Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - 195: Do We Like Getting Recognized In Public? | Ear Biscuits Ep. 195
Episode Date: May 27, 2019Ever feel timid asking someone for a picture? R&L share their true feelings about getting recognized and approached on this episode of Ear Biscuits! Sponsored by: Heads Will Roll: Go to Audible.com/Ea...rBiscuitHeads or text EarBiscuitHeads to 500 500 for a free 30-day trial. Stamps.com: Visit Stamps.com, click on the Microphone at the top of the homepage and type in EAR for a special offer that includes a 4-week trial PLUS free postage AND a digital scale without any long-term commitment. 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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Welcome to Ear Biscuits. I'm Rhett.
And I'm Link. This week at the Roundtable of Dim Lighting, we're asking the question,
do we like getting recognized in public?
Hmm, but before we get into that discussion,
we wanna let you know that we are going on tour
and we're gonna announce all the dates for the rest of-
It's weird the way you said tour.
2019.
I wanna make it clear. Tour clear that this is it, guys.
These are the only dates for 2019.
This may be the only dates for some time, okay?
We don't know if we're gonna be going out again in 2020.
We don't know.
So this might be your last chance definitely
to see this show, A Night of Music and Comedy.
We're gonna be in Las Vegas on June 21st,
Salt Lake City on June 22nd, Denver on June 23rd,
Milwaukee on the 25th, Indianapolis on the 26th,
Detroit on the 27th, Omaha on the 29th,
and Minneapolis on the 30th.
So that's coming up, that's coming up end of June.
All right, and then I got some fall dates
starting September 4th, we're gonna be on Houston.
We're gonna be on Houston, Texas.
Yeah, we are coming on Houston.
September 4th, New Orleans September 5th,
Birmingham, Alabama September 6th,
Jacksonville, Florida September 7th,
Tampa, Florida September 8th,
then skipping down to the end of November,
Albuquerque, New Mexico November 20th,
Phoenix 21st, Sacramento Mexico, November 20th. Phoenix, 21st.
Sacramento, California, November 22nd.
And Valley Center, California.
The center of the Valley.
Harrah's Resort on November 23rd.
Rhettandlinklive.com, get your tickets.
I wanna get an update.
I've kinda gotten the update.
I want you to give the listener an update
on your mimic diet thing.
Cause I, you know, anytime you do like a,
what I'll call an experiment on yourself,
I don't know how you would describe it.
I'll describe it as a failed experiment.
Oh okay, especially if it's a failure,
I wanna hear about it.
I want them to hear about it. I wanna hear about it. I want to hear about it.
I wanna hear about it twice, I'll put it to you that way.
Okay, quick refresh, it was a diet designed by a professor
who got together with the people at the Anti-Aging Institute
or something that's named something like that
and created a diet that tricks your body
into thinking that it's fasting.
So you get the benefits, the physiological benefits
of fasting without going on completely nothing.
But it's for me, for a big man like me.
What happened?
I'm just adding to the big man montage.
700 calories is not a lot.
So I lost nine pounds, which not hard to do
when you're as big as I am.
But I actually had the benefit of-
How much did you weigh?
I was probably like 215 when I started.
Okay.
And the reason I know exactly how much I lost
and the composition of what I lost
is because I did that thing they have at my gym
called the in body where you get up there
and you hold the thing and it gives a very specific analysis
of your, I mean, I trust that it's accurate.
I just wanted my gym too.
You stand on the thing barefoot
and then you hold these things on your thumbs
and you hold your arms out like that. Yeah. And you don't move.
And then it gives you like, this is how much muscle
you have in your right arm and your left arm.
And then it gives you your BMI and all that.
So before, so I just happened that I did it right before
and after and we were looking at it and my trainer was like,
you lost nine pounds.
And then she was like, six pounds of water.
Dang.
That doesn't sound like the right thing to lose.
Two pounds of muscle.
Oh, okay.
And one pound of fat.
Yeah.
So mission not accomplished. Not good.
I lost more of what I want, less of what I don't want,
and I want water.
And she was, it wasn't that I had dehydrated myself,
it was something about the fact that your nutrients
enable water intake into your muscles or whatever.
But the thing that I also noticed is that,
you know, I have all kinds of issues with my back,
like all up and down the spine,
and like muscle stuff that happens
because of weird things in my discs.
And all that got exacerbated to the point
that like it was tightening up,
because your body needs stuff, it needs nutrients,
especially if you've got like your kind of borderline
about to go into
like a muscle spasm at any moment.
And so, but after a week of just regular eating,
everything is back to normal.
You gained nine pounds?
Well I haven't done that.
I'm just saying that like I feel good again.
My back is good.
So are you doing, are you still doing intermittent fasting?
Yeah, I'm still doing that.
Because that just is not a diet.
That is a, just a.
It's a lifestyle.
Well, some people are like, don't promote diets,
especially ones that don't work.
Yeah, and the fasting thing.
I was reading that.
The fasting wasn't a diet.
So it was a fasting period for very specific reasons
and it wasn't so I could lose weight,
that wasn't why I was doing it.
I'm doing it because I wanted to have something
I could go back to on a quarterly basis.
If it did have good results in those numbers,
then I would do it again.
So you do recommend it and use code EAR
to lose nine pounds of the wrong stuff.
Yeah, you could.
We shouldn't be throwing our coupon code for like bunk things. If you wanna lose nine pounds of the wrong stuff. Yeah you could, you. We shouldn't be throwing our coupon code
for like bunk things.
If you wanna lose one pound of fat
and eight pounds of muscle and water.
Oh gosh.
You've got too much water and muscles.
Don't use code ear.
You know who you are.
Too much muscle and water.
Yeah so we're gonna, well first of all I got a cold.
Like I'm three days into this thing.
Yeah.
Don't breathe on me.
It's a pet peeve of mine.
This is a bad time to get a cold.
This is a tough time to get a cold.
What do you mean?
Transitioning from spring to summer,
it makes you feel like you're out of sync with nature.
I'm gonna be good in about two days
because I've been doing this thing called the mimic diet.
Mimic fasting diet.
So that's different than the fasting mimicking diet.
It must be different.
I have not been doing anything.
Maybe you'll gain muscle now.
Except trying to nap.
It's a pet peeve of mine for podcasters
to like go on and on about how their voice is different
and like apologizing about how they're sick.
I think it's good to acknowledge.
I just want to acknowledge it.
Got some Kleenex down here.
But yeah, we're gonna talk about
a question that we get often,
I think when we're being recognized,
at least I know I do, is do you get recognized often?
And I think the implied follow-up question is
how do you feel about that or this as it's happening?
So we're gonna talk about that.
And I also think that people wanna know
if they are the, like a special source of something.
Like maybe he doesn't get recognized that often
and I've made his week.
So I wanna get into that, but something happened to me
that I wanted, I've been saving this story
to share with you and you.
And you too, Jacob.
I was pointing at the camera,
which represents one loyal listener, but then, you know.
But also, Jacob.
Out of the corner of his eye, he saw me point.
Now I am pointing at you.
That's what it feels like for me to point at you.
Incidentally, pointing is a part of this story.
Oh gosh, this is not good.
It's fine.
This happened in the context of when we were taking care
of my father-in-law Louis at the hospital
and I took a break and I came home and I was exhausted
and I was gonna take a nap but then I was like,
you know what, it will be therapeutic for me
to walk the dog and I'm gonna make Lily come with me.
So come along so that I can spend some time with her
because I just wasn't seeing the kids as much
in that phase of caring for him in the hospital.
Right.
So we went out for a walk and we're walking down the street
and I remember the doggie bags.
A lot of times I don't remember the doggie bags.
I'm glad I did because.
Well when you don't, what do you do?
I'll use like a, if Jade poops, I'll use like a.
A leaf?
I'll find a big leaf and use it as like a glove
and then I'll just throw it all into the woods.
What woods?
Well the woods like on my walk, like trees.
Not someone's front yard but.
There's not a lot of woods where we're around here
so you're throwing it onto somebody's property, man.
I mean there are trees in like little wooded areas,
like unmowed areas of people's yards.
Okay, yeah, people's yards.
Okay, but the wooded parts of people's yards
that they never go into.
The thing about Jade is she likes to,
like we'll be walking and all of a sudden I'll realize,
oh, the leash is getting taut
and I'll look back there and she's popping a squat
in the middle of the street.
Yeah, Barbara does the same thing.
Like she doesn't go to the grass in somebody's yard,
she's very respectful of that.
She goes to the, like not even on the lane of the street
where she's walking like on the edge,
she'll like go to the middle of the road and like,
I wanna have a wide berth as I, I don't know.
That's funny, Barbara does the same thing
and I always thought that that was,
I was doing something wrong.
Like, she's stupid, like she's not,
she doesn't understand.
We never told her that she shouldn't do that.
That, yeah, it feels more natural
to do it on the grass or some dirt.
But it's easier to clean up when it's on the concrete.
I like to like throw some dirt or some leaves on it
before I pick it up, so I do not like it being on the dirt.
I don't like just grabbing.
You're like Mr. Leon throwing sawdust on vomit.
Yeah, he was the janitor at our Buies Creek Elementary.
May he rest in peace.
Great man.
So anyway, she pops a squat in the middle of the street
and I'm like, you know, then I'm cleaning it up with the bag.
You know how to do this, you put your hand in the bag,
then you grab it and you turn it around on your hand.
But it still is really bothersome to me.
It's so warm.
It's so warm and I feel like it's coming through this bag
in some way.
That's why I like to put nature sawdust,
like whatever I can find, I like try to let that.
Some mulch from somebody's yard.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, a little bit of mulch.
Yeah, they don't need this.
Yeah, have you seen me do this?
Yeah, the objects in your story
is as if you're on a hike in Yosemite,
but really you're in the suburbs of Los Angeles
where there's no woods, it's just trees in people's yards
and the mulch that they have so carefully arranged.
And you're using it as sawdust.
I don't miss it a little bit.
So then I'm carrying this bag around
and we turn the corner and we're going up the street
and I will say at this point,
because this is the point in the street
where it usually happens, there's this car
that's typically parked there
that has a vanity license plate.
You know, me and my bumper stumpers,
I always notice the vanity license plates.
And there's a license plate that says Mr. Noodle.
Which, for those of you who don't know,
Mr. Noodle is a live action mime character
in Elmo's World, the Sesame Street series.
And he was kinda like a clown without makeup,
he would do clownish things and then Mr. Noodle
had a brother, Mr. Noodle.
And Elmo would voice over this, like Mr. Noodle,
you know Mr. Noodle, right?
Never watched it.
Lily was really into Elmo, I think Lincoln was too.
I saw the controversy coming, I never let my kids,
I just sensed it, never let them watch it.
Oh.
I separate the man from the puppet.
Well that's a difficult thing to do when his hand is in it.
It pretty much becomes a dead Elmo
when you take him out of the.
Okay good point, I have no response to that.
I'm not even gonna tell my story now.
So I will clarify that there are no controversies
that I know of associated with Mr. Noodle
or his brother Mr. Noodle.
Even though with that name you would think there would be.
If anybody's problematic, it's probably Mr. Noodle.
Right.
Mr. Noodle's brother, Mr. Noodle,
was played by the guy from Evening Shade who,
Oh I love that guy.
Who was also in The Green Mile.
Oh yeah, he's great.
But I can't be more specific about what his name is.
But anyway, Mustache.
So there's license plate Mr. Noodle,
and then sometimes, but on a rarer occasion,
I'll see another car and it says,
the license plate says Dr. Noodle.
I'm like, oh there's a family of noodles
that live around here.
What?
So for like two years, I've seen these vanity license plates
so it's just a part of my life
and sometimes we'll point it out,
there's Mr. Noodle's Park there again.
That's just a little background.
So we're walking, now I've got this poop bag in my hand,
Lily and I are walking, I'm catching her up
on the situation at the hospital and everything,
we're having a great conversation,
but I'm bothered by the fact that I haven't even completed
30% of this dog walk and I'm already holding poop in a bag.
I do not like being that guy.
Like I judge heavily the people I see walking their dog
with like a big sack of poop in their hand.
It's just like.
You gotta offload that.
What a loser.
But I also, I hate seeing poop bags just laying around.
It's like we are humans.
We're at a point on the food chain where we need to love
our earth to the point where we can't just throw
plastic poop bags down just because of pride.
Do you see people throw plastic poop bags down?
I see them laying down, I see evidence that they've been
left places, like when you go on hikes around LA,
there's people who will drop their poop bag.
And you know what they're thinking?
They're thinking, I hate walking around with a poop bag.
When I come back down the trail,
I'll pick it up and throw it away.
No, you don't.
And then when they see it, they're like,
well, that could be anybody's poop bag.
It's not mine.
Oh yeah, you conveniently forget about it.
I don't wanna be that guy,
so I'm in a Catch-22 situation.
So I tell Lily, I'm like, Lily,
when I spot a trash can, we're gonna get rid of this thing.
Now, the trash had come recently,
so it wasn't like everyone's trash cans were out.
But there are the stragglers.
There's some stragglers and you're looking for that.
One out of 10.
So I'm like, we're looking for stragglers,
we round this corner and go down this other dead end street.
I'm talking to her like this,
and she's like looking at me like, are you okay?
And let me say before you proceed,
I believe in this, I'll just say that.
Here's what I believe in.
Okay.
I'm like, really?
We're all humans, it's a public service.
Yes, it's your trash can, but I'm not changing
the dynamics of your trash.
You know, I'm not throwing a chair in there.
You know what I'm saying?
Or a dead body.
It's a bag of poop, it doesn't change anything.
You should be okay with it.
When you're, you didn't tell me.
Okay, I'm glad you're backing me up
but subject to some specific key points that I believe
and that I wanted to relay to Lily
because I needed her help.
I think the first thing is you gotta pick
the right trash can.
There's a green one for,
Oh of course.
There's a blue one for recycling,
there's a black one.
And I'm like Lily, look up there.
I see some stragglers.
There's three trash cans.
What I want you to do, and this is my second point is,
Making your daughter do it?
The second point is we gotta be clandestine.
We gotta be secretive.
You gotta be sneaky. Even though I completely gotta be secretive. You gotta be sneaky.
Even though I completely believe in it,
you still gotta be sneaky about it.
Because you never know how the person's gonna feel
looking out their window and seeing somebody
open their trash can and make a little deposit.
Yeah.
You don't know if they're gonna run out
with some sort of a firearm or at least.
I doubt that would happen.
Armed to the gills with insults.
That could happen.
You know, in front of my daughter and my beloved beast.
Cause I will say that if I saw it happen.
You'd be mad.
You would feel anger instinctively.
But I wouldn't say anything,
cause I'd be like, you know what?
For all the reasons I just said, but I understand.
But your heart rate would go up
and you'd have to do some breathing.
The tendency to be protective of your trash, I get it.
It's your domain.
It's not logical, but I get it.
So I'm like, Lily,
we're gonna subtly scoot over to the left side of the road.
As we're walking, we're not gonna stop walking.
I want you to go up to the trash can.
I want you to gently lift the lid like three inches.
All right, you don't have to open it all the way.
I'm talking to her this way.
This is maybe over instruction, but okay.
I just want you to just give me a little poop bag gap.
And then I'm gonna come in, I'm gonna swoop in,
and I'm just gonna, I'm gonna throw it in there,
and then you just gently let go.
You made this a two-person job?
It needs to be a two-person job.
If I was there, I would've been like,
this is a bad idea.
Listen, you short-sighted amateur.
I'm walking a dog with a leash in one hand,
I got poop in a bag in the other hand,
and I got a daughter with two free hands.
Like I gotta teach her the ways, man.
This is a teachable moment.
This is less about what I need
and more about what she needs.
I would give her the poop
and let her do the whole shebang.
That's just what I would have done.
Well that's because you're a cruel, unfeeling father.
Lift with one, deposit with the other,
and she's also a young woman, which I think gives her,
she's gonna get a little more leeway.
They're gonna be a little bit less likely
to come out cussing or with a firearm.
A little less likely, so there's still a likelihood
that your daughter could be blasted with poop bag insults.
And hey, if you're fine with that,
your daughter can be thrown to the wolves.
Then she could be taught a lesson. Then that would be the lesson. if you're fine with that, your daughter can be thrown to the wolves.
Then she could be taught a lesson.
Then that would be the lesson.
How do you deal with that?
So I'm like, I just need three inches and three seconds
and I'll take care of the rest.
And she's like, dad, this isn't a heist.
Yeah.
I'm with her.
I'm like, just go, we're almost there.
Just don't, just do the plan. And I'm talking, we're almost there, just do the plan.
And I'm talking like this now.
You probably look suspicious.
And then she grabs the green.
No, wrong one.
No, no, no, you gotta go with the black one.
And then she gives me three inches on the black one
and I just make the deposit.
And then we immediately swing back over to the other side of the road and I just make the deposit. And then we immediately swing back over
to the other side of the road and I'm like, yes.
I think I literally out loud said yes.
And at that moment I looked up and I saw a car
with a person inside of it and the door was open.
I was like, oh crap, there's somebody there,
I think they saw us.
And they were like, oh, nope, he didn't see us.
He was like in his car detailing his dash.
But he was the owner of the trash can.
He was on the same side of the trash can.
I would say most likely the man in the car
cleaning the dash was the owner of the three trash cans.
Yes.
I panicked for a moment.
But as I stated before, not really the owner.
They're on loan from the city.
He's renting it.
Yeah, so I mean, we're all paying for it.
Put yourself in his shoes, Rhett.
I was a bit afraid until I realized,
and I told Lily, he didn't see it.
He didn't see anything.
We succeeded.
We are amazing.
You know what, I hope Jade craps again.
Right now, so we can just do it again.
It was exhilarating.
It was like on the edge.
The dude was like rubbing his dash down
with like some Armor All situation.
He was like me when I first got my 1987 Nissan pickup
and I thought that I was gonna wax it
and it was already so old that when I waxed it,
it basically just took the paint off of it.
You saw like chrome underneath.
Yeah, like sheer metal.
The dude was going at it.
He never looked up.
I was like, oh, that's your fault, man.
You're too into your dash to see who's making the stash
in your can.
Okay, what happened though?
Okay, yeah, I should get on with this story.
So I walked by and we go all the way to the end of the road
and then we have to turn around and we're walking back
and I'm like, oh, the guy's still there.
And then I noticed from this new vantage point,
I can see the license plate on the car
and it says Dr. Noodle.
Oh gosh.
So then without saying anything to Lily,
as we're walking by, again, his door's open,
one foot's out and he's still on that dash,
just grinding it.
It's just like- It's a dirty dash.
It was a shiny dash by this point.
We get up next to him and I'm probably
as far from here to that wall,
so like, I don't know, seven feet away.
And at that point, without really planning out
what I'm gonna do, I just went with the feeling.
You know, I was feeling on top of the world
after what had happened.
And I point at him and I say,
you must be Dr. Noodle.
He looks up from his dash
and the look on his face went from surprise,
someone speaking to me to like jaw dropping amazement.
And he says, you know me?
And then before I could say anything in response, he said, I know you too.
And I never stopped walking.
What?
I never stopped walking and I said,
cool man, you have a good day.
Oh gosh man, you're such a moron.
And then Lily leans over.
Oh gosh.
As we're still walking, she leans over.
You weren't afraid of him because of what you had done.
That's why you didn't stop.
Lily leaned over and she said, what's happening?
I was like, we just met Dr. Noodle.
That's what's happening.
Then we walked around the corner.
Well who the hell is Dr. Noodle?
Well he, I don't know, he's that guy.
But here's the thing, he had this amazing look on his face
and it was as if I'd gone up to Clark Kent
on the streets of Metropolis with his glasses on
and I said, you must be Superman.
You know, it was like, it was one of those, streets of Metropolis with his glasses on and I said, you must be Superman.
It was like, it was one of those, oh, you know me? It was like, what?
It's like when someone has a name tag on and they forget
and you think you're cute because you're like,
Steve, what's up?
And they're like, you know me?
But people don't typically say, you know me?
But then he also knew me.
Since then though.
I guess from the internet.
Since then he has realized why you said that.
I walked around, what do you mean?
Because of his license plate.
He saw the license plate.
Yeah.
He realized, oh.
But he did know me I guess from.
Why did you know?
You didn't stop subconsciously because of.
I was walking a dog, I wasn't standing a dog. You may not even realize why you didn't stop subconsciously because of the poop. I was walking a dog, I wasn't standing a dog.
You may not even realize why you didn't stop.
You didn't stop because you felt guilt over the poop.
Walked around the corner and guess what we saw?
We saw the other car and from that vantage point
it said Mr. Noodle and we were like,
look Lily, one down, one to go.
One day, we might just get to meet Mr. Noodle.
Hold on, it's the same house, right? Yeah but I'd like to think there's a doctor and meet Mr. Noodle. Hold on, it's the same house, right?
Yeah, but I'd like to think there's a doctor
and a Mr. Noodle living there.
There's two cars.
But you met the doctor.
I met the doctor.
I'm just really interested in, I don't,
who's doc, he obviously does something.
I think he's a dash doctor.
He's a car doctor.
Update to the story, just to provide
a little color commentary.
What I'm saying is you could have found out
by just stopping.
I didn't wanna have a conversation, Rhett.
I was just being nice.
I think I made his day.
Okay.
Maybe he made yours through that story.
I was walking Jade yesterday and I walked past Dr. Noodle
and dadgum if he wasn't out there again, second time,
and guess what he was doing?
He had the hood open of the same car.
He's cleaning the engine?
He was cleaning the engine.
Yeah he's getting ready to sell that car.
Because cleaning the engine doesn't do anything
except make people think that your car is cool.
You know what I'm saying?
Look how clean this engine is.
I think he just has an obsession.
It's gonna go another 10,000 miles.
He's a shine doctor.
He's the doctor of car shine.
You know me?
What kind of car is it?
I know you too.
Is it like a car that he would take to a car show?
It was like an Accord.
Yeah, he's going to the Accord car show.
So anyway, he recognized me and I will say,
that's probably the most enjoyment I've ever had
about over being recognized, spoiler alert.
Oh, it's all downhill from there.
Well. In the negative sense.
Maybe not,
because I don't want to be negative about being recognized.
But we- So let's wrestle with that.
You know what, we're gonna be honest
about being recognized.
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apply you know we talked about this from time to time if you if you've listened to the show for a
while you know that we tell the story or two about being recognized in certain places
and what we said and what the person said.
We might retread a few of those,
but we're doing it in the context of answering this question
of like, what does it do for us?
Like mentally, emotionally, what is it like
to be recognized in public?
How do we deal with it?
What do we think about it?
And this could come across as a little bit
like self-aggrandizing, I think is the word that you used
when we were thinking about doing this.
Yeah, when I pitched the topic, I was like,
let's do something self-aggrandizing.
Yeah.
You know, like talk about how often we're recognized.
Yeah, but we're doing it in the,
because we have this conversation
and I think that because you listener
are perhaps the kind of person that if you saw us in public,
you might feel like you had to Dr. Noodle us.
And if you do, then this might give a little perspective.
And I don't know where it's gonna go.
There's no agenda.
We're not like trying to land at some sort of like
public recognition ethic or anything.
Maybe we will by the end of this.
I have a little story that I can start with
that happened recently and I think it kind of feeds into
a part of my perspective on this and that is,
I think part of the positive for me,
and this is just a totally selfish positive,
is that there are times that I am with someone.
Might be my family, it might be friends,
and getting recognized when I'm with someone,
you know, it gives you this little like,
hey, yeah, I got recognized.
It's sort of the self-centered, egotistical part of me
responds to the fact that, hey, I was in a group of people
and I got recognized.
And then when you're with your family.
Someone that you care about their opinion of you.
Right, and then, you know, like if I'm with like my mom
gets such a kick out of it.
Right.
Like my mom will introduce herself,
my mom will be in a conversation with somebody in public
and then just in the middle of the conversation
just throw out, do you know Rhett and Link?
Just so that she could be like, well, Rhett's my son.
Right.
You know, so if I'm out in public
and then we get recognized, like she gets a kick out of that
so I kind of get a kick out of it.
Well, my brother and his boys recently came out
and spent some time with us.
And we took them down to the west side.
The only time you go to the west side
if you live on the east side
is when you've got family in town.
You don't ever go over there on your own volition.
It's just like, oh, we got people in town.
Let's show them Los Angeles that we never see.
So we went to.
You talking Santa Monica?
We went to Santa Monica.
You talking Venice Beach?
We didn't do Venice Beach.
We have done Venice Beach with them,
but you know, you need that like once every five years.
So we were at Third Street Promenade,
you know the outdoor mall situation down there.
We go into the Urban Outfitters because you know,
it's different over there. I guess. I meanters because you know, it's different over there.
I guess.
I mean, it just feels different, it's west side.
No, so we're going through and then all of a sudden
I realize that there is a dog, just a bulldog,
like an American bulldog.
Are you about to tell me you got recognized
by a bulldog?
Yeah, well.
Because that is a first, man.
There's an American bulldog.
There are cats that watch Good Mythical Morning.
I hate to tell you that but we get lots of screenshots
of cats watching our show.
You think you get lots of screenshots?
Yeah, people send them to me all the time.
But not as much dogs.
I appreciate the views.
I mean, it still adds to the ad revenue,
even if it is a cat.
But this American bulldog is walking around
without a leash in Urban Outfitters.
And I was like, is this what they do on the west side?
They have like mascots that roam the stores?
Please tell me that he spoke English, please.
And then I hear someone say the dog's name,
which I don't remember, let's just say Spot, which it wasn't.
Spot, get over here!
And I look up and the source of the voice
and ostensibly the owner of the dog, Dennis Quaid.
Dennis Quaid?
Dennis Quaid.
Now, for those of you who don't fully know
who Dennis Quaid is.
Okay, you don't, that's what my story's about.
Okay, okay.
Okay so, right, Dennis Quaid is.
All I was about to say was I can't answer that exactly.
Dennis Quaid was a very, very, very famous movie star,
right, like back in the very famous movie star, right?
Like back in the time of movie stars.
Like back when, if you were in movies in the 80s,
it's a big freaking deal, right?
Like, the celebrity culture was way, way smaller.
So he kinda comes from that old guard.
What's his biggest movie?
Oh gosh.
Can you look that up but keep going?
He's been in a bunch of stuff.
He continues to act.
He's like in a new insurance campaign or whatever but.
Oh.
He's had on snakeskin boots first of all
which was impressive.
So my brother obviously gets a huge kick out of this
because he's a 40 something year old man
and so obviously he knows who Dennis Quaid is
and we got a kick out obviously he knows who Dennis Quaid is and we gotta kick out
of the fact that Dennis Quaid has a dog off leash
in Santa Monica.
In an Urban Outfitters.
Which seems like the kind of thing that you would feel
like you had the right to do if you were Dennis Quaid.
You know what I'm saying?
It's like I could do anything.
I was a movie star in the 80s.
I can walk around with my dog off its leash.
I do have to tell it to come to me over and over again,
but a leash would help with that.
But Cole got a big kick out of it,
and then he's literally saying
kind of what you were getting at.
Cole's like, you know, it's kinda crazy,
like you come in here and you see Dennis Quaid,
but you know, like these kids in here,
they probably more readily recognize you than Dennis Quaid. They probably don't even know who Dennis Quaid but you know, like these kids in here, they probably more readily recognize you than Dennis Quaid.
They probably don't even know who Dennis Quaid is.
Literally five seconds later, a group of four teenage girls
walks by us and they're saying, that was Dennis Quaid.
Are you serious?
Really? Yeah, yeah.
Really? It's Dennis Quaid.
You know why, because he was in that,
the movie about the dolphin girl.
Parent Trap. He's in Parent Trap?
That was the remake of Parent Trap.
Dolphin Girl's not Parent Trap.
I just saw Jacob held up Parent Trap.
What's the dolphin girl, the girl he's got?
Free Willy?
Not unless her leg was Free Willy.
I mean, she got her leg bitten off.
By a dolphin?
No, by a shark.
That's a mean ass dolphin.
You mean the girl that lost an arm?
She lost her arm to a shark.
Soul surfer or something like that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
He's a dad and a dad.
Yeah.
That's how they know him.
No dolphins involved.
But they know his name and they,
you know what I'm saying, like, that means they,
people watch Pikes Watchmen. you know what I'm saying? Like that means they, people watch.
And then what about you though?
Well, I will say that then they did see me
and they did, it's not as good of a story
when they recognize me, but they did also recognize me.
Was that after you asked them if they knew who you were?
I did not approach them.
And I heard, they saw me and then one of the girls
was like, it's crazy, we're seeing everybody in here
or something like that.
So, anyway, Dennis Quaid, man.
Shout out to Dennis.
You wanna hang out at the dog park
where you don't need a leash,
the only appropriate place where the dogs
don't need to be on a leash, hit us up.
A lot of people, like I said at the top,
when they recognize me, like last night,
we were walking to meet friends, including you and Jessie,
at, where were we, Highland Park.
Yep.
Somebody comes around the corner like,
hey man, let me, can I, I know you,
can I take my, take a little video with you?
And I'm like, oh, videos, ooh.
I'm always like, we can just grab a selfie,
but I didn't say that.
That's interesting,
because I got a video request this week as well.
And usually they'll ask,
can you say so and so to this person?
But instead, he just held it up like a selfie
as if it was a photo, but he was doing video and I waved.
So it's like, that's actually never happened before.
And then he said, does this happen a lot?
So whenever I'm recognized, I do get that follow up.
I do think that, like you said, people wanna know
if they're the only one that does this
or if they're maybe, I guess if they're,
am I being annoying because this has happened five times
as you rounded the block?
So I guess I'll answer that question
a little bit in the middle.
I think it does happen a lot.
And basically every single time I go out now,
it's multiple times.
I mean it's, you know I had to run errands with the kids
and I went to the grocery store
and then the drugstore next door and then we got in the car and I went to the grocery store and then the drugstore next door
and then we got in the car and drove a block away
and went to like this Poke Bowl place.
I walked in the grocery store and I got recognized.
And then I was checking out at the drugstore
and I got recognized.
And then we went to the Poke Bowl place
and the guy working there said something else
that I've started to get more frequently.
And that is the question, has anyone ever told you
that you look a lot like a guy from the internet?
That happens quite a bit.
And so what I say to that is,
I do get that a lot actually.
And the reason why I say that is because like,
one of my kids is usually with me
and I like messing around with people
and like making them feel like,
and Lily was like, dad,
this is not a heist.
No, she said that for the other one.
For this thing, she said,
it is him, he likes to mess with people.
Because when we were, I think I told this story
when we were in London at the Harry Potter thing,
like these kids were like, excuse me, sir.
Have you ever?
Tiny Tim.
Have you ever been told that you,
you look like someone
from the internet?
I'm like yes, exactly.
I get it a lot that I look exactly like someone
from the internet, exactly and I kept saying that
and they're like nodded their heads and walked off.
Yeah right.
Then they came back later and got pictures
because I was in a confined environment
where we were all going through a tour together.
Yeah.
I mean after, I should just say that like
it's freaking surreal to find yourself walking around
and just, and it's happening, I don't know if we're
the most popular we've ever been but it's happening
more now than ever, like it continues to happen
more and more.
I think it's the nature of just the popularity of the medium, like more and more now than ever. Like it continues to happen more and more. I think it's the nature of just the popularity
of the medium.
Like more and more people are watching.
Even if you don't watch our videos,
you can't escape our thumbnails.
And so I think, and that brings me to a theory
about something else which I'm sure we'll get into
about what you hear people saying a lot.
Well I don't know if we're the most popular
we've ever been but we're the most visible. Definitely. And I guess maybe they're the same thing. And so it's saying a lot but, well I don't know if we're the most popular we've ever been but we're the most visible.
Definitely. And I guess,
maybe they're the same thing?
Well. And so it's happening a lot
and I just wanna say,
I'm extremely grateful because it's an indicator
of things working, like oh, we create our stuff to be seen.
Yeah. And so when people see it
and we get recognized more,
that's like, that's a good sign.
Oh, this is working.
It's also freaking surreal because in my innermost being,
I have a hard time actually thinking of myself
as a famous person.
Yeah.
Like, it's like, I don't think of myself
as an adult either a lot of times.
I mean, I know how my brain works.
I know the thoughts and feelings and processes I go through
and I feel like I might as well be a fourth grade
a lot of times, you know?
I can attest to that.
And in a similar way, I feel like,
I know who famous people are.
I mean, I've seen Parent Trap,
the remake with Dennis Quaid.
I've seen Parent Trap, the remake with Dennis Quaid.
But I just don't feel like I'm one of those people. But you know what, I guess I am
because I get recognized everywhere I go.
And I think that there's a few dynamics.
I mean one is, like you said, it's an indicator.
So be grateful.
It can be a little bit of a nuisance at times.
Now, in the moment, I'm never, I wanna make this clear,
in the moment, unless somebody says or does something
that is particularly annoying, which we'll get into,
I appreciate it and I don't hold it,
there's nothing against an individual
who comes up and recognizes me,
but it's this, sometimes going into the situation
knowing that it could happen,
it's just a little, that's what's annoying.
Not the person who did it,
but just the dynamic of the fact that it could happen.
For instance, we were coming back from someplace
and I was like, I'd like to make some burger.
I can't remember what it was.
I think I wanted to make some burgers
and I'd watched a YouTube video
about the perfect skillet burger or whatever.
And I was like, I'm gonna make these burgers
with this really nice beef or whatever.
And Jessie was like, okay, well, I don't have any of that
stuff so let's just go by the grocery store.
And we pull up to the grocery store and I'm like,
can you go, she was super tired, she was like,
I don't wanna go in, if you wanna cook this stuff,
you go in, I was like, I don't wanna go in
because I just, I really don't wanna be recognized right now.
It wasn't like I was having a bad hair day or something.
It was just, I was like, I just don't,
sometimes I get into the grocery store and I have to have
multiple interactions.
Yeah, and they have to be for that person.
You know, every interaction you have is for that person,
it's not for you.
I don't go into the grocery store
unless I'm taking someone home to press, I guess.
I don't go into these places saying,
I wanna stop and have interactions
that are for that person to make them feel special.
Sometimes you might be in that mood,
which I wanna talk about that,
but sometimes you're in the I don't wanna get recognized
mood because I just wanna get in and get out.
No one would win.
I don't, because I want the interaction to be something
that is positive and memorable to this person,
because I do care about anyone who watches what we do
enough to know who we are, I care about that person.
So I don't wanna be an asshole to this person
even if I'm feeling particularly like an asshole at the time.
Yeah.
But so Jessie was like,
you're not gonna get recognized at the grocery store.
Like she was basically trying to manipulate me
so I would be the one to go in
because she had her feet up on the dash.
Oh she did.
Speaking of dirty dashes.
I know a guy, I know a guy.
I need to call Dr. Noodle to buff out
those Doc Martin stains.
But so not a sponsor.
And I don't know why I felt the need to say
what brand of shoes my wife had on at the time.
Oh I thought you were saying Dr. Noodle's not a sponsor.
But he will be.
So Locke and I go in together, literally.
I walk in to the grocery store and I'm like,
where are the, what do you call the things?
Carrying things?
Baskets. Baskets.
I was like, where are the baskets at?
And a guy's like, oh, right over here.
You from Good Mythical Morning?
It was literally the first guy that we talked to
and Locke just got a kick out of it
because he was like, mom said you wouldn't get recognized.
And then it happened two more times in the seven minutes
that I was getting the three ingredients that I needed.
And again, it wasn't,
it's not like it was some big inconvenience,
but it was just like, again, you feel like,
all right, if this person has a question,
they wanna get, I wanna give them the time that,
it's just one chance, and they wanna have
an interaction that's special or whatever.
Right.
And so, but I just wanna get burgers and go.
But then there's the opposite end of the spectrum,
which is, I remember one time, our friend Gar,
who we met Tony Hale through,
and obviously Tony at this point is like a huge star
and would be recognized basically anywhere that he went.
At the time, he was pretty much known
for Arrested Development.
Yeah.
And not.
Veep had not started.
Veep had not started yet
and he wasn't like gonna be the frickin' main character
in the upcoming Toy Story.
But. Were you up for that role or something? Why'd you get angry? started yet and he wasn't gonna be the frickin' main character in the upcoming Toy Story.
Were you up for that role or something?
Why'd you get angry?
My friend got more famous, Gar!
I'm not angry, no.
But in fact, if anybody should get what he's gotten,
it's him.
Absolutely, yeah.
So, but Gar said, you know, he was joking
because Gar has this way of like finding this thing out
about you and or assuming something about you in a way
that it's just funny, right?
Yeah, yeah.
So he was like, you know, sometimes Tony, you know,
whenever Tony needs a self confidence boost,
he just goes to the Apple store.
Because they're a rest of development.
Right, because the people who work at Apple
and or shop at Apple at the time,
Gar's joke was that there was a lot of crossover.
Those people were the Arrested Development crowd
and they would recognize him.
Now, he didn't actually go to the Apple,
he went to the Apple store to get a product,
but that was Gar's little joke
because he was like anytime he's been with him
in an Apple store, he's getting recognized.
So you must do this for self-confidence boosts.
Whenever we wanna get a self-confidence boost,
we go to the meat section in the routes.
That's right.
I don't know.
That's where the Mythical Bees hang out.
No, I was making a statement more about us
and our proclivity to eat butchered refuse.
But I will say.
So the back of the butcher counter.
So those are.
The stuff they don't put out front.
Those are the two dynamics, right?
There's the, I'm in a situation right now
where I'm at the airport and I'm trying to move
to a location or I'm in an amusement park
and I don't wanna suddenly have to get a picture
with somebody because that might lead
to this other person wanting a picture
and this other person wanting a picture.
There are situations like that where it seems
like an inconvenience and then there are times
where it's just like, you know what?
This is never something that you think
but it's just like, oh, I'm with these people right now
or I'm in this place right now.
I'm in this place that I think the people here
are particularly cool or something.
I have some reason to think that these people
have a particular taste in comedy.
Boy, it'd be cool to get recognized here.
Again, this isn't an actual conscious thought process,
but this is sort of the emotional undercurrent
that is happening from time to time.
Because you remember when we were in-
Yeah, there are times when we wanna be recognized.
Like, I'm in Melbourne, Australia, and I think this is one of the coolest places I've ever been, and if recognized, like I'm in Melbourne, Australia,
and I think this is one of the coolest places
I've ever been, and if I feel like I'm in
one of the coolest places I've ever been,
and somebody with a cool backpack meets me
on the bridge going over the river,
and I get recognized, even if they don't know
that we have a show that night, I can get over that,
because I'm like, oh, that was a cool backpack.
I really, I like that person's taste in backpacks
and they like my show.
So, hmm, there's a correlation there.
I'm cool.
Right.
Therefore, I am cool.
Right.
Well, you remember, so we were in New York
and we were somewhere Lower East Side or something.
We're walking along and there are like six to eight guys
sitting on this stoop and basically like it feels like
a television show, like it's like this is a scene
from a movie, this isn't normal, this isn't like these.
It was nighttime and it was a bit seedier than like,
this wasn't network TV, this was like,
this could be like a scene in an HBO
CD movie. Yeah, yeah.
Like The Wire. Yeah.
But it wasn't Baltimore, it was New York.
And so you got these guys kinda sitting on this stoop
and some guys who were sort of embodying
the grittiness of the area, shall we say.
Right.
We were fish out of water, walking by.
Or like, we walked by, we actually get past them,
and all of a sudden, a guy's like, hold up!
We might have even sped up, honestly.
Rhett and Link?
And I'm like, what?
And then a guy who, I'm just describing him
because this is, he's actually known on the internet for this.
He calls himself T-Rex.
I think he's got an Instagram.
But he does not have arms, he has hands.
He just has hands and no arms.
And he wears this as like a badge of honor.
He didn't have his shirt on.
It's like it's his thing.
He has fully embraced it. Yeah. And so like it's his thing, he's fully embraced it.
Yeah.
And so he comes up to us and he's like, I'm a big fan.
And he's like telling the other guys
and another guy's like, yeah, I know who they are, whatever.
And then I was blown away, I was like,
this interesting combination of the coolest guys
who've ever recognized us are saying that they're fans
and then he explained who he was and how he puts on
a T-Rex head and goes around and does T-Rex motions.
But that was this thing that we talk about that all the time
because it was just like those guys watch.
Yeah, we're in each other's orbit, it's weird.
In a cool way.
And again, I feel like I wanna constantly apologize for,
we're just trying to be honest
about the way our thoughts work.
It's like I'm not trying to be like,
oh look, we get recognized by cool people.
I'm trying to explain the psyche of what it does to you
and what it could do to us.
I could easily see how this could become something
that you sort of rely on like an injection into your arm.
But I would, you know what I'm saying?
So I think a healthier response is to,
you know, if I'm gonna err on the side of something,
it's being over it versus desiring it.
And so I guess I take, I guess it's a good sign
that like the struggle that we have is being gracious and continuing
to be grateful, so being gracious to the person,
no matter what they say, if it's awkward
or if it's unintentionally insulting.
Well yeah, that's a whole category we can get into.
That's a whole category, but then switching
to being gracious, like I said, and grateful, so like how we feel about it.
And so we can land there in a few minutes, I think,
and also talk about boundaries,
because I'm starting to think about that,
and I have one story, but before we do,
I do think that, you know,
there are unintentionally insulting things
and I think we've talked about these before
and it's just funny.
It's not that we're actually,
well, I don't know.
Maybe go through them and then we'll see if it actually hurts
or if it's just kind of funny and that's why we're talking.
Yeah, I've told the story before about the one time
I was at the airport and we were panicking
and we missed a flight and somebody came up
and I think I was probably as short
as I have ever been with somebody.
But I would say, I don't think I'm exaggerating,
70% of the time, people say one of two things.
One is, I used to watch you all the time.
Right.
And the second thing is, my fill in the blank,
cousin, sister, kid, mom, brother,
is the biggest fan.
Somebody besides me.
Somebody besides the person who's coming up to you.
70, so 70, and this is just anecdotal,
but 70% of the time, somebody says something that,
it basically says that me currently,
the one coming up to you, I'm not a fan, I don't care.
I used to care or somebody else cares.
Right.
And so that's.
So I'm bothering you to tell you that I'm not,
I'm not really into you.
Is the worst interpretation.
And basically what I say every time is,
if somebody says, my so and so is a big fan,
I'm like, you're not?
That's what I say.
And then if somebody says, I used to watch it,
I'm like, why'd you stop?
Because I mean, I'm not being a jerk,
I'm just legitimately like okay.
Well it's a little jerkish.
I say, if they say I used to watch, I'll say,
like the guy in the Pokeball place,
who like, I had to wait for the order
so I ended up talking to him for like eight minutes.
But the kickoff was I used to watch you.
After he said, has anyone told you you look like a guy from the internet that I used to watch you. After he said, has anyone told you
you look like a guy from the internet that I used to watch?
I guess it was like they put it all together.
And I'm like, well we're still doing it, man.
And that's when it starts to feel like,
yeah we're getting recognized more,
but we got all these people who are recognizing us
for not watching anymore, what does that mean?
We're falling off and like it plays into my insecurities
and I'm like, ugh.
So that's not healthy.
First of all, I think if you're talking about
our emotional state, this is good, right?
This is good.
I don't want to be somebody who is constantly like-
Agilated. Agilated and built up by other people
because A, it makes me feel a little uncomfortable,
but also it turns you into a jerk.
I mean, like it's very difficult
if you are just a normal person,
even if you're normal, well-adjusted person who,
like this all happened to us after we were fully adults,
with kids, married, we got lots of things in our lives
that ground us.
But even with all those things in place,
if suddenly everyone cares about you
because of something you did
and they wanna be around you or they want,
that can create problems.
You can become a person that no one wants to be around.
So we're constantly guarding against that.
But it helps when 70% of the time people recognize you,
they're kind of insulting you.
Well, I-
It kind of balances things out.
Obviously they're not intentionally insulting us
and I think it's an insecurity that leads to it
being interpreted as an insult.
But it's also a good thing,
it's also a positive indicator that like,
our work is getting out there.
And again, I wanna talk about our work
and not talk about us because that's what I want
this to be about, it's the stuff that we create
even if we're the center of the show or whatever.
It's a sign that it's getting out there to the point
where even if you don't watch it, you know about it.
Like it's like people pay millions in marketing
for just that to happen, Awareness, not even enjoyment.
Yeah.
You know, awareness is arguably just as powerful.
You know, it's like I've got an opinion about something
that I don't even actively watch.
Yeah.
You know?
Well, and I think that's evidenced by,
so you're kind of talking about people who-
That's a good sign.
Aren't familiar, and this is something
that has happened repeatedly that demonstrates what you're talking about
is definitely the case that people just kind of know.
A, they don't know the name of the show.
B, they don't know who our names.
But the most interesting and funniest thing
that has happened is I'll be with someone who is not you.
Okay?
This most recently happened with my brother,
same trip when he was in town.
And somebody came up and they were like,
oh, you're that guy.
You're that guy from the internet.
And I helped him.
I was like, yeah, good Mythical Morning.
And they're like, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And then my brother's with me.
And they're like, and you're the other guy.
And my brother was like, yeah.
Cause he's your brother.
So we got a picture.
Right, why not?
The two of us got a picture with this woman.
Ironic, what's that not?
And that happened like five times.
Ironically, was I not like a block and a half away
and we had just split up to go in different stores
at that moment?
No, that wasn't that day, it was a different day.
Because that happened then too.
No, someone got a picture with you
and you didn't tell them that I was across the street.
Yeah, they were, they were,
a lot of times people are like, where's Link?
And 99% of the time I'm like, well, I don't know.
I don't have a geotag on him or whatever.
I have one on you so I tell him exactly where you are.
That's why you get recognized so much.
But in that, people are going after you.
In that moment you were literally on the opposite in that. People are going after you.
In that moment you were literally
on the opposite street corner.
I was watching it happen.
Where's Link?
I don't know.
I currently see him over your shoulder.
But I'm not gonna, I'm not gonna sic him on you.
Sometimes I like to, if people are taking a picture
with you, I like to sneak up at the last second
and get in the photo.
Kinda like how really famous people do
when they're like in the Marvel universe and then they show up and get in the photo. Kinda like how really famous people do when they're like in the Marvel universe
and then they show up and sneak in the photos.
Well and that,
because you know what you were talking about,
I don't feel, again, I watched that documentary
about Bill Murray, which by the way,
I don't know if I could recommend it
because I was kind of annoyed by the filmmaker
and I just didn't like the way the film was made
but I really like Bill Murray
and I really like these stories about people.
He shows up in places.
He shows up and he does these things and he's built,
we're not Bill Murray but I also have this abiding sense
that I can't, I could never do that
because I'm just a guy from the internet.
There may be some circles that if I showed up,
me and you showed up, it would be a big deal for people,
but for the majority of people,
there's one person in the group who knows who we are
and then everyone else starts asking,
why are you, who are those guys?
And then people start asking us.
Oh, that's the worst.
That happened in the coffee shop the other day.
We were down in Seal Beach where Locke had
some basketball games and he had like a game
in the afternoon and then a game at night
so we had all this time to kill and we're walking around
going to this coffee shop.
All these seals to kill, what did you say?
Time to kill. Okay, good.
At Seal Beach. Okay, better.
Did not kill any seals.
Didn't even see any.
Did you have a club? It's a misnomer.
They show up when you have a club.
I go into this coffee shop
and the girl working the register is like,
oh hey, I'm a big fan of your show.
And we had a pleasant interaction.
That's perfect.
And then an older woman who was in line behind me,
she was like, well what do you do?
Oh gosh.
This happens quite a bit.
I hate having to explain what I do
to people who don't actually care.
Ever since I had a, a few dozen times,
I was like, I got a show on the internet that, you know,
well what do you do on the show?
Like that conversation, that annoys me. Okay, in all the internet that, you know, well what do you do on the show? Like that conversation, that annoys me.
Okay, in all the things that happen,
with getting recognized, that is the thing
that annoys me the most is you're making me tell you
why someone that, so what I do now,
whether it's a child who recognizes me
and the parents are like, why do they, I say.
I feel like it's even worse with the parents
because they have a relationship with the person
who knows us so that could be an easy way
to have a conversation.
It was worse when I leaned over,
I turned to the girl who was waiting on me
at the cash register and I said,
she'll tell you all about it.
So that's what I do now.
It's like, what do you do?
I said, well, ask her.
And I mean, I know that I'm putting that person
in a situation, and I know that I'm kind of seeming
like a complete jerk now, I've told you that the way
I respond to these things, but it happens,
I just have these sort of back pocket responses
for people, so I used to watch, why'd you stop?
May I make a suggestion?
I think if you tweak your language a little bit,
it could be a little more self-deprecating.
Like if instead of saying, well ask her,
even with the up at the end.
I say it nicely.
I know you say it nicely,
but you could go a step further
and you could say something like,
I think it would be better hearing it from her.
And then it's like what?
Well I think the tone.
He's embarrassed to talk about what he does.
He must be a porn star.
I think the tone of, I say, you know what?
Then you got her. Then she's afraid to ask. I he must be a porn star. I think the tone of, I say, you know what? Then you got her.
Then she's afraid to ask.
I say it in a joking way.
In all those responses, I say, she'll tell you all about it.
And then it usually just results in
no one saying anything else,
and I just get my coffee and start drinking it.
Yeah, I don't like that either.
When the parent is like asking multiple questions
to figure out why the kid likes us.
I mean, it's like, you know.
Well, it'd be one thing if it was like, I'm an actor.
You know, it's like, I can't.
It's hard to explain.
If I tell you I'm a YouTuber,
you'll have a question about that.
Right.
And then if I tell you what I do on YouTube,
you'll have a question about that.
Right.
And then you'll just be like,
why is my child a fan of this?
It's the same principle as if you do have a question about that. Right. And then you'll just be like, why is my child a fan of this? It's the same principle as if you do get a selfie
with somebody in like an amusement park or a crowded area,
like a mall or something,
then there is a chance that like a little line will form.
Which brings me to, I think the biggest sensitivity
to this whole thing is being out with our families.
You know, because it really puts a wrench,
we don't make public plans as a family
that involve adding, you know,
a 10% margin to accommodate for, you know,
us being stopped, me being stopped,
and then having to separate from me
so that they won't be in the photo.
And then, so I think it really tests their patience,
and I fully understand that.
Or do I?
I was at, we went to the Shazam movie premiere,
and it was thrilling.
Like we did Instagram stories, like I had Shando with me
and like you were in the Ferris wheel,
with my wife, by the way, right?
No, I was with my wife.
Who are you?
Your wife and your daughter, I guess.
We're in the Ferris wheel.
Different cart.
Okay, and she's afraid of heights,
so like I wanted to watch her be in that Ferris wheel,
but I'm glad you weren't there in such a tender moment.
Did she have a difficult time?
I think she did great.
She overcame some sort of Ferris wheel fear.
They freaking shut down the Hollywood Boulevard
and set up a whole carnival.
And then it was just invite only,
and fortunately we got in on that.
And we're walking around, getting free fair food
and all this stuff and then Christy's like,
turns to Lily when I'm standing there,
she's like, look it's Sterling K. Brown.
One of the stars of This Is Us,
the show that even mentioning it makes you cry.
They both love this show and they bonded over it
and I know who the guy is, I haven't watched the show
and of course we had the other guy from This Is Us
on Good Mythical Morning.
Chris. Chris Sullivan, absolutely.
Anyway, Sterling has not been on our show,
we had never met him but when my wife and my daughter
are talking about how much of a connection
they make with the show and they're like geeking out
and like I actually think that Christy,
I'm gonna pull her under the bus with me here,
I do think she said,
maybe we can get a picture.
He's sitting right there.
He and his son who is like grade schooler,
we're like enjoying some fair food on a bench
and we're standing there whispering about him.
And I'm like, I just was like, I'll ask him for a photo.
And they were like, oh, oh, okay.
And I go up there and I'm like, Sterling, how you doing?
And I shook his hand, I was like, I'm Link,
I just wanna let you know, and boy, as I'm telling this,
there's a lot of faux pas here that we've discussed.
The first thing I said was, wife. I used to be a fan. My wife and daughter are huge fans.
Would you mind if I snapped a photo?
So again, I was like, I'm not a fan.
I feel like, go on, but I feel like that's different.
Okay, it is.
Because they were there.
Yeah, it is different.
And I'm not annoyed by it, I'm just saying
it's just the case that most people say that.
And Sterling K. Brown said he,
No.
His face changed to this apologetic yet kind,
I can make you cry at will on television face.
He said, this is really family time for me and my son.
So I'm just gonna, I'm gonna need to pass.
Or he said, I don't know if he said I'm gonna need to pass,
but he said something like, the most gracious way.
I was like, hmm, I'm gonna write that down.
And then I walked away like totally,
I felt like a total jackass for asking him for the photo.
And then I turned around and I yelled at Christy and Lily
in front of everybody, look what you made me do!
No I didn't.
I was like, he's having family time.
And I was like, and then it like clicked for them too
and they're like, all three of us, it clicked in our minds
I think at that moment, it was like,
wait, I bet we could have that too.
You know, it was like the tables.
We could have family time?
The tables turned where it was like,
what if learning from my mentor, Sterling K. Brown,
I adopted a similar mantra when it came to,
I'm out in public but I'm having special time
with my wife and my kids.
This is a difficult one.
I respected him totally and I felt.
I have no judgment of him.
And by the way.
I felt bad for asking him.
I felt like.
Did you talk to him the other night at that thing?
He did not recognize, we went to a party and he was there
and we might tell more of the details of that party later
so I wanna save it.
Okay.
Except for the fact that like I shook his hand
and I like looked in his eyes and I was like,
is he gonna recognize me as that guy?
No, I'm sure he wouldn't.
He didn't.
Now.
Even though it was me and Christy there.
This is interesting because okay, at the same premiere,
a number of people, 10, I don't know, came up. And asked to get pictures with us.
And got pictures with us.
And some people, like one of them was, it was a mom.
She came up and she was like, my son is a huge fan.
And he was there.
And it turns out he was in the freaking
movie, he was one of the kids in the family in Shazam.
Yeah.
And we, and that, I think two things are going on.
Number one, we don't see ourselves on the level
of Sterling K. Brown, right?
I know some people are like, that's ridiculous,
there's no difference between what you do and what,
well I'm just telling you, I see him as a real celebrity and I see myself
as a YouTuber and I know that's,
I'm selling the whole platform short by saying that
but just mentally, because anybody can make a YouTube video.
Not anybody can just go and say,
I'm on an episode of This Is Us.
You can make your own show on YouTube
just as easily as we can.
So it just feels like it's-
Or can you?
It feels like there's a different thing going on.
Maybe he has experienced, well, if I come to,
like I'm bringing my kid to this thing
and if I get a picture with one person,
it would lead to a picture with,
and all of a sudden this is about me and not about my son.
So I completely understand that.
But for me, and when we were at the Shazam premiere,
I always feel like we don't really,
we shouldn't be there, imposter syndrome.
I'm like, wow, we're just two guys from North Carolina
who just kinda got lucky and nobody knows
that we're just a couple of dumb rednecks
and we just know how to put hair product in.
And maybe if Sterling K. Brown sees us
get a picture with somebody,
then something will, maybe we can be friends with him.
Exactly, and so when you're in this mode,
I gotta admit, it's like, oh,
there's other real celebrities here.
If somebody wants a picture with me,
there's that dynamic.
But Sterling K. Brown is not thinking about it like that.
He isn't trying to impress anybody.
Right.
And so I guess when you get to this centered,
balanced place, you can say things like,
I'm having family time right now,
so I'm gonna have to pass.
And you say that without apology.
So are you now saying that that is what you're gonna say
when you're with your family?
I think I'm going to, when I go into certain situations,
like if it's a special event that I'm bringing
one of my kids to because they are particularly excited about that
and it is about, hey, I'm bringing you to this thing,
we're talking about it and there's a buildup to it
and then we get there and there's,
like I'm spending 10% of my time taking photos with people,
I think that that sends,
it's a missed opportunity to send a message to that child
that like, you're the priority and this is about you,
this is not about me.
I think we've just broken down the psychology
of what selfies could mean to us in a situation like that.
And I think that, so I'm not saying across the board,
but I'm saying I'm gonna choose,
I'm gonna try to choose going into events
like a mindset of doing that.
Like especially if it's an enclosed space
where there's lots of people that could be fans.
That's the environment, I think the environment
is a big deal.
If you're walking down the street.
One picture leads to another, leads to another.
If you're just walking down the street with your family,
having family time, and somebody's like,
hey, can I get a picture?
Like that's a 10 second interaction or whatever.
Now if they wanna start talking and they have a bunch of questions, at that point you 10 second interaction or whatever, no, if they wanna start talking
and they have a bunch of questions,
at that point you'd be like, I'm sorry,
I'm with my family now and I'm,
people are still gonna think you're a jerk for doing it,
just so you know, because people are gonna be like,
why can't he just give me a minute?
That's just the way people are.
Like you actually took a very mature perspective
on the way that you responded to Sterling K. Brown
and you're only able to do that because you can relate.
But if somebody couldn't relate,
they would just be like,
he's kind of a jerk for doing that.
They wouldn't go to the next step and be like,
oh, that's sweet that he's doing that for his kid
because there's other dynamics
that people don't understand going on.
So I do think that the environment is really important.
If I'm just out in the middle of somewhere where there's,
it's not like all of a sudden a crowd could form
or somebody else, I'm gonna say, okay, sure,
let's do a quick photo or whatever.
But I do think that if it's a situation,
like amusement parks are the supreme situation
because you're there for your family to have a good time and one recognition
and one picture leads to more and then it becomes,
the first time I went to Disneyland with my kids,
right when people were starting to recognize us,
I ruined their day.
It ruined their day.
Right.
And because I was trying to be nice
and I'm like, oh, I'm the approachable guy from YouTube.
Yeah, of course you can get a picture with me.
And that turned into, I've gotta get a hat.
I've gotta get a hat and sunglasses.
And then I always felt like one of those douches
walking around with a hat and,
I'm wearing a hat and sunglasses at Disneyland
so you won't recognize me, douche level.
Excuse me, sir, can I get a picture with you
because I've never seen someone so douche-like.
But I.
Your douche level is so high.
I ruined my family's day, so I do think
that you kinda have to evaluate the environment
and then you have to have, like I'm sure he said that line,
I'm sorry, I'm having family time right now
so I'm gonna have to pass, he's worked on that line.
Yeah.
He's made it as disarming as possible.
Sterling K. Disarmament.
That's what I'm gonna be doing from now on.
Yeah, I think that's helpful.
I think that's a good stopping point, you know?
Food for thought.
I think this has been beneficial for us.
I don't know what it's done for you,
but thanks for hanging in there.
Hopefully it hasn't made you incredibly nervous about,
if you see us in public, I don't know what to do now
that they talked about it like this.
Just be yourself, just be yourself.
Be yourself and evaluate the environment.
We'll be doing the same thing.
Yeah, but it's on us to set the boundary.
You know, leave that to us.
We will crush you.
No we won't.
You have a rec for us?
Oh yeah, as a reward for hanging on so long,
give you a recommendation.
Check baby, check baby, one, two, three, four,
rec baby, rec.
You know what, I'd like to recommend going over
and perusing and maybe participating
in the Good Mythical Morning and Rhett and Link Reddit
threads, subreddits.
In the occasional times that I go through there,
I'm encouraged about the thoughtful exchanges
that are happening around our content.
So check that out.
And then if you want more relational
and even deeper interactions with people,
other mythical beasts, then of course,
I'll tack on a recommendation for becoming a member
of the Mythical Society.
But yeah, I like the, I'm encouraged by the tone
and the thoughtfulness of the exchanges on Reddit
and you might, if you haven't been there,
you might be pleasantly surprised in lurking
and then joining in.
So those two subreddits.
So there you have it.
Well thank you for joining us once again.
We will be doing the same thing, just slightly different.
We'll be talking about something different,
but the same two guys sitting at the same table
in the same formation.
Link's voice may be a little bit different
because he won't have a collar anymore.
Hashtag Ear Biscuits.
Let us know what your thoughts are and don't be afraid to let it
shine. If the sun is hiding, then your teeth can make the difference in someone's life.
Just smile a little smile and brighten the environment.
So that's an original, right?
We don't have to pay anybody for that.
I think that was painfully obvious.
I went to, you know, I was at lunch yesterday.
Are you done now?
I'm not done.
Oh.
I could tell that I got recognized
by someone who was seated with us,
and then they were seated further down,
and me and Christy were on a date
and the whole time in the back of my mind
I knew that there was this like,
these people who recognized me,
you know they were fans.
Like it was a little more like giddy fan energy.
And so like, I've learned to deal with the fact that like,
okay I know I'm being watched right now
even though I'm on a date.
Yep.
It's like, there was a couple of years there
where it was like that did a number on me.
But I think I'm over that.
But.
I thought this was gonna end with,
and I went and sat with them.
We got a picture afterward,
like we ended up leaving at the same time
and they were waiting outside for me to come out.
So at least they didn't approach me at the table.
So I thought that was a nice boundary.
But it was weird, because you know,
you ever feel like you've been watched
when you're on a date?
And it's actually much easier than people realize
for you to notice that they've noticed you.
You don't even have to try.
Even though I'm oblivious.
Right.
So thank goodness I'm oblivious.
You notice twice as much as I do.
I have a great vantage point.
Okay, now we're done.