Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - 219: We Solve Some Bleak Creek Mysteries | Ear Biscuits Ep. 219
Episode Date: December 2, 2019Join Rhett and Link as they dive deeper into the mysteries of Bleak Creek. Listen to them break down questions asked by the readers in 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.
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Welcome to Ear Biscuits, I'm Rhett.
And I'm Link, this week at the table of round.
Oh God.
Wow, you would have thought
that it would have been ingrained by now.
This week at the round table of dim lighting, that's it.
The table of round.
Not the table of round lighting in a dim room.
Well, it is round.
I mean, we have a like a globular light, it is round. I mean, we have a globular light, it is round.
But it's not as dim as it used to be.
Yeah, I saw that there was a post.
We can't say that it's not.
Kiko, there was a post and somebody was taking pictures
and doing this different strata of screens
of how Ear Biscuits
has gotten increasingly less dim.
Well it got really dim for a little bit.
It was very dim.
And that was because something was wrong.
Well no, it started off dim because there was no video.
And we had guests and we had this idea that like,
if you create like a dark space,
people are gonna share their dark secrets.
And I believe that it helped.
It's welcoming, yeah.
I mean we were down in our basement
and it was just us and somebody getting into it in the dark.
It wasn't a basement though.
No it wasn't.
It felt like a basement.
At the other studio in Burbank.
At the other studio, you're right.
It was the first floor.
It felt like a basement because there were no,
all the windows were blacked out.
Right. You're right, it wasn't a basement because there were no, all the windows were blacked out. Right.
You're right, it wasn't a basement.
And then when we started doing video,
which comes out a week later,
YouTube channel Ear Biscuits,
if you're listening and you wanna start watching.
And then we were like, man, it's a little too dim.
We gotta make it brighter because this is video.
I mean, you kinda wanna see the people.
But it was still dimmer than it needed to be.
Because it was like, man, it's.
We've increasingly made it less dim.
But I saw that post too,
and I thought that it had a temporary really dark,
it was a dark time.
We had a dark time.
And that was just because something
had been dialed in wrong.
But then we fixed that,
and then we've slowly gotten it a little bit brighter.
Did you add this, there's like a pull down projector
screen just beyond this main camera here.
Was that added just as a reflector or was that already there?
It was added after.
It was added?
Yeah, we decided that we wanted it a little bit brighter.
Okay.
Yeah, it reflects.
What'd you do, bring Ben in here to have ideas?
You just came up with this.
It was kind of like a team effort with me and Ben, yeah.
Yeah, I know, it seemed like a Ben thing.
So we got, it's a projector screen
but there's no projector anywhere.
We're just using a projector screen as a bounce.
That is gratuitous.
We could project something.
That is the, you know, we are high rolling.
We got a projector screen with no projector,
just for the bounce. That's how high we high rolling. We got a projector screen with no projector, just for the bounce.
That's how high we're rolling.
That's how large we're living.
Let's put a projector right in between us.
Let's replace the ear biscuit sign with a large projector.
Yeah, so while we're doing the podcast,
we can be watching a movie.
I wanna watch The Mandalorian again.
I know, by the time this comes out,
like most all, I don't know how many episodes there are, but like,
so I know it's a little late,
but I just have to gush a little bit.
I'm still trying to get you to watch it.
Oh, I'm gonna watch it,
but what about what we're gonna talk about today?
Oh yeah. Which is not
The Mandalorian. This week
of the Round Table of Dim Lighting,
we're talking about our book.
Yeah.
We're gonna go into specific story points
based on your questions, comments, desires.
The Lost Causes of Bleak Creek has a lot of details
and a lot of, some controversy it appears.
And this is going to be full of spoilers.
So might I suggest,
and this will be after the break that we get into this.
So if you end up, if you haven't read the book yet,
before we get into these questions,
just stop this podcast and go pick it up.
Or listen to it on Audible.
You listen to this podcast and you haven't read our book,
well you can listen to the audio version of the book
and it's kinda like a good replacement for Ear Biscuits
or you know, for a little bit.
So go to Audible, get yourself, go to Amazon.
12 or 13 Ear Biscuits together.
Get the Audible version of the book
and listen to that thing.
And then come back and enjoy this discussion.
Now if you're the kind of person who's like,
I'm not reading the book, I don't care how many times
you guys say it, I'm not a reader.
We respect that, I guess.
Yeah, that's cool, whatever.
I'd still push back a little bit on that and say,
just read it, if you're gonna read one book, read this book.
And then if you still are like, I'm not a reader
and I'm not gonna make my first book ever read your book.
Then just keep listening.
Then just listen to this whole thing.
Just listen to us talk about a book
that you haven't read.
It's not gonna be that, I mean,
we're gonna get into a lot of things,
but it's not gonna ruin it for you
if you ever do go back on that and decide to read.
I mean, I'm gonna have a moment of gratitude here.
I'm still so grateful that this novel has been created,
that we made it, that we wrote it, that it's done,
that it's bound, and that it's sitting on shelves.
Oh, speaking of sitting on shelves,
me, Lily, and, not Lily, me, Christy, and Lando,
we went to the mall, and, Lily, me, Christy and Lando, we went to the mall and well,
we were going to the Galleria,
but really what we were doing was we were going
to Din Tai Fung.
Cause it was just us with Lando and we were like,
we gotta eat at a special place.
And maybe our favorite restaurant as a family
is Din Tai Fung.
They got these dumplings.
Good gosh, you can look through a window
and they're like folding these dumplings
at like a rapid speed, something that would be like
one of those satisfying manufacturing videos
that I would watch on Reddit.
It's just like people working like robots.
They're just amazingly fast and-
And they will be replaced with robots.
Oh my gosh, and the dumplings are so good.
Dumpling robots.
I mean the wait was two hours,
but when I finally got in there,
what do you order from there?
Because I ordered the crab and pork dumplings.
I don't know, I just order a little bit of everything.
Once you eat those, everything else is, I mean.
Crab and pork together?
Yeah, those are the best ones.
Soup dumplings, you like bite the edge,
the soup comes out,
and then you dip it in the vinegar
and the hot saucy stuff.
I don't think I would enjoy eating those with you.
Well, and listen.
Do you make noises like that?
Yeah, I'll put the first one in my mouth.
I can only imagine you have a system.
And they're not the best things for you,
especially when you eat as many as I eat.
So I try not to go there but like once a quarter.
But when I go, I go hard.
The first one I put in my mouth,
I was like, this thing is so good.
I close my eyes, man.
I'm sitting there in the restaurant
and I've been transported to Shanghai.
That's Shanghai for you.
And I'm just like savoring it.
And that, boy, that's one of my happy places.
You know when you're like going through a surgery,
you're like having a cyst removed or you're like.
I appreciate your passion about dumplings.
Like you need to go to a happy place,
that's where I'm going.
Once again. Crab and pork
in my mouth.
You're really easily distracted today.
Like you've gotten off on two tangents.
Oh, the book.
Yeah, the book, that's what we're talking about.
So we're waiting.
So we go over to Barnes and Noble and I'm like,
oh, I bet you the Lost Causes of Bleak Creek
is here, Chris is like yeah, I saw it,
I've been in here a few days ago
and it's on this shelf right there at the front
like at the table, like new fiction.
Yeah, the table that you'd wanna be on.
I felt, you know, I kinda, I looked at it
but I didn't wanna like sit there and like pick it up
and like stare at it like a lost child in sit there and pick it up and stare at it
like a lost child in the mall that I just found.
Did you think about signing it?
Christy was like, you should sign it.
I was like, I don't wanna do that
because then you have to have this weird interaction
with Mr. Noble or Mr. Barnes and be like,
excuse me, sir, why are you writing in the books?
She's like, well, I'm one of the authors of this book.
It's like, depending on where it's printed online,
you might not see me as the author.
You might only see Rhett McLaughlin
because apparently there's not enough space
to put two authors on stuff.
Yeah, I didn't have anything to do with that.
But I am on the front of the book
and when you put the discounted sticker,
you also put that over my name.
So it's a novel for number one New York Times
bestselling authors, Rhett McLaughlin and.
20% off. 20% off.
Yeah. I just get the short end
of the stick, man.
Well your name's shorter.
With the second book, my name needs to be first.
Okay. Is that a deal?
You just said okay.
TBD.
We need to figure that out.
So I was a little self-conscious
and then we kinda walked away.
I was like I know what the book looks like,
I'm not gonna buy it.
And you know there's escalators in there
and I just noticed when I went up the escalator
that I was turning back and looking down
and looking at my book.
I just couldn't believe that we have a novel in Barnes and Noble.
Well I went to the,
Other places.
To the Vromans, I guess is how you pronounce that?
Yeah in Pasadena.
And which is,
That's my go to.
I like that it's independent bookstore
and they got a lot of cool stuff.
It's right next to the Lamley,
which incidentally.
Subtitled movies.
I saw, no, I saw Jojo Rabbit there.
Oh, why didn't you invite me?
I just took Shepard, just me and Shepard.
What's it rated?
It's PG-13.
He's 13.
He's 11, but I was with him.
I guided him through it.
Boy, speaking of tangents. Is it good? I gotta through it. Boy, speaking of tangents.
Is it good?
I gotta see it.
I mean.
Taika Waititi was also in The Mandalorian.
It's a.
It's a freaking joy.
It's so good, it's so good.
But I'm not talking about that,
I don't wanna get off on a tangent.
Isn't he great though?
And he's great in that too.
I'd like to meet him.
He's even great as Hitler.
I mean it's just like,
when someone can make Hitler likable,
and I'm not gonna.
Spoiler alert.
I'm not gonna give away anything
because he doesn't really make Hitler likable.
If you understand what Hitler represents in that movie.
Okay, anyway, so.
So I was longingly looking at the book
as I was going up to the second and third floor
but I didn't want Christy to see me looking at it.
I thought she was like, you're looking down there
at your book, aren't you?
I was like, well yeah, it's my book, it's down,
I mean, how often do you get to look in a bookstore
and see your own book?
It's thrilling, man.
Well I went, I was in Romans and I was like,
well of course I gotta find the book and I was actually thinking I might sign it because last time I was not relating, man. Well, I was in Romans and I was like, well, of course I gotta find the book.
And I was actually thinking I might sign it
because last time I was in Romans,
one of the employees came up to me and was like,
Rhett, would you mind signing some copies
of the book of mythicality because they had that out
in the internet humor section or something like that.
Oh yeah.
And with all the other YouTuber books.
But I was more excited about this
because I was like, oh, our book's gonna be
in the fiction section and like the part of the bookstore
that everybody goes, not the internet humor
that like only if you're lost on your way to the bathroom
do you find it.
Right.
That'd be good for the toilet.
And so it's not quite as well organized
and set up as a Barnes and Noble
in that there's also like five entrances to this bookstore and you don't know what, what's the front?
There's multiple cashiers and-
I love that because it makes it easy to steal their books.
You know, they gotta spread out their security.
Right, yeah.
I'm rolling out of there with books.
Like, you know, Dune's a thick book.
But when you got multiple exits, you just bide your time
and you're taking that Dune down your pants.
That guy's got a lot of junk in his trunk
shaped like a book.
I have not and I do not advocate stealing books.
But you can put it down your pants,
just pull it back out and purchase it.
So I go to the fiction section
and they have new and noteworthy.
That's what they call it, I think.
And there it was.
Well, being as ours was new,
does that mean it wasn't noteworthy?
Well, no, it's new and noteworthy.
Oh, it's both?
Not either or?
But then they had the best sellers section,
which is like a nice shelf with like a really nice light
on it, we weren't on that.
Which I was like.
But that was before we were technically a best seller.
No, this was yesterday.
Oh, they didn't get the memo?
So I almost, well, a couple of things.
I almost offered to sign one or two.
But then you just. There were only two left.
Oh only two, you decided not to.
And then I was almost like, well,
how come we can't put it on the bestseller?
It is a bestseller, but you know.
So you thought about going into negotiations,
you're like, excuse me, I'd be more than happy
to sign my novel if you'd be more than happy
to put it under the lights.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, so we can move these last two.
You could've just moved them over.
But that's a cool thing, a lot of people
have been reporting that they've been going
to various bookstores and they're out,
they've sold out of a number of these.
So there's more on the way,
there's a second printing already, yeah.
And the new printing's gonna say
New York Times bestseller, bestseller.
Something like that, right?
Oh, I didn't.
That will be printed on it.
It's not gonna be a sticker, but it will be over my name.
You're taking Link's name off.
I'm taking my name off of the book.
And it's gonna say, New York Times bestseller.
It's gonna say, a novel from number one
New York Times bestselling authors, Rhett McLaughlin,
and this is also a New York Times bestselling book.
That's what it's gonna say.
Yeah, sorry, Link.
But you know what, you're in the back.
They sent us the mock up but I didn't open it.
You're in the picture in the back
and you're standing in front of me, so.
I think that makes up for it.
I love the fact that you knew that
before you looked at it.
Like you know that I'm standing in front of you
in that picture.
No, well I knew that when we chose this picture.
Because you didn't, you're so much bigger than me.
No, I think you always stand a little bit in front of me
because I'm taller, but this is like,
your elbow is all the way across my belly button.
That's, in my opinion, that's just a little too far in front.
My face is
way bigger. Bigger than your face.
Cause like not only,
I think that it's the wide angle lens
that they're using to take this picture with.
So typically we'd be the same size,
but my head looks really, really small and really far away.
So it all evens out is what I'm getting at.
I don't know if that evens out.
You wanna answer, oh, and another thing I thought is,
it's a really cool cover,
but people are putting like really bright colors
on covers now, kind of playing like the YouTube thumbnail
game with book covers.
Do we lose?
And I was like, I don't know how much I would just,
it's a really cool cover,
but I don't know how eye-catching it is
when you just put it next to like 20 other books.
Yeah, it doesn't have,
the letters should have been neon pink.
Yeah, so maybe the next printing,
well, we should call them right now, go all neon.
We'll say no explanation, it's all neon this time.
Yeah. Gotta get those clicks wherever you're
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What was the last thing that filled you with wonder
that took you away from your desk
or your car in traffic?
Well, for us, and I'm going to guess for some of you,
that thing is... Anime! Hi, I'm for us, and I'm going to guess for some of you, that thing is...
Anime!
Hi, I'm Nick Friedman.
I'm Lee Alec Murray.
And I'm Leah President.
And welcome to Crunchyroll Presents The Anime Effect.
It's a weekly news show.
With the best celebrity guests.
And hot takes galore.
So join us every Friday wherever you get your podcasts
and watch full video episodes on Crunchyroll
or on the Crunchyroll YouTube channel.
Okay, we're gonna answer some questions about the book.
This is a good time for you to pause the podcast
and go buy the book and read it.
Bleakcreek.com.
So we have questions from loyal listeners and avid readers
and a lot of discussions happening
on the Mythical Society Discord as well.
So I think that's gonna, we've read all of that,
so I think that's going to color some of our answers.
And I think that, I know we should wait
for the Ruby questions until the end.
So let's just, let's save those,
but start anywhere you wanna start.
Let's start with a question from Mythical Cop Wife. Okay.
We've met her a number of times.
That's why we're in her profile picture.
Very engaged member of the
Mythical Community Society, et cetera.
I would love to know more on Whitewood's backstory
on transforming from a seemingly normal person
to the headmaster slash cult leader he became.
What made him decide to go the route
of forming a reform school?
Was there no other way to get his ruby back?
Now this is a, I think that this question represents
or is related to a conversation that I have seen
quite a lot of people having, right?
Yeah.
I feel like the fact that our antagonist
is revealed to have some humanity
and almost might elicit some of your sympathy
is something that people have kind of struggled with.
They struggle with sort of wrapping their minds around
what am I supposed to think about this guy?
Are you guys trying to justify his actions
by explaining that the motivation is him doing
whatever he can for his daughter.
And some people are like, obviously,
I don't care what your motivation was,
your actions have hurt so many more people that,
I think our, I'll just say first thing,
our intention in doing that was unlike,
what was the bad dude in Captain Planet?
I never watched Captain Planet.
It was the guy who polluted,
and it seemed like the reason that the guy who polluted
who was the evil dude in Captain Planet,
it just seems like he just got a kick out
of just polluting the Earth.
Oh, look at that.
I'm getting a message.
Your hair is messed up.
Look at that, you talking about that?
It's bothering you, thank you. Jenna's bothered because my hair is messed up. Look at that, you talking about that? It's bothering you, thank you.
Jenna's bothered because my hair was messed up
after the hoodie.
Yeah, I was gonna let it ride.
You weren't gonna say anything?
Actually, I couldn't tell, I couldn't tell from my angle.
But he polluted and as a kid watching that,
I was just like, this guy's just evil
for the sake of being evil.
Like I didn't even make any connection to,
and I don't know if the show did make a connection to,
no, oh no, this guy's committed to industry
and therefore his pollution is just a byproduct.
It seems like he just was a bad dude
who wanted to pollute the planet.
But I think in reality, everyone who does something
that is wrong, for the most part,
has their own internal morality that is telling them
that what they're doing is justified, right?
Most people make the decisions and they rationalize them
and we just kind of wanted something that
you take this person and you've got all this hate
built up for them and then you see that,
oh, actually, he has reasons,
that doesn't excuse his actions,
but the world's a messy place.
Yeah, but it's a- And people are complicated.
It's not justification, you know,
but it's explanation.
I mean, it's like, didn't you wanna know?
It's like, why is this guy doing this?
Why?
He's constructed, I mean, and I guess that's the question.
Like, why make a school?
Why have a reform school?
And.
Well, that's because that's what he knows.
He was a principal in his former life.
So he has run a school before.
And there was an opportunity
because with the way that Bleak Creek worked,
that there was a need
for someone to step in and say,
I can solve one of your biggest problems,
which is, I can address one of your biggest fears,
which is what's gonna happen to our children?
Are they gonna stay on the straight and narrow?
Are they gonna stay on the straight and narrow or are they gonna go wayward?
You know, as a parent, there's times when you're struck
with oh my gosh, what, how are my children gonna turn out?
And am I doing enough, you know?
Am I doing enough to help them become
contributing members of society,
like people who follow their heart, that are kind?
You know, you want, but I mean, if you oversimplify that,
or if at times as a parent, you just get to like,
I just want them to act right.
Like if I could just do that,
then maybe everything else would fall into place
because if they start acting wrong,
then that's a red flag that something's really
going wrong deeper, that I'm really screwing up as a parent.
And so I think he was smart enough to see that
that fear goes very deep in a parent.
So if I can tap into that and present the solution for a kid
that they're just like throwing their hands up,
I don't know what to do with this kid, you know?
She's pulling the pants off of mannequins.
Yeah. She's embarrassing me.
She's, you know, they're interrupting prayers
at the pig picking.
Then that's,
it's a nice simple solution.
And hey, the kids don't even have to live with me anymore.
Well I think there's three contributing factors, right?
That kind of, the first thing was the keeper
specifically asked for kids who have kind of
gone their own way, right?
Kids who weren't falling in line.
So you gotta find those kids, right?
Right, that's his problem.
And so, okay, okay.
And then the second thing is is that he's got experience
with school administration.
And then the third thing is,
is kind of what you're getting at,
which is early 90s North Carolina,
really America in general, we're still in the midst
of moral panic that really started,
that really kinda hit its peak in the 80s
when parents started really worrying about Satanism.
I mean, we remember very, very clearly,
there was a whole lot of moral panic around people
actually worshiping Satan.
Like we actually were told that no, you guys,
people are worshiping Satan, nevermind the fact
that the whole church of Satan was started
as almost a mockery of the idea of religion in general.
I remember thinking as a kid, I was like,
so you're telling me that there are people
who worship Satan, which means that they believe
in the framework that there's a God and there's a Satan
and they're choosing the bad guy.
Yeah. Like this is illogical
on so many different levels.
And I would just say.
Because you're buying into the worldview
that includes Satan and then choosing him.
I think, but I.
That's just, I'm not saying that no one,
no one does that, but it's not a societal problem.
We knew enough. And it never was.
We knew enough bad kids to be like, oh that's a bad kid.
I bet he would like to worship Satan.
Well and then.
He's not saying that he does, but.
And then we were told that if you played
all this rock music backwards, back-masking, like we would literally go.
Back-masking.
Masking, yeah.
We would literally go to these presentations
where these guys would get up and they would play
Led Zeppelin and ACDC and the other bands backwards
and show all the satanic messages.
Whose power is Satan?
That's what Robert Plant sang in reverse on a song.
Right.
Yeah, and I remember that being a film from the 70s.
It seemed like a 70s-ish film that was then screened again
in the early, early 90s for us at Campbell University.
Bro, I was a little bit behind.
Well, it was, you know,
they were still trying to eradicate the,
Led Zeppelin was still popular.
But I think this is, what I'm pointing at is
in line with what you were saying before which is,
what an effective way to manipulate people
and manipulate their behavior is to understand
what their greatest fears are.
Right.
And then you can basically just begin selling them
any kind of bullshit you want to.
Within, especially within the,
if it works within the framework
of what they already believe.
Exactly, so what I'm saying is if you tell people
that rock music is actually a subversive way
to worship Satan and that's consistent with the fears
that they already have about it,
then you can get them to believe things
like people are intentionally putting satanic messages
into their song because they legitimately worship Satan.
If anyone actually ever did that,
it was because they were playing into it
in a tongue-in-cheek way.
But anyway, so Whitewood is in a community
where this is the way people think
and he's like, this is what my experience is
and these are the kids that I need
in order to accomplish my mission.
So you do that mathematical equation
and you kinda come up with a really strict reform school
that the kids have to live at.
So you gotta have control.
Right.
And then of course you've eventually
gotta get some other adults to help you out
and you've gotta manipulate them as well.
And the way you do that is twofold.
One, you play a mean organ at the church.
I mean.
Trustworthy.
It's hard to argue with that.
He's there every Sunday playing that organ, you know?
That means a lot.
He might have made a run at being a pastor
but like that takes a lot more time.
Yeah.
And then the second thing is you master that pit barbecue
and you win them over.
Yeah.
You win them over.
People can overlook a world of hurt.
Literally, they overlooked deaths.
Which is something that we wrestled with
because it's like, man, once you have kids die,
is this town really, is this town really gonna just
let this school just continue?
Well, but that happens all the time.
I mean, it is, in my mind, it's not that big of a leap.
People let injustice fester,
especially when the person who's in charge of it
seems legitimate, right?
And there seems to be a legitimate explanation.
I'm just like, oh, okay, three kids over a decade
have died in accidents at this place.
It's just like, and this is largely based on,
so the reform school in the book,
we had the whole thing sketched out,
but then we actually, once we had outlined the entire book,
we found out about this reform school.
Yeah, Lance found this article.
Somewhere in the Northeast that even up until
within the last decade had operated and they had found
that they were doing all kinds of crazy disciplinary things
on the kids, including rolling them up in a carpet.
Yep.
Because we had written, let's see,
I'm trying to figure out if we knew or if we changed it,
but it was a box.
Yeah, well, we had not decided
what the specific disciplinary thing was,
but we knew we wanted it to be something
where kids were isolated and we wanted it to seem
kind of like the carpet thing, so yeah,
the first draft was the box and it was a wooden box
that was about two and a half feet on each side
and you basically sort of ball a kid up
and you'd put them in this dark box
that had some breathing holes and then the guy
would come in and kind of kick it around
and you would end up upside down
and you couldn't get turned,
it was too small to turn around inside.
But I just thought that there's just nothing,
it just wasn't as memorable or as visceral as the roll.
But the carpet roll is a real thing they did to kids.
And these kids, at a certain,
once they reached adulthood,
if I remember correctly, a lot of them were troubled.
They had residual effects and there was a lot of suicide.
A lot of them were dying and then there was
an investigation through Facebook of whatever happened
to classmates and then it turns out a lot of them
had committed suicide.
Yeah, I don't remember that. As a long-term result. I don't remember that detail but there out a lot of them had committed suicide. Yeah, I don't remember that.
That's a long-term result.
I don't remember that detail.
But there was a lot of bad stuff going on at the time
and people didn't, it raised an eyebrow,
but it didn't cause any action.
Yeah, so it's sad that these things do happen.
A related question, Shell, the Velvet Hook,
who's changed the moniker to include Scooter Leg.
That's an homage.
Appreciate that.
You mentioned the seven pointed star being significant.
In Christianity, the seven pointed star
represents the seven gifts of the spirit.
Wisdom, understanding, counsel, might,
knowledge, fear, and delight.
Those aren't the gifts of the spirit that I know.
Yeah, that must be.
This is a different list.
Must be NIV.
I don't know.
It must be the message.
Yeah, it must be.
That's some biblical translation humor for you.
So I wondered if this was a metaphor
for the seven lost causes in some way.
Absolutely, the seven pointed star is a metaphor
for the lost causes that the cult needs
to get into the spring.
Well and let me pair this with this next question too
from Fanto Moose who asks,
can you elaborate on the Latin used by the cult?
First one seems to be vita est aqua, life is water,
but couldn't completely figure out the second one.
Electus intrat aquam sanctum, selected in holy water.
Yeah, so all the stuff that is true about the cult,
like the robes, the seven-pointed star,
the Latin chants that are happening,
just to kind of get your mind in the right place,
all of this is fabricated by Whitewood
as a manipulative scheme to give the appearances
and trappings of a cult or some sort of religious
organization that these people would buy into.
So it isn't like these things have.
The Keeper didn't transfer this knowledge
and this symbology to Whitewood. The Keeper, you know what the Keeper didn't transfer this knowledge and this symbology to Whitewood.
You know what the Keeper wants.
He wants seven lost causes.
He wants kids of a certain age with a certain oomph to them
because his fuel is associated with that.
Right.
But everything else is Whitewood's problem.
Right, and the seven-pointed star, yes,
it was chosen because the keeper told him,
gotta get seven kids.
And while the seven-pointed star does have significance
in Christianity, it also, like most symbols,
it has significance in other places,
including pagan religion.
And we just took it and turned it upside down
so that the predominant arrow.
Let's say white would turn it upside down.
Was pointing down towards the earth, towards water.
Also the triangle in general in paganism
is a symbol of water, because it's pointing down. It's also a symbol of feminism because of the triangle in general in paganism is a symbol of water, because it's pointing down.
It's also a symbol of feminism because of the triangle.
What's that got to do with this?
I'm just letting you know.
I mean, that wasn't a joke, I'm just letting you know.
Now, the Latin specifically, so again,
my thought process behind this was,
so when we were writing the section about the cult,
I was like, okay, well, what could they chant?
And I was like, all right, well,
what if there was something that was like life is water
or water is life and then once they get down there
and they're selecting the specific person to go into the,
put their hand into the water, it'll be the selected one
or the chosen one enters the water.
The chosen, and I can't remember whether or not
the chosen one refers to the person chosen
in sort of the weird Duck Duck Goose game
or if it's Whitewood himself.
But anyway, it was very simply putting the meaning
into Google Translate and going from English to Latin
until we got something that,
oh, that kind of seems like it could be a cool chant.
And so, and also I was thinking at the time,
we're probably gonna get a couple of things wrong,
like maybe the tense is wrong,
maybe this isn't a perfect translation,
but let's not pay too much attention to it
because we're trying to make it seem like this dude
who has no experience in any of this stuff
is like going to the library and kind of coming up
with this language that wouldn't be perfect.
This system would not be this perfectly cohesive system
that feels like it has some sort of supernatural force
but it's more like somebody creating something
to fool people and it's gonna have some inconsistencies
in it so you're like, ah, he chose this
and this is what you chant.
So everything has significance but it's not,
it doesn't have like metaphysical significance,
it's just.
He made it up to make sense and to manipulate.
You know, kinda like.
You think I was gonna throw another religion
or cult under the bus, didn't you?
So yeah, so the Latin and the symbology,
the star, the freaking star is on the side of the book.
Look at that, this white wood tainted the spine
of our novel.
They did.
Because there's the star, that means nothing.
That's a deception, man.
We got it right there on the spine of the book
because it looks cool.
But it means something now.
It means the lost, yeah, it means.
Or else I shouldn't have got it tattooed
on my left butt cheek.
Oh.
So yeah, he made all that stuff up, y'all.
He made it all up.
So then we go back to the fact it's like,
why would a guy go through all this trouble?
And so, not to make, I mean, yeah, you can,
I think you do feel for him,
but it doesn't justify his actions.
I mean, would you wanna do anything to save your daughter
to like, to remove your daughter's pain
and to give her a full life.
Well, hopefully not anything, hopefully not this.
But I mean, it's not just the one decision.
He's continually communing with his daughter
who's frozen in time.
And every time he goes down there,
his heart is wrenched one more time.
So it's like at a certain point, he's kind of,
again, I'm not trying to justify this,
but psychologically, you can go crazy
trying to care for somebody
if you've reached a total dead end.
And especially if it's like, this is the answer.
If you just do this, you know, you can find a total dead end, and especially if it's like this is the answer, if you just do this, you know,
you can find yourself becoming convinced of,
or justifying your actions.
Yeah, I mean, so we wanted it to be a little bit messy
and complicated, but ultimately, you're still,
I mean, I think if you're normal,
you're still gonna conclude that none of the stuff
that he's doing is actually justified.
It's just he has his own reasons,
which may draw a little bit of sympathy from you,
but not to the point that you think any of it's justified.
Just think, I mean, you got this poor girl
who doesn't wanna get out of her dress getting in there.
"'Oh my Lord,' Wayne said.
"'It was working.
"'The water all around it began to bubble.
"'Wayne began to laugh,
"'unconcerned about disturbing anyone "'who might be within earshot. "'Ruby laughed too.'" My Lord, Wayne said, it was working. The water all around them began to bubble. Wayne began to laugh,
unconcerned about disturbing anyone
who might be within earshot.
Ruby laughed too.
This is really fun.
She pushed off the bottom, beginning to swim.
Wayne was careful not to let go of her hand.
That didn't matter though.
As soon as she dropped her face below the surface,
Ruby was violently sucked down into the water.
Her hand slipped from her father's.
Ruby, he yelled, baby.
Then he got spit out.
Moving along, I mean, this is a question related to,
related, a quick one related to the spring.
Joel McCray asks, are the seven souls taken
by the keeper dead?
What happened to them?
Do they go to an afterlife or just not exist?
So no, the seven souls that are in there
are in the same situation that Rex,
I mean that Leif and Alicia were in this book.
So in this state of stasis,
which your body is not aging,
there's some things happening in your mind, of course,
the longer that you're there,
it seems like the less you can kind of remember
and hold on to the life that you're there, it seems like the less you can kind of remember and hold onto the life that you had before.
And interestingly, this, I don't wanna get into too much
of this because I don't like taking so much of the mystery,
any of the mystery out.
But I will say that the nature of the spring
and the keeper of the spring and even the nature of this, the void
and the people sort of being suspended in time
and kind of trapped in this place,
every element of that is at least somewhat influenced
by sort of like Celtic mythology, right?
And that's why in the book,
they break out the giant book that talks about, I can't remember the name in the book, they break out the giant book
that talks about, I can't remember the name of the book,
but that's when they get some information
about the nature of the spring and the blood
and all this stuff and the blood being the key.
That's because, now that particular,
some of the particular choices that we made
are just things that we came up with.
But the general idea of like,
there being this sort of being in charge of a spring
that represents almost a portal
to a slightly different plane of existence.
These are concepts that come up time and time again
in Celtic mythology, which in a second,
well, when we get to the end,
we'll talk about
what does this mean about a potential second book
and where else could this go?
But I will say that all of that is,
it's not completely fabricated.
We didn't just invent it out of thin air.
We kind of looked and did some research
on the way people thought about that
in sort of ancient Celtic times
and use that to influence us.
So no, long story short or long answer short,
those people are not dead, they're still in the void.
You mentioned when we were talking about Whitewood,
you said like he would come up with the symbology
and the Latin and stuff like if he like went to the library
and was doing research, which reminds me of this question.
Jade underscore IEM Margie,
is the man who told Janine in the library basement
about the deaths at Whitewood School
going to be talked about at all?
He disappeared and I have a feeling
his character has a story to be told.
Yeah, we're working on a spinoff novel series
about library dude, creepy library dude.
Yep.
Well, first of all, you ever go to the library?
There's always somebody who like,
you can tell they spend a lot of time at the library.
Yeah.
So, I mean, maybe Whitewood went there.
Janine definitely went there for answers.
And this guy apparently knew what she was looking for
and had a little information,
but then either he was ghost or he just ghosted.
I mean, he wanted to help,
but do you have a straightforward answer?
Because I have a roundabout answer.
Who is this guy?
Well, go ahead.
I just think that in this town,
you can't expect everyone to believe exactly the same thing
for there not to be anybody who's more suspicious.
So to me, it rang true that there's at least somebody
that you encounter in this story that's like,
it's just not taking this hook, line, and sinker.
Somebody who's a little bit of a conspiracy theorist.
Yeah.
But every once in a while, conspiracy theorists are right.
But then not accepted, kind of like, you know,
we say conspiracy theorists with derision,
and I'm sure in the town, you know, any naysayer
would be, you know, who knows what they'd be saying
on scratching on the side of his car.
You know, so it's like, hey, I'm gonna help you out
a little bit, but I don't wanna be associated with this.
It's like the simple explanation.
Well, and I was- Who is he?
How much does he really know?
And I would say an even simpler explanation
that doesn't even, it's very much,
all right, she needs to do some kind of research
and she needs, again, this is one of those things
that in storytelling, it's like, okay, well,
Janine needs to learn something
that the audience
needs to also know in order to move this story forward.
Where would you get this type of information?
Well, you would get it at a library.
What kind of town is Bleak Creek?
And also what kind of story are we trying to tell?
Okay, so I think that the library scene
is actually pretty indicative of exactly
the way we wanted to write this book.
So the first thing that happens is,
okay, something ironically funny.
Yeah. There's a loud librarian.
It's a simple, simple joke
that we got a good bit of mileage out of, right?
Right. And then,
oh, but this is also a scary, scary thing.
So she's gonna go down into this basement.
It's gonna get a little bit weird
when she says that she's asking about the Whitewood School.
And what better way to introduce a little bit of,
I mean she obviously passes this guy
who's kind of following her with his eyes as she goes down
and walks through the main part of the library
to then go to the basement.
And then what if all of a sudden he's just right behind her?
Not necessarily because there is significance to this guy
that will be explored later,
but mostly because it's just really creepy.
Well, because you know.
It's a more inventive way to get this information out.
You know that she's being watched.
You know that she's being,
there's a lot, there's increasing attention
on Janine's efforts.
And so like how far is this gonna go?
You know, is she gonna be harmed?
And so hopefully you're thinking that
as you're reading this that like,
I mean, she's lying about the recipes
and that's kinda, it's not going too great.
You know, it's like, she kinda, I really enjoy her lies.
And, but I was, you know, I'm hoping that the reader's like,
okay, I just don't know if that lie is good enough.
I think she might be putting a target on her back.
Yeah.
Or like I said, on our car, at least.
Yeah, well, and you know.
So then what's this guy gonna do?
Well, and the funny thing is, is you know,
I mean, it's obvious by the way we ended the book,
which somebody pointed out in a question,
that we want the story to continue.
Yeah, the book ends with,
you should, okay, Ruby's out.
And this is not quite reconciled.
I mean, no justice has been done
to what these adults have been doing
and what's going on in the spring
and there's still people that we love and care about
who are stuck there.
Is Alicia gonna get back to normal?
There's a lot of open questions
and that was very, very intentional.
And I think that one of the interesting things
that we're finding when when you asked this question
about this man, well, I just told you,
no, there was no greater significance to this guy.
He represents an opportunity to make the scene scary
and he's also indicative of just the nature of the town
and like Link said, that there's gonna be people
who are skeptical about this school.
But the cool thing about potentially writing a second book
is if we wanted there to be significance to that guy
and we wanted to make it almost retroactive,
as long as you don't do anything that is contradictory
to the way that you set it up in the first book,
you have the right to do that.
Well, and it's not that we didn't,
I do think it was important with that guy that like,
it does also send the message that
there are potential allies in this town.
Everybody's not against these kids.
It's not just in Janine, you know?
So there's a little bit.
You're not wrong, I'm just saying.
I'm just saying there's a little bit.
But I'm just saying that's not the process that. But there's a little bit. But I'm just saying that's not the process that
But there's a potential there.
That went into it.
It's not the process that went into it,
but we talked about this,
we haven't talked about it on the show.
But there's an openness to it.
That's the point I'm making.
You know what, and this leads to another question.
Tell me about.
The question about.
Dennis?
Dennis, yes, read that question. Dennis, yeah.
So read that question.
Julia, which is, jula483 asks,
was Dennis calling Janine, who was still in Bleak Creek,
just a weird coincidence or was there something supernatural
happening there?
Him calling her all of a sudden when she was in doubt
and not sure if she should stay or leave
was almost too perfect.
And a related question from Griffiest.
That, and she actually replied,
he or she actually replied to this question.
That or I was even thinking at the time
that he might have been paid off or encouraged by someone
or some or one of the cult members to get her to leave town.
I wish I had a really awesome answer to this,
but the answer is no, it was just the best way
to tell the story.
It was dramatic timing.
If it was a little too perfect, well, yeah, yeah,
it might have been a little too perfect,
but sometimes you need your characters to do something
that will do the perfect thing for your story.
Hey, you know, things happen serendipitously
in real life too.
Yeah, they do all the time.
But which.
You wanna avoid the cumulative effect
of a lot of that happening and driving the story forward.
We didn't make it, there's not a whole lot
of super convenient things that happen,
but there are some convenient things that happen
so you don't have to sit through an unnecessary chapter
to move the story forward.
And also, it's our first novel.
Listen, don't apologize.
But I'll also say that I read,
I read like well-established writers all the time
and I see things that I'm like, whoa,
that right there is so convenient that it's just,
and I tend to not be very judgmental about that kind of thing
but I find some things get too convenient sometimes.
I don't think this is necessarily one of them
but I think it relates to the question
that we were answering before which is
kind of the way the intentions and symbolism, in fact,
I was in a classroom last week.
Lot was doing this tour of this place
and there was a, in the writing classroom,
the English classroom, there was a, I'm gonna get this wrong,
but the quote was,
"'I don't know whether the author intended
"'what my teacher says they intended
"'or if she's just making it up.'"
But it was a very funny way to kind of word that.
And I think that, and I think-
We're just glad to be a part of the discussion.
I don't know if it, I think it may have been Hank Green
talking about his book, but somebody had seen something
in his book and he was like, oh,
I'd like to take credit for that, but no,
and I'm glad that you see that that way.
But I think it goes back to the process of like,
once you put yourself in a certain frame of mind
and you're in a certain setting
and you're telling a certain story,
there are going to be things that,
like even the observation that you made
about the nature of the friendship
and the way that they held hands around the tree,
the observation that you made in the documentary,
which wasn't, the reason we put it in the book
is because, well that was what we remembered.
We remembered three people holding hands around a tree
and not being able to reach.
And then you made the connection that this is like,
well, if two people are holding hands,
the other two people can't be holding hands.
And so it sort of represents the inherent tension
in a three-way relationship.
It's not that that's not true,
it's just that that wasn't intended.
People can find the meaning in that
and I think that's totally fine
to find the meaning in something,
but that doesn't mean that all of that was there.
It's just when you're in a certain frame of mind
when you're writing and then the person's in a certain frame of mind when you're writing and then the person's
in a certain frame of mind when they're reading,
there's gonna be connections made.
For me, that's just a beautiful part of the reading process
is that finding those things and attaching meaning,
even in places that it could have been subconsciously
inserted by a writer.
It doesn't necessarily have to be intentional.
I think that was the case there
because we were very much talking about
the relational dynamics and like,
Leif trying to confess his crush
and that being thwarted, you know, it's like,
and then that's the very next thing that we talk about.
And it's an easy connection.
Let's move to the-
Well, but keeping in the same theme,
this question from Nicole Tennant, SundayRain26,
is there any significance to the blue frog?
So Ruby's blue frog left on the bed.
And yes, there is very specific significance to it.
I don't know exactly where it could go,
but the reason that it's a blue frog is of course the blue
sort of represents the theme of water
that we're dealing with and that's why the robes are blue
and the cult, but the frog is of course amphibious,
which represents the ability to go between
two different worlds, two different modes of existence,
a frog being able to go into water and then on land.
And who does that?
And also, the frog itself does have,
once you start kind of searching like spiritual
or symbology of frog or something like that,
you'll be taken to like 12 different websites
and they all kind of have a different interpretation.
But I did find one website that talked about the,
there's a sort of a spiritual analog
to the amphibious nature of a frog,
being that it represents the ability
to kind of go between two planes of existence,
both the physical world and the spiritual world.
And I think that the void does represent
some sort of metaphysical spiritual plane of existence
that isn't necessarily the other world or underworld,
but it's something different.
And so that is the significance of the frog.
Where we're gonna go with that, we don't know exactly,
but yes, there's a reason that it was a frog
and that wasn't accidental.
And if you remove the R in frog, you get what?
Fog. Fog.
And fog is something that lingers over what?
A bog.
Water.
Okay, Austin Reed, Reaper Crew 96.
Can we talk about the very last scene
when Alicia's going down the street
and sees Ruby in the epilogue?
Is that a hint at a second book?
When Ruby got out of the spring,
is she still a little kid or has she grown up the 10 years?
Hashtag Ear Biscuits.
She has not grown up the 10 years.
She's the same age she was when she went in. She's seven years old.
She's seven years old.
So yeah, let's talk about that scene.
Is it a hint at a second book?
Wouldn't I like to know.
I hope so.
Yeah, it was our.
A second book that doesn't exist yet.
It was our big hint at the fact
that we want to write a second book.
It's not necessarily up to us whether or not
there will be a second book,
but it represented our intention that there will be.
But it would be cool to have like Ruby in a second book.
Oh yeah.
Or maybe we just forget about her.
Say, you know what, that's just a dangling participle.
Let's move on to something else.
Forget about Ruby.
She's not gonna be in the second book.
Was there another question?
I think, I thought there was another Ruby question.
Yeah, there is.
From Lex, why was Ruby the most attached to the Keeper
when she wasn't the first kid to drown in the spring?
Because you know, there's Timothy who is in there
is the kid who, I can't remember how many years ago
it would have been, but basically when the spring shut down
was when he drowned according to the people,
according to his parents,
according to the people in the town,
the bleak family that was running the resort.
He drowned but we know that no, he didn't drown,
he's been in there.
So okay, so why is it that the keeper is sort of speaking
through and obviously more attached to Ruby?
Again, the-
Well, his question was why is Ruby so attached to the, I guess it's the same question both ways. Most attached to Ruby. Again, the- Well his question was why is Ruby so attached to the,
I guess it's the same question both ways.
Most attached to the keeper.
Well, again, I think the answer's the most straightforward
and that is the keeper wants more children, right?
The keeper's made that very clear.
Apparently, he didn't have any,
Timothy being down there wasn't doing anything for him,
but Ruby, because of the way that it ended up working out
where both Ruby and Whitewood went down at the same time,
now the keeper's an opportunist, right?
So the keeper knows that now I've got the carrot,
Ruby, in the spring, that now I can manipulate Whitewood
and get him to do my bidding.
And so he's naturally going to be more attached to Ruby
because she is the way that he can accomplish his purposes.
Unlike Timothy, which apparently hasn't worked out so well.
Right.
So, I mean, let's shift to more of a summary of like,
okay, so where does this leave us?
I mean, rest assured we've given a lot of thought
to where we're leaving the reader and yeah,
we've given a lot of thought to where we wanna take you
in a follow up, which we're not saying that's definitely happening
because we don't know that that's definitely happening
at this point, but we certainly hope
that we'll have the opportunity to write a second book.
So honestly, the more buzz that continues to be generated
around this book, the greater the chances
that we get the opportunity to write the second book,
which we've already been working on.
Yeah, we know where we want to go in the second book.
Again, it's just a question of,
will we have the privilege to do so?
Okay, so in summary, kind of where we leave off in book one,
and this is, if you for some reason have decided
to listen to this podcast up until this point.
And now you're thinking you wanna read it?
You really need to pause the podcast.
This is not, yeah.
Because I'm gonna summarize where it ends.
So just don't listen to this, please.
Don't listen to this.
There are a number of people who are inside the void.
Ben, because he was taken by the wave at the end.
Josephina, the girl who befriended Alicia inside Whitewood.
Josephina really liked that frog, I will say that.
You know, I was like, Josephina, and this is me
but like just putting myself in the mind of the reader,
why do you keep touching that frog
and like messing up Ruby's room so much?
That made me uncomfortable.
Good.
The fact that they were getting too comfortable
in that room and then Whitewood snatched them up.
The two kids who were thrown in during the commotion
at the end of the book, so there was the crazy moments where they were getting
Leif and Alicia out but there were other kids
being thrown in and rejected.
Well Patrick Small and April Lee are two kids
that have, they're mentioned as missing at the end
of the book by the sheriff.
They are lost.
They are in the void.
Because they are lost causes.
There are three former Whitewood students
who've been there for years since their supposed deaths.
That's Richard Stanley in 1982,
the 16-year-old girl, unnamed.
She the. She's the one that.
There's the fire and then there's the.
Richard Stanley was the one in the oven.
Yeah, the oven. And the 16-year-old girl
was the one that was smoking next to the gas leak, supposedly.
That was stupid.
And then there's the boy that was struck by lightning
in 1989 who's also unnamed.
That really happened.
And then there's Timothy Bleak,
who's the first kid to ever be taken into the spring,
at least in the span of our story.
Maybe things happened before, I don't know.
He's been there since 1961 when he drowned, in quotes,
and that shut down the original Bleak Creek Resort.
Now you might do the math on that
and realize that that's more than seven kids.
That's eight kids.
And again, or is that, no, that's, no.
So if you count Ruby, that's nine.
If you count Ruby, that's nine.
So again, the seven.
The seven kids was just a number,
the seven additional kids given to Whitewood for,
again, I don't try to put too much logic behind
why the keeper needs a certain number.
But if he's saying seven,
then that must mean his real number was nine.
Yeah, and you could get into some numerology there
if you want in the significance of seven
and the significance of nine.
If you wanna read about that a little bit,
I'm not gonna say that that isn't at least.
Go to the library.
It works out nicely.
See who comes up to you.
Oh, the library guy, don't forget him.
Now the sheriff, Sheriff Lawson and the rest of the cult,
Mary Hathaway, Shackelford, et cetera.
Now Mary Hathaway's dead.
You wish.
She ain't dead.
About to say.
She's so likable.
They have explained everything to the town
by saying that Whitewood was acting nefariously,
kidnapping, murdering kids.
They basically say that the original kids from the 80s
are presumed dead, but the most recent four,
which would be Ben, Josephina, Patrick, and April,
are just presumed missing.
With Whitewood on the lam.
And maybe being held someplace with Whitewood.
Again, I'm just giving you, this is all the stuff
that the sheriff says at the end,
just so your mind will be in the right place.
And the cult itself still believes
that the seven lost causes are being purified
by the one below and that they will return
as the seven shepherds.
Poor Travis.
They just don't know how long it's gonna take.
Or maybe, I mean, you're mad at Travis
because he double-crossed him,
but it's just, you know, just to use the parlance
of the situation, it's the testimony
to Whitewood's ability to manipulate
that Travis, a guy who's like so genuine,
such a good hearted guy,
in endeavor to deceive and you know,
keep that from the kids as much as he did.
Yeah.
Which then, you know, is there a rereading of the scene at the river?
What does that tell you about Travis?
If you take another look at that scene,
you know, with the button.
It's not for us to answer, I'm just saying
it's just food for thought for the rereader.
Travis is one of my favorite characters, by the way.
California Raisins.
Rex, Leaf, Alicia, Alicia and Hornhat
and all the other kids who were in the school
are compelled, effectively compelled to remain quiet
for the fear that the sheriff or the cult will kill their parents, do other crazy stuff.
And then anybody who decides that they're gonna say
something could also be dismissed pretty easily
because you got a bunch of traumatized kids
that have been in this weird place that,
of course they're gonna say things about it.
And then finally, Janine and Donna,
you know, they've shown their film,
which has been interpreted by that initial audience as.
A precursor to Blair Witch,
well, not in a very loose sense.
Yeah, basically a mockumentary,
a fictional documentary, not a true expose.
Somebody did ask a question,
why did you make that decision to do that and it's, well,
it's because that we don't want the loop to,
if all of a sudden it was like, and she makes a film
and everybody sees that, they're all crazy murderous
cult members, well then the case is closed on that.
We don't want the case to be closed.
Yeah, I mean the cult successfully destroyed
the most damning information.
And so you're left kinda like, I'm not really,
I think it's the most, it's a pretty reasonable response,
I think, it's like, ah.
Yeah.
Yeah, okay, this is a marketing ploy.
You know? Yeah.
All right, where does that leave us?
Well, hashtag Ear Biscuits, first of all,
if you wanna continue this discussion
and if you wanna join the Mythical Society
or already a member, make sure you talk about it on Discord.
Yeah, because there's some really.
There's chapter by chapter.
Really great discussions happening.
Discord conversations happening.
And listen, we, like Link said,
yes, we wanna continue telling this story.
The only way that's gonna happen is if the book continues
to be a success and that requires the book to continue
to break outside of this, the community of Mythical Beasts.
Of course, you guys have been super supportive
and many of you have bought it,
but we need to demonstrate continued interest
in the fact that this thing is bigger
than just the Mythical Beasts.
So that means buying the book for somebody,
encouraging them to read it.
Maybe they don't, maybe this isn't,
maybe you've tried to introduce them
to the world of mythicality before,
but you sent them a video where we were eating
animal testicles and that's not their thing.
We do other things as we've hopefully demonstrated
with this book that I think are maybe even more accessible.
So share the book.
Did you say leave an Amazon review?
I didn't say that.
Yes, you did that as well.
That's a big help if you read the book.
Or Goodreads as well.
So on Goodreads or Amazon, please leave a review
of The Lost Causes of Bleak Creek.
It makes a difference and we truly appreciate it.
I'm gonna give a quick rec.
I was telling you about this right beforehand.
So shifting gears a little bit.
I never, I've never listened to Jim James,
lead singer of My Morning Jacket.
But I started reading,
I stumbled upon a song on his new album,
solo album called The Order of Nature.
The song that I listened to first was called Set It to Song,
but this is the Louisville Orchestra
and Teddy Abrams teamed up with Jim James
to like make this song cycle.
It's unbelievable how this thing works, but like,
let me, I'll just read a summary of this.
He has so many albums and they're all so distinct
and I've just been introduced to the world of Jim James.
So I've just scratched the surface.
You can come along with me.
A fully orchestrated song cycle titled
"'The Order of Nature' in which James pondered the roles
of hatred and compassion in the natural world
is his latest album recorded live
with the Louisville Orchestra.
It's pretty amazing.
It's on tour, tour, I gotta try to see that.
Well, he's gonna be in Denver on May 15th.
Let's go to Denver.
Jim James.
All right, hashtag Ear Biscuits.
Let's keep the conversation going.
Thanks for hanging out with us and for enjoying the spoilers.
And we'll be here for another,
how many episodes do we have left?
Two additional episodes in 2019
and then we're going to take another two week break.
Be back on January 6th.
Cause your boys, your boys gotta have a break.
And yeah, we'll be back bigger and better than ever.
Actually, it'll be exactly the same.
Or will it?
I don't think it will be actually.