Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - 152: Rhett's Personal Obsessions |Ear Biscuits Ep. 152
Episode Date: July 16, 2018Rhett & Link dish on their different approaches to hobbies, how Rhett's "layers" impact their friendship, and more on this week's classic Ear Biscuits. 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.
Welcome to Ear Biscuits, I'm Link.
And I'm Rhett.
This week at the round table of dim lighting,
we're going to be doing another throwback episode
to a good long time ago when we talked about
what I call my layers.
And I call, a a lot well different things,
including obsessions.
Basically a series of interests that I have had
over the years and we're kind of exploring
how they affected me, how they affected you.
Yeah, there is an interesting dynamic
that we do explore that I do find it interesting
how we work so differently but the interplay
that happens with something that you really get into
sometimes for just a fleeting moment
could have ripple effects through my entire life.
Again, we're on a short break
from releasing new Ear Biscuits.
So that's why we're doing the throwback this week
and we got one more throwback next week
and then we are back to fresh biscuits two weeks from now.
But before we get into it,
we wanna throw a quick plug to us coming to a stage
in the Northeast America or Canada?
First, we will let you know there's still time
to get tickets for Australia late July the 27th, 29th,
and 30th will be in Melbourne, Sydney, and Brisbane,
respectively, respectively.
So go to Tour of Mythicality for tickets there
and then like Link said, we're gonna be in the Northeast,
we're gonna be in Toronto on November 8th,
we're gonna be in Atlantic City on November 9th,
and then we're gonna be in Connecticut at the Foxwoods Resort Cas Toronto on November 8th. We're gonna be in Atlantic City on November 9th. And then we're gonna be in Connecticut
at the Foxwoods Resort Casino on November 10th.
Go to tourofmythicality.com to get the info
and get the tick skits.
The tick skits.
But right now, let's dive into Rhett's psyche
and then come out the other end of my situation.
What orifice?
You'll see.
Welcome to Ear Biscuits, I'm Rhett.
And I'm Link, thanks for joining us today.
That's right, it's another interesting conversation
with someone interesting from the interesting internet.
Interesting net.
At the round table of dim lighting this week,
we have each other, Rhett.
Us!
That's right, people, you get another Rhett and Link
only Ear Biscuit this week.
I'm not gonna apologize for that.
Well, you don't have to.
I mean, you seem like you are about to apologize for it.
No, no, no.
And then you said, I'm not gonna apologize for it.
I thought about apologizing for it.
Kinda like a backwards apology.
But I'm not gonna apologize for it.
We've got some dark chocolate here
that I will be eating as we have this conversation.
I'm very much looking forward to, I think that,
Rhett, I know you're gonna enjoy it,
but I think that you're gonna enjoy it out there
in your ear cans or your...
Your ear cans. Or in your ear cans or your... Your ear cans.
Or in your car or I like to imagine you
wherever you are being transported to another world.
It's like you're sitting here at this table with us.
So it's like you're the guest today, but you're silent.
But somebody out there is on a bus.
You're on the bus, you get on the bus every single day.
Wearing ear cans.
You got those ear cans on, and you're like,
all right, time for my biscuit as I go along.
And you're making eye contact with the guy across from you right now
who also has on ear cans.
He's listening to another podcast.
What I want you to do right now is I want you to pause this.
I want you to take your ear cans off.
I want you to go.
I want you to grab him by his ears.
Pull his ear cans out and say,
what podcast are you listening to? And then he's going to say, something else. And then you say,
you should be listening to Ear Biscuits. And then just-
And give him your ear cans.
He's going to start to try to say something and you just put your finger over his lips and say,
Ear Biscuits, and then go back and sit down. That's how we spread the word about Ear Biscuits,
one creepy interaction at a time.
Okay, here's what I've decided to do
in this Rhett and Link-only Ear Biscuit this week.
I want to explore a phenomenon related to you, Rhett.
Yeah, that's me, I'm here.
And this is a fascinating phenomenon
in how your brain works, how your life works, I guess.
That not only have I noticed this, but-
You've piqued my interest.
Your wife has chronicled this.
Somewhat.
In fact, today, I asked you to send her a text
to make sure I wasn't missing anything
in my list of what I wanna go through,
and she replied with even more things to add to the list.
She did.
Not only has your wife chronicled and diagnosed,
I'll even say, this phenomenon.
Talking about psoriasis?
But my wife, as well, has been a part of this conversation, and we have labeled this phenomenon. Tell them about psoriasis? But my wife as well has been a part of this conversation
and we have labeled this phenomenon
that is not necessarily unique to you,
but between the two of us it is.
And I think that there's also, as we discussed this,
it is kind of a discussion about the interplay
of our friendship and how we're different
and how the dynamic of it and
how things work and how your personality impacts how we interact. So. Okay. I mean, I'm not going
to hedge anymore. Are you going to ask me questions? Is that how it's going to work? Yeah, I've got a
list here. I'm going to prompt you. Do I need to lay down? Some things. No, it's not a counseling
appointment. Okay. It's just a fun conversation. Do I need to stand up?
Okay.
This is, Rhett is an ideas guy.
I mean, it's one of the things that I've liked about him in the past.
That I've liked.
One of those things I used to like about him.
One of the things I appreciate about you.
Until I got old.
But there, Rhett goes through a series of obsessions like a fashion designer goes through new outfits.
And I thought it would be fun to explore all of the obsessions that Rhett has had over the years,
things that he gets really excited about for one hot minute before just long enough,
it hasn't even cooled off before
he's moved on to the next thing that he's, I'm so excited about this.
This is the thing. And so I've called it, Jesse your wife and my wife Chrissy,
I mean we talk about this and we're like, here you are, okay, it's another obsession.
Rhett's talking about vitamins and natural medicine.
They call it phases. Phases, that's right. My wife calls it a phase. A phase. Oh, he's just going through another obsession. Rhett's talking about vitamins and natural medicine. They call it phases.
Phases, that's right.
My wife calls it a phase.
A phase.
Oh, he's just going through another phase.
He's talking about natural medicine.
He's reading a book about what vitamins he's going to take,
what supplements he's going to take.
Next week, it'll be gone.
It's just a phase.
It's an obsessive phase.
Can I give you my perspective on that?
Yeah.
That you already know? Yeah, that's not what you call it can I make my, can I give you my perspective on that? Well, yeah. That you already know?
Yeah, that's not what you call it.
I call it layers.
Okay.
Because my contention is that, yes, these particular things that I know what you're going to list, I know what my layers are.
I may have had a more heated passion for them at times that has subsided somewhat.
However, they remain on my mind, in my heart, and a part of my life at different points,
and I can access them at any time.
And some I just, I want to go back, and I want to go deeper.
And there's an interesting phenomenon.
It's a layer.
It's a layer.
Okay, so I have a list of these layers.
Oh, good. You're using layer. It's a layer. Okay, so I have a list of these layers. Oh, good.
You're using my terminology.
I like that.
One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14.
I mean, I've got 14 of these.
We may not even get through all of them.
Okay.
I would love to talk.
I could do a podcast on each.
So there's no need to spend too much time on each one.
But I think as we go through it, there's an interesting phenomenon that the reason why we call them an obsession because you bring these things to us, to me, to your wife, sometimes to
my wife, and it, well, you bring it to me, and it's an implication for Christy that this could
change my life if I decide to get into this too. Right. So it's always a point of decision for us when you have your new layer. Am I in this?
Am I in on this?
Okay.
And if I am, then it can really take off because it's like adding fuel to a fire kind of thing.
Or is this not for me kind of a thing?
Right, because you tend to be pretty singularly focused on things.
And so if you get into something, whoa, buddy, you go pretty deep.
Right. Let's just get to one.
Okay.
These are semi-chronological order. Ultralights.
Oh, ultralights. Yes. This is a class of airplanes that at the time I became interested in these.
A class of airplanes that what?
A class of airplanes that you don't need a real license to fly.
Now, that has changed.
I don't remember what year it was.
It was about the time I was interested in this.
They were changing and creating a new classification of airplanes.
But let me tell you about this.
I was working for Black & Veatch Engineering Firm.
This is my first job right out of college.
And we didn't have a whole lot of work going on.
I spent a lot of time on the interwebs, and one of the things I found is that there were these dudes
who were really into flying these different contraptions, and it was all kinds of different stuff.
Contraption is a great word.
Yeah, right, because they're not really planes.
They are mostly either a powered parachute, and I'm talking a guy with a parachute,
and then he has a propeller on his back,
like a backpack that is a propeller.
And you can fly all around the world on this thing.
Well, you can fly like around a county with it.
So it's for people who are obsessed enough with flying
to strap a fan to their back and some wings above them,
but not obsessed enough to get a proper license.
Yeah, yeah.
Actual license is too much work.
Who are we kidding? You don't need one of those.
And trust me, once you get into this and you start reading
what these guys say about it, it's like they say
you're one with, you're like a bird.
This is as close as you can be to being a bird.
In fact, there's a movie called Fly Away Home
which is about geese being led back home by an ultralight.
And this was an ultralight trike, which is basically a tricycle
with a big hang glider wing on it.
And you're reading all this stuff
over the course of like-
Oh, I love them.
I mean, like five days.
Oh, no, no.
You gotta give me more credit than that.
I read about-
It's not, I mean,
it's not that I'm not giving you credit.
I read about them for weeks,
and then I contacted a guy in Irwin
who was doing lessons.
But before you contacted him, you were talking to me about it.
Oh, yeah.
I was in.
And I agreed to go to Irwin and to get on one of these things.
I was like, how much does it cost?
You were like, $300.
I was like, I'll go up once and see if I catch the fever.
But I'm not going to really read anything before I go.
But I had mine priced out and everything.
I had a ballistic parachute that was going to be attached to it.
Like your personal one, not the...
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Because you got an altimeter on this thing, a GPS.
I mean, there was a guy who went all the way from North America to England,
United Kingdom on one of these things.
He went over the Atlantic Ocean.
North Atlantic, yeah.
So anyway, yes, I still want to do this.
I'll tell you the thing that stopped me on this one,
the thing that stopped me on this one
was the fact that I'm a family man.
And that every time I got really close to doing it
is when I realized that, you know,
this is how John Denver died, you know, this is how John Denver died.
Was it? John Denver died in an ultralight, yeah.
Really?
Mm-hmm.
I didn't know that.
Country roads, take me home.
He apparently-
Straight down into the ocean.
Ran into, I think it was the side of a mountain probably,
cause of Rocky Mountain High.
Oh, that's what that song is about.
Is it too soon to joke about John Denver's death?
I think it's okay.
Okay.
I don't think there's anyone who's upset right now.
So I was just like, okay, this may not be the best idea.
So you put pause on that one.
But that's a layer because you might could dig,
you might could unearth it.
At any moment, I could get right back into that.
I am so close.
They do it out in Ventura County.
It's the place to be.
Yeah, it's amazing.
Well, we're at a point where if it can be an episode of Good Mythical Morning,
and I don't have to pay anything, I'm very much in.
But I am a family man.
So, I mean, when the rubber meets the road.
You're not going to die, man.
Or doesn't meet the road anymore, I really have to think about that.
You're not going to die.
The technology has improved over the past decade.
Here's another one.
Chiropractic.
Okay.
Now, for a normal person, it's like, okay, chiropractors. I could see how you might do some research. But calling that an obsession or a layer is a little bit different than saying, well, I went to a chiropractor.
Well, it's interesting because... Is it interesting?
Is it interesting?
These are all interesting Otherwise I wouldn't be interested in them
But I will say
I don't believe
I think a lot of stuff
Is pseudoscience
Including a lot of chiropractic medicine
This whole idea
That the alignment of your spine
Will improve every part of your well-being
I think that that's wishful thinking,
and I don't think there's actual scientific support for that. However...
But there's no need for them to push it that far, because there is something there.
Right. I just want to be clear that I went to a chiropractor who... I do believe that there's
a certain portion of chiropractic medicine, which is definitely legitimate medicine. I mean, they do, they do x-rays of your back.
They do manipulation to move things. They know the stretches and strength exercises and that
kind of thing. You know, I got a bad back. I've had a bad back since I was in high school. So
starting in college, I got interested in this and I was like, this could be my thing. You know,
I could go on a regular basis. And I think in my day, I've seen three or four different chiropractors.
But I wouldn't call this an obsession. No, you just said, you just said,
there's a thought that crossed your mind. You said, this could be my thing. Going to a chiropractor,
I thought it could be- You got excited.
I thought it could be the thing that kept me pain-free.
Oh, but you didn't think I'm going to.
Be a chiropractor.
No.
Or go every week and that'll be fun.
No, I actually thought I was going to go twice a week for an extended period of time.
But you didn't do it.
I didn't do that either because my insurance plan didn't have enough visits.
And so, again, I was prohibited.
What you'll find is that in most of these times, it wasn't my own decision that I moved on to the next again, I was prohibited. What you'll find is that in most of these times,
it wasn't my own decision that I moved on to the next thing.
I was prohibited from exploring it further.
Okay, we can move on, but I don't want to put you
on the defensive.
Oh, I'm not being defensive.
I'm just being explanatory.
I have to say, well, you seem to be defensive.
Like, well, I would still be doing this
if it wasn't for something else. And the reason why is because, well, you seem to be defensive. Like, well, I would still be doing this if it wasn't for something else.
And the reason why is because,
well, that's the difference
between an obsession and a lair.
A lair, it's a dormant lair.
I learned enough.
Because one of the things that does happen with me,
I will say this,
I love to read, right?
And I'm always reading something.
And I get, okay,
here's the difference between me and you.
Well, there's a lot of differences between me and you
as we've established, but our reading habits
are very different.
Right.
I'm currently reading eight books.
Right, like if you look at your bedside
or maybe your Kindle if you do it that way,
there's like a stack, like there's a physical stack
by your bedside, right?
Well, but I do, I read.
A digital stack.
Right, exactly, I have my iPhoto.
You read pictures?
iPhone library.
But for me, like three-
But I will say, let me finish,
I have not finished any of those books,
and it is very likely that I won't finish
the majority of them, because I get the idea of the book,
and I'm like, all right, I see where you're going, buddy. I won't finish the majority of them because I get the idea of the book and I'm like,
alright, I see where you're going, buddy.
I'm on to the next book.
And for me, if you look at my bedside or my Kindle,
there's only gonna be one book on my bedside
or one book within the Kindle.
Even within the Kindle.
Like, I'll clean them off,
because I don't even want to see another book
in the Kindle that I could read.
You're joking.
When I read...
Just don't click on it. When I first got the Kindle, first book read. You're joking. When I read... Just don't click on it.
When I first got the Kindle,
first book I bought was Game of Thrones.
Right.
Like two and a half years later,
I was reading Game of Thrones.
Like I read all the books,
but I was committed,
I'm gonna keep reading Game of Thrones
and nothing else until I have exhausted it.
And I read half.
I haven't watched the television show, but I've read every single page of the books because
I just want, once I got there, I was committed and I actually felt an obligation to keep
doing it.
Like saying, well, I get the idea.
I'm gonna move on to the next thing.
Something, I don't know.
And I think this is a problem for me that I'm like, I can't move on.
Well, but a narrative work like Game of Thrones,
I mean, I'll admit, I read half of it and quit.
You can't get the idea because you don't know how it ends.
I read mostly nonfiction,
and a lot of times you can get an idea, right?
Well, I moved on to that.
But Game of Thrones is just like, man, this is a long book.
It's very good.
It's very long.
I feel like if I commit every night to reading this book,
there'll be like seven other books that I can't get to.
And so then I get distracted and I go to these other books.
Well, interestingly, once I ran out of Game of Thrones,
I started reading some nonfiction.
And it was most, I can't remember what it was,
but it was most likely something that you were reading
at the time that you were talking to me about,
so then I just picked that up and started reading it.
Well, yeah, I started Game of Thrones
and was like, this is awesome, and then you read everything,
and I'm still halfway through the first one.
Right, and then you recommended it.
Years later.
You recommended another book,
and I can't remember what it was,
but I guarantee you I read the whole thing
just out of sense of obligation.
Huh, an obligation to the author
or an obligation to yourself?
Because they don't keep up
with whether or not
you finish the book.
I can't even say.
It's a subconscious thing.
It's like,
well, once you start something,
you gotta finish it.
I don't think there's anything
to apologize.
I mean, I'd love to finish
all the books,
but my point was
I read enough about chiropractic
to know that
this is probably not
a completely legitimate enterprise, and I know I'm probably upsetting people who are into chiropractic to know that this is probably not a completely legitimate enterprise,
and I know I'm probably upsetting people who are into chiropractic medicine,
but I was like, you know, I don't think I'm going to do this a whole lot.
Okay, if that one's a little controversial, some people have different opinions on chiropractic.
Let's go even more controversial.
But first, Ear Biscuits is supported by Oatly.
Oatly is the original oat milk from Sweden
that is now available in the United States
for the first time.
Now, once again, Link is not here.
I'm gonna do this by myself.
As I've stated before, Link is maniacal.
I mean, I love this stuff, but he's maniacal about it.
If he were here, he would say embarrassing things about it.
I'm just gonna say normal things about Oatly Oat Milk.
I'm also going to ask you a rhetorical question,
a ret-torical question or a ret-oracle question.
What is oat milk?
Typically, rhetorical questions
are not supposed to be answered,
but I'm just using that
because I wanted to put my name
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because Oatly Oat Milk is a super sustainable,
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You ain't gonna be chewing on this stuff,
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And it tastes really, really good.
Link would say that it's life-changing.
I would say that it's life-changing
in so much as you would be changing
your favorite milk alternative
because I think it is the best of all of them.
I like it more than milk as well.
But I'm not a freak about it.
Give me a break, Link.
Gosh.
To find out more about oat milk,
go to oatly.com today.
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And look for Oatly at your local supermarket
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And now on with the biscuit.
Guns.
Oh yeah.
You had a guns obsession.
Well, it's a little strong.
My,
my father-in-law
took us,
well,
okay,
my father-in-law
has always had a bunch of guns,
right?
You know,
and he's a guy from the,
the,
the South
and it's not uncommon.
My uncle's a hunter.
I mean,
he's got cases of,
behind safe,
lots of guns.
My father-in-law is not a hunter.
He's just a gun owner.
A collector?
Yeah, he's just a guy who has a lot of stuff,
and one of the things that he has a lot of is guns.
And this is really funny because I'm going to say this
in a way that is as sensitive as possible
because in reality it's hilarious.
as possible because in reality, it's hilarious. My sister-in-law fell in love with Chris,
my brother-in-law, who is half Palestinian and half Lebanese. She has since been married to him for 15 years or so. Okay. But right at the beginning of their relationship, a typical
Middle Eastern family,
when you meet one, then you meet everyone, right?
So we met Chris, and then we are immediately introduced
to all his cousins and aunts and uncles
who lived in the Raleigh-Durham area.
Okay.
And this, keep in mind, this is,
now, first of all, all of them,
it's not like any of them are terrorists, but this was right after 9-11, like right after 9-11, like legitimately like-
Like 9-12?
Within the year, within the year of 9-11.
on some land with Chris's family, all these Middle Eastern guys,
and we take all these assault rifles.
I'm not kidding.
From where?
They had them, and my father-in-law had them.
I mean, I'm talking like semi-automatic,
some automatic guns, just a bunch of guns,
and they bring a picture of Osama bin Laden,
because they're anti-Osama. They're gonna shoot this picture. And they're gonna shoot the picture. Okay, good. bunch of guns and they bring a picture of Osama bin Laden.
Because they're anti, I mean, they're anti-Osama. They're gonna shoot this picture.
And they're gonna shoot the picture.
Okay, good.
But it was just a weird time in my life.
You were there.
I was there and I was shooting a picture of Osama bin Laden
with an Uzi.
With an Uzi?
With an Uzi.
Oh, I wasn't there for this.
And I was out there on this land in the middle
of Harnett County shooting these guns and I'm just like, this is so weird.
But worthy of.
But I was like, this is fun.
Because there's power behind unloading some ammo.
Yeah, right.
You know, just target practice.
Just a bunch of good old boys from the Middle East just shooting up because of Osama bin Laden.
a bunch of good old boys from the Middle East just shooting up because of Osama bin Laden.
And at that point, I was like, you know what?
Maybe, you know, maybe I should have some guns, you know?
And again, if you're not from the United States
and if you're not from the South,
one of the things I've learned in doing Good Mythical Morning
and being on the internet and seeing all the comments
from people, people have no,
they don't understand gun culture
in America, and I don't blame you, okay?
So, it seems crazy.
But I got
a gun. I went to a
You went to a gun show, right?
I went to the gun show at the NC State Fairgrounds
Dorton Arena, and I bought a.38
special, which was a cop
revolver. So we're talking about, I didn't
get an Uzi, I got a revolver.
It has six bullets at a time, and they revolve.
Yes, it's an old style.
Old school.
It's the kind of thing that Roscoe P. Coltrane
would have had in his holster on Dukes of Hazzard.
Or Roscoe P. Coltrane.
Coltrane.
P. Coltrane.
That's what we used to call him as kids.
And this is where it intersects me, because you come back and you're like, I got a, I bought a revolver. That's what we used to call them as kids. But this impacted you, right?
This is where it intersects me,
because you come back and you're like,
I bought a revolver, and let's go into the woods
and shoot it, and you should get one.
Oh yeah.
And so here's my point of decision,
and I'm like, well, how much is it?
That's always my thing, it's like, well, how much,
I know you're into this, and that means
I'm gonna be into it, how much, I know you're into this and that means I'm going to be into it. How much, how much is my wallet going to hurt? And I realized that my, uh, my grandfather had a
.357 Magnum as a sheriff's deputy. Right. Uh, and he, Smith and Wesson, he had passed away a few
years earlier. And my, I asked my grandma, could I have his gun for mainly for sentimental reasons,
but then also to, to have something to shoot
whenever we went out into the woods
and did some target practice.
And I got that thing,
and I went out there that one time with you,
and it was fun until I had to fire the thing,
and it was scary to me.
But it wasn't fun to you?
It kicked like a mule, man.
Yeah, because you had a.357.
You had to step up from the.38.
Well, it was a Magnum.
It was a.357 Magnum.
Smaller bullet, smaller caliber, but more gunpowder.
Okay.
I didn't hate it, but I was really bad at it.
And it was kind of, there was quite a jolt to it.
So it didn't take with me.
It didn't take.
Well, I will say it didn't necessarily take with me either.
I never bought another gun, and I haven't shot that gun in 10 years.
But I still know how to, and I'm ready at a moment's notice.
Okay, so should I move on to the next one on the list here?
Now, this one's related.
Crow hunting. Yeah.
Now, this one, this is... Do you hunt crows
with a.38? Well, you'd
have to be a really good shot. You hunt
crows with a shotgun.
Scatter pattern.
I was not involved in this.
I was on the very fringe of this.
Again, I met Black and Veatch. Lots of stuff happened when I was an involved in this. No. I was on the very fringe of this. So again, I met Black and Veatch.
Lots of stuff happened when I was an engineer
that wasn't engineering.
Boredom breeds obsession.
So somehow I stumble upon this website
where these guys out in the Midwest
are hunting crows at the request of farmers out there
because crows destroy crops, and there's lots of them. There's no population problem with the crows at the request of farmers out there because crows destroy crops and there's lots of them.
There's no population problem with the crows. There's more than we can handle. So there's no
limit. In some states, there's no limit on how many crows you can shoot. And so these dudes will
just go out and they'll just kill like 50 crows because the farmer wants them dead. They're like
pests. It's like pest control. But you you know, you start shooting that many birds,
you feel like, well, we should do something with these birds.
We should eat them.
Oh, really?
And so there's all these crow recipes.
Now, the thing I found out, I'm reading about this,
is that crows are extremely intelligent.
Now, they're not as smart as us.
They are birds.
And they're not as smart as dolphins or anything like that.
But you can teach a crow to talk just like a parrot.
A crow is incredibly intelligent.
It has an amazing vocabulary.
You can teach a crow to talk.
You can teach a crow to say things like,
Polly want a cracker?
You can teach a crow to say those kinds of things.
First of all, just to clear it up a little bit,
Polly doesn't want a cracker.
How do you know that?
Since when does Polly want a cracker?
But go ahead.
A crow is incredibly smart, has an incredible vocabulary,
and what this lends itself to is,
Shooting it.
You can draw a crow in
using its own vocabulary.
Trick a crow. Now, let me, this is fascinating, okay?
This is one of the reasons I got into this.
There are these tapes that you can buy, okay?
An audio track where you can create a situation,
somehow they've recorded crows or they've made crow sounds of a certain scenario
that will cause a bunch of crows to come in.
So what they do is they have this thing.
Crows, do you know that crows hate owls?
Owls and crows are arch rivals.
Do they eat each other?
They, well, they're.
They compete for the same mice.
There is a tape that you can get, a soundtrack,
that is an owl attacking a baby crow.
No.
And so you hear the sound of the owl,
and then you hear a baby crow crying a distress call,
and then it brings in hundreds of crows,
depending on where you're at.
Really?
So the idea that you could do this.
And you set up a fake owl there too, right?
Oh, and fake crows.
And fake crows, right?
Yeah, I'm glad you remember more than I do.
Well you told me about it,
you were trying to get me to do it.
Yeah, yeah, you get a fake owl.
And this is a three-dimensional owl.
A three-dimensional owl,
and then you can get the three-dimensional crows, or you can get the two-dimensional
I made two-dimensional crows. I
bought poster board. Out of construction paper.
Out of construction paper. Poster board.
And I made these things. And you put
them on a stick, and you just
jab them down into the ground around
the owl. Yeah, I took a boombox
and I bought a
bullhorn, and I took the boombox
apart. I took the boom box apart.
I wired the audio wires,
instead of going to the speakers in the boom box,
I wired them directly to a bullhorn.
And so I could play it really loudly.
If you ever wonder if your boyfriend, husband,
or acquaintance is bored
and you see him building crows out of poster board
and booming crow sails from a boom box, your answer is yes.
Okay, so, but again, I'm gonna-
Handle that men's energy somewhere.
I'm gonna disappoint you, first of all, again.
So you build all this stuff, you go out,
you set up the scene, you blare the crow sails.
I go out with a good friend of mine from work, Sean Collins,
and he goes out there with me,
and we didn't know what we were doing.
We expected dozens of crows to come in.
We had like one crow come in,
and he looked down there, and he was like,
that's poster board, and he flew away.
We shot at him.
Did he say that in English?
Was he tall?
He was like, that's poster board.
And so I never killed a crow.
I'm sure that's a relief to those of you who were worried about how many crows I was going to kill.
I never killed a crow.
Well, they're so smart.
And then, because I'm just not good at it, but I was so interested in it.
Here's what happened.
And this is a microcosm of what has happened with me and you in a number of times.
of what has happened with me and you in a number of times.
Sean Collins, I left Black & Veatch,
and Sean Collins had just done it with me,
had just done this crow hunting.
He carried the torch,
and he became like an incredible crow hunter.
Crow stalker?
This dude, he-
You gave him your boom box, didn't you?
I said, you can have it,
and he got other dudes into it.
And I don't know if they still do it to this day,
but there was like a little community of guys
who were like holding down the fort.
In your wake, man.
In your wake of obsession.
You created a covey.
You bought the tapes.
You made the contraption.
You made those things out of poster board.
You've got the owl.
Let me have all that.
And he still does it.
Well, I like to think that he still does it.
He's like got his own reality television show.
He's controlling the crow population of North Carolina.
Crow man.
But that was, that was,
and you know this,
what happens is I get interested in something
and if there's stuff associated with it.
You get the stuff.
You gotta get the stuff or you gotta make the stuff, or you gotta make the stuff.
Yeah.
That's when something really gets me, if there's stuff involved.
Because I want to get that stuff.
Oh, you get, oh, wait, wait, you can make crows out of poster board?
I'm in.
He's like, really?
Okay, here's another one on the list.
I gotta get back into that.
It's probably illegal in California.
This is not healthy.
I should not be.
It's like I'm conjuring.
Over the course of an hour, I'm conjuring up your emotions associated with every single layer at once.
Like, you're going to explode.
I'm not going to go to sleep tonight.
I'm afraid of what you're going to try to get me into in the morning.
Okay.
Okay.
Next on this, wine pairings?
Yeah.
Wine pairings.
Yeah.
I'm a fan of wine.
You know that.
I like to drink it with my meals.
Well, I mean, I've seen that you've had a glass of wine.
I would never call you a fan of wine
or a wine aficionado.
But I got close to becoming one. But you thought about what it would be like I'd never call you a fan of wine or a wine aficionado.
But I got close to becoming one.
But you thought about what it would be like
if you became close to becoming one.
Once I figured out that there was this,
there was a whole world of people who
experimented with pairing wine with food. Because that's when wine really opens up, right? When you with pairing wine with food.
Cause that's when wine really opens up, right?
When you start pairing it with food.
And-
That's what the menus say.
Yeah, but, and you know, there are no rules.
There used to be, you had to eat this kind of meat
with this kind of wine or that's what,
but there are no rules.
It's whatever tastes best to you.
But interestingly, there were these apps and books, even before apps,
there were books that suggested wine pairings, and I got a little obsessed. I did think,
oh, this is something I could get into. Again, if there's something you can learn and something
you can buy and something you can do, I'm in. What about it? It was great. And you know, I don't, I don't-
But the fact, so what about it?
What I mean was you were intrigued by the fact
that you could take this certain,
you could take a pork chop and you could buy this wine
and you could consume them together
and experience something.
Something better, something better.
Something better.
Yeah, you know, I grew up drinking milk
with spaghetti at my house, you know?
But it's just like, no, you get this right wine
and they interact.
There's synergy happening in your meal.
Right, I'm laughing.
I know this is true.
I mean, I accept this.
So what happened?
Well, what happened was is, you know,
that's a rather expensive hobby.
Yeah, I mean, pork chops are expensive.
Much less the wine.
And honestly, you gotta have somebody to do this with.
You know, my wife is not a big wine drinker.
She doesn't really enjoy wine.
And so you buy a bottle of wine, you break it open,
and you're the only one drinking,
it's going to be over pretty soon.
You're going to be asleep, you know?
And so, you know, we have some wine.
We drink it occasionally, try to make pairings.
But it just, this is the thing.
And I think this is where we're going with this.
I'm kind of processing this.
Okay.
I get interested in a lot of things,
but if I'm gonna stick with it, I gotta have a partner.
I gotta have, either you have to get into it
or my wife has to get into it.
And if neither one of you get into it,
I'm probably gonna move on.
Yeah, and we know that.
And we don't take that lightly. But that's not gonna stop me from continuing to get into it, I'm probably gonna move on. Yeah, and we know that. And we don't take that
lightly. But that's not gonna stop
me from continuing to get into stuff.
No, I mean, we like to make fun of you, but
I mean, what I tried to say at the beginning
was, I appreciate, well,
I said I appreciate,
I said I appreciated, but I appreciate
the fact that you're an ideas guy. I think this dovetails
with that, that
I would be content
to just live my simple little life
and do my simple little routine
and make the crevices in my brain deeper
and not form any new connections
to my own detriment.
I don't like that about myself.
So I like interfacing with someone, let's call that
person you. That's me. Who says, okay, it is exciting. Okay, if I don't like this thing,
well, he's going to present me with something. And that's exciting. And if I don't like it,
well, I can say that because there'll be something else next week. True. And it's exciting. And if I don't like it, well, I can say that because there'll be something else next week.
True. And it's great.
This is true, yeah.
So, this is a good arrangement.
And if you ever get interested in that thing again,
like if we go through this list tonight,
and you're like, you know what,
I'd like to get back into wine pairings.
I'm like, buddy, I got the app, I'm ready.
I need to re-download it, but I've already bought it.
You've gotta unearth that layer and bring it, you've gotta toilet to the surface. I need to redownload it, but I've already bought it. You've gotta unearth that layer and bring it,
you've gotta toilet to the surface.
I have to expose that layer.
I would love to have, I mean, I had some dark chocolate
and I'd love to pair that with some yerba mate.
I'd like to get real experimental with this.
Okay.
No, but I'm open to that, but let's move on.
All right, there's plenty to go.
Fossils in geology.
Now I wanna say that this is something,
I've never lost interest in this.
I've been interested in geology
ever since I took a class in college.
Ever since Ted McKinney gave you an arrowhead
on the Royal Ambassador's hiking trip.
Well, that's archeology, that's not really geology.
I mean, I guess indirectly it's geology
because it was at one point a rock.
Okay, smarty pants.
I'm talking, now, the layers of the earth.
You see that?
I've got layers.
One of my layers is the layers of the earth itself.
Okay.
Is that a meta joke?
I am fascinated by the layers of the earth itself okay is that a meta joke and i am fascinated by the history of the earth i'm fascinated by uh geological formations and i am fascinated um
by fossils and i've got a couple some trilobites i don't know how many millions of years that they
old they are i knew at one point they're in a safe at home. But- Why?
Why?
Why is a trilobite or a trilobite in a safe?
Why isn't it out on your coffee table?
Well, I haven't-
Somebody gonna steal it?
I have a safe that has things in it that mean a lot to me.
And I don't have a way to display this.
I hope one day to have a man cave of sorts.
And you're gonna take what's in the safe
and you're gonna put it in a case.
Yes. Okay.
In the man cave, there will be
a lot of Hawkman paraphernalia, memorabilia.
There lies another layer.
And there will be fossils.
You can go on eBay, and for a pretty penny,
you can get a small dinosaur skull fossil.
Really?
You can also get replicas of a T-Rex made out of resin or whatever.
They're still expensive, but not the real thing.
Full size?
Yes.
Really?
Yeah.
You have to build it yourself? I mean, the head will come as real thing. Full size? Yes. Really? Yeah. You have to build it yourself?
I mean, the head will come as one thing.
But I want a man cave that's got like these
uplit dinosaur fossils.
And you're walking around in a museum.
I want that someday.
What about studio?
Okay, we can do it in the studio too.
But the reason I'm fascinated with it is because it's incredible.
I get it.
It's incredible to hold something in your hands that lived 100 million years ago.
That's fascinating.
I get it.
To hold that in your hand.
I mean, depending on the cost, I could start, I could start a Trillibike collection. But here's the thing. If I bought one, I would buy as many as Merle Haggard records as I've bought. Like, we're both equally into Merle Haggard, but who bought all the Merle Haggard records? Me.
And I probably said, oh, that would be cool to buy one, but I'm just going to listen to Merle Haggard.
And I'm like, no, I'm going to go on eBay, and I'm going to obsess, and I'm going to buy 65 records,
and then I'm going to hang them meticulously on our wall.
But fossils are more expensive than records.
Exactly.
So I know I can't buy one because I can't buy just one.
Really?
But I do respect it.
And, you know, camping, and I think we'll get back to the whole camping thing because it comes to another layer, but I do, it dovetails with when you get into nature and you're seeing those things.
I can see that one, so I'm very close to that one.
I turn rocks over all the time.
I've never found a fossil in the wild.
That's a dream of mine.
Or an arrowhead.
I have found an arrowhead.
It's not a fossil, Rhett.
That's not a fossil.
Yeah, it's an artifact.
So I get it, but let's move on.
All right.
Next on my list, Crown Victorias.
Oh, buddy.
Crown Victoria.
Now, when you say Crown Victoria, in this context,
especially after talking about fossils and weighty stuff like that,
I think people are thinking like royalty or something.
Like, oh, is this a historical obsession of some sort?
Like Queen Victoria?
This is a Ford car.
The cop car.
Cops drive.
Cops still drive them.
But they used to.
It's a quintessential cop
or government car.
And can I, what you, the listener, is thinking right now
is how could anyone have an obsession?
It's like, okay, I get fossils, wine pairings,
yeah, there's people who are really into these things.
You can read books about this stuff.
You don't go to the Barnes & Noble
and find a section devoted to Crown Victoria Ford cop cars. How on earth could you have an
obsession? And you admit to this, right? Oh, yeah. I still want one. Okay. And this is going
to sound crazy to you listeners. I actually, back in the early 2000s,
created a savings account,
a money market account.
Back when IGN Direct,
remember them?
Capital One bought them.
Okay.
You could start a money market account
back when money market accounts
could actually generate some interest.
And there comes a point,
it's always like,
I'm going to save some money for something.
What is it?
And what could that be?
Well, let me figure it out.
It came time to name the account,
and I named the account Crown Victoria.
Why?
Because I wanted one.
Okay, now, why did I want one?
First of all-
So you were saving up to buy one.
I think I called the account Crown Victoria slash vacation.
It was like, we need to save some money.
I gotta get a car at some point.
I gotta get a new car at some point for myself
because I was driving that old Cadillac, remember that?
Yeah. I drove that Cadillac
that I had to buy the heater that you plugged
into the AC adapter.
Yeah. The cigarette lighter?
No, cigarette lighter.
It was a cigarette lighter heater.
I drove a Cadillac. And it was down by your feet.
I sure was.
It was really cold.
That is insane.
I drove a Cadillac DeVille.
It was burgundy.
Four door.
And the heat,
and neither the heat nor the AC worked.
So I got this thing that you plug.
The cigarette lighter worked.
The cigarette lighter worked,
and it blew like a really weak stream of hot air
onto like one foot.
The gas foot. The foot that was
the gas foot.
So I needed a new car, and I started reading
about new cars, and I was like, I want a big car.
I always wanted a car with enough leg room,
and I wanted a sedan, I like a car, a car drive.
And I want a big trunk.
You have those three requirements,
next thing you know you're looking at Crown Vids.
Also-
But you like Google these things.
Oh, and then I find-
I want a car with leg room, head room,
and room for my heater by my gas foot.
What I found is that because these are government
and police vehicles, that you can get them in auctions.
So you can go to a police auction
and you can get a Crown Vic that still is black and white,
just like an old cop car,
but doesn't have the lights on top anymore.
And that seems to me to be a bad thing.
Now, okay, yes.
Because you're on the interstate
and then everyone's slowing down in front of you.
I thought many, yeah,
but it's a little bit of a power trip. Oh, and. Because the guy slows down and then he moves over and then you go past him and you're like, interstate and everyone's slowing down in front of you. I thought many, yeah, but it's a little bit of a power trip.
Because the guy slows down and then he moves over and then you go past him and you're like,
I'm not a cop, I'm just a dude who bought a car at an auction.
Gotcha, sucker.
And then you're telling me about the chain drive.
No, it has a chain belt, a chain timing belt, as opposed to a rubber timing belt,
which wears out over time.
So these things are just indestructible.
That's why cops have them.
You can just go, you can chase people through rivers.
You can go through creeks.
You can spin out in the middle of the median.
And they're just indestructible cars
with a lot of leg room, a big trunk,
and a lot of horsepower.
And so I really wanted one.
And my wife thought it was ridiculous.
Again, a lot of these things have been tempered
by the people in my life, and that's one of them.
My wife was like, I don't want you to get an old cop car.
What are you, crazy?
But you know, we did interview a guy.
You remember this guy we interviewed not too long ago,
for some position, I can't remember what it was.
We didn't hire him, though.
We asked him what he drove,
and he said, I drive a gold Crown Victoria.
It was like a former taxi.
And I was like, what?
No, it was just a gold.
You almost hired him on the spot.
Yeah, and so-
Like I could see it in your eyes.
And then he said, I said, really?
And we talked about Crown Vic's for a while.
And then he was like, yeah, you want me to drive
by the front of the office on the way out?
I was like, heck yeah, I want you to.
And so when you drove out, I mean, we didn't hire him.
But you got a thrill when you drove by.
I got so close because of that Crown Vic.
Okay.
Wow, can we take a moment
and just think about what just happened?
I'm glad that you owned it.
What car did you get when you didn't get a Crown Vic?
Side note.
Scion.
You got the Scion.
Yeah.
Which now I drive a Scion.
So there you go.
If I drive, we got a follow-up Scion to that one.
And you know why I got it? Because of the headroom.
And the legroom.
Unbelievable headroom and legroom in a Scion XP.
And you got it on auction.
It was a total, yeah.
Next on the list, I don't remember this one.
Sailing.
Yes.
Still fascinated with sailing.
Just last night, I was looking at a book that my wife bought for me a couple years ago because she knows I'm fascinated with this.
Sailing Around the World.
This is a book where a couple goes around the world and they document,
they're photographers, and they document every location.
They went around the entire world.
It's absolutely amazing.
The reason I got into sailing is because I did some research on what my name meant.
McLaughlin.
And McLaughlin means master sailor.
And so I was like, boy, I got to get into this because I got to live up to my name,
be a master sailor.
And just the idea of a sailboat that could go anywhere,
untethered, go around the world,
go meet new people in new places.
I've always been fascinated with it.
As far as I got on this one is I bought a few books.
I read a book called Sailing Alone Around the World,
which is a great book.
Do you wanna do that?
I don't, I don't wanna do that.
I'm a little bit of an introvert,
but I don't wanna sail alone around the world.
You want to go?
We can document the whole thing.
It's going to take a long time.
I mean, with the right sponsor,
I might be willing to do it.
Red Bull.
I don't know why.
What about like sailboats?
Okay, some sailboat.
Sailboats.com.
Probably won't pay for it.
But I'm fascinated with it.
And as far as I got with that-
I would like to take a yacht around the world.
How about that?
Well, that's pollution, man.
It takes gas.
It costs money.
Okay, okay.
The sailboat is beautiful because it's powered by the wind.
And the furthest I got on that is I took a sailing class at Harris Lake.
Remember that?
Remember that lake?
Well, I remember the class, Rhett, and I think what you
mean by class is like a three-hour introductory orientation. Yeah, introduction to sailing. Yeah,
intro to sailing. There was no, a class is something you go to, and you leave, and then
you come back to it on a scheduled basis. Well, I took a class, one class. I went to class one time.
They sailed me around, there wasn't a lot of wind that day,
but they let us go around.
Now, just as, I've got more on the list,
but just as a side note, it occurs to me,
this phenomenon that we're exploring,
tell me what you think about this.
Okay.
If you did not, if your brain didn't work this way,
if your personality wasn't this way,
I don't believe that we would be doing
Good Mythical Morning right now.
Because I remember that the impetus for doing
Good Morning Chia Lincoln was,
let's just come in and talk about stuff every morning,
and let's just see what happens.
And it was just like we were in between projects,
and we had a couple of months.
It was an experiment.
We had a couple of months,
and we, on the way into work every morning,
you would always have something to talk about because, well, for this reason.
There was always something you were thinking about.
And then it was like,
why are we just having these conversations?
We should bring people into this.
Let's bring people into this.
And so I don't even need to ask you.
I certainly believe that we wouldn't be where we are
if your brain didn't work the way it did.
Now, you know, I'm going to own some part in this too,
but I do think that, I mean, it's an interesting phenomenon
that that was that it kind of gave us the blind confidence
to say we're going to, every morning,
we're going to literally show up, turn the camera on,
and just talk about something
because you always had something that,
you always had three things. Oh, I'll just pick one that I can talk about, you know, and I've always got an opinion
about it. So that gave me confidence to say, okay, we're just having the same conversation that we
had rolling into work. We're just going to have it when we get to work. And we would actually be
silent on the way into work and save things for that conversation. And I'm glad that we did that.
on the way into work and save things for that conversation.
And I'm glad that we did that.
But my question is, are some of these things,
you're defensive, it seems defensive to me when you're like, well, I only took one class
and then I haven't sailed since then,
but I still have that book and I read the book last night.
But is there part of you that the validation is not really in completing things, but is there
something about just being able to talk about things? Is there an ulterior or at least a side
motive? Maybe that's the same thing. If the main motive is you're interested and you just have
passions that, wandering passions, but there's a side thing that's like, I just like to know things.
I like to be able to talk about things.
I like to be the guy that knows
just enough about a lot of things
to talk to anybody about anything.
Is that a motive?
I can honestly answer you that it is not.
It's not.
It is not.
I'll admit my faults.
I have many. Well, I don't think that's a fault. No, no, no, no. What I'm not. I'll admit my faults. I have many.
Well, I don't think that's a fault.
No, no, no, no, what I'm saying, I will admit my faults and I have many, but no, I don't like being, I don't like seeming like a know-it-all.
I know that I come across that way because I do have an opinion about a lot of things.
And I don't even know
that that's not
what I was
I wasn't saying
do you want to be a know-it-all
I'm saying
do you like to engage people
and be a guy who can
I love to talk to people
about a lot of different things
and I like to be able
to contribute
in different conversations
about different disciplines
and different interests
but
I really think
you know
that thing we did
earlier this year
where we did this
personality evaluation
with Jason Jaggard and my number one thing was futurist.
Yeah.
Meaning my mind is always in the future and I actually spend more of my time thinking about anticipating things.
I spend more of my time in the future than I do in the present.
I actually have a very difficult time enjoying anything in the moment.
I spend more of my time in the future than I do in the present.
I actually have a very difficult time
enjoying anything in the moment.
And I think that the thing that you'll notice
about most of these things is that
they are somehow related to an experience
that I kind of create in my mind.
And I think one of these days,
I'm gonna fly in an ultralight
and that's gonna be fun.
One of these days, I'm going to sail around the world
and that's gonna be fun. One of these days I'm going to sail around the world and that's going to be fun.
One of these days I'm going to kill a crow or I'm going to pair the perfect wine with that.
There are experiences that I set up in my mind and I think that I'm going to have experienced
some sort of satisfaction. And so I actually, I begin to anticipate the satisfaction. I anticipate
the fulfillment of these things.
And so then I learn about them because you need to know what you need to know
about these things in order to experience them
in the right way.
And then what ends up happening
is that life happens, right?
You end up being normal.
You know, I can't be a guy that flies in an ultralight
and sails around the world and has a crown vic
and crow hunts on a regular basis
and all these other things
because it's just, you can't do that. There's only so many things we can do
between the work that we do and family life. So a lot of these things are just passions. They're
just interests. And I'll just read a book about sailing and think, well, maybe when I retire,
I'll actually do that. So I honestly think it's just my disposition is future oriented. And so
I'm interested in these things,
not because I'm waiting to go to a party
and talk to somebody who's a sailor and be like,
oh, I know all about this.
Let me tell you about the Seychelles.
I've read about them.
You've been there?
I think that's an interesting dynamic.
I think it's an insight into you
or maybe a misconception of you that people would say, you know, for someone who
has always something to offer or a detail to offer, it is okay. You could say he's being a
know-it-all. Maybe he's not. I'm not saying you are a know-it-all. I'm saying people could say
he's being a know-it-all okay um but i think it's
interesting to find out that if you if that's your honest what's honestly driving is just in
uh well what you just said it kind of
it dissolves that at least a little bit
well and i and i will say that and we've learned this being friends for a really long time and working together for a long time, is that you begin to see, people ask, why are you guys, how have you guys been friends for so long?
Why do you guys keep doing this entertainment thing?
You know, people come and go on YouTube and you guys kind of,
they're right from the beginning and you're still relevant, right?
There's this search for relevance.
And one of the things that we've said many times,
and Hank Green made this observation
when we talked to him at VidCon,
a lot of times when you look at people
who have been doing something for a while on YouTube,
it's a partnership, right?
And so there's this dynamic that's like,
I'm going to be interested in a lot of different things.
You are going to have a sense of follow through.
So when we decide to do something, it's going to happen.
It's going to land.
It's going to be finished.
And that's not something that we could have ever anticipated or planned.
But I think that the reason that we have an idea that gets completed versus just a bunch of ideas that never actually come to fruition is the partnership.
And so, you know, if you're thinking about trying to do i i just i don't think that
you can i just don't think you can do it alone i mean i certainly can't imagine it i'm gonna list
out a couple of other things here and we'll pick the ones that you want to talk about but i will
say one last side note in this is a byproduct of this phenomenon is I think that people ask you things,
like ask your opinion because they assume that you're going to know something because you know
about things that you know about. People end up asking you these things and there's a lot more of a opportunity for you to hone your ability to bs a great answer
to things oh yeah so i observed that as a byproduct of this whole thing or could that be the motive i
just want to i want to know enough stuff so that i can bs my way through everything else
of course i know i'm just i'm just giving you a hard time. All right, here we go. I've got one, two, three, four, five more things on my list.
Oh, really?
You know, we're not going to talk about all five of these.
I'm going to read them, and I'd like for you to pick one,
maybe one and a half.
How about I give you a sentence about each one?
Well, I want you to-
And we'll dig into one.
Or if you want to dig into one and then pick one to close with, okay?
So in no particular order, I'll read these out to you
and you can tell me which ones you're intrigued
to go back to.
After sailing, I have barbecue, hot yoga.
Oh yeah.
Juicing.
Okay.
Paddle boarding. Yeah.
Four wheeling.
I'll say a sentence about each one.
Okay, you just can't choose.
And then we can close on the one that,
there's two that me and you are experiencing together.
The last two, okay.
So barbecue. Barbecue.
I'm really into barbecue.
And you know from our song that barbecue is a noun
and it's not a verb, it is not a grill.
It is a meat prepared in a very special way.
And I came out here to California and I found that they don't know how to do barbecue.
They think barbecue means a grill or they think it means hot dogs and hamburgers.
Or even a party.
And I missed North Carolina style barbecue.
Pulled pork, slow smoked pork shoulder.
And I figured out how to do it myself.
And now it's something I do on a semi-regular basis.
I figured out, I went to amazingribs.com,
a crazy guy named Meathead.
Meathead.
Meathead Godwin, I think is his,
Godwin is his last name, Meathead, obviously a nickname.
Who happens to be in Chicago.
Of course, I know about this guy
because you've gotten so deep into this one that like,
I can't just limit it to a sentence, I'm sorry.
Anyway, I figured out how to do this.
It is a passion now to recreate authentic
North Carolina-style barbecue here in North Carolina.
Using a charcoal grill.
I bought a thing called, again, there's a thing you can buy.
I have a Weber grill, kettle grill.
I bought a Smokinator 2000.
And a series of special meat thermometers.
Yes.
And a special magnet that goes on your refrigerator that tells you meat temperatures.
Well, that's just the receiver of the, yeah.
I'm actually buying that.
No, the magnet, the meathead magnet.
Anyway, okay, hot yoga.
Again, my, well, this was, a lot of times there's an experience
that leads to me having an interest,
and this was making commercial kings.
We went to, where was that, Sacramento, California?
Sacramento, we made a hot yoga commercial
for Sandy and, what was his name?
Well, I can't remember, but it was Rambo-themed,
Rambo slash A-Team themed local commercial
with like a 78 year old man who was missing a finger.
And this is a form of yoga called Bikram yoga.
And there's a dude who's more than a little bit crazy
who came up with this thing that there's these like
26 different yoga moves that you do under extreme heat,
like over a hundred degrees. And you go and you heat, like over 100 degrees, and you go,
and it's an hour and a half class, I think,
and there was, you know, we did it with this dude,
and I was like, this would be great for me,
I need to do something. We did it for the comedy,
but then you come back home and you sign up for a class.
Oh, I went to the class, and I went to the class
a number of times, and then we did move,
we did move to the other side of town, and I never went back to the class. You went to the class once number of times, and then we did move, we did move to the other side of town,
and I never went back to the class.
You went to the class once and then you vomited.
No, I went to the class like five or six times.
And vomited five or six times.
No, I didn't vomit, I got very close to it.
Sounds fun, juicing.
But here's how, and again, I'm not being defensive,
I'm just being, I'm just explaining things.
I don't do hot yoga anymore,
but a number of those yoga moves that I did in that class,
I retain those.
I do them every single morning
for the treatment of my herniated disc problem.
Which brings us back to chiropractic
and how smart crows are.
Yes.
Juicing.
Juicing, I watched a movie about juicing,
one of those Netflix documentaries
that makes you think that you can do something
and change everything.
And so what I do-
Where you can do something and change everything.
Yeah, right.
That's the definition of a documentary.
Right.
And I do this a lot.
I watch a documentary.
I watched this documentary
and the guy talks about juicing can change your life,
which I no longer believe that
after having read about it a lot.
Oh, after having juiced.
You know, it's controversial,
but I bought a juicer.
I did something you would never do,
which is I watched the documentary,
and within, not within 24 hours,
within 24 minutes of the documentary going off Netflix,
I went on Amazon, I ordered a juicer,
and my wife and I used
it for a couple months, and now it's just sitting
up there above the sink. And I would
hate that juicer
if it was in my house.
And that would...
You would hate it? I would hate it.
And I would hate myself because it was there.
And that's why I didn't buy one.
But why would you hate it? Because
I would see it as a failure.
To me, it's an opportunity.
I could juice it at any time.
Right, and maybe that's my problem.
No, I haven't juiced since.
Paddleboarding.
Now, in the Mythical show, half-hour show we did last year,
we wanted to explore some segments that were outside of the studio.
You had this idea to do paddle boarding
and you'd mentioned it to me multiple times.
But the way you got me on board, literally,
was you finally, through Eric and our management team,
got a paddle board company
to hook us up with some paddle boards for free.
And I'm like, I'm in now, buddy.
And we had tried a year before, you remember that?
And it didn't work, yeah.
We couldn't get any response.
But SUPATX hooked us up with a couple of boards.
We made a segment for the Mythical Show.
And that was all you're doing
because of some paddle boarding idea you had.
I saw a picture.
You saw a picture.
I saw a picture with a-
Like in a dentist office.
A dude in an incredible location on a paddleboard.
And I was like, well, I got to do that.
How do I do that?
And then we've documented the process of us doing it,
and it was nothing like that.
But we've gotten a lot better.
But I stuck with you, so I'll take some credit for this.
You know, because it's that dynamic.
Once I was in, and once we both had the boards, and it was hanging in my garage, I was like, I'm going some credit for this. You know, because it's that dynamic. Once I was in and once we both had the boards
and it was hanging in my garage,
I was like, I'm gonna use that board.
You had the stuff.
I had the stuff.
Yeah, so now we've each got two boards now.
But- And we should go
in the morning, by the way.
We will.
Once you have the stuff,
and once you have the stuff,
because your sense of obligation,
you read a book because you think the author is waiting for you to finish the book.
You're going to use that board because you're like,
well, in fact, if you don't use the board,
you're going to delete the board like a file, right?
You're going to get rid of the board.
You're going to sell it on Craigslist or something.
I don't want to have that failure
or non-follow through staring me in the face.
And that's something I enjoy immensely now.
And we both enjoy it.
And we do it on a regular basis.
Yeah.
And four-wheeling, the last one on the list.
Our friend Nick, who I went mountain biking with a lot
when I used to mountain bike,
now that we got into four-wheeling,
it's very difficult to do.
Four-wheeling is like mountain biking, but in a truck.
And once you do that, it's very difficult
to go back to mountain biking.
It's like, I need two more wheels
and like an air conditioning.
Yeah, and like a couch to sit on.
Right, and a steering wheel in front of me.
It's so great.
So he took us to Death Valley,
and when we came back, you didn't tell me,
it was like classic.
Five days later,
Rhett's like,
for the past five days, I've been doing
extensive research on what
off-road vehicle we should buy.
Yeah, right. So he
had been researching it from the moment we got back from
Death Valley, but he knew not
to present to me
the data
until he had found a place where we could get in one,
which was actually just down the street.
And I kind of rolled my eyes, but I was like,
okay, this is gonna happen.
I mean, we were gonna buy, we needed another vehicle.
That Bronco was a failure.
Right.
It was ridiculous.
And now it's like, I'm thinking,
when am I gonna go camping again?
Like it's opened up a whole world for like,
sometimes me and my family take the FJ Cruiser,
sometimes you and your family take it,
sometimes me and you and the boys take it.
Yeah.
And sometimes, well, I guess that's it.
But you know, it's opened up a world.
And it's incredible.
I love it, man.
And I would never, I would never have bought a truck.
That's ridiculous.
And it's totally worth it.
Okay, and so here's my question for you,
because we were going to close this down in a second.
Here's my question for you.
I've eaten all my dark chocolate, so. Obviously, there is mutual benefit to this, right? I bought the truck. Well, we bought the truck.
Right, we went in together, bought the truck. Because I thought, if we get this
truck, the next thing you know, we'll be like four-wheel freaks.
And now it's this thing that we can potentially,
potentially, is that a word, potentially?
I think so, yeah.
In crow language.
Do it on a regular basis.
Do you think, okay, if you were to subtract me from the equation,
I do not believe, you say that if you were to subtract me from the equation.
Fat, dumb, and happy.
You'd just be sitting there.
I would be fat, dumb, and happy.
I just, I don't think that's true.
Here's why.
I think that what happens is, is that when you're in a friendship with someone,
as long as we've been in a friendship,
you begin to rely on one another in a way
that's just like, okay,
certain aspects of our job...
It's like don't develop strengths that the other guy has.
I see something, I'm like,
I'm not gonna even try to figure that out.
Like, I don't wanna sit here and toil over this edit
or this graphic or this thumbnail,
because I know that Link already has an opinion about it,
and just let him do that, you know what I mean?
I think that you end up develop,
you kind of embrace the fact that you're like,
that person's gonna kinda handle this.
So I think that you've kinda been like,
I don't have to seek new interests
because I have a friend who's going to bring me
a buffet of new interests on a regular basis.
But I think if I wasn't in the situation,
you would have developed your own interests.
I don't think there's any doubt.
I hope so.
I hope I'm not,
but I do, I have observed that there
are people like that, so I know
it's possible.
And so
I could be one of those people.
I don't know.
Does it matter? I mean, are you
concerned about my level of self-esteem?
Or do you think it goes further? I don't think it has anything my level of self-esteem? Or do you think it goes further?
That it's like-
I don't think it has anything to do with self-esteem.
I think it just has to do with...
I just think it has to do with a disposition.
Like, do you think that you shouldn't depend on me
to bring everything to the table.
You should come up with some...
You should explore your own things.
Is that...
Do you...
I don't even think that.
I don't necessarily think that.
I think that if...
I would have to focus more on follow-through
if you weren't here,
and you would have to focus more on
finding something new to be interested in if I wasn't here. Yeah, I mean I certainly
so I don't know
you know, I don't know the
I think there's ways for us still to grow to where we can't we don't have to be
Like we don't atrophy in a certain area like I don't atrophy
Because our entire lives don't overlap.
I mean, there's like take being a father or a husband.
There are things that are very much,
those parts of our lives don't overlap near as much as our work life
and which dovetails to a lot of our hobbies like paddle boarding
or camping or things like that.
or camping or things like that,
that I certainly shouldn't let a zest for life and a willingness to engage potential passions atrophy
because that will happen.
I want to be the type of father that does that,
that inspires creativity and a sense of adventure in my children.
And so I think that is a good lesson for me that, okay, I've got the benefit of someone,
let's just say that's you, who can inspire me to be more of that in another circle,
say with my family type of thing.
And so maybe in the same way, the opposite for you that, you know, I don't know what
that may be, fill in the blank.
But I do observe.
I think that's the healthy, one healthy application here.
And I have another one too, but go ahead.
I was going to say, I observe this, you know, now that we've got kids, I observe this in
my children.
Most, it is most evident in Locke because he's older.
And Locke is just, he gets on something.
And the funny thing is,
is I never realized this about myself
until I got older and started thinking about it.
Right.
Like you were telling me today
that he's obsessed with exotic cars.
Yeah, right.
And this was out of nowhere
and this had nothing to do with me.
You know, I'm not-
Like just watching exotic car footage on YouTube.
I like Crown Victorias,
and I like trucks that can go four-wheeling.
I'm not a big sports car guy, right?
But I was as a kid, you know,
I'd draw sports cars and had sports cars.
But it's kind of beside the point.
He found this on his own.
He found this on his own.
And he's super passionate about it.
But the thing I've observed is that he will move on to the next thing.
He was super into Pokemon.
He was into Legos.
He was into these things.
And he's into Minecraft right now.
And I'll tell you, I'll cut you off.
I know where you're going.
You're saying, well, then as a parent, you need to foster some follow through
that everything's not a mile wide and an inch deep.
It's fascinating how like Lincoln is so much like me
and their interaction, the conversations they have
are so much like the conversations that we have now
about, oh, Locke's like, you know,
I'm into Lamborghinis now. Like Minecraft, not so much.
And Lincoln's like, this morning at breakfast,
I was like, Lincoln, what are you thinking about?
And at the same time, we were like, Minecraft.
It's like, I totally knew that
because that's what he's been thinking about
for the past three months.
Right, and Locke has a certain capacity for Minecraft
and then he's gonna be like,
I'm kind of ready for something else.
Right, it's interesting that things that even at our age,
the things that we're learning have a direct application
to shaping the lives of other humans,
which are our children,
but also each other in this conversation.
And I'll say the second thing is just,
I think I'm taking from this conversation,
just an appreciation, you know,
I think I'm taking from this conversation just an appreciation, you know,
that I do appreciate that, okay, you're going to bring something to the table.
That's going to be fun.
There's something, you know, there's something new.
It's like I would hate to do the same type of job every day.
I would hate to have the same type of thoughts every day.
I would hate to have to come up with all those different thoughts if I hated to have the same thoughts.
So it's nice to have someone else who is a catalyst for that type of thing.
So that's exciting. And I don't mean to relate it all back to work, but we kind of know when
it comes to certain topics we want to discuss in Good Mythical Morning, who's going to take
those things and why. And I think that there's certain fascinating elements of Good Mythical
Morning that come through because of things
that you're engaged in.
I think we can sit here and have a conversation
for the next hour about how, oh, isn't this so sweet?
But we should probably wrap it up.
And I would say, in an effort to relate it
to anybody who's listening.
Let's do that.
I think part of this is that, you know, if you're an Ear Biscuits listener, Let's for everybody. It's just the way the internet works. And there's a lot of things that
we've kind of learned being friends for this long. And I think one of those things is that
you tend to, there's a combination of things that you have in friendships that last.
There's going to be common interest, first of all.
There's going to be, like, you're interested in the same things
and you see the world enough the same way
so that you kind of connect with one another.
But then I think that when you think about your friendships,
appreciate the differences.
Because the same differences that you have with the people
who are your friends are going to be things that they can be frustrations, right? The fact that we're
different from one another and we see things a little bit differently about things and you get
so focused on something and I might have to like shake you loose and introduce you to a new thing,
that can be frustrating to me and my distraction and moving on to the next thing can be frustrating to you. But those things that can be a weakness in a friendship ultimately can be a strength.
So as you think about the friendships that you have, the people who you're friends with,
you think about the conflict.
What are the sources of conflict in your friendship or your relationships?
A lot of times those are going to be opportunities for a stronger friendship.
a lot of times those are going to be opportunities for a stronger friendship.
I think that that's something.
It's taken us a long time to learn that about one another and to kind of be like, this is what he does and this is what I do
and it's different and it's good.
But still a little funny so we can have a good time talking about it.
And I'm glad we had this Ear Biscuit.
I'm glad you were here for this.
So people, you have your assignment. we can have a good time talking about it. And I'm glad we had this ear biscuit. I'm glad you were here for this.
So people, you have your assignment.
Go and do your research tonight.
Ultralights, chiropractic, guns, crow hunting,
wine pairings, fossils, geology, crowned victorious.
That's a lot of good stuff.
Sailing, barbecue, hot yoga, juicing,
paddle boarding, and four-wheeling. And if you stick around for another 30 minutes,
I bet you something else
will be added by someone
here to the list.
Hashtag Ear Biscuits.
Let us know on the Twitter
and other places.
Leave a comment on SoundCloud
and a review on iTunes.
Still do that.
It matters.
See you next week.
Okay.