusation
of a restaurant.
We're putting something else on the menu.
I don't see why you would complain about that.
And you go back to the chef and you're like.
You can complain about what the green beans taste like.
You can, yeah.
But don't complain about putting green beans on the menu.
Well, and it's like going back there
and complaining about new menu items
and then the chef says,
but it's in my heart to make chicken nuggets.
It's in my heart to add chicken nuggets to the menu.
And yes, if the chicken nuggets sell well,
we'll make more money and maybe we'll be able to open another restaurant
and that's good for the economy and that's good for you
and that gives you more options
and there'll be a restaurant closer to you.
And by the way, I wanna buy a Lamborghini.
I mean, okay, fine, dude.
I mean.
And these are accusations that are never levied
at traditional celebrities.
Let me just say that.
So like when people find out that
some actor gets $10 million to make a movie, they don't say, I'm not gonna go watch his work
because he got paid $10 million to make that movie.
I'm not into this because this is all about,
every movie that you watch,
the intention is for it to make money.
Everything that you're a fan of,
with very, very few exceptions, the intention is to make money. Everything that you're a fan of, with very, very few exceptions,
the intention is to make money.
If you're supporting someone on Patreon,
you may say, well why don't you just do that?
Why don't people just pay you directly
for what you're doing?
Well, the reason that that person is asking you to pay
is because the intention is to make money with it.
Now, it may not be the first intention.
The first intention is probably to be creative
or to make chicken nuggets or to do whatever.
But ultimately, they can't sustain it and they can't do it
because we live in an economy.
We live in a world where money is how we,
it's currency-based.
This isn't a barter system.
So because currency is involved,
these things have to be financially sustainable.
And I think a lot of these comments come from kids.
Again, I think a lot of comments come from kids
who don't understand economics
and they definitely never run a business.
I guarantee you that there's not one person
who owns a business who has made that accusation.
Yeah, and that's why we should move on
because we're getting worked up, but it's not.
Yeah, I just think it's,
I think it's worth saying because I saw the comment
so many times and I took that one personally because,
if you tell me that the color's off, yeah, you're right.
If you tell me that it sounds off, yeah, you're right.
We're working on it.
You tell me that this particular segment isn't funny,
yeah, you're probably right
because if you don't think it's funny, it's not funny to you
and we're gonna try to keep being funny.
But if you say something that's just a bold-faced lie,
I know.
That just is especially upsetting.
I agree with that and I also have been upset.
I guess I'm concerned and I just wanted to say that like,
is it, you listener right now
are probably just as frustrated
as we are, you know?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Here's the thing, like we did that Vice interview,
like within the hour of shooting the vlog
where we responded to comments,
and like I made the comment that during that thing
I was like I didn't know if I was gonna start crying.
I just had that like, or if I was just angry.
You know, it's just like when you get so frustrated,
you just like, you just find yourself crying
at like an angry, frustrated cry.
And that's what I described in the Vice interview.
And then I'm getting a lot of feedback on Twitter that people feel sorry for me.
And it's, you know,
we're verbally processing this thing, but I don't know.
It's not, I don't want you guys to feel sorry for us.
I also don't want you to feel like we're accusing you.
I just want, you know, I just wanna be understood
by the people who maybe aren't even listening.
So that's the tough thing.
That's a good point.
And maybe we never will be.
Oh, yeah, we're not gonna necessarily,
this wasn't about trying to change people's minds.
I mean, maybe some people's minds will get changed,
but we just wanna, I mean, for what it's worth,
we're verbally processing our experiences as creators.
And I would like to move back to what I was saying
about what is our task and how are we interacting with that
because it's still a very emotional thing.
Well, because I think that this could be,
if any, I think the person who's gonna benefit
the most from this is any creative person who's listening.
This isn't for the people who are just criticizing things
just to criticize things.
This is for the people who you're gonna go
and you're gonna do something creative
and you're gonna be subjected to the same type of scrutiny
that we have been subjected to
by just being online creators.
And I mean, hopefully something that we've said
and something that we've offered
will help give you some perspective and kind of help you keep going
because it can be a difficult thing,
especially if you're by yourself.
And I'm not trying to shut this thing down.
I got more stuff to say so this is not the end.
This morning, by way of another analogy,
which I don't know my entire point so you can help me,
you're good with analogy.
Each morning, the older kids go to school
and then I'm left with Lando to help him get ready
by the time Christy comes back to then take Lando to school
about the same time that I leave with you for work.
So my job is to make sure that Lando is wearing clothes
that match and that his hair is put together.
That's an easy task.
This morning I did that.
And you know, he invites my input.
He's like, dad, I'm gonna pick out the shirt
and then you pick out the pants to go with it.
He doesn't like me to fix his hair,
but he's gotten used to it.
I go upstairs, I get ready, I come back down
and like Christy's taking him out the front door
and I'm telling them bye for the day.
And Lincoln turns, not Lincoln, Lando turns around,
seven years old and he looks at me
and he's got this funny look on his face and he's like,
what you're wearing doesn't match.
And it was these brown pants which I hardly ever wear
because I, and literally I'd spent 10 minutes upstairs
right before coming down
trying to figure out what shirt,
what the heck shirt goes with these pants?
They look like, they look like pajama pants,
but they could also look like trousers
that the Wright brothers would wear.
I'm like, I can do this, man.
And I'm not wearing this shirt, I'm wearing another shirt,
a green button down.
And then Christy's like, yeah, I would just wear
like a monochrome shirt,
like a black t-shirt with headphones on it.
Black t-shirt and maybe like your jean jacket.
But when the seven year old that my job is to make sure
what he wears matches to all of a sudden to hear back
from him that what I'm wearing doesn't match
and he's right,
it was tough to take.
And I think our audience may have bristled a little bit
at one of the things that I think maybe I said
in the vlog and more when I said,
we don't wanna just give you what you want,
we want to give you what you don't know you want yet.
And I just, I don't, I think it may be,
that may not have settled on some ears in the right way.
And I, you know, I don't know the,
I guess for me, the point of the story is it's difficult
because I do feel like you're gonna,
this is something new, but you're gonna like it.
Not every single thing, but the general trajectory
of what we're doing is gonna be good for you, the viewer.
And then when, I feel like that's our job.
Our job is to come up with stuff that you didn't know
you wanted and give it to you.
Not just keep giving the same thing.
Anybody can do that, you know, a lot of people do that.
But then to hear back from them that no,
this is not what I wanted and this is how it should be,
is, I don't know what the word is. Does it should be is,
I don't know what the word is. Does it hurt?
Is it frustrating?
Well yeah, it hurts.
I mean, it definitely hurts, but I mean, in some ways,
why creative people do creative things is for validation.
I mean, that's a fact of human nature as well.
You know, the reason that we started being funny
in front of people is because when we were young
and we were funny in front of people,
it made people like us.
And there's sort of this empty part of every comedian,
every performer that is looking to fill that hole
inside of themselves with the response
that they can get from an audience.
It's an imbalance, it's like an imbalance in a battery.
There's a positive and a negative charge on each side
and if that battery is completely balanced,
there's no charge.
So I think the imbalance within a performer is
they're constantly trying to balance it out
and it actually is the engine that runs their whole system.
And we're no different.
I mean, we love it when we create something that we love
but then that's just like, that's the opening salvo, right?
That's the serve.
And then the volley back is the audience liking it
just like we liked it.
And them taking it and understanding it
and appreciating it for all the reasons
that we intended them to.
That is the challenge of any creator,
whether you're a painter, a filmmaker, or whatever.
And that's what I was saying that-
And when they just catch the ball,
when they just catch the ball and say,
why the hell did you serve it like that?
I'm not gonna volley that back to you.
Why would you do that?
You're like, oh, that hurts.
And you're like, but you don't understand,
this is like a new kind of serve,
and trust me, everyone's gonna be doing this serve
in 10 years.
And we really believe in this and we're trying it out.
And it doesn't always mean it's going to work,
but we're not going to stop just because
the first person doesn't hit it back.
We're gonna keep trying and keep trying
and keep finessing it and updating it.
Well that's the challenge that we've set up for ourselves.
Because if you keep serving it the same way,
if you keep serving it the same way, if you keep serving it the same way,
they're gonna get bored.
Oh yeah.
That's the thing is that you don't think
you're gonna get bored,
but people have a tendency to kind of come into the world
of being a mythical beast and then kind of leave.
You know, we meet people all the time.
I would say absolutely the most common thing
that we, the conversation that we have with people
when we meet them in public is,
I used to watch your videos all the time.
It isn't like, ooh, I'm a huge fan of this.
It's just like, yeah, I used to watch your videos.
Or I have a, we actually heard a guy the other day say,
my ex-girlfriend used to watch your videos.
He was like removing himself from it
as far as he possibly could.
He didn't realize it. And it doesn't mean that.
My response was, I'm sorry.
Yeah, it doesn't mean that, you didn't stop watching
because we changed, some people may,
but most people are just like, you know,
I just, it's tough to stay committed
to something for a long time.
Actually, the fact that we kind of evolve and change
is one of the reasons that there's people
that have been around for a long time.
But our challenge right now is what I was saying,
that we have to make this longer version of the show better
than just the one segment show that it used to be.
Yeah, the burger's gotta be better.
And then the fries and the green beans
have to be better.
And then-
There's green beans at this fast food restaurant.
That's one thing that's throwing me a little bit.
Yeah, and it's like-
They're not fried?
Well, we've made some green beans already, you know?
At the fast food restaurant.
And it's like, okay, are we gonna keep doing it?
How long are we-
They have green beans now.
How long are we gonna keep making green beans?
That's weird.
They really lost themselves now that they got green beans.
It's tough, because there's stuff that's gonna come out
that we don't have your response yet
and we know it's gonna be negative.
But we decided to try it.
And we don't expect you to act like you like it.
But I do feel this pressure that like, okay,
do we pull back that like, okay,
do we pull back and do we just, like there was the episode with the cryo zone.
Like I'm so proud of that episode.
I was like, I told you, I was like,
I watched the whole thing before it went out
and I'm like, this is a crowd pleaser.
There's not one of these four segments
or Good Mythical More that is not like anything we've done and I felt good.
I felt good and then it came out and I was like,
the views are down.
I'm hearing something's wrong with the view count
but then also people are loving the fact
that we did something like backup plan where we went
and we froze ourselves in this cryo tank
and I'm super proud of that,
that we're able to bring that back.
Yeah.
And do, hopefully do more field pieces.
And then we did like a Whopper Big Mac thing,
which is a totally new segment and it is shorter
than anything we would have done.
I know I'm getting in the weeds here,
but my point is I'm very proud of that as a new type
of video that we would not have made before but it's still fun.
And then we played a game which would normally
have been a whole episode and it was just as good
as any other game we've played at the desk.
And then there was another thing that I can't remember
right now that wasn't different than anything
we've done before.
And then I'm like, well, we don't wanna retreat back
to that too soon, because then it's just more of the same.
It's more, four of the same thing all in one day.
It's like, we have the ability now to do these things
that you're not gonna like, but what we're gonna get to
is discovering the thing that we never would've gotten to.
You know, I think we approach creative endeavors
a lot of times as like trying to unearth something.
It's in there, we just gotta find it and get it out.
Yeah, we actually are doing this,
something, nothing is planned to fail,
but we know that failure will be part of the plan.
So we are, everything that we put out there,
like we've already said this,
but we know that we're gonna discover
that something doesn't work and then something new will work
because that's been sort of the method to our madness
for all these years is trying things, failing.
We failed so many times.
The cool thing about this venture is that you got four,
five videos a day if you count more,
where you've got so much opportunity
to kind of discover new things.
The risk is that people will,
I guess the fear is that,
I looked at the five videos this morning
and I clicked on the one that I liked the least
and then I read those comments
and because I was subconsciously fearful
of people saying I'm out.
Because I think it's a ridiculous thing to say
at such an early juncture in the evolution of the show.
But at some point, if we keep getting those,
then that becomes a problem.
And so I'm prematurely scared
that people are really gonna check out
and give up on our show because we may do the thing
just as great as we always has,
but we're doing something that's like embarrassing.
Well, I think this is what we signed up for.
You know, we don't make these videos in a vacuum.
We make them for an audience.
The intention is for the audience to love everything,
but that is never going to be the case
for them to love everything.
But we want them to love the general direction
and general effort, and we want more people
to be watching a year from now
than were watching a year ago.
And that's what we're trying to do.
Now to answer just a couple of very specific things,
people are like, why can't you just make a,
if you're gonna do four times the videos,
why don't you just make an episode of,
make four traditional episodes every single day?
So it's like four 10 minute videos.
It's like, I don't even feel like I should have to,
I've seen that comment so many times.
That's not what we're doing.
We're actually doing the shorter segments
because there's a lot of shorter formatted stuff
that gives us an opportunity to experiment
with segments and little field pieces and stuff
that don't work as longer videos
but actually work better as shorter videos.
So that's why we're doing that.
And then people are like,
how long is this gonna go on?
Just a month or so?
It's gonna go on for at least months.
It's not going to end anytime soon.
And we're gonna continue to tweak it and make it better,
but we have every intention for this to be the new normal
for Good Mythical Morning.
We're not saying that it's not ever,
again, if it doesn't work, it doesn't work,
and we go back to what we used to do or something new.
We don't know what we're gonna do,
but we don't begin things knowing the end,
we just begin things and then we learn and we adjust.
So that's kind of where we're at right now.
At the risk of doing something cheesy,
I was, I wanna read some lyrics.
Uh oh.
Is it from a Merle Haggard song?
Actually it's Eminem.
Oh gosh.
So this is gonna be a little weird.
I was listening to the new Eminem song last night.
Have you listened to it?
Yeah.
With Beyonce.
I walk on water.
I mean, the dude's kinda of baring his soul here.
I'm just gonna read it,
because I think I just really related to it where we are.
And it's interesting where the song ends.
So I'll get to that.
But why are expectations so high?
Is it the bar I set?
My arms I stretch, but I can't reach.
A far cry from it, or it's in my grasp,
but as soon as I grab, squeeze, I lose my grip
like the flying trapeze.
Into the dark I plummet, now the sky's blackening.
I know the mark's high, butterflies rip apart my stomach.
So you got this dude who is the,
like the highest grossing artist in history.
I think he's got, there's like some crazy stat
that he's like the best selling artist ever.
And I don't know, Jacob, can you look that up,
whatever it is, because I don't know how he's beaten
Michael Jackson, but there's some sort of,
there's some mind blowing stat
that I'm sure I'm getting wrong.
But you talk about this guy, you know,
talking about the expectations,
is it based on, for his next rhyme,
and the butterflies in his stomach, you know.
I don't know all the lyrics, and it's a little risky
to just read Eminem lyrics blindly.
I've only heard this song once but,
"'It's the curse of the standard
"'that the first Mathers disc set,
"'always in search of the verse that I haven't spit yet.
"'Will this step just be another misstep
"'to tarnish whatever the legacy,
"'love or respect I've garnered?
"'The rhyme has to be perfect, the delivery flawless,
"'and it always feels like I'm hitting the mark
till I go sit in the car, listen and pick it apart.
Like this is garbage.
God's given me all this,
still I feel no different regardless.
You know, I definitely feel that way.
It's like we make this stuff and we try so hard
and then it's like, it's just not as good as it used to be.
Well, and here's something that I think a lot of people,
I hear people say this about people like Eminem
who've got this, been around for a long time
and have been really successful.
It's just like, this guy's got more money than God.
He doesn't need to work another day in his life.
Why doesn't this guy just sit out in his backyard and paint?
Right.
It's like the only person who would actually say that
is a non-creative person.
And I truly don't believe that anyone's non-creative.
We said in our book that everyone's creative,
it's just that people don't know it yet.
It's like people who say, I don't remember my dreams,
or people who say, I don't dream.
You do dream, you just don't remember them.
It's some part of your brain you have to unlock.
But I think that this accusation or this expectation
that when somebody has seen some kind of success,
that why do you sit around, and this is not,
we're not anything like Eminem.
That's again, we're not the Wright brothers
and we're not Eminem.
But the reason that he's sitting there toiling over
this bar that he set is because he never did it
to be successful, he never did it for the money.
He did it because he can't help it.
He's in search of the next lyric.
He's in search of the next bar that he's gonna spit.
And that's what keeps any creator going is like,
you just, what is the next thing that we're gonna do?
What is the next thing that's gonna connect?
And are we ever gonna connect like we used to connect?
That's the fear that every single artist has.
And I think that when you're doing it in a place
that is just, the feedback is so immediate and so raw,
and I mean, it's not the same for a guy like him
because he's not, you know,
but because he's so huge and so big,
the amount of feedback is just an avalanche of feedback.
So he can read a magazine and see what,
we're not in magazines,
so we can't see what people think about us,
the magazines, we just look at YouTube comments.
And he has to craft an album.
I mean, even in a world of single streaming,
he has to craft an album where it's like,
I went away, I worked on this thing,
I came back and I'm slapping it down on your counter.
And he can't change it once it's out there.
No.
That's the luxury we have, we can change it.
What was the stat?
So he has a few different ones.
He was the best selling artist in the 2000s in the US
and he is the best selling hip hop artist in the world. Best selling hip hop artist in the world, best selling artist of the 2000s in the US and he is the best selling hip hop artist in the world.
Best selling hip hop artist in the world,
best selling artist of the 2000s, yep, that's what it was.
I knew it had to be related to some, yeah, the 2000s.
I mean he goes on, his third verse, he gets even more
specific about things that he's done.
And then he like turns his mind to like,
when this is over, because it will be. It's like, as yesterday fades and the Dresden home
is burnt to the ground and all that's left of my house
is lawn, the crowds are gone,
and it's time to wash out the blind.
Sales declined, the curtains drawn,
they're closing the set, I'm still poking my head out
from behind, from out behind.
And everyone who has doubt, remind,
now take your best rhyme, outdo it,
now do it a thousand times.
Now let them tell you the world no longer cares
or gives a F about your rhymes.
He's basically saying, all right,
you're gonna try it after me
and the same thing's gonna happen to you.
And as I grow out of sight, out of mind,
I might go out of mine.
You might go crazy.
Cause how do I ever let this might go without a fight
when I made a effing tight rope out of twine?
But when I do fall from these heights though,
I'll be fine.
I won't pout or cry or spiral down or whine,
but I'll decide if it's my final bow this time around,
cause, and then Beyonce sings.
Beyonce.
Cause I'm only human just like you.
I've made my mistakes.
Oh, if you only knew,
I don't think you should believe in me the way you do
cause I'm terrified to let you down.
Oh if I walked on water, I would drown.
And then the very end he's like,
cause I'm just a man, but as long as I got a mic,
I'm God-like, so me and you are not alike.
Bitch, I wrote Stan.
And then at the end he's like, I'm still fighting.
So it's like he goes right back into it.
He knows there's gonna be an end but like,
I feel like that's where we are.
Very much engaged in a creative fight.
I don't think it's a fight with commenters.
I don't think it's a fight with critics.
I don't think it's a fight with anybody's feedback.
I think it's a fight with the creative goal
that we set for ourselves.
It's a fight with ourselves.
It's a fight with a mountain that we have created
to say, okay, we are now gonna climb this hill.
And so I really think that's it.
I don't think it's that we're, you know,
we get frustrated with people,
but, and well with comments and feedback,
but it's ultimately, a lot of it taps into a fear
that we're not gonna be able to accomplish
what we've set out to accomplish.
And that may be embarrassing, or it may be worse.
It may put our livelihood or our kids or grandkids
that we don't even have yet, at least as far as I know,
in jeopardy in some way and it's not irrational fear.
It's an irrational fear.
Well, it's irrational.
But it's a fight that we're,
but the fight that we're engaged in is creating something
that's going to express who we are,
make money in the process,
in a way that we're not gonna apologize for,
to accomplish more of our creative vision.
And we don't know if we can accomplish it.
There's no guarantee that it's gonna work.
When people say, you guys just killed GMM,
maybe we have.
I don't believe that we have.
We wouldn't do this if we thought
that that's what we were doing.
That's not why we made this decision.
But the fact is is that there's no guarantee
that this is gonna work.
We could have already peaked.
Everything's gonna be okay.
It will be okay.
But we're not going to stop behaving the way
that we've behaved all this time.
We're not gonna stop pushing and trying something new.
We're not gonna stop creating
and we're not gonna stop trying to make
that next piece of content that's gonna be better
than the last one.
That process is never gonna continue.
Now we will, we are old, we're gonna continue to get old
and older and more out of touch and more irrelevant
and then we'll be like David Crosby's latest album.
Which I made Link listen to.
David Crosby's album called Skytrails, I think.
We're ending it this way.
Do yourself a favor and go listen to that
just as an example of where things could end up.
We love you guys, we appreciate your support.
And yeah, I think,
but that's not specifically what we're asking for.
I think we appreciate you being along for the ride.
We don't want your sympathy
and we don't want your sympathy likes
and we don't want your defense.
This is just, hey, we wanna be authentic.
That's one of the things that we do on Ear Biscuits
and everything that we do, but especially here.
There's no script, there's no plan.
This is just very rawly what we've been thinking about
and feeling and we wanted to share it with you guys.
But don't worry about us.
We're gonna be just fine.
We'll talk at you next week. Thank you.