Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - Ep. 85 Louis Cole - Ear Biscuits
Episode Date: September 4, 2015Fearless adventure seeker, YouTuber, and vlogger, Louis Cole, best known from his channel FunForLouis, joins Rhett & Link this week to discuss his passion for inspiring people to face their fears and ...break out of their comfort zones, why a court battle with the RSPCA lead him to abandon his original YouTube channel FoodForLouis and his videos of eating living things including a scorpion and tarantula, and how he prevented a full on gang brawl from breaking out inside of the double decker bus he drove around London. *NOTE: This conversation contains adult themes and language 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
Transcript
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This, this, this, this is Mythical.
Welcome to Ear Biscuits, I'm Rhett.
And I'm Link.
Joining us today in our final recording from VidCon
is YouTuber, globetrotter, vlogger, and adventure seeker,
Louie Cole from his channel Fun4Louie.
Louie travels all over the world
and documents his experiences
and it's probably not an exaggeration to say
he's experienced more things in the past few weeks
than most people experience in an entire lifetime.
The dude is the real life version
of the most interesting man in the world.
Indeed. I think.
And his YouTube channel, Fun For Louie,
which hosts daily vlogs of these traveling adventures,
currently has 1.5 million subscribers
and 155 million video views.
Some of his escapades include spearfishing in Australia,
swimming with ducks in London, yes he did that,
integrating himself into the Himba tribe of South Africa,
horseback riding in New Mexico,
para skiing in the Alps, and rowboating in Vietnam.
That's just a few of his adventures.
This guy has a good time.
And he's not just experiencing the stuff
we wish we could experience.
He's the type of guy you'd want to be experiencing
this stuff alongside.
He's got a positive outlook, his free spirit,
his ability to live every moment to the fullest
really inspires his audience to face their fears
and break out of their comfort zones.
Of course, this made us wonder
if Louis has any fears himself.
Hmm, so we talked to him about that
and a few other things, got some great stories.
There's gotta be a sequel with this guy by the end,
but we talked about the gang face-off
that happened on the double-decker bus
that he bought and drove around London.
We talked about eating many extreme dishes
on his now privated or deleted, I think,
Food for Louie channel, including he ate a live scorpion
and a live tarantula.
That gets controversial and so we unpack all of that.
And finally, how his itinerant lifestyle
impacts his personal relationships.
Yeah, this is definitely one of the best,
one of our all time favorite conversations
we've had on Ear Biscuits
and we know you're going to enjoy it.
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Build it beautiful.
And now, onto the biscuit.
But beautiful. And now, onto the biscuit.
Our lives intersecting with yours is difficult
because there's one huge variable, and that's your life.
Yeah.
So whenever we get together, which this is this,
I mean, we've passed at events,
but like, gotten together to create something like even this
is like, oh, this is, it immediately feels more special
because you're such a moving target.
Well, but it's like you're the real life example
of the most interesting man in the world.
That's how I think about it.
Oh yeah.
I see that Dos Equis commercial
and he says all these things and I'm like,
but I know a dude who kind of does all this in real life.
Yeah, I guess so. Agree or disagree?
I mean, there's obviously the behind the scenes.
It's every second of every day is not as interesting as the videos and Instagrams.
But yeah, I guess this has been the most interesting,
action-packed kind of couple of years of my life, this whole YouTube adventure.
Right.
Okay, so let's backtrack from this moment because even if I look at your channel currently,
it's basically real time.
I mean, you're within a day.
You pretty much load something up every day.
Yeah, every day.
Do you ever miss a day?
I've started to as of the beginning of this year.
I just thought, you know,
it was only me that set the challenge of doing a daily vlog
and then I just thought it know it was only me that set the challenge of doing a daily vlog and then i just thought it become it become a little bit unhealthy where i just thought i'm
not taking any me time i'm not taking any rest time um okay but still give or take i can look
at your channel and i may take off like one day a week uh one day fortnight but it's around it's
at least i'm doing at least six days a week. So you got the VidCon Madness Begins video,
which has been up about a day,
because you've been in VidCon about that long.
Yeah.
And that's almost 15 minutes.
But then if I backtrack from there, I can tell,
okay, you came from Hollywood, you were riding on,
I'm just based on thumbnail only.
Yeah.
You can get a lot from your thumbnails.
You were in Hollywood riding horses, and then, that's probably Griffith only. Yeah. You can get a lot from your thumbnails. You were in Hollywood riding horses.
And then that's probably Griffith Park.
Yeah.
And then you were on the beach doing a cleanup.
Is this like a self-imposed cleaning up a section of the beach?
There was a charity and we were helping, yeah, do a beach cleanup with them, yeah.
Okay.
And then you were doing a GoPro audio test underwater.
That was in New York.
You were in New York for that.
Yeah. Yeah. gopro audio test underwater that was in new york you were in new york for that yeah doing some
rooftop instagrams uh testing out some of casey's danger toys whatever that means it sounds awesome
he's got these wheels these electric you know those uh you've seen those toys with the wheels
and everyone's floating around on them yeah yeah yeah uh-huh they can be dangerous and your mom
was in new york yeah i can tell that and And then you were doing some skateboarding in Central Park.
I'm like, yeah, I'm like hitching a ride on the back of one of those bicycle taxis.
You know, those guys that cycle around.
But he didn't, they didn't know you were doing it.
Not to begin with.
We made friends.
We made friends quite quickly.
He was cool.
So even, and then before you were in New York, where were you?
I can't remember.
Swimming with swans.
Oh, that was in London.
In London.
Yeah.
And then it was just two weeks before that.
I jumped in, there's a lake in Hyde Park and I went swimming in it.
There's actually like a, you're allowed to go swimming.
And that's not a thing in England usually.
Like these are, this is a lake full of ducks and swans.
You just look at the lake.
Yeah.
But you're allowed to swim
yeah it's like a thing like i didn't notice a thing so anyway yeah we anyway that was that
thumbnail we were jumping in swimming with the swans floating around us but but three videos
before that you the first video in your london series is called back in london so right before
that when you were talking with animals where were you uh italy yeah italy yeah you were in italy yeah and and
this is over and i'm just i've just taken you through the previous previous five weeks yeah
italy london new york los angeles and then where are you going after vidcon um i am doing a road
trip up to um portland and then on the 11th of august i'm going to Sierra Leone in West Africa where the Ebola outbreak started.
But I'm going with the UN and World Vision, this charity.
I'm going to go and interview some patients that have recovered.
And it's going to be, I mean, that's going to be a pretty intense one, that trip.
So we're going to get into like specific places and like highlights.
But let's just talk about
workflow. Like what's your approach? I see, you know, you walked in here, you had your camera,
you were kind of leading with the camera. And so what's your general approach, like shooting,
editing, all of that? What's your workflow? I mean, I'll just shoot as much as possible
during the day. I've just found i'm happy to go
through a bit more footage each day to capture those moments and i'd rather capture a little
bit too much i think that's my what i figured out over the years of doing this um vidcon's an
interesting one because a lot of it's relational so a lot of it's just meeting people chatting with
people all day um and that's a little bit more difficult to capture though the moments you want
to share because some of the conversations it'd be weird if i was like like this the whole time
with my camera um so the to be honest vidcon's an interesting one you can capture a bit of the
party scenes i go and chill in the hot tub a little bit when i'm on the move and there's a
bit more activity to the day and we're moving around a bit and there's a bit you know that's there's a slightly different workflow because i'm
i'm explaining a bit to camera how i'm feeling about where i am i might i might get put my camera
on someone else and ask them something and then it's just a montage of clips of what we're up to
and then you know another chat to camera and it's pretty it's pretty edit heavy then if you yeah so
a lot of it i mean we had a panel this morning i was with uh casey neistat and uh ben brown and nadine and we all do well me and
casey and ben do daily vlogs and nadine does travel vlogging and uh we we were saying it's
it's almost entirely in the edit you know obviously you need to capture the moments but then it's how
you cut that together and that usually happens for me late at night
i'm my problem is i've got that fomo thing where i can't miss out so i couldn't like pull myself
away from a party to go and edit i have to wait till everyone's gone to bed yeah which things
like this i mean i couldn't even edit last night we had this amazing conversation with a few of us
about how we can change the world together as youtubers and you know having an impact until five in the morning and then i was like who was in this bunch uh jerome jar do you know
jerome jar he's uh the biggest viner in the world uh and you know he's uh that french guy tall french
guy does a really funny okay okay anyway his whole thing is making people happy making people smile
and challenging people to face their fears so he like does like public singing and he goes up to people in public and like
i guess pushes them out of their comfort zone but anyway we had this i mean i won't go into
now but we had this incredible conversation about well just give us the conclusion what's the answer
how are we changing the world when we were in bed at 5 a.m but i want to be a part of this
okay so my original point is i haven't even edited yesterday's video yet so it chops and changes
um when when i edit and the workflow could depending on what i'm doing right so i don't
want it to take over especially conversations like this which i'll explain the the the the
crux of the conversation was um society's broken we have got this incredible voice um with millions
of ears potentially between the network of people I
was looking around last night at the YouTube party and I was like I mean this group of you know this
small group of people here we could 100% change the world you don't need the politicians and the
and the big corporates to do it like we we could do it and then we had this conversation of what
is it that's broken and how do you mend it? And it was all around the subject of compassion.
And I think the three words, which my friend Dave, who I'm doing a lot of cool charity ideas with at the moment,
and these are his three words, are compassionate problem solvers.
So finding compassionate problem solvers and getting them to release that and other people.
And I mean, there's I mean, this was like we started the conversation at 930 and ended at 5 a.m.
So I'm struggling to summarize it.
But it was but it was documented.
I mean, the cameras are rolling.
Well, I filmed a bit and then I just put my audio on recording because I just wanted to listen back because it was just very exciting because there's a lot of amazing people and minds here
and people have had incredible different incredibly different experiences people from all over the
world but the one thing common is somehow we've built this incredible platform that people seem
interested in our lives and what we're up to and there's this potential to inspire people and
make a difference and i don't know that's that's where my head's at at the moment yeah let's skip from workflow to kind of what you want to accomplish you know your environment's always
changing you're always figuring out how to take the footage that you capture which is always
compelling but it's but it's a testimony to your editing and all those uh the music and the style that you bring to it but it's all for a reason like I really get a sense
that you you want to elicit something from your audience what it what is that what is your goal
it's an interesting journey I think I started off just wanting to document my life
and at times I'm just doing what I want to be doing regardless and then it just
happens to be oh I've got a camera I'll just film this whilst I'm doing it other times and what I
can fall into and I want to avoid is suddenly thinking oh I need to make sure I'm making an
interesting video today so then I'll deliberately choose to do things to make them interesting and
I don't think that's bad in itself because it does motivate you to you know have a fun day
and not just sit in all day but I don't want that to be the primary drive for me is like I have
to make interesting videos that wasn't ever the goal it was just to share my life I think my my
goal and what I would love to do is to inspire people um when they watch my videos a lot of
people say oh you've really helped me face my fears or um dream bigger or
you know some of it's about travel and that's my like face the fears of jumping off of random rocks
or even that's the interesting thing a lot of my videos are literal fears like you know jumping out
of a plane and and going to crazy countries but i think just if you just think about fear in general
that's the thing that holds people back
in life whether it's a fear of jumping out plane or whether it's a fear of leaving your house or
making new friends and if you say to you know if you if you explain to people
embrace this this pushing out your comfort zone and and and even if it's scary do it um a lot of
people have said you know I wouldn't have even come to VidCon, but, you know, watching your videos have, you know, helped me overcome that.
And a girl yesterday said she wanted to go to, she'd never left her state and she wanted to go to university in New York.
And she's like plucked up the courage and she's now got a place and she's going from California to New York in a month's time and she said it's all from this this general feeling of like facing your fears which uh I guess people feel inspired to do
so I think this whole thing is like you can watch my life and see what I'm up to and there's this
shallow sometimes level of like just pleasure seeking fun I'm jumping off things I'm having
you know here I'm there I'm riding horses I'm jumping in lakes but i hope my hope is it's a lot deeper than that
people can see that my my kind of heart behind it all is embrace life and and be passionate about
what you do and hopefully that can inspire others to um to do it in their way it might not be travel
it might be something different well because you know there's an interesting there's an interesting
dynamic when you when you watch what you do.
I mean, one thing is you might be tempted to think
that you don't have any fears.
You're fearless.
That guy's fearless.
I'm scared of everything, but that guy's fearless.
And then the second thing might be like,
man, I can't go to all those places.
How am I gonna have, how can I embrace life
and get the most out of life
when it's going to the cubicle every day or you
know whatever situation somebody might be in the classroom yeah yeah that is a tough that is a
tough one i know i think that's why if i choose to vlog daily it means those off days where i'm
not going out having adventures and i might just be sitting at home with my family and the most
adventurous thing i do is walk down to a coffee shop and get a coffee which often happens it shows that life isn't this adrenaline 100% every day doing the biggest
and best thing it's there's there's a reality to it as well and I think that's why I quite like the
daily thing right but what are your fears you know in this big conversation we had last night I
realized where sometimes I do think I'm fearless i realized uh i realized i need
to think about that a bit because i think there's some fears i have which aren't normal which aren't
a normal classic fears well let's let's let's start to put circle some candidates is this a
therapy sometimes it is like that okay um i think i'm i think I've got a fear of missing out, that FOMO thing.
But I think that goes bigger than just like the party.
I think that's recently been, you know, I'm in this incredible position
and I don't want to miss out on the opportunities that I can have.
And then it's like, well, what are the opportunities?
The reality is in my position with
I'm I mean brands are contacting me every day saying we want to work with you we're going to
do projects I could easily draw that kind of get absorbed into the world of like just making as
much money as possible from this platform which is a tough one because yes I'm I've monetized my
videos and I'm earning an income and i've got dreams that require money
so i for instance one of them is i want to buy a big plot of forest and build a treehouse ewok
village in it and live there because i haven't got a house at the moment i was like who wants
a normal house i want to live in an ewok village yes of course but we've been looking please build
a guest room we've been yeah i mean i want to build multiple but we went and looked at a plot
of land up in santa cruz which was like i mean it was a big plot of land but it was like half a million dollars and i was like i don't have half a million
dollars uh but but anyway my point is i can work with brands if they work organically with my
channel and my viewers are cool with that and understand the principle of me doing sponsor
videos uh and it can work or i can get i'm like well i just do sponsor videos every
day like you know and then i'm just so that's one of my fears is i don't want to become unauthentic
and i don't want to alienate my audience and i don't want to kind of sell out to things i don't
believe in but i also don't want to be on my high horse and be like i'm not gonna i'm you know i'm
just gonna make money yeah i'm not gonna make money because the reality is
money isn't shouldn't shouldn't be a motivation but i think it's a brilliant
uh tool and thing that can equip that can really free you to do you think awesome things so anyway
that's been playing i mean this is the most to be honest this is the most honest i've been oh
really and i hope this isn't like a crazy subject to talk about but this whole thing's a fear of mine i don't
know what to do in this situation i don't know whether to embrace it and just do it all or
whether to like step back a bit i'm scared of missing opportunities and i'm scared of what
if i if i if i do the wrong thing what could happen well the ewok village is a definite yes
yes i think if a brand would pay you with an Ewok Village
and take money out of the equation,
would that simplify things?
Yeah, absolutely, yeah.
Well, I think that money represents an Ewok Village.
So it's still, it's like it's an equation.
Yeah, exactly.
Seriously, I mean, just one piece of advice
I would give just hearing that
is I think that the nature of your content
and the nature of the things that you're doing is that there is a really,
you're concerned about authenticity
and that's a great instinct
and you should keep that instinct.
I think there is a really authentic way to incorporate
brands that you believe in into the kinds of things
that you're doing because there's, you know, whether it was like, you know, Red Bull is an example of somebody who does all kinds of things that you're doing because there's, whether it was like,
Red Bull is an example of somebody
who does all kinds of adventure things,
which there's like a connection there,
but just simple things, like if there's something
that you use or something that could help you
do the things that you do while you're traveling,
like there's a million people out there
who'd wanna give you something like that
to talk about as a sponsor. You have to figure out how to navigate it, but it's like, there is a lot people out there who'd want to give you something like that to talk about as a sponsor.
You have to figure out how to navigate it,
but it's like, there is a lot of opportunity there,
and I don't think that if you maintain that authenticity,
you're not gonna alienate people, I would think.
And then we could build that Ewok village.
We'll help you, we'll come and we'll stay.
Oh yeah, come stay.
Next podcast should be in one of the tree houses.
That's right. You know, and it's not our job to should be in one of the tree houses. That's right.
You know, and it's not our job to solve your fears either.
It isn't.
I think it's our job to just make you talk about them.
No, no, I mean, yeah, I just need some processing time.
As many sponsors as we work with, though, we are like,
oh, you definitely should be doing that. We can find a way.
We can talk about that more later.
I will say that I think that the challenge
is to find integrations that the brand
already reflects your values.
Because a lot of brands want to.
Yeah, that's a good point.
A lot of brands want to attach themselves to us, to you,
in order to, by association,
put your values onto them, you know?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And that's what you don't wanna do, you know?
And that's where, when they throw a dollar amount out there,
sometimes it's difficult for us to say, oh, okay.
Oh, now that there's that amount of money on the table,
well, we gotta, now we gotta have a conversation.
We gotta have a conversation.
Right, because there are different kinds of brands.
You can't do that, it can't be about the dollar amount.
Right, because there are different kinds of brands.
I mean, Coke could come to you and say,
we wanna sponsor you, and at that point it'd be like,
okay, why is Louis being sponsored by this huge soft drink?
But there are smaller.
And their slogan has been enjoy happiness.
I can see how that would totally work.
Which totally makes sense.
But does that work for you?
And I wouldn't answer that here. I mean, let's not talk specifics.
But the general thing is, I mean, it's been tough.
Some brand things I've worked with, it starts off great.
You're like, yeah, I think we're on the same page.
By the time this contract sign
and you're starting to get things reviewed,
then suddenly everything changes
and you're like, well, this was never the plan.
And then it's this stress of like,
I really don't want to start
reading lines and scripts in my...
This isn't a fictional thing.
This is my life.
So this is the this
is the struggle anyway but um yeah i mean i think we it is but i think we are getting to a place
where there's enough that's starting to work correctly that there's hope that it can be
there can be trust a brand brand can actually trust us.
Yeah.
But let's just see if that happens.
The other fear of missing out is an interesting one
because that's just more,
we're going just more inside your head
and not inside your wallet, right?
Yeah, yeah.
This is more of like, I think the other thing is like,
well, I don't know if it's quite related,
but it's this whole shiny thing syndrome
where I arrive at something like VidCon and I'm like, you know, like a kid in a candy store.
I'm like, oh, and it's all about love.
It's relational.
Oh, I want to go and chat to that person.
Oh, look at this person.
And then and also people come up to me.
They're like, Louis, we want to talk to you.
I'm like, yeah, let's talk.
And then it's this whole thing of and then it's like meeting my viewers and it's like exciting but also sometimes a bit overwhelming and uh and it's this whole thing of i'm my attention is not in one place for like more
than 30 seconds and this is this is rare right here sitting down and having a conversation
because you're you're scared of missing out because why you know is uh so what i think part
of it's just wanting to make the most of everything you know and make the most
of life and i mean this is great i haven't really i don't know i don't i don't know is the is the
answer but yeah let's talk about it i mean well let's see if we can derive it because now i have
a theory that as a youngster you were locked in a dungeon and deprived of all sorts of stimulation
so now you're just making up for it at like age 18 so let's see if we can get there yeah so yeah
how did you how did you become louis i mean how did you become this guy that is the most
interesting man in the world for real where are you from um no i mean brilliant family really
close to my family um loving home i was always say brilliant and not
like a like extremely smart but like just like like in the british way of brilliant it's like
when charlie says lovely he doesn't mean lovely he just means great i mean great yeah right got it
great family uh so i'm sure they're smart too though yeah um rather british quite um quite a
typical like grew up in the suburbs middle class
didn't have loads of money um my dad's been a high school teacher his whole life uh he's actually
been i think like 33 years teaching at the same school and we've always lived in the same house
so this is a very you know um in terms of like in terms of security it's just been same house same town I grew up in
it's been nice it's been great but also this has been running strand of like my parents have been
quite supportive and encouraged all of us to think outside the box I've got two sisters as well um so it's like thinking outside of the box and as a kid i remember i
was like i love rainforests i love jungles i'm obsessed with like jungles so they let me
completely transform my bedroom into a rainforest i had like a running waterfall
i i lived in a cave i painted trees all over the walls i had a pet iguana roaming free in my room
oh as long as he didn't leave the
threshold of your door that was his terrarium yeah i mean where did that idea come from
i don't know my head i mean i just always loved i was always in as a kid i was always in another
world like i was in fantasy land the whole time like i just daydreamed my way through my childhood i was just always playing games even at school
i imagined i was i was a spy in a military camp like every day i was like i just create this
fantasy world around me to it wasn't an escapism i just saw this i love seeing the magic in the
world around me yeah it was fun it just hit me that rainforest cafe could be a sponsor yeah no
i love them i went i went to that they've been a big i've always loved the rain have you been there because
yeah it's like your room but they serve food yeah the food isn't great though but you know but it
is no it's a fun atmosphere it is like my room that was that is my room my room was like the
rainforest cafe um but and then it's been i guess just crazy ideas i've had that don't fit into the normal like so uh let's fast forward
10 years like um I bought a double-decker bus like the you know the London double-decker buses
uh that's quite a fast forward I bought a bus got some friends got some friends to paint graffiti
all over the outside and then I used to run uh and help with young people and like bad neighborhoods
around London like gangs and we and I set up a music studio in there.
And I used to like help with youth clubs and churches and different people.
Did you drop out of high school in order to do this?
No, no.
This is that I'm fast forwarding past high school.
No, I didn't go to university though.
That's the interesting thing.
And a lot of my friends I've talked to that are doing bigger things,
you know, entrepreneurs,
and they've set up big world potentially world impacting
things didn't do degrees i didn't go to university which is a common thread with a lot of my friends
at home but your parents kind of stoked that flame of instinct for you to just yeah invent it and then
do it yeah invent whatever you want to do and do it yeah so what was was the double decker bus the
first example of that i mean he's multiple
like i remember wanting to do something really fun for my uh 21st birthday and we could try and
rewind i'm trying to think what else so my jungle bedroom teenage years uh i did a i did a i did like
a work placement instead of university and then um where that? Where did you work? I did like 3D animation.
I worked in an office for Sky TV.
Oh, really?
So it was all like...
Because I love graphics and visual stuff.
Was that before or after you were homeless
for the first time?
This was before.
Okay.
So anyway, then I left the corporate world of like...
I mean, it was fun.
It was visual.
It was graphics.
But it was still an office.
And I had a...
Not a cubicle.
Well, almost a cubicle.
Like it was an office.
I just had the same seat every day. then i thought oh you know this isn't me
i can't do this anymore so after two years there i just left i thought i can i can save some money
because at that point you're like what's important to me i'm paying rent and it made it made me
challenge everything i knew about society i was like wait hang on i don't i don't think this has
to be the way that i'm told it is like i think i can just decide what i believe um so the belief that i
needed a house because i was like that's a big outgoing you know renting a house so i just bought
a minivan and i just thought i can just live in here and it's free so i left my parents said
well my they were supportive they were like they were like well we know you're skilled enough
to go back into a workplace if you want to but in the meantime go and have fun um and do you know
that i've got a funny story so i went and lived in this minivan for a few years drove around europe
with all my friends um literally survived on maybe 20 a week i was like eating cans of food
and i just thought i was like i can live for free who needs money and it was this whole thing of like i just want to my at that point i was like time is so
much more valuable and i i remember leaving my job and thinking with all the time in the world
i can do anything i can i can literally take over the world not in a not in a good way yeah in a
good way i can just do anything um and still got to put gas in that minivan yeah and that's because
i was always traveling with friends.
I would literally pull in a gas station and be like, can everyone just put in like $1?
I mean, I'm talking American for your sake.
Can everyone give me £1 to put in for fuel?
So I'd get everyone to chip in.
We'd put £10 in the tank.
It was literally like that.
I remember often running out and often having nothing and going hungry.
I remember often running out and often having nothing and going hungry.
But I love this testing the limits of what do I need and how can I adapt to create more time in my life.
So it's this whole experimental time.
Then I had this vision for the double-decker bus.
I told everyone, I was like, I'm going to get a double-decker bus.
But you need £10,000 or whatever to $18,000 even to do that.
And then someone came up to me and they said
we love your vision here's the money which was awesome what do you mean someone came up to you
well i i was i was uh involved with circles of people that like want to do cool things right so
someone showed their friend he showed their friend and i found this uh almost like a foundation that
want to support cool projects um and they said we love
the idea here's some money and it was like literally wrote me a check now is there a
a belief system that your parents kind of put in place that kind of kind of formed the structure
for this was it just your parents saying go off and have fun or you know was there something else
well i mean i won't go super into this but but like my, and on a personal level, I have
like a kind of a faith, like I grew up in church and like, I think part of that mentality
of seeing a bigger picture to the world, it's not just the here and now, it's like, there's
more going on.
And I think that's what always thought this sense of magic, there's a spiritual realm,
there's more going on.
And I later on read books like The Secret where you're like you know you're like putting things out there
and you know when you or it's like having even if you don't want to put it in terms of god and
stuff like if you have a belief in belief that you can do something and that something's going
to happen i honestly feel like you can make things can happen, you know, like you can almost will things to happen.
Whether you believe that's like a spiritual, spiritual.
Yeah. Whether you believe that's like a spiritual, like God's got a path and he's, you know, doing something or whether it's just a law of the universe or whether it's a law of the universe.
However you perceive it, because I don't want to like preaching my personal beliefs, but like however you perceive it um because i don't want to like preaching my personal beliefs but like however you know that you gave there's a jesus shout out in your draw my life well i just
said you were inspired well i just wanted yeah i mean i just wanted to explain i wanted to mention
because for me personally that is a massive impact on my drive and motivation what's difficult in in society is there's a lot of uh connotations and
and and assumptions when you label yourself if i labeled myself a christian for instance it's
you just you know it's just like such a a negative thing a lot of baggage a lot of stuff and also
there's like the whole republican christian south you know southern american thing uh state you know everything all of that uh for me i i i like the idea of you know jesus was an
incredible character whether you believe he was the son of god or whether you believe he's just
this cool guy that did some awesome stuff or whatever like so when i say i'm inspired by
jesus and i want to follow what how he taught to live i don't i feel like that can't be that
offensive for people i think he did drive a double-decker bus too yeah he was so it's all coming together um yeah but if you look
at even you got the bus so i got the bus yeah let's go back to the bus so we got the bus um
and from this motivation of like i want to you know growing up being taught as a kid
it's bigger than you it's look at the world around you. We care for people, love people.
This is the whole message I grew up with.
Like it's about loving people.
And then I'm like, well, whilst I was in the minivan, like driving around, I'd meet these kids on the street, which had nothing.
It didn't have good homes.
Some of them had left, you know, run away from home or whatever.
I remember sleeping under like in a highway, like in those, you know, they're like a highway,
the bridges that go over the highways and there's a little tucked in there. I remember this kid was like distraught. He'd run away from home for some reason. The police were after him. And I,
I don't know how I found him. Anyway, I had this conversation with him and ended up having a
conversation on the phone with the parole officer, his police person that was trying to look out for
him. And, and just, I just thought, wow wow there's people really like in much more way more broken situations in their life and they're like
struggling and i just thought i i can help i can try and help and love them in some way and then
i just thought this idea of oh if they had a place to come that wasn't like this set location like
run like government run youth club which there's so many restrictions and paperwork and i just
thought oh i've got some
friends around me as well that love to help and i just wanted to set up and i thought oh i could
live in the double-decker bus as well because it's much more spacious than the minivan so i
the van where you can make a double-decker bus work double-decker bus had some it kicked kitted
it out i mean i need to show some pictures in a minute these guys can't see but um anyway so i
just thought it'd be great i had to have this safe space that i could pull up in the neighborhood kids could jump on board it was all
safe like we had often volunteers like i even worked alongside the police the police said
at one point this is the best thing we've ever seen like this project so it was like working
alongside people already in the areas like charities churches the police the council
and um just helping support
young people often through just having somewhere to sit down have a drink have a like a hot drink
of hot chocolate or something or play a computer game or whatever they want to record like we were
like making cds of their music at the time and so that was my motivation was this how can i love
people in an interesting way that's not you know doesn't fit
into the norms of society necessarily but it's like and how did the bus work like it was okay
i'm gonna drive up under this bridge and say hey guys i got a double-decker bus come on get in i
had this sound system that was so loud because i also used i forgot i used to dj a little bit as
well just at parties for fun so i had this sound system so loud the
the bass speakers could set off car alarms as we drove past so you could drive down the road and
like all the cars inside the road the car alarms would go so you just start pumping music and
people would come flooding and then i had a microphone and i just hand it to a kid i was
like do you like rap do you mcd and i just give him microphone and then suddenly that spontaneous
mc battle on the street and it would happen all the
time and then and then i found i'm not just around london yeah and i i don't i don't see myself as a
like an entrepreneur but i i i soon found a way to fund it all um by kids saying can i rent this
for my birthday party and i was like well yes you can so on the weekend like a clown though did you
no on the weekends i used to drive around kids for their birthday parties and teenagers and used to rent the bus
out and that used to cut that used to fund the whole project it was brilliant and they would
and i even got a message on my facebook uh and it said five years ago this is like last week
five years ago you uh drove me around in your bus for my birthday party it was the best night of my life
that is awesome and i was like wow okay and so but that didn't last forever
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Now onto the biscuit.
So you were doing the double decker bus thing
and then how did that come to an end?
So it was pretty full on, it was most evenings a week and then every weekend
was busy for me doing that i struggled to delegate and build a team around me so i was the driver
always i never i sometimes took someone to help me with security because then i mean the stories i
could tell you about the craziness that with working with urban like bad neighborhood young people tell us one i mean okay
uh what's the craziest one i mean there's one so it's similar to american the gang problem in
london isn't as severe and there's not guns so that helps but they they still there's still this
like the gangs don't have guns either i mean yeah they they
some of them do but not like not not everyone not everyone's carrying a gun okay um but they can get
hold of guns illegally so anyway so i was working i was living in south london at the time um and
i'd worked in this neighborhood where there's this particular gang and i'd built relationships
with a lot of the members and was just trying to be a positive influence in their life but it's i mean it's
a crazy structure like the drug dealing the the the hierarchy everything so i took a bunch of
them out for their one of those one of their birthdays i was like oh i'll take you i'll just
take you out because it wasn't like they weren't renting it i was just like come on let's go and
do something for the birthday yeah freebie for the gang like i kind of see where
this is anyway so we go off into london double-decker bus go off into london pumping music
some of them are like emceeing often when i stop the bus people crowd around and then other people
want to join in so often it will be there'll be spontaneous emcee battles with people on the street
that just happens to be walking past and it attracts people over so anyway there's like this other gang that kind of show up and they start
like mcing and then they have their own double decker bus no they're just walking along the
street and then and then and somehow they ended up in the bus and on the same deck probably no so
this no this is the thing there's two decks there's the original they did separate the
original gang members were chilling upstairs i'm like oh they're probably playing on the playstation
or whatever this other gang oh there's a playstation yeah thanks for mentioning oh there's
like a 52 inch plasma screen at this point anyway so downstairs this other gang came in and they
start like chat like emceeing on the mic and then they start representing their ends which is like
their neighborhoods and they start shouting out because there's this turf war right they're like north london north london i'm
like i'm like oh like because my gang is from south london so i'm like anyway i'm like i'm just
gonna i'm just gonna i pulled over i'm just gonna go upstairs and check that this is this is safe
like that because i can kick them off i can come down like walked upstairs the gang i'd originally come in had pulled over balaclavas on their face five of them blacked out all black black clavis black masks i
don't know if you yeah in england we call balaclavas so it's just the eye holes the mouth
where you're going to do a robbery or something right and and they pulled out like knives
and i'm like i'm like well i'm glad you went upstairs i'm like whoa whoa guys guys chill
chill like this isn't this is not happening you are not having a gang fight in my bus like and i
because i built relationships and they actually respect me so i'm like so like take those masks
off calm down i can tell these other guys to like get off It's fine. We don't need to start a fight over this.
But what was crazy is they ended up making friends.
They came down.
It was all chilled.
And I was trying to be like, look, why are you fighting?
Because you live in a different area.
This makes no sense.
I think in a gang's thing, maybe there's drug territory where there's dealers and stuff.
Anyway, I managed to like-
There's an ecosystem of commerce.
I managed to somehow make this bond over the music they everybody's equal on a double-decker bus once
you get on the same deck and also because we're driving around we're driving in and out of
different areas and there's no we're not in like oh you're in my location you're in my location
yeah we're just you're confusing them they're going in their territory then they're going in
somebody else's territory this is like the most genius gang solution there's ever been so i mean i drop them all off at the
police i've had to like i've had to like confiscate weapons off guys um i've had to like break
physically break up fights um it's been it was a crazy time actually i mean i should probably
write some of these stories down but uh but But it sounds like logistically it started to become too much to manage.
Yeah.
And I think it was just, yeah, it was tiring.
I felt like I was achieving the bigger thing I'd wanted to.
And then what happened was the YouTube stuff started alongside this, right?
So I, with some some friends started eating crazy
things just as a it was just it was never my thing it was just like a silly thing i did it was this
whole thing of like questioning society why can't i eat a spider let's face my fears you know and
so the first thing you ate was a what i actually drank a but on my on my food for louis channel which is the first channel i had
on youtube um it was we had some old footage on a mobile phone of me like eating a little spider
off the floor and it was just just to be just it was never meant it was never meant for youtube it
was just me messing around with some friends and they'd be like eat that spider it's a day right
so i'm like okay okay because i'd already at that stage already
like gone jungle trekking um and traveling and like i'd seen like there's this why not i can
eat spider and and anyway so i did that and then you you had seen people eat a spider probably yeah
exactly so then i did that and then i so we had a few clips that we put on uh youtube because we're
just like oh let's why don't we make this a thing and then my friends were egging me on and they were like um they
encouraged me and then i drank a whole bottle of wasabi sauce and then things started getting more
extreme this was 2000 maybe 2011 okay uh maybe maybe end of 2010 there yeah so you had this
this footage off of youtube you start the channel you're gonna call it food for louis because hey you already had some eating stuff yeah and then
they just keep giving you more stuff it kind of so then it escalated alongside the stuff so i was
only doing snowballed i meant it was like yeah it was like once a once a week and i'd be doing my
bus thing still a week and then once a week go around my friend's house what am i going to eat
this week oh we bought you a box of crickets see if you can eat them all or you know and then it just escalated
and people were suggesting things in the comments that's when the video started going viral a little
bit and then that's when we realized we're like huh this is this could be a thing like people
like this there's people like this and also at this point a few other uk youtubers reached out to me because
i'm starting to get some traction and interest and these are the young like the younger guys
that were coming up so there's this whole crew in england and it was just the perfect timing and they
wanted to make friends with me and i was like huh so what do you do what do you eat
i have no idea and they were like oh no no we did you know we vlog in our bedroom and i was like
i didn't even know there was people on YouTube.
I just watched music videos on there or like cat videos or like fail compilations.
So I'm like, oh, okay.
So you're chatting in your bedroom.
What do you eat?
Yeah.
So you're chatting in your bedroom.
And you're not eating the mattress or jumping out of the window.
You're just talking.
Yeah, just talking.
I'm like, huh, okay, interesting.
out of the window you're just talking yeah just talking i'm like all right okay interesting um so i chatted to these guys and that's when um i came to i think at this point it might be in 2012
i came to a vidcon anyway as food for louis and um met a bunch of the american youtubers and i was
like this is an amazing community and at this stage i got in a ton of trouble in the uk for what i was eating i actually got uh
threatened with arrest taken to court for eating a goldfish which in england is actually illegal
so the rspca showed up at my house they always had it was it was live and swimming it was swimming
around i picked it out the bowl chomped it up quickly and in my opinion still didn't cause it
to stress or or like pain like
unnecessary pain you didn't swallow it live you know i just bit his head off so then you swallowed
it yeah then i ate it all so in my theory my my thing was if you're gonna eat meat don't be naive
and think that the animal's not dying for you to eat that right so my i took it to the extreme of
like well i didn't like the fact that i'm killing this animal. That's not what I'm finding pleasure in.
It was just pushing the limits of like, how can I challenge myself to think outside the box and eat something crazy?
And it turned out I ended up eating live animals like scorpions and spiders.
And that's what I think a lot of the viability of the videos is like, people thought I was a psychopath, right?
Well, okay.
So let's explore a few of these
because that was our that was our introduction yeah that was our introduction was uh i think
the tarantula one was the first one and i was just like so there was and i couldn't stop watching i
had to watch all of them tell us about the tarantula that was the the most scary one of
the most scared time in my life because this tarantula was this was when when
we bought it from the pet shop right uh they they wouldn't handle it they were like you can't handle
this species of spider these it was like some brazilian i can't remember exactly what it was
anyway so they kind of like kind of put you know two of them were like standing back pushing it
into this plastic case uh i walked home with it did a bit of research like
the trench was dangerous and it was mainly like you know they're not fatal it hasn't got fatal
poison but it was it's gonna hurt a lot if it bites you and especially around your mouth throat
area like i'm like the swelling yeah i can see there being a serious danger here also it has
these hairs all over it that can like flick it It flicks at predators. It fires barbs.
It fires barbs, yeah, at predators to deter them, right?
So I'm thinking all of this.
I'm like, yeah, this is scary.
And what was the biggest, most ambitious thing you had done up to that date?
I'd eaten the scorpion already, which was again scary because of the stinger and the pincers.
And it grabbed my mouth.
Yeah, it grabbed your mouth on the way.
Tell us about the scorpion.
Pause that one. Tell us about the scorpion. I started on the crickets right like live crickets and i'd as a kid i'm pretty sure i've eaten or i mean i'm sure i'm sure i'd like eating live crickets and things in the garden or whatever
like yeah sure like our kids do well you know i mean there's this there's the statistic everyone's
eating x number of spiders during their sleep.
Yeah, I think that's true. But the scorpion was, what type of scorpion did it have the stinger?
It was an emperor scorpion.
It's the biggest species of scorpion.
It had a stinger.
So I upgraded from, I think I'd done, I might have done cockroaches before that,
which were pretty vile, like the taste of pretty vile.
But the scorpion was the first kind of arachnid,
predatorial little thing that i'd eat
and where i was like this is going to attack me rather than just yummy in the video you hold it
by its tail so you don't have the stinger and then begin to drop it down and it grabs my tongue the
pincers grab your tongue and then you just kind of like bring it right in and just yeah yeah i mean
that was scary.
But as soon as I had the stinger, because the sting is the dangerous part.
Right.
So you ate everything up into the stinger.
Pop that out.
Put it on the plate.
The great thing of these videos.
I mean, I'll fast forward to why I moved away from this.
And then I've actually now taken these videos down.
I'll explain in a minute.
But they it was all my friends were crowded behind the camera laughing and egging. know but there's a lot of banter they were like saying funny things that was part of the fun of it it
wasn't um do you know bear grills he does like the man versus wild yeah so the whole time i'm like
this is no different from going out into the jungle pulling over a tree stump and finding a
spider and then you know eating it which he does all the time so everyone's like wow like he's showing us how to survive well if bear grills jumped off a cliff would you
he did way in my opinion way more extreme things than i did but kind of got away with it as like
oh he's out in the wild right i'm like oh i'm just in my friend's living room like you bought it at
a pet sitting on the couch yeah but it's the same thing same thing. It's just a weird out of context, right?
So the scorpion ape calls tarantula next step up because I can't hold the sting of the tarantula, right?
It's got two massive fangs.
These are like an inch long fangs. Just a question about the scorpion.
If it's got venom that can come out of the stinger, when you eat it, isn't that venom?
No, it's all in the thing.
It's all in the thing it's all in this
also also there's a difference between being injected into your skin like a venom and poison
it's different so you can some venom like once you digest it breaks down it's like protein whatever
like okay so i did enough research to be like i'm pretty sure this isn't gonna poison me it's not a
poison it's just you know it's just if it stings you that's like you know like bees things are
acidic or whatever it injects this acid into i'm pretty sure your stomach can cope with that if i
ate a bee i don't think that would hurt either like as long as it didn't sting me on the way down
but you had to find this out there's only so much you can wiki yeah i know and we i mean we really
didn't do much research either and a part of that was part of the fear because you did say pretty
sure i was pretty sure it wasn't well we had this whole joke there's a guy on the show i mean i'll
there's a doctor right we can move in a minute sure it wasn't going to happen. Well, we had this whole joke. There's a guy on the show. I mean, I'll...
There's a doctor, right?
We can move on in a minute, but he wasn't a doctor.
He was my friend and we called him...
The doctor.
The doctor.
And we were like, is this cool?
And he's like, yeah.
It was this whole like, very like blase, like, yeah, whatever.
Like it was, we made a whole joke of it.
He actually, when these videos started to go viral, his employer asked him to not be
on the videos anymore.
Asked him to step away because they didn't feel it was they he was representing the company you know he he asked they asked him to stop
appearing on them so we at one point replaced him with a dog my friend's pet dog who was just like
there in the same jacket just looking like accomplish the same thing yeah we're like dude
is this cool and the dog was just like yeah the dog gave the okay okay so now re-describe the
tarantula so the tarantula um it's got these poisonous barbs or whatever and it's got these
fangs and i'm like oh if i don't eat this correctly it will bite me because they're
ferocious and it's a very vicious kind of attack thing like you shouldn't handle it i i looked
online i researched uh eating
tarantulas i found these amazonian kids they would pull these tarantulas out the holes in the ground
and and the way that they the way they grabbed them i was like i was like oh okay this is how
you always wondered why you grabbed it i was like how did he figure this out so these kids like what
they do is they they pin it down so he puts his finger on his back and they they pull its legs up
so all its legs are above it.
Yeah.
So it can't run away
and it can't grab it.
And then you just pick the legs up
and they all like,
you know,
bent backwards.
You know,
I think all the legs are pointing
toward the palm of your hand
and you're holding it.
And then you're holding it
and then it's almost like a lollipop.
It's like the legs of the,
you know,
and then it's this body
and you've got the underside
of the trench.
But then the fangs...
It's exactly like a lollipop.
It's a spider lollipop. But the fangs were still there and i was like if i i need
to also i don't like the idea of causing unnecessary pain to animal i eat meat right so in my head i'm
like right i eat meat i never research how that meat's been killed the reality is and for and the
sad reality is for a lot of us we eat meat we don't research where it's come from. It's come from slaughterhouses.
It's come from, you know, battery chickens
where they don't get looked after.
They're in agony their whole lives often.
So I got a lot of criticism for my channel, by the way.
Like people hated it.
Some people loved it.
Some people hated it.
It was very controversial.
But my thing wasn't like,
I'm going to torture this spider.
I'm going to pull its legs off one by one.
And then, you know, I just was like, my thing was, I'm just to torture this spider. I'm going to pull its legs off one by one. And then, you know,
you know,
I just was like,
my thing was,
I'm just going to eat as fast as possible.
I don't want to put it through unnecessary pain.
Um,
so within seconds, my idea is within seconds,
I want it to be dead.
Right.
And also you're explaining this on camera.
Yeah.
Some of it.
Yeah.
And then I'm like,
I don't want to also don't want to get bitter.
So I'm like,
if I just bite his head off quick,
you know,
so I'm like hovering,
hovering in front of a mouth. This is where I like i like i honestly black out i can't remember what happened next
uh and i can watch it on video but i blacked out from the fear because i'm like if i don't if i
like miss if i miss my mouth or something and then it sinks its fangs into my lip like that's what
i'm scared of like oh i got a spider bite in my mouth like imagine like and then and then the
barbs i'm like this could go all over my face.
My whole face could swell up.
So, these are real things that could happen, right?
But I just went for it.
I was, you know, shaking.
My friend who was filming was one of them guys, the back of the room, shaking.
Like, he didn't.
Even right now, as you talk about it again, I'm like kind of backing away from you.
So, I bit the head off.
All done.
Really scary. But, yeah, uh yeah done no not really and then you had to get it down then you got to actually chew it and consume it at that point once it's dead i don't know it's not going to bite me
i'm chewing that's fine that's just because once the because did you also do research
or at least ask the dog that if it was okay that once you bite the head off not only can it not
bite you but it can't like fire its barbs because i would be afraid about the barbs coming out off
of the legs as i was trying to get down my throat i honestly didn't research it i just assumed once
i got in my mouth those things spike spiky things wouldn't be as bad but i know it was all right it
was actually okay um what was the texture like? Was it like paper mache?
The legs were quite chewy.
The bit at the back, like the...
I don't know what that is.
Yeah, the spider butt was squidgy and goopy.
It was like creamy inside.
I don't know.
It had spider juice inside of it.
And what was the taste?
It was kind of tasty.
I don't know.
Like mushrooms?
I don't know. I can't really explain the taste. It wasn kind of tasted like mushrooms i don't know i can't
really explain the taste it wasn't you were blacked out yeah exactly um anyway let's not
look let's not spend too much longer on it but the fact is i did all these things i got in a lot
of trouble because you know and what i was going to say is the rspca which is the royal society of
prevention against cruelty to animals it showed up at my house they came here with freaking house
yeah i don't know how they found my house with an f literally an fbi style file on me like literally show me flick through documentation
every and every video like you know and their point was they were like we we're against what
you do and you've taken it too far and they were waiting to pin something on me they were waiting
to pin something on you yeah so they went and spin something on me they um so this goldfish thing right they're like this is in the uk illegal
now what i could have done is say i didn't film it in the uk filmed in france or something you
know because i was traveling at the time i was doing different things with friends but i was like
something in me was like no i'm i'm just gonna be honest like i i did film this i don't think
there's a problem with it right and if if i'm gonna get in trouble like i found that a bit
ridiculous like you can go fishing in the uk you can catch you can shove a hook through a fish's
mouth pull out the water slap you know uh stab it in the head take it home cook it and eat it
i'm like stabbing it in the head with a knife and and chomping and biting his head off with my teeth can i can i catch a fish in the river with a hook take it out and then bite his head off and then
take it home and cook it and eat it you know this is my whole this is my whole theory right so i'm
like why pulling it out and biting his head off and then eating it how is that illegal i don't
understand anyway they took me to court they took me to court and it was in all the tabloids all the newspapers national press it was like psycho guy you know it's i was like hammered by the press about it and no one was on
my side because it's not like i'm standing for an important issue here yeah yeah it's just like a
like who's this weird guy and he's eating goldfish this is this is wrong england's big on animal
cruelty but so am i i don't want to cause animals pains, but then I'm like,
I also,
I am also a meat eater
and I know animals are dying for me to eat.
This is my point.
This is my whole,
the premise is like.
Are you making this point from the witness stand?
Yeah,
I'm like talking to the judge
and he thinks it's ridiculous,
but they're spending,
the charity is spending.
He thinks their case is ridiculous?
Yeah. The RSPCA have, is the biggest charity in the UK. They and the he thinks their case is ridiculous yeah the rsbca have is
the biggest charity in the uk they have the most donations millions of people donate their private
money to them they spent thousands of really good commercials they spent thousands well it's good
it's all the puppies and the kittens and like poor puppy you know sarah mclaughlin is singing
we have more than any human charity right which i find they're a bit crazy like i love animals but there's people
dying as well yeah anyway so they're spending thousands of people's donations money on lawyers
to pin me down for this and i'm like really like really anyway so it got to the point where i was
asking my friends i didn't know what to do you hire a lawyer yeah okay to pay a lawyer i got
to the point where i was like I don't need to fight this battle
I don't
this isn't my
I never set out to be an advocate
for like the
the right to eat goldfish
so I just
I just said
out of court settlement
I was like
okay I'm sorry
I'm not going to do it again right
they gave me an RSPCA caution
it wasn't a criminal thing
just a caution
so like for instance
if I
if I then
am caught again like
abusing a pet then i actually get issued this warrant thing saying i can't own a pet and then
the police can confiscate me or whatever so i was like that was the that was the thing i had to admit
that i was wrong and there was no criminal thing filed or anything and i was like okay but you
didn't have to delete the videos no i didn't
have to and they said like making a public apology and i think maybe i tweeted something but it was
at this point they were like uh no i did i did have to delete the goldfish one okay no but at
this point some animal rights activist groups had gone online and they had gone onto my channel and
just started flagging all the videos so like eight of my videos got taken down the day after all the tabloids showed me online so like ton of people started my channel actually got removed by youtube
because so many people flagging it i went back to youtube and i was like hey look um i don't agree
with this i don't think it's all wrong some of it was me drinking bottles of wasabi sauce you know
maybe the goldfish was too far but that's an opinion thing. Anyway, my channel got put back up.
I snuck a couple of videos back on.
The same videos that got removed, you know.
And it all started going again.
And I was like, I think I did a few more videos after that.
But at that point, I was like, and I think one of my friends said to me,
is this what you want to be remembered for?
Is this your legacy in life?
Is this channel?
I'm like, no, it really isn't.
I'm not a psychopath.
I'm not. I know people are like, yeah, whatever like you're definitely a psychopath but i'm not and i just thought this is it was just a weird thing i was doing that kind of got way out of
control but but the positives are that i'd met this youtube community i'd realized there's a
bunch of different content online and i just thought i can do anything i want so i at that
stage someone said why don't you just film your life and just what you get up to every day and adventures stop eating crazy things and
then that's what I started doing at the end of 2012 maybe and it wasn't a guarantee that it was
gonna work might not have worked I think I think I just I started a brand new channel didn't even
really push people over from I think from scratch yeah I probably had 400,000 subscribers on food
for louis and I just from scratch started again didn't even really push my subscriber base over because those people
didn't care about me they were like that's that weird guy eating weird stuff again they weren't
like oh we love you louis right so then i started from scratch got my youtube buddies that i knew
in the community to help me uh and just built the channel from scratch again started the daily
videos took my double decker bus on a tour around the uk um and at this stage this is where the transition was going back to the start then
i was like i'm gonna i'm gonna take a pause on the bus stuff the the working with gangs and all that
um go on a little tour and then go and spend some time in la came out here beginning end of 2012 i
think um and then it just all took off from there met cool people started having cool
adventures documenting it all uh and now i'm here with much much bigger channel i surpassed my
channel quite quickly um and now i'm occasionally recognized as food for louis but now i've really
have like re rebranded redefined who i am online um and it's a bit of a mad story of how i got here really right
well in this point with it being you know you you said okay i you when you started with the
double decker bus you kind of took it on a tour but at this point it's just one adventure after
another is is what it seems like and is it now the adventures are for the purpose of
the exhibition right there so people can see it so now it's just now is it is it like i've got
to plan the next adventure because i'm going to continue to bring people along for the ride is
that sort of how it works well yeah this is the interesting thing so now i'm like i can fall into this trap of like i need to keep having adventures so people keep watching
or i can be like look people are invested in me whether i'm jumping off cliffs or you know
you know doing adventurous things or just being me so i really want to be doing the things that i care about and want to do
and the world changing projects and and then i think i would naturally just be doing that in
an adventurous way anyway and let me let's qualify the the word adventurous here because
okay what's the new equivalent to eating the scorpion and
the tarantula because what's the craziest thing that you've done in your in your fun for louis
adventures well this is a quant of qualify that this the connection here and it goes back to what
we're saying before is it's about facing fears right so that was all about me facing fears every
time i had a new challenge it was like can i do this sometimes there's a fear of it's going to
bite my mouth or sometimes it's the fear of like this is going to taste this is going to be the
worst tasting thing i've ever eaten um and now in in my traveling and adventures um it's not
i mean what's rivaled that like it what has rivaled that i mean there's been some kind of
adrenaline style things sporty things that have been scary like you know jumping waves on this motorboat on this like
high powered engine boat in south africa and there's like sharks in the water and there's like
crazy high waves and i didn't have a life jacket on i remember that's probably the most scared i've
been uh on a activity thing but i think sometimes um it's yeah, I mean, I don't know.
It comes back to what are my fears right now.
I think sometimes the things I'm doing aren't necessarily my greatest fears,
but they are things that people typically can be scared of, right?
So going to new places, connecting with people and making friends,
just doing things day to day that's slightly,
typically slightly outside people's comfort zone so um hopefully being like you know i can do this guys and and also showing that it's
not as scary as they think so a lot of fear is in our mind it's not things aren't black and white
this is a scary thing you should be afraid of i mean there's some basics human fears which are good but a lot of it is just in
your mind like and if i can show people just this is you can do this like it's easy to do this um
it can encourage people to do it what what do you think it's what's one of the coolest things
you've done like it stands out in your mind like you kind of go back there in your own memory
whether you re-watch the video or not like this was a surreal moment maybe it's this sunrise at this place maybe it's it's not jumping the wave with the sharks
it's not the craziest thing the coolest thing the coolest thing i can think of this year
was i went to uh i've got a pilot friend and we ended up flying this two-seater plane around
namibia in southwest africa and we went to this tribe called the Himba tribe and they were like this the most primitive people group I've ever met they they pretty much naked
they wear like clay in their hair and they um they live in mud huts right and they speak this
tribal language and they're just very it's just so basic and they just heard goats that's their
thing and when you showed up what were they thinking well there's a there was a guide who um who translated a bit he grew up in
the area but then had modernized his lifestyle right so he grew up in a similar as a kid in in
super rural primitive then modernized gone to a school and like started wearing clothes and
um learned a bit he brought you back so he came back with us um and this particular tribe
had said that we're happy for tourists to come and it's funny because they don't they don't even
really have a concept of money they just said bring us food so you bring a big bag of like
maize and you give it to them and said here's the maize can we just come and have a look around
it felt interesting because some of the people there wasn't a bunch of tourists there but at one point this german guy showed up with a camera and just
no real interaction with them just taking photos right and i'm like i don't know how i feel about
this like it's it's tough isn't it because it's amazing to us and we want to capture it and be
like look at these people like but you'd also don't want it to feel like a zoo like there yeah
you know so i really wanted to interact with
them engage and i don't speak the language but i was trying to have fun and they were showing me
how to milk the goats the kids were loving it i actually ended up showing them an ipad i had my
bag with a photo booth with the thing that squashes your face yeah and uh and this photo actually this
photo went viral on the internet recently as the best photo on the internet and i and of what of you or of these kids holding this ipad and all grinning and going crazy
so so love it this day was incredible for me and i wanted to i wanted to stay there i was like can
we stay here for a few days i want to like live like them i want to learn how so they we went we
went for a few hours and we went back that night and they showed us how they cook their food and
i was like helping them cook their food
and making a complete mess of it.
And they were just so happy, so content,
had no material possessions,
apart from a couple of them who actually had like Nokia 3310 phones.
They didn't know how to text.
They just used them and they used to charge them down the road
at a solar panel.
But they had nothing else there no clothes but like
a mobile phone hanging around the neck where do you put that around they hung it around their
hang around the neck um which is a kind of wild thing so that i think that stands out as like it's
totally different culture these people are content they they're not in the rat race they're not they
don't care the crazy thing is that there's the full option around them with other villages to
modernize
and they just don't want it they're like no we love our we love our like traditions and you have
not like they're oblivious to it and they see the ipad and they're like cool and they're like
um go and play with their goats as well like you know it's not a thing like they don't want to be
and what i loved is they didn't seem to want to chase after this these technical you know these
technology and this other stuff they didn't have the fear of missing out
yeah i guess they just were so they just seemed so content and it was epitomized by this girl
who was obviously thirsty running around with this little cup and she just grabbed a goat
and just milked the goat into a choose tiny like five milk the goat into a cup and just walked off
sipping the cup i was like i was just like oh she's just chilling like just want a cup of milk
yeah cool got the milk yeah i was just like she's just got everything she needs you know now
you had the option to stay there you had the inclination to spend more time with him but you
didn't do it you could have i could have there i could have they specifically at the time they got
the men of the village were off herding some goats in another place and they said it might not be
appropriate to stay just with all the women and children but i would have if the men had been there and it was cool i would have
changed plans and i would have slept there i would have like i don't i just so fascinated
by this culture i was like this i i'm willing to do this you know this is i'd love to learn
and and also interact and have fun with them it's not about like oh look at these weird people take
photos and leave like i'm like let's you know i know this girl was showing me how to make fire and everything it was brilliant
i loved it so that anyway i'm babbling but that's what that's what it was the coolest time of
my vlog that's pretty cool well okay so in speaking of women you just said you're being
with women in a village this kind kind of thing, living this life,
this has got to get the ladies a little excited.
What?
What do you mean, like this audience?
Being the most interesting man in the world,
this is sexy, you know?
And I'm gonna go out on a limb here,
I'm gonna tell you something,
my wife has a little bit of a crush on you.
And here's why.
Okay.
She likes guys with dreads.
She likes tall guys.
I'm a tall guy, but I don't have dreads.
And I remember the first time we saw your videos
and then you were gonna be, I was like,
I guarantee you this is the kind of guy
that my wife would have a crush on.
So you showed the videos?
You like served them up on a platter?
No, me and the boys were watching some of the crazy,
my kids just absolutely loved the Food for Louis videos.
Yeah.
And it wasn't like she sought it out,
but I was like, you like this guy, right?
This guy's your type.
And she was like, yeah.
She just owned it.
Yeah.
So,
but I'm not threatened.
I'm in a happy marriage
14 years and going on.
He's not in the same county
as you most of his life.
Well,
and exactly.
Yeah.
You're constantly traveling
the world.
So she can't.
This is the thing.
This is the thing.
Girls,
I think,
my experience is
and some of the comments
from viewers
and,
well,
it's not,
the start is like most of my audience pulled in were like teenagers right because a lot of my friends had their
teenage audience right so and i'm i'm old enough that they're not it's a bit weird i'm a little
bit too old for them to have a real like obsession crush on like some of these young superstar
youtubers that are like you know the justin bieber style like right so a lot of the interaction is you're
cool and you're like an older brother kind of vibe and i'm like i love that vibe like you know
i can i can inspire you guys i can try and be a good role model that's much better so i'm not
getting that same obsession but then i do meet a lot of people a little bit older that are like
yeah they might have they might and what i means what i have gathered is the my lifestyle is very like a romantic
idea i just i don't i just travel the world have fun exactly but the reality is
there's no security in that i don't know what i'm doing day to day often i'm completely erratic
there's not much structure that when you start breaking it down and start thinking about not
many people want to live how I do.
And it sounds romantic.
It's like, oh, you live the best life.
I wish I could live like you.
I don't think everyone's built for it.
I honestly don't.
I think a lot of people need like a bit of,
a bit of like that.
They want the home.
They want somewhere they can just,
you know, I'm home.
You know, they want that, that comfort.
I'm built differently.
I'm wired differently.
I don't need that.
And I think when people might
initially be find this i this concept romantic but the amount of people that step in and be like
oh yeah i want to i want to do that everything and really when they think through it i'm gonna
right i'm gonna move out and what has that happened though have you have you been in
relationships that uh were stressed because of your lifestyle before youtube yeah i was always
i'd always loved traveling and i i didn't see eye to eye with one of my ex-girlfriends and she was
like uh she's like i don't like it when you travel and i was like but i love traveling and i was like
come with me and then she didn't want to and i was just like like this isn't she was gone yeah
it just didn't work so what about now what's your love life like i don't talk about
that uh but um let's talk about more vaguely like i i think let's keep it vague the thing is
if i was to uh i just you know a lot of viewers speculate i hang out a lot of cool girls on my
channel right and everyone's always speculating who am i in a
romantic thing with i at this stage i don't want to like um talk about that but um all i will say
is like i think at the moment in my life the only way a relationship of any sort could work is if
i was traveling more often with someone that they had a more nomadic approach to life i would never
be a fan of like like a long
distance thing where i had to go back to somewhere to see that person so i think that's always been
the thing i've thought i've thought well i've adopted a lifestyle which creates me it means
that meeting someone and being able to start and sustain a relationship is really hard really i'm
like i'm setting the bar really high like i'm saying i don't live
anywhere i travel the world and i feel my life every second of every day like it's all it's quite
a lot to yeah suddenly if someone's like you know oh i want to be with you i mean there's a lot that
comes with that there's a lot of yeah conditions you know and also then i'm like you know how far
if i just fell head over heels in love with someone what would
i sacrifice because the reality is and i've seen it around like daily vlogging isn't great isn't
always conducive with like a healthy relationship that where you've got where you've got like a
marriage and you start thinking about a family and stuff some some people have done it there's
channels you know there's there's families that do it but i don't know i don't know that's all future stuff
i need to think through but it's uh it's much the whole thing works a lot easier with this concept
of i'm just me i'm louis i'm single and i'm just doing my thing and i don't need to i don't need
to worry about like someone else's decisions and it all well i think it's going to be you know my
prediction is there would be a magical moment at some point in the future. You'll be somewhere in a savanna
riding on the back of a lion
and you'll come upon this beautiful woman
drinking directly from a buffalo.
Or yeah, let's just say a zebra
drinking directly from a zebra
and you'll lock eyes.
And it'll be like,
Well, I'm riding past the lion.
I'm like, yeah. And then she'll be like, I, I'm riding past the lion. I'm like, hey.
And then she'll be like, I'll get on that lion with you.
Yeah.
Or he'll get under the zebra with her.
Either way, yeah.
You're going to be going the same direction.
And better yet, she's going to already be vlogging it.
Yeah, exactly.
She'll be down there next to the zebra teat with a camera on herself.
Yeah.
And you'll be like, you understand me.
Let's make this happen.
So, ladies, if you're out like, you understand me. Let's make this happen. So ladies,
if you're out there
and you're currently
suckling a zebra
and filming it,
then we've got the man for you.
Ladies,
like there's multiple.
Yeah.
All their heads
popped up at once like.
This has been fun, man.
I think this may be
one of my favorite biscuits
ever made.
We need to plan an adventure together
is what we need to do because so up for that.
Our adventures have to be very well planned in advance.
But I didn't even tell you about this.
You may have seen the email, but I met a guy last night.
You may have seen that weird email that came in
from Australia.
This guy was like an adventure planner dude
in Australia for years and I was telling him
about one of our dreams is to do some off-roading
and surfing combo thing in like Australia.
He was like, oh, I know all the people to hook you up with.
Don't be talking about it in front of Louie
because then he's gonna do it.
No, but he's, we do it together.
Let's do it together, yeah.
Okay, we'll invite him.
Yeah, okay. He's still here, he's listening.
Oh, okay, yeah, yeah, let's do it.
All right.
Thanks for hanging out man this is great
really fun yeah all right
and there you have it our conversation with louis we had a lot of fun with louis
i was going to make a play on his channel name, which is Fun4Louie.
We didn't have fun for him.
We had fun with him in the conversation.
Let him know what you think by tweeting at him.
His handle is Fun4Louie.
Use hashtag EarBiscuits, y'all.
Tweet at that guy.
It is definitely difficult to have a conversation
with a guy like this and not think,
man, I need to get out more,
which I think is, you know,
A good thing. It's a good thing because we should get out more. We should, I need to get out more, which I think is, you know. A good thing.
It's a good thing because we should get out more.
We should, I'm not necessarily saying
that we should be eating any live stuff
or we should necessarily be buying double-decker buses,
even though all that's exciting.
Well, he does neither of those anymore in fairness.
Right, but this whole idea of squeezing all of the excitement
and experience out of life in as many places as you can,
that's something that I'm gonna try to make happen
just in my commute in the Southern California area.
That's as far as I get.
That's exactly what I was gonna say was,
it's not like you've got to dive into the Amazon
to experience life.
I think the challenge for us is,
within the parameters of the life that is ours,
that we have, you know, with our wives, with our kids,
with our friends, with our coworkers,
within the context of commuting,
finding a way to squeeze the realness out of it,
live in that moment.
Yeah, and there is something that we can both
begin doing right now that doesn't require travel.
We could grow dreads.
I just started, could you tell?
No, you didn't wash your hair today.
I did, but I just started.
I didn't wash it right now again.
Okay, so that's it.
We're not gonna wash dreads?
We're not gonna, well, it's a complicated process.
Just wiki it, man.
Okay.
It involves washing and not washing.
You can't just put shampoo, normal shampoo,
and put your hands in there and separate your hairs
because then you can't make dreads.
You have to let them lock up, and then once they lock,
there is a way to wash them, but it's not a traditional way.
But we're not gonna talk about that
cause that's gonna be wicked.
That's right.
Okay, that's also your assignment.
Start growing your dreads and experience life
to the fullest.
Those things are, you don't have to do both.
You can choose one or the other.
But they are mutually exclusive.
No, they're not.
And we'll talk at you next week, guys.