Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - Dealing With Failure And Rejection | Ear Biscuits Ep.290
Episode Date: May 31, 2021From high school romance to creative endeavors, listen to R&L discuss how they deal with facing failure and rejection and how it’s changed over the years in this episode of Ear Biscuits! To learn ...more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This, this, this, this is mythical.
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Welcome to Ear Biscuits,
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,
you could kind of call this a part two
to what we did last week where we talked about
all the ideas that we've had
that have never seen the light of day.
They failed.
Yeah. They fizzled out.
We were rejected.
Ba-ba-da-ba-ba-ba-ba.
Now let me also say that some of the stuff
that we went through last week,
I thought about this after the fact,
some of those ideas we kind of rejected.
Like they didn't even make it to the first level of,
or maybe they were considered by like an agent
or someone who looked at a list of ideas and said,
okay, this is the one that I think might be viable.
So I didn't wanna give the impression
that every single idea that we went through last week,
we had sat down in a room with a group of people
and pitched it to them and it was rejected.
Some of them were, they were all rejected on some level,
but some just never, like little baby birds
that never even got pushed out of the nest.
They just came out of the egg and then died.
I don't like picturing a dead baby bird.
A dead baby bird.
Some didn't even get out of the egg.
They're in the egg and they die inside the egg.
That's better.
And then you just have a dead bird inside of an egg
that slowly rots.
I'm cool with that.
But like one of those-
That's even grosser to me.
No, because it's an egg. Because I eat eggs, I crack eggs, and I'm cool with that. But like one of those- That's even grosser to me. No, because it's an egg.
Because I eat eggs, I crack eggs,
and I always have a fear.
Every time I crack an egg, I think to myself,
is there gonna be a bird in this one?
That's why you need to shine the light on it first.
I don't do that.
But the baby birds that are like out
and like they don't have any feathers and they're like-
They're cute.
They're like little dinosaurs.
Their eyeballs are like huge and like bruised.
They look like there's bruised all over.
You look like you should be talking with a German accent.
I'm going for a different look today.
I found this sweater.
The combination of your glasses and your sweater.
I bought this sweater.
You look like- Cashmere, by the way.
It is peach.
What was the old SNL skit? Sprockets. You look like- Cashmere, by the way. It is peach. What was the old SNL skit?
Sprockets.
You look-
Sprockets.
They wore black, man.
I know, you look like-
You didn't wear peach.
The 2021 version of Sprockets.
Hey, man.
If Sprockets came back, it would be peach.
I look different, but I looked at myself in the mirror
and I was like, I think I look good.
And then-
Hey, I didn't say you look bad.
Christy came in- I said you look German.
I was fully ready to come in.
Yeah, I've got different glasses on today.
My signature link glasses-
I heard about this.
Broke. Yeah.
Sorry about that, by the way.
And-
I punched him.
I've been wearing them for a couple of months broken.
It's just that right here,
I just noticed one day the lens just fell out in my hand
and it's because part of the frame,
it just broke clear in two.
Now I could super glue it, but consulting with Jenna,
we're gonna take it to a professional because-
And they're gonna glue it.
Right, because the-
And you're gonna pay them for it.
I cannot buy another replica of these go-to glasses of mine
that I've had for years.
Like four years ago, I did buy a second pair.
And you lost them.
I got stolen.
I kept them in my car.
Oh yes.
Thanks for spoiling all of my stories this morning.
Oh no, I mean, come on, man.
I'm just continuing the conversation.
And guess what?
It was stolen.
Yeah, stolen out of my car in my own freaking driveway,
my second pair of glasses.
Sorry about that, by the way, as well.
So that when this happens, You know what, I should probably give those to you now. I second pair of glasses. So that when this happens,
you know what, I should probably give those to you now.
I still have my glasses.
I stole those from you,
so when you broke your other ones, I could give them to you
and I think I've misplaced them at this point.
These are, I'm not switching to these
because I don't like them enough, but.
It's a nice change of pace though.
I thought, you know what, it's a nice change of pace
for today, I'm wearing this peach sweater.
You look two or three IQ points smarter.
Than you, yeah, exactly.
And I was thinking, I looked in the mirror.
Than your previous self,
is what I was getting at. I'm like, hey,
I kinda got a different look, but I think I like it.
I go downstairs and I'm like ready to walk out the door
and Christy looks at me and I'm like,
yeah, she's gonna say, she's gonna give me a compliment
or at least say I look like that guy from Sprockets.
She's gonna laugh at you probably is what she did.
First thing she said was,
was there like a red dot on your neck
and you got another one.
I actually put a little makeup on it so you can't see it.
Oh, pull that down again.
What in the world?
Is it there?
Yeah, you got a rash.
I don't know what that is.
Maybe it's from the sweater.
You got, pull it down again. Yeah, you got a rash. I don't know what that is. Maybe it's from the sweater. You got, pull it in again.
Yeah, you got a rash, man.
I actually feel, I think it's just that I'm flush.
I'm kind of wired this morning.
Anyway.
Because you went to the gym.
I'm in the market to some new-
You went to the gym and you got your heart rate up.
That's what it is, yeah, maybe.
Yeah.
I'm in the market for some new glasses,
but I'm gonna get as close to my go-to glasses
as I can get because going this far away,
I never wear them because they're too far.
Well.
Too far from the real me.
And speaking of being too far,
we went kind of far afield there.
What I was getting to was,
what we're gonna talk about today is
how we've dealt with that rejection,
more on an emotional level and what that has done to us.
Years of having things rejected,
multiple things that we can never bring to the light of day.
Or things that were brought to the light of day
that then, I mean, are considered failures.
Like how do you move on after failure
from a creative standpoint?
Yeah.
So we'll discuss that.
I do wanna give you an update on one of my children.
Choose one.
I'll pick the older one.
And so I think we've covered the fact
that our kids got a little bit later start
with the whole getting their driver's license thing.
It's a generational thing.
Kids are not rushing on their 16th birthday
to get their license, at least not in Los Angeles,
I guess because of Uber.
And then COVID, of course,
had a pretty large impact on everybody's plans.
Like for Locke, it was, he needed to get his driving lessons
and then was COVID hit, it was like, well, you can't,
we don't really want you to get into the car
with somebody right now.
But anyway, since we're coming out on the other side of that,
he has, he's got his permit and so he can drive us around.
Now, Jesse-
Even though he is now, he's already 17.
He's already 17.
He could have had his license long ago.
15 and a half, he could have taken his drive,
what he's doing now.
And every day he tells me how much he regrets
not going with the original schedule.
And I say, this is why I told you 100 times,
at least that you should do this.
He was like, I know, I just,
sometimes I just have to learn things the hard way, dad.
Damn, that's a milestone, man.
I mean, that right there is what every parent lives for.
When you say, I told you so, and they're like, you're right.
How often does that happen?
Well, often in my house.
No, no, actually, no. Oh God, it doesn't.
No, it's interesting because
it is happening more lately with him.
Like I thought that some of,
I thought that there would be things that would be like,
okay, you know, when he's-
Is it a pill that I can get my kids to take?
When he's like 28, he'll come home for Christmas
and he'll be like, you know what?
You guys were actually pretty good parents, you know?
Yeah. But he actually, like, you know what, you guys were actually pretty good parents. You know? Yeah.
But he actually, I told you this yesterday,
he recently said, I've actually realized recently
that you guys are actually pretty good parents.
And you just gotta understand.
Did you get suspicious, be like, what do you want?
No, he wasn't asking for anything.
He was just experiencing some things with, you know,
other parents and stuff and has points of reference
and stuff and he's, you know, appreciating his own parents.
Oh, us?
You talking about me and Chris?
Yeah, the Neils.
No.
So anyway, so he is driving now
and Jessie had this stipulation.
She was like, I'm not driving with him, you can drive with him.
Her and Locke tend to kind of get into it sometimes
and she could only imagine what it would be like
if she's trying to, you know, the classic trope
of the new driver and the parent in the passenger seat
losing their mind.
It's funny because Christy said the same thing about Jessie.
Said what?
She wasn't gonna ride with her.
Yeah, well, can you imagine?
Jessie's offspring,
but is also my offspring.
So I was like, okay, I mean,
then that means that we're just gonna be driving
on the weekends,
because that's like the time that I've got
in order to do this.
And so the first couple of like driving lessons
were going to a big parking lot
and getting the basics of the car down.
Like, okay, this is, you know, literally like,
you know, when we grew up,
we had driven like golf carts and go-karts and four wheelers.
We had a lot of driving experience.
My kid's a city kid.
It's just, he's come up different.
And so there wasn't like all this driving experience
that you could just transfer over to a car.
So it was a little bit like,
oh, the gas is here and the brake is here.
Like it was, we were literally at that point.
And I'm just, I'm basically just getting through
that point with Lincoln who is, you know, he just turned 16.
And you take him to a parking lot,
and for the reason you're talking about,
there's like, it's not a big parking lot
that you can find that's empty.
There's like five other people.
And then there's at least four other cars
just like parked or lurching slowly.
Yeah.
And so that's actually seems worse,
because it's like all these cars
are just gonna lurch into each other
because they don't know there's any gas in the brake.
And you know, this is actually a great time.
I mean, the traffic is picking up,
but I would say that a couple of months ago
when we started doing these little adventures,
LA traffic is as low as it's ever been
in the history of our 10 years of being here,
but probably in the past 30, 40 years because of COVID.
But if you wanna experience going back,
you can watch the latest Tarantino movie.
It has a lot of LA driving.
That's basically all I remember about the movie.
Which one?
That and Brad Pitt on LSD, but.
Oh, the Hollywood one.
Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.
So anyway, so yes, we did the parking lot thing
and I wasn't too confident.
I was like, I wanted him to get the feel of like, okay,
this is how you pull up into a parking space.
This is how you back out.
And this is how you put the brakes on, you shift the gears
and you're getting those, the transitional points of driving,
which is a really big part of driving.
Yeah, yeah.
Just being on a road and going straight
and stopping and then starting again,
that's not driving.
That ain't driving.
Yeah, I remember telling, I was telling Lincoln,
I was like, he was in the driver's seat
and I realized I needed to tell him how to,
what to do with his hands in order to turn a 90 degree turn.
And I'm like, well, you're supposed to grab
and I told him what to do based on what I thought I would do
and then I was like, you know what, pull over.
I think what I'm telling you is not what I do.
And I was totally right.
It's like, you think you should,
you're supposed to like grab hand over hand
and then when I did it,
I was like doing something totally different.
Right.
Now, I just wanna get a timeline straight here
with your story with Locke because you have told the story
of when we went to Death Valley,
you let him drive in the desert,
which was like a series of-
Well, that was the first time he ever drove.
And it was a little bit traumatic.
Right, so.
And I was a little bit worried, like, is he gonna be okay?
Well, when we got back from Death Valley,
and he actually, he didn't have his permit at that time,
I don't think.
And Lincoln still doesn't.
That's why we're only in a parking lot.
But now he has it, and so we're able to like legally
let him drive, not just in the middle of the desert.
So he did the parking lot thing
and there was a couple of times where I was,
you know, sometimes you find yourself becoming
the stereotypical dad who's like yelling and saying things
that you're gonna regret and you kind of catch yourself.
You're like, ah, I feel like I'm on a sitcom right now.
Like I'm Murray Goldberg or whatever, you know?
And-
Some grunting, the occasional fart.
But he was doing pretty good.
And so then I was like, all right,
well, let's take this out into the neighborhood.
So we kind of drove around
some like quiet neighborhood streets.
And then I realized that,
so he was coming to stops abruptly,
like we would stop and he would be going
a little bit too fast and he would stop.
And then even he was going a little bit too slow,
when he would come to a stop and roll to a stop,
there would be like a jerk.
That moment where the brakes totally seize.
Totally seize.
And then when he takes off, he would go,
and then I found myself-
Feel your brain hitting the back of your skull
every time, yeah. I found myself- Feel your brain hitting the back of your skull every time you- I found myself
becoming my dad.
You know, my dad didn't just tell you how to do things.
He like, there was like a second level of like style
that he thought was important.
It was philosophical.
So I was like, Locke, listen, I'm gonna tell you,
as I teach you to drive,
I'm going to tell you a lot of things that are going to make you
a better than average driver.
That's your goal is to be better than average, right?
And I was like, there's a lot of people
who are never going to learn some of the intricacies
that I'm gonna teach you.
Yes.
And then one of the things is I'm gonna teach you
is the smooth.
Yes.
To be smooth.
Yes.
And there's three ways that you can be smooth in a car.
Okay? The first way is stopping. The second smooth. Yes. And there's three ways that you can be smooth in a car, okay?
The first way is stopping.
The second way is going.
And the third way...
The third way...
Oh, man.
Oh, whoa, hold on.
I'm on the edge of my seat now, because you already did...
You already covered stopping and going?
And there's a third one?
The third one is...
But we'll get to the third one right after this.
Nope, psych.
Here it is.
While you're driving. Now you know this,
because we've talked about it a million times.
You get into a car with like an Uber driver.
And there are many Uber drivers and drivers in general
who do this like pulsating acceleration thing
where they're like.
Instead of just like treating,
you need to treat the gas pedal and the brake like,
I don't wanna get sexual here.
But go for it, man.
It's like foreplay, you know what I'm saying?
Is this what you told Locke?
I was like, I didn't use foreplay as an analogy,
I thought that would be inappropriate,
but I'm using it here.
That's a fun, I mean, talk about a fun driving lesson.
You want your foot to be on that brake
and you want it to ease, and then I was like,
and there's the art of the roll,
right when you sense that the brakes are about to lock up,
you release, you release a little bit.
And this is, of course, to carry the foreplay thing,
right when you're about to, you pull back, okay?
And then when you take off, you want to go,
you don't wanna go straight pedal to the metal,
you wanna, and I said, picture it as if-
I didn't know this is what he was gonna talk about
when I said, hey, you should sit in on this one
because we're fully vaxxed.
I said, picture it as if you had a glass of wine
and I don't know why I chose glass of wine again.
I said, you've got a glass of wine on the dashboard
and you want that to stay perched on the dashboard.
That's how smooth you need to be at all times
because you're creating an experience
for the other passengers in your car.
And then every time you come to a smooth stop,
you wanna take a deep gulp of that wine.
And so, and then I said something like,
I actually at one point I switched it to,
I said a glass of water, he said,
you just said a glass of wine a second ago.
He was with it.
He's like totally on board.
And like, you know what, he's getting it.
So we've been driving together and like he,
the thing is is that Locke's mind works a lot like mine
and so instead of thinking that what I was saying
was ridiculous, he understood that there was a standard
that we could hold ourselves to in driving
that was above just getting around safely.
That's professorial.
Getting around with style is what you're aspiring to.
Now, if you wanna, if you as the tutor
or the professor of driving school, if you wanna go if you as the tutor or the professor of driving school,
if you wanna go full Miyagi on this thing,
you need to bring a glass of wine.
Yeah, I thought about this.
That's the ultimate test.
This is not, he's got his driving test in a couple of weeks
and I'm gonna tell him to take a glass of wine.
Take a glass of wine.
It's like my dad told me to bring this.
That's good, man.
I mean, it's so funny because that's one of the first things
that I was teaching Lily and that I've started to instill
in Lincoln is this same principle of like,
as you're stopping, you got a picture of the brake.
About the grip.
It's like, I tried to explain how the brake works.
You become the anti-light brakes.
Right, so that as it closes down,
as the brake pad closes down on it,
then at the last second, you wanna release it a little bit.
Right, exactly.
But I didn't use the, I was very practical
and I think I missed the mark with an inspirational analogy.
I don't think you have to go foreplay.
I think the glass of wine kind of covers everything.
You put the glass of wine on the dashboard.
You want it to stay filled.
You don't want it to spill when you're stopping,
starting or any time while going, taking a turn.
All about smoothness.
Yeah, you wanna be stopped before you realize it.
That's just a surprise.
Oh, we're stopped. And let me tell just a surprise. Oh, we're stopped.
And let me tell you right now.
Oh, we're going again.
Let me tell you, in the same way
that many people go their entire lives
without dealing with their own halitosis,
which is, there's a certain percentage of the population
that doesn't ever deal with the halitosis, right?
There's a certain percentage of the population
that never ascends to the smooth driving level.
This is our new, this is the second thing on our list.
This is our second mission in life.
Yeah, it is.
First mission is to get people to deal
with their nasty, stink-ass breath.
Well, I would say-
And the second one is to get them to be smooth drivers.
And let's just take the opportunity,
gargle with 50% hydrogen peroxide, 50% water,
or mix it with wine if you're feeling freaky.
You can put a glass of hydrogen peroxide
on your dashboard and do both at the same time.
Oh yes, there it is.
We just figured it out.
We need to start the rent like driving school, man.
When you leave here, your breath will smell like a,
I was gonna say a baby's bottom,
but that's actually, that's ridiculous.
B-Y-O-H-P.
Yeah, bring it on. B-Y-O-H-P.
Yeah, I like this.
Anyway, Locke's doing great.
His driving instructor told him,
now this is after a few lessons with Dad, okay?
The Mr. Miyagi of driving, as Link has just coined me.
I did not say that.
You fell short of that.
The driving instructor said,
"'You know what?
"'You're a natural.'"
And he said,
"'I gotta tell ya,
"'a lot of these kids that I teach are just dumbasses.'"
That's what he said.
And he was like,
"'But you're a natural.
"'In fact,' he says,
"'you could pass your test right now.'"
And he drove on the highway,
and then just the other day,
for a Mother's Day brunch,
Jessie and I,
I mean, the boys and I drove to meet Jesse,
she was getting some time alone for Mother's Day
in a hotel and we met her for a brunch in West Hollywood.
So we were, this is like a 40 minute drive.
And he drove, he had the full LA driving experience,
driving on the 101, driving over the canyon, Laurel Canyon,
like I was like, and then driving in West Hollywood and the traffic wasn't that bad on a 101, driving over the canyon, Laurel Canyon, like I was like, and then driving in West Hollywood
and the traffic wasn't that bad on a Sunday,
but I was like, hey man, you know, this is,
if you can drive here, you can drive anywhere
in the United States.
North Carolina would be a breeze at this point for you.
So I think he's getting there.
See, Christy was in the car.
We also went to West Hollywood for Mother's Day. Just the place to be. But Christy was in the car. We also went to West Hollywood for Mother's Day.
Just the place to be.
But Christy was in the car, so I did not,
it didn't even cross my mind to suggest
that Lily drive the car.
Oh, because Christy will get-
A little anxious about it, yeah.
Oh, well.
And Lily will also get anxious, you know,
if like, this is our big, you know,
we gotta make it to the brunch.
I only yelled very loudly one time.
What did you yell?
It may have been a curse word.
I think it was like, what the hell is,
like that kind of thing, you know?
But I think it was, he was doing great,
but then there was a car that was stopped in the middle,
like a car that had broken down in the middle of the 101,
and he got right up behind it and then had to like pull
and he pulled in front of somebody,
but then he moved over one more lane
and like really cut somebody off.
And I yelled at that point.
When we-
But then I immediately, let me say,
I immediately apologized.
Okay. Okay.
I was like, hey, I'm sorry about yelling.
Because he crisis averted.
And he was like, dad, I'm calm.
Ooh. Ooh.
And I was like, you know I'm calm. Ooh. Ooh.
And I was like, you know what, that's good.
I had to hurt.
Master becomes the student.
Yeah, well, I mean, Daniel did win his match
at the end of the Karate Kid.
I wouldn't know.
When we, you know, to harken back to
when we did the college visit, that was a long drive.
And I got Lily to drive some of the way,
even though she did not want to.
You gotta get them on the freeway.
You gotta get them merging.
You gotta get them merging.
That's what they're all scared of.
Well, I've done that.
Like we did the whole,
well, let's go out and let's take every off ramp and on ramp.
Every off ramp and on ramp.
That's called the Miyagi merge.
Yeah, we did that.
Cause that's on and off, yep.
I only wish there was wine involved.
Merge on, merge off.
Merge off, okay.
I'm familiar. This school. We got this, man. Is Mr. there was wine involved. Merge on, merge off. Merge off. Okay, I seem familiar.
This school. We got this, man.
Is Mr. Miyagi, is the guy who played him dead?
Does that mean we have the rights?
Yes.
Is that how they worked legally?
Pat Morita.
Pat Morita is dead. How do I know his name?
I don't know, but you know what?
If you had given me like seven hours,
I could have arrived at that.
I mean, I have really impressed myself.
You still haven't even seen the original Karate Kid.
Not all of it.
I feel like I have.
Pat Morita.
I watched the pilot of the,
I don't wanna get off on that.
So I got Lily to drive and we're on the freeway
and then we're like going,
we're going through some hills off the freeway, okay?
And she's doing good, but it was a little scary.
First time, it's the first time we were all in the car
and she was driving and I wanted her to get an idea of like-
How was Lando doing with this?
Longer distance driving.
Well-
Was he more, was he scared than Christy?
At one point he said, I don't feel good.
And then he said- I don't feel good.
Few minutes later, he's like, I don't feel good.
You know how the I don't feel good gets shorter and shorter,
more staccato.
Eventually it turns into I feel bad.
And then it turned into Christy's like,
I think we need to pull over.
And then I'm like, we gotta find a good spot.
And Lily, I don't want you to panic, but you know,
we were going like 70 miles per hour on like,
it's like kind of curvy roads, four lanes.
It was challenging.
And I wanted to, I was like, okay, I see a spot.
You're gonna pull over up there.
Lando, we're pulling over up there.
We hit the gravel and then the vomit
from the very back of the car hits Christy's seat
in the middle of the car.
He threw up on her.
As we were stopping and pulling out,
and you talk about dad yelling, I'm like,
just hold it in your mouth!
Oh, that's what he meant.
Just hold it in your mouth!
I didn't realize he was getting sick.
He was getting sick.
I thought he was up, he felt unsafe.
No, he felt nauseous.
And he vomited in the car.
And that's where the smoothness comes in because-
Then he got out.
You make your passenger sick if you don't take those.
And sometimes the roads are, you can't avoid it.
And when you're in the very back, like the way back.
It's even worse.
And you're a kneel, we get car sick.
And that's what we teach at the Miyagi School
of Driving and Fresh Breath.
Christy was trying, so Christy hopped out.
It was like there was a fire inside of the car.
It's like if you were watching from across the street
at the fruit stand where the guys were watching.
We pull over, all the doors open.
We're trying to get Lando out.
Christy gets out of her seat in the middle of the SUV
and she yanks up on the thing to make the seat fly forward.
The eject button.
Yeah, to make the seat fly forward
so that Lando can crawl out from behind the seat.
And as she's doing that, he's vomiting on the seat and she-
Oh, he's vomiting again.
I think that was the first vomit.
Like as we stop, she hops out.
He's vomiting on the seat.
He's gonna kill me for telling this story,
but he's not gonna listen.
No one's gonna tell him.
Right, don't add him on Twitter.
Christy's panicking so much
because I'm yelling for him to hold it in your mouth.
Yeah, like a good dad.
We don't accept that at the Miagi school.
She ripped. You cannot vomit
in a car, you are expelled.
She ripped the handle that makes the seat go forward.
She rips it off, it's in her hand.
And then, I mean, Lando has to crawl across the seat go forward, she rips it off. It's in her hand and then, I mean,
Lando has to crawl across the seat and get out
and vomit some more on the side of the road.
And I still don't know how to fix it.
How did you clean it up?
Did you have vomit smell the rest of the ride?
We had wipes.
The Neils got wipes, man.
Yeah. Wipes for days.
The McLaughlins would be in trouble.
We'd have like one napkin from McDonald's
in the glove compartment.
We blame that on Lily and then I took over from there.
But I think it was-
With the windows down.
I think it would have been me.
It would have happened if I was driving anyway,
is what I'm trying to say.
Right, it was the road.
Well, anyway, the kids are doing great.
Enough of their successes, let's get to our failures.
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Oh, you know what I can tell you about?
I can remind you that the first two episodes
of the scripted podcast that we're starring in
called Ronstadt drop tomorrow.
Again, this is a scripted podcast.
This is a totally immersive world.
It's about a dude named Ronstadt who is a 911 phone jockey
who answers all the weird sort of supernatural calls.
He has a special ability that gives him the ability
to maybe make some, to exercise some decisions
based on the calls that he gets.
And you know all about Ronstadt
because you embodied the role of Ronstadt in this.
And a lot of you have been asking
as like the trailer and stuff has come out
and now the episodes, it's like,
what was your inspiration in creating this?
It's like, well, we didn't create Ronstadt.
We just, you know, we wanna be clear about that.
It was, Q-Code brought the opportunity to us
and we got to know Johnny and Brando who created it
and they wrote the entire first season.
So we had the benefit of being able to read the plot
and the world that they've created
and it really resonated with us.
There were a lot of like mythical-esque elements
and just the world and the tone and the fact
it was exciting for us to get involved.
So we'd love to say that we created it, but we didn't.
We were brought on to the project later
and brought on as producers as well.
And so that kind of helps answer some of the questions
that people have had.
It was just like, well, usually when you guys do something,
like it's about two dudes because you're two dudes
and this is not really like that.
Like Rhett's playing Ronstadt
and Link's playing like three other roles.
Yeah, it was, yeah.
And there was a moment that's like, okay, is this for us?
But I think, you know,
because we were really excited about the project
and doing something that was getting our feet wet
in a different genre, scripted audio podcast,
like you get back into that radio teleplay type stuff,
all of that's coming back around.
And maybe we'll create something from the ground up later.
Yeah, sure.
But to get involved in that project,
like we first heard about it in January.
I mean, if you were a part of the Mythical Society AMA,
you already know this, but.
Right.
The pacing with which we were able to just jump in
and get involved kind of made it, it made it a no brainer.
And it also gave me the opportunity to say,
you know what, I can play a couple of different roles here
and see where I fit in.
So you'll see where I fit in as the season unfolds.
You just wait.
So super immersive world
and the fact that all this can happen just between your ears
and it's as big as your imagination wants to make it,
it's just something that,
it's a medium we're excited to be involved with.
Ronstadt, first two episodes drop tomorrow,
wherever podcasts are found.
Okay, before we get into creative failure and rejection,
I just wanted to start off
with like some relational rejection.
Have you ever, Rhett, been relationally rejected?
Of course not.
I know you'd set your sights on a girl,
but that didn't necessarily mean
that their sights were set on you.
You know, I've actually, I thought about this recently.
I actually had a tendency,
well, I think there's two things going on.
First of all, I just really like women.
And that started very early.
And it was very intense.
Like from, I'm not talking, this was like not at puberty.
This was before puberty.
This was like first grade, right?
I just had infatuation issues
and I would kind of get focused on a girl
and typically I would focus on someone who-
You dream about flying to her house.
Well, I would focus on girls that were,
for lack of a better word, unattainable for me, right?
Like, I don't know what it was.
It would be like,
okay, this girl is two years older than me.
And it would be embarrassing for her to date me.
Even if we were in the same grade,
she probably wouldn't date me, right?
I mean, you've seen pictures of me growing up.
And so I was a little bit gangly,
but I had a lot of confidence and I would,
and once I kind of made that decision, I would begin what I guess was my version of flirting
and talking and telling other people that I like this girl,
telling her friends that I like them.
Moving and shaking, trying to get something going.
And there are a couple of times
where this was a successful strategy
and that was all I needed to continue doing it.
But I would say that just a percentage breakdown,
it's probably 80, 20, 80% rejection, 20% success.
So rejected more often than I was accepted.
So it, I didn't think it was that much of a spread.
Sorry to use the term.
I mean, I, you, I.
So does that mean that not,
no one rejection stands out?
Uh.
Well, I mean, if you're talking about my biggest crush
in high school, I don't even consider that a rejection
because it was so unrealistic.
But like, I remember a girl.
But like, do you, like one where you were like
to her face saying, will you be my girlfriend
or will you go with me or will you go out on a date?
And she was like, ah, no.
I don't think, well, you know how it was
in like middle school, high school.
It never really got to the point where you were
face to face asking and being rejected.
The rejection usually came through a friend
before you got there.
That helps, right?
Yeah, and I mean, the funny thing is,
is I don't ever remember,
again, it's hard to remember exactly emotionally
what was going on in high school.
But I would kind of just be like, okay, all right, that's not happening.
So I would just kind of move on.
So you never like, it never shook you that you can recall?
No.
Okay, because for me, I mean, my problem was the opposite.
Like I never got, I was so anxious and self-aware
and just kind of felt like I didn't know what I,
I didn't know what I wanted and it was so much about
what should I be doing so that I can, you know,
fit in or whatever.
So like girls would, I would hear through the grapevine
that some girl wanted to date me and then I was like, oh crap, this is a huge test.
I feel like I'm gonna fail.
There was a lot of fear and anxiety that short-circuited,
it was just like the polar opposite of you at that time.
You know, it short-circuited so many of these experiences.
So for me to say, well, you know what?
I don't think I was ever rejected
is definitely not a brag at all because,
and I think this is something that when we talk about
the creative ramifications of rejection and failure,
it's this dynamic of fear kind of keeping you from action.
And if you overcome that to,
whether that's to create
or initiate with somebody or try to initiate
some sort of a relationship, it's,
you never know what can happen if you go for it,
but you know what's gonna happen if you don't, nothing.
Right.
And I think for me, the only rejection was,
I mean, definitely I was dumped by Jana.
Yeah.
My sophomore year, she was a freshman
and she wrote me a note and I put it in my,
she wrote me the note that we were breaking up
because I was just a friend to her
because I was, I clammed up so much around her
and I was so anxious and in my own head
and it was about what should I be doing
and not what do I want to do?
I was so in my own head and she was very nice
and she let me off the hook, but it was a,
I mean, I remember reading that letter
and boy, it was embarrassing to be like, okay,
I just consider, you're a great person and you're a,
I read the letter on Good Mythical Morning
because once we moved to LA, I found my,
I brought my soccer bag out here for some reason.
Yeah, you gotta have a soccer bag.
I thought I was gonna play some soccer
after not playing for like a decade or something.
It was sentimental value to have my cleats
and stuff in there.
But I found that I had kept that rejection letter.
I guess, I don't know why I did it.
I'd like to think it was some sort of lesson
that then I was gonna be,
I was gonna go after what I wanted from then forward
and I wasn't gonna let fear clam me up.
But I don't think that was actually the case.
I just think it was like, man, this hurts.
But I'm so sentimental, I'm gonna shove it in this bag
and maybe I didn't go in that pocket anymore
or maybe I was just sentimental.
I was giving you good advice at the time, man.
I was like, this is quite an opportunity
that you've been given.
Cause she like invited you to her house.
I went to her house.
And I was like, well,
you should definitely accept that invitation.
Yeah, one of my biggest regrets
is not riding the four wheeler with her.
Right, yeah, and that's not a euphemism.
That's literally riding a four wheeler.
We were in North Carolina.
But that, I mean, that would have been so awesome.
I mean, here I am, you know, about to turn 43 years old
and I'm still regretting not straddling her
on that four-wheeler.
Right, yeah.
I mean, we'd both be facing the same, I don't know.
Who knows what directions we would have been facing.
There's lots of things.
We could have been facing every direction, man.
The seat is very wide.
I mean, once I got away from her.
There's probably a whole section on some porn website
of just stuff that happens on ATVs.
I'm not saying I know about it,
I'm just saying that that's how specialized things can get.
You gotta wield the power that we have with caution
because just saying that is gonna spike that search.
What if it generates a whole new category of porn?
I mean, we could take credit for that too.
The Miyagi School of Driving, Fresh Breath, and ATV Porn.
Okay, so we're teaching people how to have sex on an ATV?
There's a bunch of ATVs there.
Are those for driving?
No, that's just for sex.
Oh man.
That rejection hurt, so I guess
I mean, that's all we have to go
into the relational stuff.
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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Just to get back to the creative stuff,
let's get in our minds what we feel like is,
not rejection, but failure.
What's our like biggest creative failure?
Do you have something in your mind?
I have something in my mind.
I mean, the first thing that comes to mind is GMM 22.
Yeah, that's my answer.
And we've, I mean, we devoted a whole episode at the,
it would be interesting to go back and listen to that.
Oh, I'm not gonna go back and listen to that.
And I don't wanna do that, you can do that,
but that was like.
That was one of my, I am not proud of,
I'm not, but we can talk about that
because I think that's a good example of the way
that failure and rejection can kind of get into your head.
You know, because I got very, well, just a little background.
Categorize what it was.
So what year was that?
2017?
I don't know.
2018?
2018.
17 and 18 she said.
17 and 18, okay.
So we were given the opportunity,
we were approached by YouTube,
they were investing in different kinds of content.
They actually originally came to us, I don't know if we've ever talked about this part of it. They actually originally came to us.
I don't know if we've ever talked about this part of it,
but they originally came to us and asked us
if we would make like a late show version
of Good Mythical Morning.
So like Good Mythical Night or something like that.
And we were like, that sounds like a great idea,
but like we're already kind of really doing all we can
with Good Mythical Morning. And we're like, of really doing all we can
with Good Mythical Morning. And we're like, is there some way to expand
Good Mythical Morning itself?
Which going back in time, it kind of feels like
we should have just done the late show version.
But anyway, in addition to GMM,
because we ended up doing five parts of a show
every single day.
I think it went down to four.
But anyway, it was like a multi-part thing and-
The technology worked against us, but also,
you know, we said yes, we wanted to go for it
and it did not work.
I mean, long story short, it didn't work.
And it hurts when it isn't, you know,
if you create something and you put your heart
and soul into it,
I'm saying this by contrast,
I'm not describing what we did with that.
But as an artist, if you create something
that you pour your heart and soul into
and then nobody sees it or cares about it,
that's a certain type of failure.
That's a different thing.
What we experienced was something that was near and dear
to so many mythical beasts that they cared about so much
and we messed with it in a way that frustrated them
and was not a good experience,
which then made it an even more difficult experience for us
because we were trying to take into account
there was so much feedback. Yeah.
So that was a certain type of very scrutinized failure.
It's kinda like the water world,
like big budget movie scenario
where everybody's geared up to see it
and then it's just horrible.
So it becomes the object lesson of cinema no-nos.
You know, it's like maybe,
and because there was,
the digital space is much more experimental
and frontier-like, I don't think it serves,
and no one's emulating GMM to the point
where it becomes a cautionary tale.
So I don't know exactly what we learned,
but I think, I'm sure we learned a lot of stuff.
And we both agree that we're very glad
that we said yes and we tried it.
I mean, because there are a number of things
that came from that.
Honestly, it transformed our business, right?
We ended up moving into the space next door,
which we ended up more than doubling our staff.
The funding that we had, we put to work in ways
that we're still seeing those benefits now.
We were able to take so many of the things that we learned
just from a creative and a production standpoint
and then incorporate it back into GMM
when we went back to the one episode a day version.
So I totally take back what I said.
It's like, I don't know if we learned anything.
No.
Because I think the principle is absolutely
we learned a whole bunch of stuff
and that's kind of the point
and it kind of redeems the experience, right?
If that didn't work, but it changed the trajectory
of where we're headed, and I can't even articulate
all the lessons that we learned,
but they're ingrained in our experience
and impact the decisions that we have been making
ever since then, and I think that's a principle of failure is,
it's less of a failure if you went for something,
tried something and learned from it,
than not going for anything and learning nothing.
And you might have saved face a little bit,
but I mean, if it would have destroyed Good Mythical Morning
and it wouldn't have recovered,
and I mean, that could have happened.
Businesses go bankrupt, people try things,
they have bad ideas, or they have good ideas
that just things out of their control tank it.
You know, that absolutely could have happened for us.
And then it would have been a regret.
And it would have been what we call a mistake.
But even then.
A creative failure.
I choose to believe that even then
it would have led to something else
because that's just my experience is that is always,
there's a lesson.
Thankfully the lesson didn't come along with a complete
fumbling of Good Mythical Morning and killing it.
It came back.
But there's always a lesson.
And I'm especially grateful for it
because that's why I started going to therapy.
You know?
And because of just how difficult that time was.
Not just the rejection, it was more,
the rejection was difficult, but it was more just,
it was too much to take on.
But you know, the reason I don't wanna go back
and listen to that episode,
where we like essentially complained and defended ourselves
and I did it more than you did.
So I take credit for that.
I was defensive, I was in a bad place, I was hurt,
I was trying to, I said some things I regret.
Now, I think that my, if that were to happen today,
post therapy, my processing of what was going on
would be very different.
Now, because one of the things, and is it next week
that we're gonna start talking about the Enneagram?
Yes.
Okay. We're gonna do it.
So we are gonna start, so stay tuned next week
and maybe even the following week,
we may do a two part thing with the Enneagram
where we're gonna talk about what the Enneagram is
a little bit but more just talk about our experience with it,
what numbers we are and how that has impacted our lives.
But I am Enneagram three, I'm a performer.
There's a number of things that might go into that,
meaning that it's into that, meaning that
it's part nature, part nurture,
that I have been a very performance-minded person.
And when you're a person who finds their worth
in their success, you might also be a person
who finds their worthlessness in their failure.
And so I think that there is, again, and I have been,
you know, things have gone really well for me.
You know what I'm saying?
Things have gone really well for us.
Things have also gone well for me individually.
Before we ever started doing what we did,
it was just like, I kind of prided myself
on being good at stuff, right?
It's like, okay, I'm gonna make good grades.
I'm gonna be good at basketball.
The things that I choose to do,
I'm gonna do them well, right?
And so I kind of developed this sense of self
that was based on being good at things.
And then when it keeps happening, when you keep trying and of course there's lots of failures,
there's rejections, like those relational,
I wouldn't say that dating was one of the things
I was good at so I'll just put that out there.
I did really well one time with my wife
and things have worked out really well since then.
But this idea, I think the thing that was so difficult
about GMM 22 was because it was such a public failure
in terms of so many people saw it as you guys tried something
and it did not work and it's so obvious to everybody.
Why don't you just admit now?
Isn't that embarrassing?
Yeah and again, there's this, you start,
if you're me, you start, you've placed
some of your own personal value
in the way that what you've created is received, right?
And so I told you last week, my recommendation
was Elizabeth Gilbert's Big Magic,
which I was talking to my therapist about that.
And he was like, oh, you know, I used to recommend to a lot of people
her TED Talk, which if you don't wanna read the book,
which I do recommend the book,
you can kinda get a lot of the same ideas
and she's actually done a number of really popular TED Talks
where she talks about this.
But she kinda emphasizes this idea of what you create
matters a whole lot, but also doesn't matter at all, right?
There's this sort of built in irony,
like it's sacred and it's awesome
and the creative expression is an incredible thing,
but also you kind of have to live as if it doesn't matter,
especially how it's received. you kind of have to live as if it doesn't matter,
especially how it's received. The thing that you can't control.
The thing you can control is what you create
and how you create it.
The thing you cannot control is this reception.
And we operate in this world where reception is
such a big piece of the pie.
Yeah.
Because we throw things out there constantly.
We're throwing things out there to this,
the most interactive media genre that's ever existed.
You know, what has happened with since YouTube, right?
So immediate feedback and also this high quantity
of content that's going out there.
So you're just getting this constant feedback
that's shaping everything. And so that's going out there. So you're just getting this constant feedback that's shaping everything.
And so that's been very difficult for me,
a performance-based person,
to create in a medium where approval,
literally, like how many people like this?
How many people watch it?
There's, the approval is quantifiable.
And it's a reflection in your mind
of what people think of you,
their assessment of you as a person.
Oh, you must not be as smart as I thought you were,
Rhett and Link, because you made a decision
that led to something that was embarrassing,
that was a failure.
I think the thing for us though is
because we have this longstanding and growing relationship
with our audience, that it created a soft place
for us to fall, you know, where,
I think anybody who listens to this podcast weekly
has a sense of who we are
and is on board.
We have a, you know, there's an understanding
and there's a belief in, hey, I might, I like these guys.
You know, I'm loyal to these guys.
If you stick around.
Even if some things that they create
aren't the best thing for me.
Like you may have a favorite artist
who has a body of work that from album to album,
you may not like every single album the same,
like Sturgill Simpson.
Like I feel like I have a relationship with his work,
not with him, that is, it's special to me.
But there's certain albums that like,
I really applaud the fact that he's doing his thing
and it wasn't for me.
And there's been a few of those albums, right?
And, but I still believe in him and like,
it give him this, and those weren't failures,
they just weren't for me. But even if they were failures, him and like, give him this, and those weren't failures, they just weren't for me.
But even if they were failures, I'm like,
hey, I'm still a fan and I respect the fact that like,
just because I don't like it or even if people didn't like
it, that he was doing his thing.
And I'm on board for that.
And we have the benefit of having that soft place to fall
because we have that loyalty and that relationship built.
There's, you know, I was reading Questlove's
creativity book, which spoiler alert,
I'll recommend at the end and give you details about it.
But he's talking about, he talked about a creative failure
and if people don't, and the type of failure that like,
if you put something out into the world
and nobody notices or cares,
and he was spinning that in a positive way
as there's freedom in that.
There's freedom in that to do something.
There's freedom that we don't have
because everything we do because of our success
has a level of scrutiny.
That if you're a developing artist
and you do something that doesn't work,
you can focus on the freedom to then try something new
and not be under the thumb of people's expectations.
I think there's a way to redeem every failure
or every rejection.
And I definitely think that's finding,
there's always, you can always see it as an opportunity
if you want to, you can always spin and focus
on the positive and you can learn things from it.
You know, if it builds into who you are
and changes who you are, then it was worth it, right?
And it enables you to move forward
as long as you don't allow it to keep you
from moving forward.
And I definitely feel that if we,
yeah, as we talk about GMM 22 now,
and if we continue to talk about it, we're not,
because I'm just not that interested in it,
but like I'm interested in talking about the other,
some other failures and rejections,
our conversation will continue to be different.
Like, so all the stuff that you said,
and that I would say,
if we were continuing to talk about it,
will be different than what we're saying
at that point in time,
when we were still really reeling
from it, you know?
And that may be the biggest takeaway,
that the experience made us,
maybe maturity is the right word or.
Well, we have the, you know,
we have the benefit of being able to kind of get back
on the horse and throw something out into the world,
kind of what you're saying, a soft place to land.
You've got an audience.
It's not like when we made a television show
that got one season, which we can talk,
our two TV things, both our very first foray in 2007
as hosts, that show was short-lived.
And then the show that we actually helped make and create
that was much more about us got one season.
Commercial Kings.
And then it's like you can't just turn around
and churn out another television show,
but you can turn to the internet
and turn to a faithful audience.
So we do have this ability to kind of,
we have this distinct advantage of not having to sort of sit in our failure
and not be able to move forward creatively.
And one of the things that Elizabeth Gilbert talks about,
and this may be in the book,
but it's definitely one of the TED Talks,
but she talks about how, you know,
she had the incredible success of writing Eat, Pray, Love,
which got turned into a movie. I haven't read the book or seen the movie. I don't necessarily plan to, I'm not incredible success of writing Eat, Pray, Love, which got turned into a movie.
I haven't read the book or seen the movie.
I don't necessarily plan to, I'm not sure it's for me,
but it was a huge success.
It was on the bestseller list for like three years,
you know, and then she experienced this incredible success.
And then there was all this pressure on writing
her next book and she wrote her next book and it bombed.
And she was like, thank goodness,
I got that out of the way.
It's like, unlike Harper Lee who she talks about
in Big Magic who wrote To Kill a Mockingbird
and then didn't write anything else
and she didn't write anything else because she was scared
of not being able to repeat the success
of To Kill a Mockingbird.
Now- I thought there was a hidden novel.
No, she did, something else was released later,
but I'm saying for a long time she didn't write.
But yeah, it wasn't,
Harper Lee did not publish it, I don't think.
She was so scared.
So one of the things that she talks about is how
you've got this home position, right?
And then success throws you away from home and failure throws you away from home
and failure throws you away from home.
But emotionally, you don't really have the cognitive ability
to feel the difference.
In other words, success can be just as disorienting
as failure can.
And also it goes to your head in a similar way, right?
So you can, success can breed fear, failure can breed fear.
And she's like, whether you are super successful
with something or it's something is a huge flop,
the goal for her is to return home,
is to return to home base.
And for her, home is doing the thing that she would do anyway, if success or failure,
you know, whether people are watching or not,
and that's writing for her, right?
It's simple for her, she's gonna go back to writing
and that's what she's gonna do,
whether or not you're buying it or not.
And I think that, now our creative process is complicated.
We're not just writing,
we're doing a bunch of different things.
And also the larger,
the more success that we've gotten
and the bigger our company has become,
there's more people depending on the stuff
that we come up with working
than there were 10 years ago, right?
So now it's like, okay, now we've got,
there's people's livelihoods are on the line, right?
There's a company, there's employees.
And so something working isn't just about us
and our like personal creative fulfillment.
So it's a little bit complicated,
but the advantage we have with being able to turn around
and just be like, well,
there's gonna be another video on Monday.
There's gonna be another podcast next week.
There's gonna be another, you're gonna go right gonna be another podcast next week. There's gonna be another,
we're gonna go right back to the drawing board
and start writing another pilot for something
or writing a movie, is that our home is pretty clear.
We always know where to come back to.
And that's just coming back to the creative process
and just churn something else out.
But specifically, Good Mythical Morning and Ear Biscuits
being kind of like a creative home base
where it's properties that are working,
where we're reaching you listening or watching.
You know, it's quite a luxury,
especially because we've been able to structure
our professional lives to then spend a good amount of time
on speculative stuff. So, and I do wanna get back to that spend a good amount of time on speculative stuff.
So, and I do wanna get back to that
and reference the stuff we talked about last week.
Everything that fizzled out was rejected or failed.
You know, it's difficult for me because I'm more of an,
you know, I thrive more in the execution phase,
and I don't mean the killing,
but I'm meaning carrying out of the creative process
than in the ideation and the writing of it,
which is a point that you thrive in.
So I'm actually curious how you interact with,
you know, a premature rejection.
It's like we write a pitch,
we write five pitches on a page like we read last week
and then, you know, maybe none of them,
nobody's excited about it so then we say,
oh crap, we'll just put that in the Google Drive
and read it on Ear Biscuits years later and laugh about it.
But in the moment it's like, ah, gotta start over.
Already starting over. And I'm sitting moment it's like, ah, gotta start over. Already starting over.
And I'm sitting on my hands like, oh, okay.
Gotta start over.
You know, or we are writing,
we decided to go write a pilot
and spend that amount of time to invest in that,
knowing that because it's a foray
into traditional entertainment, it's skipping tracks for us.
And we have this, you know, it's something we really want.
We want to stretch our arms and build our muscles creatively
and take some swings in other places,
just to get those type of things out into the world,
just to make that type of stuff,
to have that challenge and that experience and that reward.
But we know that we're not as special.
In fact, what we discover is that,
I guess in most people's ideas and these gatekeepers,
like we're not, like the things that make us special
or at least the popularity and the momentum that we have,
excuse me, and the success that we have.
Not an asset.
It just doesn't seem, it gets us in the room,
but it doesn't necessarily get things made.
And you know what?
I would go as far as to say it's not an asset,
it's a liability.
Yeah, I mean, we at least start to question that
because it's like, okay, we can get in the room,
but is it, okay, are our ideas and what we've written
and our pitches, are they not good enough?
Well, there's other reasons that don't have anything to do
with who we are and like our ability and talent as artists,
but it is a part of it.
So it's like you start,
you can get in your own head about that type of stuff.
Because you pitch in the room and they're like,
there's a million reasons to say no.
And there seems to only be a few reasons to say yes.
And then even a yes to a pilot is some,
it's an unknown length process to then,
and it's a crap shoot that something ever gets made.
So it's like, it's setting us up for a beating.
And we've been, so even though we're so successful,
we focus on this, what we wanna go after.
And we do have this experience of taking a beating.
So how do we deal with that?
And, cause we keep signing up for it.
And it's more frustrating for us
because we know the experience of making something
and have it and people seeing it and people liking it,
you know, and or if they don't, it's a soft place to fall.
We're spoiled, right?
But we're trying to switch tracks
and do something different.
I mean, so I'll let you respond to that
and then I'll talk about how,
like I've tried to adjust my approach mentally
to this entire process.
I mean, I think I'm thinking a lot of things.
You know, I definitely,
there is a part of me that I've always kind of had
this belief that's probably, that's not a realistic belief
that we can do anything, right?
That if we-
It's kind of like you can date anybody?
Yeah, we can, if you set your mind to something,
we can figure this out.
We can write a book, we can write a movie,
we can make music, we can, you know.
And so we have done a lot of those things
because there's just this persistent belief
that we can do it.
Cause I'm always like, well, somebody figured it out.
You know?
And the funny thing is, is that in Big Magic,
she kind of talks, one of the things I always think
that when I'm writing, for instance,
and I'm learning a lot while I'm writing,
and especially if we have the privilege of working
with someone who's more experienced,
like we did on a recent thing that we developed,
that's still kind of maybe gonna be something,
but probably not,
that's still kind of maybe gonna be something, but probably not, you know,
is my lack of experience and education
in the creative arts becomes frustrating to me, right?
Now, meaning that I went to engineering school, right?
I didn't even pay attention in any of my creative classes.
I didn't make the connection between
how there was an opportunity to like pursue
vocationally entertainment until, you know,
YouTube came around.
And so you start seeing that like, okay, well,
it isn't easy to just write something.
It doesn't just come naturally.
Like there are sort of, there are some unspoken rules
and there are rules that the people
who are gonna be reading your scripts know.
They've been educated, they've read a lot of scripts.
There's certain things that they're looking for.
Now, you can get way too formulaic in the process,
but one of the things that she talks about in Big Magic
is how that creative education and academia
is kind of overrated, right?
Like the idea of storytelling in general
is something that exists in our DNA as a species.
And this is who we are.
And then I start questioning,
well, do I have anything important to say?
Like, do we have something that people will care about?
Is this original enough?
You know, is this an original idea?
Elizabeth says, you know,
originality is secondary to authenticity, right?
And there's nothing, ultimately, there's nothing original.
Like there's nothing new under the sun.
Solomon had that figured out.
And so you're going to do something that has been done.
You're gonna come up with a melody
that is kind of already exists.
It's like, there's only so many combinations of notes.
There's only so many expressions of ideas.
There's only so many stories you can tell,
but only you as an individual can tell your specific story
in your specific way.
And so that's-
So this helps counteract this, an inferiority complex
or a fear of being exposed as like uneducated
or not as, or untalented.
Because everyone is faking it.
You know, when you think about it,
the person that you're pitching to is also faking it.
They're trying to maintain their job.
They don't want to get fired.
And they want to please the person that they report to,
who wants to please the person that they report to,
who wants to be the man or whatever.
So it's like everyone is kind.
I'm not saying that technical creative writing education
is a bad thing.
I think that would be great.
I wish I had had it, honestly, right?
Especially given what I'm doing now.
But when you kind of just are like,
listen, this doesn't really matter.
And also if I'm not enjoying every step of the process
up to the point of rejection, which the good news is I am,
I enjoy writing.
I enjoy the process of creating a role and exploring things
and putting words into characters' mouths
and that kind of thing.
And every single time I do it, I learn a whole lot.
So I know the next time I do it, it's gonna be better.
And I'm probably gonna increase,
the chances will be increased the next time
that this will come to light.
But you know what?
If it doesn't, it's just a lesson.
It's just an experience.
And it's what was supposed to happen.
You know, even if that's not true,
even if everything doesn't happen for a reason,
living like everything happens for a reason
is a healthy perspective.
I think for me,
and this is something that I actually started saying out loud
as we were entering into certain processes,
I'm thinking of two examples.
One is we were doing a pitch
and we had teamed up with somebody who,
if the pitch went as a television show,
we would, like they would be running the,
they'd be the head writer and like show runner.
And we were pitching that.
And then the other one is writing the pilot that we collaborated with,
a friend and mentor.
Yeah.
So with the first one, I remember we went in,
we were going into, well, it doesn't matter which network,
but bonafide meeting, big deal.
By the way,
our livelihood is not connected to our pitches working
for things being bought from us.
We have this luxury of not having this,
oh gosh, I gotta put food on the table.
We gotta make this work.
There's not a desperation.
There's not a desperation.
But we want it so bad that it feels the same at times.
And I do think that as you were getting at it,
kind of short, that can short circuit your ability
to pitch and sell something, I think.
When it's like, you're gripping so tightly
that you're like shaking or, you know, sometimes literally.
I remember we had done it,
we had gone around town pitching this thing
and this was the last person we were pitching to.
And remember we were sitting in the waiting room
with the writer who we paired ourselves with.
And before we went back there, you remember I said to him,
I was like, well, you know what?
If this doesn't, this is our last meeting,
if this doesn't go, we may never see you again.
You know, it's like we were introduced to him
for this project, we really hit it off.
I think, you know, I could see us being really good friends
and collaborators and having an entire
creative future together.
Or, and that's why, that's one of the reasons
we picked the person.
Or this could be the last time that we ever see each other.
And I, you know, there was like this kind of uncomfortable
laughter because we all knew it was true, right?
It's just not the type of thing that you typically say
unless you're Link and you're a little nervous
so you're trying to figure out something to talk about.
And there's nothing like a good dose of the truth
to really shake you out of being nervous.
And that's exactly what happened.
That was over a year ago.
And even without the COVID of it all,
like we still would have never have seen him again.
I mean, we might, who knows if we'll ever cross paths,
but it was just like, you know,
we could be working together for years
or we could never see each other.
Isn't that funny?
Yeah, that's true.
And the reason why I said it
is because I was trying to adopt this philosophy
that like,
all of this stuff is so tenuous.
Like, the least we can do is be entertained by the process
because it may not be ever anything more than this.
Like, we go into this pitch, we practiced it,
we kind of know it backwards and forwards.
Let's have fun with it.
If all that happens with this project
and it never goes past a pitch,
well, I wanna have fond memories of this pitch.
Like I wanna take the pressure off
and just convey that we believe in it
and leave the results to whatever power
you wanna leave the results to.
So that's the thing that I was trying to do
was just embrace the process
because the results are out of our control.
And all we can do is we can come up with an idea,
we can write a story and we can have a compelling pitch,
but it is so tenuous because the reason
that someone might say no could very easily be
what they had for lunch.
It could be a conversation that they had with their spouse
right before the meeting.
And that can be frustrating or it can be fuel
to let go of the things that you just have an illusion
of control of.
I think when you actually think about it
and when you understand how tenuous it is,
for me, it is helpful to be like, you know what?
Why would I place my value, my happiness,
in the hands of someone who just had a bad lunch?
You know what I'm saying?
Like, and so again, it is frustrating when you take the,
but I feel like for me, it's step one is finding joy
in the process, what you just said,
like, and that is everything from the conceptualization
and the writing to going out and talking about it,
meeting people, doing the pitches,
like having fun while we're doing it.
And then the second thing is, and this is not easy.
I wanna be very clear, this isn't easy for anybody.
It's definitely not easy for me,
somebody who built an identity on, you know,
impressing people, to take all the power,
to give the results,
my expectations, there's no power in that.
I'm just removing all my expectations altogether
and trying to detach myself from the outcome.
If I can enjoy the process
and detach myself from the outcome.
And again, there's things that make that easier for us,
given the fact that it doesn't have to work.
Like we can go back, we can keep doing what we're doing.
It's, we're gonna be okay in the short term financially.
You know, we're not depending on this working
in order to eat.
Yeah.
So those are the, and again,
if that's your situation, again, I know I'm biting a lot
of Elizabeth Gilbert's thoughts here,
but I mean, she kind of makes the point that
because the process, the arts are so tenuous
and because people, you're putting your livelihood
into the whims of another person who holds the purse strings,
she recommends don't quit your day job.
I know that sounds harsh, but she's like,
she didn't stop working her day job
until after she published Eat, Pray, Love
and it started seeming like it was working.
Like she had all these different jobs
and she was like, make yourself,
give yourself that creative time.
But the moment that you begin to attach yourself
and attach your self-worth
and attach your own livelihood to it,
it becomes a different thing.
Now we've had the privilege of, okay, well,
the baseline creativity stuff is working.
So we have this privilege of being able to kind of do that,
to put these things out into the world
and not have them have to work, but.
Yeah, and with that second example of,
you know, co-writing a pilot
with somebody with a lot more experience that can give,
you know, just being on Zoom calls and having that time,
it was just like, you know, this is just, you know,
the thing that I would remind myself and just,
I would say out loud at times to all of us on the Zoom call
is I was like, you know, like you said,
this may never be anything,
but it's fun to think about what it could be.
And this is fun right now.
Like this experience is fun.
Like finding, like taking that moment to pause
and recognize, oh, we just got notes.
But the way he gives notes is he does,
he records it all audio stream of consciousness
and then he just emails it to you.
So like, you've got this like verbal processing
of what we've conceptualized and what you've written.
And there's like this detailed analysis of it
that like people would pay,
people would save up for years
to get that type of feedback on something they've written
from someone of this level of experience.
And just saying, okay, I might be,
the notes might eviscerate and they didn't,
but even if they did, it's like, wow, what a cool process.
It's like going to, signing up for your driving course
and then you get to the parking lot
and Mr. Miyagi gets in the car with you
with a glass of wine.
It's like, oh God, this is freaking cool.
I need to go home and watch Karate Kid now
and I think I would really, really appreciate this.
You know what I'm saying?
And it's tough to do that.
It's tough to enjoy the process
because I think there's this romantic notion
of the starving artist and the desperate artist
and the tortured artist,
literally somebody like Van Gogh cutting off his own ear.
Like you have this, there's this cultural entity,
which is you've got to drag yourself
through a torturous experience
in order to come out on the other side in success.
And it's like, well, first of all,
the success on the other side may be just as disorienting
as the failure and the struggle.
You are who you are and your baseline happiness
is kind of pre-tuned, you know what I'm saying?
So it's very difficult for me
because I always have thought that,
yeah, this is supposed to be this like,
this is supposed to be a grind
and you're really supposed to just like
throw yourself in this and be able to look back
and be like, oh man, we worked so hard on that
and then it became a thing, but it's just like,
I don't know if it's gonna become a thing.
Can I just learn to enjoy the steps?
I mean, who knows?
If one of these things becomes a reality, it'll be fun,
it'll be awesome, but it'll also complicate our lives
in a certain way, right?
Like, okay, we do a hundred different things already.
Let's throw 101 in there and this one will be
making a television show, making a movie.
I'm not saying we won't find a way to make it happen,
but you know what?
It'll be stressful.
It'll be a complicating factor in things.
Yeah.
So it's not always like the success
or something happening is gonna be some incredible thing that is gonna change,
change your life, you know?
Yeah, so I think ultimately, for me,
it's just a constant battle to detach myself
from the outcome and also to when the outcome is failure,
which is most often,
especially with the stuff that we're talking,
it's in fact only almost exclusively failure and rejection
with the ideas that we've talked about before.
Seeing that there's probably ultimately
more long-term value in those rejections and failures
than there would be in one of them working out.
And I think my chief struggle is something
that will make more sense in light
of our Enneagram conversations over the next couple of weeks
because my struggle is when things are so speculative
and they're not actually like nuts and bolts of doing
and like perfecting, like executing and perfecting,
like the next parts of the creative process.
Like if a project never gets off the ground
and that keeps happening and happening,
I get very dejected.
I feel like I'm sitting on my hands, you know,
because I'm not the writer and you know,
I'm not as much of the idea from nothing comes an idea.
It's more of like, yes, I get on board with those things
and then let's go for it.
Right.
You know, so there's a different type of struggle for me
in this kind of like to stay engaged when it's, you know,
our hands have been tied with COVID
but also so much is speculative.
And now we're, you know, we've actually got people
whose full-time job is to, as a development person,
I don't think I could ever be a development person
because now that we're working closely with Mallory
and Taylor who are like working for us full-time
to take our ideas, develop other ideas, bring projects in
and like get traditional things off the ground.
It's like, it's very hard for me to remain engaged
because it's just so speculative.
I can just be like, this is never gonna happen.
I'm never gonna be able to engage what I feel like
my gifts and my passions are because we're just meandering
around a starting line and then no one may ever fire the gun
to run, you know? It's like, call me when it's time to run,
you know?
And so it's been, that's what's been difficult for me.
And it's not even, so then I start to anticipate
the rejection and just disengage, I think,
to protect myself from the dejection
of never getting to the part that's where I feel like,
like I thrive and I can find my flow.
And maybe that'll come up more,
or you can just kind of take what I just said
and map it onto being an Enneagram one next week.
And I think that's one of the reasons that we end up,
we've got something planned.
We have a creative exercise.
Yeah, we do.
That we have planned for the fall that is-
We have complete control over it.
And it is going to happen.
We're going to make it.
Yeah, and I think for me that was a reaction
to what you're talking about.
Yeah sure I may be engaged in like the writing process
but when you've, for years you've been able
to put things out there, whether it was a music video
or a sketch, or something that's coming from a different place
creatively than, obviously Good Mythical Morning
is its own entity, but Good Mythical Morning has become,
as we've established, it's become an environment
that we place ourselves into and we're just kind of
operating off the cuff and as ourselves
and kind of being ourselves and our friendship
is on display and that kind of thing.
It's a different kind of entertainment than something that's
because the conceptual stages are happening
with a writing team and producers and on purpose.
It's like, we're not trying to like throw ourselves back
into GMM creatively.
We're throwing ourselves into other places creatively.
And, but then after a while, you're like,
well, I gotta get something.
We used to at least have like a sketch
or a music video or something like that
that would get out there.
And it's a different process of throwing that out
into the world and having people react to it.
So I think that our reaction to feeling a little bit
restricted in that way is to say,
well, let's put something out there.
And so that-
I don't wanna build it up too much
because it's not gonna be anything
that they can predict.
Yeah, yes, I agree with that.
So if you think anything that you could predict
and then you would get excited about, don't do it
because it's not that type of thing.
But we're excited about it and I'm gonna leave it at that.
I'm gonna make a recommendation.
You know, you had your creative book,
which I'm actually listening to it.
I'm not that far into it, but I really appreciated,
early on she talks about fear being a barrier to creativity.
Yeah. a barrier to creativity.
I was going in a record shop and I found,
I knew this existed and then I'd forgotten and then I remembered so I picked it up.
Questlove wrote a creative book called Creative Quest,
a creativity book is what I meant to say.
I'm not all the way through this thing.
I skipped to the last chapter so that it could inform
our success and failure is one of the last chapters.
And so I'm a big fan of Questlove, you know,
honored to have met him in the halls of,
actually we met him, we didn't meet him on the halls
of the Tonight Show, we met him during during, we just met him during the show.
I mean Questlove played drums for us to rap.
Isn't that crazy? Our eighth grade.
Questlove is awesome.
Eighth grade talent show,
a Halloween fall festival thing, it's crazy.
So Creative Quest, fun book,
it talks about, you know,
it's his relationship with creativity
and the thing that got me was his opening line,
"'Decades into my career with many albums
and songs under my belt,
I still don't know if I am truly creative.
Most days I spend more time absorbing
the creative work
around me than actually creating myself.
At times I feel like I'm a way better student
than I am a teacher or a maker.
And that really resonated with me.
I think a lot of what I said just a few seconds ago
about, that's a testimony to our teamwork
that we will talk about with the Enneagram.
That was like, okay, a guy who is undeniably creative
has this doubt in his mind if he would call himself that
because of the way that he engages
with the creative world is different.
So if you're into Questlove, if that resonates with you,
Creative Quest is my recommendation.
Tell us about your experience with creativity,
failure, rejection, hashtag Ear Biscuits.
That's what we're calling it now, Ear Biscuits.
This has been a longer one.
Yeah.
We love to talk about how much we suck.
Join us, join us next week
as we finally get into the Enneagram.