Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - Looking Back At A Decade Of GMM | Ear Biscuits Ep.318
Episode Date: January 17, 2022From the ups and downs and everything in-between, listen to R&L take you on a behind-the-scenes audio journey of a whole decade of GMM on this episode of Ear Biscuits! To learn more about listener d...ata 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.
Every Canadian dairy farm is unique.
That's why every farmer takes charge of their own unique environmental farm plan.
Also drawing from 57 environmental practices.
My plan starts with soil health.
And part of mine includes biodiversity.
Why care so much?
Because Canadian dairy farmers hold themselves
to higher standards.
That's what's behind the blue cow logo.
Dairy Farmers of Canada.
Welcome to Ear Biscuits, the podcast
where two lifelong friends talk about life for a long time.
I'm Link.
And I'm Rhett.
This week at the round table of dim lighting,
we are celebrating 10 years of Good Mythical Morning.
It's a show that we make other than this show.
It's on a platform called YouTube.
Apparently we've been making it on that platform
for 10 years and last week we did a celebration week
on the show
and we're capping that off with a lengthy discussion. A retrospective. Looking back on the length
of Good Mythical Morning.
Could you not use length? 10 years.
Link, could you not use length?
However, we have established
that your porn name would be Length Neil, right?
Did we?
I don't know if we've ever said that publicly
but we discovered that at some point.
Well how did you discover this Rhett?
This is getting weird.
No, it was a conversation.
I mean you just can't over notice.
It was a conversation amongst friends I believe.
I don't know, maybe it was, you probably know,
it may have been on Good Mythical More.
I think it happened at this table.
Really?
Link Neal was born at this table?
So my idea, I've done some homework here.
I've looked back.
Well, let me just give you my perspective
on what you told me because we were getting,
we were gonna do a retrospective episode.
And you know, we actually, over the summer,
we did the retrospective episode of 2000 episodes of GMM,
which happened over the summer.
And so then we're like, we're gonna do the same thing.
So we're trying to figure out other ways to talk about
this much GMM without dipping back
into the same conversation.
Yeah, and there's a lot of conversation
about fan evolution in that episode.
Right, and so we were talking like,
okay, we'll think about it over break.
And so then when we got back, you said,
well, I kinda went back to the beginning
and started looking at titles and thumbnails.
Just to jog my memory.
And then I just went through all of them,
all 10 years worth of them and you were like,
and it took, and made notes and you were like,
and it took a lot longer than I anticipated.
I was like, yeah, it's over two, I mean, you could have,
like, I didn't realize that I was signing myself.
10 episodes in, you could have extrapolated
and done the math length and figured out how much length I was signing myself. 10 episodes in, you could have extrapolated and done the math length.
Yeah.
And figured out how much length this was gonna take.
I felt like I really, you know, I owed it to us
in reminiscing and celebrating what we've done,
what we've gone through and what we've created
and what's evolved.
Oh, I'm glad you did it.
I'm glad you did it.
Over the years, I just want. you didn't call me and say,
could you start from the end and meet in the middle?
You just let me worry about other things.
Well, it was just fascinating because I mean,
with 10 years, at a certain point,
the show is just, it's a staple, it's a part of our lives.
It's something that we go to the desk,
we enter that zone and we, you know, it's, there's a rhythm to it
that it can kinda wash over you.
Like, I'm a little self-conscious when we talk about
Good Mythical Morning because I know that Mythical Beasts,
when you experience it as a viewer,
it's different than how we experience it, creating it.
And we don't, we got to a point where we don't go back
and watch it after the fact.
And also, many, many years ago, we stopped doing that.
And I think you probably have picked up on this
as we've talked about the show over the years.
The moments don't register with us in the same way
that they register with the audience.
Yeah. Because,
it's, I don't know, it's kind of overwhelming for us in that it's just like,
what's the craziest thing you've ever eaten?
What's the craziest thing that ever happened on GM?
Do you remember when you did this?
I was like, when you pointed out-
What's your favorite episode?
But like when I'm going to bed at night,
my mind is not filled with memories of the crazy stuff
that we do on the show.
It has to sort of be like called out. with memories of the crazy stuff that we do on the show,
it has to sort of be like called out.
So I have a feeling that when you go through these things,
I'm gonna be like, oh man, we did that?
Yeah, we did that.
I wouldn't have thought about that again
if you didn't point it out.
And I was particularly fascinated
with how the show has evolved,
like remembering things that we tried,
you know, because we have this oversimplified idea
of what the show has been in certain, you know,
there's a Reddit post talking about the certain eras
of Good Mythical Morning,
and I think that they presented like five different eras.
If you go on Reddit and just search GM different eras.
If you go on Reddit and just search GMM eras, it'll come up.
But yeah, I ended up going through-
Don't search GMM errors
because that's a different Reddit.
We don't wanna get exposed in that way.
So I think it would be fun for me to go through episode,
like what's the word I'm looking for?
Notable episodes. Like, so it's not the most memorable
or the most successful episodes,
but it's just notable episodes along the way that said,
yeah, we, that's part of the DNA of Good Mythical Morning,
even if there's stuff that we don't do anymore.
Okay.
And it might jog your memory in other ways.
I'm also a bit tired this morning.
We had a party with a friend last night.
I stayed up past my bedtime.
Yeah, yeah, 1130.
We caught up with an old friend, the three of us.
And that rarely happens.
Well, while we were together,
there was a point, I believe it was 9pm,
when your phone-
Well, I was playing music at the Creative House.
We were listening to music,
but your phone at 9pm began to play a Spotify playlist
that was unbelievably soothing,
and we were like, whoa.
It was a hard turn.
This is a mood change.
And Link was like, this is my bedtime music.
And I'm not talking about like sexual music.
I'm talking about sleepy time, like make you go to sleep.
Bedtime music.
Like meditation sleep music.
Begins for this man at 9pm and he's only 43.
When you're 73, you're gonna eat at 3.30.
You're gonna eat at 3.30 and you're gonna go to bed
at 5pm.
You're gonna go to bed when the sun goes down.
There's so much emphasis about sleep.
No, like I said last night, I think you're making
the healthy choice.
I envy you in many ways.
I'm not proud of going to bed at 11.
I think I get adequate sleep, but I think you get
more sleep and I think it's probably you're gonna live
longer because of it.
But apparently my sleep is not of a quality.
Oh yeah, I totally forgot about that.
Let's save this for another episode.
Okay. Let's analyze our sleep patterns. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Trust me, I've forgot about this. Let's save this for another episode. Okay.
Let's analyze our sleep patterns.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Trust me, I've been through a lot of episodes of G-Man.
That's a good idea.
We shouldn't delay it.
That's a good idea.
My point was, you know, we spent last night
reminiscing with an old friend
and now it's like we're continuing that.
Two old friends reminiscing about what we did.
Good segue.
January 2012.
It's hard to believe, like, I mean,
over the course of the week of celebration
that we just did on Good Mythical Morning,
with a lot of special moments.
If you haven't seen all those episodes, hey, go back.
It's like we were surprised by a number of those videos
and it makes me super grateful for what we've been through.
But can I, one of the things I'm seeing right now It makes me super grateful for what we've been through.
Can I, one of the things I'm seeing right now
is I actually see a video in December 13th, 2011.
Yeah.
That's called You on Good Mythical Morning.
And it's us at our desks and it's a six minute video
where we are basically, I think, fielding videos
for the Wheel of Myth, for the,
Yeah.
Whatever we people say at the, let's talk about that.
We were asking people to tell us, let's talk about that.
So that, so it was at least a month,
well, a month ahead of time,
we already let the audience know
that Good Mythical Morning was coming.
I didn't, I haven't seen this video,
I've never thought about it in 10 years and here it is.
I think it's in, is it unlisted actually?
No, it's not unlisted.
Is it?
No.
Because you're logged in that might happen.
But yeah, when we started this thing,
we've reacted on the society to the first episode.
So I'm not gonna spend too much time on that.
But like the thing that I noticed was that my voice
was still in a place where I was kinda talking,
I was kinda talking like this.
There was, and I think it was because
we were restarting something,
I'd like to think that I got into more of a rhythm
with Good Morning Chia Lincoln,
that I was speaking a little more confidently,
but I didn't-
Did you go back and see that?
I didn't have the heart to go back and see.
But I will say, very quickly, as we were doing
Good Mythical Morning, I changed.
So I got to a point where it's like, you know what,
I'm saying something and I'm speaking at volume.
But it was, you know, I'm very self-conscious
of like the, what I felt like was a rough start for me. Well, you know, I'm very self-conscious of like the, what I felt like was a rough start for me.
Well, you know, we-
Better to have a rough start than a great start
and then fizzle out.
The reason that we both at one point talked very quietly
when we did podcasts was because the very first podcast
we ever did was in this little office
at the Campus Crusade headquarters in Apex, North Carolina,
where we couldn't disturb anyone else as we were talking.
And so we had to be very, very quiet.
And I think that maybe that just stuck with you
and you forgot that there was no one around us.
Like when we started doing-
Well, there's a difference when you speak at this volume,
you're speaking to an audience
versus you're speaking to one person.
And it's like, you know, you're trying to find,
you're trying to find the right zone.
But you don't speak that, I just wonder if you spoke
that way in regular life, because you don't speak
quietly now under any circumstances.
Yeah, I think that's what it is.
It's more of like developing an on-camera persona
behind that card table.
Right, but what-
And I think getting, like I said,
we had done the Rhett and Link cast,
the live show for over a year,
then we did the Tia Lincoln thing.
And you know, I think it was more of getting reacquainted,
but I'm glad that I quickly got up to speed.
And then I'm also glad that we introduced puppets.
Actually that didn't happen until season two.
So with season one, it was like we were doing best evers.
We also went to Texas and we shot a couple episodes.
You talk about talking quietly.
We did like 20 worst tattoos ever,
which that video performed really well.
We did that inside of a tattoo.
Yeah, when we were making the,
cause we were still, we were making commercials
for local businesses still.
We went after, after Commercial Kings,
we went back to doing that.
What episode was that?
What number?
108, 20 worst tattoos ever.
We were both talking quietly
cause we were like self-conscious.
Yeah, if you put me in a situation
where I feel like I might be offending someone
or making someone else feel uncomfortable,
that's when my personality changes.
And then we did take a break, to our credit.
We took a summer break, even after season one,
and we did that thing called Rhett and Link Vault,
where we were like, hey, we got some old videos,
maybe you haven't seen them,
we're gonna contextualize them
and then you're supposed to rewatch them.
We were thinking about taking breaks,
but still keeping content coming over the summer.
And that, I mean, that was a smart move to say,
this is not gonna be every single day forever.
You know, as we talk to other creators now,
we still very much say,
if there's a way for you to set up how you work on things
so that you can look forward to your own creative break,
so you're not obligated to keep churning stuff out
with no breaks, that's a smart move.
I'm glad that we did that.
And also at the time, if I'm remembering this correctly,
we had not yet developed any sort of block shooting schedule,
which we've revealed.
Oh, hell no.
We've revealed the secret about that,
about how we don't come in and shoot every single day.
But at that time we were.
So you're coming in and shooting every single day
in season one.
So if you didn't take a break,
there was no vacation, there was nothing, you know?
And I definitely remember there were times when it's like,
and if we would sit down to do an episode and they were,
I mean, they were, the concepts were very loose
and it was like, okay, you're gonna,
I assume you're gonna bring something,
I'm gonna bring something,
and we're gonna try to make this thing land
around 10 minutes and we're not gonna edit it.
So there's this, there's a push and pull,
a creative tension between the two of us of,
okay, I thought you were taking over at this point.
I thought you were bringing this perspective.
We had to work through that stuff.
And there's no saving it with another camera
or a jump cut.
I don't know when the first jump cut in GMM history was,
the first edit where something was hidden.
But it didn't happen much, if any, in the first season.
And I remember there were times when it was like,
you know what, I don't feel like doing this.
Let's just take a walk or let's not do it.
Let's get some lunch.
We'll shoot two in a row tomorrow.
Yeah, we never lost.
Or we would start it and like,
one of us would be like, you know what?
We'd stop like five minutes in and be like,
yeah, this is it.
We're not to the thing that we said
we were actually gonna talk about.
Let's start over.
That would happen every once in a while.
And then there'd be this risk of it,
the other person reacting as if they were being critiqued.
And it was the dynamic there, it was touchy, right?
Cause it was like, you both have to bring your best
and feel confident and you gotta feed off each other.
And if anything goes a little wrong,
I mean, we avoided as much as we could,
but there were definitely times it was like,
okay, abandon ship.
It's like, I can tell that you're getting frustrated with me
because I've done something,
said something that's rode you the wrong way
or vice versa, you know?
I would say that was- I remember that.
It would happen, but it was pretty rare.
Well, Jason was there.
Without a third person there,
like we would have been sunk
because I think those moments would have happened even more.
It's like, you tend to be on a little better behavior.
But we were committed to the concept
of continuing the show.
Oh yeah.
So we would have figured it out.
But the other thing that we were doing
that I feel like is, you know,
what has gotten us to this point in our career that I feel like is, you know,
there's the, what has gotten us to this point in our career is just this combination of good fortune and timing
and great help and some good instincts.
But one of the things that we did
is a choice that I'm very happy that we made
is that even though we didn't have
a production schedule per se,
we weren't, what most of our peers were doing at the time
is they didn't have a,
they didn't have regularly scheduled programming, right?
Yeah.
So what happens is
because you don't always feel like making things.
And so when you're talking about this scenario,
if we were doing this hand to mouth thing
where we were coming in and we were filming
and then we were posting when it was done,
which is pretty much what everybody was doing at the time
and pretty much what everybody still does in a lot of ways.
Yeah.
A lot of people still do it.
It gives you this out.
Well, and then you're just like-
Because there's a fear of like,
if I commit to something and then-
But not only that, if you don't feel like doing it,
you say, okay, guys, you go on Twitter and you say,
guys, the video is gonna be late, or so sorry, no video this week.
We've never done that in 10 years that I can remember.
Yeah, that's right.
It's like the season, it's like,
this is when the season is, it's Monday through Friday.
There's been a couple of times where an episode
either got pulled down for some reason or whatever,
and then we made another, put it on the society,
or I actually saw early on in season one,
like a few episodes in there was that
because of what was happening
with some internet legislation,
we did like a blackout and we didn't do an episode that day.
Yeah.
But I think because we didn't give ourselves that out,
that's one of the reasons that 10 years later,
we're looking back at 21 seasons.
Yeah, season two, August of 2012,
that's when we introduced Time Ranger-ers.
I mean, we still have the puppets
sent by Mythical Beast in our likenesses.
And then, so that would be within an episode,
but it wouldn't be,
we talk about something for a little bit,
and then we would-
But we put them in the thumbnail.
And there was no, the scripting was extremely loose
for that and I just remember that,
you remember the catchphrase?
Give me a second.
I didn't watch any of these videos,
this has just come back to me.
We would say it, we would say it together.
Yeah, we were horrible at puppeteering.
It was our version of like to infinity
and beyond or something.
To the time machine, it was like something
about the time machine.
To the gazebo.
To the gazebo.
The gazebo was the time machine.
Yeah, the gazebo was the time machine.
And I think time rangers.
To the gazebo.
Might have just been a mispronunciation
of time rangers in the first episode, I don't know.
Well, based on the thumbnails
and the associated view counts,
puppets, not a strong choice.
We did Best Ever Fridays.
Wow, people hated puppets.
People hate puppets.
Episode 37, How to Make Someone Sound Like an Idiot.
So this was an early important episode for us
because we talked about like the Darwin Awards
and there were, so we talked about the thing that won
and then we talked about another thing
and then we talked about the speech jammer device
that you appointed at somebody, it's in the thumbnail.
But like we said, hey, we can do this ourselves
using the delay within GarageBand,
and you listen to yourself talking on a delay
and you sound like an idiot.
And that was absolutely hilarious.
But we waited until, I don't know,
seven, eight minutes into the episode.
After the episode was over.
Before we actually began demonstrating it
because the first half of the episode,
we were talking about those inventions, right?
And like the research side of things.
And we've told this story at some point, I'm sure,
but a good friend and manager of ours at the time
was, we were talking about that episode and he was like,
"'Hey,' and this was actually
like a year after the fact.
Yeah, this was Dan.
We were talking about kind of making some,
like we were evaluating GMM and he was like, you know.
Yes, like we said we wanted to put sponsors in,
we had sponsors, a slot for sponsors from the beginning,
but we were like, well, we need to be making more money
doing this thing, so like that's why we were having
these conversations with Dan.
And he said, you know, my favorite episode
is the speech jammer episode and I send it to people,
but I always have to, when I send it to people, I say,
fast forward to like, you know, seven or eight minutes in
when they start doing this.
Right.
And then it was like, well, why don't we make the episode
about one thing?
Which was typically what we did,
but it was sort of a reevaluation of what we were doing.
It's like, if people are clicking on this
because of this expectation,
we want to deliver on that expectation.
And that was a pretty significant mind shift for us.
Yeah, and I think there was a little bit of fear in it
because we were playing an episode and we'd be like,
we gotta make sure that we can fill the time.
What if, you know, in real time?
So we're gonna save this thing that we know
is gonna be funny for a little bit later
so that the episode is full.
We didn't have enough confidence that like, okay,
you take one thing that people wanna click on
and then you flesh it out.
It's like, now we gotta throw other things in first
to make sure that we can break 10 minutes.
And once we made that shift and said,
no, you have a good concept, you lead with it
and you flesh it out,
that certainly helped the product drastically.
I mean, one of the things I'm noticing
in just looking at these old thumbnails
and the associated views is,
there's an incredible range of how low it can be
and how high it can be, right?
There's a psychopath smell test
where we're wearing blindfolds.
Episode 38.
Which has got 5.8 million views from nine years ago.
And then, you know, there's the puppet episode right next to it.
Well, over the years, people have gone back.
Right, it's just.
And Cherry picked ones that I think resonate more
with where the show ended up going.
Well, I feel like I can actually look at these thumbnails
without the view counts and be pretty accurately predict
which ones perform well now that 10 years of all this data
of how people respond to titles and thumbnails,
it was just so experimental at the time.
We had, and the feedback, we're looking at 10 years
of collective feedback on these videos, nine or 10 years.
Yeah.
And so you see this like cumulative effect of like,
no one cares about gladiators versus puppets
to the tune of 273,000 views,
you know, next to a 6 million view video.
It's just pretty eye-opening.
And then we wrap up season two with episode 86,
which was a Christmas special.
So, you know, even though it was the first year of the show,
it was still a side project in a lot of ways.
It's like, we gotta, let's do something.
I mean, we're gonna take a holiday break,
let's do a special and we threw all this stuff at it.
Julian Smith was in that.
Got 575,000 views, which is pretty low for that time,
which again-
And it was a lot of work.
How long is that?
It was 28 minutes, But- It was special.
I think that the decision to make that special
and make it 28 minutes and make it a variety show
was what led directly to-
The Mythical Show. The Mythical Show.
You're exactly right.
That's why we decided to do the Mythical Show.
Totally on our own, we had done this
and it was like, well, if we can do it,
we can do it again, and people liked it.
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Season three, well, January, 2013, episode 13.
Do you remember we tried something called Newsicles?
Yes.
Where we would take a story,
we had taken funny news stories,
like somebody getting arrested over like complaining
about their fries at McDonald's and stuff like that.
And we would use those news stories just for conversation.
But then we were like, let's toy with the format.
Let's actually sing these things.
To some like royalty free music?
Sure.
It wasn't like I was playing guitar.
We played, no.
And so it was a kind of operatic, talky, singy type thing.
Yeah, yeah. It was fun.
Everybody liked it, but it didn't really work.
But it just goes to show you, I mean, from an early point,
we were like trying to develop formats.
Well, and again, when you look at, okay,
so episode 13, Pizza Thief the Musical,
we just got the picture of you holding a pizza and singing,
464,000 views.
The next day, episode 14,
Nutella versus peanut butter taste test, 1.8 million views.
Now again, at the time,
it wasn't like we were getting this incredible feedback.
It wasn't like it- No.
The way, you know,
this is quite an operation at this point.
We do AB testing on titles and thumbnails, that's why they change early in the day, you know, this is quite an operation at this point. We do AB testing on titles and thumbnails,
that's why they change early in the day, you know,
and it's become much more of a science.
At the time, it was more of an art.
It was throwing things out onto the internet.
And also, I would say a week after that episode goes up,
we weren't learning like,
hey, people are loving the Nutella
versus peanut butter taste test.
This view discrepancy is something that is registering
over the course of a decade,
not the course of us then making decision about our content.
I mean, I will say six episodes later,
Walmart brand versus name brand taste test.
And then episode 29, Rhett and Link eat insects,
which still hasn't broken a million views,
which is interesting.
Which in the Walmart brand versus brand name taste test
has got almost 7 million views.
Which I, you know, and again,
we talk about this quite a bit,
but it just kind of illustrates this thing
that there's this, what we don't do,
what we try not to do is just follow,
is just be, oh, people like this.
And so that's the only thing that we're gonna make,
but it does get, so we still have to do some stuff
that's just for us and for the folks
who have been around forever.
Right.
So I'm not saying we wouldn't do another musical.
It's just now, 10 years later, there's this mentality
that like, okay, if we're gonna do a musical episode,
we already know it's gonna be a lot of work, a lot of fun.
It's gonna be very rewarding for us
and the people who watch,
but it's not gonna make any money
and no one's gonna watch it.
And you just have to be like, and that's okay,
and we're gonna go for it, you know?
Yeah.
That's what looking back on this
is sort of just a reminder of the way this system works.
And you know, we were still sharing personal stories.
I mean, our experiences of getting acclimated
with living full time in Los Angeles,
having moved across country,
our kids, our wives making the transition,
we would share funny stories.
But even over the course of season two,
that started to diminish more because-
Running out of stuff.
Because we knew that like our personal stories
couldn't support an entire show forever.
Yeah.
Right.
It's not like we're now doing that on another show
that's even longer.
Episode 31, Rhett and Link are moving.
Episode 32, new studio tour.
So by that point, the beginning of season three in 2013
is when we moved into the new studio.
We knew at that point we were making the mythical show
because that's what gave us the confidence
to start renting a space and the necessity to rent a space
because we were hiring people.
Hired Stevie, we hired Ben, we hired Jen. and the necessity to rent a space because we were hiring people. Yeah.
Hired Stevie, we hired Ben, we hired Jen.
And we moved into that new studio, episode 32,
and we kept, and then we had a makeshift,
they were building the set downstairs,
which ultimately became the Good Mythical Morning set,
but it was built as the Mythical Show set.
And then upstairs, we would just set up the card table
and working with Jason,
we would still make Good Mythical Morning
while everybody that we were hiring
was working towards the Mythical Show.
Was that whole season in that space?
Was all of season three in that upstairs space
at the whole studio?
From episode 32 to episode 60.
So, and when we were up there in that space,
our energy started to be diverted into
preparing for the mythical show.
So it's like, we couldn't prepare as much for an episode.
So I remember telling Jason, like, this is a problem.
Episode 35, best movie theme songs.
But instead of us alternating and saying what we think
are the best movie theme songs, we turn it into a game.
I'm not saying this was the first game we ever played,
but it could have been.
But it was in this era that we started to gamify things
because it took the pressure off of us to prepare a lot
when we had to devote that type of energy
to the mythical show.
Yeah, that's a good point.
Episode 46, Most Amazing Optical Illusions
got 22 million views.
But episode 55 and 56 were both games,
cartoon theme songs games, greatest April fools game,
you know, where one of us will quiz the other
or Jason would quiz both of us.
And it was, yeah, it was-
So games kind of came out of necessity-
It was an efficiency thing.
It was like, yeah, again,
we're gonna digest all this information
and have to spit it back out or just perform and react.
But it wasn't that we were thinking,
you know, games will be fun.
It was like, no, we need something
that takes the pressure off.
Games can do that.
It moves the prep, the writing, if you will.
It kind of started to convince us,
because Jason was an editor,
and maybe he would have done some research,
but we never allowed ourselves to think
that like we could ever hire writers.
But then you're like, hey, Jason, write this game.
We didn't think of the show.
And all of a sudden we have a writer,
we just didn't know it.
We didn't think of the show as a show that needed writing.
Because when we thought about writing,
we thought about scripted stuff.
Exactly.
In fact, that's still often a misconception
when people find out that there's writers
for Good Mythical Morning, they interpret that as,
so what you're saying is scripted?
It's just, no, what we're doing,
what we're learning about, the game that we're playing,
the question that was being asked, that's scripted.
Yeah, the name of the game on the title screen.
Yeah, right, right.
There's so many details, there's so much to be written
when you actually start thinking about it.
But yeah, as creators, it's like,
it's one thing to start to entrust someone else to edit you.
That's a journey a lot of creators get hung up on,
but then moving to a point
where you can get somebody to write for you,
it's like, oh, you can think of it differently.
It's not putting words in somebody's mouth necessarily.
So all of that up until episode 60
was leading up to the Mythical Show,
which was 12 episodes.
And even now, looking back at the Mythical Show,
I'm very, haven't watched it in a long time,
but I'm sure I'd be proud of it
and I'd be very endeared by it.
And I'm sure there's a lot of things
embedded in these half hours that we carried forward
so creatively. Oh yeah.
We'd have to sit down and watch them all.
I'm sure people could point that out.
But only two of the 12 to this day
have broken a million views.
Again, it's just that the longer form thing
is not what you go after. 10 of them.
And that was YouTube giving us a chunk of money
to hire people to make this show
to experiment with longer format.
And then there's parallels between that
and when we did the expanded version of GMM that comes later, GMM 22, that like, okay,
even though it didn't work, there was an infusion of,
like trying so many things at such an increased rate
and figuring out how to work with a team
that is growing in the process is something
that then has ripple effects because we kept Stevie on and then it was like,
okay, we're going back to Good Mythical Morning
and it needs to be part of your focus.
Good Mythical, the Mythical Show,
which was your focus is going away.
But I kinda, I remember the mindset
going into the Mythical Show, at least as I was thinking.
I was very excited about the Mythical show, at least as I was thinking. I was very excited about the Mythical show
and there was a big part of me that was thinking,
if this works, this could be what we do
instead of Good Mythical Morning.
Oh yeah.
Right, because again, I was more excited about-
We didn't, there was no plan to go back
to Good Mythical Morning that I can recall.
I was super excited about this high level of,
there's so much creativity just put into
one particular episode and there's a music video
and there's a sketch and then there's a game.
So it was a little bit of everything that we could do.
But pretty early on, it became clear that like,
wow, again, there's this weird thing,
the feedback that we're getting,
and I'm not talking about the quality of the feedback, I'm talking this weird thing, the feedback that we're getting,
and I'm not talking about the quality of the feedback,
I'm talking about the quantity of the feedback.
Like some people who love what we do
and love all the creativity are like so excited
about something like the Mythical Show,
but you can't, like we couldn't have kept,
like we couldn't have, first of all,
YouTube wasn't gonna give us any more money for that.
But even the money they gave us to do that show
wasn't sustainable.
Like the business would have just like completely gone under
if we were like, let's just keep making that show
with that money that we're getting from YouTube.
Like it wasn't a sustainable business model.
But there was a little bit of this,
ah man, we put this thing out there
that felt like it was creatively innovative
and okay, well, I guess we'll go back
to talking to each other at a desk every single day.
To me, there was a little bit of like, ah, really?
Okay, okay, this is what you want from us?
You don't want us to do this incredibly creative stuff?
But also the thing that was happening,
and listen, I don't wanna,
my mind has shifted a lot over the years on this
because I didn't appreciate at this stage eight years ago,
I still had not accepted the fact that this medium
was very different than traditional media
in that it was much more about connecting with people.
And one of the things that people were appreciating
was not that we could write a great song
or do something funny as a sketch.
It was that they're like, I like being with those guys
and being a part of their friendship
and seeing them crack each other up and seeing them laugh.
And that was the experience that was comforting people
and entertaining people.
And it's just a mind shift.
It doesn't mean that we don't do,
have all these creative aspirations.
It's just now we kind of understand
that there's a certain place for those
that's probably not gonna be a half hour YouTube video
on the Good Mythical Morning channel.
But that was the first sort of like
throwing this thing out there,
thinking that maybe this will change everything.
Maybe we'll have the first ever
really popular half hour comedy show.
It'll be like the Carol Burnett show,
but it'll be on YouTube and it'll go for 10 years.
No, that's not what happened.
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So we went back in fall of 2013,
leading up to season four of Good Mythical Morning,
we made that weekend sucks ad, you know?
With Soren.
When Good Mythical Morning is not around,
the weekends suck.
Episode one, which is the 275th episode overall,
we were on the new set,
we had altered the Mythical Show set
to be the Good Mythical Morning set.
We started saying, let's talk about that,
and we moved the wheel,
the fan videos to be for the wheel, spin the wheel.
That was all part of a really focused evaluation
that involves Stevie.
Yeah.
Of like, okay, we're changing the way we're producing it,
we're applying this team,
but I was also when Stevie began to,
she turned her attention,
where she had not really been involved at all creatively
with GMM.
After the Mythical Show, she turned her creative instincts
and producer instincts onto GMM.
And so the three of us were sort of attacking this thing.
And we had a few writers at the time.
Yeah, yeah, and we kept our writers on board.
Actually, that's not true.
We didn't have any riders yet besides,
hmm, I'm pretty sure we didn't.
Because this was also when we started Good Mythical More
with season three, but it was on our website.
So we were still doing,
so when we started at season three,
but we had it at rhettandlink.com.
Yep, we were trying to get people to go to our website
and that's the only way you could watch Good Mythical More.
Episode four was a spicy pepper challenge.
And Ben, Stevie and Jason and Jen all came on
during Good Mythical More.
And I was like, this is the whole team bonding experience
where we impromptu brought them on camera
and made them eat the peppers.
Yeah.
And so it was just kinda like something that happened.
And that's why I think that was the extent of our team
at the beginning of season three.
Episode 27, six legal things that should be illegal.
So we were doing these list episodes,
like, okay, if Buzzfeed can do all these clickbaity stuff
and there's all these clickbaity listical titles out there
all over the internet, we're basically capitalizing on that.
Yeah, and it was really working.
You got eight million views for six legal things
that should be illegal.
I just can't resist clicking on that.
It's like no one gives a shit about that now.
It's like, you know, it's so,
I mean we learned that over time.
That's why those lists went away.
Everyone learned every list.
Yeah, it's like I'm tired of this.
Everyone was like I've been through every list.
There's no more lists.
Yeah, they were click baited so much
that it's like, you know,
I was burned one too many times
with a list that didn't come through.
And the thumbnail strategy at this point,
I'm noticing with that episode,
it just has like a stock photo
of a woman sneezing into blackness.
What I don't see- That was a good thumbnail.
Is I don't see your face going.
No. Or my face going.
No. I don't see that.
Yeah, it was like this,
I remember I would work closely
with Jason to like figure out some sort of eye catching
Photoshop thing that was like, okay, here's a sneeze.
There was a completely isolated self contained strategy
for every single thumbnail,
as opposed to a thumbnail strategy.
Yeah, it was quite exhausting.
That's a function of why YouTube has changed.
We also started Ear Biscuits.
Episode 25, we announced Ear Biscuits on season four
and we started doing Saturday Ear Biscuit promos.
We'd put a video up on Saturday
where we would talk about the Ear Biscuit
because there was no video and we would tell a story.
But it wasn't a clip.
It was related to the Ear Biscuit
that you could go and listen to.
Yeah, so like we talked-
I forgot all about this.
Like, yeah, in October, we had DeFranco on the show
and we were talking about that
and he talked about a friend of his.
And so then on our Sunday episode,
we spent a few minutes talking about Ben back then in 2013.
You know, what ended up being an entire episode
that like is the most viewed
on the Ear Biscuits YouTube channel.
Yeah, by a long shot.
Yeah, I just, I totally forgot that we did that.
Episode 36 is when we did the hashtag war.
Oh, that's still one of my favorite things.
Hashtag GMM, we took it from Good Morning Memphis
and Good Morning Maryland.
Good Morning Maryland.
Two morning shows, like two morning news shows
that were using the hashtag GMM.
And we basically did a full on coordinated assault
to try to claim GMM for ourselves.
But it was obviously a publicity stunt
and we did end up getting featured,
at least on Good Morning Memphis.
I think that Good Morning Maryland at the time like-
Somebody didn't follow through.
They were a little cold towards the idea.
We made some jingles for them, but I don't think-
I'm glad you brought this up
because I was actually thinking about this this morning
that there is a GMM out there that is really popular now.
I've told you a little bit about this. There is a GMM out there that is really popular now.
I've told you a little bit about this.
It seems to be more popular than us. Oh yeah, you're talking about a new hashtag.
Yeah, if you just put GMM on Twitter.
Put GMM on Twitter.
Wait, you sound like such a dad.
Look, GMM actresses.
There is a show,
Look, GMM actresses, there is a show,
GMM 25 Thailand is tweeting about this. I don't know where this show is,
I don't know what country this show is in,
but it is incredibly popular
and there's a huge cast of characters
Oh, it's.
That are on this GMM show.
And-
We have to do something about this.
I don't think we can take the hashtag back,
but I feel like a collaboration is at least in order.
Again, I'd have no idea what the show is.
I don't endorse it.
I don't know anything about it.
So just let me be clear about that.
But I just have seen this-
It's not a band?
No, it's a show.
GMM actresses?
It's a show.
I'm 100% sure that it's a show.
But there's all kinds of people associated with it.
This is, I mean, this is an after party.
A GMM after party.
We weren't there.
No, we hadn't invited them.
It's nothing to do with us.
That must be fixed. Like, we hadn't invited. It's nothing to do with us. That must be fixed.
Like we need to be involved.
Look, see here's this clip from the show right here.
I swear if GMM won't give us another due to.
Oh.
I still blame time for Rengoria, not Endgame.
GMM got no manager to drive, is it?
What?
I don't know.
We're gonna figure this out.
We'll figure that out.
In the meantime, I'm gonna continue
my stroll down memory lane.
If you know more about GMM,
the other GMM and you're a fan,
hashtag Ear Biscuits.
Ironically, not hashtag GMM.
No, so rounding out that fall of 2013,
episode 76, Never Wet Our Pants.
A 17 million views on Never Wet Our Pants.
Yeah, episode 79, 13 million views when we got waxed.
We got waxed.
So, I mean, we were starting to get some momentum here.
Season five, January of 2014,
that's when we moved Good Mythical More to YouTube.
So the putting it on RhettandLink.com
was a short-lived experience.
Yeah, that didn't last.
Episode 18, that's when we, exotic meat taste test,
that's when we broke a million subscribers.
Well, one of the things that I'm seeing
in the numbers here is that season five,
so towards the end of season four, so there seems like towards the end
of season four, okay, we're getting,
some stuff is really taking off,
some stuff is really getting traction.
Season five, so seven years ago.
Yeah.
That's when, that has to be based on the numbers
that I'm seeing, that has to be the beginning
of what we call the YouTube algorithm change that we benefited from,
where they started rewarding watch time.
Yeah, over- Doesn't that sound
about like the beginning of that seven years ago?
So we're like 2015?
Yeah, because we got a million view,
a million subscribers around that time.
And then at the end of 2015,
we were about to break 10 million subscribers. So for the next- At the end of 2015, we were about to break 10 million subscribers.
So for the next-
At the end of 2015?
Yeah, at the end of 2015.
So we went from 1 million-
So that was like a course of a year, man.
How's that possible?
No, it was two years.
So over those two years-
Still, that's the-
January 2014, we had a million subs.
January 20, yeah, January 2016
is when we had 10 million subscribers.
So yeah, that's when it really started to pick up.
I mean, I remember the thing that I was thinking
at this time is that I had always seen GMM
as what I called the side project, right?
I mean, that's why we put it on the second channel.
Yeah.
To this time, we're still doing like sketches,
music videos and that kind of thing.
But this was the year, that two year period, 2014 to 2015,
is where GMM surpassed anything
that we were doing on the Rhett and Link channel,
on the main channel in terms of just the level
of engagement and the number, at least the number
of subscribers and just the fan base
that was building around it.
Yeah.
And it was, and I think both of us were thinking like,
oh man, this is becoming our thing.
This is not a side project. Yeah, so a lot more focused, so much so that we were like, oh man, this is becoming our thing. This is not a side project.
Yeah, so a lot more focused.
So much so that we were like,
let's make a Hawkman trailer for a Hawkman movie
that doesn't exist in hopes that like,
people will care about that.
They didn't really. They did not.
Episode 82, Will It Taco?
Episode 88, Sensory Deprivation Tank.
So it's like we had just hatched the Will It series
and the Sensory Deprivation Tank was,
okay, we're gonna go out into the world and do some stuff.
We didn't do it that often, but it was a really good episode.
Well, before moving past Will It Taco,
it's got 20 million views now,
was this the, up until this point,
I don't know if we had done,
like the next time we did Will It after this was when,
because up to this point, we didn't see things as series.
Yeah.
Right, I don't see any evidence.
It was always like kind of, okay,
maybe this is a slight twist on something that we did
or we're playing a game,
but we didn't have a title that just changed out one word,
like Will It Taco, oh, now let's do Will It Burrito
or whatever.
So that was Cinco de Mayo.
In July, we did Will It Ice Cream Sandwich,
which was in the next season six.
Okay, so it took us a full season to come back to,
that's interesting.
Again, we weren't seeing like-
It took us two months, yeah.
But we weren't, and we're just way different these days
where we're constantly trying to come up with an idea
that then can be a series because we just found
that that's what people like.
I mean, obviously there's production considerations for that
that you get something that works,
you wanna do it again
because the team knows how to produce that.
But also like it develops a life of its own
like the international dart game has at this point,
which I'm sure you'll talk about
the first time we did that eventually.
But we weren't thinking about the show in that way
at this time.
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Over the course of season five,
the other thing we did was
Wheel of Mythicality animations.
We started releasing those.
And then season six, July of 2014,
that's when we got our new intro with the column
where it starts at night and like it's going up the column.
We still had some more animations coming out.
Episode nine of season six,
that's when we did the vacay gone cray-cay.
Cray-cay.
Cray-cay.
Cray-cray, where we would reenact
stories of people's vacations gone wrong,
which was sponsored by the same people that sponsored
I'm on Vacation, the music video.
It's like Hotel.
Choice Hotels. But yeah, in that episode. It's like hotel. Choice hotels.
But yeah, in that episode nine,
it was also on a Thursday,
that's when we would also do mail.
So we started having variety episodes
where we'd do a little something,
usually a prompt from a fan,
and then we would go into the vacay gone cray-cray segment,
because we wanted to be able to sell to a sponsor,
a segment within an episode,
but then do other things that we could use
to market the episode with title and thumbnail.
And we would add mail to it.
And then, so Jen would bring out the mail,
but she wasn't on camera.
And it was in the main episode. She wasn't mail, but she wasn't on camera and it was in the main episode.
She wasn't on camera?
She wasn't on camera.
And we did sing the song, Thursday means mail.
And you're talking season six?
Yeah.
Episode nine?
Episode nine.
Episode 17.
Okay, because we still called that
outrageous camping gear you must own.
And yeah, because the first thing we talked about was- Which got 5.6 million views. Outrageous camping gear you must own. And yeah, because the first thing we talked about was-
Which got 5.6 million views.
Outrageous camping gear.
Again, the lists were working for us.
No one was gonna click on watch us reenact
somebody's bad vacation.
But once we got the click with the crazy looking tents.
So we were figuring out those things.
It's like, if we can do a variety episode every week,
we can learn more, we can do more creative things,
and we can connect with the Mythical Beasts
by like reading their mail.
Episode 17 is when we went to the YouTube space
and we had Daniel Radcliffe on the show.
Up until this point, we really hadn't had guests on the show.
We had had guests on appear on the Mythical show,
but then we didn't add any guests
when we went back to Good Mythical Morning,
but we couldn't turn down Daniel Radcliffe.
And I just remember being so freaking nervous.
Like I still can't, I wouldn't watch that episode back.
Well, not only that, we wanted it to,
first of all, we had this hang up and we still do have it
where we were like, okay,
when a celebrity comes to the YouTube space
and other YouTubers go to it,
it's almost like a press junket
and they're just making videos.
For us, it felt a little cheap, right?
Because we were like, man, we want our show
to feel like a place that celebrities want to come
and actually be on because that's what a legitimate show is.
Jimmy Fallon doesn't go and go somewhere.
He said, you come to a show.
That had never happened,
but we said that's how we would want it to happen.
But the compromise was we're going to print out our set.
No, Paisley actually built it.
He built it like a paper, it was like paper mosaic.
Yes.
It was really amazing what he did.
And I don't even think it came across on camera,
but your eyes forget that we're not in front of our own set.
Yeah, so we did basically a portable set,
which was a whole lot of work.
Later when we had to do the same thing another time,
we printed it out.
But yeah, I forgot, the first one was like literal.
He unrolled the thing.
Unrolled, yeah, it's crazy.
And then we had to sit around for hours
for Danny Radcliffe to show up.
And he was a joy.
He was a joy. He was a joy.
Episode 56, that was the Carolina Reaper.
That's still the thing that is more often than anything,
the thing that people talk about
if they see us on the street.
Episode 110 was our first weirdest eBay
where Stevie was the host. Oh, really?
Well, okay, so yeah.
Wrapping up 2014.
At what point did Stevie start becoming
the voice of the goddess off camera?
I don't know.
Cause I know that season four, episode 64,
we did the movie setting game,
which was the first time that we had, we like,
we were like, let's put a title screen on this.
We still didn't say it's time for,
but we called it something impromptu.
And like Jason made a title screen.
Jason was the off screen voice for those games.
So I don't know exactly when that switched,
but by this point, Stevie was not only,
she did that on camera,
what was doing stuff off camera, I'm sure by that point.
So then let's go to season seven.
All right.
January, 2015, we had a new wheel with 24 spaces.
That was a big moment, I think.
We would have variety episodes that were,
they were still question-based.
So I remember that we would take questions
from Mythical Beast and we would use those,
the writers would then pitch us comedy bits to do.
Like someone gave feedback on how I was,
like we took a comment about how I made Eddie eat something
that he didn't want to eat and I was kind of being a jerk
to him and so they were like, you were like,
yeah, it actually happens a lot and we cut to a sketch
of hidden camera footage of me being a tyrant
around the studio.
So we were still trying all different types of things
in like these mini variety episodes.
It got five million views for it, it does at this point.
Because we called it Link is a Tyrant.
We also started song biscuits.
So this was a new thing.
It was like, all right, not just doing an ear biscuit
and having them come on the show.
But that was a weekend series.
Yeah, but we got, I mean, that was ambitious.
That was kind of a, hey, you're gonna come on a podcast
and then you're gonna write a song with us.
I wouldn't have said yes to that.
We made it easy for people, man.
They didn't have to do much.
Yeah, but I was like, man, that was,
that was asking a lot of people.
Okay, but so yeah, and like you said,
before that there was the Wheel of Mythicality animations.
Again, so I'm thinking about where this decision leads.
That's one of the fascinating things for me is like,
we make a decision,
for whatever reason we were making it at the time,
and then just making the decision
then leads to something else.
So I would say that decisions like this
to do song biscuits on the weekend,
okay, maybe what we were thinking,
I know one of the things we were thinking was,
man, like we've gotten to this point
where we're putting so much time into Good Mythical Morning,
it doesn't really justify itself to put all this time
into a music video on our main channel,
unless it's sponsored.
And even then sometimes it would be weeks or months of work
for one piece of content, right?
Whereas we can do as well with GMM.
So we were like, okay, well,
we're still really good at writing songs.
Let's make it something that's more interactive
and quicker and that's what led to doing Song Biscuits.
And hey, why didn't we put that on the Rhett and Link channel?
Well, again, at this point in season seven,
there's all this traction on Good Mythical Morning.
So it's like, this is the place that people's eyeballs are.
So let's put it on the weekend on the GMM channel.
That decision led to things like Mythical Kitchen, right?
Because Mythical Kitchen,
before it was Mythical Kitchen,
it was a weekend show, you know,
where Josh would make something on the weekend.
And I don't know how long that went.
Yeah, I can get into some of that.
But yeah, for this, and it was also,
we're trying to promote this podcast through our channel.
Because it was still guest-based.
Ear Biscuits was guest-based at the time.
2015, we go into the fall for season eight.
We were done with Song Biscuits
and we started then releasing the animated versions
of those as a music video.
Let's do that.
The backup plan continued.
We did the Cereal Bowl bath on episode five.
We really weren't having a lot of guests,
but episode 55 was when we had Shay Mitchell come on
because there was some sort of connection
that like she actually wanted to come on our show
and I had to eat a live beetle.
I'm not proud of that.
And we had episode 45, we had Smosh on the show.
Yeah, so we started to-
You and Anthony at the time.
I think we had them on Ear Biscuits
and it was like a cross promotion
instead of doing a song biscuit.
Because I guess we were done with those.
It's like, maybe we can double up.
We had already gone to Pirates versus Ninjas
for Debaterama.
Yeah, that-
That was the beginning of the end for the debates.
Yeah. If I recall correctly.
Didn't work that well.
Episode 91, we did Will It Pie,
which is the only will it on location.
Yeah, in front of the pie hole.
Nobody really cared that it was interesting,
but it wasn't anything to continue.
It didn't add anything.
No, it didn't add anything.
Which I think is an important point to register
because this is like, oh, well,
this episode required traveling to a place, setting up.
And it's like, oh, this will be cool,
breath of fresh air, literally,
but also makes the show feel like it could go anywhere.
And you're like, oh, it didn't translate into anything else.
We could have just been at the desk.
Let's just be at the desk.
January, 2016, season nine.
That's when we got that new desert intro
and it was my new haircut, 2016.
Wow, it's been that long.
It's been that long.
Willits were still the biggest thing,
but we were doing games, we were doing ranking stuff,
we were still doing lists.
Episode 43, Can You Hear Colors?
So we're doing experiments.
I mean, we were trying a bunch of different taste tests
of like the flavored oxygen taste test,
physical challenges, like we were doing these weird,
like we would invent our own physical challenges
and that like magnetized mullets, magnified mazes,
like all these weird physical challenges.
That didn't last too long.
But episode 62, I think is still our most viewed video ever.
Game show cheaters.
Amazing game show cheaters.
Which was just an anomaly.
That thing blew up way after the fact.
Something happened, something happened with YouTube's system
that kept sending this video as a suggested video.
You could see where the views came from
and it was always a suggested video
that was popping up for people.
And people wanna click on that for sure.
And they just like, I just-
The cheater during the showcase showdown.
Yeah, we put a arrow at the cheater.
We had an extras channel
that we were doing Good Mythical Crew,
but then we moved that show, Good Mythical Crew,
to Saturdays.
It's where we would have like Mike or Alex or Chase,
like showing them how they would,
what now is behind the mythicality
on the Mythical Society basically
is something that we started in 2016.
And it was-
Starting to feature the crew
and show behind the scenes content.
But also there was,
you sort of skipped over the middle thing
because that was, again, it was a Saturday launch
for something that then became its own channel
for a certain period of time.
There was an extras channel and then we were,
it wasn't called This is Mythical yet
and we were moving some, so that was the main thing,
the Good Mythical Crew.
Right, yeah.
This is when we broke 10 million subscribers
and had our 900th episode.
Episode 105, Will It Burger?
That was the first Mythical Chef Josh appearance.
This is when we wrote 10 million because earlier you said
we brought 10 million at the end of 2015.
Yeah, it was episode 70, so at the beginning of 2016.
Okay.
So it was still like basically two years.
Two years, almost two years exactly.
So then Josh showed up,
but then he went away again for like a while.
He only helped us in that one episode.
And then episode 120,
that's when we announced Buddy System season one.
So like all of this stuff was happening back then
around this time, season nine, going into season 10.
Season 10, episode 54, we released Buddy System.
We did the Conjoined Twin Challenge
and we celebrated the 1000th episode.
We also did our, it looks like our first ever
retrospective episodes around the holidays.
Right.
Very different thumbnail strategy,
like top 10 link gags, ridiculous Rhett reactions,
Rhett and Link can't stop laughing.
They were shorter, but this was sort of the precursor
to what we do now, which is like the top five moments.
Yeah, we ended that,
right before we did those retrospectives,
we released episode 102,
which was the international Christmas food.
So we were throwing darts at the end of 2016.
So the very beginning, the first time we did that,
we were already throwing darts.
All right, so now we're in January 2017 for season 11.
This is when we had a This Is Mythical channel.
Okay, yep.
We were throwing things over there,
but we were still doing the Good Mythical Crew episodes,
I think on Saturday on GMM.
But we weren't having guests
unless we had a connection to them,
like Mayim on What's On My Head for episode 33.
I was the human nacho in episode 65, episode 69.
That became a thing.
Yeah, that became a thing.
Discontinued snack taste test
started back then in episode 69.
And then after around episode 83
is when we announced Buddy System season two.
And that's when we started doing Good Mythical Summer
for the first time.
Yeah, so a couple of things were happening there.
So with Buddy System going into season two at this point,
again, we were putting it on
the Good Mythical Morning channel.
Even though we didn't want to.
And that was just because by that time, again,
we were, there was so much focus on GMM
and it's so difficult to like keep this level of content up
and also make a scripted show, do the podcast, do the weekend series,
that it was like, okay,
there's not a lot happening on the main channel.
Now we just call it Rhett and Link channel
because it's definitely not the main channel.
So yeah, it was like,
this is a little bit weird to put this on GMM,
but it probably will get more views.
I don't know if that was true,
if it would have gotten more views
if we put it on the Rhett and Link channel.
We had to announce it during this season
so we could explain why we were doing Good Mythical Summer
and we were having guest hosts.
It's like, why are you guys going away?
What is it you're doing?
So we would start teasing it,
but then it wasn't until season 12 that fall
when it actually started coming out.
A lot of things happened in season 12.
I mean, we had our new stop motion animation.
Episode three was our brosectomies.
Oh wow.
We released our book of mythicality in episode 37
and announced a tour for that.
Episode 44 was our first leaving things in Coke.
Episode 52 was our first leaving things in Coke. Episode 52 was our last episode before we switched over
to GMN 22 in the middle of the season.
Wow, so there was so much stuff happening at this point.
I'm thinking about, I'm trying to like think beyond
just what was, so much happened with Good Mythical Morning.
Yeah.
It was now-
I mean, just getting vasectomies
would have been enough for that fall.
One thing I will say by season 12, which was what year?
2017.
So 2017, like if you go in the back end
and you look at the engagement and the views
and all that stuff.
So again, there was this sort of incredible time
of like 2014, 2015, 2016, like this three year period. So again, there was this sort of incredible time
of like 2014, 2015, 2016, like this three year period
in which there was this incredible amount of views and incredible amount of audience growth.
Like you said, like breaking 10 million subscribers.
2017 sort of represented a little bit of a slow,
things were beginning to slow down. Now this wasn't- Well, I would say level out. Yeah, yeah. sort of represented a little bit of a slow,
things were beginning to slow down. Now this wasn't-
Well, I would say level out.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, the growth was slowing down.
Like this explosive growth was slowing down.
And then if you just look at the numbers,
what you won't see is you won't see an episode
that has 12, 15, 18, 20 million views
like some of those ones that had broken out during that time.
Now, again, that's not a function
of a strategy change on our part.
It's just a function of the change of audience taste
and also the YouTube platform.
So we're kind of like, okay,
this is maybe the new normal
for where this thing is shaking out.
In the meantime, doing all this other stuff,
like you mentioned, the book, the tour, the show,
and then YouTube knocks on our door and says,
hey, do you want to, they actually said,
do you want to do a Good Mythical Night
or Good Mythical Evening, like a night,
a daily nightly show in addition to your daily show?
We were like, do you?
I mean, there's only two of us.
We have a lot of help, but there's still only two,
these two guys.
That turned into, well, let's apply those changes
to Good Mythical Morning itself and hence GMM 22.
We call it 22 because it was, you know,
a half hour of television is actually
just 22 minutes of content.
So we were trying to make four videos
that totaled up to roughly 22 minutes of content. So we were trying to make four videos that totaled up to roughly 22 minutes of content
because there was a little bit of a potential hope
and actually this was discussed is would maybe that show
in its entirety end up on linear television at some point?
Like there was a discussion about that.
I mean, it was crazy that that was a discussion,
but that was a discussion at some point.
Most of the discussions were about click the green border.
Yeah, yeah.
We're not gonna talk negatively about GMM 22.
We've done enough of that.
I'll present the positive sides of it.
You know, this was the first,
like we accelerated like how big our team was,
how big our set was.
There was an injection of creativity
that where we had to make all these different videos.
We had to make four videos a day instead of one.
So we were willing to try things and say, okay,
one of these or two of these segments
are gonna be the things you expect
and they're gonna perform well,
like episode 59, freezing our bodies.
This is gonna work.
We're gonna go to a cryogenic therapy place.
Then we're gonna come back to the set
and do Big Mac versus Whopper,
and that's gonna perform really well.
And then we're gonna do this silly invention thing
where we wear sauna pants, which we just made.
And then we're gonna do this very quick thing
called Censored Kissing Game,
which the writers really had to push the writers
to come up with comedy bits that then we could,
where we could play fun games or quick improv type things.
So we were reapplying our efforts and lessons
from way back with this is the Mythical Show,
which was a half hour and saying,
well, we're not gonna make a 30 minute video,
we're gonna make each of these internet videos
and then there's room for experimentation.
And because of that, we did learn a lot,
but we had to do things like we have to have a teleprompter. We get- Yeah, this was the beginning of that. This is when we started having a lot, but we had to do things like, we have to have a teleprompter.
We get- Yeah, this was the beginning of that.
This is when we started having a teleprompter
instead of like trying to commit stuff to memory
for just a few seconds and then say it
in twice as much time as it needs to take
and with a lot more prep than we have time to give to it.
And to clarify, okay, so when we talk about what's scripted
and what's not scripted on Good Mythical Morning.
So for a very, very long time,
maybe not from the very beginning,
but definitely there are early seasons.
What we had scripted was, okay,
at the beginning of this thing, when the camera turns on
and we say Good Mythical Morning,
the things that we're going to say right at the top
are essentially scripted.
It started loose and it was like,
okay, I've got a little thing I'm gonna say
and then you're like, okay, here's how I'm gonna react to it.
Then it slowly evolved to a place where it was,
I think literally written down.
And we would look at it and be like,
okay, I think I can say that.
Again, this is just the intro,
just like the first minute or so of the show.
Because we wanted to quickly and efficiently
get into the good stuff and set it up in the right way.
Orient people, maybe there were rules or whatever.
So yeah, so that was the existing system.
And then, but what would happen sometimes
is we would have this sheet of paper
and we'd be trying to get it
and we'd go through two, three, four takes sometimes
just getting the takeoff of the show done.
Which is very frustrating.
And it's taking a bunch of time.
And I think all along, I can't remember who it was,
if it was Stevie or whoever it was,
was like, what about a teleprompter?
We were very anti-teleprompter
because if you know what it looks like
when somebody's reading a teleprompter, you know what it looks like when somebody is reading a teleprompter,
you know what it looks like when somebody is reading
a teleprompter, right?
Yeah.
And then that makes it feel, the show feel less authentic.
And plus we were self-conscious about it,
but we basically knew we had to figure it out.
We had to utilize it for the show openings.
And so it was just one of those things that made GMM 22 fill off at the beginning.
It wasn't just about the fact that it was the wrong color
and that we're using different cameras.
There was a lot of transitions
that shouldn't have impacted the audience experience
that did because it was a,
there were so many things that we were changing
in our experience behind the scenes.
So like using a teleprompter
and the specifics of how we were using it.
But that ended up being a good thing.
It's like forcing us to figure out what are our terms
for using this tool.
We learned when not to use it
because I think we overdid it in certain times.
Yeah. And we also got better at,
you know, if you want to look
and you want to follow our eyes and get really specific,
you, I mean, you probably, if you watch the show enough,
you know when it's happening, but we got better at it.
So somebody who's coming into the show for the first time
doesn't feel like I'm walking
into this stiff newscaster situation.
We also had like writers writing more comedy bits
that like we were figuring out, is this for us?
Are we, do we want, do we enjoy this?
Are we good at it?
Can we take someone else's joke and say it as our own?
Like there was a lot of,
and or work within an improv bit where it's like,
we're gonna, you know, we're gonna be sucking helium
and saying,
and then ranting about things that are, again, on a teleprompter.
And a lot of things didn't work,
but it was great to have to force ourselves
to try these things and at least have these segments
that were like our bread and butter
and that we knew were gonna work.
We also had guests come in.
We had a dedicated effort to book guests
like through traditional means like that.
A booking agent.
That's how you get Weird Al Yankovic to come on the show.
That's how you get in touch with Jack Black
to come on and sing Silent Night for episode 85.
We also at the end of that year, episode 84,
we made the Christmas Booty music video.
Oh, we decided to reengage.
And all we had done was announce Buddy System season two.
None of it came out until season 13, January of 2018.
We reduced our number of videos from four to three per episode,
but we were continuing to do the segment at GMM 22.
At the end of 2017, it was during this season
that we were releasing Buddy System season two.
It was all happening at the same time.
Yeah, it's also when I started going to therapy.
Yeah, that was freaking crazy.
Well, you know, there's a couple of other elements too
that this is not the kind of thing that we typically
think about or talk about, but I'm sure that if we were
to talk to some of the folks who work more
on the production side of GMM, A lot of the things that we do now
in terms of the way thumbnails are created,
the way that graphics are created,
the way the editing workflow, the audio workflow.
Yeah.
All this back end stuff that enables the show
to happen every single day,
those efficiencies were developed during GMM 22.
That's not something that we often think about,
but anything that worked, we kept.
What didn't work, which mainly was doing three or four
or five videos every single day,
didn't work on a number of levels,
but there's so many things that we took forward.
Yeah, we learned how to work with guests.
And so then, well, I won't get ahead of myself
because that's the second half of GMM 22 in January, 2018.
That's episode 12 was when we did fancy fast food, Big Mac.
So it's like, that is a staple
of the Mythical Kitchen channel now.
We did our first Munch Madness tournament,
which we ultimately, so that was like-
That was pretty pivotal.
Yeah.
Was it a multi-day thing?
Oh yeah, and then episode 116,
Will It Churro was the last GMM 22.
But then the things we continued from there
were having guests on the show,
being able to use the teleprompter for the stuff
that we just needed to get through,
like how a game works.
Right. And the intros.
So it was, there was, like you said,
there was a lot of efficiencies that like when we said,
okay, in season 14, we're going back to one video a day
and then Good Mythical More and that's it.
And it will forever be that way.
We now have this capability,
we're like, if we can make three or four times
this amount of content in an episode,
then we can shoot things more efficiently.
We can start shooting more episodes in a day.
We can have more time to work on other things
and still keep Good Mythical Morning
at the caliber it needs to be at.
Because one of the things that was happening
with the book and the tour and buddy system,
which represented things that we really want to do,
they become more difficult to enjoy
when you just can't really devote time to them, right?
And then everything begins to feel a little bit
like a burden, like, okay, GMM,
when you wanna work on this, GMM feels like,
oh, that feels like a burden.
Or it's like when you've got GMM scheduled to shoot
and you, well, I need to work on this book,
that begins to feel like a burden.
We knew that wasn't sustainable.
We also knew the thing that we didn't wanna do
was stop doing anything.
Right, that's the one thing that we've never really
considered is stopping doing anything.
Right.
It's just finding a more efficient way to do it.
But the beautiful thing about this is that
it solved a lot of problems for us,
but then nobody, like, I mean, I'm sure there's somebody out there
who's like, I was disappointed when you guys went back
to one episode a day.
I know that that group of people exist
and you know what, I love you for that.
But I think the vast majority of people were happy
to get their good old traditional GMM back,
but we were able to be like, hey, we can actually write this thing or do this thing.
Oh no, we didn't do a buddy system season three
and we probably never will,
but hey, we're trying to do other things.
And we wouldn't be able to do those
if we hadn't transitioned back.
Season 14, episode 13 is when we did shuffleboard.
So it's, you know, we had confidence
to do these bigger set pieces did shuffleboard. So it's, you know, we had confidence to do these bigger set pieces like shuffleboard.
We also, that's when we released the GMM billboards
with the body paint.
Well, and another thing that is beginning to happen here
pretty consistently, I would say that it started not,
it started during season,
it started a little bit during the GMM 22
and then it settles into itself a little bit more
in season 14 is there's a thumbnail strategy.
There is a face, might be your face, might be my face,
feeling about half the screen.
There's words on the thumbnail itself, like big bold words.
That's happening more and more often, right?
And we had it, yep.
And then we had a long streak of high performers
from episode 29 to episode 36, MRE taste test,
six and a half million, leaving things in nail polish,
six and a half million, President Foods, you remember Jordan was talking for the-
Oh, we're bringing,
I think we're trying to bring that format back very soon.
And this was the season that we launched LTAT.
So GMM 22 went away and then LTAT, we started that.
Let's keep going into season 15.
Okay.
I mean, this will start getting quicker
because we're getting closer to things
that are just new news.
January 2019, we had that new collage-y intro
and we were like, we were doing the Rhett and Link live shows
like we started in London.
Right. So it was like the concert.
Yeah, we got hypnotized.
Yeah, you talked about how Finland doesn't exist.
Like what's my superhero mask?
Like episode 91 was hot food cold versus cold food hot.
It's like getting into some of those things
that like we're still doing now from 2019.
By the time season 15 rolled around,
we were definitely getting this very clear message
that was, hey, when you guys eat weird stuff,
or when you guys just eat stuff,
or when you guys talk about food,
it's gonna get more views.
And so the game began or became finding ways
to incorporate food into an episode
while it's still doing something completely original
that doesn't feel derivative.
Still the name of the game in a lot of ways.
But as you can see, we continue to,
and as we continue to continue to,
try to find things that aren't eating food
that people will get excited about.
Yeah, and it's like, once you get into 2019,
where you got 16 million subscribers,
we're talking about the lost causes of Bleak Creek,
we've got Josh doing a show on Sundays after LTAT,
we're launching alternate universe snacks with Wheat Thix,
and then we did the Buies Creek series, episode 1630.
And then we, by the end of that year,
we had done our Bleak Creek mini tour.
And that was when we wrapped up LTAT.
And then we're all the way to season 17, 2020.
Oh, dang.
Not launching gut check,
eating every Ben and Jerry's flavor,
not knowing that COVID's right around the corner.
So then we had the home split screen episodes,
then like slowly ramping up our ability to produce
back in the studio to the point where by episode 1789,
we've got this huge putt-putt course
talking about the most expensive item at 7-Eleven.
Yeah, so just in bringing us closer to,
bringing us to last year.
Yeah, it's funny as I think about-
And the present.
You know, okay, going from GMM 22,
well, again, you think about the eras
and the early GMM of figuring a bunch of stuff out,
then that middle or early middle era and the early GMM of figuring a bunch of stuff out,
then that middle or early middle era that we talked about with the incredible growth and the incredible engagement.
Yeah, the takeoff.
And then the thing that I think is,
I wouldn't have been able to process is,
because you could believe, like if you could think,
and I think maybe some people do think this is just like,
oh, you guys, you really screwed up
when you did the GMM 22 thing,
and that's why their videos aren't getting 20 million views
or whatever, but looking at what actually happened
is there was this incredible growth,
and then things sort of settled into a place
just because, you know, that's just the way YouTube works.
There's changes that take place.
And we kind of settled into something.
And then when we did GMM 22,
the views actually were in the engagement sort of went up
just because there were so many videos.
But we abandoned that for all the reasons
that we've covered.
And then those things, and if the efficiencies-
It was a refining, then it moved into a refining phase,
which that Reddit thread called a renaissance,
where it was, yeah, it was a reinvigoration
of what we do best and doubling down on those things.
So you might start to get more homogeneity,
but to capitalize on the success,
and that was really working within that renaissance phase.
Well, this is the thing that we're always up against.
And I'd like to spend a little bit of time
just talking about the future of GMM.
Like what are the next 10 years of GMM?
If that's, I don't know how long we're gonna do the show,
but let's just say that as we move
into the second decade of GMM.
Yeah.
One of the things that you definitely see,
and of course, listen, we are very in touch
with what longtime Mythical Beasts
think and all the opinions that float around
and we value all that, we're making this show for you.
We are also frustrated by some of the changes
that have taken place on YouTube to reward the homogeneity,
is that the word?
Of a product and a predictability.
And things that have led us to,
yeah, the thumbnails pretty much feel the same
because whenever we divert from that,
we get less clicks, right?
And that's something that, you know,
you look at the most engaging YouTuber on the platform
and Mr. Beast and look at his thumbnails,
well, he's doing the same thing
and he's doing something different,
but he's doing it in the same way.
He knows that that's the system, right?
He's not doing the old strategy,
which is constantly trying something new.
He's like, this is what works.
I'm gonna keep doing it for as long as I can.
Yeah.
It's interesting when you're making a video that's,
a show that's coming out five times a week
and we're getting this feedback
that this is what people are clicking on.
Obviously they continue to click on things
where they're food related,
but we don't just do this show to just fill a gap
in our business strategy, right?
Every day we think about Good Mythical Morning
as this is still our bread and butter.
Yeah, we wanna do other things, we are doing other things,
but this is still our bread and butter.
This is still something that people depend on
in a lot of ways and enjoy.
It's not just some fluffy product that we want people to,
you know, it's meaningful in people's lives.
It's meaningful in our lives. But the thing that we've people to just, you know, it's meaningful in people's lives. It's meaningful in our lives.
But the thing that we've been talking about recently is
as we find ourselves in this platform where
consistency and predictability and homogeneity
are rewarded, right?
The more you can kind of center on a strategy on a channel
and be like, this is the very specific thing
that you're getting from this channel.
And this is the very specific thing
that you're getting from this channel.
We've had this sort of existential crisis
that we've been dealing with, which is,
well, we're trying to do a variety show.
We're trying to do a show that comes out every single day
and covers a lot of different ground,
but we're doing it in a place where specificity and focus
has been rewarded more and more.
People try a bunch of different things
are not necessarily getting rewarded.
They try a bunch of,
and we were actually,
we were watching some TikTok videos last night,
as a matter of fact,
and talking about this phenomenon on TikTok,
where you can look at somebody's channel and be like,
oh, this is this guy and he was trying,
he's doing like seven different characters
and all of a sudden something clicks with one character
and then he fine tunes that character
and now every single video is that guy.
And my question was, are we moving into a place
on the internet when it comes to internet content
where everyone just zeros in on the particular thing
that is working and then they,
it's like you've got this, forgive the analogy,
you've got this cow that's got udders
and then you're like, oh, everything's coming
out of this teat, let's just focus on this teat
and you just, and this is what the internet does,
the internet sends you to a particular teat and you keep going back to that teat. Sucks the life out of a teat and you just, and this is what the internet does. The internet sends you to a particular teat
and you keep going back to that teat.
Sucks the life out of a teat.
You gotta suck that teat clean off.
And what we are committed to doing,
both as a company, as a brand,
with our whole suite of content and everything we're doing,
and including GMM, is we want you to suck on every teat.
You know, we don't wanna just suck,
we don't wanna just give,
we don't wanna just keep putting one teat out there
for you to suck on.
It sounds embarrassing, but I have to agree.
We've got lots of teats and we want you to suck on all
of them to equal degrees.
I think there's a focus now.
As I think about the future, I'm just thinking about
the continuing to make sure the udder
is got lots of teats and it's not just one teat.
We have a loyal viewership of Mythical Beasts
that are gonna watch no matter what.
And what we're realizing is that
like this presents an opportunity for us and the team
to say, okay, we are gonna determine
to continue to experiment, to assert that we are more
than just people who shove food in our face.
Yeah.
And we need to take risks creatively.
And we need to say, we need to try different things
and continue the story.
You know, there's ebbs and flows.
There's like, okay, we tried this thing,
we're gonna, and then it, maybe you say the whole thing didn't work. It's like, that's ebbs and flows. There's like, okay, we tried this thing, we're gonna, and then it,
maybe you say the whole thing didn't work.
It's like, that's not true.
There's always things that carry on from everything you try.
Yeah.
And yeah, even the things that don't work lead,
they help direct you into the future.
So, okay, now we're gonna run interference on this,
but I think that's where we're at with GMM is saying,
okay, how does it continue to evolve?
You know, and how do we earmark a certain number of episodes
where we're gonna continue to push innovation
and experimentation within the parameters of us
being able to show up and do it
within the construct of the show.
Yeah, and this has been, frankly, with the pandemic,
we've had a great, great time during the pandemic
as a company.
Our team has been incredible being able to produce the show
that we've been able to produce.
It's just phenomenal what we've been able to do.
But it's been tough.
It's been tough on our team.
It's been tough on our writers,
especially who are isolated.
You know, it's like we have a production crew that comes in
but it's still less than what we had pre-pandemic, right?
And we don't just bring in all the writers all the time
because it's just unnecessary risk at this point,
but we believe that we're getting towards the end
of this thing and we're gonna get back
to whatever our new normal is.
One of the things that, I'm saying this
because there's a level of excitement around the show.
Yeah.
And I think that as we think about
not having the restrictions of a pandemic,
getting our crew back here in this building,
not yet, as soon as it's safe.
I mean, I'm talking about everybody back.
And really doubling down.
I'm just saying this to say that when I think about
the future of GMM, even already this year,
like me and you have been thinking about it
and been engaging with it in a way that, you know,
because we do so many other creative things
and we have such a great team,
there are times where I kind of like,
I don't really have to think about GMM right now.
I can just show up and be a part of the episodes
in the way that I am, but I'm not,
I don't have to think about,
I don't have to think about the future of it
and like, where are we going with this?
But right now there's this focus on,
this is something special and this, we're not gonna just, it's not focus on this is something special
and this, we're not gonna just,
it's not gonna just fade off slowly
and be this thing that is just a relic of the internet.
Like the focus right now is like, hey, you know,
this is incredible that we've been doing this for a decade
and there's been ups and there's been downs.
We've learned a whole lot,
but we're not just trying to settle
into a comfortable thing.
Like we're still trying to innovate, we still will innovate.
We're gonna be trying newer, bolder things this year
than we did last year.
You know, we've never been more focused on that.
And the appreciation that I have with this process
that I went through looking back through all this
is that like, it's a continuation of what we've done.
It's like the reason why the show has gone on so long
and will continue to go on is that it's constantly changing.
It's never just one thing.
And it's most usually changes are not drastic,
but they're over the course,
you discover things, you realize we discovered things
and then you apply those things.
And so that's gonna continue to happen.
So I don't anticipate a drastic change
in Good Mythical Morning,
but I fully expect a continued evolution of the show.
And I do sense that we're at a juncture
where over the course of this year, it's going to,
as we, you know, we spent our time looking backwards
over 10 years, we've done our celebration
and now it's, all right, we're continuing to push forward
creatively and so that we can define we're continuing to push forward creatively
and so that we can define what this show
is gonna look like 10 years from now.
Yeah. Over time.
And like you said, you know,
and this is actually one of the things that's given us
this sort of, I think, a new found sense of,
we tend to, like lots of people in this business
and lots of people in entertainment in general
and probably just lots of people around the world,
sometimes you begin to let a little too much fear
creep into the way that you think about things, right?
Yeah.
So I think when you've been doing something like this
for as long as we have and you've kind of experienced
the level of success that we have and you've seen ups and downs,
anytime there's a down, fear creeps in.
It's like, oh, well, okay, what?
And then you, fear doesn't lead to innovation.
A lot of times, for a lot of times,
for people, fear leads to taking less risks.
You get scared and you're like, I don't wanna like, I don't wanna go into the deep end.
I don't wanna try that.
And we kind of recognize that.
And of course we've had the restrictions of the pandemic,
which restricted the ability to really innovate in big ways.
But because we have that,
I don't know what the number of people specifically is,
but there are a number of you out there who, like Link said,
you watch every single day.
Like you're just a GMM watcher.
It's part of your daily routine,
or maybe you watch it all on Saturday,
but through the ups and downs
and the changes you've watched the show.
And you actually give us the ability to take risks
because what we found is,
regardless of what we do,
there's a certain number of people who are like,
"'Hey, I'm showing up, this is what I do.
"'I support you guys.'"
That, knowing that and embracing that
has really given us this confidence to be like,
"'Man, we can, you really can't,
"'they've got nothing to lose
"'by really getting experimental.
Yeah, it's a great place to be in,
to have 10 years under our belt
and to know that we've got that loyal connection
with those mythical beasts.
And it's extremely comforting and it makes this exciting.
And you know what?
As much as we talk about clicks and views
and the reason we talk and think about that
is because we're trying to support a business here
with a lot of staff.
But when we think about GMM,
I think I speak for both of us when I say this,
when we think about GMM and we think about what we're doing
and we think about the person that we're talking to,
I'm not thinking about that person who just clicks
on a video every once in a while.
I'm thinking about the person who,
I'm thinking about a mythical beast.
Yeah.
You know, I'm thinking about a mythical beast
who is coming back, you know?
When we continue a dumb bit,
I don't re-explain the bit like this is your first time.
I just take it for granted that this bit is for you
who've been watching, you know?
Yeah.
And if you are watching for the first time,
well, you'll catch up, you'll catch on, you know?
It's like stepping into a game
after everybody started playing it, you'll figure it out.
I think I anticipated that I would be a lot more sentimental
at celebrating 10 years of GMM.
Well, why don't you cry?
I think the reason why is because it's not over.
You know, we're already looking forward.
Yeah.
And I don't think we've ever stopped looking forward.
So yeah, it's nice to look back and celebrate
and on GMM over this past week to do that.
And it has been special,
but having this overwhelming sense of,
I'm not gonna say we're just getting started
because that's cheesy.
We're not, we've done this for 10 years.
Actually, we're saying that at the beginning
of every episode this season.
We're just getting started.
But you know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
It ain't over.
So I'm not prone to get too sentimental
about something that I'm in the middle of
and very excited about and as we look forward.
Yeah.
So I'll just leave it at that, no tears.
Yeah, I mean, if the show ends at some point,
which for whatever reason it will,
I mean, there's gonna be some circumstances that lead to it ending at some point, which for whatever reason it will, I mean, there's gonna be some circumstances
that lead to it ending at some point, I'll cry then.
Shit right.
Yeah, shit right.
Sure.
Yeah, shit right, man.
Okay, I got a quick rec.
I've been listening to the Audible version of the book Will.
Will Smith's autobiography. Seen the cover. audible version of the book Will.
Will Smith's autobiography. Seeing the cover.
Being a huge fan of, being our age,
growing up and experiencing the DJ Jazzy Jeff
and the Fresh Prince era as a middle schooler
and really loving music documentaries. I love the first third of his book
because it was about that.
And so if you're my age and you're into that stuff,
you'll be into hearing the stories behind the making
of everything that led to like those first two albums.
And then the stories of him, the story of him getting
to be the fresh Prince of Bel-Air.
There's some shorter stories out there on YouTube
that are absolutely amazing,
but hearing it,
hearing him perform his book,
he doesn't just read his book, he performs his book.
Like he does impressions of every single,
of so many people.
And you can tell it's like these,
like his grandma and Jeff and Quincy Jones.
And so it's really great stories.
And then I gotta say,
I wasn't a huge fan of Will Smith, the actor.
I was just, you know, more of the musician
and the Fresh Prince, but it was good.
I actually couldn't have told you that like, yeah,
he was pretty much for a long time,
the biggest star on the planet.
Like it seems very obvious, but like I didn't,
I wasn't a fan of his movies, but then seeing that
and like, so as a business owner and leader,
I enjoyed the second half of the book
in terms of like him saying,
okay, as an artist, this is what I'm going after
and this is the team I'm surrounding myself with
and this is how we're gonna go about it.
And there's also the partner aspect of like,
you know, being a husband, being a dad,
like all that stuff was pretty cool too.
It's pretty inspiring, a lot of fun to listen to,
some really good stories in there.
So if that floats your boat, I highly recommend it.
Will.
Will, the Audible book.
Well, thanks for joining us.
Thanks for joining us for 10 years if you're one of those.
Here's to 10 more.
Yeah.
Hashtag Ear Biscuits.