Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - 149: Our Summer Memories | Ear Biscuits Ep. 149
Episode Date: June 25, 2018Rhett and Link take your questions about all things Summer and reminisce about their favorite vacations, what it's like to love but not always like your kids, and their Great American Roadtrip on this... week's Ear Biscuits. Listen to Ear Biscuits at:Â Apple Podcasts:Â applepodcasts.com/earbiscuits Spotify:Â spoti.fi/2oIaAwp Art19:Â art19.com/shows/ear-biscuits SoundCloud: @earbiscuits Other Mythical Channels: Good Mythical MORE:Â youtube.com/user/rhettandlink3 Rhett & Link:Â youtube.com/rhettandlink Credits: Hosted By: Rhett & Link Executive Producer: Stevie Wynne Levine Managing Producer: Jacob Moncrief Technical Director & Editor: Kiko Suura 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
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This, this, this, this is Mythical.
Hello, in this special edition of Ear Biscuits,
we just wanted to let you know up top
and unequivocally how much we love our children,
love spending time with them,
and how much we welcome them into all,
not all aspects of our lives,
but all the appropriate aspects of our lives.
I'm making this weird. It'll make more sense when we get into the episode because this is at the aspects of our lives. I'm making this weird.
It'll make more sense when we get into the episode
because this is at the top of the episode.
It's not right now in the middle
where I'm actually saying it.
To clarify, we love them, we just don't always like them.
Is that, is that, is that, is that how it, boop.
Welcome to Ear Biscuits, I'm Rhett.
And I'm Link.
This week at the round table of dim lighting,
we're gonna get cooking like it's the heat of summer.
Talking about summertime, summertime,
some, some, summertime.
We didn't pay for that, we didn't license that.
It's a summer, I made that song up.
Oh, it was an original.
Slightly a different tune.
I think that's illegal,
I think it's illegal to make that claim.
Oh gosh.
You know, we are gonna be talking about summer,
answering some summer related questions,
talking a little bit about what we're doing this summer.
And what we've done in past summers, I think.
Yeah, one of the things I'm doing this summer
is I raise my mic up about an inch.
I get, your back is more raise my mic up about an inch.
Your back is more arched in like an odd kind of a way. Well, I tend to hunch.
I've hunched most of my life.
I like to seem normal.
I'm not, but I like to seem normal.
I like to blend in.
And so I tend to bring myself down.
But you know what?
It's summer 2018, man.
I'm going up an inch.
Gotta arch that back.
Is this what it feels like to be you?
If I had good posture, yeah.
I feel like my nipples are gonna pop through my
frickin' tele, I almost said teleshirt.
Teleshirt? Teleshirt.
What were you combining?
Well because I have a television character on my T-shirt.
No you don't.
Yeah, Cotton Candy Randy.
I use television in the broad sense.
This what is happening right now is television.
You tell me what part.
For those of you who are watching,
what part of what's happening right now is not television?
Every part. Break it down.
It's vision and it's tele.
Well, this show is more of a teleplay.
Well, it's a radio play.
Who cares?
We're talking about summer.
Summer.
And yeah, you're already haunching.
Get you, just get you, lower your mic back down.
No, no, I like it up, I like it up.
We're in the middle of a summer
that has been
well orchestrated, I mean. Or orchestrated, it's been both.
That's what I said, orchestrated.
You used a G.
Oh you're saying I say orchestrated wrong?
Yeah it's orchestrated, but it's cool, I mean both work.
Well orchestrated, as you notice,
I've said it many times and I haven't changed it at all
because I'm emphatically staking my claim.
What do you call a group of people playing instruments?
An orchestra.
No, that's a group of people playing instruments
who are donating their organs, an orchestra.
That's when an orchestra plays for people's organs.
Like it's like a fundraiser for organs.
What do you call a group of?
Or only organs are being played, like pipe organs.
What do you call a group of trees
that are intentionally planted in rows
and then they grow fruit?
A tree farm?
Like peaches or apples.
Oh, an orggered.
Right.
An orggered.
Last summer, we were talking about this summer.
It's weird how that happened.
We were talking about how, what we wanted
the summer of 2018 to be like in the midst of 2017.
We didn't want it to be like 2017.
This summer is different than a summer we've had
in a long time.
Mission accomplished, man.
We're accomplishing a mission.
For the past two summers,
we worked on Good Mythical Morning
and shot it in such a way and kind of planned breaks.
I can't, two summers ago, we didn't do Good Mythical Summer.
Last summer is when we did Good Mythical Summer
with Monday, Wednesday, and then Friday guest hosts
so that we could bank episodes and then film buddy system.
Season one, two summers ago, season two last summer, and we just catapulted ourselves
out of our weekly routine of filming Good Mythical Morning
into just a very aggressive production schedule
with making Buddy System a reality.
Well and while we were filming Buddy System,
we were preparing for two different things.
We were preparing for our tour,
which was right on the heels of Buddy System.
And we were also preparing for the expanded version
of Good Mythical Morning and like interviewing people.
And like, we wouldn't even eat lunch
while we were shooting Buddy System.
We would like have interviews.
It was-
And I guess we were doing this show.
And I think talking about it some,
I mean, last summer. Somewhat, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I mean, I think we were talking about how,
man, I don't know, this is just crazy.
Well, and we talked-
We should go back and listen to that.
And then that'll make us appreciate it even more
because as we try to develop this discipline
of stopping and celebrating.
We had to crew host the podcast.
That's right, that's what we did
in order to gain some time to do the other stuff.
Just trying to orchestrate the habit.
We were orchestrating like you would not believe.
Of stopping and celebrating.
So I kind of feel like I want to assess
whether we're doing that.
And I think you already have said that we are.
I mean, this summer is, it's a lot more laid back for us,
which is so great.
I mean, we said, I wanna plan a vacation
that's more than a week and let's go to Australia.
And then that was kind of the start of,
okay, there's some work involved.
We're gonna do some tour of mythicality stops in Australia,
but then the vast majority of the time,
we're gonna have our families there,
we're gonna be in vacation mode at the end of July.
It's gonna be, I can't wait.
Listen, don't build it up too much though
because vacation buildup syndrome is something that I suffer from.
Most people suffer from it.
VBS.
Yeah, yeah, it's not vacation Bible school anymore.
No.
It's vacation buildup syndrome.
And you think that it's going to be great.
You begin measuring everything
according to when you're going to be on vacation.
And then you begin to think,
I'll be happy when I'm on vacation.
Then you inevitably get on vacation.
It takes you several days to adjust to being on vacation.
And then you have this extended period
of like not quite met expectations.
And then the next thing you know, you're going back home
and then you're looking forward to the next vacation.
You can't let that happen. Can't let that happen.
Can't let it happen.
You have to think it's going to suck.
It's gonna suck when we go to Australia.
It's gonna be the worst time ever.
Now we're in the perfect place.
And it's gonna be your fault.
It's gonna be your fault.
It can't be both of our faults.
I said it was yours.
Well it could be your fault for me
and my fault for you.
Deal. Yeah, well hold on. Let's just Well it could be your fault for me and my fault for you. Deal.
Yeah.
Well hold on, let's just make it the kids' fault.
They'll be there.
Yeah, well they're gonna make us miserable.
We shouldn't even take them, what are we thinking?
But too late.
I mean, can we resell the tickets on like some sort of a,
like some sort of scalping situation?
What?
Can we scalp plane tickets?
No, it has to be the name that is attached to the ticket.
True.
Once you buy a ticket, if you wanna just change the person,
like if we decided that we wanted to take
one of our kid's friends instead of one of our kids
because they did something wrong,
always a chance that'll happen.
I always tell my kids that I'd rather be with their friends.
Then, you can't do that.
The airlines make it very difficult.
Trust me, I've tried to replace my kids
with other kids many times.
Last minute before vacations.
We feel that way, but then we also love our kids dearly
and we're kinda joking, okay?
Kinda.
I'm glad that we're bringing them,
at least at this point. It's gonna be great,
but it's gonna be bad. Their fault. It's gonna be point. It's gonna be great, but it's gonna be bad.
It's gonna be bad.
It's gonna be horrible at the same time.
But I'm proud of us that in our commute back
from filming Buddy System,
we were just commiserating about how exhausted we were.
We're like, you know what,
next summer's gonna be different.
And you know what?
We had the discipline to follow through,
and look, it is different.
And so I just wanted to assess, how do you feel?
I actually, I felt a little lost, honestly.
I feel great.
Like not having something that I have to film
basically every single day, I just kind of feel like,
oh my gosh, what do I do with myself?
Well, you said it is laid back,
but I wanna, I think, and I'm not trying to like,
I'm not trying to be like, we are working really hard.
But, we are working.
What we're working on is something that we haven't,
we're working on things in a way
that we haven't worked on anything in a while.
Probably since like six, seven years ago.
Yeah.
So since things kinda got going
once we moved to California,
it's been one thing after the other
and multiple things at a time usually.
But we always kinda knew exactly
what the next thing was going to be and while we are working on some things
right now that we can't yet talk about,
the main thing that we're doing is we are developing
other ideas, like what we've always done is we've gotten
an opportunity to do something and then we filled it
with an idea but we're actually sitting around talking about
all kinds of ideas and all kinds of different outlets,
different media, and we're developing these ideas.
We're actually talking about them,
developing worlds, developing characters,
fleshing them out, writing things up.
We're having meetings to try to make some of those things
a reality, but it's the summer of like lining things up
and just throwing them at the wall
and seeing if something sticks.
And I mean, I'm having an incredible time.
But it is also the kind of thing because it's not.
It's all speculative.
So for me, I tend to overanalyze
whether anything that we're working on,
if it's like, if none of this amounts to anything,
which I don't believe that,
and I get excited about the things that we talk about
because it's such a mode that we've usually
just kind of crammed in.
Like if we're in the car going somewhere and one of us,
it's like, you know, I had this idea.
And then it just kind of percolates a little bit,
but having dedicated time to just sit on a couch
or then go to lunch, like we've gone to lunch.
We've left this facility and we've gone to lunch.
And then a couple of times when the food was done,
we're like, that was over, lunch was done.
We should have gotten up and left.
We stayed.
I'm gonna get a coffee and stay here a little longer.
I feel like an actor.
You know how around here in Los Angeles,
you see just, all times of the day,
you just see people sit in places, drinking coffees.
Yeah.
These are actors.
Good-looking people that look like they should be actors.
And I think that they're like commercials,
but they're not currently,
I'm not currently on a commercial,
but I make a buttload of money
from like a Zerbert Skirbert commercial.
Zerbert Skirbert is my favorite brand of tennis balls.
Right.
Have you tried the new Zerbert Skirbert tennis balls?
It's two guys.
Now with twice the bounce.
Who they each were making their own
Zerbert tennis balls. Skirbert.
Zerbert made a tennis ball that was really bouncy.
Hey, I had like the perfect bounce,
but then it didn't have the right texture.
And then Skirbert, he had the-
Skirbert or Skirbert?
Skirbert. Skirbert.
Skirbert. Skirbert.
Zerbert and Skirbert.
But I say Skirbert. Well, you're mispronouncingirbert. Skirbert. Skirbert. Skirbert. Zerbert and Skibbert. But I say Skirbert.
Well you're mispronouncing his name.
Well, it's an orchestra kind of thing.
It's written on the tennis ball.
Zerbert Skirbert. Skibbert.
I think it's spelled the same way.
How do you spell Skibbert?
Hit S-K-I-R-R-R-R-B-I-T.
B-I-R-T.
Skirbert.
Skirbert. Yeah, so now you're back withR-T. Skirbert. Skirbert.
Yeah, so now you're back with what I said.
Skirbert, Skirbert.
Zerbert and Skibbert.
That's how you say it.
And Skibbert's ball had the perfect fuzz on the outside.
It had what they call Skibbert fuzz.
But it didn't have that Zerbert bounce.
And then somebody, I think it was Nancy.
Who's she?
The CEO.
Oh.
She said, let's bring you two together
and hyphenate these two companies.
Oh, you're talking about the hyphenated Zerbert-Skerber?
I'm talking about the unhyphenated Zerbert-Skerber.
This whole time I've been talking about the unhyphenated.
Bankrupt. The unhyphenated ones. The one that was. This whole time I've been talking about the unhyphenated. Bankrupt.
The unhyphenated ones.
The one that was popular in the 70s.
Moot Point.
Oh sorry.
Zerbert Skirbert is the perfect tennis ball.
And then they got this jerk guy in Los Angeles
like in the commercials.
Can't even serve properly.
You notice that?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
He's a good talker though.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I could tell that he didn't memorize his lines. That he was like reading them off a cue card. Yeah, yeah, yeah. He's a good talker though. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I could tell that he didn't memorize his lines,
that he was like reading them off a cue card.
Yeah, but who cares?
But he's still getting resiged.
He's getting all the resiged.
But when he's not collecting it.
And now he's coasting, man.
He's just drinking coffee.
He's sitting down on Coanga.
Next to us, yeah.
Sipping, eating a crepe.
Oh, Coanga.
And that was us for a little while.
I thought you were talking about the guy on Fairfax.
You're talking about the guy that was in
the Zerbert Skirbert commercial on Coanga.
I'm talking about the guy that was in
the Zerbert Skirbert commercial on Fairfax.
Is there two commercials?
I thought there is, you're right.
I'm talking about the blonde guy.
Oh, you know what?
I thought he was wearing a wig.
I thought it was the same guy.
Yeah. Why didn't they use the same guy and just put a wig. Oh. I thought it was the same guy. Yeah.
Why didn't they use the same guy
and just put a wig on him?
Well, different markets.
Right.
One's for Maine and then one's for the rest
of the continental United States.
The wig does look like a mane, like a lion's mane.
It goes down on either side.
It's kinda like, you know,
what's that headpiece that a pharaoh wears?
A pharaoh?
What, now you're gonna tell me
I don't know how to say pharaoh?
You said it right, B.
What?
I don't know, it just made me laugh.
Pharaoh, it sounded like a red.
Pharaoh.
Let my people go, Pharaoh.
His wig was shaped like a Pharaoh headpiece,
but it's hair, of course.
Yeah, I think it's Pharaoh.
Pharaoh.
I mean, I don't know.
You're thinking of Pharrell, the artist.
Anyway.
We were kinda like that guy.
Yeah, we're just like those guys.
Just sitting there, drinking.
The waiter came by and was like, can I take your, and we just like those guys. Just sitting there drinking. The waiter came by and was like,
can I take your, and we're like, yeah.
And you know what, I'd like a cappuccino.
I got a couple of teas.
I double teed one day.
I got tea and then I got another tea.
That's how good I'm feeling right now.
A new bag or a new entire?
I didn't notice.
New water, new bag.
And we're talking about ideas.
Like this would be a great television show.
This would be a great movie.
No limits.
Yeah, so the chances that any of the stuff
that we're talking about right now
actually becomes a reality is actually, is, is.
Beside the point.
Not slim, but it's probably the next idea.
Which is a little unusual for us,
because again, when you do stuff on the internet,
even with the stuff that we've done with YouTube,
like with Buddy System, we ended up getting a show
on YouTube Red before anyone knew what the show was.
I mean that's, that's, you know.
That's the truth.
That's how it went down.
It was like, do you guys have an idea?
Like, yeah, we got an idea.
Let's come up with an idea.
Buddy comedy, scripted, it's gonna have musical elements.
And this process, and the pitch was backwards.
Which is kind of going through the more traditional
process of talking to gatekeepers about ideas.
That's right, they won't even let us on studio lots.
We're just talking to the guy at the gate.
Yeah, it's a different process.
But I'm really enjoying it.
I'm really enjoying it.
Even if it's just.
I get inside my head a lot in terms of,
because my personality type,
I keep a running record of like,
have I accomplished enough today?
Do I feel like I've earned the right to go to bed tonight?
I think it's something that, it's subconscious for me.
So I have to make an active decision,
kind of like what you're talking about being on vacation,
there's that transition period.
I'm still kind of in that in terms of what our summer is.
Well, it's gonna be over before you know it,
so you better start enjoying it soon.
And it's gonna be your fault.
But I do think that some of the ideas
or these will lead to something.
Of course, while Good Mythical Morning continues to go or to stay.
You know what I'm saying?
I feel like whenever we talk about something
that's not Good Mythical Morning,
there's a certain person that we need to reassure
that it's not gonna have a negative impact
on Good Mythical Morning.
Well, certain person be reassured
that Good Mythical Morning is not going anywhere.
You wanna answer some summer questions?
Yeah, we have summer questions from you.
I think we'll get to, I think we'll get to many of those.
But first, Ear Biscuits is supported by gunpowder
and Sky's new film, Hearts Beat Loud.
You know we had Nick Offerman and Kiersey Clemons
on GMM recently.
Well, we had them on because they're actually
in a new movie called Hearts Beat Loud
where they play a father and daughter songwriting duo.
Yeah I've got the synopsis.
Single dad and record store owner Frank
struggles to keep his shop open
while college bound Sam tries to balance her studies
and her budding romance with Rose.
Hoping to stay connected
through their shared musical passions,
Frank urges Sam to turn their weekly jam session
into a father-daughter live act.
And after their first song becomes an internet breakout,
the two embark on a journey of love,
growing up, and musical discovery.
It also co-stars Ted Danson, Sasha Lane,
Blythe Danner, and Toni Collette.
The LA Times calls the film triumphant!
With an exclamation point.
It was also selected as the closing night film
at this year's Sundance Film Festival.
Hearts Beat Loud is now playing in select theaters.
Check it out.
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And now on with the biscuit.
Okay, let's get to some questions,
some are theme related, help you guys out,
and then maybe reveal some things about ourselves
in the process.
Reza Rezwan, my friend and I have been talking
about having an adventurous summer because we haven't,
we've always lived a boring life.
Oh, well.
We wanna do something exciting and dangerous.
What are some new experiences that my friend and I
should try while also not spending too much money
as we are college students?
Exciting and dangerous.
Put this down.
No, I wanna hold it right.
But you're almost blocking my shot, hold it right there.
For some reason when you said exciting and dangerous,
the first thing I thought about,
and I think it's great advice, is get a kayak.
You and your friend, get a kayak.
And go on a river excursion.
I'm talking about like rapids situation.
This is 2018, I think we should probably give a disclaimer.
If you get a kayak and then you end up injuring yourself
or dying because you're in a kayak.
Well she said dangerous.
You're the one who asked.
You wanted dangerous activities.
We are not responsible for your kayaking, okay?
No we're not.
That being said, you should definitely get a kayak
because it's extremely dangerous.
When I was a- That's what we did.
I was in middle school at the time that our friend Ben
talked us into getting kayaks and I went to get a kayak
from some, I don't remember where I bought it.
Well, you're too big for a kayak.
I mean, putting on a kayak is like putting on a sock.
I couldn't get, I couldn't find,
especially where we were at, I couldn't find a kayak
that could fit me that had the proper internal parts
of a kayak, so I got an old school kayak, which is shaped like a kayak.
Let's clarify what internal parts are.
There's like, there's bladders.
Well, not only that, there's places for your feet.
Like there's places that your feet rest.
This kayak did not have those things.
Then also there are the,
Floatation.
The floatation parts on the inside.
So we're talking balloons inside of the front
and back of the kayak so that even if it fills with water,
and it will, when you pop out of it
and struggle to maintain your life force,
it will not sink because it's filled with these bladders
that are filled with air, not urine.
And my kayak did not have these.
So what I did-
Because yours was like a 1970 cover.
It was very old.
It was a covered top canoe, basically.
It was like a canoe that had a top on it.
But it had a hole just for me.
So what I ended up doing is first of all,
I christened it the USS Merle.
You painted that on there?
I painted the USS Merle with the stencil on the side.
And then I found in my attic,
I found all this foam from like the previous residence
of my parents' house in the attic.
There was just all this like a box of pieces of foam,
like yellow flexible foam.
Okay, like.
And I took a bunch of trash bags,
filled them up with the foam, tied them off,
double bagged them and just stuffed them
into the insides of the kayak.
That was my flotation.
I went to REI and Cary.
They had like a bulletin board.
It said kayak for sale in Durham.
I went to Durham and I bought the Matador
off of some college student from Duke University.
Brought it back, nestled down in that thing.
It had flotation that had tubing
where you'd blow in a long straw
and you would pump up the flotation.
But then I remember the first time I got it,
it had a bunch of, smelled very mildewy.
Yeah, those Duke students have a lot of mildew problems.
When I opened up the flotation thing
to blow more air into it,
the Duke college students air came out. Oh, Duke air? Into my face, the Duke college student's air came out.
Oh, Duke air?
Into my face, like Duke student,
Duke undergraduate lung air.
And so it's very, it's a little smart.
Pretentious. A little pretentious.
Like really hoping to get into a good graduate program.
It smells of a little bit of desperation
and also a lot of like pressure from parents
their entire lives.
Right, and he needed the money,
so it was a lot of desperation coming out of that bladder.
But man, we took those things on the river.
We would go down to Irwin on the river.
I mean, how long of a trip was that?
It was probably a four- hour trip on our kayaks.
Yeah, took half the day.
A lot of that was just very slow river.
Yeah, but then there was.
There would be some very intense rapids
right when you got to the end in Irwin.
Denim capital of the world, they say.
They used to make a lot of jeans there.
And if you made it, if you got to shore there,
there would be people, men, women, children,
lots of children would just, they would just give you jeans.
It was just like when you land in Hawaii
and they give you leis.
They would just, they put jeans on you.
Right. Remember that?
Yeah, yeah, and that's why we always went pantsless.
Right. While kayaking, because we knew if that's why we always went pantsless. Right.
While kayaking, because we knew if we got to Irwin,
they'd give us the jeans.
And if we didn't make it, they'd just find us
floating dead in our undies.
So get a kayak, that's your advice?
I mean, at flood stage, I've definitely turned over.
There's times when, instead of kayaking around trees,
you're going through the tops of the trees in flood stage.
We did that.
So stupid.
It wasn't, we did a lot of things that,
our summers were filled with a lot of things that-
Danger.
Not advisable.
We're probably about to get to another one.
Shelby Austin, what's your opinion on water shoes
for adults?
I personally won't step into a body of water
where I can't see my feet in it without them.
Hashtag no shame.
Well, if there's any way we can bring shame
into the equation, I would love to do it right now
because I'm against water shoes.
It's just like those didn't exist
when we were frolicking in the water.
I mean in the river, just to stay in the river here,
we would wear our tennis shoes.
We would have river tennis shoes.
You had a pair of shoes that had,
well, a pair of shoes that you had fully worn out on land
that now became river shoes.
And you would not wear socks,
and then you'd just lace them really tight.
And it's difficult to swim in tennis shoes,
but you don't really have to swim as much as just don't die.
If we had only had water shoes.
If water shoes had been a thing,
we probably would have worn them.
Ben wore duck shoes, like the rubber shoes
that then turn into leather at the top.
Yeah.
He wore those duck boots.
Those had like an insulating layer in them too.
I know, they were like winter shoes,
but he wore them all the time.
And you wore them in the river.
Yeah.
I don't know, once those things fill up with water,
it's like wearing two liquid anchors.
Crazy, man.
But I mean, in terms of fashion,
I've yet to see a person look respectable in water shoes.
I will say that.
When we did the Will It Slip and Slide episode,
we needed some grippy shoes and Daniel gave us those,
they're not water socks, they had the individual toes,
but they were like, what are those things?
They're kinda like, I think they're a form of water sock.
I felt a little self-conscious wearing those,
but also it was kind of neat.
So I think if you're gonna do it,
these are not technically aqua shoes,
water socks or whatever you're calling them.
But if you get those like individual toe shoes things,
you're gonna look like a dummy, but it's pretty cool.
But I do think you shouldn't get into a body of water.
If you're the one wearing it.
Where you can't see your feet.
Barefoot water shoes is what those are called.
Thank you, Jacob, for the clarification.
I don't think you should, I do agree with Shelby's
assessment that you should not get into a body of water
where you can't see your feet without some sort of covering.
I mean, I don't know how, we never got hurt
all the time that we spent in the Cape Fear River
with no real, you know, this is a serious river,
serious rapids.
Water moccasins.
No life jackets.
We were walking across the rapids,
swimming down the rapids,
and we had some like technique that we developed where like you gotta keep your feet
forward and keep your hands up which is true.
But there's just a lot of good fortune that got us
back and forth across that river thousands of times.
And we found.
Without getting into any trouble.
Yeah so in Buies Creek there's that set of rapids there
that we would spend most of our time.
We knew there was a secret water hole
that was probably 10 feet deep,
even though everything around it was like three feet deep.
We'd swim there, that was pretty cool.
But then we would also go down the river further
and not all the way to Irwin,
there was that place that had the huge rocks
and we would swim there and they had these places
that we would call them jacuzzis.
You know where the rapids would kind of,
it would eddy back on themselves
and basically the water would churn and dig a hole
and if the river was at the right level,
some rocks would be exposed such that there was
a lot of water spilling into this hole
and then churning around and one person could fit in
at a time and you could hold your breath
and go under water, remember?
And put your head under the waterfall
and breathe under there.
Well we were doing that, it was crazy.
After we graduated college, we went down to Irwin
and we did that and remember, you got stuck.
Oh, my foot got stuck.
One of your feet got stuck.
And that's how you die.
And it was, there was a panic situation
because we're in the middle of this river
and I'm like, oh, his foot is stuck.
And you eventually got very, this is crazy.
It makes me think, I just read this news article today.
There's a river in Arkansas
where apparently it's not uncommon in Arkansas
for sinkholes to open up in the riverbed.
Good Lord.
And these people are kayaking or rafting or something.
So the river just disappears?
No, no.
Sinkhole in the middle of the river formed a whirlpool
that started taking someone down and a guy saved people,
but then the guy who saved people went down and died.
Like this happened yesterday.
I saw this like the headline,
I didn't read too many of the details.
Maybe he'll pop up, maybe he's not dead.
I doubt that's gonna happen.
Yeah, sinkhole.
Yeah, but we never saw any of that.
Sinkholes are jerks, man.
No warning, like email or something, just send a warning.
There's a ramp onto the highway
and I noticed the other day it said,
it's like a construction ramp and it says,
this ramp will be closed intermittently
between February 2017 and March 2018.
And of course, it's after March.
It's past that.
That's a big swath of time.
And we're beyond it.
And we're beyond it and the sign is still up.
And by the way, they're still closing that ramp sometimes.
Intermittently.
Intermittently.
I mean, but I think they should take the sign down.
Well, they should adjust the sign.
I got one.
Brianna Schmid.
What do you do?
She did?
What do you and your wives do to keep the kids
from bickering all summer?
Good question.
She says, we have a pool, a trampoline, and an Xbox.
Well, come, okay.
You go, Brianna.
You got it.
We got all that stuff to keep them entertained,
but they still manage to drive each other and me,
emphasis on me, nuts, fighting over the smallest things.
They are 10, six, and three, all girls.
Oh gosh.
Well first of all, mine are eight, 13, and 15,
and it don't stop.
So don't get your hopes up that the bickering
over the smallest things is gonna stop.
No. I love my kids.
I know we've already laid into them
at the top of this thing but.
Well, what we have discovered.
I don't have a trampoline.
We have discovered.
Now I've.
I would have thought maybe that was the thing
but Brianna's saying it's not.
I've had all of these things at some point in my life.
Currently have a pool and an Xbox,
had a trampoline.
Well you go. At my. Why? In my own point in my life. Currently have a pool and an Xbox, had a trampoline. Well you go, boy.
In my own, in my past.
You also have an Xbox and a pool, but you're just not.
But I'm not talking about it.
You're just not talking about it.
I also have an Instagram account.
This is a point, I'm just trying.
Use it.
I'm just trying to relate to Brianna here
so I can say that I feel qualified to answer this question.
We have discovered the wonders of summer camp.
We heard about these people.
Yeah, yeah, tell them about it.
We heard about these people who were like,
we send our kids off for a month.
We're like, what?
A month?
Of course it was like six weeks!
And then somebody else.
Two months!
It was like they were bidding.
They began bidding on how long the kids are gone.
Sometimes they come back,
we don't quite remember their names.
And we're like what?
That's a long time.
And most of them were like in the Northeast.
Northeast apparently.
It's a Northeast thing.
Northeastern people don't like their kids.
Northeastern people like their kids less
than we like our kids, apparently.
And this goes back to when we were,
if we lived in the northeast,
we would have gone to these camps.
It's like boarding school.
Yeah.
But everybody loves it.
The kids love it and I have to assume the adults love it.
It's a win-win.
I mean it might hurt the wallet.
So the wallet doesn't win.
But if you've already got a pool, a trampoline,
and an Xbox, it shouldn't be a problem.
So yeah, Rhett's exactly right.
We started, we started like, we put our heads together
and we're like, why don, let's talk about these camps,
let's get our kids into these camps.
It's like, well maybe we can talk them into camps.
Because for us, camps were just, you know,
there was one summer between, I don't know when it was,
we could figure it out, but that ubiquitous photo
of the two of us as kids with the purple gorilla shirts on,
the matching shirts standing in front of Rhett's dad's
Dodge Dynasty, that was taken in the parking lot
of the zoo. Probably the summer
between sixth and seventh grade,
maybe between fifth and sixth, definitely one of those two.
Seems right.
That was taken in the zoo parking lot
where we had just purchased the T-shirts
after your dad had picked us up from spending a week
in the mountains of North Carolina at Camp Carraway.
I wonder if it's still there.
It's gotta still be there.
We did that once and we never went back.
Well, I wanted to go back,
but because you puckered up
and didn't take a crap the entire week,
and had a horrible experience, and didn't take a crap the entire week. And had a horrible experience.
We didn't go back,
because I wasn't gonna go back by myself.
Well at night, it would be dark.
It was great, man.
It was.
And in the day it would be light, but.
But it was great.
Not that light.
We went on hikes, we took that one hike
out into the middle of nowhere
and slept at this old abandoned camp.
It was dark there too.
We roasted marshmallows, they did these crazy
like activities at night with bonfires.
I mean. Very dangerous.
I remember loving every part of it,
but every time I would check in with you,
you would just have this like pained look on your face
like nothing was going well.
It was quite literally out of my comfort zone.
I mean when you line up to take showers
and they got stopwatches and they're like,
everybody just gets a couple of minutes.
That was uncomfortable, that was uncomfortable.
And it's a cold shower and then you're like,
if you were gonna poop,
somebody could walk right by and see you.
I don't think that's why you didn't poop.
I mean I, I mean. My body knew.
I didn't poop as much as normal.
Whatever I had when I arrived at camp,
my body knew to keep it,
because it didn't know what else it was gonna get.
Well but it kept getting camp food the rest of the time.
Did you, were you not eating it?
Maybe not, maybe not.
Camp Carraway's still open.
So. But you did eventually poop. I'm sorry. Hold on, care away, still open. So.
But you did eventually poop.
I'm sorry.
Hold on, but then, hold on.
You didn't poop and then we went to the zoo.
Did you poop at the zoo?
I'm sure the animals did.
It would be hard to watch, to not poop that long
and then go see animals and they're pooping left and right.
It's like they're taunting me.
Because it makes me feel different about that picture
of us with the gorilla shirts on to know that you're
holding a seven days worth of crap in your large intestine.
But the expression on your face is so happy.
I was out.
Because you were so happy to be at the zoo.
I was released, man.
You had not experienced that release.
You took a crap at the zoo, there's no way.
That's a I just crapped a seven day log face.
Yeah.
It really is.
It's a look of relief.
And all I got is this purple T-shirt.
That's what the T-shirt should have said.
So we're sending our kids to summer camp.
Now, first of all, Locke is gonna be doing
the basketball thing most of the summer.
Shepard's not going away to a sleepaway camp.
He's going to like a day camp,
but the thing is every other day for like five,
he's gonna be doing a lot by himself,
but you're actually doing the-
Lando's not going to any sleep away camps,
but Lincoln is going,
because he went for one week last summer with a friend
to a sleep away camp in Michigan actually,
because that's where his friend was already going
and had been going.
This year he's going with another friend for two weeks.
Most of the camps, they sell it really hard on the website.
It's like, well, the first week,
you really gotta stay for two weeks
if you're gonna make the best of it.
And I'm like, you ain't got to talk me into it.
I mean, cause I'm really concerned about,
we got a lot of questions from you guys
in responding to our post about the boredom.
You know, if you're not working over the summer,
you're freaking, what are you gonna do
when the Xbox gets old and the trampoline falls through
and your pool gets stagnant, you're just gonna be bored.
So he's going away for two weeks.
Lily's going away for one week to another camp.
I mean you drop a load on this stuff.
I don't mean to bring that back up but we'll see.
Are you preparing that for that though?
They are related to you.
Well it's funny, tell them the story the other night
where when your parents were in town
and we took them all out to dinner, right?
And like Rhett's parents and my mom and her husband Louis,
yes he's technically my stepdad,
but I don't call him that.
He calls you his son-in-law.
Does he? Yeah.
He did that?
I mean, he did that at some point in the past.
Well, that is so sweet.
It's technically accurate.
Well, it's technically incorrect.
Oh.
I mean, maybe you are his son-in-law,
but that's not typically what son-in-law means.
Yeah.
You're his stepson. Stepson is accurate. Yeah. Son-in-law. I don't call him father-in-law, but that's not typically what son-in-law means. Yeah. You're his stepson.
Stepson is accurate.
Yeah.
Son-in-law.
I don't call him father-in-law, I just call him my mom's.
Yeah, because that would also be incorrect.
You could say stepdad would be.
I don't say stepdad either.
Okay.
I say my mom's husband.
Okay, that's one way to it.
Stepdad's a shorter way to it.
I mean, when he arrived, I did give him a hug,
and when he left, I gave him another hug.
Okay.
I know what you're getting at though.
They're sitting down there talking
and then it's Christy and Jesse and then me and you
and so like, you know, along tables,
it's like everybody, we're just kind of talking in pairs.
Like the two of us are talking to our wives
or talking to each other.
And then our kids are down at the other end of the table.
Yeah.
So you didn't hear,
apparently they were talking about
what we're talking about now,
about the kids going to summer camp.
And then you catch wind of the conversation.
You're like, you told them what we just talked about.
You're like, well, when Link and I went to summer camp,
Link didn't crap the whole week,
and the table just erupted.
And I was like, well, I mean, it's funny,
but it's not that funny.
And then they were like,
Christy was just telling us
that when she went to summer camp as a kid,
she didn't crap the whole time she was there.
Okay, this is a serious problem.
So we're super compatible.
You're taking a very high constipation potential
into these summer camps with your kids.
I think that's, I mean.
You gotta say more exudates.
That's the key to marriage right there, first of all.
Let's just focus on the positive for a second.
But yeah, genetically speaking,
we're setting up our kids for a world of lower GI hurt
in the coming weeks.
What should I, how do you prepare your kids for that?
Just say, all right, for the next few days, kids,
you're just gonna take a dump in the backyard.
Yep, that's one way to do it.
And you're gonna have to watch each other.
Yeah, I like that.
Another thing you could do is you could begin
to slowly transform your home environment
into a camp environment.
You could begin acting like a camp counselor.
You could begin decorating their room
a little bit differently.
And if they can learn how to crap in that environment,
then they'll just carry it right through to the summer camp.
I mean, I didn't dislike camp. And I'm really glad that I'm sure they'll just carry it right through to the summer camp. I mean, I didn't dislike camp and I'm really glad
that I'm sure they're gonna enjoy it
and I'm sure they'll poop at appropriate times.
I don't think I have to go through this,
but all of the rituals of camp are pretty cool.
So I hope that the camps that are going to have those
like rituals, I think they all do.
Like even Camp Carraway, it was like-
The first night.
Yeah, they-
I don't remember the details.
The camp counselors did some sort of performance
and the guys sang a song.
I thought they were so cool.
Moon pies and grapes.
Remember that song?
Yeah, moon pies and grapes.
Moon pies and grapes.
Oh, the best song ever.
I don't know, that guy was so cool.
He had a beard back when it wasn't cool to have a beard.
Right.
He was so ahead of his time,
singing a song about moon pies and grapes.
Of course, my wife went to Meredith College,
an all girls school, which was basically summer camp
year round.
They had, because they had all types of rituals
that they would do at this thing.
Corn husking.
And we would go to it.
Remember, because I started dating her and I would drag you to this stuff. Corn husking. And we would go to it, remember,
because I started dating her
and I would drag you to this stuff.
I made the mistake of going one year.
They had rituals and stuff.
They would hide the baton.
There was a baton.
They still hiding the baton there?
And it was like the senior.
Sometimes they hide it under the bridge.
The senior, what like one class.
Under the bridge over the lake.
I think I'm gonna get this all wrong,
but I'm just gonna say it this way.
I think it was a senior get this all wrong, but I'm just gonna say it this way.
I think it was a senior class that would hide the baton
and then all year, the junior class,
like their job was to find it.
That's pretty cool, right?
Totally summer camp stuff.
This is a college campus.
We should hide a baton around here.
Well you know Chase put that picture of himself
in our office to cover up the hole
where it's the fire valve.
Like if you want, if like the sprinklers
are going off in this place,
you wanna scramble to turn them off or something.
You gotta punch through Chase's face,
grab a valve and turn it.
Well he's obstructed,
the fire marshal came through here,
we'd be fine. I think it's a fire cut.
We'd have Doc has paid the level of a fire marshal fine.
And then I'm...
You found it within a day though,
because it was next to your desk.
He was like, oh, you found it.
I was like, well, yeah, I found it.
I know where everything is down to the millimeter
in my office.
You can't change anything and me not know it.
I'm like, but we moved it, see if you can find it.
It's somewhere else in the office, see if you can find it.
Few days later, I was like, have you found it?
He's like, no, I haven't found it yet.
Another day later, I'm like, you know,
you see him in passing.
I'm like, you found it, you found your picture?
He's like, no, I'm not really looking.
I was like, you're looking.
He's like, I haven't found it.
I hadn't moved it.
That was the joke. I was like, maybe you should look in my office. And then he comes up and he's like, I haven't found it. I hadn't moved it. That was the joke.
I was like, maybe you should look in my office.
And then he comes up and he's like,
it's in the same place.
I was like, gotcha!
It's not in the same place anymore,
but I really got him, that skydiving fool.
We should do it, we should do it, Baton.
Follow him on Instagram, he sky dove.
What a weirdo.
Aubrey Bishop.
What's the best way
to even out a farmer's tan?
I'm embarrassed to look like Neapolitan ice cream.
I wanted to answer this question
because I recently saw myself in the mirror
and realized that-
Don't make a habit of looking at that.
I'm working the farmer's tan too.
I was, it was really setting in right here.
Yeah, you're talking right at the traps.
I saw myself in the gym.
And because there's mirrors everywhere in the locker room.
Okay.
And I don't really see my back very often.
You know, it's not a view that I take in very often.
Your back?
Yeah, because you gotta have like a,
it's gotta be like a two mirror situation.
A mirror on a mirror.
And I'm not interested in my back.
And maybe I should be.
But I noticed a very distinct line forming.
Okay.
And I was like, I gotta do something about this.
And so, you know how I get up
and I do the stretching in the morning
with the barber, she gets on my chest
and then we have the ritual.
You decided to do that outside?
I was like, I'm gonna do sun stretching.
That's cool.
That sounds totally LA.
And you can sign people up for an Airbnb experience.
Come enjoy sun stretching with Mr. McLaughlin.
And it was on Saturday because typically I'm up too early
for there to be sun that could actually
change your farmer's tan.
Not this summer, man.
We are laid back.
But on Saturday, I got up and I had breakfast
with the family and then we're hanging out
and then it gets to be about 10 o'clock.
That's when you start getting into like
where the sun's rays can have an impact.
And I went out there in just a pair of sweatpants,
not interested in getting my tan on my legs
and sun stretched for a good 25 minutes or so.
I'd highly recommend it.
You gotta watch it.
If Barbara jumps on you,
then you'd have a Barbara outline on your back,
which could be cool, actually.
She'd have to stay very, very still.
Sit down, lay down.
But I think I got, can you see it?
Look away a little bit more.
I still see it a little bit, but it's not that pronounced.
It's fading.
My father-in-law has a tan, he always wears shorts.
He does a lot of grass mowing.
Are you about to tell me you know
where your father-in-law's tan lines are?
Is this your father-in-law or your stepdad?
Because I never know with you.
Which one you talking about?
I don't call Louis either, man.
I call him my mom's husband.
Okay, so this is your wife's father.
Yeah, this is my father-in-law.
Your actual father-in-law, got it.
Bobby.
Bobby'll come in the house, take his shoes and socks off
and get in his recliner and let me tell you,
his feet and ankles, he wears socks that come over
his ankles, it's never seen the direct sign.
Right.
But his legs are really tan because he fishes
and he's outside and he's mowing grass.
And he always wears the same pair of socks.
Yeah.
No flip flops.
No.
Wouldn't be caught dead in a pair of flip flops.
It's like a Frankenstein situation.
It's like he's still got socks on.
It's like they attached a Caucasian's foot,
well, to a Tanner Caucasian.
I don't wanna get in a race, that would be stupid.
Where are you going with this one?
I don't know.
He's just super white, man.
Yeah, his unsunned skin is very white.
Like a Swedish foot
to a Los Angeles surfer dude leg.
Okay, that works, that's better, that's safe.
I don't know, I'm in hot water.
You want another question?
Hit me.
Emily.
Paplinski.
Boy, I like to say that name, Paplinski.
Ironically, you're mispronouncing it, but go ahead.
Peplinski?
Peplinski?
Paplinski.
I think we're done with the pronunciation.
I'm never done with it.
I'm done with it.
I wasn't trying to be funny.
I was just admiring.
If I could orchestrate a way for us to be done with it.
I was just admiring the way that it rolls off the tongue.
Hi Rhett and Link, what are some fun outside games
that don't involve a lot of physical activity?
I love enjoying the nice weather but I'm pregnant.
And get out of breath easily but also wanna have fun
with the energized seven year old we have.
Please help, thank you.
He's got a seven year old and another one on the way.
He's really, he's spacing them out.
But congratulations.
My advice is just to get it over with.
And we're so cynical about the kids in this episode.
Let's put a warning at the top.
Yeah, we love children.
Let's just put like,
the first thing people are gonna hear,
I'll do it now.
Okay, good.
We'll put this at the top.
Hello, in this special edition of Ear Biscuits,
we just wanted to let you know up top
and unequivocally how much we love our children,
love spending time with them,
and how much we welcome them into all,
not all aspects of our lives,
but all the appropriate aspects of our lives.
I'm making this weird. It'll make more sense when we get into the episode because this is at the aspects of our lives. I'm making this weird.
It'll make more sense when we get into the episode
because this is at the top of the episode.
It's not right now in the middle
where I'm actually saying it.
To clarify, we love them, we just don't always like them.
Is that, is that, is that, is that, I would, boop.
I don't know what, the boop is like the edit point.
I think I just made it worse.
Well, I didn't make it great, let's be real.
I actually like hanging out with them,
it's just after a while they need to do their own thing.
Are we still at the top of the episode?
Do I need to boop again?
No, no, no.
Congratulations on the pregnancy,
but warning, that leads to a child.
When you say get it over with,
what do you mean, go ahead and induce labor?
No, I meant, no, I said I usually give advice
to clump your kids together to get the whole process
of child rearing over with in a clump.
Again, and we've already been through this,
how you shouldn't be giving family planning advice
to people.
And I'm not.
And the fact is, we cut that out.
Is that another edit joke.
She's pregnant and she has a seven year old and you're telling her
to squish it closer together.
No, I'm saying. It's impossible at this point.
I'm not advising her.
You aren't listening to me.
All she's asking is how to,
what should she be doing for exercise and fun.
Play fetch. Outside game.
With the seven year old.
It's pretty obvious.
I mean, I think, don't call it fetch,
but everyone's gonna know it's fetch.
You sit down with something the seven-year-old likes
and you throw it.
And then if they bring it-
How many times do you think that'll work?
They bring it- With a human,
this is not a dog.
That's a good experiment.
Experiment.
Typically, in all the times that I've played-
I'm thinking fetch though.
No, but when I've played fetch with seven year olds,
it's worked the first time.
Yeah, it's not a two year old.
The second time, they're like, what?
No.
So then what does she do?
And I think at that point is when she should play cornhole,
which is what I was trying to get to.
Oh, cornhole.
Cause cornhole is.
Close contact cornhole.
A lot of fun.
You don't want 30 feet though.
You can eat and drink while you're doing it.
It's really low exertion,
but the competition can get incredibly tense.
I just recommend cornhole.
I mean, even if you got a pool Xbox and a,
what's the other thing?
There's a younger age group.
Pool table?
If you properly clumped your children together,
you could have played fetch.
But you can't do that with a seven year old,
that's an excellent point.
Lisa Marie Brew asks,
what is the best thing to bring to a barbecue?
I don't understand the question.
Oh gosh, oh gosh.
Your name is Lisa Marie, which is commendable,
but the fact that your name is Lisa Marie, which is commendable, but the fact that your name
is Lisa Marie and you're still using the term barbecue
as if it's an event that you go to,
I'm gonna have to take this opportunity to correct you.
Barbecue is not an event.
It isn't a place you go.
It is also not the device that you cook hamburgers
and hot dogs on.
It is also not a verb, it isn't something you do to meet.
Barbecue is a noun and it only refers to meat
that is prepared in a very special way
that varies from region to region,
mostly around the Southern United States.
How many times do we have to say this?
We have not said it enough.
You can't say it enough.
I mean, the day we have to not say it
is the day we're in heaven.
And if that means that everyone on earth understands,
then heaven on Earth.
And listen, okay, so I've said that,
I don't wanna drag on about that.
So let's just, I'll just re-phrase it.
I'll just re-ask the question.
Re-ask the question.
Lisa Marie, Southern first name,
the Southern heart to go along with it.
Her last name is Brew, for goodness sakes.
Brew, Lisa Marie Brew.
Best name ever.
What is the best thing to bring to a cookout?
Okay, now, oh, you mean a place
where you'll be cooking things?
Yeah, outside.
You're cooking out.
You're cooking it out.
The answer is exotic sausages.
Whoa.
Okay, hey, hey, hey.
You're gonna get some sideways looks
at the cookout, man. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. Okay're gonna get some sideways looks at the cookout, man.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Okay, here's the thing.
People are gonna bring burgers.
You mean exotically shaped sausages?
No, no, no, no.
People, this is, I feel strongly about this answer.
Exotic sausage.
Now, it may depend on what you're trying to accomplish,
but if you're trying to have a good time,
eat some good food, and score some points,
you know, get noticed a little bit.
You don't wanna bring hamburgers or hot dogs,
you wanna bring exotic sausages.
If you're the guy who breaks out the ostrich sausages,
everybody's gonna be talking to you.
You know, if you're gonna do some-
While you're eating, they're gonna be talking to you
about the exotic ostrich sausages while you're eating
what they brought to the cooking.
No, no, no, no. I get it.
Every single person- Oh, try my ostrich sausage. you're eating what they brought to the cooking. No, no, no, no. I get it. Every single person.
Try my ostrich sausage.
Hey, you wanna trade these?
Let me get a little bit of that burger.
First of all, you would enjoy it.
I mean, you're a very picky man,
but here's the thing about, all we're talking about
is starting a conversation here, making friends.
If you bring ostrich sausages, kangaroo sausages,
I don't know, I'm probably getting into like
endangered species at some point,
appropriately raised exotic sausages, not a legal trade,
what's gonna happen is people are gonna wanna try it
and you bring enough for everybody to try it
and next thing you know, people are like,
oh, Link, ostrich sausage man.
And there's a lot of worse-
That's not what I wanna be known for.
There's a lot of worse things to be known for
other than ostrich sausage man.
Let me tell you right now.
My answer was deviled eggs.
Okay.
I mean, it's, I'm assuming with cookouts
that like they got like the meats covered, but if it's bring your own meat, okay, I'll go with cookouts that like, they got like the meats covered,
but if it's bring your own meat, okay, I'll go with you
because it's a fun little thing that you're doing here
for everybody.
Everybody gets to taste a little bit of ostrich.
Okay, yep.
But deviled eggs, especially in a cookout environment
are perfect because they're room temperature or warmer.
You go to a restaurant, you order a deviled egg,
it's gonna come, they've made it a long time ago
and it's been refrigerated and that's not-
Sometimes, not always.
That's not good.
The best place to eat a deviled egg is when
Aunt Sluicinda
pulls the saran wrap off
a plate or two of her homemade deviled eggs.
Does she make that noise or does the plastic make that? The plastic does, it kisses the roof of the.
Okay, I love deviled eggs.
The yellow.
If you brought deviled eggs to a cookout,
I'd be happier than if you brought ostrich sausages.
Here's the problem with deviled eggs to a cookout, I'd be happier than if you brought ostrich sausages. Here's the problem with deviled eggs.
The next day,
Fart-sees?
Somebody gets sick.
Oh, somebody gets sick.
Two people get sick.
They're gonna, even if it's not.
Who they gonna blame?
Who they gonna blame?
They're gonna blame deviled egg man.
The devil.
If you bring deviled eggs to something,
That devil brought his deviled eggs.
And anybody gets sick, the blame falls on you.
Why do you think they call him deviled eggs?
I mean you got Eddie over there,
The devil!
cooking the chicken breast and not cooking it
all the way into, all the way to the bone.
What internal temperature of sausage
when it's ostrich does it need to be?
Nobody knows, but they're still gonna blame
the deviled eggs!
Blame deviled eggs!
Katie,
Katie Richie.
Her name is actually Kate Richie.
She's got a Jeep icon.
Yeah, I see that.
Sounds like we're having a sexist reaction.
Like a female can't have a Jeep.
Well, that's not what we were doing.
No.
Well then why were we saying?
I was like, that's cool.
It's because every other icon on here
is just somebody's face.
It's a Jeep.
You're sexist for thinking we all had a sexist reaction.
That's true.
But I'm not sexist.
I didn't want to say that.
Yeah, you're not helping.
Kate Ritchie.
I'm going on vacation with my best friend
near the end of summer.
Okay, cool.
What should we do during the 12 hour car ride
to make it extra enjoyable?
Well, I mean, you've picked your best friend,
so you got a good compadre for this thing.
I mean, it took an hour and a half to drive
and pick up my mom and my-
Stepdad.
My, her spouse.
Her husband.
And I took Lando with me
because I liked hanging out with him
because I love all my children.
Yeah.
And I look for any opportunity to hang out with any of them.
Plus, I needed to legally drive in the carpool lane.
And I was like, shut up, you're only here
so I can drive in the carpool lane.
No, I didn't say that.
Because the whole, he was like, dad,
let's play the alphabet game.
So you're looking around, I'm just brainstorming here.
For us, I mean, it literally, for an hour and a half, we played two games, I'm just gonna pitch these. For us, I mean it literally, for an hour and a half,
we played two games, I'm just gonna pitch these.
I don't think this is what they should play,
but I think it might be the start
of something that they can do.
Okay.
You'd look for a word that started with the letter
that you were on, so I have A, so I'm like,
oh, Allagash Lane, and then he has B,
and he has to find a B in signage or bumper stickers.
I know how it works.
Oh, you do?
And then we played another game
where it was still the alphabet,
but it was, you say your name,
you say your best friend's name,
you say your favorite food and you say where you're from.
So if it was G, it'd be like, hi, my name's Gary.
My best friend's name is Gertrude.
My favorite food is Galapagos turtles.
And.
That's real bad.
No, I'm from the Galapagos Islands
and my favorite food is jelly.
How about grapes?
Since that starts with a.
Grape jelly.
Moon pies and grapes.
We had a lot of fun with that.
Eating turtles.
I mean, that got us an hour and a half.
What, okay.
No books on tape?
The overlap between Lando and our books on tape taste
is not, there's no, the Venn diagram looks like
two tires on a truck.
I don't think that's gonna get 12 hours,
so I do think that you can play that game for a while,
about as long as you can play fetch
with a seven year old human.
My advice sucks today, that's what you're saying.
No, no, no.
Well, I think that one of the things.
I didn't say it was advice,
I said we're beginning a brainstorming.
Okay, well.
And now you're saying, well,
since neither one of those ideas have led.
I'll add to it.
That's fine.
I just don't think they're gonna take the whole trip.
You don't have to yes and it.
This is not improv play.
No, no, I think you're gonna agree.
I don't even like those people.
I think you're gonna agree with my suggestion.
Rest stops are really underrated.
You know what I'm saying?
Let's put things into perspective here. You're already paying for them. You know what I'm saying? Let's put things into perspective here.
You're already paying for them, you know what I'm saying?
Oh they're ours, they're the communities, man.
They're the citizens.
They're the public.
They're the rest locale for any citizen.
And have you been to one lately?
Where anything goes.
Listen, rest stops get a bad, bad rap.
You know?
This is how it goes.
I'm a rest stop.
I'm at the side of the road.
You're driving real fast and then you're pulling slow
and you stop.
You get out, you go to the bathroom.
You see a weird dude by the trash can.
You run back to your car and you leave,
as quick as you can, as quick as you can.
Okay.
You don't agree?
I thought you would be with me on this.
I am, it's great.
I mean, anything you wanna eat, anything you wanna drink.
Vending machines, water fountains.
Large bathrooms.
There's usually a grassy area, you could play fetch with your seven year old. Anything you wanna eat, anything you wanna drink. Vending machines, water fountains.
There's usually a grassy area,
you can play fetch with your seven year old.
You can play cornhole if you've got a mobile set.
They won't stop you, I've tried that.
You don't wanna do anything
that's gonna slow down the trip.
You gotta keep moving if it's a 12 hour drive.
No.
You don't wanna play cornhole at every rest stop.
But I think you should stop,
but think of all the time you save with the rest stop
because you just get off an exit and you're there
and then you get back on the exit.
There's no like, which way do I go?
I would recommend packing special food items
and then instead of stopping to eat,
having picnics at rest stops.
And bring enough for friends.
If anybody, if other people who were there,
some people are on their last leg at a rest stop.
They need a little fried chicken.
I'm not talking about at night.
Let me just clarify.
I'm talking about day rest stops.
Oh yeah, broad daylight.
Don't go at nighttime.
What about dancing across state lines
like we did in the Mythical Road trip?
I mean we drove all the way across the country
in a U-Haul pulling a minivan.
I feel like that- We stopped at every state line.
I feel like it's dangerous.
And danced across, it was dangerous
to find a parking spot on the side of the road
to run back to the-
Getting out on the interstate and walking,
you're just in the danger zone,
especially now with texting and driving.
Like, people end up getting into the shoulder.
Like I will not change a tire
if I haven't had a flat tire on the interstate.
All the advice we've given today has been so unsafe.
Why can't we just continue?
No, what I'm saying is if I get a flat tire
on the roadside, I'm calling AAA, man.
I'm not, especially if it's on the inside,
if it's towards the road, I'm not getting out
and trying to change my tire
with the people texting and driving, man.
Yeah, you do have to pull over really far
if you wanna do that. But what if there's a wall?
What if there's a wall and you can't get that far over?
I'm not getting on that side of the car
because people swerve, they're not thinking, they're not just texting or driving,
but people just, they swerve.
I'm not gonna take that chance.
I'm gonna make the Triple A man take that chance.
My papa, when he was, I don't think he was
the chief of police, but he was a policeman
before he became the chief and he pulled somebody over just on this side
of the Lillington Bridge.
And he gets, you know, the person pulls over
and then he gets out of the car and goes back
and he's coming, he's talked to the person,
he's got their ID and then he's coming back
to his patrol car and then he sees this bread truck
coming down the road and it's drifting off of the road
and he can tell that it's not seeing him
as he's walking on the shoulder back to the car.
He runs back to his patrol car, gets in the car
and slams the door just in time to get smacked
by a freaking Wonder Bread truck.
He was hospitalized and there was no permanent damage.
I was very young when this happened,
but I remember the stories in retrospect.
Did he get Wonder Bread for life?
Did he get like a loaf of Wonder Bread?
I don't think there was any lasting damage,
but it just goes, even a flashing patrol car, you know,
the lights flashing, not the whole car.
That'd be kinda cool though.
Yeah, you can't. It's a dangerous place.
You don't wanna get on the side of the road,
so I can't, in good conscience, I can't give that advice
to dance across state lines on the shoulder.
We did that at our own risk.
Well, we don't have anything for Kate then.
We haven't gotten anything.
Rest stops and the G in the stop picnics?
Alphabet, alphabet.
You know, that's good advice.
I admit, Kate, that's not very good.
You got a Jeep, just go off road.
Yeah, that's what you should do.
You should drive as the crow flies
to wherever you're going.
Yeah, forget the road trip, just make it a trip.
The 12 hour car ride is gonna turn into
a 14 day Jeep excursion. That is an excellent idea. I'm gonna get a trip. The 12 hour car ride is gonna turn into a
14 day Jeep excursion. Hold on.
That is an excellent idea.
You get a map and you map the straight line
as there crow flies from where you are
and where you wanna go and then you GPS that sucker
and then you just ride through people's yards,
ride through people's pools,
Xboxes, What about houses?
Trampolines. Oh this is safe.
Now you're giving safe advice.
It's safe for them, it's not safe
for the people in the path.
It's not a armored car.
I mean you get a couple miles.
I don't even know if she, it's just because
it's in the icon doesn't mean she has it.
Two more.
I could go all day, man.
Don't hold back.
I got a quick one here from Brittany Noara.
Noara, Noara, Noara.
What are the best summer movies to watch?
Okay. Okay.
I've got a list of five.
I got a list of five.
Off the top?
Off your top?
That's like, that's what the rappers, the freestylers say.
No, no, this isn't off the top.
I looked at this question and I have my five movies
and I just wanna see what you think about.
I think these are the five movies
that if you're gonna watch five movies this summer,
you gotta watch these five movies.
All right, hit me.
They're all summer themed.
That's kinda where I went with this.
If you haven't seen them especially,
Ferris Bueller's Day Off.
I should check that one out.
My dad watched this with Shepard the other day
and my dad said,
I was watching Ferris Bueller's Day Off with Shepard
and like seven or eight times
during the movie, he would stop, slap the pillow and say,
man, I love this kid.
You talking about Ferris Bueller?
Yeah.
He's nine.
He should have invited me, I haven't seen it.
Oh gosh. You haven't seen it. Oh gosh.
You haven't seen it?
I know about it.
Okay, well this is your list, Goonies.
I've seen that, I saw it two years ago.
Okay, that's a great summer movie
if you haven't seen that.
It holds up.
Do the Right Thing.
That's a good summer movie.
I have not seen that. Oh gosh, Link. And I feel like, I think you summer movie. I have not seen that.
Oh gosh, Link.
I feel like, I think you would've thought
I would've seen that one.
Because all of the, the soundtrack for that is amazing.
You need to go.
I've watched the soundtrack.
You need to go home and watch this tonight.
Do the Right Thing out of all these
is the one you need to watch.
The Endless Summer, you've seen that.
The surfing movie? Yeah.
I think I've, I know that I've seen it,
but I might have fallen asleep.
Oh gosh.
It's a pretty soothing movie,
it's just kind of people surfing.
And here's a curveball summer movie, The River Wild.
Meryl Streep.
Kevin Bacon.
Hold on, tell me that Meryl Streep is not in that movie.
I think she is.
Yeah, she is, right?
And Kevin Bacon.
The River Wild, I saw that in the movie theater.
Oh, with you. Oh, okay, I saw that in the movie theater. Oh.
With you.
Oh, okay, we saw that.
And I think it's because, you know,
going back to all the river shenanigans from earlier,
I think that's why we saw that.
That's a good.
She was a river guide, and Kevin Bacon.
Don't say what, you can't say anything about it.
You can't say what he is. Because you spoil it.
I don't remember what he was.
Okay, all right.
He just goes on a trip with them.
It's a good movie.
Well you just kinda, you soft spoiled it.
Now everybody's gonna be watching Kevin Bacon with
eagle eyes.
Happens pretty early.
What about A River Runs Through It?
It's not a summer movie, it's just a river movie.
What about Cape Fear? It's not a summer movie, it's just a river movie. What about Cape Fear?
It's another river movie. What about, let's talk more about river movies.
Name another river movie.
You just named some really good ones.
Name another river movie.
Mystic River.
Oh, Rivertasia.
It's a Disney, there's lots of dancing, it's animated.
River's Edge.
What is River's Edge?
Something that you read off of Felden's phone?
I don't know, I don't know what it is.
Okay, last question.
Summer's great, man.
There's a, even if you're working, there's a freedom.
It's like, traffic's gone down, have you noticed?
Because of the kids.
It's amazing. They're not in school.
How much LA traffic goes down, in the morning especially.
I mean, in the afternoon, not so much because,
but I think the kids are off, they're out of the,
the moms are off the streets taking their kids to school.
Or dads, I take my kid to school.
Sexist.
Elon Costa, what do I do if I live in the other side
of the world and it's winter?
You know, that's a good point.
We've been all excited about going to Australia,
we realize it's their winter.
Huh.
And well, so the answer is you buy tickets
to the Tour of Mythicality Aussie edition.
We're gonna be in Sydney, we're gonna be in Brisbane,
and we're gonna be in Melbourne.
Yes.
We're gonna be gallivanting all around the place
with our family.
With a footprint as big as we're gonna have,
you probably just, the odds of you running into us
are through the roof.
Yeah. That's not a challenge,
by the way.
Come see us at the show and don't try to find us
anywhere else.
Tourmythicality.com.
Seriously, if you're in Australia, come on, come out.
I think I'm bringing a- It's winter time.
I think I'm bringing a- It'll be warm in there.
I'm bringing a coat.
It's not that, in Australia, it's not that cold
when we're going there in the winter.
Like what are the temps?
But I mean, I think 30s to 60.
30s is pretty cold, man.
It's probably not cold to most people,
but it's freezing to me.
I'm bringing like a heavy,
I'm bringing a whole bag that's just full of coats.
Coat bag. Okay, I'll bringing like a heavy, I'm bringing a whole bag that's just full of coats. Coat bag.
Okay, I'll put my coat in there.
That's it, that's all the advice that we have.
I think there's just so much freedom with the summer.
I'm just, I love it.
I love summer, man, it's great.
It's your favorite season?
No, fall is my favorite season.
So when it's all ending?
When death is upon us?
There's a freshness to fall, I feel like, actually.
It's not a death to me, it's like a, I don't know.
To me, it's the-
Change is exciting.
The transitions.
Yeah.
The transitions into every season.
Of course, we don't have that out here in Los Angeles.
Oh, there's a teeny bit, but not nearly the don't have that out here in Los Angeles. Oh there's a teeny bit,
but not nearly the amount of transition
that we got in North Carolina.
That is one thing that I miss,
is the transition into fall
and then that first day of spring,
not literally the first day of spring,
but when you kind of realize that spring is happening,
then all of a sudden it's like 100 degrees.
Going into spring is a problem
because of the pollen and stuff.
Pollen.
And then you go into summer and it's like,
it's very smoggy and gloomy out here.
But then it starts to clear up some late in the fall.
We're enjoying it.
Now we're just talking about the weather.
Yeah.
This podcast sucks all of a sudden.
Just turned into an episode of the Californians.
We talked about traffic and weather right at the end.
Oh gosh, what have we done?
We hope you enjoyed this episode of Ear Biscuits.
Thank you for all your questions.
As we asked you last week,
if there's somebody out there
that you think might enjoy summer advice and podcasts,
share this Ear B ear biscuit with them.
They might be a parent who says that we had no need
to apologize or hedge with the things we said about our kids.
They might be a pregnant woman with a seven-year-old
that they like to play fetch with.
I don't know.
They might be somebody who loves their kids
or likes their kids or they're just tolerating their kids.
Everybody on that spectrum is welcome.
Summer and pregnancy, those are two things
that you should not combine unless, if you can help it.
And very important last thing we wanna say
is that after next week's episode,
we'll be back with another episode
just like always next week,
but then we are taking a short three week summer break
because we just weren't relaxed enough.
So we're going, no, we're taking a short break.
We got some other things going on
in kind of preparation for our trip across the world.
And then we'll be back on July 30th.
30th. July 30th.
We'll have a freshman.
So it'll be three weeks that you can mine
some older Ear Biscuits.
Lastly, I'll just say continue to give us feedback,
hashtag Ear Biscuits.
We gave a little speech about the morphing of this show
in the last episode.
We appreciate that feedback.
We are processing it and we'll continue to process
as a response to this prompt, hashtag Ear Biscuits.
Let us know what you're thinking, what resonates with you,
what do you appreciate about this show or just about me?
Just kidding.
I don't need any feedback.
All right, thanks for hanging out with us.
We'll talk at you next week.
Yes.