Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - 258: Link's Camping Night Of Horror | Ear Biscuits Ep.258
Episode Date: October 5, 2020What started as a beautiful, romantic #VanLife getaway for Link and his wife ended in a night of terror. Listen to Link recount his camping trip to Utah, which ended with what might be the scariest mo...ment of his life, 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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conditions apply we say welcome to ear biscuits is that what we say for some reason uh some reason
welcome to ear biscuits yeah i was like was like, is welcome the first word?
Because that seems really odd to me right now.
Oh, you see, you're really fresh, man.
What do you think it should be
now that you're back from your solo trip?
Just change it.
Greetings.
Greetings, okay, do it.
Greetings, that's it.
Greetings and welcome to Ear Biscuits,
the podcast where two lifelong friends
talk about life for a long time.
I'm Rhett.
And I'm Link.
This week at the round table of dim lighting,
I'm gonna talk about the trip that I am fresh off of.
I got home last night from six days of-
Bliss.
Van life, boondocking in the middle of van life, boondocking,
in the middle of nowhere camping,
just me and my wife, some national parks,
a lot of Utah, probably Mormons, I didn't know.
Yeah. You know?
Yeah, just statistically.
Just statistically speaking.
Right.
Probably ran into a few Mormons.
Mm-hmm.
I didn't run over anybody, I didn't run into anybody.
That's good.
There were no accidents.
But I will say on the last night,
something happened to us that I just have to,
I wanna tell you the whole story.
I was so scared, okay?
I'll just say that we,
Christy and I both got really scared.
Okay.
Yeah, and it was just a strange story
and I just wanna tell the whole thing
and that's why I texted you this morning,
I was like, hey, I think if we're coming in here
to record first thing fresh off our trips,
I think I've got, with everything I wanna share with you,
I've got a whole episode.
Yeah.
If it's okay for you to then have another episode,
I don't care who goes first.
Right, and so today we're gonna hear about your trip.
Yeah.
Next time we'll hear about my trip.
I will give you just a short preview.
All right.
Which incidentally includes me being scared.
I was thinking, dude, I was thinking about you a lot.
I was like, I wonder, okay, we'll get into it.
So, but it also, so it also includes an update
on the conversation slash argument slash debate.
Am I a competitive person?
That we turn into an entire episode.
I had some time to think about that
and I have sort of, I have some perspective on that.
I definitely do not want that.
Just trust me, it will not be a majority
or even a significant part of the episode.
It's just an update.
Are you saying this to me so I'm not scared?
No, I'm saying it to- To them.
I'm saying it to all the people who,
some people enjoyed that conversation
and some people didn't.
You know, I saw some people was like,
this is the first one I've never,
I just had to quit listening to.
Yeah, I saw that.
And I totally get that because it felt like
it was, some people don't wanna hear like a,
turn into a debate.
Yeah. So I have just an update
on some perspective that kind of came to me in the desert.
And also just a summary of my trip
and some other things that happened,
but let's hear about yours.
But even right at the beginning of this,
when you said greetings and you had a different voice,
is that your new Rhett voice?
I was playing into it.
Okay.
Are we gonna include the part that we-
I think we did, yeah, they heard it.
Yeah, I basically forgot how the air biscuits started.
I mean like, I literally forgot how it started.
I do have this feeling, first of all,
I'm not totally awake.
I had a coffee, I should have had a second coffee.
I do feel like I need a day.
Like the experience that I had and that Christy and I had
that I share is gonna be very raw
because I haven't fully assimilated back into life.
I think that's what, are you feeling that a little bit?
And I got home last night.
I got home last night later, even later than you did.
Like I came home basically as the sun was going down.
Six days of camping.
Turns out that's a long time and I was not alone.
I mean, I really wanna hear your experience
because I've imagined a lot of it.
And we're gonna record mine tomorrow.
So it's just one day apart.
So it'll still be fresh.
It'll still be fresh for me.
Okay, okay.
Well, just to give an overview of my trip,
we ended up deciding, let's say we drove past Vegas
and when we stopped in Vegas and we got something to eat,
I mean we just ate in the car.
That's the great thing about this Sprinter van is that-
What did you eat?
What did you eat?
Well, we were gonna go through the Raising Cane's
drive-through. Oh crap, I stopped at Raising Cane's
in Vegas yesterday. So did I. No you didn't. Yes. Oh crap, I stopped at Raising Cane's in Vegas yesterday.
So did I.
No you didn't.
Yes, because.
Hold on, you ate at Raising Cane's in Vegas yesterday?
No, two days ago, I'm sorry.
I ate at Raising Cane's.
When we were coming back through.
I saw the sign, I was like, oh Raising Cane's,
I gotta try this out, everybody, Post Malone's into it.
Yeah.
And so I ate it in my car.
Well we were trying to eat there on the way
and then the Sprint of Man would not go through
the drive-through, so we had-
The Raising Cane's I went through,
went to, because I had my rooftop tent on,
I thought about this, there was no overhangs,
we went to different ones.
I went to the one on the east side of Vegas.
I can't say which one I went to.
Because as soon as- I don't want to drive
too much traffic there.
Because I was coming from the east, coming back home.
Okay, well there's more than two. Yeah, and as soon as I saw the sign, I was like, drive too much traffic there. Because I was coming from the east, coming back home. Okay, well there's more than two.
Yeah, and as soon as I saw the sign,
I was like, well, I'm going there.
It's pretty good, right?
I mean, I would say it's like Zaxby's, but a little better.
My opinion was the chicken is good.
Chicken is great.
The fries are horrible.
I thought the fries were horrible.
I'm comparing them to Bojangles,
and Bojangles fries are way better.
Dip and sauce was good and we'd already had that.
That's the only thing I've had.
Slaw, bad.
Slaw was bad, yeah.
Tea, good.
I got tea.
I didn't get the tea.
Maybe I should have gotten the tea.
They didn't have a biscuit though.
Oh, Texas toast.
Oh, the Texas toast was good.
That and the chicken tender.
I highly recommend it.
So we start there but we're eating in the van,
we're peeing and pooping in the van,
we're washing our hands in the van,
there's a shower, we could even shower in the van,
but there's also a hose off of the back of the van
where we ended up showering.
Because it was-
Because the shower on the inside is so small.
So small and there's a toilet in it.
Oh yeah, toilet, toilet.
Toilet, toilet.
Are you gonna talk about the pooping?
Are you gonna get into that?
Sure, yeah.
Because I'm gonna get into that on my trip.
As time allows, we may have to throw back
to my experience once I hear yours
because I would not say that's a highlight
or something that I plan on talking about at length.
But I'm always game to talk poop
if you wanna go for it.
For me, it will not be an insignificant part of my story.
Okay, okay, okay.
I'll just add some two cents at that point.
But until then, I'm just gonna say,
you know, we stayed in the van.
You know, we got the five guys, take out,
we took it to the car.
On the way back through is where we went
to a Raising the Kings and we figured out we could call them and, we took it to the car. On the way back through is where we went to Raising the Kings
and we figured out we could call them
and they would bring it out to us.
Yeah, curbside, I saw that sign.
And when we kept going from Vegas,
from there we decided, I saw one of the Sklar brothers
tweeted that they were at Zion.
And I was like, I'm a direct message Sklar bros, you know?
Haven't talked to them in a while, but we're like, you know, they know who I am.
And I said, I'm thinking about going to Zion,
but I'm concerned about the crowds, you know,
the COVID regulations and everything,
and I can't get on the shuttle,
I have no shuttle reservation.
And he said, well, you should definitely go,
do a private shuttle.
You can pay, there's one, there's shuttle companies
that go in, you just get one of those, and then you get on a private shuttle. You can pay, there's one, there's shuttle companies that go in,
you just get one of those
and then you get on a private shuttle,
they take you right,
because Zion, and we ended up doing that.
And he said, we did the Narrows hike.
You should definitely do that.
I saw the pictures.
He had like a walking stick and these special boots
and he was like wet. For real?
I was like, okay, we're gonna do this
based on just direct message in his tweet
because I was just gonna go to Bryce Canyon and skip it
because less people go there and it's less regulated.
Anybody can go in.
But I began to understand when I got there to Zion,
it's relatively small.
I mean, when you compare it to like a Yosemite,
we've both been there. It's small on the map.
Yeah, it's this one canyon that, I mean,
the Virgin River just cuts through this thing
and it almost doubles back on itself
and it makes these like amphitheater areas.
And to get up into that canyon, you have to be on a shuttle.
So they just don't let cars go through there
because they would jam up the whole thing.
Right.
And so that's why the shuttle thing is so important.
So we get up and we made a reservation of 930 to be picked
up, we go out there.
How far, how much ahead of time did you have to call
to make this reservation?
It was noon, it was noon the day before.
And they had a few spots open on that shuttle.
And so we went the next morning, we go out there
and the shuttle takes you all the way through
to the back end of the park where it's like,
it's a cul-de-sac, basically like a river made,
sheer wall, like thousands of foot tall,
like red rocked mountain climber heaven type thing.
I don't even wanna try to explain it.
You can look at the pictures and you know,
it's like they always say, until you go,
you really can't appreciate it.
Is it better than Yosemite?
It's so much smaller and so much different.
It's like going to an attraction.
There's only a, you can really do it.
I mean, you can spend multiple days there and enjoy it,
but I felt like we just did that one day
and we did the one hike.
And I was like, you know what?
We're gonna move on to Bryce the next day.
We'll call it a travel day.
Which is a different national park.
Yeah.
So just to tell you about the Narrows hike,
you're hiking in the river, which is like,
it's, I mean, it has carved these, this deep chasm.
Yeah, this is the one you see on Instagram.
Yeah, and it's just absolutely amazing.
Like, you know, I can show you some of the pictures,
but there's no, after you hike in a little ways,
everyone's just getting in the river
and there's no trail anymore
and you're just hiking in the river.
And it's usually like shin deep.
Sometimes it went to mid thigh deep on me and it was cold.
And I was like, I was trying to get Christy like ready for,
I was like, you know what, we're gonna,
she's like, we can turn back at any time. And this is before we get in the water.
And I'm like, come on, we gotta do this.
What kind of shoes did you have on?
I just had on our quick dry, low top shoes.
We didn't wear our boots, but these people had like-
The ones that we took to like Fiji?
No, not like water socks, just like hiking shoes,
but low top.
We didn't wanna wear a high top
because they would get real soggy.
At least that's what we thought.
I mean, people are renting like these waterproof hiking boots
with like ankle support.
You really do need ankle support and they give you a stick
and you're supposed to use that to stay up.
But like, you know, I've walked in the river so much,
it was easy to walk over all these rocks.
It was like when we crossed the Cape Fear River,
except the water was clear for the most part.
And cold.
And really cold.
But you could turn your ankle and you could fall down easily.
But I think we gained confidence when we saw like retirees
trudging through this thing.
And we were wearing a mask, there was a lot of people
going up this thing, but it was a hike unlike anything else.
And we go up there for a number of miles
and it's just, it gets to a point
where it gets really narrow.
I mean, it could have been like 15 feet apart,
like sheer a thousand foot in the air, it seemed like.
And it was like, and you're just walking up this,
what I would call a stream.
It's not really a river by that point.
It was amazing.
Sounds like it could be a problem if it was to flood.
Yes, but you know, they take all that into account
in terms of, I guess they had confidence
that there wasn't gonna be a flash flood.
Right.
Or they would have shut it down.
And there was so many, I mean, even with COVID,
there was a lot of people hiking there but it was totally worth it.
The next day, I'm gonna go through the park stuff now
because what I really wanna talk about
is the camping experience and then the story that happened.
Okay.
So I mean that was a super cool hike.
I definitely recommend that for everybody.
Like I was thinking the kids would have loved it
once they got over the cold of the water,
your feet getting numb and then-
And this has gotta be though as warm as the water gets,
you would think.
I would think so.
It wasn't phased by being, you know.
It was like in the mid 80s.
Actually it was in the low 80s.
It was like perfect weather to be there.
Right.
And then, so we camped that night.
The next day we took like an easy day of just camping, like getting going late, but then we droveed that night, the next day we took it, we took like an easy day of just camping,
like getting going late, but then we drove to Bryce Canyon,
which it was like you wind your way up out of Zion
and you go through,
when the tunnel was built through the mountain,
it's like the longest tunnel in the world
at the time it was built in like 1920. And it was crazy, you're like going through the mountain, it's like the longest tunnel in the world at the time it was built in like 1920.
And it was crazy, you're like going through the mountain
on this tunnel.
How long are we talking about?
Like I'm gonna know that.
I don't know.
If it was the longest one in the world,
it's gotta be.
Like 10 minutes to get through it.
I mean at least a mile.
Oh yeah.
And we can look it up.
I was driving, I couldn't Google.
I was like, it's dark in here.
But 10 minutes to go through?
Yeah.
So several miles.
Yeah, I mean, we were going pretty slow.
We were probably going,
oh, we're going 30 miles an hour, 25.
Anyway, you wind up out of there
and then you drive for like a little over an hour,
hour and a half and you get to Bryce,
which is, it's kind of like if you've ever been
to the Grand Canyon, you go in and it kind of feels the same
because you're in the woods and you go to the edge
of this canyon, you walk to the rim of it
and then it's all of these hoodoos is what they're called.
Like, you know if you make a sand castle,
the type of sand castle people can make on the beach
where they like drip sand and it like the sand
just plop, plop, plops on top of each other.
It's like that except done by erosion, not by addition.
And they're just like these pinnacles of sandstone stuff
just everywhere and it's like a magical fairy land
that you're walking down through
and so we did a hike down through there
and it's cool that it's so close
and it also was small so it felt like
I can see all of this in one day.
I can hang out for a couple of days
and really appreciate it but I can also move on
knowing that I got an idea what this national park's like
and I've done one of the more,
one of the most famous trails.
So we did that the next day, camp that night,
and then we drove back down, just to get closer to home,
we drove down to the other side of Vegas,
like, well, on this side of Vegas,
there's a place called Red Rocks National Preservation Area.
And it's like, so we looked at all that,
there's like a cool scenic drive.
Is- Right outside of,
like the mountains you see-
On 15?
From- On the main highway?
To the west of Vegas.
Like that mountain range there
is like this Red rock mountain range.
Which you have to get off of the-
Interstate, yeah?
Well, no, but is it like,
because just yesterday I drove that.
And I was like, I'm trying to get home by a reasonable time
so I didn't stop at anything.
Yeah.
I didn't see any signs for that.
I saw like the Mojave National Preserve.
Yeah, it's- Before that. Yeah, it's right outside of Vegas.
Like literally if you go west out of Vegas,
there's like these condos and like these desert communities
they build up that are like really nice
and then it turns into nothing.
And if you go south around the Red Rock,
that's where we camped the last night
and then instead of coming back down into Vegas,
we went around and skirted the edge of Death Valley.
It actually said it was faster from where we had camped
the last night where the story happened.
How, you're gonna talk about camping.
I want to ask you how hot it was.
I picked that place because it wasn't,
it wasn't the hottest night, but everywhere I picked it was just trying
to like escape the heat and anything that might be burning.
That's why I didn't camp near Vegas the last night
because I looked at the weather and I was like,
it's gonna be like 105 during the day.
That was the high like down at like Vegas level,
but then once you got into that like hilly rocky area
that where we camped,
I picked it because it was probably like a high of 85
there actually, maybe 90, but then it,
so it wasn't uncomfortable at night.
So we went there and then we skirted the edge
of Death Valley, we saw a hot springs,
cause I saw a sign, took like a two minute detour,
dumped our crap and our water.
Like literally, you gotta, I gotta, well,
we'll talk about the crap later.
Well, hot springs.
Tacopa, it's just some little town,
but it was just some guy at a booth
and then behind his booth was like a men's shack
and a women's shack and showers and then he let me look at it
and it was just like a pool, like actually,
you know, it wasn't rustic in any way
and I didn't have time to get in, I was just curious.
I needed to dump my crap and get out of there
and then we came home.
You mean they had pumped the water
into like a tub kind of thing?
Yeah, yeah, the water flowed in,
there was a hot water pool,
like it looked like a big rectangular pool,
like 15 people could get in, but nobody was in it.
And then there was a cold pool on the other side
in another room.
And you had to be nude and it wasn't co-ed, so.
You only do nude if it's co-ed, is that right?
That's right.
That's right.
That's how you made that sound.
That's right, I was like, I'm out, I'm out.
You see, You know what?
I don't do either one on its own, it's gotta be both.
But the main experience that I'm taking away.
I will talk about that by the way.
Yeah, I know you were aiming for Hot Springs,
so I wanna hear about that.
My main takeaway was not the beauty of these parks,
but it was the experience camping,
so that's what I wanna spend the most time talking about
and then telling you the story about how we got freaked out
night before last, our last night there camping.
So I'll get into all that.
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Oh man, I gotta shave immediately after this.
Itching?
Yeah, this is the worst phase.
And I took my razor camping and I was like,
who's gonna shave when camping?
What kind of chump shaves when camping?
People who commit to long-term camping.
And also shaving shave.
They do shave.
I think I would do that.
Yeah, I met some people.
I met several clean-shaven people.
Oh yeah?
Who were permanently, as Christy calls them,
road travelers.
Yeah, I mean like-
She could not remember the word for hitchhiker.
And we encountered this guy on a back road
who he was just walking down and I pulled over.
He was clean shaven?
I pulled over, he had a huge beard.
Oh, yeah, okay.
And I was like, do you need any help?
And he had the most paranoid guilty look on his face
like he just killed someone.
And he was like, I don't need any help killing anybody,
I do it on my own.
I was like, okay. And I was like, I don't need any help killing anybody, I do it on my own. I was like, okay, and I was like,
I don't know why I stopped and talked to you.
Yep, did he, if he doesn't, if he's not like thumbing.
He was in the middle of nowhere and he was walking.
Oh.
And usually my instinct is just to keep going,
like let him eat the dust, but I was being very altruistic
and then I got a little scared.
That is a good point though, because I met a couple,
just a young couple that was moving.
They were in the process of trying to move
from New Jersey to California in a van.
Oh, okay.
And they were like, these fires started
and so where we were gonna go
is basically on fire right now,
so we're kind of just hanging out.
This was in Nevada.
Yeah.
And they had been on the road for like three weeks
and he was completely clean-shaven
and I haven't thought about that at all.
And he was not the kind of man who can't grow a beard.
I could see the potential for a beard.
I think he was, you know-
He's just a shaver.
He had his destination in mind
and I think it's psychological. It's like, you know. He's just a shaver. He had his destination in mind. And I think it's psychological.
It's like, you know what, for that guy,
I'm putting a lot on him, but I think, you know,
his tie to the civilized world is him continuing to shave.
And once he stopped shaving, he was giving up on his hope
of ever reconnecting with society on the West Coast
where he was gonna make a life for himself
and I presume his partner.
Yeah, and the hashtag van life.
And they were like-
Rent a van?
They were in a converted Astro.
Oh, okay. A four-wheel drive Astro.
No judgment.
And that had a pop-up thing on it.
And I could tell by the way that the woman,
his companion, Yes.
was taking pictures of like this hot spring that we were at
and everything and waiting for the sunset.
And she went to the hot spring and she moved things around.
I was like, this is a total hashtag van life.
And they're getting these really good pictures.
I can only imagine what this Instagram is gonna look like.
Well, our van was,
everything was,
it had all the amenities,
but the materials that they used to make everything
were very rugged.
It felt like you could just take a hose
and hose everything off because it's a rental.
And I mean, they touted how much
that they rigorously cleaned the thing
in between people using it.
If you were to do your own deal,
you would want like mahogany.
Yeah, it wasn't picturesque
because you start to think about,
hashtag van life is these people who put stuff on Instagram
and I was sitting in the back of the van
on the day after Zion when we were like,
we're just gonna take this day,
we're not gonna rush off the campsite,
we're gonna wake up, we're gonna eat breakfast,
we're gonna hang out here.
Hell, we may even take a nap before lunchtime.
A late morning nap.
Yeah, which we did.
Yeah, never been done before.
And then I was like, you know what?
That seems almost impossible.
Before, yeah, I know, right?
The whole hanging around in the morning,
which for me ended up being the highlight,
I'll talk about that, but never did it strike me
that I should get back in the tent and take a nap.
Like not even.
Well, it's different.
The back doors of the van are open.
This is a hashtag van life moment.
You lay down in the bed and then you stand up
towards the cab at the driver's seat
and someone takes a photo through the back of the van
at the scenery of someone.
Did you take a bunch of photos
that you're gonna post to hashtag van life?
Well, I said, Christy, come in here and take a picture of me.
I was laying on the bed thinking about maybe taking a nap.
She was outside reading a book and I was like,
come in here, take a picture.
And so she takes my phone, she comes right up to me.
I was like, no, no, no, haven't you seen?
Go back to the cab.
Gotta have some perspective.
I wanna shoot past me.
And then we tried to do that
and then I looked at the pictures and I was like,
you know what, I'm not gonna blame Christy for this.
Yeah, it's a heart.
It's the decor, so many things have to line up
for it to be hashtag-able van life.
And let me tell you, it was not worth it.
Because that right there.
I think it ruins the enjoyment.
It proved to me how much of a,
if you get really good at it,
you can probably do it quickly,
but it takes a lot of practice
to look like you're cool out there.
When this woman went to the hot spring,
she just moved a bunch of stuff around the hot spring
and then started taking pictures.
Were you in her photos?
No, but I'll explain why,
but I was very close to the hot spring.
The thing that I didn't fully anticipate,
I guess I could have known this,
but it's one thing to say it, it's another thing,
it's kind of like going to a park.
You can say how beautiful it is, but until you're there,
you really can't experience it.
I think in a similar way, I could have known
that this camping excursion would have been unlike any other
but I really didn't think it through until it was happening.
First of all, me and Christy, to the best of my recollection,
we've never gone camping just the two of us, ever.
Me and Jesse have never done it.
Every time that I would go camping,
I mean, in college we would go,
and it was also mission oriented.
We're gonna go to this place
so that we can experience these things,
so that we can experience these things so that we can do these things.
And whenever we would start going off-roading,
like when we first moved out here
or like we did the Death Valley trips and stuff like that,
camping was kind of just the means to bed down
in between doing more off-roading.
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
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The most prevalent experience of camping
is bringing the kids and there's so much logistics
associated with once you have one, two, three kids,
good gosh.
Right.
And you know, it's just-
Definitely one too many. trying to keep everybody straight
and keep everything together.
And somebody is all, everybody's got opinions
and everybody's on edge.
I didn't realize how, you know,
I came with a mentality of this is not,
everything we talked about in the last Ear Biscuit,
it's not about, it's just about taking every day
as it comes and my desired outcome
is quality time with Christy and then hopefully
that this is overall a great experience
that we can then do again.
So within that context, I started to realize,
I started to have thoughts.
Like the first night when we were camping
and setting up the camp was so easy.
There was no tent to set up.
There was no fire to start, which is illegal.
I just had that propane tank and you just fire that up,
cook some stuff, you immediately turn it off and on
and it doesn't spread flames at all, it's legal.
But it makes it so simple.
I found myself having this found myself, I found myself
having this-
Abundance of time.
Headspace to think and I actually had the thought
for the first time, I'm starting to connect with nature.
Like you hear people talking about
how they go out in nature and like some people say,
well, you know, I feel closest to God when I'm in nature
or I just like to connect with the earth.
And I was like, you know, hunters do that in their own way.
They connect with it so hard.
So hard. They kill it.
But it's this like primal thing, like farmers do it.
They get their hands dirty.
They like have a relationship with the earth
that they learn to speak its language and to give to it
and benefit from it.
And I actually started having these thoughts,
just like a level of appreciation for connection
with nature that on all of the campers I've been through,
there just wasn't a lot of space for that.
And you know, we're like setting up our camp,
we're eating, we're watching the sun go down.
Well, it also helps,
and I'm assuming this was your experience
because it's definitely my experience.
It also helps for me when you're not
in an established campground.
Yes.
To me that like-
Dispersed camping for the win.
That made all the difference in the world
in being able to-
What did you even say, for the win?
To feel like there's an opportunity to connect.
Because when you're in this like, okay, well,
there's this, especially when it's like a paved.
If you're at a campground.
Campground and there's a building over there
that a person built that you can take a crap in.
Yes.
That to me, that just takes away from it.
Even if the scenery is beautiful.
And then also, oh, and there's another person
right there next to you and you can hear their conversation.
You can like hear, even if you can't make out
what they're saying, you can kind of just hear
the.
Yeah.
And it's like, okay, that's part of camping
is what we've thought.
And we have camped like totally isolated,
but we've done it with other people.
Like when we went to Death Valley,
there was nobody around in many of those nights
except for the group, but it was like five trucks
full of guys.
So you still have that, there's no isolation.
But yeah, definitely that first night,
we found this amazing campsite just outside of Zion
on National Forest land using the iOverlander app.
That was the app that worked best for me.
I ended up using that, yeah.
We didn't have cell service, but the spot was so good,
we were like, all right, we're going to Zion tomorrow,
we're gonna come back to the same spot and enjoy it again
because it's such a good spot.
Like we could see the sunset.
Well, you know.
There was like a ravine right there,
there were red rocks, it was amazing.
I took a Garmin satellite phone.
Yeah.
Not a sponsor, I think it was the inReach
or something like that.
And so even when I didn't have cell service,
I could text Jessie and it texts her
and she gets the text on her phone.
And a location.
And a link to my location on the map.
Oh, that's cool.
And it's like a monthly service
that you can turn on and off.
And I think it's like 30 bucks for the month.
And then you just turn it off and it's stagnant
while you're not using it.
That's nice peace of mind because yeah.
I mean, I was by myself.
Yeah, especially by yourself.
So I definitely had to do that.
Yeah, so that isolation, it really creates
so much more space than I even anticipated
and it was just, it was relaxing.
And so it gets dark, you're hanging out
and I turn off the, actually I didn't turn off
the propane fire yet, we were like sitting around the fire,
we were looking up and we were just like,
man, look at the stars.
Oh yeah.
It's the time of year, it took me a while to figure out
why, I mean it was totally clear, the most stars
I had ever seen except for that night
that we landed in Fiji and it was dark
and we got on a boat that had no lights on it
and they took us out to that island
that we stayed at for a week and we looked up at the sky
on this boat, which Chris and I were talking about that
and we're like, I can't believe we did that.
Like in the middle of the night, it felt like,
in the pitch dark, we get on this boat and then we're talking about that and we're like, I can't believe we did that. Like in the middle of the night, it felt like, in the pitch dark, we get on this boat
and then we're just going out
and there's no lights on the boat, it seemed like.
Because we would look up and we saw so many stars.
And it took me back there because that was the only time
I'd seen as many stars as we saw that night.
And I turned off the fire
and I turned off all the lights on the van
and we just, just craned our necks and just,
we watched the stars like we were watching a movie
and that had never happened.
And you can see like the bright like,
sort of like cluster of stars
beyond the stars.
I was like is that the Milky Way?
Well you're in the Milky Way.
And then yeah, I convinced Christy it was the Milky Way
and then we came home and Lily's like,
dad, you're in the Milky Way.
She was like those are nebulas is what she said.
Did she say nebulas?
No, she said supernovas.
That's what she said.
Supernova is an event.
But this is just more stars, right?
You can see it was a whole band across the sky,
like one band of more stars, right?
Yeah, you know what?
Like a Milky Way.
By the time I record mine, I'll tell you what it is.
I'll know definitively.
Yeah, I wanted to look it up.
Because I saw,
I didn't have service.
Because you don't see that at all in Los Angeles.
No, yeah.
You don't even think about the stars.
It was mesmerizing.
And I didn't, you know,
like I said, we were just watching it like a movie
and we were just, it was a highlight.
It was amazing.
And then-
Did you see,
we'll talk about aliens, but did you see,
when it's that clear and you have that big of an expanse,
if you look for long enough, you start seeing shooting stars.
Yes, we were both looking up
and we saw the same shooting star.
And it was like, whoa, we just saw that.
So like seeing a shooting star together
and just talking about how, okay, first of all,
a shooting star is not a star, it's not a star at all.
A shooting star is a meteor.
No, a shooting star is the Milky Way.
It's like just to see this,
to both see a shooting star, to see this meteor.
It's almost like, what's the movie where they're-
It's serendipity to share that.
Is it Fievel, American Tail?
Is that when you're both looking at the same? Yes. It's just like that. It's to share that. Fievel, American tale, is that where, when you're both looking at the same?
Yes.
It's just like that.
It's just like that.
Except we're next to each other.
Is it Fievel or Fievel?
Fievel. Fievel.
Fievel.
And then, you know, we watched the stars, we had eaten,
it was time to, you know, to start bedding down
for the night.
And then I realized,
and I had this thought in the back of my head,
but it's not the type of thing that I wanted to say
as part of my intention.
And I wanted to hold on loosely
because you don't wanna attach too many expectations
and you don't, you know,
a lot of things have to line up
for certain things to happen.
I'm interested in where you're going with this.
But that night it was like, you know what?
You're not trying to have a fourth kid, are you?
Because you're not capable of that.
No, that's not what this is about.
That's exactly what this is about.
I'm talking about getting into the van and saying,
you know what, I brought some mail, you brought some mail,
I think we need to sort this mail.
Yeah, right.
We should sort this mail.
The back doors of this van are open.
There's a nice space here where we can lay out all the mail
and sort it.
Right, and this, hold on,
this is the first or the last night?
This is the first night.
I'm about to say, hopefully this didn't wait
until the last night before you figured out
this could happen.
This is the first night and I knew it could happen but-
You know what can happen?
I just never know, I never know.
You know, a lot of things have to line up to say,
you know what, it's a good time to sort the mail.
And if you're making a lot of adjustments to a place,
the last thing you wanna do sometimes is sort the mail.
And you gotta have an internet connection
so you can look at the WikiHow and know how to do it again. Now I remember how to sort the mail.
And we just felt like-
For those of you who didn't listen to that episode,
sorting the mail is having sexual intercourse.
That's for them to find out.
Okay.
Yeah, so we embark on sorting the mail.
Turns out we have both brought mail
that needed to be sorted.
That's important, both of you have to be sorted.
Right, yeah.
You just can't be one person.
Right, right, yeah.
That's very selfish.
Both people's, I mean, if you both bring mail,
you should both sort it.
Yeah.
It should both be sorted.
Did you sort hers first?
Sort each other's mail.
Because you should really sort hers first.
Don't be one of those guys.
Well, I mean, it's like you,
if you wanna categorize your mail,
then you like put it into stacks
and then you might sort some,
okay, some of your mail's over here,
I'm gonna sort some. What are the stacks?
I'm gonna sort some of,
we sorted some of her mail, sorted some of my mail,
then sorted the rest of her mail and then sorted.
Yeah, yeah, you don't wanna do all sorting.
Right, right. You wanna mix it up.
And then just make sure that-
You wanna save a little bit of my mail to sort last.
But the thing is, is once you've sorted your mail,
you don't wanna sort any more mail.
That's why the mail,
the mail's mail is sorted last.
Yeah. Yeah.
I was like, it felt like two teenagers
like going off into the woods in a van.
We never got to do that. And it a van. We never got to do that.
We never got to go parking.
I mean, not that teenagers even cared about their mail,
but you know what I'm saying.
I mean, it felt like teenagers sorting mail.
It was just- I cared a lot about mail.
And then I started thinking,
is the purpose of this van, this is a rental van,
is the purpose of this rental van
so that people can take it and go off into the wilderness
and sort their mail?
That's why they wash it so much.
Are other people sorting their mail right here?
That's why they tell you we've really, really,
really rinsed it down.
I started to get freaked out.
Of what?
I wasn't even done sorting the mail
and I'm starting to get freaked out
about thinking about other people sorting their mail
in the van. Well, have you ever been
to a hotel? And then I thought about the hotel thing and I'm starting to get freaked out about thinking about other people sorting their mail in the van. Well, have you ever been to a hotel?
And then I thought about the hotel thing and I'm like,
but it feels different because it's tighter in here.
And there's, I don't know,
it just felt a little different, okay?
And then I started thinking, you know what?
You're overthinking this.
Actually, continue to overthink it
and you'll come through the other side.
Here goes.
A lot of people want to sort the mail.
That's usually not. They think,
you know what, I'm going camping.
I'm gonna bring all this mail, I'm gonna sort it.
Were you talking about this out loud
or just thinking about it? No, no.
Too smart for that.
That distracts from the other mail being sorted.
You're not good at doing two things at once.
So I can only imagine that your mail sorting
was suffering significantly at this point.
Well, that's not the only thing I had to take a break for.
I mean, I was so parched.
I had to keep my water bottle up by my pillow
so that in the middle of the night I could reach over,
I could grab my water bottle.
Why don't you just sleep in a camelback?
And it's a good idea.
I do have one.
If you just would sleep in a camelback
and you could put it on your front
so you don't accidentally sleep on your stomach.
Yeah, I don't sleep on the ladder.
It's a camel front. You should make on your front so you don't accidentally sleep on your stomach. Yeah, I don't sleep on the ladder. It's a camel front.
You should make a camel front.
Or I could just run a straw from my water bottle
into my mouth and not have to wear anything
because that's basically what I had, a tank of water.
That's gonna spill.
At one point we were like,
we were sorting, you know,
we were doing a good job of sorting.
Like at a certain point, it's like, wow,
I really know where everything goes now.
Now that you're 42.
And then I look up and I see my water bottle
and I grab it and I start drinking water.
And then Christy's like, you can't take a water,
you're taking a water break in the middle
of our mail sorting?
Only Link Neal would take a water break.
I was like, I am so parched.
Like your nose, like my nose is still running a little bit
because it was so trying to moisten itself.
And like everything got so dry.
My mouth was so dry.
Oh gosh.
Yeah but.
I started to feel better about.
You gotta drink before and after, not during.
Yeah, lesson learned.
But I was, so I started to get freaked about
other people sorting the mail and then I realized,
you know what, a lot of couples,
they get out here and like one of them done,
one of them's like, you know, I didn't bring my mail.
Or the other one's like, I didn't bring my mail.
It's like, again, you both need to bring mail
to be sorted if you really want this thing to work out.
I think most people, one person will be thinking,
oh, we're going in this van, I'm definitely bringing mail.
But both of them, maybe not.
I think most people, when they're packing everything
and they're like, you know, oh my gosh,
I know I'm gonna forget something.
At that point, even before they left on their trip,
they say, you know what, I ain't got room for mail
and they don't even bring it.
So then I started to feel better.
I think that we broke in that van.
So you're telling me that you are trying to take comfort
in the fact, which I believe is not a fact,
which is a false assumption.
I don't want you to.
That other people have not had sex in this van.
That's just not, that's,
most couples who go camping have sex with each other.
I never had.
You haven't been camping with your wife before.
You just said that at the top of this.
Well, you may be right, and you know what?
I need to get my own van.
Whoa, okay.
I was okay with it.
You should get your own van for other reasons.
We didn't discuss this, it just happened in my mind.
I'm only discussing it with you
because I knew this is where it would land.
I think maybe what you should realize at this point
is that you have probably had sex in many different places
where other people have had sex and most likely-
Can you say male?
No, because I think that we have to talk about this
directly at this point. I think that we have to talk about this directly at this point.
I think that the analogy is fun,
but I think that it may be making you think
incorrectly about it.
Sometimes an analogy can get too vivid.
Yeah, like if I have to wear a postal outfit?
I think that we need to now be using literal terms.
So next time you have sexual intercourse with your wife
in a place that is not your home,
you need to assume that another couple
has also had sexual intercourse in that place.
And that's fine.
And you need to be okay with that.
I was okay enough with it to finish the job.
Not without taking a water break though.
It's totally unrelated.
And then I was like, man, I hope we're not close
to other people like when we camp other nights,
because I don't wanna be thinking,
are they over there sorting their mail?
Do they think that we're over here sorting our mail?
Does it matter?
To me, that's a more relevant question, right?
Especially with the van doors open.
Because what I found is that there is a sweet spot.
I'm not talking about sorting mail.
I'm talking about wherever you find a place to boondock,
which is not another word for sex.
It just means, it just means, it sounds like one though.
But it does.
Boondocking complete.
Initiating docking sequence.
Well, I mean, because you think about it.
Yeah, you dock.
Boon is a pretty good name for it.
And docking is the perfect word for it.
Boondocking in the boondocks, that's what I did, man.
Wow, boondocking.
Boondocking just means camping.
Dispersed camping is the official term
on like the National Forest websites.
But to me, there's a sweet spot.
You don't wanna be in an established campground
because you're too close to people.
Yeah. But as I will explain thoroughly in my episode.. You don't wanna be in an established campground because you're too close to people. Yeah.
But as I will explain thoroughly in my episode.
Other people don't care?
No.
Being too remote presents itself
with a new set of problems.
There is a sweet spot in which you're alone.
Yeah.
But you kinda know where that other family is.
Yeah, and we knew there was another couple,
like the first place we went to in that,
like we could barely see them
if we looked through the trees in a certain way,
like, I mean like over a mile away.
Right, you feel like-
I had made contact with people
and then I found another site.
You can have a conversation with yourself, in my case,
you can play your own music.
You're not thinking about,
like if you need to like walk to the side of the campsite
and piss on a tree or something like that,
you can do all this freely.
Yeah.
But, so obviously I wasn't thinking about boondocking
or sorting the mail because I was alone.
So the question for you would be,
was that on your mind?
Like, could someone be watching?
And does that, would that bother you?
Well, we had already,
because we didn't wanna shower in the shower,
like I said, we showered out in the open
using the garden hose that had hot and cold water,
spick it right there at the back of the van.
Like we did like a full on shower there.
Yeah.
Like shampoo, I had my freaking loofah, baby.
You brought a loofah?
I brought a loofah.
Okay, all right.
I took a- Exfoliate me.
I took a naked shower.
It's great.
In a valley.
Bring a loofah?
I know, I don't have a loofah to bring.
Now when- I don't know why
there was judgment in that statement.
When you go to- I gotta get in my loofah to bring. Now when you- I don't know why there was judgment in that statement. When you go to a-
I gotta get in my scary story too, so.
We're just quickly answer this.
When you go to a hotel that is like a high rise
in New York City, for instance.
Yeah.
And one of the walls is a window.
Yeah.
And it faces across to another building
that has a similar setup. Yeah. And it faces across to another building that has a similar setup.
Yeah.
And the time to sort the mail comes.
Do you close the windows?
Or do you put on a show?
I think,
I don't know.
I honestly don't know.
I think it depends on, I don't know, I honestly don't know. I think it depends on, I don't know,
there's a lot more variables than like
what I actually see out of the window and how close it is.
Well, yeah, so.
But if I can see other people walking around
and if they were nude, I could see them.
Like I usually, well, if you turn off most all the lights,
I leave the windows open.
See, I have not been able to convince.
So it's darker. I haven't been able to convince. So it's darker.
I haven't been able to convince my wife of this yet.
But my personal philosophy in this situation is,
if I can look to an opposing building
and I can see that there's people.
Yeah.
But I could not identify them without, you know,
a set of- The position they were in.
I could identify the position.
Okay.
And I could tell, okay, there's a long haired man
and a woman or whatever, whatever, you know.
But not, hey, there's Rhett having sex with his wife.
Yeah, yeah.
Without the assistance of like some sort of binoculars
or something.
I am on team open window.
Open window.
Open curtain.
Because I-
But when the lights are off in the room.
No, I'm team lights on open window.
No, you're not.
I am.
Lights off, man.
Lights on.
Okay, all right, that's okay.
I wanna see what's happening.
But then you're encountering resistance from your mate.
She is, she's not completely close to the idea.
She also thinks that, like She also thinks that like,
she also thinks that like everyone can hear
and see everything.
She thinks that everyone else on earth is Superman
in terms of how well they can see and hear.
You know what I'm saying?
I mean, you gotta ease into it.
Leave the curtain open, but turn the light off, man.
Just that you need just enough light to read
what the mail says so you can sort it.
You gotta know where it goes.
If I had to choose between lights on or window open,
I would choose lights on because I mean.
I like a nice candle light or like a nice ambient light.
I don't mean like fluorescence.
I'm talking about like the bathroom light is on
and the door is a skew.
I'm not talking about like commercial kitchen lighting.
I'm talking about like,
I wanna be able to see everything,
but also if it's a little bit dim,
you know, everything is,
you're both that much more flattering to one another.
Sure. Yeah.
But completely dark?
No. No, not completely.
I mean, ambient lighting.
I don't want it to be fuzzy.
Ambient lighting does not allow for anyone
across the skyscraper to watch you.
But having people across the skyscraper watch you can,
in my thinking, I never experienced it,
could be an enhancement just for every once in a while.
Okay.
Yeah.
All right, I wanna hear your story though.
It's not that I want to cut that conversation short.
It's just, I don't have anything to say after that.
It's like, okay, you know, and I'm like,
I'm gonna just thumbs up.
Well, my favorite part about these conversations
is that after we have them, people tweet at my wife
and then I get home and she's like,
what did you talk about?
What were you talking about?
We pre-recorded these, it was so long ago,
I don't remember.
So it was our, this story happens, and it is not a story.
This is a true event.
A matter of fact, I wrote down what happened
so I wouldn't forget any of it and to lend credibility
to it.
I didn't wanna forget anything.
Christy had a more direct experience
with a key part of this, so I wanted to make sure
that her story came through correctly
and not in any way embellished.
This is how the things happened.
We had gotten pretty good at camping by our last night.
Like I said, we went outside of Vegas.
We were looking forward to finding a campsite earlier
and then also leaving later the next morning,
like to really be at a leisurely pace
and still be able to get home
before I have to return this thing at five o'clock.
So we went up into this Lovell Canyon Road.
It's actually, it's a road in the middle of nowhere
on the backside of that mountain range
that overlooks Las Vegas.
You can't see anything.
I mean, it took a long time to get up there.
Once you're gonna, once you get on that road,
it goes for miles up into this picturesque valley.
And then there's an occasional gravel pull off to the side
with where people could camp.
We saw a couple of people,
but the one I was going for was way far in there.
And we wanted cell service.
So I went as far as we could go, we lost cell service.
Then we came back and I saw one campsite
that was up on this berm in the middle of this valley,
this amazing berm where middle of this valley, this amazing berm
where we drove off of, it was actually a paved road.
Did I say that?
It was like, it was asphalt,
the main road through the thing.
So it was like accessible,
more accessible than other places.
But then once you go off of that on the dirt road,
like I was like, I'm gonna put it in four wheel drive
because I just don't know, like going over these rocks.
It was not a smooth road at all.
It wasn't a gravel road.
It was borderline off road, off roading right there.
But it wasn't far that we would go off the paved road.
We would go up this berm,
maybe 400 yards. And there was a campsite
that had this amazing vista on both sides.
We had cell service, but I looked
and there was down a little saddle,
further on the off-roading and back up,
like 200 yards away, there was another,
it dipped down and went back up and there was another berm.
So I drove over there and it just wasn't flat enough.
I'd learned that like, if you don't park flat,
you don't sleep flat and that's,
it really compromises your ability to sleep.
Did they not give you the little blocks to balance?
No.
They were no blocks.
I took those with me, those proved to be.
I underestimated, like people were leaving reviews
about like the campsite is flat and I'm like,
I discovered it's important.
For a tent, that's really important.
But when you have a van or you've got the rooftop tent,
I just bought like 30 bucks on Amazon,
these blocks that you can stack in all these different ways
and I use them literally every single night to get,
under multiple wheels, to get it exactly,
it became this mission to get the tent exactly flat.
Because you sleep a lot better.
Yeah. If you're sliding,
especially with two people,
when you're like smooshing somebody.
Yeah.
That's not good.
So we left that outermost berm,
we came back 200 yards down the saddle,
back up to this other berm,
and then we set up shop there.
Sun was still, it was like four o'clock.
We had plenty of time to enjoy everything.
We had, it was like 360 degree view.
You cooking inside the van?
No, we're cooking on the, there's a burner in there,
but then we cooked on top of that propane tank outside.
Like we had a big rectangular skillet.
We ate breakfast for dinner that night
because it was our last night and we had eggs
and bacon.
Christy made the bacon.
She fried the bacon and it spelled link.
She knows the way to my heart.
Wow.
Yeah, pretty great, huh?
We're having a great time.
We're listening to Sea Change by Beck.
That's a big pan or a small bacon.
It's a, yeah, the pan was this big.
Okay.
And then the sun's going down
and some, I think there is some smoke residue
or it might've just been so hot, the ambient heat,
it created this amazing effect on the sunset.
And it was like literally the most amazing sunset
we've ever seen.
Like it was wonderful.
We were having the time of our lives.
And then we ate dinner as it was getting dark.
And then because she made the dinner,
I was on dish duty inside of the camper
and she was sitting outside, I think reading something by,
like on her phone, because she had service.
And by this point it's dark.
It's like nine o'clock, okay?
And I'm like finishing up washing the dishes.
And earlier in the day, before it got dark,
we heard a car coming up the road
and again, it was still light.
And so I stepped out of the camper to just let them know
that like, hey, there's two people here
and I'm gonna suss out these people going by.
People coming up the dirt road.
Yeah, coming up the dirt road
and they had to go right beside our van
to then go down that little thing to go to that next site
that we decided not to take.
Well, really early on, one guy,
along with the rooftop tent went there, he parked,
and we're like, oh man, is he gonna say,
we can't shower there now, because he would see us.
He stayed there for a few minutes, then he left.
Later on.
Yeah, you can't be crowding people, man.
It's a frickin' desert, there's all kinds of people.
Later on, it's almost sunset, this people man, it's a freaking desert. There's all kinds of people. Later on it's almost sunset, this other man
and it looked like his teenage daughter came through
and then they went up and checked out the same spot
and then we're like watching and we could see them.
We could see and they got out of their car
and they set up a tent and they stayed.
So we were a little bit bummed but like we were facing the other direction and they were up a tent and they stayed. So we were a little bit bummed, but like we were facing the other direction
and they were on the other side of the van,
like I said, 200 yards away in another berm.
So we still felt like we had pretty good privacy.
And then sun went down, we ate our dinner,
it's nine o'clock at night.
I'm inside washing the dishes, she's outside on her phone.
And all of a sudden I hear gravel,
and I see like headlights hit the side of our van
and a car is creeping up the dirt road,
coming right up to us and like, I'm in there washing
and the car comes past my field of view and stops
where I can't see the car.
I can't see who's driving the car or anything.
I can just see the tail of the car
from where I was washing the dishes,
but I could see Christy and she could see this car,
of course, because she was out there in the open.
And then the car stops.
Right next to you.
Right next to the back of our van.
And I hear a guy say to Christy,
are you selling any hot dogs?
And Christy said, and I freeze and I'm like,
what the hell is this guy asking about hot dogs?
And I'm like, I literally freeze and I'm like,
just listening, cause it was hard for me to hear,
but my instinct was just to listen.
So let me just, here's the exchange.
Are you selling any hot dogs?
And then I hear Christy say,
no, we actually don't have any.
And then the guy says, I'm going around
getting people to vote.
Vote on my pictures to see which ones they like best.
And I'm still listening and then Christy goes,
no, no thank you, we're not interested.
She was like really, had a friendly voice
and then the guy said, I just need you to vote on the photos.
See, I have them right here and I can't see them.
And then Christy stood up.
You're still in the kitchen?
I'm still in the kitchen frozen.
Like washing, like you gotta be out there at this point.
In retrospect, I was trying to figure out why,
was I frightened, was I frozen with fear,
was I being strategic?
Being strategic.
I think all of these were happening because my initial thing
was- The strategic hesitation.
It's not basketball.
I was trying to assess the situation.
I was freaked out.
I was like-
As you should have been.
I was like, what the heck's going on?
Like when the people came around earlier,
I had come out and shown my face,
but my instincts told me, just sit back here.
Christy is gonna,
I need to do whatever it takes to deescalate the situation.
This guy seems strange.
Uh, a little. Very strange.
And I think I was just like,
Christy is going to politely get this guy to drive off.
If I go out there and like say something,
I might say the wrong,
I had this instinct that I was gonna say the wrong thing.
And I will say- You might escalate.
I had had a couple, okay?
Okay.
So I wasn't, I was just trying to know my limitations.
And I was like, I might go out there
and I might be aggressive or I might try to scare the guy.
And that is your MO when you enter into weird situations.
You come in pretty aggressive and pretty strong.
Not deescalating.
And if I had, yeah, I escalate things.
And if I've had a few, I speak louder.
And so I think I didn't have enough
that I didn't know that about myself.
So my instinct told me, Christy's gonna deescalate this.
I'm gonna stay back here and then I can assess
what I need to do when the time is right.
So, I mean, he was like,
I'm going around getting people to vote,
to vote on my pictures to see which ones they like best.
And then Christy's like, no, thank you,
we're not interested.
And then he said, I just need you to vote on the photos.
See, I have them right here.
And then Christy told me that he holds up
like four by six photos.
Was on a phone, it was literal photos.
He had printed out photos and he was,
of course he's in the driver's seat.
He's leaning over the passenger seat,
trying to lure Christy close to the car
to show her the pictures.
How old is this guy?
What does he look like?
Christy said, it's very dark.
Again, there's no moon.
We had turned most of our lights off.
You're way out there.
We're way out there, yes.
And Christy was like, well, no,
we're just wrapping up dinner.
And then she said she couldn't see his face that well,
but it was just, it was one guy in the car
and it was a hatchback car.
It could have been like a Subaru Outback type thing
that could have gone on this off-roading part.
But if you're in a car and you go slow enough,
you can, you could navigate it.
And so it was just a hatchback.
That's all we could tell.
He was, he's leaning from the driver's side,
so she can't really see his face,
but it's just some white dude.
I mean, she couldn't describe him more than that.
And then she's like, we're just wrapping up dinner.
And so she said, he was like, okay.
And he throws his hand up in the air, like whatever.
And then he slowly keeps going past us.
To the other people.
Down into that thing and then up to those next people.
And at that moment that he drove away,
Christy, you know, I'm still in the kitchen.
Christy comes in there and she's visibly freaking out.
Hmm, yeah. And I visibly freaking out.
Yeah.
And I'm also freaking out and like our eyes are so wide
and it was like, we were like, what just happened
is what we seem to be saying to each other
without actually saying words.
And I was just like, she was like,
was this guy trying to lure me to the car? I was like, yeah, I didn what, what, was this guy trying to, this guy was trying to lure me to the car.
I was like, yeah, I didn't know if I should go out there
or if I should wait, but it felt like you were handling it.
And I was like, I just, you know,
I just wanted him to go away
and it seemed like you were doing a good job of that.
And she was like, and I was thinking,
we gotta get out of here.
You know, he's going to these, this guy's unpredictable.
Did you, do you have a- He may be unstable.
Do you have a knife or anything?
I wasn't thinking of that at the time.
I have one of those like five and one tools
that has a knife in it.
I have a giant knife.
Yeah.
Like a hunting knife that's like 12 inches long
and I kept it in my tent every night
just in case trouble came.
Yeah, yeah, well let me tell you,
I gotta rethink some things.
To think things through on another level
because at this point, I'm thinking in my mind,
I know Christy wants to get the hell out of Dodge
and I'm also thinking.
He's gotta come back by you, right?
We knew that he had to come back by us once he was done.
Once the dad and the daughter
were done judging the photos.
Yes.
Or once he's done like killing and eating them,
there is a dead end.
He has to come back by us.
So we were freaking out that we knew he was coming back by.
Also, you still got cell service.
Did it hit you that maybe you should call the police
at that point?
Christy said, let's call the cops.
And I'm like, let's not call the cops yet.
Let's not panic.
And I just didn't feel like, I don't know.
I just didn't wanna call the cops.
Let's put a pin in that.
Okay.
I'm not saying that you definitively
should have called the cops at that point.
Christy was talking about let's call the cops.
There was a debate.
There's something not right about this guy.
Yeah.
There's several things not right about this guy.
So Christy was like,
need to pack everything up so that when he comes back
through, we can be ready, we can be in the van locked up
and we can, if we need to leave, we can just leave.
So I was like, listen, Christy.
And we turned off all the lights in the van
so that we could see through our little window.
We watched him drive down there to those other people.
With all of our lights on, we couldn't see him that well.
So we like doused.
How easy is it to pack up?
We doused everything.
And then I was like, Christy, you look out this window
and you keep your eyes glued to this guy.
If he starts coming back, you let me know.
While you, don't take your eyes off of his car lights.
I'm gonna get everything cleaned up.
And then I went out there and I got,
the propane tank had just, propane burner had just
cooled down enough to put it in the car,
the propane tank, our chairs, the cooler.
I'm scrambling putting everything away
in the pitch dark without any lights on.
And then I put everything back in and I come back in
and she's like, he's still there.
Yeah, I mean, he's got a lot of photos to go through.
He's still there.
I don't, you know, did he kill both of them?
I don't know, you know, what's he doing?
Is he putting on their skin as a suit?
I don't, you know, I don't know what's happening,
but I'm thinking if we, and I asked Christy this,
like if we're watching a movie of us right now,
what would we be saying to our characters?
Get the hell out of here.
Yeah, but in the movie
that you would definitely have judged the photos
because I mean, that's what would be more fun for a plot.
Oh, really?
Yeah, yeah.
Let me see your photos.
Christy did stand up, I think,
but she did not walk towards the man with the photos.
Yeah, we knew he was coming back and we're like,
I don't wanna be the people in the movie
that I'm gonna be angry at.
We need to be ready to leave.
So like we locked up the van, we locked up everything.
And then all of a sudden the car starts moving
and it starts creeping back.
And because of the terrain, it had to go so slow and it went down in that berm
and it came up and we're looking out the back two windows
of the van where he would drive right past us
and he drives and he comes right up to the van
and then he keeps going slowly.
And he goes down below the van
and he gets back to the paved road
and we could still see him
and he stops there at the paved road
and he doesn't, he has to turn right or left.
He doesn't turn anywhere.
He sits there for a long time.
And I'm like- Like how long?
It felt like 10 minutes.
Like he was like, I don't know,
is he blocking our only exit?
Like we're cowering in this van locked up
and then he turns left and we like watch him go down
into the canyon and then we watch him go up on another berm
where a long ways away we saw that there was another camper
and it's like, Chrissy's like, we need to get out of here.
And it was like, she was like, you've,
you can't drive.
It's like, you don't wanna get a DUI.
She didn't want her first experience driving
the sprinter van to being off road.
So then it's like, you just need to like,
you just need to just take some time. How long do you think it's gonna take you just need to like, you just need to just take some time.
How long do you think it's gonna take you
before you feel like you can drive?
And I'm like, ah, an hour.
And then like, we're just sitting there in the dark,
freaked out.
You can see, you can still,
you can kind of see where he went.
I see that he went to another site.
And then like over 20 minutes of processing this,
I'm like, you know what?
It's a paved road down the middle of this thing.
This guy's a little off, but I bet you he comes up in here
and tries to sell his pictures to campers.
And I'm like, Christy, he said,
I'm not trying to sell you anything,
I just want you to vote on my pictures.
But then when you said, I like this one best,
I'm voting for this one, he would say,
I'll sell it to you for $5.
Because it was like pictures of like nature.
Of nature.
So I was-
Well, the pictures of him like posing.
Yeah, yeah.
Which would have been especially weird.
It wasn't like you in like a New York City exhibition.
Right, yeah.
In your bedroom.
So I'm like, this guy is just a strange guy
who likes to sell his pictures to like campers
in the pitch black of night.
Yeah, not a great strategy.
And she's like, well, I would feel better
if we went and talked to that other couple.
And I'm like, if we drive up there,
there's no place to turn around
because of where they parked.
I can't turn this van around.
That's probably why it took him so long up there
because he couldn't turn his car around.
And I'm trying, you know, I'm like,
I'm getting my wits about me now.
I'm not freaking out as much
and I'm trying to deescalate how scared Christy is. And I'm like, I'm getting my wits about me now. I'm not freaking out as much and I'm trying to deescalate how scared Christy is.
And I'm like, and then we start,
so we start walking down into the ravine
up to where this other camping group is,
the dad and the daughter.
And we get halfway there and like,
you can hear someone's on a laptop,
like watching a show or something.
But then it's like, it's so dark out there.
And I just had a headlamp and I was like,
we're gonna freak them out by going up there.
And we just, we got too scared to walk up to them.
And we turned around and walked back and we were like,
we're like, I'm scared.
We were like laughing.
Chrissy had not had anything by the way.
She was just like, she just predisposed
to be freaked out by this stuff.
And she doesn't like to drive off road,
which stuck us in this middle ground
where like huddled back at the van,
afraid this guy's gonna come back.
And I'm like, listen, this is fine.
She was, I really would feel better
if we talked to those other people.
So we walked out there again.
Did you make it this time?
We get halfway and we get scared again and we come back.
Hold on, you're scared?
I don't know, we were just so freaked out
that we didn't wanna go.
Scared of freaking them out?
We were scared of freaking them out.
What if after all this, like that guy has a knife or a gun
and like he's trying to protect his daughter
and we're the ones who get caught in the crossfire
or something, because we freaked him out.
And we were gonna yell at him and then it's like,
you don't wanna yell.
Hey, we're gonna talk to you about that guy
that tried to get you to judge the photos.
We go back and I'm like, listen, everything is fine.
We're locked up in this van.
And you sleep inside the van.
We sleep inside the van.
It's locked up.
So we got calm, we're like,
we're just gonna chill out here.
And then we're like, you know what, we're here.
I mean, we're just bedding down for the night.
I got some mail.
We could- This is not a great time.
We could sort some out.
You know what?
Surprisingly enough, there was enough mail on both sides
to sort that it actually, it actually, you know,
sometimes when you clean up,
it gives you a sense of control.
I think sometimes sorting the mail gives you a sense of,
well, release.
Well, it's like a gorilla,
when a gorilla is trying to express dominance.
Dominate another gorilla,
it gets an erection and shows it.
Yeah, yeah.
And it's actually way smaller than you would expect
for a gorilla.
Cause you would know that like anyone who's really scared
can't get an erection.
Right.
If they're even, not'm not even just a gorilla.
Like I'm talking about me now.
So being able to get an erection and use it.
Yeah.
Is actually the ultimate show
that you're completely relaxed.
We were completely relaxed.
We were over it.
In fact, come on back, let me buy some of your photos.
And then, so then I was feeling pretty good.
And we were like getting everything, like I probably got a drink of water and I got up. I'm feeling pretty good. And we were like getting everything,
like I probably got a drink of water and I got up.
I'm sure you did.
And it's like all of a sudden,
the sliding door on the van begins to open.
Now it's a big electric sliding door.
So it's like you pull the handle and then it like goes out
and then it slowly and there was dirt.
So it took a while for it to open.
I did not, the keys were up in the front
where I'd locked the van.
Christy didn't have them.
We didn't touch any buttons that would have opened the door.
100%, we did not do anything to open the door,
but here we are, the door is opening,
and I'm standing there looking out the door as it's opening,
waiting to see this guy standing there.
It scared the shit out of me.
And also Christy, like she literally had to go
to the bathroom once we found out
there was no one standing there.
I don't know why the door opened,
but there was, my theory is there's some sort
of voice command that connects
to like the entertainment system.
You didn't know about the voice command?
And I don't think that the voice,
sometimes it would come on kind of like,
when you say, hey Siri.
So it's, but I don't have any proof that that would actually work
with the van.
Maybe it wasn't locked all the way.
And when I shook it.
Had you said like open?
No, I did not want the door to open.
I'm so open right now.
There was nothing on the other side of that van door
except blackness.
It was so dark.
It scared me.
You expected the guy to be standing there with two photos. Yeah. Van door except blackness. It was so dark. It scared me but-
You expected the guy to be standing there with two photos.
Yeah, he wasn't there.
Which one do you like?
Just tell me.
And then Christy, at this point,
Christy wasn't freaking out and I was like,
I think it was the voice thing
because something lit up on the entertainment console.
I was lying.
And so she was fine and she wasn't freaking out about it.
So then I closed the door back
and then I made sure everything was locked.
And then we laid back down in the bed
and Christy kept looking at those,
she was looking through the window,
but like I rolled over and went to sleep.
I don't know how long I was asleep.
Christy said I was snoring,
but she was wide awake and looking out the window.
And then what I woke up to was Christy grabbing my thigh.
This story is still going?
Yes.
She grabbed my thigh and it was probably 10 30
at this point.
I woke up out of a sleep and like eyes wide open,
headlights shining through the back of the van in my face.
Oh gosh.
Did you immediately recognize the same headlights?
And I couldn't see it because it was headlights.
And then the car is creeping towards us
and coming right up to our van.
And then it slowly goes by
and it's the same car.
It's a hatchback.
I will say for a fact, it's a hatchback car.
And it keeps going by and we are freaking out.
I mean, every time that we've been freaking out
this whole time with all the lights off.
This is nuts.
Christy and I have been whispering to each other.
We haven't been talking in a loud voice.
We've been like whispering, like what do we do?
And it was like, oh shit, I think that's,
I don't think it's the same car.
I'm like telling Christy, I'm like, that's a different car.
It's boxier.
Yeah, boxier. I'm lying.
I'm thinking, this is the same freaking car.
This is picture man.
And he goes by us.
He knows it's a dead end.
He goes down into that saddle.
And then I can barely see his car stop, brake lights.
He doesn't go up to those people.
His car stops down in the bottom,
a hundred yards from us and a hundred yards from them.
And then all of a sudden the lights in the car go off
and I'm waiting for the interior light to come on
when the car door opens.
They don't. It doesn't.
He's bedding down.
It's totally black.
And then we just sat there for a long time,
just watching to see if there's any signs
of this guy getting out of his car.
Cause I'm like,
and then I'm like, I sit up and I'm like,
just keep watching.
I'm getting in the driver's seat
and we're getting the hell out of here.
And I got in the driver's seat and I backed that puppy up
and we drove out of there.
Because the guy was just there.
At any moment, he could have got out of the car,
walked up there and made his skin into a suit.
At that point, you have no choice.
Now, and so we drove down like to the end of the road
where we pulled off the main road
and we were still in a place where we just parked over there.
We saw someone else camping.
We camped kind of near them.
We just parked and we felt much better
and we slept that night, got up the next morning.
But I wanted to go ride back up there
and see if anybody was still up there, but we didn't.
Because what about the dad and the daughter?
Well, they were alive the first time he left.
And then the second time he didn't go back up there,
but like he might've blocked them in.
We, that's the scariest, that's the scariest I've ever been.
And it was like multiple freaking parts to it.
And maybe we should call the ranger even now and tell him,
hey, heads up, there's some dude with pictures.
If there's a, you know, I don't have much of a description,
but maybe, maybe this is what's happening with this guy.
Maybe years ago,
Maybe this is what's happening with this guy. Maybe years ago,
he made a deal with the devil of sorts.
Okay.
And now every night,
he has to get someone to buy one of his photos
or else he turns into a pumpkin.
And I think what happened is,
is that either he succeeded or he didn't.
And he goes back to that spot.
And if you had a stuck around until midnight,
you would have seen him turn into a pumpkin.
What do you think really happened though?
I think the guy was a little off,
but he was just trying to make scratch,
selling these pictures of nature.
And I'm dying to know what he said to those people,
but I was too scared to walk up there and I'm mad at myself.
And what did they, did they see him coming up?
Because I mean, if they were freaked out,
then they see this guy come down
and stop at the bottom of the ravine.
Do you think that they knew that he was there?
Yeah.
They definitely would have seen him.
And he's on the road.
Yeah.
So they can't get around him.
Yeah. I did a bad get around him. Yeah.
I did a bad thing, didn't I?
We abandoned these people.
Those people got boxed in by this guy.
Who knows?
And this just happened two nights ago.
You might need to look at the news.
And it might be like,
father and daughter murdered by crazed photo man
outside of Las Vegas.
And if that happened.
While other couple sorts mail in the close vicinity.
And now you've told your whole story,
which includes, well, we saw him,
we got a little bit scared, we had sex,
and then we left.
No, he came back.
You have no alibi at this point.
You don't really need an alibi,
but I mean, you definitely are an accomplice to this.
I just, I don't like calling the cops
because I didn't wanna like trouble them.
They got things to worry about other than that, you know?
It's like, and I couldn't describe my exact location.
I was like, well, we're up this canyon road
and we still have cell service, so we're not too far in,
but we're not, we're really far in.
It's one of those situations, and I'm not saying,
I don't think I would've acted any differently, but it's one of those things and I'm not saying, I don't think I would have acted any differently,
but it's one of those things that you wish you could go back
and the moment that he shows up,
you could just say something like,
hey, bro, let's talk about this.
You understand what you're doing
is very weird and threatening.
It's dark, we're out here in the middle of nowhere.
You're asking these weird questions about selling hot dogs
and then asking us to judge your photos.
This makes my wife and I feel unsafe.
Oh, well in that case, let me shoot you in the face
and turn your skin into a suit.
I don't think that would happen.
I think the reaction would be.
Oh, you're right.
I'm not crazy anymore.
No, no, they'd still be crazy,
but you would at least say, so dude, go away
or I'm gonna call the police.
I'm not saying I would have done that going in,
but if this ever happens to me now,
that's what I'm gonna do.
I feel more prepared now.
I would have gone out there and I would have said something.
Here's the thing that I've learned.
Whenever you're out there camping
and there are people going by,
like when that dad and daughter went by,
I probably would have waved them down and had a conversation
because that way it's like I have an assessment
of who these people are on this next berm.
And then I would have confidence if I needed help
or if I needed to check on them,
I know I have confidence that I know who they are.
That was part of why I was scared to go over there
because I don't know that it was a dad-daughter.
It was like, it was a weird age difference.
Yeah, but hey.
So, you know.
Maybe that's what they do.
I don't know.
Maybe the photo person was with them
and they spent a lot of time there and they were like-
They're a team, huh?
It's not a very effective plan.
Yeah. They need to work on their strategy It's not a very effective plan. Yeah.
They need to work on their strategy.
I don't know what the end game is.
I could get better at being ready for this type of thing.
And then again, not escalating it.
The main thing is like, after I was like,
as it was happening, I was like, okay, if we don't die,
this is the end of me and Christy ever going camping again.
And I was mad.
Yeah, they got ruined.
But you know what?
She actually took it in stride with our entire trip
and all the other things that happened.
And- At least it happened
the last night.
We had a positive experience.
It happened the first night.
So many positive experiences
that this scary thing did not outweigh it.
So, you know, just to kind of shut this down
in a positive place, I'm not saying I'm definitely
gonna buy one of these off-road sprinter van outfits
because I've got three kids and there's a lot of problems
associated with that.
Space was of a premium, let me tell you.
How many people could you comfortably take on a trip?
We could have brought Lando and there's one place
that could lay out where he could sleep in a separate bed.
But also.
But you could do a rooftop tent or just set up a tent.
Take a tent. Yeah.
Because my rooftop tent is rated for three people,
but they would be very small people.
Yeah.
So I think I could either have Jesse or one of the kids.
And so I was like, well, I'll just take an extra tent,
put it on the ground.
If that guy would have been on the other side
of that sliding door, like I have no explanation
for why it opened, but that I've never been so scared
as that moment.
That's why you gotta have a knife, man.
That's why I was, yeah, like,
and I needed to have that knife in my hand.
I had bear spray, I had a bullhorn and a giant knife.
Yeah, I've never been more scared than at that moment
because like, I just remember the feeling
of peering over into the darkness as the door,
it could not have opened slower.
And I just knew that he was just gonna be standing there.
Yeah.
You know, we're not prepared for that kind of thing.
Like because we live in such a controlled,
civilized society at this point,
you go back in several thousand years,
first of all, you wouldn't be in a van
because they didn't exist.
But if you had been in a van and the door opened,
you would be immediately like in an aggressive,
like you would have been so ready,
like you would have been punching the air,
you know what I'm saying?
This is what I look like.
Right, yeah.
You were totally, you were petrified, man.
I looked like this, I was sticking my neck out
to be chopped.
We've lost the ability to just take life
by the horns, man.
Yeah.
We've been coddled.
Yeah.
We should all be, we should have knives.
I'm gonna have so many knives.
We should have.
I'm gonna have throwing knives.
We should have gloves that have claws on them.
So you're saying that Link Neal should go out
into the woods cosplaying as Wolverine.
Yeah.
Like is that a good idea?
I mean you might hurt yourself and others
but you'll also protect yourself and others.
The first night I couldn't figure out the freaking van.
This is another point of reference.
Like we were bedding down for the night and I'm like,
I can't get the cab lights to turn off
in the front of the cab.
I can't get them to turn off.
I was pushing buttons everywhere.
I accidentally pressed the SOS button on the Mercedes.
That's a problem.
And all of a sudden I heard it.
Hello.
I heard a number.
I heard it, it's ringing.
Yeah.
And I'm pushing buttons and I can't get it to stop.
Well, they'll ask you if it's a true emergency.
And then all of a sudden I'm like,
they were like, hello, is this an emergency?
And I was like, um.
No, I'm one of the 98% of the people
who accidentally press this button
that you talk to all night long.
No, what I said was, said, hello, is this an emergency?
And I said, no, but can you help me with a technical issue?
No, you didn't.
And she said, no, this is for emergency uses only.
I'm like, okay, well, I didn't even mean to call you.
I just hit the button by accident and she hung up.
And then I ended up pressing the SOS button
three more times by accident,
trying to figure out how to turn the lights off,
but she never answered again.
I got blocked.
Cried wolf.
And then I got in bed, I'm like, I'm sorry, Christy,
the cab lights are gonna be on, it's gonna be ambient.
And then she's like, I'm scared, this is a first night.
She said, I'm scared sleeping with the doors open
on the back of the van.
So I was like, I went around, walked outside,
closed the doors, cause that's how you have to close them. And then as I was van. So I was like, I went around, walked outside, closed the doors,
because that's how you have to close them.
And then as I was walking back, I was like,
that's why the damn lights were on.
So then I closed all the doors and I hit the lock button
and the van locked and all the lights went off.
And that's how I know that,
I don't know how that door opened for the creepy guy
to not be there because I'd figured it out.
But everything was so hard to figure out.
Can you have the doors open and the lights off?
Surely you can.
You can't hit the lock button.
If you hit the lock button, the lights stay on
to let you know that you didn't actually lock your van
because there's doors gaped open.
Got it, yeah.
So you have to learn to speak the van's language.
Maybe I'll get one, maybe not,
but I definitely have an appreciation
for going out into nature and just like bringing my mail.
I don't know if I ever wanna bring my kids, honestly.
Maybe just one kid at a time type of thing.
If I have this van, I can do smaller trips too.
It doesn't have to always be,
I'm trying to talk you into talking me into this.
You can come, me and you can take the van.
Yeah, but we gotta share a bed, right?
I will have a different, what?
I'll put a rooftop tent on it.
You can put a rooftop tent on the van?
Yeah.
That'll be way up there.
You're used to it.
It's true.
You definitely should do it, man.
That may have been the scaredest I've ever been, period.
I mean, I haven't had anything that legitimately,
as I'll share in my episode.
I'm just trying to get people to vote on my pictures.
Lots of, first I thought you were gonna say,
I'm just trying to get people to vote.
I know, that's what I thought.
I was like, this guy in the middle of nowhere,
you're trying to get out the vote?
Yeah, man, whatever it takes.
That's what I thought. Every vote counts.
I was so, I was so. Nevada's a swing state.
Everything he said was so strange
that I was just frozen in fear and lack of assertiveness.
But Christy handled herself like a master.
Now here's the thing.
My wife would be really mad at me
if I had behaved like you did at the beginning.
I was surprised Christy wasn't mad at me.
Because. Because I think I deserve beginning. I was surprised Christy wasn't mad at me. Because.
Because I think I deserve it.
There was this one time that she never
lets me live this down.
There was this one time we were in Chapel Hill,
been married for like a year.
Yeah.
And there was a homeless man who was aggressive
and kinda like, kinda coming at us.
And. You pushed her. No, I didn't push her into it. kind of like, kind of coming at us and-
You pushed her.
No, I didn't push her into it.
Take her, not me.
What if that's what I actually did?
Take the small one.
I had seen this guy before and he was,
he would get in people's faces and you know,
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Most of the time, the vast majority of the time,
if a person in this situation gets aggressive,
it's all talk.
You know, it's all bark, no bite, right?
So we're just walking along and she is on the side that he's,
and he kind of comes at us and I just sort of looked at him
and just kept walking, but I didn't get in front of her
and I didn't bow up to the guy because in my mind,
this guy's just a little bit nuts.
He does this kind of aggressive thing
when he comes up to you and then you just walk by.
But for our entire marriage, she has held that against me
that I, you know, in her mind, I pushed her to this guy.
And so now I have this conscious thing
where it's just like, if we're in a situation
where someone is threatening, I've gotta like,
I've gotta like insert myself.
But I haven't had the opportunity.
And I have the opposite because remember that age old,
the story of Christy was pregnant and the guy,
Yeah, right.
And the guy with the football.
You tend to come in a little too high.
What are you doing?
Yeah.
You know, I gotta swing the pendulum back.
All right, let me shut this down.
I need to make a quick rec.
It's my turn to make a rec.
Let's see, not the last, but the AMA before that.
The Mythical Society AMA we do every month.
Somebody asked what I was listening to
and I told them what we were listening to.
I'm gonna make it a recommendation.
Zephaniah Ohora.
This guy channels Merle Haggard and he's like,
I mean, I'm not telling you anything you don't know
because we discovered this guy.
He channels Merle Haggard on these like,
these vintage country music tracks.
He's out of Brooklyn.
It's pretty phenomenal.
My favorite song, We Planned to Have It All,
is like a early 80s Merle.
He usually goes like some of the earlier Merle,
but we really liked that early 80s Merle,
not the like early 70s Merle.
We love it, but that's our sweet spot.
We Planned to Have It All is the song
that I am recommending
by Zephaniah Ohora off the album, Listening to the Music.
Oh man, I gotta get out of this sweatshirt.
I just been sweating too much.
And if you're out there and you're listening
to this podcast and you have a tendency
to just approach people just outside of Vegas.
In the dark.
In the dark to get them to buy.
Or vote on your photos.
Just understand or buy people's hot dogs.
That's your opening line.
Yeah.
This is not a good strategy for selling your photos.
You frightened at least one family that night.
And you're on the verge of being reported.
It hasn't happened yet though.
It hasn't happened yet.
Just know probably next time,
the next person you approach in this way
will probably call the authorities.
Or stab you.
And if that person is me,
both those things I guess will happen
because now I'm ready for it.
Yeah.
Hashtag Ear Biscuits.
We'll hear about Rhett's amazing solitary experience
next time.
Yeah, I didn't run into that guy.
Spoiler alert.