Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - Celebrating Our 300th Episode | Ear Biscuits Ep.300
Episode Date: August 30, 2021From your favorite Ear Biscuits moments to how the podcast may have influenced your life, R&L are celebrating 300 episodes by engaging with your submitted voicemails. Thank you for the ongoing convers...ation, and thank you for helping shape Ear Biscuits into what it is today! 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,
the podcast where two lifelong friends
talk about life for a long time.
I'm Link.
And I'm Rhett.
This week at the round table of dim lighting,
we are celebrating 300 episodes of Ear Biscuits.
That's the name of the podcast.
Wow. We already said that.
And we're gonna be doing that by hearing,
hearing from you.
Yes, we have done, we have just embraced.
You are now on the line.
Modern technology.
It's not gonna be live.
It's not that modern actually.
Thank you to all of you who recorded essentially voicemails,
filling in the blanks, completing sentences.
We had a few prompts that we went through
that we sent out there into the ether and you responded.
Many of you responded with lots of heartfelt, funny,
even some weird things that you said,
and we're gonna be covering more than a handful.
Yeah, I mean, I had a lot of fun getting a little taste
of some of these and selecting some of them.
If you're a long time listener,
this will give you an opportunity
to see how much you remember
and if you agree or disagree
with what was the most impactful
or the most memorable moments or that type of stuff.
If you are new to Ear Biscuits,
there's no shame in not having listened to everything.
I mean, I certainly don't remember all of it.
It's like, I don't think I was here for most of all of it.
Yeah, but if you weren't, this is an opportunity to say,
hey, I might have to go back and find
where they were talking about this or referring to this.
What year was episode one?
I remember we were in the other studio.
We bought this table.
I mean, we were in the other studio. We bought this table. I mean-
I mean, we were in the other studio doing that podcast
for more than a year.
And we've been in this studio for at least five, six.
Of course, the Ear Biscuits started off
as us interviewing other YouTubers and getting their story.
That's not what the podcast is now.
And I'm glad it is what it is.
Man, it's evolved so much.
We're not gonna get into that.
We're basically talking about the current iteration
of Ear Biscuits and how that's impacted your life.
Well, really, that's what you talked about.
That's true.
We left it open-ended.
We left it open-ended and no one,
as far as I understood,
like recognized or brought up anything
from those early days.
Well, there's one like intermediate episode,
which we'll talk about.
But you know, I'll give credit to Stevie.
She was instrumental in encouraging us to start a podcast.
I remember back when we were trying to figure out
what we were gonna call it.
We were getting the rug, we were getting the table.
And you know what?
That turned out to be a great decision.
So much of our professional development has,
this has been such a catalyst for that
in terms of what our brand means,
how we talk to ourselves and how we talk to each other.
That's pretty much what it is.
And how we talk to our audience.
Welcome to When We Talk To Ourselves.
This show has had such an impact on our lives
and our friendship and I'm very grateful for it.
And in some ways, 300 doesn't seem like a lot.
When it's once a week.
When you've done 2000 episodes of Good Mythical Morning,
but that's not a reason not to celebrate
because it is a lot and dammit, we are gonna celebrate.
This is special.
And I think as we go through some of your responses,
maybe that's gonna give us some stuff to talk about
about what the podcast has meant for us
as it has meant things for you.
But before we get into that first one,
I'm very excited about September because you know what?
Around here in Ear Biscuits land,
it's not called September.
Nope. It's called Sextember.
He said Sextember. That's right,-tember. He said sex-tember.
That's right, starting next week
and continuing through the month of September,
we're gonna be doing nothing but talking about sex
on Ear Biscuits for a full fricking month.
I'm talking four episodes in a row.
And I'll go ahead and say it, the last episode,
the fourth one, we will be taking your questions,
which we will be asking you to submit to us
over the course of, starting now,
if there's any question you want us to answer,
any topic you want us to discuss in the world of sex,
sex-tember!
We're falling.
Wow, that's good.
We're falling face first into what?
Well, let's save that.
Four sacks.
Yeah, so I think maybe for the full month,
you know, I don't know, this is not, I mean,
this podcast is, you know, it doesn't get too,
doesn't get too damn bad.
That's about as bad as it gets.
I was just illustrating how we might curse
every once in a while, but let me just tell you.
Cursing and sex have really nothing to do with each other.
Well, it depends on if you come from
evangelical background or not, which we will get into.
But what I'm getting at is-
Cursing during sex, let's talk about that.
We're not gonna be, I mean, we're gonna be talking openly.
We're gonna be talking openly about sex.
And so if that's not something that,
if you don't want your children-
Strap in or buckle down.
Your children to be educated by us,
and we're not gonna do this to educate.
You just, they may just get a sideways education.
I guarantee you, everybody's gonna get education on us.
Yeah, so, Sextember, mark your calendars.
It's pretty much just once a week in September.
One of the prompts that we put out is,
the re, shoot, what is it?
Earbiscuits is the reason I blank.
So let's just start there with a few.
Let's listen to one.
Earbiscuits is the reason that I get in my car in the morning and actually want to go to work.
I have over an hour commute, and being able to listen to Rhett and Link talk about stories from their lives
and be introspective on different things that have been going on around the world
is really fantastic to go into every single day.
Starting my morning with two best friends is definitely how I'd like to start my day for the rest of my life.
Thank you for that, Noah.
That was Noah Cook.
Are we saying last names?
In that case, I just did.
Some people submitted first and last names.
Some people just did first names.
Some people did like nicknames.
So we'll just do whatever you did.
Thanks, Noah.
I mean, I think that I would like to ride into work
with two best friends who just wouldn't shut up
in the backseat the whole time.
This is my issue with what Noah said,
is it makes me feel like we're not giving Noah enough content.
I mean, Noah's riding.
Yeah, well, he has an hour commute.
Riding to work, assuming he works daily,
you know, Monday through Friday.
We're doing this once a week.
Yeah, I don't know what he- We're gonna have to go to a week. Yeah, I don't know what he-
We're gonna have to go to five times a week?
I don't know what he does the other four mornings
out of the week, but Taylor does something different.
Let's listen to that voicemail.
Hey Rhett and Link, Ear Biscuits is the reason
I get so much stuff done around my house.
That is my chicken in the background if you heard him.
But Ear Biscuits helps me keep focused on what I'm doing
and it's entertaining as well.
So anytime that I finish an episode,
I realize that I've done about an hour's worth of work
without even realizing it.
So keep it up and we love you and you guys are awesome.
Bye guys.
And by we, I think the chicken is included.
Yeah.
Thank you, Taylor.
And thank you, Taylor's chicken.
I would love to have a chicken in the background.
I wish I could be on more phone calls
with people who have chickens in the background.
I mean, it's just something that we need more of.
But I do think that that is something,
you know, that's how I listen to podcasts.
I listen to podcasts while driving
or while doing something.
I mean, does anyone just sit down and be like,
what are you doing?
Well, right now what I'm doing is only listening
to a podcast.
Have you ever done this?
Yeah, I'm always doing something else, usually driving,
but I've started mountain biking.
I think I told you this.
I'll mountain bike up when I'm doing the climbs,
like typically my routes are majority climb
and the majority downhill.
Some routes are a little bit of both,
but like, especially for the long climb routes,
I'll listen to a podcast on the way up
and then on the way down, I'll switch to music.
Because-
You wanna listen to the podcast when you're working hard,
you wanna listen to music when you're just riding the gravity.
Well, yeah, it's fun, you know,
that the music gives me that energy to like,
just, it's more fun, but it's also more technical.
You could die if you're not really concentrating on,
you know, missing certain things at a higher speed.
Cause some people feel like you might need music
for motivation while going up a hill.
But I like getting in the zone of ideas
when I'm just trying to granny crank it up, you know?
Well, I just gotta say, I think,
I'm glad that we can be a part of your lives in this way,
even if we're in the background with your chicken
or in the background as you're driving to work.
We're not asking to be front and center.
We're not asking to be completely focused on.
We want you to focus on what you need to focus on.
We just wanna be present.
It's cool to be a companion.
Yeah.
Yeah, to be along for the ride.
I really like picturing what people are doing.
Oh, they're getting done.
Right.
I mean, maybe there's people who just sit down
and give it their complete, you know.
I mean, for the video version,
and there are people who prefer to watch it on YouTube,
it's still a background thing, but I think, you know,
you'll stop and be like, whoa, whoa, whoa,
what's that look on his face?
Is that an additional meaning?
Is that another layer?
There's a layer of context sometimes with faces.
Let's hear from Abby.
Ear Biscuits is the reason why I feel like
I should install a window in my shower.
I love you guys.
I love the pod.
The channel's awesome.
It's just really nice to see a couple of best friends succeeding in life just by being themselves.
Pretty epic.
Congrats on 300 episodes.
Can't wait for more.
Abby sounds like.
That's a nice voice.
Soothing. It's soothing.
It's like a Delilah voice.
You know what I'm saying?
Oh yeah. It's like,
I would like to hear,
I would like to hear free falling from Tom Petty
because I'm thinking about, you know,
my eighth grade girlfriend.
Even with the laugh, the little,
I mean, that was good.
Yeah. Abby, you need to go
into radio or you at least need to consider it.
Because it's not a dying industry. Maybe you should start a podcast. Well, let was good. Yeah. Abby, you need to go into radio or you at least need to consider it. Because it's not a dying industry.
Maybe you should start a podcast.
Well, let me just start a podcast.
You got a great voice.
Two friends succeeding at life by just being themselves.
I mean, I like that.
There might be a better, again,
the slogans just keep coming.
Yeah. I mean, that's a-
Succeeded, I like the mantra of succeed at life
just by being yourself.
And I do think that's something that,
you know, we're processing our lives
in front of these microphones.
And there is a level of, we've gotten to a point
where there's a level of expectation
that we can come into this place
as kind of like a safe space for us to process.
And I look forward to that.
There's plenty of times when I'm like,
I don't know exactly how I feel about this,
but I'm gonna get it out.
And it's great to have a venue like that.
I mean, it's kind of, it's therapeutic in that way,
but it's also so encouraging to see how many people,
how it resonates where you're having an honest conversation
and sometimes I even forget people are listening.
At least maybe 90% I'm totally just in the conversation
at certain points.
90% huh?
I think there are times.
Only 10% thinking about the fact
that there's someone listening.
Yeah, that's a dangerous place for me, isn't it?
Does that make you nervous?
Well, I actually am surprised based on
you pretty much kept yourself in check most of the time.
But it's one thing to give people what they want
or something that's gonna get clicks or get listens.
But it's another thing to just do something we wanna do
and for it to work and resonate.
Well, and I would say this whole idea of being yourself,
it is, you know, making the decision long ago
for a number of reasons to just talk to each other,
one of them just being it was easier.
Mm-hmm, yeah.
Started us on this trajectory
where you gotta keep digging.
Like, you know, we're not, this isn't performance mode
and this isn't unlike something like Ronstadt,
which is obviously just the scripted podcast.
You're putting your work out there.
You're putting your art out there.
This is really putting ourselves out there
and it's actually given us,
like we've revealed more and more and more about ourselves
and actually kind of began to more to understand
by revealing and being vulnerable,
actually learn more about ourselves in the process.
I mean, again, wasn't ever the intention.
It's just something that sort of happened.
It's a win-win.
Who else do we have?
Shanice.
Ear Biscuits is the reason why I graduated
with a uni degree this year.
Helped me conquer my travel anxiety
by keeping me entertained and calm on my long trips
in and out of uni.
Thank you so much.
Shanice is saying that the reason why
they got through college or uni, whatever that is.
The same thing in Australia, I think.
Is Ear Biscuits.
I mean, being able to help, it's like, okay,
this is the show that Shanice goes to
when it's like, I'm traveling, I'm anxious.
Well, I always wanted to be a uni professor.
You know, I mean, I always loved the idea
of just walking around a campus and watching the leaves fall
then going into a classroom with like a wild haircut
and beard and like saying something
that makes the students confused.
So this is as close as where we're gonna get.
And Shanice has basically just validated that dream of mine.
I don't think that's what Shanice was going for.
Okay, right, yeah, that's right.
But it is validating.
Oh, I'll take it.
Do we get like an honorary copy of the degree?
I think we might get an honorary degree
at that said uni, whichever uni that is.
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similar uh vein still with the prompt ear biscuits is the reason i blank here's rosie
ear biscuits is the reason I still understood.
I also stopped believing in God after being raised in a very religious environment and family.
And the only difference between me and you was that I had to go through it all alone.
And hearing you guys' story and how similar it is to mine, even though I live across the globe,
just really helped me feel like I'm not alone out there.
Thank you.
Thank you, Rosie.
Yeah, thanks, Rosie.
You want to move through all three of these,
and then we can kind of talk about them together?
Yeah, here's Matthew.
Earbiscuits is the reason I'm much more open about losing my religion
and replacing it with openness and kindness and curiosity.
After growing up in the South and giving so much of myself to the Southern Baptist Church, my childhood best friend and I began touring the country and processing all of that just out on the road.
Both of your stories run really parallel to ours, and it's been a joy to share such an eyeopening experience together through Ear Biscuits.
Love you guys.
Thank y'all so much.
Love you too, Matthew.
Thank you, Matthew.
We've got some parallelization happening there.
That's like him and his best friend.
Touring, doing something.
Touring. Band.
Some sort of tour.
Comedy show.
Situation happening.
I don't know.
I don't know.
All right, I got a third one here. This is Amna.
Ear Biscuits is the reason I have so much knowledge about the South in the United States,
despite me being totally removed from it as a Pakistani.
But, you know, this place I call home is also a conservative place with its Islamic traditions, rituals, etc.
I find myself drawing these intricate parallels
inside my head.
The patriarchy, the underlying racism, intolerance.
It's just been a fascinating exercise
to get this outside view of something
that sounds so similar.
Wow, thank you for that.
That, I mean, it's super cool.
I mean, there's so much feedback we got at the time
and even now with this prompt on our spiritual journey episodes,
our lost years, sub series, deconstruction stories,
but it was just nice to see that, you know,
there's people who are saying they feel understood
and not alone, they relate to our situation directly
or they're coming from a totally different place
on the planet.
Well, I think the cool thing about what Amna shared
is talking about the patterns, right?
And it doesn't matter where you're from
and it doesn't have to be the American South or Pakistan,
but there are so many, there are systems,
there are oppressive systems
and people who have been in power,
who have been oppressing people forever, right?
And they might come in different forms,
but a lot of people have suffered under those systems and then at some point questioned
those systems and questioned how it relates
to them personally.
And that's another pattern.
That's a pattern that's happening in the United States
and all around the world.
I mean, we're most familiar with what's happening
in the United States in the evangelical church.
And that is people are leaving in the,
I know it might seem like things are getting more
and more polarized and it might seem like certain
very loud voices on the fringes
are getting louder and louder.
And so it might seem like certain groups are growing,
but the reality is is that in a lot of ways,
people are leaving behind those old oppressive systems
and they're kind of collapsing on themselves.
And I'm sure they'll be replaced with other things
and we're never, you know, it's like,
we're not immediately gonna just have some utopia,
but it's been amazing to see the number of people
who have just by us together kind of processing our story
who have just by us together kind of processing our story
and people hearing like, oh, this is so common, right? I don't think that we were responsible for a movement
by any means.
I think that we were just representative of a movement
that has been happening for years.
Yeah. And we just vocalized
what was happening in our little corner of this movement.
And that was people beginning to question
these foundational things that they had built their lives on
and now they're seeing more and more people
are in the exact same boat.
So, you know, and this is just a sampling
of similar messages that we got from people who are like,
hey, I basically have gone through something very similar
to what you guys went through
and thanks for talking about it.
To Rosie's point about loneliness,
I'm just continually grateful that we have had the benefit
of supporting each other and being there for each other
throughout our entire lives.
And especially when exploring things as weighty
as your deeply held beliefs and practices,
you know, it's just really encouraging to hear
that us sharing how we leaned on each other
is then becoming something that they can lean on.
And I just didn't know that was gonna happen.
But it's cool for people not to feel alone.
It's such a, you know, that's just one of the things
if I need to cry, I can think about either being lonely
or thinking of people being lonely.
Like that's gonna do it.
I don't wanna cry right now.
So let's move on to Mercedes.
Actually, I think this might make me wanna cry
a little bit more.
Ear Biscuits is the reason I was initially able
to get through the loss of my lifelong best friend.
She'd shown me GMM years prior.
And when she passed away at a young age from cancer,
listening to their episode about the loss of a loved one on a loop each night is what brought
me comfort and company in a time of isolation. And they don't know that they held my hand through
that, but I can't thank them enough either way. Wow. Well, we do now Mercedes, thanks for sharing that.
Yeah, you know, it's really remarkable
how much that episode about Ben has connected with people.
And again, whether you're talking
about the deconstruction series,
you're talking about the episode where we talked about,
you know, losing Ben,
our intention every time we get ready to talk about something
is not like, okay, well, this is really gonna,
this is gonna bring in the listeners.
This is, you know what I'm saying?
It's like, it's really a decision to kind of look inside
it's really a decision to kind of look inside
and be vulnerable and kind of speak from our perspective, which we recognize is a very particular limited perspective.
But what you just find repeatedly is that
somebody is gonna connect with some aspect of it
in a way that we just,
we're just sitting here talking about the guy
we grew up with who were sad that he's gone.
And then you just see how many people watch that
and listen, I mean, on YouTube, especially,
we just, they were like, oh, the Ben episode,
it's broken 4 million views, right?
And it's just this phenomenon of just making a decision
kind of unintentionally just to speak from the heart.
And sometimes I'm like,
well, I think people watch that video
because it's the rawest we've ever been.
It was a difficult episode to get through for sure.
You don't see us in that state a lot.
It was so raw.
It's like, are people watching for the spectacle of it?
Okay, whatever, if some are,
but it is really nice to hear that that is not the majority,
I believe, of why people are watching that episode.
It's a legitimate connection.
And I do think, you know,
the experience that we have in being vulnerable
and then seeing how people,
they take it how they will,
but if it enriches their life,
there's a reward cycle there that then says,
okay, are there things that I am willing to explore?
I'm more willing to explore things
because I see that people benefit from it.
I think there's a couple of things
and one is just personal growth
and the other one is how it affects
the programming of the show.
From a personal standpoint,
and it's not just true of being a host of a podcast,
I think this is true of life,
is that when you take a risk to be vulnerable
and someone benefits from it,
like there's a connection, there's intimacy,
there's help or solace, it fuels that.
It gives you more courage to do that again.
And I think that is the development
of a big aspect of this show.
From a programming standpoint,
you talk about something like sex timber.
Yes, there is a, we know that that's sensational,
that we're gonna talk about sex.
And so it's not just, I really want us to process sex
and talk about it
and figure it out. Cry about sex.
Yeah, it's not, I mean-
You gonna cry during sex temper?
There is a programming motivation that like now
we're willing to go into unmind areas of our lives
because that's what this show has become.
And so there is a programming, producorial decision in,
okay, if we talk about sex,
I think that people are gonna come out of the woodwork
and be introduced to ear biscuits,
and I'm excited about that,
but I'm gonna do it subject to the values
that we put in place, that when we do it, we're gonna approach it with honesty
and we're not just trying to cash in.
We don't wanna do anything to make it cheap,
even though conceptually it could go that way.
I think we're putting in boundaries where that's just,
I mean, you know, as a listener that you expect us
not to like, cash in is not the right word,
but you know what I'm saying?
Yeah, well, there's a, yeah, it's the-
Use a topic or use vulnerability.
Well, we try to avoid what I might call vulnerability porn,
right, which I do think is something that exists in media Well, we try to avoid what I might call vulnerability porn. Right?
Which I do think is something that exists in media
and exists on the internet
and it definitely exists in our industry.
And it can be a tough line to walk,
especially like our brand is not,
like our brand is comedy first with almost everything we do.
This podcast has become a place where we are most honest
and most vulnerable.
But when you start seeing people respond
to the vulnerability, then the vulnerability
becomes a content strategy,
I think is what you're getting at.
Yeah. And that can feel
a little icky.
And so I ultimately, what we're trying to do is,
hey, we understand that these subjects
and us being honest about these things
may connect with more people
and that may be good for the bottom line of the podcast
and of the business,
but at no point are we moving into this place where,
oh, let's manipulate our audience
through us being vulnerable.
And that's something that you gotta think about
and something you gotta keep in check.
Yeah, and so do you.
Yeah.
Right?
It goes both ways.
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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video episodes on crunchyroll or on the crunchyroll youtube. With the next prompt, it kind of went in the more comedy response direction,
which kind of balances out what this show is about.
So I think we can go there next.
The prompt is,
what moments live rent-free in your head from Ear Biscuits?
And let's start with Alexander.
Congratulations on 300 episodes, guys.
I've listened to every single one.
And the one Ear Biscuit moment that just truly lives rent-free in my mind
is when the Battleship guy was narrating you guys eating imaginary s'mores.
I think of it all the time.
And just a big old hunk of chocolate.
Congratulations, guys. Keep doing what you do. That was our buddy Dave. all the time and just a big old hunk of chocolate.
Congratulations guys, keep doing what you do. That was our buddy Dave, Dave D'Andrea,
voiceover artist extraordinaire.
One of the last guests we had on the show
where we went through that period
where occasionally we were bringing in someone
that we wanted to talk to,
but that wasn't necessarily famous.
It was just more of subject matter based stuff.
And as a voiceover artist,
I mean, we didn't know we were gonna start asking him
to like, to spit ball and start doing impromptu VOs for us,
but I just remember how much fun we had.
And it's cool to know that like,
it's cool to create stuff that people are just going about
their everyday lives and they just remember,
stuff is just triggered.
Well, he was the voice of Battleship.
Yeah.
When did we play or listen to, was that on GMM?
I feel like it was a Good Mythical More thing.
And we were like making a big deal about the voice
and then we tracked him down.
Yeah.
Yeah, it turns out he was much more
than just the voice of a battleship.
Yeah, he was the voice of us eating s'mores.
Right, which I do not remember the specifics of.
I didn't remember the actual s'more thing.
Stuff that we forget, people, you know,
it gets stuck in people's brains.
Yeah.
And they're not even charging us for it.
How about Nia?
Hello, hello, Ear Biscuiteers.
The Ear Biscuit's moment that lives in my head rent-free
is Link's discussion about sorting mail.
Because it do be like that sometimes.
You gotta go through the laborious task
of sorting through all the junk mail
to reach that one niche envelope that really gets you going.
But it just ends up being a $5 rebate check.
Hey, it's better than nothing.
I'm really trying to follow this analogy.
So in that analogy of sorting the mail.
Yeah, I think we just up to go into sextober.
Are the different pieces of mail,
different things that you could do with one partner?
Or are they multiple partners?
I mean, I'm not trying to make any assumptions here.
I took it that it was like different practices
that then, oh, you found the right one.
You found the right piece of mail.
But then it turns out it could be a $5 rebate.
And so you thought that you were getting something special.
The analogy's fun.
Yes, it is.
But it can be stretched.
Yeah, I mean, we've gone from me like speaking in code
and trying to come up with,
but I mean, that is something that Christy and I would do.
And it is something that we can talk about in sex-tober.
It's like, how do you talk about sex in your own house
with other people around, children or otherwise?
But yeah, we've gone from like speaking in code
and that being like a shocking,
oh, this is what they're talking about now?
To us doing it for four weeks in a row.
But I also think that we've potentially ruined
actually sorting the mail,
like literally sorting the mail for many people.
Like you just- I love it, again.
Well, you wanna go to your mailbox,
you wanna see if you've got, you know,
if there's any checks in the mail, any coupons.
And you wanna get honey.
And now all you can do is think about Link in his bedroom.
So on his behalf, I apologize to you
if we have ruined that for you.
It all runs together for me
because is sorting the mail the same story
was when we were locked in the bedroom?
Locked in our own bedroom?
I think it was.
I think that's how I told the story.
I transfer whatever it is that we said and did
in an episode to the internet mind.
Right.
It leaves my own mind because I did it, I was here,
now it's on the internet, it's available.
Yeah, I got more room.
Why does it need to be in my mind anymore?
Yeah.
This is how I think about Good Mythical Morning.
When people start asking questions about something we ate,
I'm just like, it is just a huge blur.
Not even a very detailed blur.
Let's go to Karina.
The Ear Biscuit moment that lives rent free in my head
is Rhett talking about watching trashy reality TV
for seven hours.
Yeah, you were on quite a tear there.
Now, did I talk about it for seven hours
or did I talk about watching it for seven hours?
I don't think I talked about it for seven hours.
In my memory, it was both.
You, I mean.
I've definitely watched a lot of,
at least seven hours worth of trashy reality TV.
You give them people all types of permission
to just love that crap.
Well, they didn't need my permission.
Nope, but they got it.
What I've done is I've connected
with the millions, hundreds of millions of people out there
who unabashedly, unashamedly watch reality television,
trashy reality television.
I told you this, so we're a big fan of John Wilson,
How To With John Wilson on HBO,
which probably was a wreck at some point on this show.
And super innovative documentary series,
very quirky, very funny, very real and raw.
He was a guest on Conan O'Brien's podcast,
Conan Needs a Friend.
And just somewhere in the middle of the conversation,
like Conan was asking him what he enjoyed,
like what kind of entertainment he enjoys.
And of course you got this, like,
what is the word, the auteur?
You've got somebody like him and you're like,
well, whatever this guy likes is gonna be this thing
that's refined.
And he was like, well, I'm a big part of Bachelor Nation.
And he goes on to talk about how much he likes The Bachelor.
And then he, I mean, I think he talked about,
he may have talked about Too Hot to Handle.
He talked about trashy reality TV.
I mean, I think- And explained why he liked it.
And I was like, that's exactly why I liked it.
You can start a commentary channel.
Well, that's been done.
I mean, yeah, that's kind of a big fuel
for the commentary fire across YouTube anyway.
Mason or Maison. Hmm. if that's the French pronunciation.
The Ear Biscuits moment that lives in my head rent-free
is the time that Link was telling a story
about him and Rhett were in the car on the way somewhere,
and the guy next to them at the stoplight
got out of his car to get something out of the trunk,
and Link was like, I have a great idea.
I'm going to play a little prank on this random man.
I'm gonna get into the driver's seat of his car.
And Rhett responded like it was a little zany,
but to me it was insane.
But maybe Rhett is just used to this.
I peed my pants.
Did you actually do it
or did you say you were gonna do it?
Again, I don't remember the specifics.
I don't think I actually got in the driver's seat,
but if that's how I told the story, I need to stand by it.
I think I would remember
if you actually went through with it.
I remember you reacting as if it was a bit zany.
Just a little bit zany, nothing too serious.
Amy weighed in.
The Ear Biscuits moment that lives in my head rent-free
has got to be when the lighting fell down,
the crew quickly rushed in to clean up,
Rhett's completely gone off camera,
and Link is singing Everything is Awesome into the microphone
and also trying to explain what happened.
Pretty funny.
And I think Kiko thought he might get fired after that.
Because it was one of these things, right?
It was one of these circular,
spherical light fixtures that fell.
I'm just like, finally good content.
Yeah. Something happened.
And I was like, I'm gonna go and use the bathroom.
There was a spill happening.
And I mean,
a number of people responded about that particular moment.
It really lives in people's heads because it was,
I guess it was such an outlier
to what normally happens on the show
and the fact that we just kind of went with it
and kept it in there.
People love that and that's why I was like,
yes, this is great.
People are gonna remember this forever.
But the thing you have to be careful of
is then you can't engineer the light falling down next time.
Some people are not above that.
Whoop, the light, see, like that?
Right, yeah.
It would have seemed a little planned.
Yeah.
Crystal.
The Ear Biscuits moment that lives in my head
of rent-free is when Rhett was telling his story
about his family trip to Scotland.
And then at the very end, he says,
well, turns out we're Irish.
That was a great moment.
That lives in my head.
That's one I haven't forgotten that I kind of remember
pretty regularly with a little bit of shame.
Yeah, but as an ear biscuit-
Not that I'm ashamed to be Irish.
I remember it as an ear biscuit moment
because I knew it was coming,
but then when you hit us with it,
it was just like, I talk about burying the lead,
it was just perfect.
That just felt good.
That's one of those things that has,
recently spending time with my family,
the McLaughlins up in the mountains,
you know, when I was in North Carolina a while back,
we was the same group that had gone to Scotland together.
And so they're not really letting me live that down.
And also kind of holding me to this idea
that we now have to go to Ireland.
It's the running joke.
Yeah, so mom can break her other ankle.
Who's pushing that trip the most?
And do they,
cause they really, someone really wants to go to Ireland.
Your dad?
My dad definitely mentions it more than anyone.
It's hilarious, man.
I mean, I think we gotta make it happen.
I mean, if we were like to talk about the top 10
funniest moments of the show,
which I, you know, maybe at 500 episodes.
Okay. That's what we can do.
That would definitely be on it.
Like the biggest laughs from us, Anna.
The Ear Biscuits moment that lives in my head rent free
is it's not that I'm stupid,
it's that I can suspend my intelligence.
No, I'm guessing that you said that.
You don't remember when I said that?
Yeah, I do remember that.
Yeah, I mean, it was a personal realization
that I had in conversation with Lando and then with Lily.
I was just trying to, I remember trying to figure out
how they perceived the internet me
versus the real life dad me.
And I just kinda, I gleaned that piece of wisdom
that made me feel better about,
I experienced freedom through this phrase even now.
Is this like, I can be as stupid as I want
and say, you know what?
I don't care if people think I'm stupid,
I'm in control of it.
Right.
That may not be completely true,
but that's the narrative
that I'm now putting out into the world.
I think that's a good story to tell yourself.
And it could also be a good t-shirt.
I don't know, we never made it.
Phoebe.
The abyss gives moment that lives in my head rent-free
is one Christmas when you guys were talking about
Christmas gifts that you were
getting for everybody and where i was talking about how he was getting one for christine he
was getting some sort of like some sort of food like pickled food or something and he had to jump
over a fence to go to the place and he completely like ripped his leg up and it's stories like that
that get me through school that it was then and now university now. So cheers guys.
Well, Phoebe, I'm glad I could provide that.
I could help you get through your day by ruining my leg.
I actually- How's that going,
by the way?
I went to pick up some food at a pizza place
that was at that same intersection.
And I haven't been to that intersection
since the incident.
Uh-huh.
And this was just a couple of weeks ago.
And I was like, oh, what is familiar about this?
I was like, oh yes, there's that place that I got those-
Pickled stuff.
Pickled things for Christy. She's right.
And then there's the fence.
And it just looked so harmless, like from my car.
It just looked like, how could that injure a man?
It really did.
I don't even remember what part of my leg it cut,
but it was bad.
But I'm glad it gave Phoebe some entertainment.
All right, now let's move on to the third
and final prompt we have, which was,
ear biscuits changed the way I look at blank.
You ready to get into this?
Yeah.
With Catalina?
Ear Biscuits has changed the way that I look at therapy.
I now think that there's not one person on this earth
who wouldn't benefit from therapy,
and I have Ear Biscuits to thank for that.
Well, we definitely agree with you.
That's cool.
Yeah, I think, you know,
coming from two guys who at one point
definitely believed that, oh, we don't need therapy.
Like why would we need therapy?
Might be counseling.
Yeah, you always make the distinction
between therapy and counseling.
I never really went down that rabbit hole so hard,
but I was resistant for a really long time
until my wife made the appointment, as I've told before.
But I completely agree with you that this idea,
that the stigma around therapy is, in my mind,
it's as dumb as there being a stigma around having
a primary care physician that's worrying
about you physically.
And it's been so cool.
This is one of the most rewarding things
that has come out of Ear Biscuits for me,
just because I understand personally
how beneficial therapy has been.
And people saying that I actually started going to therapy
because there seemed to be this barrier that was broken down
because you guys talked about it.
Knowing how transformational that can be
because it's been transformational for me.
I mean, if nothing else came from anything that we did
and it was just some people like Catalina
decided to go to therapy,
then I think this whole exercise
would be more than worth it.
You know what, I think I agree with that.
And in that case, maybe we should just end every episode
with, and go to therapy.
And then that's the end of every episode,
no matter what we're talking about,
no matter what the ending point is, just tack it on.
Okay.
Matter of fact, Kiko, when I just said it,
and go to therapy, you can put that on the end of the episode.
Maybe we'll just test it on this episode.
And then you give Kiko a version of you
so we can alternate so that it's an us thing
and not a me thing.
And go to therapy.
Why did you emphasize go?
I just wanted it to be a little different.
I have my therapy session tonight.
Okay, you going?
Exactly.
I have a confession to make.
Here we go.
As much as we talk,
as impactful as it is in my life,
I'm still in this weird place where like every time,
I'm like, maybe he won't show up on the Zoom call
because we do it remotely now.
I don't know what it is.
I'm so-
Well, no, you're not alone in that.
We're not gonna get into this,
but I'm just gonna say it has been so rewarding
to my therapeutic experience in therapy.
But I will say that it's still a constant struggle
from week to week in terms of how I interact with,
how I approach it and being ready for it
and thinking that I would rather just do anything else
every single week.
Listen, you're not alone in that.
And as someone who has benefited greatly from therapy,
rarely, if ever,
my wife and I talk about this all the time,
when that appointment comes around, am I like,
yes, I'm always like, man, I just rather watch television.
You know, I always wanna do something else.
Every single time I wanna do something else.
And then when it's over, I'm like, man, this is so helpful.
So I don't know, unlike Jessie, who's like,
always thinking about when the next therapy is and just kind of embraces it.
I could learn from that.
All right.
Here's a different response.
Rachel.
Ear Biscuits has changed the way that I look at being from the South.
I grew up in a small town in Kentucky. And after college, I moved away to a bigger city, and I've changed the way that I look at a lot of things, like religion and some social issues.
And Rhett and Link have shown me, especially through Ear Biscuits, that it's okay to still embrace your Southern roots,
but also to grow and be a new person and have new ideas.
Thank you, Rachel.
That's a cool nuanced response.
Because I know that I am guilty from time to time.
Like if I get frustrated about something like people,
you know, being scared of the vaccine or not believing,
you know, in evolution or whatever,
I go into my Southern accent
and I want to portray that mentality.
I'm guilty of that.
I usually defend it by saying that I am from the South
and those sentiments tend to be a little bit more
highly concentrated in the South.
But I'm glad that Rachel picks up on the fact that
we're not ashamed to be from the South.
We're not ashamed to be from North Carolina.
Like we are proud to be from North Carolina.
We are who we are.
We talk the way that we talk
and we think the way that we think
and act the way that we act
largely because of where we come from.
But at the same time,
we do recognize that a lot of those things
that we thought were,
you know, we've kind of,
we've moved beyond them.
We've changed, we've grown.
And also that's not something to be ashamed of. There's nothing to be ashamed with suddenly
thinking some things and doing some things
that you would have thought were un-kosher or wrong
or whatever when you were younger.
So yeah, like you said, this is kind of a nuanced perspective,
but I appreciate it because I don't ever wanna communicate
that we don't like the South and we're ashamed of the South.
It's just that there's things that we thought and believe
that we are glad that we no longer think and believe.
Yeah, I think when we talk about it,
it's because we still consider ourselves Southern.
That's something that we will always be.
Yeah. It's not something that we will always be. Yeah.
It's not something that we're trying to hide.
Let's see what Kate's got to say.
Ear Biscuits has changed the way I look
at old Southern white men.
That's it?
Old Southern white.
Yeah.
So now we're being more specific.
You added this one in. is this a trap for me?
No.
Old Southern and white, I guess I am.
Yeah, I mean, but hey, but no, no, I think,
no, maybe we're changing the image of old Southern white men.
Maybe, yeah, there's people who don't have
old Southern white men in their lives.
In their lives.
We'll be those guys if you need us to.
We'll be the old Southern guys.
Oh my gosh, I'm just hoping that-
Hey Kate, you want some butter beans?
Yeah, Kate is just a positive thing.
It didn't necessarily sound positive, but-
Kate, you need to work on your inflection of positivity.
If Kate went through the trouble of doing this,
I have to believe that the intention was that
it is to be taken as a compliment, you know?
Well, compliment accepted.
There we go.
Maggie.
Ear Biscuits has changed the way
I look at my own spirituality.
When the deconstruction videos came out,
I was too scared to watch them.
I didn't trust myself to listen to your spiritual journeys and come out of it the same person. Over a year later, I finally worked
up the nerve to listen to them, and they changed my life. I was a queer evangelical Christian deeply
in the closet, and for the first time, I felt like I had the right to take steps back from the things
that had hurt me my entire life. Thank you for that. Wow.
Thank you, Maggie. Maggie, thanks for sharing.
Yeah, the fact that there was an entire year, I mean.
Listen, I totally get it that you're like-
Blows me away.
I don't wanna, you know,
I recall people, just friends,
people that I was in contact with
when we were kind of going through our deconstruction
many years ago, who would be like,
listen, I don't want you to talk to me about this.
Yeah, yeah.
Because I have this sense
that if you were to talk to me about this,
it would make me think things
that are gonna drastically complicate my life.
Because listen, it is incredibly difficult
to extricate yourself from a belief system.
Because usually there's family tied into it.
There's a story and a security that's tied into it.
Sometimes there's a career tied into it, right?
And there's so many things that make it difficult
to be like, yeah, okay, I don't know
if I necessarily believe this, but the alternative is what?
The alternative is me going through hell
in order to get out of this.
And if you're still in that belief system,
maybe thinking that you would actually literally go to hell
if you were to extricate yourself from this,
that's tough, that's heavy shit, man.
But I think you can hear it in Maggie's voice
that they're happy that they went through this process.
And I'm not saying it was easy,
I don't know Maggie's particular story.
Prioritizing your own safety and your own well-being
is such an important and at times extremely difficult
thing to do in ways that I can't even begin to imagine.
Yeah.
And I just, I'm honored that again,
us just processing our experience has a positive impact in people's lives.
I'm actually surprised that I don't carry that around
as a weight.
There's something about this experience for me
that is exciting and freeing because it's,
I don't have to have all the answers
and I don't have to be prescriptive for anyone.
But as we've talked about before,
sorry to beat a dead horse,
but the cycle of reward of being vulnerable
and just being honest and then letting people take it
for what it's worth and taking,
gleaning positive impact in their own life
is it just makes me feel so good
that I'm somehow bypassing getting in my own head about it.
I guess it's never too late,
but I'm grateful that this is a healthy place for me to be.
Are you getting at the dynamic of making the decision
to talk about some of the things that we talk about
and especially when you get into talking about religion
and obviously doing it from a non-expert standpoint.
Yeah.
We may have been professional Christians,
but I don't have a divinity degree.
We're not, you know.
So talking about these things
just from a personal perspective
and then knowing that it's going to have repercussions.
I mean, some of the,
I listened to a few of these that I actually didn't include
just because it gets,
not because it gets a little heavy,
but you just, there's a lot of people who are like,
listen, I basically left this belief system.
I left this belief system.
I left this belief system because you guys decided to share.
And that, are you saying that that feels
like a responsibility that you're kind of potentially
having a weight too heavy of an influence
on people's like the weightiest decisions that they can make?
I think I could feel that, but I don't because of how,
because the boundary that I put in place
in how I approach these conversations.
People's application is not our responsibility.
The listener's responsibility,
what they're gonna apply and how it's gonna affect
their lives just because you,
it's not just hearing something.
It's, there's a lot of other factors
and it's their responsibility how, what they do with it.
I think that's how I, not rationalize it,
but I think that's how, I think for me,
the reality is that we're just a drop in the bucket.
We may be the straw that breaks the camel's back
in some situations, but just like we used to say
back when we were sharing the gospel with people,
on average, people need to hear the gospel 19 times
before they make a decision.
You know, us telling our story isn't going to take somebody
from point A to point B.
There's all kinds of things that are happening.
And sometimes it can just be a slight different perspective.
And again, we don't tell these stories
so that people will stop being Christians.
Like that's not the motivation.
I will say that my motivation is that people
will remove themselves from harmful belief systems,
whether those belief systems are harmful to themselves
or to others.
And in some cases that might be some forms
or some expressions of things like Christianity.
But, you know, yeah, I think that that was Maggie's process
and Maggie's process was being in a belief system
where their identity,
their very identity was being questioned.
That was something that we had the privilege
of not having to worry about.
Being who we are and the demographic that we come from,
our identity was anything but questioned
in that evangelical setting.
It was all validated.
So our journey is different.
But yeah, I think that it is a heavy responsibility
and we do take, I mean, I will say we take it seriously.
Like we calculate the things that we say
and there are some times that we might say something
and then we think about it a little bit later and we say,
I think that that could be taken the wrong way
and say, hey, Kiko, let's take that out.
We don't do this podcast live
because we are very concerned about being able to,
we know that people listen to it
and are getting something from it
and sometimes applying it to serious parts of their lives.
So we take that responsibility.
I'm not saying we edit it on a regular basis.
I'm saying every once in a while,
we might say something
and be like, that might be taken the wrong way.
Let's not include that.
And by the way, credit to our team,
credit to Kiko as well as Jenna and other team members
who they serve as a filter for, you know,
they believe the best in us and they know
what we're trying to do and what we're trying to communicate.
And so there are, it's not infrequent
for us to have conversations about,
hey, I feel like this might've been
unintentionally triggering or came out the wrong way.
And then, so maybe we just cut around this
just because it could be misunderstood.
Because we're works in progress. we just cut around this just because it could be misunderstood.
And- Because we're works in progress.
Like I hope that 10 years-
We say the wrong things
and we didn't even know it lots of times.
And sometimes I say things and I didn't,
and I never intended it.
All these things happen.
But 10 years from now,
I hope that I'm different than I am right now.
And then 10 years later,
I hope I'm different than I am 10 years from now.
So I don't really, I mean, the point being that, yeah,
I'm glad you don't take it, that you don't take it,
you don't take it too much on yourself.
You don't see that responsibility as something
that becomes debilitating
and then you're afraid to talk about it.
Yeah.
And so, but I will, since we're talking about the team here,
I'll say, you know what?
We wouldn't, the show wouldn't be what it is,
Kiko, without your help.
Jenna, thanks for being here too,
for all your help in that.
And we really appreciate it.
Kiko, I can't see your face, but I know there it is.
Hiding behind the glass.
But yeah, it's, you know,
Kiko's voice is also in this thing.
So even though it's not.
Not literally on this episode.
Not literally, usually.
All right.
We're not done with some good stuff, though.
Tucker, let's see what Tucker's got to say.
Ear Biscuits has changed the way I look at myself,
whether it's from the Enneagram episode or the spiritual deconstruction
or really any of them.
It's just nice to hear from two guys
who have similar thoughts as I do
and who understand what it's like
to grow up in the South
and have different ideas.
So thanks and congrats on 300 episodes.
Thanks, Tucker.
I had a dog named Tucker.
And you have a brother named Cole.
A brother named Cole.
Which is his last name.
Wow.
Maybe it's actually- We really are connected
to Tucker. Maybe it's actually your dog
and my brother getting together and forming an entity
that is now communicating with us.
Is that possible?
Talk about being from the South and having different ideas.
Yeah.
Talk about being from the South and having different ideas. Yeah.
It's okay to have different ideas, you know?
Tucker, thanks for listening.
Jacob, your biscuits has changed the way
I look at my button.
My butt? Okay, Jacob is talking
about the button that we discussed extensively.
That is the button that you press.
Oh, the-
Not to get as graphic as I'm gonna get
during sex timber, but there is a button
and it's really just a region of your taint.
Oh, what am I?
That you can press if you haven't gotten all your pee out.
I saw a bunch of people talking about milking the snake
and I'm like, oh, we're not going back there,
but you're getting pretty close.
Yeah, right, that is part of it sometimes.
But the funny thing is is we had a discussion
with a group of guy friends that listened to the podcast.
And if I recall correctly, they were either Split or-
Our college buddies?
Or just guys who listen to the podcast.
Yeah, none of them,
I didn't wanna specifically call them out,
but yes, our college buddies.
I don't think any of them knew about the button.
I thought they all did, yeah.
I mean, maybe, I don't know if everybody's got a button.
I definitely got one.
Well, I've told you what I thought,
but I just don't wanna go back into it
because if I'm, that's the one that I'm like,
oh, maybe I shouldn't have talked about that one.
Well, but you know what?
It apparently had an impact on Jacob.
All right, let's get to Gabia.
Yeah, biscuits has changed the way I look
at my embarrassing or not so good moments in life.
Hey, at least I have a good start though.
Hey, listen. At least I have a good start though.
Hey, listen. At least I have a good start.
That's our philosophy.
I gotta say, doing this podcast has actually changed
the way I think about difficult stuff.
There's been a few times.
Now, I may not project that I am constantly worried
about things, but I'm pretty much constantly worried
about things, right?
And so like, especially if I'm on-
Like a high overlook.
Well, I'm scared of heights, but no,
like if I'm on vacation and I, and like,
I mean, Jenna can attest to this,
when I was in Scotland and I don't know,
I think there was a moment where,
I'll probably talk about this in the thing,
but where I realized that one of the,
the vans weren't insured because I thought
that they were automatically insured
because I'd used my credit card,
which automatically takes care of that.
But because they were beyond a certain number of passengers
that they didn't apply.
And so I'm driving these vans around uninsured
and I'm in the middle of like the Highlands of Scotland
and I start freaking out and I'm like calling General,
like, we gotta figure out how we gotta do this.
And so anyway, but it had, and start freaking out and like calling generally, we gotta figure out how we gotta do this.
So anyway, but doing this podcast has changed the way I approach those moments where I think the world
might be about to end.
I know that having uninsured vans is not like
an apocalyptic situation,
but sometimes I can quickly get to that point.
But when something, that day in Scotland,
when all of a sudden like the bridge went out
and the water was coming across and I was like,
I don't know how we're gonna get back.
And I think my mom's got a broken ankle
and we gotta take a ferry.
In those moments, I'm holding on to the comfort of knowing
I'm gonna be able to talk about this on Ear Biscuits.
You know, like- If I make it.
I'm gonna be able to bring this to the Ear Biscuteers
and we're all gonna connect
by me talking about this harrowing experience.
And I, but you know what?
You don't have to have a podcast to have a good story.
And I think that's the lesson in, is it?
You just have to have a really robust blog.
You don't even have to have a blog.
You just having a good story, you know?
And what was it?
I thought you told me that somebody told-
A guy back home, I don't know if he made it up,
but when I was leaving and moving out, he said,
"'Remember, it's better to have a good story
"'than a good time.'"
And I don't necessarily know if I specifically relate
to that because I think being in the moment
and having a good time is important.
If you're not having a good time,
at least have a good story.
That's the right way to-
That's the saying, that's what it should be.
If you're not having a good time,
at least have a good story.
There you go.
You know, put that on a t-shirt.
Yeah.
Those are all the voicemails that we're gonna read.
Sorry, we couldn't play all of them,
but that would be crazy.
And, but we listened to every single one. Actually we didn't, but we listened to enough of them. We listened to a lot of them, but that would be crazy. But we listened to every single one.
Actually we didn't, but we listened to enough of them.
We listened to a lot of them.
Yeah, and we cherish all of them.
Thank you for submitting your voicemails.
Thank you for being a part of this.
It's a privilege.
It really is an honor to find ourselves in a position
where we're just talking
and then it becomes a part of people's lives.
It's memories are triggered, there's inside jokes are had,
relationships are formed and broken.
And over these things.
The podcast itself is shaped so significantly
by the ongoing conversation
that we have with you. You know, in the alternative timeline,
if you know the multi, one particular understanding
of the multiverse theory is correct,
there is one timeline where Rhett and Link
decided to start Ear Biscuits and they talked to each other
and they never read anybody talking about it.
And it's just, it's the Rhett and Link
with no influence podcast, just going on and on and on.
Do you think about how different that version
of the podcast would be than this version of the podcast,
which happens in the context of the community
of Mythical Beasts who listen?
It-
Drastically different.
It probably wouldn't exist,
but if it did, it would be drastically different.
So we've thanked the crew.
We've thanked each other, I think.
Thank you. Thank you.
And now we're thanking you, dear listener,
for making us a part of your listening life.
Or if you watch on YouTube,
you're watching and listening life.
It means a lot to us to know that for over an hour
every week, we're a part of your life.
It's just, it really is crazy to think about it.
Hashtag Ear Biscuits.
I mean, to Rhett's point, let's keep the conversation going.
I do have a rec.
You know I love a good music documentary.
And I got a number of people in my life
that will send me stuff and get me hip
to some new music docs, because I like them.
But I found this one on my own.
Well, it wasn't hard to find,
because if you have Apple TV, a new show is gonna pop up.
And this one is called
Watch the Sound with Mark Ronson.
Mark Ronson, many years ago when we went
to a YouTube creator summit, like an invitation only,
a small group of creators going into this room in New York
and then they bring in people like Wes Anderson
or the previous year was Will Smith.
Mark Ronson came in there
and he told a story about developing his album
and getting Stevie Wonder to play on his album.
And the way that he told that story,
I was just, I was in tears.
Like I was crying.
I just remember how much it moved me.
And then when I saw that he has a series on Apple TV,
I was like, I gotta check this out.
And I quickly remembered how he's a really good storyteller
and the way he's an interesting personality,
especially on screen, but you know,
if you don't know who Mark Ronson is,
he's the uptown funk guy with Bruno Mars.
He's Amy Winehouse's producer and he came up that way
and so now he's a very well-established music producer
and DJ, but in every episode,
he goes through an aspect of music production.
And even if it sounds kind of dry,
like episode one is on auto-tune,
episode two is on sampling.
I haven't watched episode on reverb synthesizers,
drum machines and distortion, but based on the first two,
I love it because it's really immersive.
He talks to really high profile guests,
like he interviews Paul McCartney,
and that interview is woven throughout
at least the first two episodes.
The one on auto-tune, he kind of goes through
his own personal journey of going from hating auto-tune, he kind of goes through his own personal journey
of going from hating auto-tune
to trying his hand at it.
And talk about vulnerability,
there's this hilarious moment where he's like trying
to sing through an auto-tune filter,
having never really done it.
And it's like a little cringy.
And for a guy who like has a reputation,
it's just really refreshing how he approaches this thing.
So if you have any interest in the things I'm talking about,
you'll love this.
Watch the sound.
Mark Ronson.
Well, thanks for sticking with us
on this journey of 300 episodes.
And you know what?
We're gonna be back again next week with number 301
and also the beginning of sex-tember.
Sex-tember!
And go to therapy.