Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - 216: Our True Feelings On Self-Promotion | Ear Biscuits Ep. 216
Episode Date: November 11, 2019It's all a game. Or is it really? Upon returning from their recent tour, R&L look back on their recent media appearances to promote their new book The Lost Causes of Bleak Creek. Listen to the guys op...en up about how they really feel about going on all of the different shows and how their new book got them back in touch with the roots of their friendship on this episode of Ear Biscuits! To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This, this, this, this is Mythical.
Welcome to Ear Biscuits.
I'm Rhett.
And I'm Link.
This week at the round table of dim lighting,
we're tackling the issue of self-promotion.
The question is how do we feel about self-promotion?
There's a lot of that.
We never promote ourselves.
We're constantly making stuff
and then you gotta promote it.
And I'm not apologizing for it.
And I would say specifically.
But there's a lot of psychology.
Not just, we promote ourselves all the time
in our own work, in our own properties, right?
Yeah.
This is not, we're not gonna talk about that
as much as we're gonna talk about
when you got to go on other people's shows,
make media appearances, have a media day,
and promote yourself.
Yeah, so we're gonna pull back the curtain
on what that's like, what our experience is,
what our raw assessment of that.
It seems like we have a negative view on it
by the tone of our conversation at this point.
It's really mixed.
Because we're just fresh off of our Bleak Creek
conversation story. And we're just fresh.
We're just fresh.
I mean look at us.
All black, man, look at this.
Look at these guys.
Where are these guys going?
I'm actually not that fresh.
I'm a little bit jet lagged, you know.
We're recording this on a, what is it, what day is it?
To Tuesday?
To Tuesday.
I feel better today.
I got back Saturday night.
You don't feel like you bounced a little bit today?
No.
You went to the gym this morning, right?
I did not go to the gym.
See, that's it.
Going to the gym bounces you into the day.
I thought about not going and you should've gone.
You should've gone, man,
because I feel good right now. I was gonna go. I wanna fight somebody. I you should've gone. You should've gone, man, because I feel good right now.
I wanna fight somebody.
I was gonna go yesterday.
Sometimes I get that feeling I wanna fight somebody,
I'm in that mood right now.
Well, you're not gonna get that from me.
If you start fighting me, I'm just gonna roll into a ball.
I'm kinda dressed like a boxer.
You know, like he's got a hoodie and like a hat.
You're just wearing a hoodie.
Boxers wear hoodies.
Well yeah, they wear hoodies.
They do things like this.
They wear sweatpants and they jog.
They wear like.
And they jump rope and stuff.
When they come to the weigh-in,
they pull their hoodie over their hat.
And sometimes they also have headphones on like this.
I kinda feel like maybe I should get into that.
Is it too late to get into that Logan Paul thing?
I think that's probably already happened
by the time you're hearing this.
When fighters weigh in and they're wearing headphones,
doesn't that make them weigh more?
Yeah, it's when you wanna go up to the next level.
Please count my headphones.
No, you come to the weigh in like that
and then you strip down into some colorful underpants.
That's the way I do it at least.
So what I was trying to say was we are fresh off
the Bleak Creek Conversations tour.
You know, for the past week prior to recording this episode,
we've been touring, doing what you might think
is just a book tour, but we tried to make it really special
and like we had the documentary of us going back
to Buies Creek and then making all the connections
how that ties into Bleak Creek.
And we also released that on Good Mythical Morning.
So we're basking in the public response to that
which I'm very encouraged by.
Oh yeah.
But again, with the time change
and the being on the road and a lot of flights
and a lot of self-promotion,
a lot of talking about yourself in other people's places.
So we're gonna unpack what that experience is like.
But coming back home to my place,
it means, it's so important to me.
I just started thinking about, yeah, I wanna be on my bed,
I wanna be in my bed, I wanna be on my toilet,
I wanna be on my couch, I wanna be in my bed, I wanna be on my toilet, I wanna be on my couch, I wanna be in my backyard,
I wanna be with my family and my dog.
I started thinking about pining for these things,
especially when in self-promotion mode.
So we took yesterday off.
We didn't see or talk to each other.
So let's start there.
Let's start with our yesterdays.
I had an interesting yesterday.
Christy had a proposal for me.
I was like, hey, let's hang out,
sent the kids off to school.
And she's like, let's go get a pedicure.
And I'm like, okay.
Interesting. Anytime you're paying
somebody to do something to you,
I'm up for that.
You know, a little self pampering.
But what I forgot, I-
Pedicures suck.
I've had a pedicure once.
I don't like people touching my feet.
And it was on, it was at the hotel we were staying at
and I think like Cabo or something
with Christy and I.
That's the only time I've had one.
And I had forgotten that I decided at that time
that I did not like pedicures
and I didn't want another one.
Yep, that's when I decided.
I remembered that when I was getting
this pedicure yesterday.
Here's the thing that I specifically remembered.
It's not just that, and I agree with you,
I don't like people touching my feet.
For the longest time when I got a massage,
I would say nix the feet.
I still say that.
I don't want the feet, you know?
There's like some tickling involved.
But here's the thing for me.
It brought back traumatic childhood memories.
I was deathly afraid of my toenails being clipped.
I certainly wouldn't do it myself and my mom wouldn't.
I would throw what I call a conniption.
I would throw a tantrum and start.
What age are you talking about?
As young as I can remember.
I mean, maybe four or five years old.
But I think it, I'm pretty sure it continued into at least like second grade.
So after I knew you, I wouldn't, I wouldn't.
My stepdad Jimmy, mom had to call Jimmy
and like grab my ankles and hold them down
so that she could clip my toenails.
Like I was-
What were you scared of?
I was afraid of being cut
and like bleeding happening.
Like, man, I am really afraid of like trimming nails
too short.
That, woo, that's like nails on a chalkboard to me.
That doesn't, that doesn't freak you out?
You ever had a nail cut too short?
Well, yeah.
It's not, I mean, I don't look forward to it.
It hurts, it bleeds.
I don't have a phobia.
And then what makes it even worse is that
then you have to wait for like for a week or so
for it to grow out to the point where it doesn't feel like,
I just start to feel like the whole end of my finger
is gonna start nubbing off.
I got nail problems.
I mean like you see what's happening there on those.
See that, see how it detaches?
Yeah, you got a lot of white ends,
but it's not like a French manicure.
It's psoriasis.
So you get psoriasis under your nail beds
and the nail detaches.
So this'll go all the way down sometimes.
And then it'll just go.
I thought you determined that was from diet.
No, no I've thought about that.
I thought your diet would fix it.
Well my diet causes it to not be nearly as bad
but yeah I still have flare ups.
There's none on this hand right now.
But you can see.
You have it on your toenails too?
Not as much on my toenails but you can see
like if I were to cut that down,
that nail down to where it needs to be,
like there's a lot of like fleshy part,
like that's a normal, this is a normal person's nail.
Like the nail goes to the end of the finger.
Yeah, that's great.
But that doesn't happen on any of my fingers anymore
except that index finger because I've got nail problems.
Well I'm in there and it's like,
I had to start like doing some deep breathing techniques.
I didn't wanna complain or like bolt out of there.
I was like maybe this is like therapeutic for me,
like facing my fears.
That's not what the pedicure's about though.
I mean I appreciate you trying to change your perspective
but you're supposed to enjoy it.
I'm doing some like deep belly breathing
and then on my big toe, apparently she,
yeah, I wouldn't say I have an ingrown toenail.
But she did.
It kind of goes in on the side
and I cut the thing a little too short
so then she's like digging in there,
like trying to do some sort of operation.
And I'm like, oh gosh, this is horrible.
Does your wife enjoy it or does she enjoy the results?
I think she enjoys it.
Some people don't mind.
There was a little bit of a leg massage.
Some people don't mind their feet being touched.
I got over that.
I don't enjoy, like the foot massage part of a massage
just makes me laugh.
I cannot just enjoy it.
It feels, it either feels like it's ticklish
or it just feels incredibly uncomfortable.
But there's no, like it doesn't feel soothing in any way.
And trying not to laugh makes it more uncomfortable, right?
Because then you're like, you're kind of like squirming.
Because you don't want to laugh.
Like why not just come out and laugh?
Because laughter's a nice release.
Yeah, because then you just seem like the Joker.
You don't want to do that.
You're just laughing in awkward times.
Well no, I think they would understand that like,
hey, it's ticklish.
They've encountered a ticklish person before.
Yeah, so it's not like they would think
you're demented or something.
How do your toes look though?
How do your nails look, great?
Good, they weren't painted or anything.
I would definitely, if I'm gonna take that much time
for something, it's definitely gotta be a massage next time.
It can't be the pedicure.
But I think there are people who like,
they never let anybody touch their toes.
I said that backwards.
They never touch their toes themselves.
They only let other people do it.
So it's just like, oh, I don't trim my nails.
Somebody does that for me.
You think that's true?
I think that's gotta be the case.
Yeah, I'd say a lot of people.
Rich ladies, yeah.
Yeah. Yeah.
Rich ladies don't touch their toenails.
They don't let love people do it.
It's hard to get down there
and really give it a detailed working.
I didn't get a pedicure yesterday.
What'd you get?
A manicure? A manicure, yeah.
You know, I did think about getting a manicure.
I'm not gonna let anybody,
I mean, what are people gonna do with that?
There's nothing they can do.
Oh, they could do a lot.
Shine it up, trim it down.
But. Tame those cuticles. The unfortunate thing is that both of my kids There's nothing they can do. Oh they can do a lot, shine it up, trim it down.
Tame those cuticles.
The unfortunate thing is that both of my kids were sick and had to stay home from school.
Oh.
And so then Jessie was like,
I feel like we should stay here with them.
And I'm like, I feel like we should leave them to themselves.
Dad got a day off, he was thinking he was going to get
to have a day date with his wife.
Yeah.
And so I still wanted that to happen.
Sure.
And she was like, well what are they gonna eat?
I was like, well there's a kitchen.
You know, there's a kitchen there, there's food in there.
How sick were they, were they like bedridden?
Or they're just like sniffles?
They were like, it was a cold
and maybe a little bit of a fever for Shepard
so it was like, this wouldn't be responsible,
this would be irresponsible to let them go.
To school, yeah.
So did you leave them?
Yeah, we left them. Did you win?
Yeah, and then Jessie.
And when you came back, were they all right?
They were still there.
Yeah, so good choice.
I mean Jessie would say things like,
she told him, she said, okay, there's some pasta in the refrigerator
that you can, like some ravioli type thing, you know.
Okay.
Some of that, it's in the fancy Italian section of the,
I call it the fancy Italian section of the frozen,
of the cold part of the grocery store,
where it's like the pasta
that isn't frozen, it's in that plastic thing
and you can throw it in there and boil it up
and you feel a little bit more like a chef.
All you did was boil some pasta.
But it was never frozen so it's like,
it feels fresh. Yeah, it was never frozen
so it feels fancy.
Yeah.
It feels kinda like the Italian food version
of a pedicure.
Yeah.
So you're just throwing that at the kids.
Well, they can make that, Lot can boil that,
and then Jesse's like,
well what if he doesn't turn the stove off?
I'm like, well, it'll just be a stove that is on.
Right.
Because stoves can be on, right?
How long a stove is on
doesn't necessarily increase the danger, right?
But the burner could be off,
but the gas could still be on, then you got a problem.
That's a problem, but that's kinda hard to do.
Yeah.
But I did text Locke and said,
"'Hey man, if you turn the stove on,
"'make sure you turn it off.
He was like, okay.
And when you got home, what was burned?
Nothing.
Nothing was burned. That's good.
They had full bellies.
But what did you do?
I went to a restaurant.
Okay.
Had a brunch thing.
Had a brunch.
And then we went grocery shopping.
Oh yeah, now we're to it.
Yeah.
Romance.
When, I mean, I could spend a lot of time at Whole Foods.
Really?
Yeah.
Yeah, Whole Foods, it, Whole Foods is kinda like,
there is a sense of discovery when you go there.
Yeah.
Unless you go there a lot.
I don't.
I don't go there a lot.
So you, yeah, so it's kinda like,
whoa, they got this fancy,
they got a lot of fancy crap.
Well, I wanted to come home and I wanted to grill something.
Okay. And they just have,
the meat section is just so impressive.
The meat section?
Have you seen the meat section?
No. Whole Foods?
I mean, it puts other meat sections to shame.
I'm more of a like, the weird beverage.
They got weird beverages, yeah.
And peanut butter spread sections.
They got that too.
What did you get?
Chicken thighs.
That doesn't seem odd.
No, I mean.
It doesn't seem very.
There was a lot of things that I could have gotten
that I couldn't have gotten anywhere else.
Like they had a giant, just a giant tomahawk steak.
Oh yeah.
Just, I mean, just obscene.
That's kind of intimidating.
Like I don't even know if it would fit on my grill.
And you don't wanna mess that up.
And, um.
Can't go wrong with chicken thighs.
But I do wanna get one of those at one point.
Daddy cooks a tomahawk and then I just come in
holding it by the bone and let the family eat off of it.
Like a giant meat drumstick.
You could rent like a cave.
You could like, I'll go into a cave.
No, I want to do it in the kitchen.
You could wear like skins.
You could show up with a big hunk of meat.
But no, I got chicken thighs.
Man, chicken thighs.
Can't beat a good chicken thigh on the grill, man.
I put some rub on them.
Boneless?
No, I went bone in, skin on.
Hell yeah.
Even though I talked about getting boneless,
but Jessie was like, no, no, no, you gotta get the bone in.
And I understand why.
It's just a little nastier to eat
because of the dark meat and you get down
to the right next to the bone
and no matter how well you've cooked it,
it's a little pink right next to the bone
and you're kind of like, did I cook this enough?
Oh.
And you're asking yourself that question.
But no, I put some rub on them
and then I cooked them on some hot coals, charcoal.
Then I put some barbecue sauce on at the end
and let it caramelize a little bit,
you know, blacken them up a little bit.
Also grilled some poblano peppers along with them.
The California one. Fire roasted poblanos.
Cut those up, put them in the middle of the table.
You could have them along with your chicken.
Everybody was happy with Dad for at least for a little bit.
Okay, that's good but your toes though.
My toes were in shoes the whole time.
I think your toes need work.
I've seen them occasionally, those nails,
I mean I think you could really stand to benefit.
It's not a.
It needs to be done.
No, it's not a lack of care.
It has nothing to do with care, it's genetics.
Yeah.
I could get.
They can buff it and shape it and do something.
Why?
For who?
Who would it be for?
You?
Because it's not for me.
I don't care.
I feel like the way your nails grow,
they like grow up and out.
No, they grow, they hug,
they hug the end of the toe.
They don't grow out, they just go around the toe.
That's good, maybe you never need to cut them.
Like a claw.
Like a, it's like your toes have a helmet
if you let it keep growing.
A little nail helmet.
I keep them trimmed for the most part.
It's just, you know, they're just-
It's a real long ways for you.
They're just unsightly.
Did you get down there to that toe?
I don't, to be honest with you,
and this is probably sexist,
I just don't trust a man with good looking feet.
You know, I just, I feel like he's up to something.
That explains why whenever we have an important meeting
or interview, you ask people to take off their shoes
and socks.
Right, and if it's a man and he has like spectacular feet,
I'm like, you know, I don't know.
I don't know if I can trust you.
Yeah, that's probably sexist.
It's probably multiple things.
I'm just being honest.
Speaking of being honest, I wanna be honest
about what it's like to do the self-promotion. So we're going to get into that.
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So we had a, well, I think on the calendar,
we called it media day.
This was, the day in particular,
we did a number of things,
but the day that I'm thinking about in particular
is Monday of this past week when we're recording this,
in which we had to.
In New York City.
We had to get up, I'm just gonna give an overview
of the day and then we can get into the details.
Okay.
We had to get up, get dressed,
go to the Today Show first?
I think so, yeah.
Then we had to go to Condé Nast,
who owns Wired and Vanity Fair,
do three videos with them.
And then immediately go to The Tonight Show
with Jimmy Fallon and then go directly
from The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon
to the Bleak Creek Conversations.
And that's why we showed up at that particular show
in our suits.
When I say it like that, it doesn't feel like
it was a whole lot, but it certainly felt like
a whole lot at the time.
Well, especially with the time change,
I mean, it's three hours difference,
so you're having to get up,
let's just say three hours earlier than we normally would.
I definitely had not yet adjusted yet.
So that's kinda, and it was the second or third day
of having been on the time,
that's when the jet lag really hits.
So it was pretty difficult but I mean,
you go on the Today Show, with all these,
I mean with the television shows,
it's true of Fallon, it's true of the Today Show
and any other appearance like that.
You do this pre-interview where you're kinda talking
to the producer in order to,
you know, they know what you wanna promote.
It's like we're talking to them about the novel
so that they can find a touch point
that works with their audience
so they can ask us a question that then, you know,
we can say something that'll resonate.
But then you also, you know, you gotta try to get a funny story
in there or like play a game or apparently,
they're throwing more and more things at guest appearances
in order to get people to watch them.
We can unpack that more but I think when we went
to the Today Show and the Tonight Show,
so we kinda knew based on the pre-interview
with the producers what it is we were gonna be doing.
But I will say that that interview went,
it was very short, but it went a lot,
it actually wasn't what we had been asked
in the pre-interview, unlike Fallon,
which we can get into in a second.
But you know, it's, well, let's back up a little bit
and talk about thinking about what we were gonna wear
because that was the first thing that happened.
So all right, we have a wonderful stylist, Kimmy Aaron,
who is the person
who helps us figure out what we're gonna wear
when we make these media appearances.
If you think that we look good on Jimmy Fallon,
you can think Kimi Aron.
And she also put together these looks for the Today Show
and then we had another day of stuff we needed to do.
A Chicago thing, yeah.
So I think that we have this, we've discussed this,
we're comfortable in two different modes, typically,
when it comes to what we're wearing.
And that is casual.
Whatever we would wear on Good Mythical Morning.
Which is whatever we would wear on GMM.
Which is basically what we would wear
if I was just getting up and going about my day.
Right, and then we have very dressed up,
sharply dressed like we were on Fallon.
Full suit, tie, socks that match, et cetera.
I like to wear, it's fun to get dressed up
every now and again, especially when it's something
that's important to us that, you know,
you can be justified getting that fancy
by being on The Tonight Show.
A lot of people take a different tack
when they go on The Tonight Show.
So Tyler, Ninja, he went on The Tonight Show in a hoodie.
He was dressed like I am right now,
like a boxer getting ready to weigh in.
Well let's say a gamer.
Yeah. He was dressed like a gamer.
And so he was like, okay, everybody does a different thing.
I was like, we're like, no, we're gonna dress up.
But there's this, what you might call a no man's land
for us, which is this, would you call it business casual?
Well, it's called the way we looked on the Today Show.
Yeah. So I had this like
black jacket over a turtleneck
and these tan pants and these black shoes.
I would very rarely, if ever,
choose to wear any of these things for myself, right?
I mean, I thought you looked good in it.
I mean, the pants that I wore were purple pants
from a suit that I had, but then I had this sweater,
this like thin very dressy block pattern sweater
that I wore with it.
I thought yours was a little less.
I actually would, I would wear that on like a nice date.
But not really, not in LA.
There's very few places where you go on a nice date.
You don't go out, at least I don't go out for a date in LA,
even at a really nice restaurant and wear a blazer.
Yeah.
I don't just put a blazer on over stuff.
That weird in between stage is I just can't find
a way to be comfortable.
But for the Today Show, we were given that.
We were given something in this middle zone, the things that we ended up wearing.
And we had a choice.
I will say that we have a choice.
So Kimmy comes in, she has a spread of different clothes,
and so she's going for this sort of updated,
like well, I would say elevated casual,
little bit dressed up but little bit dressed down look
for the Today Show because if you look at what people wear
on the Today Show, that's what they wear.
And so, and also you're thinking about like,
it's funny because we have conversations with our publisher
who says things like, you know, mostly moms are gonna be
watching the Today Show at the hour that you're going
to be on, the fourth hour of the Today Show.
And so we want you to impress moms.
Right.
And say something about the book
that would make them want to buy the book
for their teenager.
So then we picked out these outfits
that we just described to you,
and then we packed them.
And then we're like, we're talking on the flight
and we're like, man, that's,
it's like we're like fretting about these outfits.
We're like, man, I don't feel comfortable.
And I'm saying things like, you know, your jacket's so big.
You're already so big, it's like, you make me look small.
Why you gotta wear this big ass jacket
that makes me look even smaller?
And so like, that's my qualm.
And you're like, well, I'm not even comfortable wearing this anyway.
We don't have to talk about that
but I think that's in your mind.
It is, yeah, it was my overthinking of the ensemble.
But you're like I don't even wanna wear this anyway.
I don't feel like it's not us,
I don't feel as comfortable,
it's like all the stuff that you just said.
And so then we tell Jenna, we're like,
so we're thinking about not wearing the clothes
that Kimmy picked out, we're thinking about wearing
the slightly less dressy clothes that she picked out
for the Chicago thing on the Today Show.
Yeah.
So she's like, okay, I'll get those ready.
And then we get a text from Stevie.
And Stevie's like,
so I heard you guys are thinking about not wearing
the clothes that Kimmy picked out for you for today's show.
I was like, uh oh, here we go.
Because I could tell.
And this is, now, this is, obviously we have
an incredible relationship with Stevie
and we've been working with her for how many years
it's been, seven or eight years.
And this is often the nature of our relationship.
This is what we want her to do.
In fact, when you wished her happy birthday the other day,
you said thank you for supporting us,
disagreeing with us and blankety blank, right.
Because she's very good at what she does.
And she's usually right.
And so she was like, well, I do think that you want this
to be an elevated look, you are trying to impress moms
and I think that, and she like sends us the pictures of,
because once you get through in the wardrobe,
you take a picture of yourself.
She's like, this is what you're thinking about wearing,
but this is what you could be wearing.
I think you should go with what you could be wearing.
And I'm like, she's probably right,
but I just wanna be comfortable.
And does it really matter anyway?
Who's gonna watch this?
I start thinking things like this.
I'm like, is going on this show and talking about this book
for 45 seconds gonna make anybody buy it anyway?
Like that's the kind of thing I start thinking.
It's easy to start thinking that,
especially when you start doing it.
But yeah, I'm like, listen, okay,
we're not gonna die on this hill.
Like Jenna brought these clothes.
But then Jenna, so we had that conversation with Stevie
and I was like okay, we'll keep talking about it.
I didn't make, neither of us made a definitive decision.
You got off of the text thread.
I think you went to work out or something,
you were like I'm not gonna talk about this now.
So after some back and forth with Stevie,
then I text Jenna and I'm like okay,
well we may wear the other clothes
and she was like I thought you might say that
and I've already got them ready.
And then she was like, I thought you might say that and I've already got them ready. And then she was like, I agree
that that's what you should wear.
So, okay, Jenna and Stevie now both think
that this is what we should be wearing
to impress all the moms watching the Today Show
in the fourth hour and so that's what we did, we wore it.
You know, and it's all a game.
So looking at this as like a case study,
there's two different ways you can look at this
as a listener, I'm thinking.
One is, yeah, this is a game and maybe you can see how
it gets, it can start to wear on you
because it's like, no pun intended.
Okay, I'm wearing something that I wouldn't naturally wear
even on a date, but I'm doing it so that I can
reach this perceived mom demographic.
It's like, ugh.
But then on the other hand, it's like,
you got somebody who's bringing in like a spread of clothes
and we're trying all this stuff on
and somebody makes us look elevated.
Isn't that fun?
I mean, it's definitely fun to, and it is.
I think both are true.
Especially when you talk about the suits
and being able to look your finest
and go on the Tonight Show for not the first
but I think the sixth time.
Yeah.
You know, it's freaking awesome.
So it's like.
No, it's great.
We're not complaining.
It's just, we think it's amusing
the games that you have to play when it comes to marketing.
Well, I will say that in the moment,
in the moment, it is difficult for me to enjoy.
Yeah.
I am often,
when that day, when I knew that day was coming, right?
I was like, okay, we're gonna do the Today Show.
And the day, by the way, for those of you
who might be confused, if you were following along
during the week that we,
we recorded the Today Show, but then it shot,
it aired that Thursday or Friday, so.
But all this was done on the same day.
I was thinking about that day,
and you have so little control in those situations,
like when you, for every situation that we were going into,
you're, it's, we're not in control, we're not hosting,
we're on somebody else's show.
And I definitely don't look forward to it.
I actually start thinking about,
I have these fantasies about being in my hotel room
at the end of the night going to bed.
Yeah.
And that is not necessarily a healthy way to see that day.
When you wake up in the morning,
you're thinking about, oh, I just wanna be back here
going to bed because I'm anxious about the stuff
that I have to do.
And I don't wanna overblow it.
I'm not like, it's not a debilitating,
it's not like a true, it's not like an anxiety disorder.
I don't, I'm not like super uncomfortable.
It's just like, I have trouble getting myself to enjoy this.
I'd rather be doing this on my own terms.
But then, in the moment,
especially depending on what it was, I think,
when we were on Fallon and we were performing a song
that we had written when we were 14,
I was legitimately having a good time at that point.
Yeah, that was amazing.
But for the Today Show, I mean,
the morning shows are like zoos.
I mean, it's just like, with all the cages open,
it's just, everybody's going everywhere in cramped quarters
and you're being shoved here to wait
and then come out here and then, oh, let's meet the host,
and oh, they're putting blindfolds on you and you're eating a sandwich
that they made.
It's like, we knew we were gonna do that and that was funny
and then we did the interview and it was like okay,
we knew we were gonna get a couple of questions
about the book, we get the first question,
because we wanna talk to the moms about the novel.
You know, we got all dressed up for you mom.
We wanna hear, you wanna hear about this novel?
And so they ask you, what's the novel about?
And you're like sharing what the novel's about
and then I'm like, okay, I know what my follow up is
just to kinda clarify, you know, what I think's gonna
resonate with the viewer.
But I didn't even have a chance to get that in
because they move so quickly.
You're giving your answer about like the brief synopsis of the Lost Causes of Bleak Creek
and right on the heels of that she says,
you guys wanna play a game where we zoom in on food
and you guess what it is?
I was like whoa, okay, sure.
So you know I've heard Joe Rogan talk about this.
It's like being in a rock tumbler.
Joe Rogan has talked about the fact that he's like,
I hate doing morning radio
and I don't wanna do like appearances and interviews.
So I just have this podcast and I just tell people
that I'm gonna be somewhere and they come to my shows
and they sell out and you know what?
He can do that because he has the most popular podcast
in the world.
We can't do that.
If we just told you guys on GMM and Ear Biscuits
about what we were doing,
a lot less people would find out about it.
So we don't have the privilege of being able to make that,
but I understand the impulse because even the way
podcasting in general, I mean, obviously we don't do
interviews anymore, but you know,
the way that everything is put into these
really bite-sized pieces, even when you've got
a daily show, like the Today Show,
which I guess goes for four, is it four hours every day?
I don't know, it's at least four hours every day.
Well at least three but go ahead.
Because we were in the fourth,
they said we were in the fourth hour
so it's gotta be at least four hours, right?
Yeah, that's when they,
they don't worry about the news anymore
and they start zooming in on pictures of food.
Right, and so if you have got to talk
and fill that time every single day,
you would think this might be a place
for a slightly slower paced, relaxed conversation about something.
But no, even in that, four hours of content,
it's gonna be what's your book about?
You say one line and you say, all right,
let's play a game where we zoom in on food.
That's just the nature of the medium.
I'm not necessarily complaining about it,
but I'm just saying you have to know
that that is the environment you're going into,
as opposed to when we made the appearance
on the Dead Meat podcast.
And Pete Holmes podcast.
Yeah.
And the Books on the Subway podcast,
which we did in New York. Basically any podcast.
Any podcast, you can be like,
I'm going to talk about this at my own pace
and I'm gonna get to say the things
that I wanna say about it.
Which by the way,
I do recommend you listen to those podcasts.
If you're reading the novel right now
and you're into the details of it
but you want a spoiler-free conversation,
Dead Meat podcast was a really fun discussion.
Yeah, with James and Chelsea.
And then similarly, spoiler free podcast conversation
on books on the subway, like an off the rails conversation.
That one went places.
So yeah, and then particularly for
You Made It Weird with Pete Holmes,
two hours of talking about a lot of topics that,
using the book as a jumping off point,
we talked about lots of things in the realm of faith
that I don't think we've ever talked about.
So if you're interested in that,
definitely check out our guest on Pete's podcast.
But yeah, when it comes to podcasting and that pacing,
podcasting gives me hope.
Because it is that conversational, drawn out, going deep.
I mean, what we're doing right now is rewarding.
It's a rewarding experience for us
and I'm just glad that people wanna listen.
Well, and I think there's also an authenticity
to the platform, not just given the fact that-
You could've dressed a little more elevated,
I'm just saying.
Exactly, so it's like,
why are we worrying about this pretense?
And as you listen to us talk about this,
I'm sure because you've chosen to listen to a podcast,
you've chosen to make guys who make primarily
internet videos a part of your entertainment landscape.
If you've made that decision,
then you probably have chosen that
because you have a distaste
for the traditional way things are done.
You're not watching the Today Show.
You don't wanna see these pre-packaged clips
that are moving at this ridiculous pace.
You don't wanna think about,
oh, those guys are dressed like that,
not because it's who they are,
but it's who they think someone else wants them to be.
I understand that that might be a huge turnoff.
We're just kinda being really honest
about the way that we're talking about it
because it is a game.
When you go into someone else's territory
and the whole point is to be there to appeal
to their audience so very frankly you can sell more books
because you believe in what you created
and you want to be able to write more
and you want this thing to break outside of your fan base,
you kinda have to swallow some of those things.
Well, you don't have to, but we have chosen to,
without any shame, to swallow some of those things.
But I would say that it is the more laid back,
more authentic, new media appearances that are more fun.
new media appearances that are more fun.
But you know the traditional television media,
you see how they're being informed by the internet. It's like your point about the Today Show
was you'd think that by the fourth hour
that they could stretch things out
and get a little more conversational.
Obviously that's not the case
because we're sitting there like quickly,
I mean our segment was so short, even in the fourth hour.
If you don't stop and zoom in on food,
somebody's gonna turn it to Good Morning America.
Apparently.
Right, is that the theory?
Well it really, I mean it kind of mirrors
what's happening online in terms of click bait.
Or I'll say the way that even The Tonight Show
and all the talk shows have to create content
that then works on the internet.
You know, so it's, we found ourselves in situations
that were not that different than Good Mythical Morning
because of how the landscape is changing.
Perfect example.
The next day we flew to Chicago and we were on
The Windy City, I think is the name of the show.
It's like.
I think it's the ABC affiliate.
Yeah, the Chicago version of the Today Show basically
or Good Morning America.
And you know.
I think that's actually airing today.
We.
That we're recording this.
We never sat down and had an interview.
We said a couple of things about the novel.
They held it up, they plugged it.
But we played this game, what do they call it?
I don't know, but it was feeling squeal.
Yeah, you put your hand in a box
and then you guess what it is you're feeling.
Now, the night before on the Tonight Show,
the guest before us was Reese Witherspoon
and when she first came out, she put her hand in a box
and tried to figure out what it is she was feeling.
She played feeling squeal.
Now I'm not saying that the Tonight Show
and the Windy City have copied us in something we invented.
I don't even know if we invented it.
I don't know.
It was an idea that was waiting to happen.
Vanity Fair did something called the Fear Box
and it was very much the same thing we were doing
with Feel and Squeal but,
and who cares if it was before or after.
It's an obvious idea once you start thinking of
let's have guests do things.
But that's what everybody's doing now.
It's like you find yourself in Chicago on a morning show
and they're playing the same thing that Fallon's playing,
same thing that we're playing.
And not to mention on the Today Show,
the whole zooming in on something and guessing what it is.
Well, we've done that as well.
Again, this isn't a, hey, we did it first.
We're not saying we did it first,
but there's a, we make a show that is,
the pieces of the traditional shows
that are designed to then be viral
or to break out or to make it seem more fun,
well we have a show that is built primarily
with those sensational things in Good Mythical Morning.
And so the conversation that we started having was,
and again, I think we talk about this all the time,
I mean, while we're traveling
and while we're supposed to be enjoying,
hey, we got a book that's out
and people are responding well to it
and we get to go on the Today Show
and we get to go on Fallon,
we just continue, it's our mode to just continue to work
and to discuss and to figure out what are we gonna do next?
I actually have more fun doing that than not doing it,
so it's fine. But what we kept saying was,
hmm, we're constantly trying to innovate
in lots of different ways,
but also within Good Mythical Morning,
and it's just like when you go to a,
for lack of a better word, a local news show in Chicago,
and they're doing the thing that you do on your show,
it's kinda like when your mom got on Facebook
and you were like, I don't think Facebook is for me anymore.
The thing that we start thinking is,
all right, we gotta do something else.
Now that they're doing it for the moms,
now we gotta do something new.
They can copy that if they want,
but I kinda feel like the pressure to be like,
all right, this has gotten all the way to this point.
Let's find something else,
which is a conversation we're constantly having.
We're constantly trying to invent new things, but.
Especially towards the end of a year when we're like,
we're starting to think strategically
about what 2020 looks like,
we're just scratching the surface of that conversation.
But when it comes to Good Mythical Morning, it's like,
as we talked about with Ear Biscuits, evolve or die.
And we don't have the answers.
And so I actually, I'm at a pretty unsettled point
because I think we've started-
Even with a fresh pedicure, you're still unsettled.
Yeah, sadly.
Interesting.
Because I think we've identified this challenge
and we said, you read the tea leaves in the Windy City Show
and it's like, if they're doing what we're doing,
then we need to be doing something else.
So it's like not knowing what that is
and absolutely knowing that it's not a big drastic change
that happens overnight.
The way that everything's set up,
with the way that we produce Good Mythical Morning,
it's more like how do we continue to evolve,
not how do we drastically change what the show is.
But even within that evolution,
like knowing strategically like what are we,
what's the long view, identifying the problem
but then not yet having the answers to me
is an unsettling point.
And I think we, I feel a little bit more
engaged in the challenge of it right now
than I have over the past few years, I think,
when it comes to Good Mythical Morning.
Yeah, I agree with that.
And it's by no means not the only challenge
that we're facing.
I mean, creatively, there's lots of things
we're trying to figure out.
I think it was interesting that we've been having
this conversation about innovation
and then we go and basically every single appearance
that we make, well, also let's talk about the fact that
we, I don't know when those videos are gonna come out,
the ones that we shot for Vanity Fair but.
Well just talk about them, it doesn't matter.
We did a lie detector thing, right?
Well we already done a lie detector thing.
We've done a lie detector thing on our show
and we've also done. With our moms,
but that's not what you're talking about.
But we've done a lie detector thing for Buzzfeed I think.
Like two years ago, right?
And now we're doing another lie detector thing
with whatever outlet that was.
Vanity Fair.
And so I think it's a funny video,
but you start to get this sense that everyone
is doing the same, they're looking out,
they're seeing what works and then they're trying to do it.
Some people just do it exactly the way
that they've seen it done.
And it works. Yeah.
Until it stops working.
And so, and I think we have to be the ones
to find the next things that we're gonna try
that other people will emulate.
Well, and it's a, I mean, it's a tall order.
And we have an incredible team.
And they're coming up with things all the time.
Yeah, when I say we, I mean all of us as a team.
I'm not just talking about the two of us.
But I'm just saying that it's,
the question that's in my mind right now,
and I don't know if I'm gonna be able to articulate it
this way in a way that makes sense
to even me or anyone else.
Try it in Spanish.
Well, that would be even harder.
That would be muy difÃcil.
Okay, you've proven your point.
Hold on, I think I just.
That was French and Spanish.
Spanish and French.
Yeah, okay.
El Francais is what you just did.
Yeah, yeah, right, yeah, yeah.
You know, well, France and Spain are close to each other.
I don't mean to derail you.
You said you didn't know.
There are some people who probably speak Franish.
You said you didn't know if you could articulate your point
and then I made it even more difficult, I'm sorry. That's why you specialize in that.
Oh gosh. Pedicures and derailing.
But the...
It would have been funny if you'd have just ignored it.
I don't know if, to me it feels like
it's not just finding the next box to stick your hand in.
Right?
What's the next version of a box to stick your hand in?
A box to stick your foot in?
You know what I'm saying?
Like you can get really close to it,
but really what we're talking about,
we're talking about a genre.
We're not talking, there's evolution within a genre
and then there's the genre of it,
there's an evolution of the genre.
Evolution within the genre or evolution of the genre.
Right, because how, yeah, and I mean,
because you talk about food,
you talk about us eating so much food on our show.
You can find different ways to, no pun intended,
That's a genre. Slice it.
And you know, it's like, okay, well,
let's eat things from different places.
Specifically remember, you know,
we still do come up with some ideas.
I specifically remember when the international food thing
was birthed or pitched to us.
And it was like, hey, we're gonna play a game
where you guys eat something from international
fast food location around the world
and then you have to guess what country it comes from.
And then I was like, is there, can we make it physical?
Can we make, like what if we had a map
and we threw darts at it and that was the way
that you guessed?
And that became a format that like no one else is doing.
Right?
And then when we, the shuffleboard thing,
it was an answer to, hey, let's guess when things came from
and what's a fun way to like interact physically
with a timeline and somebody was like shuffleboard.
And so now we do that with shuffleboard.
Yeah, and then on our last tour,
we started throwing axes.
So I come back and I'm like, now in the same genre,
in the same, we also call it a bucket, of like guessing using some physical challenge.
And let's do that with Axis.
Now we haven't done that yet, but we're gonna do it.
I'm just saying we're gonna do it.
So if somebody does it before us or has already done it,
I don't know about it.
We are gonna do it.
It's tough to keep up with who's done what, that's for sure.
And there's a lot of like convergent ideation on the internet
where you end up doing the same thing
just because everyone is thinking,
everyone is, this is what I'm trying to articulate
in Franish, is that everyone is ideating
in the same landscape, kind of in the same ways.
And I think that, and I don't know if we're capable of it.
Let me just say, I don't know if we're capable of it, let me just say, I don't know if we're capable of it
and I don't know if you can do it within GMM and not kill it
but I think the challenge that we're trying to approach
is just like how do you level up the genre
as opposed to just reinventing the wheel
and just making it a little bit flashier of a wheel.
Yeah and because you look at Fallon,
how long can Fallon just have top notch celebrity guests
come in and put their hands in things or drink things,
the same stuff that we're doing.
He can probably do it a lot longer than we have
because it's a television institution.
And as much as I'd like to think and maybe for some people,
GMM is starting to feel like an internet institution,
it's like we cannot, we can't rest on that,
whether it's true or false.
I don't know, it doesn't matter to me at this point.
And you know, what matters is creating things
that we're excited about within the context of the show,
if I'm just looking at the show,
and then that we also think will work.
And that is a challenge.
I mean, when I, on one stop on the Bleak Creek Conversations,
we would always answer questions from the audience
that were tweeted at us.
And one question, let's see,
because I'm trying to remember,
I actually don't remember the question,
but the answer was basically,
well, why do we wanna write a novel?
And we talked about our passion for storytelling
and once we had the opportunity,
then our excitement to mine our shared experiences
and our friendship and like pour that into a novel.
So much of it was about story though.
But then the thing in my answer was
there was another side benefit,
something we didn't anticipate with saying yes
to the huge project of writing a novel.
And that was it really got us back in touch
with the roots of our friendship.
So yeah, so we created that documentary
in order to make the connections
between the novel and our friendship in order to,
I mean, not just to sell the book,
but I mean, honestly, as part of it.
But I think, but then it became such an important project,
just the documentary part.
I think it was so important to us
to reconnect with our friendship that we wanted to make sure
that not only ticket holders to the conversation events
but everyone who wanted to see it,
who's a fan of ours could see it.
And that's why we put it out as three episodes
of Good Mythical Morning.
As we're recording this, we're in the middle
of the second day and we're already seeing the response.
I don't know how many views it'll end up getting.
You know, I think part one is doing pretty well.
Here's the ironic thing, right?
This documentary of us going back to our childhood homes
and part one is literally visiting
the homes we grew up in,
is not taking off as fast as a video
that's just about food, right?
However, there are a lot of people who are voicing
their opinions about it and saying,
I love seeing this kind of content from you.
I love when you guys get out into the world.
And obviously, you can't, there is no world
in which we turn Good Mythical Morning into that
because I think even if you've never edited a video
in your life, you probably have some appreciation
for the fact that those documentary,
the three-part documentary was a lot harder to put together
than an episode of Good Mythical Morning.
Like exponentially more time went into that.
Sure, so we can't, that can't become Good Mythical Morning
and that's not what's on the table.
Seeing the people's response to it
because it literally is taking,
putting into the GMM flow something that's completely
unexpected and completely outside of the genre
that we've established.
I'm not saying it's oh, we're gonna move into that direction.
I'm just saying that it shakes things up
and it gets our minds working in a different way.
I think one thing that we know it already did
was I hope this happened.
I think that it reminded people that the reason why
Good Mythical Morning works is because of
the deeply rooted friendship.
It's not just about what are they gonna eat
and gag into a trash can, you know?
And I found myself saying that in answering a question
at the conversations last week
and then people started applauding.
It's like, that, I mean, we didn't talk about that
with every stop, but I think that it's-
Well, the people who've made a decision
to come to a Bleak Creek conversation,
that's a very particular group of people.
Sure.
And those people are like, guys, I'm on board,
not just to watch you eat, I'm on board
because of who you are and your friendship.
And so we get that.
But it's an interesting dance, right?
Because if you lean completely into that, we probably wouldn't, here's the ironic thing.
Again, if I could speak Spanish or French,
I'd be better at saying this, but the ironic part of this
is that because we've chosen to create Good Mythical Morning
in a certain way that is designed to kind of go out there
and take advantage of the way people's online behavior
on the platform of YouTube,
the way the algorithm serves up videos
and the way people click on things,
the titles and the thumbnails and all that stuff
that goes right into that point of decision
of somebody clicking on the video.
Because we've done that for seven years, 16 seasons,
we then have the privilege to write a book,
make a documentary, get people to buy the book,
get people to watch the documentary,
put it on a channel where you've built this momentum
doing all these things and finding the balance,
I feel like is the real, is what we're trying,
we're trying to find the balance.
That's what we're trying to achieve.
And just to clarify, is it a balance between two things?
What are those two things that you're saying?
I'm saying that you can't just go completely
on one side of the spectrum, which would be like.
Confessional.
Well, I was gonna go to the other side first.
Okay.
The I'm just trying to get you to click on a video.
That's all I want you to do is just click on a video.
And I don't care whether you are an existing fan
or a new fan, just want you to click on a video.
And then you've got the complete opposite end
of the spectrum is like, I don't care about the algorithm.
I don't care about the machine.
I don't care about the game.
I just want to be my unfiltered authentic self. And I don't care about the game. I just wanna be my unfiltered, authentic self.
And I don't care about schedule,
I don't care about how often we upload,
I don't care about it being a reliable thing
that can be there every single day.
It's just this completely authentic,
if I feel like it, I will make a video.
That is a part of YouTube.
And there are people who are successful in that place.
It's like, I couldn't make a video for the past month guys
because I've been doing X, Y, and Z.
We don't ever do that.
We say we probably shouldn't have made videos
for the past month because we're doing X, Y, and Z
but we still gave you 20 videos this month.
You know, or 40 or whatever the number is.
So yeah, I don't know exactly, well to bring it full circle
back to self-promotion, right?
Which is where this conversation started.
I do think that whatever the answers end up being
to these questions and what is striking a balance
and how does that work?
I will say that I am personally much more interested in
and excited about that documentary going out
to our audience and then being able to make the connection
between oh this is the world you guys grew up in.
This is like you tweeted if you wanna know why we are
who we are then watch this.
Making that connection between us and then the work that we put out, right?
Bleak Creek is a incredibly deeply personal expression
of our highest creative aspirations.
Not only is it something that we feel great about
that we crafted it, but we feel great about the fact
that it is so tied to who we are and I would much rather be able to do that
on our terms, being able to take that documentary
and put it in place of a show where we usually just sit
at a desk and do something, having the privilege
to be able to do that, I'm much more excited about
that exercise than I am going on somebody else's show,
wearing the right thing, saying the right thing
to get the right audience excited about the book.
I'm gonna keep doing that.
We're gonna keep doing traditional promotions
for the things that we need to do.
But what am I personally excited about?
I'm excited about the medium that we have freedom in.
Yeah, I mean, mean unfortunately we're not,
the real choice before us, the thing that like I'm,
just trying to, that we're wrestling with,
it's not a choice between do we promote
on other people's podcasts or do we make our own thing.
It's like there's not actually a dichotomy there.
We're gonna, yeah, we're gonna do both of those.
Well I guess what just happened in this conversation
was we kinda pulled back the curtain more on like
where our minds are, you know, with our own content,
which again is what, that's what we care so much about
and it's like, promotion's always gonna be a part of that
but we might be dressing a little more elevated
than we would have expected.
Maybe we'll just go, maybe next time let's just go,
let's go in long johns.
Yeah, that would be, let's just go in.
Will they let us on?
If the flaps are up.
I don't know what the conclusion of this conversation is.
Like you said, we've let you in on.
I think we should.
We've opened the flap
of the front of our Long Johns and let you in
to this intimate conversation about the creative process.
Way to make them feel great about it.
Well I want them to get out of it, you know what I'm saying?
I don't want them to get too.
We're opening the back flap, now you're gonna exit.
Yeah, go right out.
But we got a rec, it's my rec.
Yeah.
Rec baby, rec baby, one, two, three, four.
All right, fine, you know what?
Why don't I just turn the rec into self-promotion?
Yeah, that would be appropriate.
Well, I do think since you've listened this far
on this Ear Biscuit, maybe you have an appetite
to hear us talk more and more.
So I would recommend those three podcasts we did,
I think we're proud of those conversations.
If you're really into,
we talk about the novel in each of them,
of course we're promoting that,
but if you're really into horror
and like our thoughts on that,
so horror is a hard word for me, Trish A.
Demi James is a good one.
If you're into just like Rhett and Link
in random off the rails mode, the books on a subway.
Am I getting that right?
Books on the subway. Books on the subway.
And if you want an unfettered into uncharted
Rhett and Link conversation territory, if you want an unfettered into uncharted
Rhett and Link conversation territory,
because Pete Holmes loves to talk about faith and philosophy.
Yeah.
So he gets into it and brings us along for the ride
so we talk about lots of things in that two hour
conversation on You Made It Weird. So we talk about lots of things in that two hour conversation
on You Made It Weird.
So those are my three recs.
After all that, we're freaking promoting myself.
You know, you're promoting three other people's podcasts.
Yeah, I am.
But I'm only promoting us on them.
Right, but maybe they will get into those worlds.
They'll open up those flaps.
See what's inside those Long Johns.
You know? I'm really interested See what's inside those Long Johns. You know?
I'm really interested. He's got Long Johns too.
I'm really interested on what you thought
about this conversation.
Use hashtag Bleak Creek and let us know.
Whenever we talk about what we're thinking about
Good Mythical Morning, I start to get nervous
because I get nervous that we're making fans nervous
because I know that there's somebody that's like,
hey, this is part of my daily routine.
I don't want there to be any inkling of anything
that threatens that.
And I don't, that's not what we were talking about.
We're just choosing. But I do get nervous.
We're just, you know, just because mom and dad
are in the kitchen having a little bit of an,
like they've raised their voice a little bit,
it doesn't mean they're getting divorced necessarily.
Right.
Okay.
No, I think that we have.
But if they do, it's your fault.
No.
I think that this is an effort,
well, Ear Biscuits has slowly evolved in itself, right?
And has become a place that we're more,
that we're just talking.
It's just two buds talking.
In fact, that's probably the biggest change
that we're gonna make in 2020 is this.
It's gonna be two buds talking,
formerly known as Ear Biscuits.
That's the first big announcement that we can make.
No, we're not gonna do that.
And no, nothing's gonna change in a way that,
nothing's being threatened.
It's just we're letting you in.
We're letting you into the conversation a little bit.
Hashtag Bleak Creek, that's your way to engage.
Oh yeah, because we are,
we don't know what the timeline on this is,
but we are gonna do an episode where we do a spoiler ridden,
not a spoiler free, but a spoiler full discussion of the book
for anyone who has read the book.
And so we're gonna keep giving you some time to do that.
Make notes of your questions or observations,
anything, you know, it's not just gonna be questions.
And if you haven't read the book,
you don't wanna read the book,
I'm hearing that a lot,
well you can hear the book on Audible.
More self promotion.
Yeah, well, we wanna talk about it
and we wanna talk about it as a family.
Kids come downstairs, mom and dad have something
they wanna discuss with you.
It's the book they wrote.