Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - 182: What Are Our Greatest Physical Feats? | Ear Biscuits Ep. 182
Episode Date: February 25, 2019Link "The Falling Bleeder" Neal recounts his life-changing experience of training for and running in a Spartan Race for the first time, despite constantly falling flat on his face throughout the proce...ss. Prepare to get fired up and cracked up at the same time, as R&L talk about other past physical feats in this week's episode of Ear Biscuits. Sponsored by: Hello Fresh: Visit HelloFresh.com/ear60 and enter ear60 for a total of $60 off, that’s $20 off your first 3 boxes! 23andMe: Visit 23AndMe.com/EAR to see what your genes say about your health, traits, and more! 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 are exploring the question,
what are our greatest physical feats?
And I don't mean like which of our feet are bigger
because my left foot is a little bit bigger
than my right foot.
In fact, I have size bigger than my right foot.
That seems like it could be a problem.
Yes, my greatest physical foot is my left foot.
It's like a size 12.2 and my right foot
is like a size 11.7.
Eight, seven, okay. So I just get 12s and call it even, like a size 11.7. Eight, seven, okay.
So I just get 12s and call it even, call it a day.
Now, actually one of my feet is bigger
than the other foot too because back when we,
along with the help of all of the Mythical Beasts
at the time, we designed a shoe that we then sold.
I don't know if you knew this, called the Mythical Shoe.
And when you start to make your own shoe,
it was basically like a, it was a fabulous
Converse ripoff shoe, I mean.
Whoa.
It had a wing embroidered on the side.
Because it was canvas and had a.
We threw a lot at that shoe.
It had a guitar pick holster.
Yeah.
And it.
The Mythical Shoe, I still love the idea.
That was like a nice tasteful black and white
but then there was also like a oh my gosh,
look away blue and green.
That was the fun pair.
Then we made, anyway I digress but when you find yourself,
just a heads up, whenever you find yourself
making your own branded shoe as you will,
you'll find that you have the luxury of getting them
to fit exactly how you want and I found out
that one of my feet is bigger
than the other one too.
Do you know which one?
Because I'm like, oh, I wanted a 10 and a half in one foot
and an 11 in the other one.
But which one, is it your left foot?
I can't remember.
I can't remember because once I ran out of those shoes,
I'm like, I gotta forget that happened.
I don't have that luxury anymore.
Mine is noticeable like with any pair of shoes
that I try on, that's why I always just try on the left shoe at shoe stores.
And then wear two socks on the right foot?
No, it's not that big of a difference.
It's just like if the left foot fits,
I know the right foot's gonna fit.
Also, my left arm is longer than my right arm,
probably by a quarter to a third of an inch,
so much so that when I get measured for a fitted shirt, they have to measure it differently.
Really?
One of my eyes is a little bit bigger than the other.
Which one is it?
The left one.
The left one, yeah.
My whole left side of the body.
I think that the eye opening is bigger.
The eyeball's probably the same.
The eyeball's the same size.
Yeah, I think there's other things that,
but interestingly, all-
You always look like you're about to wink.
All the injuries-
It's not that bad.
All the injuries are on the right side of my body.
My elbow, my wrist, my shoulder, my hip, and my knee,
all right side.
The weak side, man, but I'm right-handed.
Isn't this weird?
I don't know if it's weird.
So we are gonna talk about our greatest physical feats.
Oh and did you happen to notice?
What, what, a little, what, a little jingle around my neck?
This is not how Olympic medalists,
if that's what you are, you gotta learn
to wear the prizes in style.
We continue to try to teach you this,
to win with some sort of decorum.
To win like I expected it?
Yes.
Act like you've been there before,
as Josh Young told you after you scored a goal one time.
Two goals in one game.
Yeah.
If you're not watching the video version of this,
I'd be happy to fill you in on the fact that
I am sporting around my thick, muscular neck,
the weight.
It's a 15 and a half inch neck.
The weight of a hefty physical feat completed
and that is I ran in a Spartan race and I got a medal, I got a medal, I'm wearing it.
This is never, I got a Science Olympiad medal once.
I will note that you just turned it around
and it just said finisher on it so I mean.
It, yeah.
Which is, I mean.
I didn't get a place.
But hey, you know what, you finished.
I didn't even do it.
I finished, you didn't even start.
I didn't even start.
Then on the back there's a third of another medal
that if I complete apparently two more Spartan races
in this calendar year, I get a Big Daddy trifecta medal.
A smart marketing man.
Yeah.
Especially a collector, you definitely wanna get
the other two pieces of that.
Right, I don't even know how,
but I'm probably already signing up.
So Link's gonna tell us about his experience
with the Spartan race and then we're gonna talk about
some other physical feats.
But I do.
And I will say that I discovered,
just a little more of a tease,
something happened that I did not anticipate
that I think is gonna have a forever impact on who I am.
Okay.
My interest is peaked.
Is it?
Peaked with a Q.
Okay.
I'm going to answer some questions
that have been lingering out there.
Those of you who follow my very dynamic Instagram account,
RedMC, also the same name of my very dynamic
and awesome Twitter account, RedMC,
shout out to both of those accounts.
I encourage you to follow both of them for enrichment.
Right and if you wanna complete the set,
that's a shout out to Link Lamont on Instagram.
That's right.
Very active, very active.
Very, very active now.
Like when the Amish go and sow their wild oats,
that active.
Whoa.
You know how they have a year they can do that?
Better protect yourself.
I don't know what they call it,
but it's where they can sow their wild oats.
I think that's what they call it.
I think they call it the devil's year.
I'm that active on Instagram now.
I posted this video to both accounts
and I thought it deserved that kind of exposure.
Yes, and I haven't gotten the complete download.
Again, I've heard pieces. You can't download
Instagram videos, I've tried.
You're talking about the cat.
Yeah. Yes.
You may have seen that I posted a video,
about a minute long video of a night vision camera
focused on the couch
in my living room, which is actually a cropped version
of the bigger video.
Oh nice, you did some cropping.
I wanted to draw your eye to the cat
and I said something like,
"'See this cat on my couch at 3 a.m.?
"'Here's the thing, we don't have a cat.'"
Dun dun dun.
And I left it at that and apparently
that was incredibly strategic because it was like
my most liked post ever.
How many likes?
I think at the time that we're recording this,
I think it's been seen like almost 300,000 times
on either Twitter or Instagram or both, I don't know,
which is a lot for a video on those platforms for me.
I think I need to know an exact number
if I'm gonna compare it to my return to Instagram.
Okay.
How many likes does that have, Alex?
287,000.
287,000.
Oh, God, I think you blew me out of the water.
Okay, but.
That's views.
That's views.
Oh, that's views, no, no, no, likes.
63,296 likes.
Okay, ha.
Yeah, because people don't usually like videos
as much as they just watch them.
Okay, yeah, that's a decent number.
It's not what I got when I came back to Instagram.
Well I think that the real comparison
should be your watermelon outfit picture
to my watermelon outfit picture.
So let's.
Oh, now something tells me.
Let's bring those.
Something tells me you've done this
because I can see the glimmer in your eye.
No, no, I just.
Of course, I haven't done it.
I haven't done it.
Rhett, you have 117,000, 85.
117,000 likes on Rhett's watermelon.
I mean, you're close, Link, you have 107.
Okay, and by the time that this is,
Oh, it'll.
You will have surpassed me.
Oh yeah, I'll just blow it out.
By the time that this is on the air, airwaves.
Yeah, mine's still on the upward trend.
Okay, but anyway, that's all you wrote
on your Instagram caption, but.
There was more to the story as Paul Harvey,
is that his name, used to say?
Everybody loves Paul Harvey, the rest of the story.
Yeah, he said the rest of the story,
not there's more to the story.
The real story is not as exciting as Satan manifested
himself as a cat in my living room,
because that's what I wanted you to think.
That did not happen as far as I know.
What happened was, because I also don't make a habit
of just watching my, looking at my couch all night long
through the video, going back through the archives.
Yeah, how would you even find it?
I woke up, I walked downstairs as I do when I wake up.
Oh, was this the middle of the night or the morning?
This was the morning. Okay.
And the front door was just wide open.
And I knew that I was the first person downstairs.
I knew I was the only person awake.
And so I was like, okay, that means that this door
has been open all night.
I mean like open and like come on in, friends.
A gape.
Yeah.
And so I did what we do in my house
when you encounter a problem.
I immediately try to figure out who to blame.
And so I knew that Locke had had friends over
the night before and so I yelled upstairs,
Locke!
Did your friends leave the door open?
I think your friends left the door open last night,
it was open all night!
And he yelled back, no dad!
Healthy communication climate.
That's how we communicate in the McLaughlin household.
Was that point blank range and you just yelled like that?
Yeah, he was right next to me.
He was upstairs.
And then I said,
well I'm gonna check the video camera footage!
You didn't believe him.
So I went into the archives that I can access via my phone
and I started to,
because basically if you zoom out that image
of the couch, to the far left is the front door.
It's the living room and the front door cam
that gets it off.
Okay, yeah.
And I'm kind of scrubbing through
but I'm kind of scrubbing through ham-handedly
so that I accidentally scrubbed all the way to 3 a.m.
Whoops.
And then I see this little dot.
Well, did you see that the door
had been left open or something?
Well, yeah, okay, so skipping forward
and then I'll come back.
I did see that it was his friends who left
and did not close the door.
Did you yell at him then?
Yeah.
Or you were distracted by it?
I was focused on the cat at this point.
Okay, go ahead.
But they walked out and they pulled the door too
but it didn't close all the way
and then it was like a windy night
so it just blew the door open.
Okay.
But what I saw was that little black dot
and then it took a lot,
I had to like, it takes a lot to get back
to this specific little minute, you know?
Right.
But then I'm like.
This is like an eight hour video.
That's a freaking cat.
A cat came in the, and first I thought, is that a raccoon?
And some people still think that they see a raccoon
in that, it's very hard to tell.
And there is a family of raccoons
that lives in the lot next to me.
Like literally a family, one time I saw the mom,
she was walking across the fence next to the pool
and three baby raccoons were following her.
That's cute.
And also if you listen to the video,
you'll see that at the end after the cat disappears
sort of behind the wall, there's like a repeated sound
of like somebody taking like a cord
and like hitting against the floor,
which that's a very raccoon thing to do.
Yeah.
It's not a, cats don't make that,
cats don't leave a mark, you know,
they're like evil spirits, they just float through spaces.
They don't step heavy and stuff like that.
So in the video that you posted.
But I do think it was a cat.
The cat jumps off the couch behind the couch?
No, no, it comes to the edge of the couch,
which is behind the wall,
kind of the corner of the room
where there's like that light and then like that little.
The camera view was obstructed.
And he did something, I don't know what it was.
But I'm 90% sure it was a cat and it's a black cat
that I think is a neighbor's cat that is kind of around
and we don't feed cats.
I don't believe in feeding cats as a policy.
I believe that some cats should be fed.
I'm not saying that, you know,
I'm just saying that I don't feed cats.
You don't believe in you feeding cats.
And it's a neighbor's cat that's one of those roving cats.
Yeah, if you feed it, it'll keep coming back.
And so apparently he just thought it was okay
to come inside.
Apparently he didn't understand the disposition
of our household towards cats.
Because you didn't, did you see the cat exit?
Or if not, did you think the cat may still be in the house?
No, I thought he had probably gone.
I thought he had left.
At that point you were thinking about an Instagram post.
Oh yeah.
You had moved on from Locke being wrong
and you being right and from a cat being there
to how do I exploit this digitally?
Yeah, yeah, and that was when my wife and I
had the conversation about,
because I think she was like,
oh I should tweet that or something.
I'm like whoa, I should tweet that.
Oh really?
You guys are trying to out tweet each other.
Well you know I think that my post has the most potential.
Ooh.
Did you give her the line, you can retweet my tweet?
No she did come up with some of the verbiage.
I think she came up with here's the thing,
we don't have a cat.
It was a collective tweet.
She's your ghostwriter.
Yeah, she's my ghostwriter.
And so it's also like just the other day,
it's funny because now that she's on Twitter,
I mean she's got an Instagram account that's,
you know, well she's got one that's like her design thing
that's public and then she's got one that's herself
that's private. But Twitter of's public and then she's got one that's herself that's private.
But Twitter of course is just public for everybody.
So like she's kind of getting into the fray
a little bit on Twitter.
And so now when things happen at home,
there's a little bit of a race.
So my most liked tweet ever as of this weekend
was my, I was like,
Jessie asked Shepard, she said, what kind of eggs
do you want and he said pancakes.
It's got like 20 something thousand likes.
Because I just tweeted my wife to my 10 year old,
what kind of eggs do you want, 10 year old, pancakes.
People just love that.
You had no role in that except tweeting it.
Yeah right, and so, and as soon as it happened,
I was like, that's a good tweet,
and it's funny because, you know,
Jessie was actually in, she was part of the tweet,
but she didn't, we recognized it was funny at the time,
but she didn't immediately think, I gotta tweet that.
Oh, and so she lost.
Yeah, but she commented on it.
It's an interesting thing because,
when what was the comment?
Like hey this should have been my tweet?
No she said she made a joke about eggs or pancakes.
I can't remember exactly.
She glommed on. I liked it.
She glommed on and you liked it.
It's funny because I don't tweet that much.
We've talked about this.
I'm off of that now.
I'm on to the new thing, the new thing called Instagram.
But Britton, who now lives with us,
he started tweeting things that are said around my house.
Oh, so he's doing that.
So he's doing what you're doing,
he's like listening in to stuff in the Neal household
and then tweeting stuff that Christy's saying.
He's tweeting it.
There's a treasure trove there.
Yeah, but of course I can't do that.
You know, I can't be the one that's like,
here's something my wife said,
implying that you'll find this hilarious.
I follow Britton on Twitter,
but I haven't followed him closely enough
to know to see these tweets that you speak of.
I don't follow him either.
No, I do, but.
I do follow him.
But I'm just saying I don't,
I just look at moments and mentions on Twitter,
so I don't see a lot of what,
because that's another thing my wife says,
she's like, I walk home, I walk in home
and she says, you didn't like my tweet.
Oh.
I'm like, well I didn't see your freaking tweet,
I'm sorry, I'll go like it now.
Dang.
Yeah, yeah, it's only if she thinks
that her tweet was deserving of a like.
And it often is.
But I haven't seen these Britain tweets.
So how many times has he done this?
And does he say, my, how does he characterize it?
He's tried out this catchphrase that's like,
he'll give the exchange and then he'll say something like,
another day in the Neal household or something.
Hashtag another day in the Neal household?
Yeah, something like that.
Gotta shorten that.
He's, you know, I'm letting him do his own experimentation.
Even though I am an expert in Twitter.
You know, who am I?
Who am I to give him advice on the tweeting?
Okay, so that's the story.
It's not as exciting as you might,
I mean, it's still a little bit exciting,
but it was just as simple as leaving the door open.
You know, fun fact, if you leave your door open, animals and or people, I mean, I should be happy that it was still a little bit exciting but it was just as simple as leaving the door open. You know, fun fact, if you leave your door open,
animals and or people, I mean I should be happy
that it was just a cat.
Yeah.
Not a cat burglar.
And that the cat left.
I mean you could be taking care of a cat right now.
Well I wouldn't have been, I would have escorted it out.
Okay.
All right we're gonna get into my race and what happened
and how my life was potentially changed or not.
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Something nucleotide.
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You know what it is though.
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Now on with the biscuit.
Okay Link, tell us about your experience.
Spoiler alert, I got a medal.
I don't know if I pointed that out earlier, but I got a,
I mean, it is a heavy medal, like hold your hand out.
There it is.
Yeah, it makes you feel like you did something.
Substantial, man.
Reminds me of when we made medals
for our SuperNote competition.
The arguably the largest YouTube collaboration
slash competition to date, to that date on YouTube.
At least that's what we called it.
At least that's what we said.
That's how we marketed it.
It was a.
True or not. It was a. True or not.
It was a competition to see who could hold out
the longest continuous vocal note on the internet.
We should bring that back.
Gosh it was a nightmare.
It's a different world now.
It's a different internet world.
Anyway, we made medals like this
but this one's pretty freaking cool.
So I go to a gym and they're doing things like,
a lot of people at my gym, they'll get on Facebook
and they'll talk to each other and encourage each other
and there's a, and of course, I don't do that.
Encouragement, encouragement's for losers.
I'm there for the burpees, I'm there for the tonage,
I'm there to just get fit.
I mean the first thing that got me into the gym
three years ago now-ish was I was having shoulder problems,
I was having knee problems, I went to physical therapy,
they taught me some exercises that then made me feel better
but I was like I gotta maintain my body,
I gotta turn a corner here.
So I started going to the gym but I'm not
one of these people that's like,
I'm doing this for me, I'm doing this for my health,
I'm doing it for my wife and kids, you know,
to be physically a part of their lives, you know?
I think I know what you mean.
You said it differently than I would have.
You wanna be around, you wanna be engaged,
you wanna be spry.
Yeah, I wanna be able to grab them and toss them.
You wanna be young at heart and in body.
Yeah, man, and not get hurt.
Arm wrestle, that kinda thing.
Show them who's boss.
But the social aspect of it was not really my thing,
so I'm not really, I mean, I know people,
I have friends at the gym, but you know,
at the end of last year, I'm thinking there's some things
that I'm, I'm trying to be more open to even more experience
especially when it relates to self-care.
And I think those two things coming together
led me very early on at the top of the year,
as I was leaving the gym, the guy just mentioned,
hey there's a sign up
for the Spartan race and I'd heard of this
and some people had done it before
and a lot of people sign up and they do it
as a group from the gym and I didn't really think about it.
I was like, I'm gonna do that.
I looked at the date, I knew we weren't out of town
and I just signed up.
It was kind of like I was observing myself make a decision
that I never thought I would make. It was like an out of body experience and I was like, I was observing myself make a decision that I never thought I would make.
It was like an out of body experience.
And I was like, I'm doing this.
I don't know why.
I'm just, I'm gonna give it a shot.
I'm open now, I'm more interested in,
I don't know what this,
I don't know what's involved in this race.
And then the next time I got to the gym,
I was like, maybe you should tell me a little bit
about this thing that I'm gonna be doing,
this Spartan race.
He was like, well, we don't train here.
We say you gotta come Sunday mornings, first thing.
We're gonna meet out at a park
and we're gonna do like special training for it.
I'm like, okay.
You gotta run a 5K and there's 20 obstacles
all along the way.
And there's a Spartan race,
there's a Tough Mudder, there's all types of things
floating around that I've heard about.
But I'm like okay, I'm gonna go to the training,
I'll see how this shapes up.
I didn't really look on the website, I made up my mind,
I didn't wanna look at the obstacles
or really try to understand what's happening
because I felt like I would get nervous.
So I'm just gonna go to the training on that Sunday morning.
But the obstacles that were gonna be,
they weren't gonna replicate the obstacles in this park.
Not to an exact degree, right?
No, when we went to the park,
there was just a small group of us, like six of us,
and the trainer guy, a friend who owns the gym.
Do the obstacles change each year?
They change from location to location, yeah.
So you don't really know what you're getting into,
that's part of it.
Yeah but I didn't even wanna know generally.
I knew there was mud involved and they talked about
crawling under barbed wire.
I'm like well okay.
And I get there and it's just a park.
There's no obstacles at all.
I mean it's just, there's a dog park over here
and then there's a regular park over here
and so we have to pair up and just start running a lap
around this park off, there's no, it's just on the dirt.
And then whenever we would come back around,
we'd get down and we'd start crawling on the dirt
and like he had some bags and we'd carry some bags
or we'd do burpees.
But he was talking about now, you gotta get low
and this is how you do an army crawl.
Just imagine there's a barbed wire over top of him.
Like dang, am I gonna be bleeding at this thing?
Well if you don't get low enough.
I think at like Tough Mudder,
Jenna was telling me they'll shock you and stuff.
There was none of that for the Spartan.
The Spartan race is not.
The Tough Mudder gets up to.
Is not as crazy as that.
They all have different levels,
but the highest Tough Mudder is a Tough Mudder.
Yeah.
So this, you don't get shocked,
but you do get dirty and you get down in it.
So like I'm learning how to do an army crawl
in the middle of this park and that's not easy.
You gotta have good hip mobility to stay low.
And I'm crawling around on my belly
and all of a sudden I hear somebody say,
what are you guys up to?
And they say, oh we're training for a Spartan race.
And then I'm crawling up to this guy
and he's like walking his dog, heckling us.
And he's like, you pay to crawl around
on your belly out here like that?
And I'm like, I wanted to say something very nasty to him.
I bit my tongue, I didn't say anything.
What are you trying to make conversation?
And then I'm like, his dog is crappy.
You pay for your dog to crap like that?
And then I. That would've been
a bad comeback.
And so here I am crawling, I'm crawling
and there's like dog crap obstacles.
Oh, thank you, sir.
It's like, kinda humiliating.
I was kinda like second guessing my decision.
And then we start running and I realize
I am horrible at running.
Like I know how to move my legs like a runner
but it's something about the breathing part of it
that is extremely difficult for me.
Like I was out of breath, man, I was struggling.
I learned this when we ran the mile in our old studio
in a very small circle and I thought that you were joking.
I thought that the trouble that you were having with it
was part of it, was a bit.
I think I have asthma.
I mean I don't wanna make light of asthma.
I just can't breathe when I start running.
I think it's a rhythm thing.
Yeah, I mean I was asking about it, like my trainer was like.
You're not breathing deeply enough.
Yeah you gotta, you know the breathe in through your nose,
breathe out through your mouth.
I remember back when we were like in Little League Baseball
we'd have to like run laps around there and like,
it's like breathe in through your nose,
breathe out through your mouth and I'm just like.
So I'm, we paired up because,
and there's a woman who had a French accent,
his name was Blondine.
Whoa, whoa, whoa. I'd seen her around.
She sounds like a graphic novel star or something.
Blondine.
Blondine the French woman became my workout partner,
so I'm running it.
That's the best, hold on, that's the best name. She's a great person it. That's the best name.
It's a great person too.
That I've ever heard.
Great person.
I might have a daughter just so I can have a blondine.
I'm gonna get my vasectomy reversed.
I'm gonna go to one of those specialists
that can put your sperm in a centrifuge
to make sure that only the female sperm,
or whatever you call it, get in there.
I'm gonna have a girl so I can name her Blondine, you heard it right here.
And you need to set the spin cycle to French
so she comes out speaking French.
Oh gosh, that could probably be done,
it's 20, is it 19?
You know what, I never ask her to speak to me in French.
Well, good.
But she has an accent, she's a very nice person,
her and her husband own like these gyms for kids.
You know how when you take your kid to this place
and there might be trampolines and obstacles and crap?
Oh like a jump center?
Yeah so she's athletic minded.
And we start running and I'm like oh she's setting the pace.
And I'm like.
Blind mean, gotta keep up with blind mean.
Very early I'm like I'm not good at running.
I don't think I know how to breathe right.
And then a few, like three minutes later,
I couldn't talk anymore.
So it was like I couldn't object.
I just had to like really try to run to keep up with her.
So she's your partner though.
So it's just you and her.
And it's not that she was running fast.
It's just that she was running at a decent pace
and I don't know how to do that from a breathing point.
It could be in your legs too.
Maybe your legs aren't moving the right way.
You have an inefficient stroke, they call it.
I achieved fatigue pretty quickly,
but I pushed through, just like it says
on the back of my medal, push harder. Okay, almost like it says on the back of my medal, push harder.
Okay, almost like it says on the back of your.
And when you get really fatigued, it's hard to run
and I found myself falling.
We're running on the dirt.
Falling behind or falling?
Like falling on my face.
Like falling, like she was running a little bit ahead,
it was a little bit of a decline,
it was like dirt and gravel-ish type scenario
and whenever she would hit a little dip
and then it would go down and up,
she'd get some momentum so be like whoop
and so she could get up the other side.
I wasn't great at that either and I fell like,
if it weren't for my hands catching me,
I would've fallen flat on my face.
And like my knees bleeding and she's like,
are you okay?
I'm like, I'm not good at running.
And then I get up, I'm like running the rest.
And then, so I had a war wound.
So I come back the next week and I got a knee brace.
A knee brace.
Over my knee wound.
Okay.
Because my knee was also hurting after that.
On the inside and the outside.
And then I'm running the next time
and Blondine's not there because she had to go to France.
Yeah, of course. For the holidays.
So I'm running with Louis.
Quarterly trip to France.
Louis is even faster than Blondine.
I'm trying to keep up with him.
Just like sucking air.
We're coming down, we're running up in the woods,
we're coming down from the woods on the decline
and he's well ahead of me so he's stopping to do our burpees
and as he turns around and looks, I give him a show.
Like I splayed out and just fell again.
On my hands and my knees, I'm just like,
just tumbling down this hill, all because I'm so,
I can't run, I'm that tired.
Like I get so tired that my feet wouldn't lift
off of the dirt.
And he's like, you don't know what to say in that instance
to the guy, it's like you're training with this guy
and he's like,
you okay man?
And I'm like, yeah, I did this last week too.
I did this with Blondine.
So then the next week I show up,
I got a knee brace on both knees.
You need like a full body suit.
Knee pad.
You need like a Kevlar three piece suit.
I need to look like somebody that you do motion capture.
Well what you need is you need like a four wheeler
just to ride and follow everyone.
I need to be inefficient.
I got a helmet and I got a combustible engine
that propels me.
So I developed this reputation amongst the group
of being the guy who is gonna bleed every time.
The falling bleeder.
Needless to say, come race day, I was pretty nervous.
Right.
That didn't affect my sleep because you know,
whenever my head hits the pillow, I get stupid.
I'm a stupid sleeper.
So I'm blessed with that but when I woke up,
I was like man, I'm kinda nervous.
We had to drive out to Chino or Chico or Chino.
Yeah you gotta know which one you're going to.
A lot of people out there.
I'm like oh I get to see these obstacles and everything.
There's probably a lot of falling bleeders out there too.
I had on both of my knee braces,
they gave us socks so we could all look the same
and so I got these like tube socks on my shins
and I got a headband.
I always wear a headband by the way.
That's my signature.
I've heard about this.
Every time I work out I gotta.
There's always one in every gym.
I'm that guy.
The guy with the headband.
I usually don't talk to him but I would talk to you.
Blondine and I take off, the race starts
and I'm like okay, I can do this.
I caught a glimpse of some of the obstacles.
There's like a three foot wall,
you gotta hoist yourself over that.
Then there's like a five foot wall
that like I'm hoisting myself, well I put my foot out,
Blondine like jumps off of my thigh and I boost her over.
Right, because there's a teamwork.
There's a teamwork mentality.
And the rest of our team, they decided to go to slower pace
and then you know, you help.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, hold on, you went Blondine pace?
I went Blondine pace.
The day of the race?
I'd been, you know, I'd been training some more.
Hold on, but was this discussed ahead of time?
Yeah, yeah, I was like, all right, don't leave me, please.
Just you and her?
Yeah.
And there's a.
So there's no obstacles where you need,
I've read a little bit about them
and I've seen like pictures where you gotta have
like three people minimum to get over
these certain things or something.
Only if this is like your first race and you need help over things, does your team like rally around you to help you get over these certain things or something. Only if this is like your first race
and you need help over things does your team
like rally around you to help you get over things.
But for us, we just had each other
and a lot of people were just kind of paired up.
And then there's like you're climbing a net wall
and when I get up to the top, I'm like, man,
it hits me that like if I were to fall from this, I could die.
Like I gotta really be careful and I got more scared.
And then we're going over all types of stuff
and then there's a mud hill.
I'd say it's probably a six feet tall, like muddy hill
and you climb this thing and you get on the top and you slide down into muddy water.
That's like three feet deep and you're trudging across that,
another muddy hill, it's taller.
Was it cold?
Conditions were perfect.
I would say it was like 74 degrees in the air.
Because that would be, the cold would be the worst part.
So I get up on the second hill and we're sliding down,
I'm like man, this is fun.
All of a sudden I'm having fun.
I'm not as scared anymore.
And so I slide down into that mud pit.
Are you like saying woo?
Did you have anything that you say when you get over?
I didn't have like fun exclamations like yee-haw
or anything like that.
I kept my redneck inner dialogue inside.
But what kinds of things did you say?
I went down there and I'm like,
my face didn't get muddy but like my shoulders did
and I'm in up to my armpits.
And I turn around and this big football player dude like makes a huge splash and and I turn around and this big football
player dude makes a huge splash and when I turn around
and look at him, he has gone under.
He's got mud all over his face and I look at him
and I say, you look great.
You encourage someone.
I encourage someone.
But it also seemed like you're kinda making fun
of him a little bit.
And he looked at me and I noticed that he was struggling
and he's like wiping his eyes with his muddy hands
and he was like, I got it in my eyes.
So he thought I was taunting him
because he was like having a moment.
Yeah, what?
I was like, you look great.
He was like, I got it all in my eyes, man.
And he was upset.
And I was like, oh.
You sounded like you were kinda making fun of him,
just so you know.
I wasn't trying to.
But I did realize that he was in duress at that moment.
I tried to make up for it and I was like,
my sleeve doesn't have any mud on it.
Wipe your eyes on my sleeve, man.
And he was like, nah, nah, nah.
I was like, dude.
Was Blondine okay with this?
Where was she?
She was trying to go up the next hill.
She was like quit helping the competition!
And so he was like nah man, and I'm like no,
it's perfectly dry, just wipe your eyes on my sleeve man.
And I basically made him do it and he did it
and then he didn't say anything to me.
He just went up the hill.
And then, so I go up the next hill.
You linked him.
You totally linked him.
I helped him.
You unintentionally.
I helped a blind man on the road.
You unintentionally insulted him.
That's link step number one.
He looked great.
And then you forced him into doing.
He couldn't see.
You forced him into doing something
that he didn't wanna do, which is link number two.
Oh my.
And then you told the story and didn't realize that.
How he took it, that's link number three.
And then I get up to the next hill and I realize,
oh I gotta slide down this third one into more mud
and now there is an inflatable wall that is.
Well that sounds fun.
That is brought down to the surface of the mud
and they force you to submerge yourself completely
and go under.
So everything I did to help that guy
was immediately erased by the fact that now we all
just have to go under this thing.
Here and that's what he should have said.
And he knew that because he told me
once we got to the top of the hill,
he was like this is a lot easier than it was yesterday.
I was like, you did this yesterday?
He was like, yeah.
I was like, oh, so you knew that you were about to go under
the mud and basically me forcing you to wipe your face
on my shirt was pointless.
Yeah.
I didn't say any of that, I just kinda slinked along.
Yeah.
But we had to submerge ourselves completely in the mud
and that was a fun moment.
But then right after that,
we're running to the next obstacle
and it is a 45 degree wooden triangle
that was probably eight feet tall
and it had ropes hanging from it
and it was soaked because everybody was soaked
and your feet are soaked, your whole body's soaked
by this point and you have to grab the rope,
stand on the wood and walk up this wet inversion obstacle
and that was nearly impossible.
Well how did you do it if you can have no grip?
Well you could grip the rope but then your feet
had no grip but you had to lean back in order to create
more, what's that called in statics?
Friction?
Well you gotta, that force back towards,
you know if you lean back on the rope,
your legs become like a moment arm and you're like
sending your force vector back into the wood
so that you can get more traction and walk.
But it was, people were like getting halfway up
and then falling flat on their faces
and then sliding back down into all the people
that were waiting.
Now, if you get up to an obstacle like this,
is there somebody there to make sure you go over it?
No, well there's people on the side saying,
hey just go around, if you can't do an obstacle,
you have to do 30 burpees.
Oh.
But you lose a lot of pride when you gotta do the burpees.
30 burpees is actually not easy.
Not easy.
I was determined to make it up and I noticed
that there was one rope that had three knots in it
all the way up, some didn't have any knots.
I'm like I'm going for that one.
I get halfway up and then the space between the second knot
and the third knot was farther than I could reach
with my fingertips and so I would grab the rope
and just slide back down and you feel like
everybody's watching, everybody's waiting for you
to get over.
Right, because it's one rope.
Well there's probably five people could go at a time,
but there's probably 45 people waiting
because people start backing up.
Embarrassing.
I was desperate to get over this thing
and I was holding on the rope, I was leaning back,
I was like really struggling and I'm like,
I look at a rope over here and it has a knot on it
and I'm like belaying over and putting my foot
on the knot in the other rope and trying desperately
to push up and there's a guy right up there
who's helping some people over
but he's not helping me over.
He's just like, and I don't know if he was waiting
for me to reach out.
It was because of the headband.
Well we all wore headbands.
They give you a headband with a number on it. Oh it was your number then. Yeah that's why I train with a headband? Well we all wore headbands. They give you a headband with a number on it.
Oh it was your number then.
Yeah that's why I trained with a headband.
Do you have athletic glasses?
Like Kurt Rambis?
I was wearing contacts, I wasn't wearing
Kurt Rambis goggles.
Missed opportunity.
I did make it over but it was harrowing.
And then I hung at the top and grabbed Blondine
and pulled her over.
It was like a survival situation.
I felt like, you know, it's like an adult version
of like don't step in the lava kind of a vibe.
It's what's happening.
There's a lot more obstacles after that
but that was the most difficult spot for me.
After that, there's some rings and other monkey bars
and like carrying a lot of weight in a bucket
around a circuit and all these different things.
There was even a javelin toss, like a Spartan.
Like a, is that what it's called, a javelin?
Like a stick that you can skewer somebody?
Into what?
Into a,
Hey, Bill? Into people who were skewer somebody. Into what? Into a, uh. Hay bale?
Into people who are doing burpees.
Oh good.
Yeah, it's like, oh you can't throw the javelin?
Yep.
Then you're the target.
Kill the burpee-ers.
Like a hay bale.
Turns out we ran the whole time from obstacle to obstacle.
We didn't do any walking, some people were doing that.
If you went first thing in the morning,
you were like in the elite competition people
who were like doing this for time
and it's like American Ninja Warrior type vibe.
But this was like the free for all,
some people walking, everybody going at their own pace.
So it wasn't the competitive run
to get across the finish line first.
But once it gets to the end,
there's like a rope you have to climb
and that's the first thing I could not do.
I never learned the technique to climb a rope.
And Blondine was trying to show me
and she was having a difficult time
so we ended up doing the burpees.
And then I saw.
How high do you have to go?
Probably 15 feet.
That'd be trouble. It was probably 15 feet. That'd be trouble.
It was intimidating and it really, my hands were hurting.
So I was like I'll just do the burpees.
And then I saw Christy and the kids
and they saw me cross the finish line.
And we got our pictures taken, they gave me the medal
and there's people there at the end who like
hand you the medal, put it around your neck.
And so I knew that my family was watching.
I felt like the whole world was watching.
So I decided I'm gonna run up to this guy
who's handing me the medal and I'm going to take a knee
like a knight.
So I went to take a knee, nobody else was taking a knee.
I guess the guy hadn't encountered anyone taking a knee
because as I took the knee, he tried to put the metal
over where my head used to be and instead slapped me
square in the face with my medal.
That's kinda what you deserve.
Which is a heavy medal.
This is an impressively heavy medal
and I know because it hit me square in the face
at the end of my race.
Wow.
I'm pretty sure Christy got this on video.
I hope she did.
I haven't watched it back but if it is,
we can cut to it for the video version.
YouTube.com slash Ear Biscuits, subscribe now.
So that kinda put a damper on my ending.
This is like wham, right in the face.
And then we ran, we got some pictures,
but then we actually ran, I was exhausted.
I was absolutely exhausted, but Blondine was like,
let's run back and come through with the rest of our team.
We can support them, we're all in this together.
I'm like, that's a great idea but I hate you
for thinking that is what I was thinking.
I don't want to run back.
And then we started running back and like,
both of my calves cramped up, I couldn't move.
I'm like, I gotta, she's like running back.
I'm like, I gotta walk in's like running back, I'm like,
I gotta walk in, do this.
But we did catch up with them and we brought them back.
They ended up carrying you.
I recovered but we got to the rope climb at the end
and like Blondine wants to try it again, she's like,
got this inner competition.
And of course my family's still there watching
and then everybody's like try it again,
do the rope climb and I'm like,
I don't wanna do this again.
I didn't do it the first time and so I had watched
and I just, you know the technique is you're supposed
to climb a rope with your legs not your arms.
And I started doing it like I hooked my feet together
and then I pushed up and then I reached my hands up
and I grabbed again, actually yeah,
I pushed up with my legs and then I did it a second time
and then all of a sudden I realized people were cheering.
And I did it a third time and then I did it a fourth time
and I looked up and there's the bell.
And I'm ringing the freaking bell.
I climbed the freaking rope, man!
Right?
That's awesome.
I'm forcing Rhett to say that's awesome.
But it was unexpectedly awesome to actually hit that bell.
Like when I got down, like my family was cheering for me
and then we crossed the finish line
and we all took the pictures.
And then it was over.
And then we went to, there's this-
Ruby Tuesdays.
Well, we were so dirty, like coated head to foot.
And they had rigged up all these garden hoses.
I'm talking like probably 35 garden hoses
under this cement slab.
And so I go under there and we're all like hosing off
so that then we can go into this changing place and change.
And I looked down and somebody had left
two hotel size shampoo bottles in front of me.
And there's like probably 50 people hotel size shampoo bottles in front of me.
And there's like probably 50 people at different stages of hosing themselves off.
Men, women, children, it was like post-apocalyptic.
Except for me because I was lathered from head to toe
in every freaking bit of that shampoo that nobody else had.
So I realized everybody was looking at me and laughing
because I was like, I was suds-ed up like a dude
taking a bubble bath.
They didn't want to use it?
I offered it to the people that I knew and like,
Chad took a little bit and like shampooed his hair
a little bit, I'm like, man, I've never been, I can't ever remember being this dirty.
It was like the ram in the thicket.
God gave me shampoo.
And I tried to share it, but no one wanted
to go full lather.
Except me.
They were like, I'll do a thorough shower
when I get home.
Right, I was like putting it down my pants
and then I changed and we went back to my family
and ate some beef jerky and some bananas
and headed out of there.
But the thing that happened that I didn't anticipate was,
and it started at the rope climb and then it continued
way into the evening and it started at the rope climb and then it continued
way into the evening and it was this. I felt good.
I was proud of what I had done.
And I know that sounds kind of cheesy
and a little weird to say,
but the thing that I realized was
kinda cheesy and a little weird to say, but the thing that I realized was
I in no way anticipated actually feeling that, honestly.
I thought, I'm gonna sign up for this thing,
yeah, it's gonna be difficult,
I'm not surprised that I'm nervous about doing it,
I'm gonna push myself physically
and I'm gonna have a physical experience
of completing something.
As long as I don't get hurt, this is a success.
But I honestly, it didn't cross my mind
that there would be an emotional component
to completing a race like this.
You know, people talk about completing marathons
and I totally get, if you run 26 miles
and you cross the finish line,
like I totally get that you might be in tears of joy.
Of course.
Like, but I did not anticipate with like,
doing a little three mile, 5K, you know,
jumping over some ropes and oh, this is no big deal,
that it would actually have an impact on my self-esteem.
It was surprising to me. it would actually have an impact on my self-esteem.
It was surprising to me.
And it was kinda awesome.
And I think, and I. Does this mean you're like a Spartan guy now?
I'm a Spartan junkie now.
No, I've talked to people after when they're like,
did you get the bug?
And I actually know what they're talking about
because there's this thrill of achieving something.
But you know, I'm not competitive at all.
So any of my many soccer exploits,
I don't know that I,
or any type of sport, physical competition type thing,
I don't think I've ever experienced actual joy in doing it.
Because I was like, what am I feeling right now?
This is so weird.
What is the feeling that I have
that my family just watched me climb a rope?
I mean, it's kind of silly.
I'm a 40 year old guy ringing a cowbell
at the top of a rope.
And the answer was pride.
You know, I was proud.
I was proud.
And it was like, it was so weird to then realize
that it was the first time that it happened.
So now I gotta get my other three.
That night, it was like late that night
because I went back into the kitchen
to get a pseudo midnight snack
because I had earned it, I mean, let's be real.
My watch told me I burned 1,100 calories.
Took me an hour and a half to finish the race.
That's how long it took.
I was absolutely exhausted.
And is it the same, because you were telling me
that your portion wasn't competitive
so people weren't going for time.
Nobody was shoving.
But the people before that in the morning are
and is it the same obstacles?
Yes, same obstacles.
So give me the best time.
I think the record, 30 minutes I think,
something around there.
Yeah.
That's pretty crazy.
Yeah.
I mean for me to be running the whole time,
jogging, if I'm not doing an obstacle,
and only waiting at a couple of them,
it was an hour and a half and I felt really good about that.
Yeah.
If I haven't established that already.
So that night, like, Lily,
lo and behold, Lily comes in the kitchen.
I guess she earned a midnight snack too
and I'm like, hey Lily, what did you think
about my race today?
She's like, well you know when you,
before the, after the rope climb,
which the first time I didn't do it,
she was like you go up to the rings
and you know how you gotta stand there for a second
and it's like I kinda looked at your face
and I could tell that you were afraid.
And I'm like, I look at Lily,
I'm, yeah.
I can see the fear in your eyes.
I was like, and I told Lily, I was like, I was.
And she was like, and then you started doing it
and you like grabbed one ring
and then you swung to the next ring
and I could tell you kinda got the hang of it
and then you felt better about it.
And I was like, I did.
And then after you did, and I was like,
did you see me do the rope?
And she was like, yeah, yeah, yeah,
when you went back and did the rope, that was cool.
And then there was like a pause and she was like,
I can tell you're pretty proud of yourself.
And I'm like.
You think?
And I'm like, I am, I am.
And it was, you know, I think,
it's the stuff that I've already said, Yeah, and it was, you know, I think,
it's the stuff that I've already said, but it's also this thing of like,
don't you feel like we were taught a little bit that like,
being proud of yourself for doing something is not,
it's not a pure, it's not a pure thing to feel.
Not in the McLaughlin household.
You think?
Oh well, maybe it's in more, okay,
then maybe it's just me then, that I feel like
if you're gonna be proud of something you did,
it's like yeah, I'm proud of that.
There's like a tinge of, but you don't wanna flaunt it.
You don't wanna be honest and be like, yeah, tell me.
Being proud of yourself and being prideful.
I understand there's two different things,
but I guess it bled in my psyche.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
So I think I will do it again.
I encourage you to give it a shot.
Well I was reading that book.
There's a book about the Iceman, Wim Hof
and the guy who wrote the book
is talking about, I read this like a year and a half ago
and he was talking about Spartan races and I was like,
I need to, I should really do something like that
but they don't do that in my gym so I didn't look at it
because you gotta, I wasn't gonna go out there by myself.
Yeah, you gotta have a squad.
I don't think you can be in my squad because.
I'm gonna get another squad and beat your squad.
Yeah, let's do that.
Yeah, I'm gonna take the.
You're gonna try to recruit Blondeine to your side.
No, I definitely wanna do it.
I am legitimately, now you know me,
I am incredibly competitive.
Like competitive sports were like a huge part of my life
growing up and so I think I definitely approach it
very differently because I never,
like I didn't think about sports and competition
in the way that, I just saw something and it was like
I am going to win at that.
And I was just like, I put everything into,
how am I gonna win?
So it was a different kind of approach.
But does that mean, can you quantify,
can you pinpoint what's your greatest physical feat?
Because I guess I'm saying, I mean,
definitely in recent history,
this Spartan race was that for me.
Like a personal physical milestone.
Last time I ran 5K was when I was on the soccer team,
like we had to run a lot in high school.
I'm talking that many years ago, 20 plus years ago
was the last time I ran anywhere near that.
Okay so speaking of 5K, so I probably have told this story in like,
maybe way back on like the Rhett and Link cast or something,
but my basketball coach was the cross country coach,
Coach Gage, and still the basketball coach
at Harness Central.
I don't know if he's still doing cross country,
but anyway, so he kinda got all the guys
on the basketball team to run cross country.
And so, I was an athlete, so I was like okay, I'll do this.
I had never really done long distance running
but I was like okay, some people can do it
so I will be one of the people who can do it.
This way I've always, if somebody can do it,
okay, I can do it. And the course is usually a if somebody can do it, okay, I can do it.
And the course is usually a 5K, right?
It's a 5K, you know, it's the one that went around
the tobacco field and like down the dirt road
next to school and stuff.
Yeah.
And so they were like, okay, well, day one,
you guys are all just gonna run this 5K
and we're gonna see where you're at.
Yep, baseline.
And because that was a competition
amongst just the people, and someone who you're now
like half related to, Brian,
Louis's nephew, I guess.
Oh yeah, yeah, okay, yeah, I know who you're talking about.
Was out there.
He's another like tall guy like me.
And so we start running and I'm like,
didn't expect him to be good.
Now he's tall like me but I just,
he hadn't played any other sports that I knew of.
Right.
And I'm like, whoa, he's not gonna beat me.
Oh.
And no preparation for this.
I don't remember this story by the way.
So.
So I just, like, well I gotta keep up with him.
I'm like, good lord, this guy is flying.
He was blondini-ing you. And I'm like, I gotta keep up with him. I'm like, good lord, this guy is flying. He was blondini-ing you.
And I'm like out of shape,
like basketball season was over
and I guess I was in pretty good shape
for basketball season, whatever,
but like I, you know, not this kind of shape.
He was your height.
Yeah, he was, and so I'm just running like crazy
and we get, and of course the way that the course, I kept up with him the whole time
and the way that the course ends is it goes around
one lap of the track, you come in and go around one.
Yeah.
And I was like, he's not beating me.
This is day one.
Day one, I ran.
Did you talk to him?
No, I ran.
You were just running beside him.
I ran beside him and then.
And didn't say a word?
In the last like 10 steps, overtook him and beat him.
You were, were you sprinting at the end?
I ran the 5K in 18 minutes.
That's pretty good.
18 minutes.
Just to beat Brian.
And which incidentally is not even that good of a time
in cross country once like you start like competing.
Okay.
But it was by far the best time I ever ran
because I was like, I beat Brian
and that's really all I wanted to prove.
And then the rest of the time, during the meets,
we would actually run and then we would get around
the corner and then we would stop running and walk.
Break out potato chips or something?
And then I would get, when we would get back into
where the parents were watching,
I had kinda just jogged along not too hard,
but I got to that place where everybody was watching
and I started sprinting and I would pass 17 people
at the very end and come in and finish
like in the middle of the path.
Just so I could come in like Chariots of Fire,
like just flying, like how does this tall guy have so much energy could come in like Chariots of Fire, like just fly in, like how does this tall guy
have so much energy?
Now you say Chariots of Fire,
but I always picture that guy in slow motion.
Yeah, but I do look very slow because of my limb length.
But beating Brian in that first day,
in practice, that may be one of my greatest physical feats.
You just wanted, you just wanted to let them know you could.
Yeah, because I was thinking about this.
Because I once did.
I was thinking about this.
That's your greatest physical feat,
like that's the one that you're thinking about.
Well I've had a lot of success in sports,
but I don't think of those as like a physical feat.
Right, right, yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
Just like a pure physical exertion.
Like pushing your body to the limit.
Have you ever been, have you ever worked out at the gym
to the point where you just vomited on your own feet?
I was thinking about this and first of all,
it takes a lot for me to actually vomit.
You know, there was the McLaughlin streak
that me and my brother and my dad had for like,
it was like 40 years combined, nobody had vomited.
And within one year, we all three vomited.
Oh.
But anyway.
Bet that was quite a gusher.
So I don't, but I've never worked out so hard
that I threw up.
I've worked out hard but I.
Oh I came, when I first started going to the gym,
I came close.
Even when, because I used to go to the same gym
that you do.
Like they gave me a packet like sugar water to drink.
Well.
Had my head between my knees.
And it's like the circuit training kind of thing
and we wore like the heart rate monitors and stuff
and like trying to burn a certain number of calories
or whatever.
Yeah, I mean basically it's like,
like a couple weeks ago,
I go to a gym but I have a trainer
and we go through like a bunch of different exercises.
It's basically a mix of,
I mean it's all strength training but it's like so quick
and there's a bunch of it going on together
so you're also getting a cardio workout at the same time
and it lasts for like an hour.
And like I work out to the, like to the point,
I have so, like I have so much pride
but the bad kind of pride, like I never ever stop
like and say I can't do that last five seconds
or something like that.
Like I can't, there's just something in me,
it's that whole Enneagram three thing, I cannot.
Uh-huh, you can't admit that you've reached a limit.
If they've told you to do something.
You have to do this plank with this weight
on your back for a minute after you've done this thing,
I'm like okay, that's what it is, I'll do it.
So she just pushes me as far as I'll go
and then I was like sore for like,
that was probably as much as I pushed myself
in my 40s definitely, which my 40s haven't been very long.
But never to the, but then there's things like,
I'll have to like run across a parking lot in the rain
to get to my car and it's just like,
I'm, you know, I got my back issues,
there's like four different places that my back can get hurt and I've got my back issues, there's like four different places that my back
can get hurt and I've got my knee that's got arthritis
and my elbow and my, I got tall guy issues.
And so I like, I'm very stiff and very much thinking,
don't hurt yourself.
Yeah.
Whenever I get going, I'm like, don't hurt yourself.
That's the main reason I would be scared of
the Spartan Race, because I was doing assisted pull-ups at the gym
and my upper back thing snaps.
It's just so, the rope climb would be a problem.
I think I could get to a place where I was physically
capable of it if I figured out how to do it
but I think I could potentially hurt myself.
I mean, you're talking about running in the parking lot.
I still have trouble, especially now, running in the parking lot, I still have trouble, especially now,
running in the parking lot because of this metal.
You know, wearing this everywhere makes it a lot more
difficult to exert myself.
Do we need to install obstacles in the office
in order for you to get to the bathroom?
You gotta, I'll get Blondine to come in here and.
Yeah, we're gonna jump over stuff.
Yeah.
Sure yeah.
I am very much attracted to the idea of doing
those kinds of physical challenges.
Not Blondine, I haven't seen Blondine.
Because, well we started working out basically
as adults at the same time.
Like I used to, you know, I would play basketball
or do something and then you kinda just run out of time
for doing that and then it's just like,
then there was like the years of inactivity
where we were just working really hard.
Yeah.
I mean I did convince us to get that elliptical machine
that we had in the Lillington basement.
Yes.
And we used it every once in a while.
I never used that once.
Then we just ended up putting clothes on it.
We would drink Slim Fast.
But we drink Slim Fast. But not to lose weight.
Just because it was efficient.
Just an efficient mode of continuing to work
but not have any sustenance.
In those days we would.
We would down to Slim Fast and just keep editing videos
and sometimes one day you showed up
with an elliptical machine.
I was like, dude, don't.
And I did use it, that's just a,
it's just a physical manifestation of my guilt.
I did use it.
No you didn't.
Yeah I did, more than you did.
Well yeah, I never used it.
Yeah exactly.
You could use it once and that statement would be true.
I use it at least 12 times.
But we would have a SlimFast for lunch
and then sometimes we have a SlimFast for dinner as well
and then we would keep editing and then we would.
I think that is the commercial by the way well and then we would keep editing and then we would.
I think that is the commercial by the way.
And then we would sleep at the office
and then we would wake up and do it again
when like a project was due because we didn't have any help.
And this is fresh in my mind because you know,
I'll turn this into a Mythical Society plug
just because it's near and dear to my heart.
I was watching, we're releasing on the Mythical Society,
we're trickling out the archive
of the original Rhett and Link cast show,
which was a live show every Thursday night on Ustream.
Now it's just something you can watch
if you're a Mythical Society member.
And so we released the first few of those
and there's one that features that elliptical
because I remember you got it and we did a whole,
we did a whole show about exercise or something
and I'm pretty sure that you were on the elliptical.
That one hasn't been released to the society yet
but just looking at like that basement
and seeing how we were setting up everything, but just looking at that basement and seeing
how we were setting up everything,
it just reminded me of that.
Basically just a shameless Mythical Society plug.
No, but I definitely have a,
as you start getting older and you're like,
I gotta do something to counteract
what is happening to my body.
I mean, the main thing that's happening to my body
is just annoying injuries.
And you don't even know what happened.
I don't remember doing anything to my shoulder.
I think it's just, it's expired.
Well my, I was playing soccer over Thanksgiving
and you know with my nephew Nehemiah and the kids
and like I kicked a soccer ball and like I messed up
my hip flexor. You can't do anything like that. And I just kids and I kicked a soccer ball and I messed up my hip flexor.
You can't do anything like that.
And I just, I walloped that soccer ball
and I knew something had happened.
And it's still not better.
You gotta stretch.
I've been stretching.
You gotta stretch one minute for every year
that you're old.
So you gotta do, I gotta do a 41 minute stretch.
Every morning?
Before, no before any physical activity.
Yeah.
But I do like a 20 minute stretch,
maybe every, like, that's what that stretch,
as my wife calls it now,
the stretch and snuggle time with Barbara.
And here's my next thing, because I,
the Spartan thing, I do recommend it.
I think it's, I don't know,
there is a lot of risk for injury.
So you gotta be, we need to be careful.
There's less risk in triathlons though.
Well somebody, you know.
That's just endurance.
Is that where you swim?
Swim, bike, and run.
Like an Ironman.
But you can do short versions of those.
The swimming is the problem for me.
I woke up in the middle of the night
thirsty as I'll get out last night.
And you know I keep a big thing of water
beside my bed.
And if you swim you don't get thirsty
because you just absorb all the water.
And I gotta stay hydrated.
What no, I start drinking the water and I'm so thirsty
that I'm like, I didn't take a breath in
before I started drinking the water.
I had like exhaled and then I started drinking the water.
And I was so thirsty that I like,
I was having this inner dialogue of like,
I need to breathe now,
but I'm gonna get one more slurp in of this water.
And I did that.
And then I nearly had a panic attack
that I was gonna like drown myself.
I just have this like, I have this fear of drowning.
Of drowning in your own thermos. I was afraid. I have this fear of drowning.
Drowning in your own thermos.
I was afraid.
I don't like holding my breath, man.
And that's why I cannot, if I'm gonna drown
in a water bottle at 3 a.m., how am I supposed
to get in the ocean and swim for a prolonged period?
I cannot do that.
So that's the next thing I'm gonna do.
Triathlon? I'm gonna be an Ironman. If you wanna do triathlons, I cannot do that. So that's the next thing I'm gonna do. Triathlon?
I'm gonna be an Ironman.
If you wanna do triathlons, I'm totally down
because I think it's much less likely that I get injured
because I'm not pulling on things and crawling,
it's just running, biking, swimming.
And I don't know what the order is,
I think it's biking, swimming, running?
Biking, swimming, running, oh.
I'm not ready to do swim training.
But.
Hey, swimming?
That's something you do when you're like 80.
No. You can do that.
Swimming is tough.
Okay so we used to live next to.
I'm talking about like water aerobics.
The pool.
I've never done that.
In Sherman Oaks and I was like,
I'm gonna get up in the morning and just do swim some laps.
And I was a good swimmer,
I was a competitive swimmer growing up.
And was good, should have stuck with it.
So that now you would be what?
A swimmer?
So that I would be Michael Phelps.
Because I was actually good at it,
I think I was actually naturally better at it
than other things that I did.
Okay.
But I didn't like the Speedo.
But I love Speedos now, that's the weird thing.
I'm wearing one right now.
But I was like,
Not a sponsor.
I'm gonna go,
It's a brand.
And just swim some laps.
And like I started out in freestyle,
thinking that okay, this is the easiest, this is pretty easy.
Like a couple of back and forths and you're like,
whoa, this is not easy, man.
Talk about getting your breath right.
You end up having to take a breath like every time
because I was just a sprint swimmer.
So like I would go under, I would dive in
and I wouldn't come up at all.
You know what I'm saying?
I would go, do a turn, maybe take one breath
and down and back in like a 50 meter or whatever, right?
But like.
You'd do a freestyle but your face would stay under.
Yeah, but this was like, I gotta come up
every freaking time, I'm so out of shape.
I don't know how, I'm in a little bit better shape now.
But then I just started going to the breaststroke
and I was like, woo. Okay, breaststroke.
Gotta do breaststroke.
I gotta keep my head above water the whole time
or I'm gonna die.
Then after that you were doing backstroke?
Then after that I got out of the pool and went home
and never did it again.
But it's tough.
It's really tough.
But with every. If it was muddy water,
it would probably be fine.
But with everything like that,
like when you're running, you get to a place
where it clicks and you're like okay, I'm normalized.
Because with every physical activity you hit that wall,
you get through that wall, then if you get your breathing
and everything and rhythm and you're not worrying
so much about competing against somebody else
but competing against yourself,
you can kinda maintain it for a lot longer than you realize.
I'd love to do that, man, let's be triathlon buddies.
We'll call ourselves the Triathlon Guys.
Shorten it to Try Guys, no, I'm takin'.
Well I already have a workout partner.
Blondine, what can we be, a trio?
No but.
The triple tribe people.
You can probably look up Brian.
He's probably still your height.
Yeah.
I think he works in an auction.
He works for.
He's an auctioneer?
Christie's.
Isn't that the fancy auction place?
He's like in New York City right now.
Yeah, yeah.
New York City.
New York City? Brian's in New York City right now. Yeah, yeah. New York City. New York City?
Brian's in New York City?
Working for Christie.
Working for Christie's.
Christie's Auction House.
Candelabras and such.
Okay.
That might be difficult, being on opposite sides.
So there it is, my greatest physical feat,
and I have this to show for it,
the thing that slammed me in the face.
I'm a Spartan, I'm a Spartan.
I'm envious, man.
Kiko, I'm gonna give you all types of pictures.
They were taking pictures during the race,
and so I tried to make a point to make faces.
Maybe I could be a Spartan photographer.
Photographer? Yeah, that could be a Spartan photographer. Photographer.
Yeah, that could be my position.
I got quite an angle on things with my height.
Thanks for sharing in this physical milestone
experience of mine.
I'll show you how to climb a rope if you ever wanna learn.
I did it once.
And there you have it.
Hashtag air biscuits.
If you got any questions about like, you know,
pushing yourself to the physical limit, I'm here.
I'm here for you, just ask away.
In the meantime.
Oh we need a recommendation.
Oh yeah, I'm gonna give a recommendation.
Don't forget that.
It's a little bit thematic
with what we've been talking
about.
Recks and effects.
Check baby.
I'm gonna recommend a book that I finished in two days.
So it's an easy read.
Is it ours?
No I think, I do recommend our book.
I definitely recommend The Lost Causes of Bleak Creek.
But this was actually.
Is it out yet?
Is it out yet?
Yeah.
Bleakcreek.com is the website where you can pick that up.
You can pre-order that.
Nice plug, Rhett.
You just recommended our own book.
That wasn't my intention.
My intention was to recommend a book
that is kind of an old, it's a little bit of an older book,
like 20 years or whatever.
Animal Farm?
I read The Road.
The Road.
By Cormac McCarthy.
So I didn't.
Viggo was in the movie version of that, right?
Yeah, I didn't, yeah he was.
I didn't realize how much, Cormac McCarthy,
you know, one of the great American authors
has written a bunch of different stuff,
All the Pretty Horses, No Country for Old Men,
like things that have been made into epic movies.
But The Road is like, I mean you can, it's short,
you can read it in a sitting if you've got enough time.
But it is so just, speaking of bleak,
it is a just bleak book, you know,
near future, post-apocalyptic,
just gray, dull landscape, no people,
and the people that are around are just garbage.
Making it sound great.
It's exactly the kind of thing that turns me on.
Okay.
So if you like a book about.
If you're aroused by the apocalypse.
If you're aroused by a world where there's no hope,
like I am, if that just scratches the right itch for you,
listen, I know you're out there.
I know a lot of you are out there,
that's why these books are so popular,
then I highly recommend that.
And I'm getting into,
now I'm reading all the pretty horses,
I'm gonna go through the whole collection.
Oh.
Because.
Well hold on, you made your recommendation.
Let's don't expand it.
Because listen.
It takes a punch out of the recommendation
to just like slather it out.
Here's an interesting fact about Cormac McCarthy
and I didn't realize that this was,
I thought that maybe it was just a stylistic choice
for this particular book but he does not use punctuation
nearly to the degree of other people.
So in other words, there's no punctuation,
there's no quotation marks in the entire book.
Are there periods?
There are periods but there are
Commas?
Very few commas.
So one of the things that he did is back in the day,
he's old, he's like almost in his 90s at this point
but his story goes that he was tasked with
sort of cleaning up some writer's work
back when he was a young man,
and one of the things he did is he went through
and he took out a bunch of what he called
unnecessary punctuation, including a bunch of commas,
and the guy was like, I really like this,
like how efficient this is.
And now his writing style is,
he'll just be like,
why don't we go do a Spartan race period,
Link said period.
Oh, because Link said is a sentence.
Yeah. It can be.
But usually. That is odd.
It is at first a little bit like, oh is this,
am I reading someone's thoughts?
And then you're just like, no, you know what?
Punctuation is unnecessary.
And then there's this whole long exchanges
which is like in the road it's a father and son
talking to each other and he doesn't say the son said
or and first of all it's just father and son talking to each other and he doesn't say the son said or,
and first of all it's just the boy and the man,
it's not like, he doesn't give them names.
He just completely forgets saying this person said.
You don't know who's saying what?
No, you do know.
You do know who's saying what
because of the way that it's written.
You know when it's a two person exchange
it's usually just back and forth.
But if you get it off, then you're backwards.
But it doesn't happen.
I don't know, it was kind of a trip.
I love discovering something that's like
an American treasure that a lot of people
already know about and then being like,
oh, there's like, it's like when you find
a new television show and you're like,
there's seven seasons of this.
Oh.
So I'm like, oh.
Good rec.
You know, so I'm excited about that.
All right, thanks for hanging out with us this week.
You know what, next week,
we'll be here to speak at you again.
So whether you're listening only
or watching on our YouTube channel.
You're special either way.
There's more where that came from.
Hashtag Ear Biscuits.