Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - 185: How Was London? | Ear Biscuits Ep. 185
Episode Date: March 18, 2019It's a whole new world for these two North Carolina guys when they visit London for the first time. Hear them recap their new experiences with food, traffic lights, and undivided urinals in this week'...s episode of Ear Biscuits! Sponsored by:Honey: Get Honey for FREE at JoinHoney.com/EAR and shop with confidence.Robinhood: Sign up at EarBiscuits.Robinhood.com to get a FREE stock like Apple, Ford, or Sprint to help build your portfolio. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This, this, this, this is Mythical.
Welcome to Ear Biscuits, I'm Rhett.
And I'm Link.
This week at the round table of dim lighting,
we're asking the question, how was London?
How was it?
And then we're answering that question
because as of the recording of this,
we are still pretty fresh off of our trip
to London, England, United Kingdom, Europe world.
Not for long.
Yeah, I still have jet lag.
I still am.
Well.
Are you waking up?
I'm waking up at like three o'clock.
It is eight hours ahead of us. I'm waking up at like 3 o'clock. It is eight hours ahead of us.
I'm waking up at like 3 a.m. and I'm like, ready to go!
And then I'm like, don't, you gotta go back to sleep.
Well the thing that I'm noticing is
at about seven o'clock at night.
It hits you.
I get hit really hard with this like irritability that,
like I was out to dinner with the family
and they were all talking and interacting with one another,
which I mean, if that's your thing.
Yeah, family's talking.
It was not my thing at the time.
I mean, I stopped at one point, I was like,
guys, I just wanna tell you,
we're like halfway through the meal.
I am so irritable right now.
I just feel like I could explode with irritability
and I'm just like very testy.
You know, this is kind of crazy
because you know how it's manifested itself with me?
Extreme restless legs.
Really?
Extreme restless legs.
Now I have restless legs syndrome
and I think I've talked about this before,
but anyway, it's this, you know,
the irresistible urge to move
and what was happening is it was in my right leg
and then it started getting in my right hand.
But hold on, this is only when you're sleeping, right?
No, it happens typically when you're trying to go to sleep
but what was happening, which was so weird,
is that because of the jet lag,
it was hitting me about 7.30 for me.
So on Monday night, I was in my therapy appointment,
and I started having it real bad,
and my leg was bouncing up and down,
and then my, I've never had it in my arm,
and so my arm was also, I was moving around a lot,
and my therapist was like, you're very uncomfortable
with what we're talking about right now, aren't you? And I was like, well, I mean also like, I was like moving around a lot and my therapist was like, you're very uncomfortable with what we're talking about right now, aren't you?
And I was like, well, I mean, yeah,
but it's because I got restless legs, brah.
In my arm.
And uh.
You got a restless leg in your arm.
And then the.
Why not call it restless arm?
And then the, I don't know what that is.
And then the next night, I went back to my therapist
with my wife, it's a long story.
Well, let's go into it.
And uh. We just needed an emergency session and uh. I talked to my therapist with my wife, it's a long story. Well, let's go into it.
And we just needed an emergency session
and it was actually great, an incredible session.
But during that, it happened again
and I was just thinking about it.
Show me exactly what you were doing.
Like, you see my foot?
Can you see my foot?
My foot would be out like this and I'd be like this.
Okay your foot's out, so you're just waggling your foot.
But what about your arm?
Okay you got a fist, you got one hand and a fist
and you're like grabbing it with your other hand.
Just moving.
You just look very uncomfortable.
Yeah I look like I'm squirming my way out of something.
And maybe I was.
Yeah like when you get sent to the principal's office
but you have to wait outside and everyone's walking by going to lunch and they see you sitting was. Yeah like when you get sent to the principal's office but you have to wait outside and everyone's walking
by going to lunch and they see you sitting there.
Yeah.
And you're like, his leg's twitching,
he's holding hands with himself.
But just to be clear,
because a lot of people think, oh I tap my leg a lot,
I almost have, that's not restless leg syndrome.
So if you have a tendency to let out excess energy
by like bobbing your knee up and down like that,
not restless legs, not the same thing.
Restless legs is this, you only can explain it
if you have it, it's this irresistible urge
to move to the point that you feel like you're going to,
it gets so uncomfortable not to move.
So it's not like the little thing
where you're just bobbing up and down.
And don't wish it on your worst enemy.
I'm sorry you have that, Rhett.
Okay, go ahead, though.
I don't have it.
Never experienced it.
I mean, I'm only imagining what it would be like
just by hearing you describe it.
Right, and I describe it in such a vivid way.
You don't even need to watch the video version
of this podcast in order to get all the,
of course, maybe you do because I did a lot
of physical
things a second ago, it was pretty impressive.
Well you shook your foot and that wasn't even in the shot.
But you saw it, they can see your face looking at me.
Yeah, they can.
Why are you yawning, man?
See, it's hitting you.
I'm tired, man.
Jet lag, dude.
I'm from London.
Come on, London time.
Once I told them I was about to explode
with irritability, then it actually helped
and I didn't for the record.
Yeah, you separated yourself from it.
You are not your emotions.
But they seem to not have heard me.
It wasn't like they responded.
It's like, oh, thanks for sharing.
They could've said that.
Yeah.
They just kept talking.
But it made me feel good to acknowledge
that I had feelings instead of letting
those feelings control me.
Yeah.
That's what I'm actually trying to do.
And it was nice to know that it was jet lag
and that I'm not just a jerk that doesn't wanna be
around my family because I do.
Yeah, because I thought something was wrong with me.
It was so intense and it was just that,
no, no, you would be asleep right now and you're not.
Yeah, because 7 p.m. feels like,
let's see, plus eight is 15 a.m.
Which is three a.m.
There is no 15 a.m.
1500 hours would be three p.m.
Right. There's no 15 a.m.
It's just that's the next day.
You know, we should change that.
They should just keep counting.
They should count from the beginning of time.
So we're going.
That should be what time it is.
We've never been to London, so this podcast
is gonna be us sharing with you our first ever experience
in London except for being at the airport.
I mean we've connected through the London airport
but we've never been in the land of London,
like out and about.
Yeah.
So we're gonna share those things with you.
We were there for VidCon and also for a concert
that we played which was at the same venue
but was technically, well it was a part of VidCon
but it was a separate event, separate ticket.
It's a little complicated but it doesn't matter
because it's done. It's over.
And I was just looking at the pictures from the concert
and I was like man, that really validates having done it
when you have cool looking pictures of it.
Well we got some pictures taken by,
it was Anique, is that how you, yeah.
Thank you Anique.
Anique Mythical Beast.
For doing that.
From Amsterdam, came over and took some pictures of us.
She took a lot of pictures and then she sent us
what she deemed to be the cool ones and they are very cool.
I posted one to my Instagram.
So lots of thoughts about London.
We'll get into all that but first,
I just wanted to share a story with you,
something that happened to me that I haven't shared
when I got back from London.
So a few days ago, I injured myself.
Oh, surprise.
And I just thought I would share it with you,
loyal Ear Biscuit listener, and to you, Rhett,
loyal friend and irritable companion.
Yep.
So I get home and I happen to mention
to Christy, I was like I'm gonna put my passport away,
I'm gonna put it back in the safe.
I keep my passport in our fireproof safe
which ultimately I just think if there was a fire,
I guess we'd grab the safe but if we didn't, maybe it would survive,
but I don't know.
It's like.
It's fireproof, man.
It's fireproof to a certain degree.
That's true.
I wouldn't grab it, it's heavy.
It's a lot of things as I'll get into.
And she was like, oh, get my passport too
because I haven't put mine back in there.
I was like, well, we need to keep them in there.
Yeah, yeah.
So I go get hers.
And the safe is not in the place that it used to be.
Well don't tell us where it's at
because I'll break in and get it.
I have to tell you.
Okay.
Because what's more important is me telling the story
than keeping secret where my secret safe is.
I got a dummy safe.
I got a safe that they'll take
and they think that they got the safe.
Where is that one?
I'm not gonna tell you.
Where's the real safe?
Definitely not telling you that.
Oh, you didn't fall for it this time,
but you had already told me that.
It's under your bed.
Isn't it?
My safe can't fit under my bed, bro.
You got a big safe?
Yeah.
Like how big is your dummy safe?
I've seen your dummy safe,
it's like you walk in the front door and it's right there.
You could carry it but the real safe I can get into.
What?
I've never told you about it.
The dummy safe is in the front of your house,
just sitting there, like somebody, a thief walks in
and you're like, dummy safe here, like walk, walk, walk.
It says take me.
I'm dummy, I'm not a dummy safe is what it says.
It says free.
You have a walk-in safe?
I might. Let's talk about you getting hurt. You have a walk-in safe? I might.
Let's talk about you getting hurt.
Ironically, a walk-in safe is not safe
because you can get locked in.
Well, I'm not planning on locking myself into it.
My safe is pretty small.
It's like the size of four trapper keepers
stacked on top of each other.
It's got a lid on it.
Anyway, it's not in the place that it used to be
and neither is Jade's dog kennel.
Jade is here with me today.
Jade, say hello.
Jade, say hello.
I'm telling a story about your kennel, your cage.
I don't like to call it a cage because it's her home
when we're not at home and she likes it.
It makes her feel secure to go in there
and more importantly, she doesn't pee or poop in it.
Oh, so you still put her in her crate when you leave?
Because she will pee and poop in the house.
She's part Dotson and she's the part
that likes to sneak and pee.
Anyway, when Britton moved into our house,
we converted the office into his bedroom.
Right.
Glorified closet.
Anyway, that's where we kept her kennel
and where I also kept the safe and I kept the printer.
So then I'm like, I gotta find a new place
to put our printer.
I moved all of that stuff that's in that bigger room
that he now sleeps in into the closet that's underneath
the stairs that lead up to my bedroom.
So picture like a Harry Potter kind of closet.
You open the door to that closet, there's a light switch.
Why didn't you just put Britain in there?
I thought about it.
I didn't think about it, I was like hey,
if it's good enough for Harry.
Yeah, give him something to write a song about.
Right.
Have you been in this closet, you open the door,
you hit a light switch.
I didn't know it was there.
Next time I'm going in though.
When you open the door, you're looking down the staircase
that like it goes, if you look straight ahead
once you open the door, it goes away from you to,
it slopes down to a point.
So you're not looking at it sideways
where it's sloping sideways.
You're at the tallest point and then it's sloping down
to the floor.
When you open the door.
When you open the door.
And a matter of fact, it kinda slopes down
and then there's like a cubby hole that I put,
stop yawning while I'm telling a story.
That's boring, man.
I know you're jet lagged but it's not good for my ego.
Your story's boring.
So it slopes down and then it.
You're talking about the architecture
of this under the stairs room.
This is, the architecture is important to what happened.
So you need to be able to visualize this.
You walk in, it's about six feet tall,
it immediately slopes down to about two and a half feet tall
where there's a cubby hole that I put the printer in.
Oh that's nice.
Then in front of the printer, I put the safe.
In front of the printer?
It's just a small safe for Trapper Keepers.
Then to the right, there's enough room for a bookshelf
that has all of our board games
that we used to keep in Britton's room.
Oh, board games.
So you can walk in and get to the printer
or the safe for the board games.
You don't put the board games in the safe, huh?
No, not enough room.
I don't have a walk-in safe.
I really value them.
I could make this whole closet a safe.
I got all my board games in my walk-in safe.
Chutes and ladders is very flammable.
It's vintage edition.
It would be easy to get to the printer and to the safe
except for the fact that then at the last minute
I realized I didn't know where to put Jade's crate.
So then I put it in right smack dab in the middle.
And it fills basically the whole floor of the closet.
So when I go in there to put the two passports
that are in my hand into the safe.
You gotta move the crate.
But moving the crate is difficult
because it's almost the width of the door.
You have to move the crate to print?
Yeah.
Well, this is not sustainable.
No, what you can do is you can basically,
I can stand in front of the crate
and bend over, like hinge,
then put my hand on the crate
or somewhere and then kinda reach and grab what I printed.
That's worked a few times.
Easy.
But the printer's a foot higher than the safe.
I didn't take that into account
that this was gonna be more difficult.
So I'm standing there, my shins against the front
of Jade's crate, then I hinge over
and I realize I can't reach the safe.
So what I do is I take my hand and I extend it out as far as I can and when the slope goes down,
it then goes vertical for a two by four
and then goes horizontal into the cubby hole
where the printer is.
So there's a little two by four height where.
You rested your hand on that.
I rested my hand on that and I'm pushing hard,
holding up my body weight with my right hand
and then I'm reaching down with my left hand
to open the safe and I realize,
well I can't open the safe with I realize, well,
I can't open the safe with my left hand
because I got.
My left hand doesn't know the combination.
Only my right hand does.
There's no combination on my safe.
It's just for fire.
It's not for theft.
All you gotta do is push, grab the handle,
push down on the safe, grip.
You don't have a combination?
No.
Squeeze the handle and then it will open.
Mine scans my eye before I walk in.
I don't care.
That's not true but I mean.
So then I'm like, I gotta switch hands.
So then I gotta get my right hand down there
because the safe handle's on the right side.
So I put my left hand
up there and I take my right hand down.
So now I'm.
Always maintain a point of contact.
So now I am, my whole upper body weight is being held up
by my left hand and then I reach down.
Again, I have the passports in my hand
but then with my other three fingers,
I'm gonna grab the handle, push down on the safe,
pick it up all the way, open the lid,
and then I'm going to throw the things in,
and then I'm gonna close the lid,
and then I'm gonna unhinge myself,
and I'm gonna get out of there like a proud man.
That's not how it happened.
So I'm holding myself up with my left hand,
and I reach down to grab the, open the safe
and I open the safe and as the lid is coming up
and I'm trying to pull the lid up,
my left hand slides off of the two by four
that's holding my entire body weight up.
Into the cubby.
Yeah, and it goes into air and then I just,
I start falling.
So the lid is up on the safe, my hand is in a free fall,
my body begins to be in a free fall forward
and the lid, my right hand starts to fall too
and I try to catch myself with my right hand
because I let go of the safe and I turn my hand around
to put my palm toward the ground and catch myself.
But as I do that, the lid of the safe comes down
on my fingertips.
I think I see the finger that got the brunt of it.
And then the lid snaps shut on my fingertips
while my left hand comes down on top of the safe and pushes my entire body weight
on top of the safe lid, thereby smushing completely
my middle finger.
And I'm not just saying the tip, I'm saying just below,
it clamped down just below the base of the fingernail.
So basically the whole top part above that knuckle
was safe from fire.
Yes it was, that is the positive spin on this story.
The negative spin was that I was in excruciating pain
where I had.
See any wordy dirts?
I had locked my middle finger of my right hand
into the safe and was applying
my full body weight on top of it and I was in like
a yoga position that you just can't magically hinge up.
You just can't magically, like my feet are way back here
behind the kennel.
The fire safe position.
Dad's doing fire safe.
I was like bent over a barrel basically.
And I don't know, at that point I'm like struggling
to get my finger out of the safe and it won't come out.
I'm like, I wasn't.
Were you home alone?
I was not saying English.
I was not saying expletives.
I was grunting like a caveman in pain, agony,
and just total despair that I was gonna be there
forever.
But how soon after that kind of thing happens,
like in the middle of it are you thinking,
I'm gonna talk about this on your biscuits.
Because it hurts so bad.
That's what happens to me now.
Anything that happens that is like,
I should have got myself into this situation.
Well I'll answer that because yeah what happened was
it was an excruciating amount of pain
and of course time slows down at that point
but somehow I was able to hop my left hand
off of the safe onto the floor
and then rip my right hand out of the safe.
It was still closed though?
It didn't fully latch.
That would have been impossible.
And then I like put both my hands on the dog crate
and like peel myself back.
Well you could have had trouble there too,
putting all your weight on a dog crate.
Yeah and then.
It collapsed the whole thing.
And then I don't know if I immediately laid down
on the floor or did a dance around the room
but I looked at the footage and you can hear,
because I have that security camera in that room,
but I was out of frame, but I played it back
and I could hear the noise I made.
It was like.
And then I was like.
Did you save that clip? Oh, I got the clip, yeah. And then I was like, oh!
Did you save that clip?
Oh, I got the clip, yeah, well,
if it works, we'll throw it in there.
And I'm like wallowing on the ground like, oh!
And like Christy comes in there, she's like, what's wrong?
She told me later she thought
that I had fallen down the stairs.
It's like the noises you make
when you are falling down the stairs. You must have fallen down the stairs. It's like the noises you make when you are falling
down the stairs.
You must have fallen down the stairs.
No, let me explain what I did.
It'll take 12 minutes.
I would have been bawling except I was laughing
and I was thinking about how ridiculous this was
and that I was gonna share it with you on Ear Biscuits
at that point.
She got me some frozen peas and she was like,
what happened?
And I was like, I smushed my finger in the safe,
I can't tell you the details because I feel
kind of faint right now.
And I was thinking about what had happened
and I was starting to feel faint and I sat there
on my butt with frozen peas on my finger
for like 10 minutes before I could feel like
I could stand up.
You thought you might have broken it maybe.
Well I was convinced that I had lost my fingertip
or at least the nail.
And I still may lose the nail.
Oh man it hurts.
It still hurts a little bit.
But, oh man, I am so appreciative of nails.
You know what's kinda interesting as well?
If it wasn't for fingernails,
I would've lost the fingertip.
I think that's, it's armor.
I'm not gonna tell the story
because it's not much of a story,
but you know the finger that I hurt
before we left for London?
I was telling you about putting my hand into my guitar case
and the thing going between my fingernail.
Oh yeah.
It's the same finger.
The middle finger of the right hand.
It's been swollen, you see that?
You think this is a sign or something?
It's been swollen ever since.
It's like I was worried that I was.
You're talking about the cartilage,
the cuticle on the right side of your.
Yeah this thing went and it bled.
It went down in there and then bled.
I did that one time and it got infected.
That's what I thought was happening.
And it swelled up so big that I superheated a needle
underneath a flame and I stuck it in
to like drain all the pus out.
I thought it was gonna get some sort of like
London bacteria, you know, like some old world bacteria
that was gonna take me out.
I don't know how bacteria works.
Okay, we're both fine though.
Well I'm not fine, my fingertips still hurt, brother.
Okay, we are gonna talk about London.
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Now on with the biscuit.
Okay, let's talk about London.
Like we said, we had never been to London.
The thing that I'm really into are the little differences.
I thought maybe we could start with just a couple
of the little differences that we noticed.
Well, there's the thing that you talked about
at the beginning of our concert
that you were fascinated with.
When you stop at a traffic light,
and it's because the light's red,
that also means in London that you need to stop.
Even though you're driving or riding
on the other side of the road,
when you see a red light, you should stop.
But once you're stopped, when it's time to go,
the light just doesn't turn green, people.
It turns yellow to warn you, to give you a heads up
that it's about to turn green and then it turns green.
So it turns yellow on both sides of a red.
Warning, you're about to stop, yellow, red.
And then heads up, you're about to get to go again,
yellow green.
And I'd never heard of this.
I just thought this would be something that they say
about London, this seems important to me.
I think it's that way in other places too,
other than just London.
I've been to other places, never seen it.
I don't deny that it could happen.
The reason there's not other places, it's unnecessary. I love it. It's unnecessary. I love it to other places, never seen it. I don't deny that it could happen. The reason there's not other places,
it's unnecessary.
I love it.
It's unnecessary.
I love it because I'm a planner, man.
I like to know when something's gonna happen.
And specifically when it comes to driving,
I like to be the guy who takes my foot off the brake
and I like start to give it a little gas.
But here's why it's unnecessary.
Because it flashes for such a short period of time,
less than a second,
your action that you take after you see the yellow
is the same action that we here in America take
when we see green.
But here's the psychologically.
There's no difference though.
There's no active difference.
There is definitely a psychological difference
because if the light's green and I'm not going,
I feel like a failure.
So I feel like I have no chance of being a success
unless I start going, risking going when it's red,
which is unsafe and a violation.
But.
I'm not looking for emotional support
from the way I respond to traffic lights.
The Brits give me an opportunity to feel like a success
when driving and I like it because I wanna be in motion.
But do you think that when they made the decision
to do this in Parliament or wherever they made the decision,
they were like, we want people to feel like success?
No, they think, they have a traffic reason
for why this is the case.
There's no other way explanation.
Well you're a civil engineer, what do you think it is?
Like walk a mile in their shoes.
The reason that from an engineering standpoint,
and I haven't thought about this much
so I could definitely be wrong.
Let me just state that.
So I am open to hearing the engineering argument for this
but the reason that.
Can we loop that part where you say,
I could definitely be wrong?
Well, they can loop it if they want.
I'm just inviting them to loop that, like jiff it, gif it.
The reason that the yellow light is in between
the green and the red is because
there's a lot of variables,
there's so many variables while all the cars are moving.
Sure.
Where you're at, how fast you're going.
So there's a decision to be made, right?
There is no decision, it's a binary decision
that needs to be made.
Because when you're slowing down,
how fast am I gonna slow down?
Am I gonna go through the light, am I not?
There's only one decision that you can make
when the light turns green and that is to accelerate, to go.
And so by seeing the yellow light for a split second,
the outcome is the same, it's unnecessary, it's not needed,
it doesn't do anything.
The people are responding to it the same way
that we respond to a green light.
The thing that I read about it was that it's related
to stick shifts because if you're not, to get in the right gear,
it's just another heads up because you have to,
there's preparatory work.
I'm not making this up, this is something
that I happen to read.
I understand that and there's many more manual cars
in England than there are in America.
And I only drive manual.
But here's my thing.
That's a lie but I do like it.
If we're all, I guess, okay, all right, so.
We don't need to camp out, we don't need to argue about it.
It's not up there long enough
because that's not a bad reason because if you,
because now there's a variable.
If you've got half of the people in line have manuals
and half of the people have automatics,
the people who have automatics are theoretically
going to be able to start that much sooner.
So therefore, maybe the length of the yellow light
is the average time that it takes for someone
to get into the right gear and go,
to get in first gear and go.
Now I would also say that you could also already be
in first gear like we do in America.
Wait, so, I mean, the reason why I like it
is the reason I already gave,
it's emotional, it's psychological,
so there's no argument here, it's fascination only.
Well the thing that I pointed out
at the beginning of the concert as well is that
the urinals, there's a few differences in the bathroom
we'll talk about but one of the differences in the bathrooms in the men's bathrooms is that the urinals, there's a few differences in the bathroom we'll talk about but one of the differences in the bathrooms
in the men's bathrooms is that the urinals
and I'm assuming that's what they call them as well
on the wall that you pee into.
You can poop into them, I have it in emergency.
I think they call them loo holes.
The bathroom's called a loo so.
Nowhere, anywhere was there a divider between the urinals.
And now, it is not exclusive, it's not that there's only
dividers in the US, but there's dividers in most places.
At least 50%.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, I did not encounter one urinal divider.
And they're pretty close to each other,
so it's kinda like, I don't necessarily have a problem
with it, but I don't feel completely comfortable.
You know what I think it is?
They don't talk, they don't have small talk with strangers.
That's something that doesn't happen.
Like it happens some in America,
like people strike up a conversation with somebody
just out and about.
Do you think that's the case?
You just went to one city for a couple of days.
I read about this.
Oh, you've been reading.
I just wanted to validate what I thought
were the differences and I just happened to find that out.
Like they don't have small talk on like the tube, you know.
It's weird for them to speak to strangers.
Now in New York, I mean on the subway, I don't them to speak to each other, to strangers to speak to each other.
Now in New York, I mean on the subway,
I don't see people talking to each other.
But I think maybe there's a higher likelihood
that Americans will shoot the breeze at adjacent urinals
if there's no divider.
But the Brits don't have to worry about that.
I've had a number of people strike up a conversation
with me while I was urinating.
In London though?
No, definitely not in London.
Not in London.
But if there was a divider.
That is not my preferred communication.
No, I don't even talk to.
I don't even turn my head, I will not respond.
Myself, I don't talk to myself at a urinal.
No, definitely.
You don't wanna be at a urinal muttering to yourself.
That's not a good look.
So they don't have dividers.
They also don't have paper towels.
That's good on them.
A lot of hand dryers.
I mean this was the case in Amsterdam as well.
And in Australia.
There may be a.
I think everybody else has figured out
that we don't need to dry our hands on trees except for us.
But is it really better for the environment?
Because you're using electricity, which in most places
is still the majority of the electricity is being produced
by fossil fuel burning.
So I mean I guess once we go all renewable,
it definitely makes sense.
It has been proven that they're not as sanitary though,
I think, don't quote me on that.
I think that they did a study that the hand dryers,
even though sometimes they say it's more sanitary,
it's not more sanitary because it's blowing
bathroom air around.
You know what's in bathroom air is little pieces
of pee and poop, man.
Well the thing, and a lot of them have that Dyson
where you like, it's that small slot that you gotta
like totally get your flat hands in and then it opens up a lot of them have that Dyson where you like, it's that small slot that you gotta like
totally get your flat hands in and then it opens up
a little bit on an air blade and then you're like
slowly pulling your hands back out.
It's nerve wracking man because you feel like
you're so close to the plastic parts
that everybody's been so close to.
And not only that, what happens on the way out?
Of what? You touch the handle.
You don't have a paper towel.
You can't do the perfect bathroom trip
without a paper towel.
We wrote a whole song about this.
The paper towel is for opening the door.
We still use that instrumental
at the end of our ear biscuits.
That is what that is, isn't it?
It's a perfect bathroom.
So you can't have a perfect bathroom trip in England
because you're going to end up contaminating yourself
on the door handle no matter how well it goes.
I think you can use your shirt sleeve.
Or your own hanky or your foot.
But you open it up with your foot,
now everybody who decides to open it up with their hand
has been compromised.
Did you feel like the hotel was different?
Definitely.
And we stayed at the hotel that was
right there at the venue, at the XL.
right there at the venue at the XL.
And so I've stayed at this brand of hotel in the US.
And I'm about to sound like a spoiled brat, fine, whatever.
I think we already do.
Deal with it.
We are spoiled.
We sound like it all the time.
Just keep it rolling.
While we're talking about differences,
I'm gonna tell you, I mean, the sheets were rough, man.
The sheets were rough?
The sheets felt like a little cardboardy
and then the TP in the bathroom.
I was gonna ask Jenna if she thought the sheets were rough
but like she works for us.
She puts up with us all the time.
She can probably put up with some rough sheets.
Did you think the sheets were rough?
I did, but it's not.
Yeah, you did, because they were.
Now, I slept fine.
I didn't notice the sheets were rough,
but I'll tell you what I noticed.
When I took a shower and then I got that towel down
and I was drying off, I dry off my face first
and I take a deep breath and the freaking towel
smelled like ramen.
They make towels out of ramen there.
I mean, if it got real damp,
it might would've just turned into a floppy noodle.
But that might be an isolated thing
because I have a theory about the rough toilet paper
and the rough sheets.
Again, I've stayed at this kind of hotel in the US
and I do not remember this. And again, I've stayed at this brand, this kind of hotel in the US and I do not remember this.
And again, I'm not saying that it was intolerable.
I slept fine.
It's just the sheets that I enjoy on my bed
and at the typical hotels that I frequent
in the United States of America have very soft sheets.
It's just part of the deal.
High thread count.
And also, they have quilted toilet paper
inside of the bathrooms.
I have quilted toilet paper in my bathroom.
So what's the theory?
Because I have, you know, I want to treat my butthole well.
I mean, that's what I do.
That's the kind of guy that I am.
I actually have a bidet.
But then.
You know I got a bidet.
I got a bidet for days.
I just think, I just think that something about, okay like.
I can set the exact temperature of it.
You have the history of.
We're so pampered.
You have the history of the English people like, you know.
I could sear my own butthole
with the temperature of my bidet if I wanted to.
Well you don't do that.
That's not caring for your butthole.
You just wanna, when you're done,
you just want that thing to smoke.
Do you wanna hear the theory?
The theory is that Western Europe, like people,
they like, it's a rough bunch, man.
I mean actually, like legitimately,
if you ever read Guns, Germs, and Steel,
which I have recommended on this podcast before,
a lot of people ask why is it that the people
from Western Europe who went to the New World,
why did they not die from the diseases?
Why was it the Native Americans that died from the diseases
that the white people brought?
Because they had rough rectums, that's why.
The reason is is because they had lived in close quarters
in sort of this like uncomfortable bacteria-laden lifestyle.
Sewage on the bricks.
Sewage and people on top of each other.
If you go back to old school Western Europe
back in the Middle Ages, it was dirty as crazy.
It was so crazy.
Unapologetically stepping on chickens.
People dying all over the place.
And then you've got people in the new world,
the Native Americans.
Wide open spaces.
Wide open. Pottery.
They weren't living on top of each other.
And so you got these super viruses, super bacteria
that are coming across on these boats
and then just decimating the native population.
I think that they just have this.
Ruddiness.
They've been, it's just been rough, man.
And they like it rough.
They like the sheets rough.
They don't know that the sheets are rough.
But something about coming over to, we're soft,
coming over here and like starting a new nation
that's all about freedom!
You know, it's like, we just got,
we got ahead of ourselves, you know?
We're like, oh, you know what?
We can vote, we don't have to have a king, we can have a president.
And we got all high and mighty about all our freedoms
and the next thing you know we got soft everything.
I wanna wipe my butt with a blanket.
Right, we wanted everything so soft.
And we got it and now we're spoiled.
Oh we're spoiled.
And they're like no no, keep it rough man.
And so I actually, I envy them.
I envy them that they can take it rough.
They can take it rough.
They can take a rough sheet.
They can take a rough TP because my booty's adjusted.
It's like now I go over there and I can't take it.
It's like I don't have to travel
with my own freaking toilet paper
because I'm just a spoiled American.
Yeah, you're spending too much time minding the wrong gap.
You feel me?
I never saw that sign by the way.
I never saw a sign that said mind the gap.
I saw a sign that said underground
but they call it the tube.
Yeah, we went on that.
I think an underground is a pedestrian tunnel.
While we're complaining about things.
Oh no, a subway is a pedestrian tunnel. While we're complaining about things. Oh no, a subway is a pedestrian tunnel.
While we're, now I'm gonna say I loved London.
Okay, let me just say that.
But let's go back to complaining now,
because you said it.
That's where I'm going to land.
I loved London, I plan to go back.
But let me complain.
We think it's funny to complain.
Let me just, I'm just gonna complain a little bit more
because I do wanna talk about the food.
I feel I have to talk about the food, okay?
Now let me just say, I know that,
again, not only are we spoiled just as a culture,
we are spoiled above and beyond
because we live in Los Angeles.
It's a good food place.
We have access.
We can get some good food, y'all.
I go back to North Carolina and it's gotten
a whole lot better than it was even when we moved away
but if you don't get up in there in the Raleigh area,
you're not gonna get real good food. But no, you're't get up in there in the Raleigh area, you're not gonna get real good food.
But, no, you're gonna get comfort food
that's comfortable everywhere, reliably good.
I mean.
I don't enjoy Golden Corral.
What I'm saying is that I just can't do it anymore.
I know, I know.
You can judge me all you want,
I just can't enjoy it anymore
because I've gotten too big for my britches.
But what happens is we go to London and we just,
well you know what, I'll let you take it from here
because you had some choice opinions as well.
Why don't you tell them about.
Well they, there's the, you know, it's the trope
that the food's not good in London and then they say,
but it's gotten a lot better.
And you know what. Could you imagine what it's the trope that the food's not good in London and then they said, but it's gotten a lot better. And you know what?
Could you imagine what it was like?
We went to this place, we had to grab some lunch
and we're like going to this place,
we end up going to this place called Slug and Lettuce.
Listen.
It's a chain.
We about to. Why on earth?
We about to throw Slug and Lettuce Under the. Under the bus.. We about to. Why on earth? We about to throw slug and lettuce.
Under the.
Under the bus.
We're about to rip them.
The double decker bus.
We about to rip them a new one
with the roughest toilet paper you have ever,
ever felt on your rectum.
Why on earth would you name a place slug and lettuce?
Maybe it means something different in English.
And why on earth would I suggest after we saw
like five places that. You suggested it.
Well because they had a menu out front and it said
they had fish and chips on the menu.
It's like you know we need to eat like a British,
some food from Britain.
Well and lettuce. We need to eat some
lettuce fish and chips.
We need to premise this with the fact that
we weren't really in the main part of London,
like where the XL is, I don't know what part of London
we were in but.
We were like 40 minutes outside, we were in a suburb.
We were in the Anaheim of London for those of you
who are familiar with the Los Angeles area.
Like if you go to Anaheim and you're like I don't like LA,
well you haven't been to LA, like that's, it's different.
It's a suburb.
So where the XL is is not exactly London.
Well and we took a gondola across the landfill to.
In the River Thames.
Yeah to see, to go in the O2 where they had
all these different places where you could eat
and we're like perusing the menus
as you walk down the pathway.
I'm like, let's just eat here,
we're gonna grab and go something.
It's like they got fish and chips and they got salads
if you don't want that and I need to eat some fish and chips.
But the reason we didn't eat at,
there was also like a Mexican place.
There was a Mexican place, there was an Italian place.
We have to tell a side story
before we tell the slug and lettuce story
because the reason we didn't get the Mexican food
is because the night before we had been out
in the main part of London, like we went to Shoreditch
and then we ended up going to Soho or somewhere,
I don't know where we went.
Anyway, so we were kind of going, we were bar hopping
basically going to these old English bars
that said things like since 1529,
which that was amazing to go into bars that were that old.
We went to this really, really cool place
that was inside an old prison and the-
Well, an old jail.
Old jail.
Yeah, you go downstairs and it was all this brickwork
and they seated us in this room
that was an archway entrance that then it was one huge table
that had bench seating the other left side
and the right side in the back, just like a used seating.
And the whole ceiling was like a bricked in hanger.
It was like an archway.
It was an old cell.
Yeah, it was an old jail cell.
And we didn't realize that.
And we were like.
Very cool.
We were hungry.
We were getting some pints,
but we wanted some food as well,
and so I was like, are you guys serving any food?
Because it was late, it was like almost midnight.
I was like, you guys serving any food?
He says, yes, we have,
what do you call them?
The small Mexican crisps.
And we all looked at each other and you said.
It's like tortillas?
He's like yes, what he really meant was tortilla chips.
And some salsa.
And then you were like oh yes, that.
So he said I'll bring you everything that I have.
He had some olives, he had some pickles,
he had, again this is a very cool place.
Gherkins, I think.
But he brought the Mexican crisps, the tortilla chips.
Now again, we're from Los Angeles.
We know what a frickin' tortilla chip is.
We probably can get some of the best in the world, right?
We're very close to the place where there's lots of those.
The source.
It's Mexico.
And the tortilla chips were,
I mean, they were tortilla chips.
Yeah.
They weren't absolutely horrible.
They were small Mexican crisps.
The salsa was ketchup with onions in it.
It was ketchup with onions in it.
I mean that's the only way that I can describe it.
It was ketchup with onions in it.
Now I ate two bowls of it because I was very hungry.
You ate everything.
And I like ketchup and onions.
Yeah, yeah.
It's just that's not salsa.
I know but, I mean you're in London,
why are you ordering chips and salsa?
It's all they had.
It is all they had.
So that's why the next day.
It wasn't like we chose that, it was like that's all,
everything they had we got.
I was still having an incredible time.
I loved everybody, I loved the scenery.
The drinks were great.
The drinks were great.
The atmosphere was great. The people were great. The drinks were great. The atmosphere was great.
The people were great.
But then the next day, you were like,
I wanna get some traditional,
I wanna get some fish and chips,
and I was like, well I definitely don't wanna go
to the Mexican restaurant,
because I'm not in the mood for Mexican crisps.
This was Valentine's Day.
I was in a sad place at that moment.
I wanted to be with my wife.
I didn't wanna be with you eating Mexican crisps at some arena.
Yeah it was an arena.
The O2.
It was an arena.
Slugging, but you insisted on slugging lettuce.
At least, well they got fish and chips
and it looks British in there and Jenna picks up the menu
and she's like crinkle browed and she's like,
well there's like 18 pages of drinks and there's like one page of food.
It's like this is just a bar.
There was a lot of stuff on the menu because
at that point I had already made the decision
that I wanted to get something healthy.
Well I'm gonna get fish and chips.
Regardless of how bad it is.
So I had a little issue because I wanted the salmon
and the superfood salad, right?
Oh gosh. But they had salmon with vegetables and then salmon and the superfood salad, right? Oh gosh.
But they had salmon with vegetables
and then they had the superfood salad with this other meat
and so I went up there to order the bar and I was like,
so yeah, I want the superfood salad
but instead of the steak, I want the salmon.
He was like, oh, okay, I'll do that.
It was like I had asked to walk out with something.
And he was like, we can't do that.
I was like, you sure you can't just do the salmon?
You might as well have said,
I'd like to burn this place down.
Yeah, yeah, and then he went and he's like,
I'll go ask my manager.
He goes and asks the manager and I see him ask the manager
and the manager looks at me and he's like,
like what, like what, okay, so you can't substitute.
Maybe I've gotten spoiled because you can substitute
other meats in. Now at that point, you can't substitute, maybe I've gotten spoiled because you can substitute other meats in.
Now at that point, you weren't that spoiled
because at that point what did you do?
I ordered both.
I said okay, well then I'll take the salmon with that
and then I'll take the superfood side, the salad, whatever,
and just give me both of them.
The fish and chips, just to cut to the chase here,
were horrible.
I mean, Wicom, the fish and chips are horrible.
They were the blandest, tasteless,
I mean, I'm sitting there pouring vinegar and salt
over the whole thing.
I mean, I need a lot of salt and they don't salt
a lot of stuff, I guess.
Well, no, because.
It just was bad.
No, because we had good food, but at the slug and lettuce,
we might as well have had a slug or lettuce.
After our show, we're devoting this whole freaking podcast
to complaining about everything in London.
We'll be back, guys.
I feel horrible.
After the show, we're like, we can't go in,
we're just gonna go back to the room,
we're gonna order room service.
And we're like, we find out that the hotel
doesn't have room service at this time of night.
Yeah, that's another thing.
So we're at the front desk and they're like,
well, can we order pizza and he's like, yes,
and he gives us three different flyers
of where you can order pizza.
No places that are, no chains that I recognize.
And listen, it isn't like I think that Domino's
and Little Caesars, et cetera, Pizza Hut
is like the best pizza in the world. I think, but it's good pizza.esars, et cetera, Pizza Hut is like the best pizza in the world.
I think we, but it's good pizza.
I mean, it's passable pizza.
I will say that we have come to appreciate it enough
because they delivered this pizza and it was so bad.
My wife loves pizza.
I had to put her on video chat in order to show her
how sad this pizza was.
And it's a place, it's a pizza delivery place.
And let me tell you that the guys at the front desk
at this hotel we were staying in specifically pointed out
this place, they were like we got that the other night
and it was great.
And so I was like okay.
So I think that it's us, you know what I'm saying?
It was awful.
I don't understand.
Listen, pizza is simple.
It's dough, it's sauce, it's cheese, and it's toppings.
And they failed.
You don't have to tell them what pizza is.
But they failed miserably in all four categories.
It was uncanny.
I was like.
How much of it did you eat?
Five pieces.
But I did not enjoy it.
You didn't enjoy it one bit.
At all, it was just sustenance.
I was freaking tired after our show
and the meet and greet, I mean we hadn't eaten anything
in a very long time.
Oh we were so, we're so hungry. We're so sad.
It was 2 a.m.
But let's talk about the food that we did enjoy
because I also had what I consider to be one of the top,
it's definitely top 20 meals that I've had in a restaurant.
I'll agree with that.
If you wanna get really good British food,
get Indian food.
We ate at this place, Dishoom in Shoreditch.
And people, this is like a sit down restaurant,
fancy cocktail drinks, like all the Indian food
that you would expect from an Indian restaurant.
And so it's like a sit down meal dining experience.
People are lined up around the block waiting for hours.
People probably wait three hours.
Waiting to wait.
Waiting to then put their name in and wait.
We waited an hour and a half and we just had to have
one person there.
And it was worth it, it was so good.
It was like a magical experience and I think that's the key.
You eat all this stuff and it's just so bland
or like unbelievably horrible and then you like this have,
you go to these dining experiences and they,
I think it's top 20.
It's either really great or just really great by comparison
but it was fabulous.
But can you explain to me how,
okay so, right okay, traditional English food
has a reputation for being bland, right?
Sort of meat and potatoes.
Mushy peas.
But then one of the countries that they imperialize
Then one of the countries that they imperialize
has incredible food and they end up getting that food
and now they kinda call it their own. Yeah.
But if they like that food.
They didn't mess it up.
Because Indian food is.
But why didn't it make the other food better?
Right, Indian food is so flavorful and so bright.
I think it may be the best food on the planet. I think it might be my favorite flavor combination.
I mean we were gushing about it for hours.
But it, because okay, because the other good meal we had
was the night before when we went to that really old bar
that I think was founded in 1666 which I thought was cool.
Oh yeah we had some meat pies, they were good.
And we had a Guinness and I had a venison meat pie
that was, oh and then we got like a little sampler
that had like a scotch egg and some other things.
All great, really, really, really good.
So you go to the right place, you can get some good stuff.
And that's like traditional stuff, it was really good.
It was like, it just had the right flavor balance.
Cause Stevie, Stevie got a meat pie at Slug and Lettuce.
You remember what that thing looked like?
Oh gosh.
They should just call it Slug on Lettuce
and that's what they should serve.
You know, you go and you're like,
you know what I want, cause it's all what you serve.
I want a slug on a piece of lettuce.
And you know what? you will have a better experience
than we had.
This episode of Ear Biscuits is not brought to you
by slug and lettuce.
We also had some great Thai food.
Very interesting Thai food, just catty cornered
to Dishoom when we couldn't get in the first night.
Was that called the smoking goat or something like that?
Are we gonna talk about anything else
because let's switch from the food and the, you know.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So anyway, we had some good food and we had some bad food.
We took a walking tour.
I like to take a walking tour when I'm new to a city.
I've said this before.
We took a walking tour.
This one, well, it happened to be
a Jack the Ripper walking tour.
Yeah.
Turns out, didn't know much about the guy.
He's a serial killer.
And so, you probably already knew that.
And I think I did but I just didn't wanna dwell on it.
So I find myself walking around the city
and it is butt cold and windy as all get out.
And I'm like,
We're a little underdressed too.
We're a little underdressed.
And this woman is walking us around saying, oh look, here a woman was disemboweled
and her throat was slit and then her innards
were thrown over her shoulders.
Yeah. And let's walk over here.
I got another story for you.
This woman's uterus was cut out.
This woman, her throat was slit
and her innards were thrown out of her body.
Hey, now, let's keep walking.
I gotta, surprise, here's where a woman,
you'll never believe this, a woman's throat was slit
and her innards were thrown out.
Yeah, that's what Jack did.
Just keep walking and I think that just kept happening.
It was quite repetitive.
And it just kept getting colder and colder.
It was like a serial walking tour.
It was like the same walking tour
again and again and again.
And the theme of the night was,
we don't know who Jack the Ripper was,
but it might have been this guy.
It might have been this guy. It might have been this guy.
It might have been this guy.
And at the end she was like, so who do you think it was?
And we were like, I think wherever he is,
he's probably warmer than me right now.
I was just thinking, does it matter?
I mean, does it really matter?
What, are we gonna go put him in jail?
We are horrible walking tour patrons because
like when we did that walking.
I was being very nice though.
The ghost tour in New Orleans,
like we were not good patrons there.
No but because that girl.
That was not good.
She was not doing a good job
but this woman was really good at her job.
She was a ripperologist.
Ripperologist.
That's a title you can just give yourself.
That's also someone who uses UK toilet paper.
VidCon was a blast.
And what I mean by that was we did a Q&A.
Stevie asked us some questions submitted
by Mythical Beast who were there.
I always have fun doing that.
Cause we, the objective is to throw Stevie off of her game
to like, just try to, and you know,
bring the audience along for the ride.
That was fun.
We did a meet and greet, we got to press the flesh
with some fans, that's a political term
for just like shake hands with people.
Yeah, you should probably come up with a new one.
And we had done our concert which,
I'm gonna watch the tape back,
I'm sure I'll have a lot of notes for us.
But in general, I had a really fun time.
I said it from stage, I was proud of you.
You sat there and you played your keyboard
for the first time.
Did you, okay.
Look at that.
Speaking of that, now I've already told you
that our musical hero, John Mayer, is learning,
you told me that he was learning to play the piano
and I went on his Instagram and saw that he was doing that.
Do you know who else is learning to play the piano
right now and I just saw on his Instagram?
John Legend, he's been finger syncing this entire time.
Nope, Jimmy Fallon.
Jimmy Fallon is learning to play the piano and-
Very musically gifted too.
And was like, I am learning to play the piano
and he's taking a course, an online course
that Harry Connick Jr. teaches.
Really?
And John Mayer commented on Jimmy's post and said,
I've got adult onset piano fever as well.
And I was like, well hold up, so do I.
And like John Mayer was born five days after me.
I love him.
And Jimmy is a little bit older than us.
I like him a lot too.
Now John Mayer commented on Jimmy's post,
I commented on Jimmy's post, at this point in time, he's responded to John Mayer commented on Jimmy's post, I commented on Jimmy's post.
At this point in time, he's responded to John Mayer.
Okay.
Hasn't responded to me but you know,
I mean give him time, give him time.
But what is it?
You want me to get in the mix?
Is there something in the air?
Is there something in the water?
Is this Twitter or Instagram?
This is Instagram.
I'm on that.
Shout out to Link Lamont on Instagram.
I'll get in the mix.
It's just interesting that old men are teaching themselves
how to play the piano.
It's a midlife crisis kind of thing.
Definitely seems like it.
We had a great time at the concert,
thank you for all you who came.
It did open things up to play that piano.
I wanna make an observation about the crowd at VidCon.
Not the crowd in the crowd, but the other YouTubers, right?
Not our people.
Not Mythical Beast, you're talking about,
I think I know where you're going.
I'm talking specifically, and I didn't know,
I didn't know many, I didn't know any.
I've got like the British YouTubers,
TomSka and Jack and Dean and Dan and Phil
and the people who've been around for a really long time
that everybody knows about.
I regret we didn't get to talk to Jack or Dean.
I spoke to Jack.
Okay. Briefly.
He said hello. To me?
He didn't but now I feel bad
because you didn't get to talk to him so just act, you know.
He said hello, just take it.
To someone probably.
But I noticed that, now there's the old school
like sketch guys that I kinda know and understand,
but then there's like the new school British vlogger, right?
And maybe they're European in general, maybe, I don't know,
but I just noticed there was like a uniform.
You know what I'm talking about?
There's a lot of brow threading, I noticed that.
Well yeah, both the men and the women
pay a lot of attention to their eyebrows
being very perfectly shaped.
But everyone's in athletic wear.
Yes.
Like cool matching sweats.
Like all the girls have these like,
they look like they're about to go to the gym
at like a really nice resort.
And they have their hair in ponytails.
They have a crap ton of makeup on.
Oh goodness, yes.
A crap ton of scent, perfume on.
Yeah.
And they look like they're about to run
like a celebrity track meet thing.
You know that filter on Instagram
that makes your face look really fake and makeup-y?
Yeah.
They just do that in real life.
Yeah but it's like everybody's really well put together.
Like airbrushed face.
And then the guys are
The same.
Sort of the same thing going on but like an athletic wear.
I mean look, I got a hoodie on.
I'm ready to be athletic at any drop of a hat.
Is this a Ariana Grande type thing?
I think like with the ponytail and the athletic wear,
you know, she'll do that.
Is that also, I don't,
is that happening in this country as well?
I believe probably, yeah.
It's not just something that I'm, I don't, is that happening in this country as well? I believe probably, yeah. It's not just something that I'm,
I don't observe the young people anymore.
Right. I just look over them.
You look through your own kids, right?
Right.
And I have noticed that our kids are doing
the athletic wear thing.
But I mean, it's a.
But they take it to another level and it's like,
it's like if your backup dancers were all wearing athletic wear.
You know, it's like that, it's a heightened type thing.
It's heightened.
Yeah.
And then you get, you're on an elevator
and then the doors are closed and all of a sudden
it's like, oi, oi, oi!
And then all of a sudden the elevators open back up
and all these people pour in and they're like,
they're very excited about themselves.
Oh, well. That's how I feel.
Okay. Yeah.
I just felt like I was on an elevator
with a bunch of people very excited about themselves.
Now we're different.
We're just very picky and demanding and crotchety
and can fill reams of audio with complaints.
I'm not complaining about the extremely, you know.
They seem happier than us.
Well made athletic teens.
A lot happier than us.
But I just made an observation.
I felt like I was like, I had fast forwarded to some,
in the distant future, we will colonize Mars
and everyone will wear matching athletic wear.
Velour.
And paint their faces and pull their hair really tight
so that they can be transported by the special train
that grabs you by your hair.
You know what I'm saying?
It's like, that would begin to make sense to me.
But it's so, everybody looked the same.
It was very uniform. It was like this is our uniform,
we are British vloggers.
Again, it's probably not a British thing.
You think it's just people of that age on the internet?
Yes, yes, yes.
Okay.
We are people on the internet now.
I love the humor.
Like let's not forget that.
Like we made a video with Tom Ska
and in the middle of the video I was like I just love the way you funny.
You know, I didn't say that.
Because that doesn't even make sense but you know
what I mean.
Like that was my sentiment.
I really enjoy your humor.
It's the greatest.
What's the greatest?
It's the greatest man.
It's the greatest humor, so self deprecating.
So and we made it back.
Oh, did I meet JJ Abrams on the plane?
Perhaps.
I mean, I won't go into it, but we're buds.
Rhett was, you know, I pointed him out
when we were waiting to get on the plane.
We were sitting there.
Yeah. Pre-flight,
like sitting in the airport.
And then we start walking to our seats.
I'm like, that's JJ Abrams.
He just finished filming the Star Wars movie.
It's not just JJ Abrams.
I mean, JJ Abrams, this guy is responsible
for the revival of the Star Trek universe.
Star Wars. Star Wars.
The shows that were on our list.
He's a brilliant.
Of our most influential television,
television shows of alias. What a brilliant,
what a brilliant entertainer.
Writer, director, producer, oh gosh, this dude.
And your seat was right next to him.
And I'm like, I made up my mind I wasn't gonna talk to him.
I respected him so much that I didn't wanna do me to him.
But it was a 10 hour flight and you weren't exactly,
I mean you were next to him.
Did I look at what was on his phone
throughout the entire flight?
Yeah, he played Words with Friends.
He played some other game I couldn't identify.
He was texting people.
Somebody was like, hey, can you talk?
And I was like, why am I reading his text?
That's wrong, and I didn't read the rest.
But it was kinda in my face, I wasn't like craning.
Like he would hold up, he was kinda leaned back,
and he would hold his,
I don't know if he was near sighted or something, he wasn't wearing his glasses,
he would hold his phone at full arms length away.
So you could read his text.
So that we could both read his phone.
He was like, Link, you seeing what I'm seeing here?
Yep.
He hadn't talked to me.
And then over the.
You talked to him at the end.
Over the course of the flight,
I was like having this internal dialogue
about this dialogue and also more importantly,
the dialogue that I was gonna have with my daughter.
If I told Lily that I sat next to JJ Abrams
and I did not speak to him, she would be very angry.
Yeah.
Matter of fact, when I got home and I was like,
Lily, guess who I met?
And we had a little yes or no game and she guessed JJ.
And she got tears in her eyes.
Like literally, she was like so just emotional
about the fact that I met him.
And so then I was validated that like,
I had made up my mind that like when we're getting the bags
and like he's about to walk out,
and I noticed that like a flight attendant,
I'm not gonna call him a stewardess,
came up to him like halfway through the flight
and was like, this is from another area of the plane
and like crouched down and talked to him for a while
and like he was most gracious to her.
Super nice guy.
And so I was like JJ, congratulations on wrapping the shoot
and he looked at me like am I supposed to know you
and I'm like I just saw the pictures online
that were posted and he was like thanks man, thanks.
And he was like yeah I'm really excited about it
and I was like well you're not the only one.
And he was like yeah yeah I'm just glad at this point
that like I was afraid at this point that,
you're always afraid at this point,
meaning when you're done shooting but haven't edited it,
you haven't gotten to that stage,
you're not gonna have everything.
It's like we got all of it.
So he gave me an assurance.
It's gonna be okay.
He had everything he needed.
JJ Abrams has got his stuff on lockdown.
He got what he needed.
It's good to know.
And I was like, you know what, I'm sure you do, JJ.
And that was pretty much it.
I'm sorry I had to cut off my conversation with you
in order to turn and talk to him, but.
Yeah, I was.
I was kind of in the middle of our conversation,
I just like whip panned.
I understood.
Okay.
I was glad you initiated with him.
I was glad you waited until that moment
to initiate with him as well.
Yeah.
Because if you had done something to embarrass yourself
early into the flight, then it would have been very awkward
for the rest of the time.
Right. For both of us.
Right.
Because you were next to me.
Very gracious, very gracious dude, very talented.
Okay. So there it is.
So that's London, I'm sure that you have your opinions
about our opinions and that's what the world's all about.
That's what the internet's about.
You know what, let me know, hashtag your biscuits
because I am going back to London on vacation with Lily.
And I am later in the year.
Both of us will be back in London in 2019.
We are gonna go back and we are gonna experience it
for just as tourists, not in work mode.
And I'm gonna tread lightly when it comes to the food but I'm gonna tread heavy when it comes to the food,
but I'm gonna tread heavy when it comes to the experience.
I love it, I love it.
Just gotta make the right choices, that's all.
Just gotta make the right choices.
No pizza.
Let me drop a recommendation.
We gotta start teasing that we do recommendations
at the top so that people will endure our complaints
into the end so they can get to this point
and experience
what I'm about to recommend to you and to them.
So, because it's my week for a recommendation.
Check baby, check baby, one, two, three, four.
Wrecks in Effect is the name of the band.
This is a wreck in effect.
This is another song that,
I was having a conversation with Britton the other night
about Ronnie Millsap.
Smoky mountain rain keeps on falling.
Yeah, big fan.
Oh he's great.
He's blind too.
If you're curious, he's the blind country music guy.
I think he was legally blind.
I don't think he was completely blind.
Well he wears the sunglasses
if you're trying to picture who he is.
When I dressed up like Lionel Richie
and sang Endless Love with you,
dressed up as Diana Ross, I looked like Ronnie Millsap.
Yeah you did.
So that's who this guy is.
We were talking about him,
talking about how much we loved him
and he was like, well, we were talking about his voice
and he was like, well have you heard talking about his voice, and he was like, well, have you heard his duet
with Kenny Rogers?
Oh.
I was like, no, I haven't.
Because Kenny has a signature voice, and he's like,
well, and then we put it on and I played it.
1987's Make No Mistake, She's Mine.
Hmm.
Sounds like the Girl Is Mine, Paul McCartney,
Michael Jackson kind of situation.
It exactly is that.
About the same year.
A couple years earlier, this was originally
a Barbra Streisand, Kim Carnes song.
But then when they did their country version,
they changed it from make no mistake,
he's mine to she's mine, and they won a Grammy for it.
Incidentally, it was also performed in a season of Glee,
this song.
So you have to listen to it on your own,
I'm not gonna play it for rights issues,
but make no mistake, She's Mine,
Ronnie Millsap and Kenny Rogers,
I sat there and listened to it,
I'm getting goosebumps just telling you about it.
Look at that.
And you listen to it and you tell me
who has the better voice.
That's the question and it's almost an impossible question.
They both, you think.
I would say Ronnie Millsap just based on.
But then when I heard it, Kenny starts
and he's got that rasp and it's basically perfection.
And then when Ronnie comes in, it's smooth, like jazz.
It's a good mix.
I can imagine.
I can't believe I'd never heard this song.
You're gonna love it, man.
And you might like it too.
You might.
The voices, the iconic country music voices in one song,
I'll leave it at that.
If they play Ronnie Millsap at the Slug and Lettuce,
I might go back, you know, just have a drink
and listen to some music.
Yeah, yeah.
I take it all back, Slug and Lettuce.
Hashtag Ear Biscuits, let us know what you think
about all this, thanks for hanging out with us,
for listening to us and whatever you're doing in your day, man, let us know what you think about all this. Thanks for hanging out with us, for listening to us
and whatever you're doing in your day, man.
I'm glad we're a part of it.
Yeah.