Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - Our Engineering Years | Ear Biscuits Ep. 375
Episode Date: March 27, 2023In another installment of Rhett and Link exploring their friendship throughout the years, they’re talking about what they were up to after graduating from college. Both were starting out in their en...gineering careers, their marriages, and meeting up weekly to write songs and skits to be creative – which ultimately led to where they are today. Get your GMM Theme Song sweatshirt at mythical.com today! Chime - Start making your financial dreams a reality with Chime. Signing up only takes two minutes and doesn’t affect your credit score. Get started at chime.com/ear To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to Ear Biscuits, the podcast where two lifelong friends talk about life for a long time. I'm Rhett.
And I'm Link. This week at the Roundtable of Dim Lighting, we're picking up a conversation that we've gone back to, just kind of like looking at different phases of our lives and friendship.
Different phases, kind of focusing in on-
The different versions of ourselves.
Different versions of ourselves.
And this one is the post-college,
like right out of college, college graduates,
fresh college graduate version,
which if you listen to Ear Biscuits,
we've covered different aspects.
They are listening to it right now.
If you've listened to multiple episodes,
especially as we've talked about different things
that happen in our lives at that point,
we're going to be making, at least I am,
I don't know what you're going to be doing,
I'm making an effort to talk about things
that I feel like I haven't talked about before
from that time period and different aspects of it.
Just so it's not like, oh yeah,
we talked about being graduates when we were in Crusade
and the whole missionary thing.
We've talked about that.
We're not going gonna talk about that.
Yeah, I'll try to make an effort.
Okay, make an effort.
Make an effort.
I'll make an effort.
Yeah, I think when you focus in on that window of time,
that version of us, it's totally different.
I was a totally different person.
And I am interested in how that
reflected on our friendship like we're
two totally different people than we are now yet we were still best friends so
you know it's it's something I'm grateful for but today is something that
I'm curious about I did want to tell you I never told you about my rolling loud
experience well I found out about it through the internet.
So, I mean, in general terms, what did you find out?
You've gone viral, Link.
Oh, the internet.
Rolling Loud is the world's largest hip-hop festival.
I don't know.
I think that's probably what they call it.
And it's in multiple places around the world. And it happened around Lincoln's birthday and like six or nine months in advance, he was asking me about it. And we had started going to some hip hop shows together. And so I was like, I'll buy you a ticket if you don't mind if I buy myself a ticket too.
So dad can tag along.
Yeah.
Tag along. it too so dad can tag along yeah dad along and we we didn't talk about the specifics of what
that meant like i never used the term tag along but i did say um when it got closer and he was
like i have some friends that are going i'm like okay yeah i can i can take you guys and then i
realized this is a three-day this is not not just a concert. It's probably, might have been a hundred
performers across three days. It's a freaking, I'd never been to a music festival. So I was a little
excited until it got close. And then I had some trepidation about it, but I said,
I don't think I'm gonna go Friday, but I'm going to go Saturday. I'm gonna go Sunday. And then it
went from, I'm not going to go Sunday at the same time as you, but I'm going to go Saturday, I'm going to go Sunday. And then it went from, I'm not going to go Sunday at the same time as you,
but I'm going to bring you home Saturday and Sunday.
So that was my role was just bringing them back home.
But beyond that, I'm curious, what have you gathered,
before I tell you firsthand my experience?
I didn't know you'd seen anything online.
I'd seen a couple of things.
Well, I knew you were going.
And I am, both from your previous experience,
but also from Locke's experience of going to a few hip hop concerts
and festivals and seeing footage from them, I know the vibe.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
I know the vibe.
And it's not the vibe that I typically, that I experienced, let's say,
at the Palomino Country Music Festival.
Which is really my vibe.
Yeah.
I definitely didn't fit in.
And so.
I mean, it was a younger demo than this 44 year old.
But I also know that while you're really into hip hop,
you're also kind of, you're also,
not only are you a middle-aged man,
but you're like a particular middle-aged man.
You're on the particular side of the spectrum
of middle-aged men. I'm particular.
Which means things like,
I think I'd rather be sitting down watching this.
You know what I'm saying?
There's like, that's how I feel about things, right?
Like when we went to that John Mayer concert,
and there was that one row of people in front of me
and the girls were standing up dancing,
I was like, oh really?
Okay, I just wanna sit and watch John Mayer.
That's what I'm here to do.
I'm here to sit and watch John Mayer, okay?
Yeah.
So I know that you have a little bit of that mentality.
There were no seats anywhere at this festival.
Like literally I didn't see a chair anywhere.
Right. Like even the port-'t see a chair anywhere. Right.
Like even the Port-A-Johns, you had to hover.
Yeah, and so when I saw the footage,
the footage that is circulating,
it made me laugh a lot.
It did?
Well, I'll play it for you and give some more context to I think the one clip you're talking about.
But yeah, let's see. It's got Lil Uzi Vert,
you got Travis Scott, you've got Future, you got Lil Wayne headlining. All of those people
headlining at different points. You got three stages. It was around SoFi Stadium. It was all
It was all outdoors in Inglewood.
And I get the, like Lincoln told me about Friday night,
because we were filming on Friday.
And I was like, I'm just too tired to go to this.
I don't think I can make it three days.
And I was starting to get scared that this wasn't for me,
that I needed to back out.
But the ticket price, like I didn't go through anything.
I just bought a ticket.
You know, I didn't try to like use any sort of internet fame and then just get frustrated that it didn't work. I just bought Lincoln a ticket for his birthday and just bought me a three-day pass.
He said, he was texting me that first night. He was like,
I was like, how's it going? He's like, it's going great. It got scary a little bit, but I'm having a lot of fun.
And he was talking about like the crowds just kind of pushing in on a stage
and getting really cramped.
I don't like that, man.
It was his first experience like being in, it wasn't just a mosh pit.
The whole thing, there could be a mosh pit at any point anywhere because it was all that type of non-seating festival,
rush the stage kind of a thing.
It's just like being pressed against other people
and getting this feeling.
Listen, this is as a six, seven person,
the few times that I've been in that situation,
and I'm like, if one person falls, we all fall like that.
I start having this claustrophobic reaction to this.
And there's, you know, I'm looking on Twitter,
and there's people talking about how two people died at Rolling Loud,
and I'm like, what the hell?
And then, like, first of all, that was not true.
It's just people just start these rumors
because they just want to get something going on the internet,
like a Twitter frenzy.
But of course, tragedies have happened, not the least of which is people being crushed.
I mean, since Rolling Loud, there was a concert somewhere else and two people did die as a
result of being crushed because there was some
sort of a scare and people started running yeah so it happens there's that's the that is the scary
part of it um but when i when i showed up on saturday with lincoln and his four friends um
they had already gotten the lay of land the day before and then they were just walking up to the
main stage
And I walked up there with them
Towards the stage at least
And this was 4 o'clock in the afternoon
Broad daylight
Things weren't really turnt yet
And it's cold in LA right now
It was chilly
City girls were playing
I do not have an opinion about the city girls
You're not saying just a general reference to the fact
that there were some girls from the city. You're saying this is a
group. Okay. This is a group.
Got it. And so I turned to Lincoln
and I was like, listen, I'll meet up
with you. I'm gonna go get the lay of
the land. I haven't seen everything. There's lots
of like booths and stuff like
this. I'm just gonna walk around
and see the stuff you've already
seen. And I'm gonna, you know, and I was thinking, I'm gonna give you space to be with your friends.
I don't think... Again, we didn't talk about it, and he was fine with anything.
He's very go with the flow, and his friends are really cool, really nice,
but I was like, I need to give them some space.
I don't want to be just hovering around with dad energy.
So instead, I went walking around with strange,
middle-aged man, unless you recognize him,
and then it's that guy from the internet energy.
By himself. By himself.
I'm proud of you, I would not have done that.
I really liked that.
I was really curious to see if I would be recognized at all.
I didn't wear a hat that first day.
And I was like, I bet you I'll blow a few people's minds.
Oh, that's okay.
And that's what happened.
I really started to get a kick out of the fact I'd just be walking,
and then somebody, you know, there are some people in the 30s,
mostly in their 20s,
and they're like, just jaws are dropping.
People start coming up to me, not getting mobbed or anything,
but I went to this one booth where they're selling cereal,
bowls of cereal for $5.
That's actually pretty affordable.
Yeah, yeah.
For an L.A. food option. And I was pretty affordable. Yeah. Yeah. For an LA food option.
And I was like,
this is my spot.
And people were like,
blink?
Or sometimes they'd be like,
rat?
Yeah.
And,
and,
the big question I was getting was,
why are you here?
I find that such an interesting question.
Why are you here? I find it interesting that people are surprised. And my answer was always, why are you here? I find that such an interesting question. Why are you here? I find it interesting that people are surprised.
And my answer was always, why are you here?
I mean, it's a music festival.
Implying, it's the same reason.
But I mean, that's the first thing people thought,
is like, I didn't think you would be here.
It's not like it's common knowledge across the board
with any casual person who recognizes my face
from a thumbnail that I like hip hop music.
Right, but hip hop is like the most popular form of music
on the planet.
That's true.
And this is Los Angeles.
But going to Rolling Loud is not,
it's a little bit more,
unless you're right in that expected demo,
it's more about,
you gotta overcome some hurdles to be at this thing,
you know, social hurdles. It's like, I'm hurdles to be at this thing, you know?
Social hurdles.
It's like, I'm willing to be...
It's another level.
It is another level of commitment, I think, that was implied.
So I didn't take offense at people saying,
why are you not here?
I just got a kick out of people just being...
just trying to make sense of it.
And I thought, you know,
if some pictures make their way on Twitter,
it might surprise...
Up your clout.
It might surprise some more people.
I didn't really think of it in terms of clout.
I just thought of it in terms of like,
that'll be fun to see what discussions can be had here,
in real time, and maybe on Twitter later.
So I wasn't embarrassed to be walking around alone.
I did have a cover story, which I started to use. I'm lost. Where am I? Yeah. I'm looking for the Home Depot.
I've got to do some home improvement for my family. Installing a toilet.
My cover story was my son is also here with some of his friends,
but then it just seemed like I'm the distant chaperone.
And that ain't true either,
because I really wanted to be there.
My son is somewhere, somewhere here.
But I felt the need sometimes to say why I was alone.
It was like, my son's here too with his friends,
and they were like, who are you here to see?
And I'm like, Lil Yachty.
Like, love his new album, big fan of Lil Yachty.
I don't have to be a fan of all of his music to be a fan of his approach to everything he does.
Like, artistically.
I like his artistic approach.
He takes risks.
And I was like, I hope he takes a risk at his show on Sunday.
And so I'm just walking around enjoying people's reactions. And then it occurred
to me as I was walking back to see Don Tolliver. I like Don Tolliver. I knew that Lincoln and his
friends were going to be up there, but there was no cell phone service once you got to the main
stage. You had to like back up something about the location or all of these people there.
you got to the main stage.
You had to like back up,
something about the location or all of these people there.
So I'm walking up trying to find them
and I'm realizing the crowd has gotten really thick
a lot further back for Don Tolliver
than it did for City Girls.
Okay.
I'm not going to be able to get to Lincoln.
I cannot communicate with anyone
on the group that we created
because they're all down there and no
service. So now I'm just alone at a concert. I'm not just, I'm not perusing booths. I'm in a crowd
of people that then, it's people standing, kind of looking overhead. There's some space. You can
kind of walk through people, walk through people, and then you get a little bit closer and it starts
to get dense. And so I wasn't anywhere near the front by any means,
but I got to the middle and was waiting for him to come out.
Oh, he's not even playing yet.
Not even playing yet.
And I'm smushed with people as he comes out.
And then the energy just starts pushing people forward and back,
and then they had to stop the show a few times and just,
get back!
Trying to give people in the front who were being smushed too much,
and I knew Lincoln was up there,
just get back!
Everybody take a step back.
And I'm like, this doesn't work.
Nobody does that. You gotta have some sort of, you got to develop a system.
I'm thinking like, do I need to get up there and get a mic and like help walk
through? If you're in the very back and if you don't move, no one in front of
you is going to be able to move. So we got to start in the very back.
That's not a very rolling loud announcement, I don't think.
Yeah. The guy got up there and he was like, all right, everybody on the left, take a step to your left.
And then nobody, everybody's like, your left or our left?
Yeah, right.
Everybody on the right, take a step to your right.
And then he was like, nobody moving.
And he's like, everybody on this side, if you can see me,
step to the way that I'm pointing.
That was better.
And then it was like, and if you're in the back,
you gotta move back. It's like, it actually
started to work, and then
the show resumed. But like, there
was a lot of pushing, a lot of
being in
personal space, and
I'm like, okay, my hands are up by my chin,
and I
couldn't put them down in my pockets if I wanted to.
And this was fun?
It was fun because in the midst of it, like, people were looking at me, and they were like, and some people would recognize me, but now we're a family.
We're stuck together in a group.
Right.
And so I quickly learned if anybody recognizes me, I'm just going to turn the conversation to the music.
Like if we're waiting.
During the show, nobody's talking.
Everybody's just like jamming out or whatever.
So I was like, I like this.
There was an anonymity to it.
Yes, I got recognized a few times,
but like once you settle in the spot
and like people are playing, like the show starts,
it's kind of like you get lost in a sea of people.
And it was fun.
He brought out Justin Bieber.
Wow.
For a song.
That was cool.
Lil Yachty was the second night.
I was more interested in him.
So Travis Scott was okay.
But like the next day I showed up later and lincoln was like we've made our way to the front
of the main stage so let's just work out when we're gonna meet up when we leave i'm like okay
that's great he was like i know you want to see yadi he's on the other stage get some good footage
for me because i'm gonna i have to give up Lil Yachty to stay at the front of the stage.
He and his friends end up staying there for like almost 10 hours.
They were like giving water bottles in the front and people were passing water
back and stuff.
So what are you about micturating?
You hold it or you just do something a little bit indecent.
You squat right there or something if it's an emergency.
Or it's where you need that stadium pal thing.
I know.
Stadium pal.
Because all the kids are wearing the big jeans now.
Yeah.
You could probably fit four or five stadium pals in your pants.
It's highly regulated.
You have to bring in a clear little bag.
You can't bring in supplies, but you can bring in a water balloon thing,
like the thing that I have when I go.
Like a camelback.
A camelback when I go mountain biking.
You can bring one of those in.
I knew I wasn't going to see him or his friends until the very end
after Future performed, and I was like,
all right, I'm going to watch a little bit of I Miss Moneybag Yo.
I heard he wasn't great anyway. A lot of these
people, they use these backing tracks and they're like the backing tracks doing
all the heavy lifting. But if you're a pro and a legend like Lil Wayne, you
bring out a live band and you have very minimal backing track because you are
the GOAT. And you bring out Nicki Minaj.
Wow.
I didn't see Nicki.
Did Yachty have a band?
I'll get to that.
So I was waiting for Yachty, and so Lil Uzi Vert's
supposed to be this like dynamic performer.
So I was like, I'm gonna watch half of his set
before I leave to get up close for Yachty.
And the dude comes out there and he's nuts.
But the thing that's... The middle screen, he's playing clips from horror movie B-movies.
Like the most grotesque moments from horror movies.
Like blood, guts, nastiness.
Right, okay.
The entire time. Not Right, okay The entire time
Not one song
The entire time
Right
Not really timed out to anything?
No
And I had to
After the second song
I was like, you know what?
I have to leave
I have to leave because this is stomach turning
That's why he did it
To get rid of people like you
Yeah
Lincoln said he felt a little nauseous Yeah, well he's a Neal But he was up at the front Couldn't do anything about it I don't believe because this is stomach turning. That's why he did it, to get rid of people like you. Yeah.
Lincoln said he felt a little nauseous.
Yeah, well he's an eel.
But he was up at the front, couldn't do anything about it.
I think I would've liked this.
Had a friend with him who the first night just got smushed so much that
they pulled him over the rail and then he was like,
oh, my shoe! My shoe! And then the security guard's like fuck your shoe and
he pulls him out and then escorts him out of the out of the area that's what i would have said and
so when i found him later he'd been walking around the entire show that was at like five o'clock at
night on uh saturday he walked around the entire festival With one shoe and one sock I mean fuck your shoe man
I guess
So
I'm down with that too
I got to the front
I might go next year
Row of
Lil Yachty
What?
Cause I was there like
45 minutes in advance
And like
Front row
Well
I got the front row
Of the normal people
And then there's a VIP section.
So I was as close as I could be without being very important.
Still being normal.
Yeah.
And I'm getting to know, I was like, I started talking to the people around me.
And I'm like, hey, I just want to talk to you because I think we might be smushed up against each other a little bit.
And I just want to be friends first.
And there were a couple other people who were there like alone.
And they were just there to see Yachty. And some people didn't, were just there because be friends first. And there were a couple other people who were there, like, alone, and they were just there to see Yachty,
and some people were just there because it was close.
But, you know, it was fun to, like, talk about the music,
and people think they knew who I was, but then they didn't,
and it was just like, don't worry about it.
We're just here to have fun.
And then this guy showed up right as the show started with a freaking VHS camera.
Oh.
And that's what shot this video.
He was like, he recognized me, and he was like filming the Lil Yachty show.
Yes, he did have a full band.
Yes, he did play Let's Start Here.
He like played the first three songs off that album, which is like super psychedelic,
like him channeling Pink Floyd.
People didn't know what to do with it.
That's a new one?
That's a new one.
And so he made a bold choice of like opening his show
with that and it was like, I was loving it.
And yeah, this guy with a VHS camcorder,
like beast on his shoulder, was filming.
Welcome to MTV News.
I'm here at the Lil Yachty Show at Rolling Loud 2013.
It's pretty pandemonium here,
but I'm having a fabulous time.
Put up on stage.
I like it really slow.
Pull up at the house, you ain't not sly. Nigga the truth. I don't really fit in, do I?
That's the part I saw.
I didn't see the MTV News part.
See, there's Yachty.
I've met Yachty before.
He was at the Game Awards.
Game Awards.
I'd like to meet him again.
I want him to come on our show or just be my friend.
So I'm assuming that you weren't officially there with MTV News.
That was a joke.
Yeah, and it wasn't 2013 either, which is what I said in the moment.
I just thought if this guy's pointing a camera at me,
I'm going to act like I know I don't fit in.
It's like what would be the reason I would be here?
2013.
I didn't even hear that the first time.
Because I am, I'm a correspondent for MTV.
That's the only logical reason that a guy like me would be here.
And I love the fact that the title of the video is Rolling Loud 2013.
Yeah.
Like he totally went with it.
Shout out to jojoworld.international on Instagram who posted this video.
Yeah, he didn't know I was gonna say that stuff.
I didn't even know if he was rolling audio.
I'm glad he was, but like, yeah.
And then I think I said 2013
because MTV doesn't have VJs in 2023.
And I was trying to come up-
It was intentional.
I was trying to come up with a date in the past
that felt like it could still be realistic.
Maybe 20, 2003.
2003 is what I should have said.
But yeah, you can, I mean, see my hands are up by my chin,
and then I'm just smushed in with all these people.
You look simultaneously like you're having a good time,
but there's also a sense of fear.
I was a little, I mean, at a certain point, the artist, including Yachty,
would like, they would, in between songs,
they would like yell like,
Open it up!
Open it up!
And they're trying to create a mosh zone
where it's like you open up a hole,
and then when the beat drops,
everybody just kind of slams in there.
Yeah.
So people can kind of mosh.
I don't care for that.
I mean, I understand that some people do.
I was close enough to the rail
that when he would start yelling,
open it up,
I would just get pushed against the rail.
There was a huge guy who I turned around one time
and they had opened up for him
and he was just flat on his face,
just passed out.
Two security guards came in, just like,
Whoa.
It took three people to hoist this guy up.
He was so big.
He fainted.
Yeah, or he took a nap.
I don't know what he did.
One or the other.
But, I mean, I had a blast.
I enjoyed just being in a sea of humanity,
listening to some, just vibing out to some music.
So you'll be back?
I think I'll do it again,
and I think I would do it alone.
Okay, well, I mean.
That's basically what I did.
You probably could get some people to go with you.
I mean, I'm not going, but I mean,
I do think you could get some people to go with you.
I was surprised that I enjoyed being alone
in a sea of people.
I don't know, something about it was, it was fun.
I mean, like the swaying from anonymity to be recognized,
I don't know, it was just, it was a strange experience.
I'm glad I had it.
Shout out to Lil Yachty, great set.
You made Rolling Loud for me.
Well, I'm glad you had a good time.
I'm glad you shared it with us.
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So set the stage.
We graduated from college.
You graduated in?
Technically 2001, but I co-opped and was still working at IBM.
So I was kind of. was still working at IBM.
So I was kind of- Right, right, right.
Because I graduated in 2000.
Christy graduated in 2000.
I graduated in December 2000.
Along with you.
Because I didn't co-op.
But you were already married
and I was not married when I graduated.
So this was when I was living over there at Driftwood Manor.
Right.
And I had,
with the help of my in-laws,
put a down payment on
a really not great apartment,
if you remember this place.
Yeah.
The full purchase price
for a three bedroom, two bath apartment
was $81,000.
In 2000, year 2001.
2000, yeah.
And so what I was doing
because I was still a college student
and I was paying this payment,
what I did is I started inviting a lot of people
to live with me beyond what code should allow.
I think at one point I had five other guys living with me.
I was sleeping on the floor.
What?
And I was charging them all rent to cover the rent.
And I more than covered the rent.
Oh, nice.
Because I remember-
You were sleeping on the floor.
I remember my payment, my mortgage was $623 a month.
And then there was like some taxes and insurance
that maybe sent it up, you know, still under $700 a month.
And I had five guys in there,
each paying $200 a month to live there.
Oh.
So I was cash flowing right from the start.
And none of these people-
I was like one of those YouTube finance bros.
Were people that we knew, because-
No, Greg was one of them.
I slept on the floor in Greg's room.
Oh, really?
Yeah, but there was a, I mean, it was a rotating batch of people who were just willing to live with me and willing to pay.
This was like a halfway house?
No one was in recovery.
It was just a bunch of? No one was in recovery.
It was just a bunch of crusade guys. Okay.
You know, and I mean, there was a bunch of people
that, Jesse's cousin lived there for a while.
I never went there.
Well, you should have.
I probably went there. It was beautiful.
I probably visited you there once
because I was a newlywed, Christy had graduated.
We had got married immediately,
and then we both started, I was still, yeah,
I was still studying and working at IBM
and she started a teaching job.
What, you had your engineering job, right?
I was working at Black & Veatch.
Well, so upon graduation, I had done a summer internship,
I think, with Black & Veatch, and then I was, yeah.
So basically in January of 2001.
And that's a firm that does what?
Designs power plants.
So like natural gas power plants mostly
is what we were doing at the time.
And I was in the civil engineering department
and I was basically coordinating
like underground utilities, whatever.
And I was engaged at the time to get married in June, 2001.
So I was gonna get married in six months.
And this is a weird thing,
because this is this moment in time
where I was this very involved landlord, essentially,
doing all these repairs. Because the other thing that happened is Jesse's dad had bought that house in Chapel Hill, that duplex in Chapel Hill,
because he's like a rental property guy. That's one of the reasons I bought that apartment is
because he's like, this is what you do, man. He's like a real estate guy. And he knew I was
marrying his daughter. And so he was trying to get some things in place,
and I'm grateful that he did,
including Jesse and her friends were living in this duplex
that he had bought for her her sophomore year or something,
and he was like, I'll sell this to you for what I bought it.
Oh.
And that was going to be the house that we lived in.
I wasn't going to in the the college apartment
with Jesse
we were gonna live
in a
like a
slightly nicer place
but
the way we were gonna
pay for it
was by renting out
the bottom
to another
to another family
a couple or whatever
because it was two bedrooms
kind of
it was a duplex
two bedrooms for us
two bedrooms for them
and
I say all this because I was thinking about this
on the way in, how much my life was consumed
with doing repairs on things.
So I was an engineer.
That sucks.
And I remember this other engineer named Lyle something.
And I don't know if you remember that downstairs
in Chapel Hill, but it was a basement
and it was a weird space that was like a completed basement,
but it was cinder block walls that had been painted.
And I was like, if we're gonna rent this thing out
and actually get some money,
or actually get somebody to care to live here,
I need to turn it into a good space.
So I'm going to put sheet rock
over the cinder block walls.
Now I got to figure out how to do that.
Now step one was the Bible study
that I was leading in NC State,
with those good, the bunch of good old boys
who were like really good at stuff.
I got them to come over and like do like the furring strips
to like create a base for it.
Oh, wow.
And then I ended up,
maybe with the help of one of them,
ended up hammering. Did you pay them?
You know what, I have no idea.
I bet you didn't.
Probably, or I probably said it was fellowship.
Either way, they had a great time.
You know, it's fellowship.
And I remember, this is before,
I mean this is 2001, and yes, the internet existed,
but YouTube didn't exist. And you couldn't figure out how to do things by going on the internet.
Interesting.
So I was like, I've got to put this sheetrock up and then I've got to mud and
sand, mud and like sand and finish the sheetrock. And this became my existence.
Because what I would do, is I would go to work and at lunch,
I would go over to Lyle's cube.
I can't remember this is name.
Sorry, Lyle.
And he was, and I would be, and I was like,
I'm doing the, he had done sheet rock in his house himself.
And so I would tell him at what stage I was in
and he would like tell me what to do next.
And then I would go home.
Actually, I wouldn't go home.
I would go to where Jesse lived,
because I was living in this apartment in Raleigh.
Yeah.
I would go out to Chapel Hill after work
and I would get in the basement and I would work
and listen to music.
For some reason, a lot of Natalie Merchant.
I don't know how I went through this.
I went through this Natalie Merchant phase.
So I'm lit and then like Sarah McLachlan,
all these like moody women.
And there's something about moody women and sheetrock
that really does something for me.
And I would just spend all this time getting this space.
That's a calendar by the way.
2024 calendar, pre-order now,
moody women and sheetrock.
And are they putting sheetrock up?
Because I tell you, you sweat.
You will sweat with some sheetrock.
I could look at some moody women doing some sheetrock.
They're not happy about it, usually.
Sometimes they get happy, but most times they're unhappy about it.
But it's just a weird moment in time.
I think January they're happy, but every other month they're...
And then I was, like, installing toilets.
Like, single-handedly.
Doing plumbing.
They do a PVC pipe.
I had to put this, like, pump, sump pump in this thing.
This explains why I think our friendship just came to a screeching halt.
It didn't come to a screeching halt.
It didn't, but...
I mean, as in...
I was very, very busy.
You were a landlord, engaged. I was trying to... I'll tell you what I was doing in a minute, but I mean, as in, I was a newlywed. I was very, very busy. You were a landlord, engaged.
I was trying to, I'll tell you what I was doing in a minute,
but like, yeah, it was like, you know,
we were in this transitional period.
So it was like, there wasn't,
we were building our futures.
Yeah, I was like very committed to like,
I'm gonna have this, this
apartment in Raleigh that I'm gonna go and do all the repairs myself, because
that's how you make money. You can't hire anybody to do all the repairs, I have to
figure out how to do all these, like minor, like minor repairs, you know,
sheetrock, plumbing, etc. Did you figure it out? Or did you? Yeah, did it? Because
that always ends in catastrophe for me. I actually got pretty skilled.
I like, I could install, I mean, it's all normal stuff.
Like I could install like a sink and fully like pipe it in.
I could install a toilet, like literally like put the seal in.
Just by talking to your cube mate?
A lot of the stuff is like just talking to the people
at Home Depot and then like reading directions.
There's not a whole lot to it.
I made some mistakes.
I learned some lessons. I can lay tile. Yeah. Lay tile, obviously paint, that kind of thing.
I hate doing that stuff now because I did it so much in my twenties because I kept those
properties and just kept going and doing all the repairs on them. So by June, when you got married,
well, then you moved into that duplex.
You moved out of the other place, obviously.
Yeah, yeah.
And you were still working at Black & Veatch.
Jessie was—
She was a student still when we got married.
Yeah.
We won't say what year she was because I don't want to give you a hard time.
I've said it this many times.
She was going into her junior year in college when we got married.
Okay.
Don't recommend it,
but if you come from an evangelical circle
like I did in the early 2000s,
you probably relate to this.
You get married so you can have sex without guilt.
And that's what we did.
It worked out for us.
Because we did wait.
Yeah, you did it so you could have sex. Yeah, right.
I loved her.
I wanted to spend the rest of my life with her,
but I really wanted to have sex with her as well.
Right.
Only way to complete that equation is get married.
Yeah.
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Visit amex.ca slash yamx. Benefits vary by card. Terms apply. And meanwhile, over here in my neck of the woods, which was Apex, North Carolina,
I was finishing up my studies, but mostly working at IBM as an industrial engineer.
And they had like a department.
Like my department had probably, I think it was like five or six industrial engineers that were then assigned to different places, different things.
Like there were all these buildings.
Like at RTP, the IBM campus like had all these office buildings, but then also these buildings. At RTP, the IBM campus had all these office buildings,
but then also manufacturing buildings.
And there were some that would build servers,
and then some that would build desktops and laptops.
And then there was one that would just refurbish
all of the stuff that came in off lease.
And it didn't even have to be IBM equipment,
but it was like...
Think pads?
They would refurbish laptops, think pads.
Think pads with the little servers.
Little red nipple that was the mouse.
Yeah, that thing felt kind of felty on top,
but grippy at the same time.
I kind of liked it.
Yeah, it's just like pushing
on that,
on that Rudolph the red nose nipple.
Are his nipples red too?
I bet they are.
Are they glow?
I think they're covered in fur.
Oh, okay.
They're vestigial for him as a male reindeer.
You could probably get some milk out of them
if you wanted to.
Anyway, the place that I worked,
the facility I was in,
building 693,
had all the refurbishing
stuff.
There were
different manufacturing lines that would refurbish
different things, including
monitors.
And then
there was this huge warehouse with all the parts in it. And so like, and then there was like this huge warehouse
with all the parts in it.
And like I worked with, shout out to my friend Mark,
still friends with Mark after all these years.
Like he started full time when I was still a co-op back then
trudging through all of these warehouses
full of just computer parts.
And so my job was designing, I kind of worked under another engineer because
I was still a co-op, but the first big job I got was redesigning the packaging line for
everything that was refurbished would then go through this hole in the wall on a conveyor belt.
this hole in the wall on a conveyor belt.
And then they would box it up and tape it up
and then put it on a pallet and then put it in on temporary storage and then ship it out
to wherever it was going next.
So, and then everybody who worked on the other side
of that wall, the vast majority of them were from,
they were African guys.
They were like, mostly from Nigeria.
Like, I loved going in there and talking to those guys.
They were like the nicest guys.
They were always happy to see me.
And little did they know that my job was to try to reduce the number of them
that it took to do what they did.
To find every efficiency.
You know, find some efficiencies.
And when I redesigned this line, I had to, I said,
you know what? Let's buy this machine that will take a box and it'll tape it up. So you
don't have to tape it. That doesn't become a manual process. You just, you build the
box, you put the thing in it,
and then you push it through this machine,
and it tapes the bottom and the top at the same time
and spits it out real nice
instead of having to struggle to tape this thing.
So my big project was finding that machine,
talking to these vendors to bring this thing in
and sell me on it,
and do we need one of them or do we need two of them,
and do we need to change the trajectory of these conveyor belts an industrial engineer in general doesn't
design things they design how things are made so it's more about the process of making something
than it is what the design of actually the thing right so I designed how it got in a box. And I remember showing up the weekend
that they had to like tear everything down when like the line was down and then rebuild it. And
like, I had, I was so nervous. Like I probably sweated so much. Like I had no confidence at that
stage of my life. Like I was, it felt like a fish out of water. Well. Being in this place.
I mean, you probably shouldn't have had the level
of responsibility that you did.
I learned a lot, but.
I know that I shouldn't have had the level
of responsibility that I had.
They throw these junior engineers into like,
I mean, I had people like checking up on me
and looking over my shoulder.
Right, my plan was approved,
but then when I had to actually oversee the building of it, like people were coming to me
and like, hey, when you design this, there was a three foot
gap, but as you can see, there's no three foot gap.
No one can, OSHA's not gonna let anybody walk through here.
What are we gonna do?
And I'm like, oh shit, I knew this was gonna happen.
Let me go clean out my britches.
You know, so we didn't actually
cut any jobs in that instance.
We just made it more safer and more efficient.
Let me ask you a question.
So I feel good about that.
No one from Nigeria or anywhere lost their job.
Anyone watching this who is not familiar with our story
and knows us from Good Mythical
Morning and knows your personality
and the things that make you funny, etc.
is surprised.
Right? Is very surprised.
Right. This was your job?
Like you, who
I know as the guy who can't hold a
knife and has
to have the rules of the game explained to him
multiple times before he really gets them,
is making these decisions at IBM.
I've definitely gotten stupider.
And so what do you-
Let's just go ahead and say that.
Well, what do you-
I don't think I was as dumb then.
I think that you, like, were you a different,
did your brain work differently back then?
Like, what do you, how do you account for this?
The perfectionism of, like, the thing that I love the most
was like getting on AutoCAD
and reflecting a physical environment completely accurately
within an AutoCAD environment.
But would you enjoy doing that right now
if that was what the afternoon entailed?
Not, probably for maybe a couple of weeks,
but not for years, you know?
And again, still, I didn't do everything right.
It's like, oh, this three foot gap
doesn't exist in the real world.
Or this tape machine doesn't actually work
as good as you thought it did.
And now we're mad at you.
Did it work not so well?
It had its issues.
It needed a person there to make sure that it worked correctly. Yeah, it needed a person.
That's how it usually goes.
So my job, I wouldn't say my job was stressful,
but I certainly made it stressful.
And so like that was, it was this sense of like,
okay, I've entered the real world.
I'm tucking in my shirt for some, you know.
Everybody was.
And.
Well, you had to, you couldn't go,
you couldn't not have your shirt tucked in.
Right, you might get caught in a conveyor belt.
You would be told you have to tuck your shirt in.
Oh, no one would, no one told me to tuck my shirt.
I wore jeans, but I did tuck my shirt in.
I wore jeans on Friday. Oh wow, you had to wear but I did tuck my shirt in. I wore jeans on Friday.
Oh, wow.
You had to wear slacks?
Every day.
You can only wear jeans on Friday.
Yeah.
Because I was in an office environment.
Yeah.
I wasn't- I bet you that's not the case anymore.
It's probably-
I mean, I'm sure COVID changed everything,
but it probably-
Oh, yeah.
The last 20 years have changed a lot.
And then Christy had just started her job
as a high school math teacher.
And she did the same thing I did,
was she probably could have been really good at it.
She was really good at it.
She was nominated for freshman teacher of the year,
like first year teacher of the year.
I think she got that award.
But she stressed herself out so much in the process
that we were both in this place
where it's like, all right, we gotta do this life thing right.
And so I remember being, and then we were newlyweds
and we were house sitting for a couple
that was missionaries in Slovakia
and taking care of a full grown wire mariner named Solomon.
I remember Solomon.
Beautiful dog.
Regal.
Very regal beagle.
Yep.
And he stayed in the house and he was lovely.
But yeah, it was like all of a sudden we were thrust into the real world. Here you are like installing toilets and sheetrock and I'm doing tape machines and trying to support my new wife in her geometry excursions.
You know?
It's good to have a woman
who knows her way around a triangle.
She's only three years older than,
no, she's four or five.
She's only like six years older
than the students she was teaching.
I know, yeah, yeah.
You know?
Yeah.
As like a first year teacher.
We were all kids. Of high school students?
Very much kids.
Now, one of the things that,
so we'll get into talking about how,
what we do today was manifesting itself in those days
and how that happened.
And maybe talk about it in a way
that we haven't talked about it before.
But one of the things that was happening with me,
I've always been a relatively confident person
and haven't had much,
I'm kind of an introvert, right?
And I don't like drawing attention to myself a lot of times,
but when the attention comes,
I can usually settle into comfortably commanding it.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
In front of a group of people, doing a presentation,
talking about something.
But one of the things that happened to me,
and it's not like this never happens.
It happens very infrequently now,
but it happened frequently then.
I want to see if you relate to this,
because what you were saying about the shit in your pants moment
made me think of it.
So there was an engineer who was a senior engineer who, Jeremy was his name, and he
was basically the guy that, he wasn't my boss, he was a coworker, but he was the guy that
I went to to help me do everything.
Okay.
And I asked him so many questions, so many questions about so many different steps that
I got to.
And he was not particularly,
he didn't have the best attitude in terms of wanting to help me.
He would not take the moniker of mentor on himself?
He was a reluctant advisor.
But one of the things that would happen,
and it didn't just happen with him,
I would go to somebody's cubicle
and I would be asking a question
or trying to explain something,
and I would have this moment of embarrassment.
Yeah.
Right?
A moment of embarrassment
that would turn into a little bit of a red face.
Oh, man!
Okay?
I'm comfortable talking about it.
Yeah, me too.
Because it doesn't happen very often anymore. And then I would know that my
face was red. And then I would get embarrassed about that.
Oh, yeah.
And it becomes this loop. And I'm like standing there asking this guy this
question about this thing. And I'm like, he knows I'm fucking embarrassed about
something right now. And why am I embarrassed about this thing?
Right. Because it's a dumb question.
And that happened, I, that had not happened to me at all up until that point in my
life.
In college, I kind of understood what was going on, and I found my place, and like,
I was like, college, being in college, man.
Best foot forward.
Like, I know how to be the college guy here, and to like, assert myself in this way.
Like, it was a great environment for me.
New job and having to ask a lot of questions and be doing some stuff that I felt like I was in over my head.
I started noticing that that was happening.
And then I was like, what is wrong with me?
Do I have an anxiety?
I didn't understand.
I didn't know what anxiety or anxiety disorder was at the time.
And I'm not saying I didn't even have one.
But that started happening.
You had an anxious phenomenon.
And that only ever happened on a regular basis
during my engineering job.
That happened to me in high school.
I remember- Oh, really?
There was this, there were two girls,
two friends of ours in high school that like,
one time I was talking to, I mean, she was just a friend, and one time I was talking to a, I mean, it
was, she was just a friend. And I remember I was talking to her and I don't know
what it was that I was embarrassed about, but like my face started turning red and
she was like, why is your face turning red? And that, you know, when you're
talking to somebody and they're like, why is your face turning red? Why is your
neck turning red? Oh, It makes me feel uncomfortable.
I know. And it's like, and that makes it so much worse. And then all of a sudden
it's like, it's like, it's like your set ablaze.
Yeah, you can just feel it.
And there were two girls who would do it to me. And I got to the point, and they
were my friends so I had to talk to them all the time, but it got to a point where
I couldn't talk to them without getting embarrassed for no reason except except thinking that I was gonna get embarrassed
I got embarrassed because I knew I was gonna I was getting embarrassed that's bad and it was two of
them and they were both they knew it too and they had power over me and be like why is your face
turning red it's like can we just, can you just,
either I'm never gonna talk to you again
or you're never gonna ask me that again.
Yeah.
And then it's-
And if you ask somebody, listen, I'm not-
It would happen after that, oh my gosh,
just like that high school experience
would then happen at other points in my life.
And it would just kind of bring out that trauma back.
Like, I don't want to over sensationalize it,
but it was just like, it's a bad feeling, isn't it?
When you're like, the worst.
What file should I pull up?
Oh gosh, I'm getting so hot right now.
What?
It's the worst, man.
I think I've gotten to a place where it's very unlikely to happen interpersonally
at this point.
Almost impossible.
But in a certain sized group,
it could happen.
Right.
It could still happen.
And then when it starts,
and there's like a little bit of a fear of it happening.
Oh, because it's obvious.
Oh, you can definitely get in your head about it.
So, yeah.
I mean, people think that like,
like if I asked Trimer, my friend from back then,
like I think he would have described
my engineering approach as like,
that I was still pretty fun.
I was still, there was still a lot of link happening,
but it wasn't like it does now.
Like I've given myself fully over, over the years of being a performer and, you know, the LA
influence. Like when you shed the expectations of having to tuck your shirt in, you can, I,
you know, just yourself be as weird as you is something that like is still an evolution for me.
The seeds of that were there then and like the college version of me would come out at
work sometimes, but mainly it was over lunch with coworker friends.
But also if I was given a presentation, I just couldn't help myself but say something
a little goofy.
Like I knew that everybody took everything really seriously,
and I had these certain glints of realization that none of this is worth it.
But it was only like if I cracked a joke or I made my presentation funny at the beginning.
I did that a few times.
Yeah, I had the opportunity.
But other than that, I took it very seriously.
I remember having the opportunity to do a presentation
for something in front of some department.
And like, I prided myself on my college presentations,
right, that's how I made A's in college was just like,
snow them with charisma.
You do the work, but give me the presentation
on the day, it's gonna be fine.
And I remember just going into my performance mode,
which I had not done at all in any context with anybody.
They were surprised.
And people came up after, well, I didn't know
you had that in you.
Because I was like, oh, I guess I haven't been.
That guy whose face turns red every time he talks to me.
He sure did.
Really pulled one out.
He did a great job with his presentation.
There's jokes and funny slides.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, but I never really had the opportunity to fully become myself there because what I was doing wasn't really.
That's not what you were hired for.
No, but I'm just saying it wasn't my That environment for me
I wasn't exercising my full gifting
If you will
But the way that was happening
So six months into that
Jesse and I got married
And so then we're living in Chapel Hill
But she's going to school
I'm still commuting to Black and Veatch
You're married to Christy
You're in Apex.
We're both sort of establishing ourselves
at different churches.
You're going to a church in Apex,
I'm going to a church in Chapel Hill,
which obviously, as you know from our backstory,
that's a really big part of our lives,
so getting involved there is something
that's kind of unfolding.
Right.
But this is how the seed of what we do now was still there.
And it was more of like a sapling
because it had been planted early in our lives
and in high school and in college
with all the weird stuff that we did together,
videos that we made.
But because we had been asked to MC Christmas Conference,
and that was something that was still happening, what we did is we said, let's get together,
hell or high water, let's get together once a week
at one of our homes, and we're going to just do
creative things, we're gonna write songs,
we're gonna conceptualize video concepts, et cetera,
all with this goal of, hey, we've got to fill these spots come December
with these entertaining ideas that we have.
But boy, I just, if we had not had had that,
that first of all, that regular,
like we had a goal,
we had something that we were working towards,
but then we had this,
we're going to get together
and that's how we're going to incubate
this creative side of us. If we had not made we're gonna get together and that's how we're gonna incubate this creative side of us.
If we had not made that decision,
who knows what we would be doing today
and where we would be.
Yeah, I think that, I mean, we were hanging out.
Like we were making plans as like the four of us as couples.
I'm sure we did stuff together.
I'm sure we did stuff with Greg and his wife, Jen.
And like, we were all hanging out and doing stuff,
but it wasn't every weekend.
And we were living in, you know,
we were living 40 minutes apart.
And we also had no money.
And we had no money.
So, I think that-
So your ability to like, well, let's go out to eat.
It's like, well, hold on, our grocery budget is $200.
Right.
And that's for all the groceries for the month.
And our eating out budget is like $100.
So, I think-
You're gonna go through that pretty fast.
I'm just getting at the fact that I don't,
I think that if we hadn't had that weekly workshop,
like on Thursday nights or whenever it was,
that, I mean, I think our friendship would have suffered at that point.
We were working towards a common goal of like,
we have this audience of 1,300 college students
at the end of the year.
Sure, it's only February, but let's go ahead and-
We were so committed to it.
And I think that that's had to, I mean, it was a big, I don't know if it was a lifeline to our friendship,
but it was certainly a big contributor to us being, staying close and having this thing to work on together.
So it wasn't just, hey, let's get together once or twice a month
whenever we can get our weekend schedules to line up.
And when we got together, we not only worked on, like,
conceptualizing skits, a lot of it was writing songs, too.
I do remember that because I remember writing that
Attribute to Friendship song.
It's like that story song we wrote
that wasn't even funny for any reason.
I remember getting together in the apartment
before the one that you moved into.
So I guess we started it pretty early
or maybe you moved into that.
I don't remember going to that,
the Sandlin Place apartment and getting together.
I remember when I moved out of 3000 C,
there was a few months that we would still get together
there.
And then I remember-
Yeah, because there was a semester
in which we still all lived there.
When you moved-
After you got married.
And then when you got married-
Well, not, just a few months, like that summer.
We lived there that summer.
Okay.
You got married in June.
We continued to stay there for the summer,
like leading up to the end of the 12 month lease.
But then I definitely remember driving
after working as an engineer, like getting on the road,
telling, remember Christy,
this is the night that I don't come home
because I leave work and I'm going to Rhett's house.
And like, Jessie would like, she was like,
"'Newlywed, I'm gonna make you guys dinner
"'and wanna be, Rhett's friends coming over
"'and they're gonna work on their stuff.'"
Well, partly because they had told us to keep doing that.
You know, it was all around the same time
with Greg's wedding where we wrote the song
for his rehearsal dinner. That's right.
And Jessie and Christy were like,
"'You guys need to keep doing this.'"
Because the other thing that was happening,
it wasn't just preparing for Christmas conference,
but I don't remember what year it was,
but right around this time is when Cole
asked us to do the show at Carolina,
like the one night only thing,
which we've talked about this whole,
we're kind of getting into that stage
that we talked about before.
But that gave us something else to work towards.
There was all in the, like, there wasn't,
there were not many years in which we ever thought,
I mean, I kind of knew going into engineering
that it wasn't a permanent thing for me
because I tried to, like, change the communications
because I thought I was just going to go into ministry.
I was like, I'm going gonna go on stint or something.
I'm gonna be on Stafford Crusade eventually,
but I gotta wait until Jesse graduates so we can do that.
And I was a little bit more in love
with the stability of the job,
and it was a good-paying job.
And at that point, we weren't necessarily thinking
about doing it together.
There was no path to full-time entertainment.
You went on stint or you got a job at a campus,
but it wasn't until Cole asked us to do that show,
Shane Dyche saw us do that show,
was like, you guys should do something as a position,
yada, yada, yada, all that stuff led to.
So we were also working on that.
So we were pretty diligent,
like getting together every week, working on stuff,
developing our craft,
as crappy as it was. But we weren't, some funny observations I make now,
we were not like performing for anybody.
There was no outlet.
It was like, let's go to somebody's house
and write some songs, knowing that we will perform these
for a bunch of college students at some point.
But it wasn't like, hey, what if we went to a comedy club?
Like we never thought, to this day, have never performed at a comedy club.
Right.
Have never done anything in a way that most people would think is the logical way to go about things.
We didn't view comedy at clubs.
Yeah, never been to one. Not only didn comedy at clubs. Yeah, never been to one.
Not only didn't perform at one, had never been to one.
There was like a famous one, Charlie Goodnight's in Raleigh,
which I think is gone now, but.
Yeah, but we didn't, yeah, we didn't do any of that.
Never crossed our minds that we would do that,
or we would be like, well, let's put on a little show,
or let's go and perform in this context.
Because it was very much about live performance
because it was like we're gonna have
this student's attention.
But it's funny because we were, yeah,
we were doing these things that feel very like
you gotta like get your stuff together.
We're always responsible and dependable to a fault.
Yeah.
I think I would still categorize us in that way.
You know, like we carry out our lives and our business
and our relationships in a very responsible
and dependable way.
Almost sometimes so much that that it can get in the way
of just like being a weird creative person.
We never did anything.
Cause we felt like it.
We always did something.
Cause we had obligated ourselves to do it.
And then it's like,
well,
that just means we like,
we have to do it.
It doesn't matter what you feel about it.
Okay.
Well,
this is the way that you have to do this.
If you're going to have this apartment and you got to get these guys to do
this and you got to do the repairs and then you got to get this job and you
have to do it in this way
and do this presentation in this way.
We were all thinking that same way.
And then when the opportunity to apply that principle
to entertainment came along
in a very weird way that it came along for us,
we applied the same level of process to it
that we've just kind of carried over for the past 17, 18 years
to up to this point. It's, but we've thankfully been able to do it in a way that now, yes,
we are different people in a lot of ways, right? In terms of like, what is your day like? And what are you thinking about?
How are you approaching things?
Yes, there's still this like sense of responsibility
and duty to our family and our employees
and making sure that these things are done in the right way.
Still very important to us.
It's like ingrained, you're never gonna get rid of it.
But yeah, it's like, if that version of me
and that version of you were to come into this room
right now and sit down, first of all, I would be like,
hey man, I have a few style tips.
Yeah.
But I would also be like, it's gonna be interesting
to see the way that that evolves
over the next 20 years for you.
As you start to think about it a little bit more, right?
But then, and then of course,
we would have a really interesting spiritual conversation
because we were very locked in on a very particular way
of thinking about things and we're 100% sure,
without doubt, that we were right about it.
And so that would have been an interesting conversation
to see what we have become,
the heretics that we have become.
But I think that if we were to have a conversation
about the creative things that we're doing,
if we were to be like,
let me tell you what we did yesterday.
Oh God, we'd flip out.
Yeah, it's great. We would be like, oh yes, we get to be like, let me tell you what we did yesterday. Oh God, we'd flip out. Yeah, it's great.
We would be like, oh yes, we get to do that?
We get to do that?
We never gave ourselves full permission
to just put the dream out there.
It was like, we didn't talk about the dream all the time.
We talked about the thing that we were working on,
the next thing.
And it wasn't like, if you have a band and you're like,
you talk about the dream of getting a record deal,
you know, there's a path.
Like, because there was no set path, it was like,
okay, this may be all we've got.
We've got this show at the end of the year that,
well, we're emceeing this conference,
we're just gonna turn it into our show
when we get our 10-minute segments.
And then your brother's like,
hey, come to Carolina and talk to my students
and make it into a comedy show.
It was like, okay, we can obsess about that,
but it wasn't, there were no,
we couldn't connect those dots to any larger dream.
So it was very much like scrambling around in the dark and it was unspoken a
lot of times,
you know,
um,
what it is we were working towards because,
you know,
it didn't exist.
So,
you know,
I give us a lot of credit that with no path,
with no,
um,
instruction manual,
we still found a way to like stick with it.
We're gonna get together.
We have these isolated events
and we're gonna obsess about them.
And that was fun and fulfilling.
And I hope it can be encouraging for people,
because again, it doesn't have to be the case.
Like, you know, if you've got a job right now,
you're working, doing something,
first of all, make the most of what it is that you're doing
and find as much joy as you can in it, you know.
But maybe there's something-
Meet a Nigerian.
But maybe there's-
Get married.
There's something that is a point of passion
that you don't necessarily understand
how that could even be a career.
And maybe it isn't.
Maybe it's just a really awesome hobby.
Yeah.
But I just think it's important to see that thing
like a little plant.
Yeah.
And that plant needs things.
That plant doesn't need to be put into the attic and covered
because it will die.
Give it a little something.
And you'll have to find a new seed somewhere.
Right.
Give it a little something all along the way.
If you just keep giving it, you keep feeding it in some way,
you don't know what it will grow into.
Yep.
You have no idea, but you got to keep feeding it.
Yeah.
If you don't kill it, it can grow into. Yep. You have no idea, but you gotta keep feeding it. Yeah. If you don't kill it,
it can grow into something.
Boy,
that ended on a motivational speech.
I like that.
That involved a plant.
Yeah.
Your wife would be proud.
Yeah,
she would.
She would.
I think she's nurturing
her love for plants
for that exact reason.
Well,
that leads nicely
into my rec if you're ready for that. I'm Well, that leads nicely into my rec,
if you're ready for that.
I'm ready for this rec, yeah.
I hinted at this recently when I said I had a rec,
but I told you like a something from this rec,
but now I'm going to give you the rec,
speaking of creativity.
So I have found this podcast called
Spark and Fire, Fuel Your Creativity.
This is from the Wait What People in BBC.
And every single episode is essentially
talking to a creative person who did something
that you probably know about.
For instance, a good episode is Ryan Johnson
talking about Knives Out.
Okay.
And the name of this episode is Cultivate a Child's Sense of Wonder, Knives Out, director Rian Johnson. So there's always like this is kind of the principle of creativity that we're going to suss out over the course of 45 minutes or so.
And it's an interview, but what you hear is like a setup.
It's very well organized in this way that like,
this is the principle that Ryan Johnson is about to
elucidate in this conversation about Knives Out.
And it's gonna be fun.
You're gonna learn things like how long has he had this idea?
How did it come about?
Like, what was he thinking?
Like what childhood experiences and stuff led him to,
and he's actually realizing some of this,
like in the interview, like, oh,
I guess this was from my grandma's house or whatever.
Huh.
So you hear that.
But it's formatted.
They format it.
And then like the woman who hosts it will be like,
I'm going to now that he's finished talking,
cause it's all produced, you know, say the principle that you should take here.
And how long is an episode?
Like 45, this one, the Rian Johnson one's 45 minutes.
Some of them are 36, some of them are,
it's between 30 and 45.
And then every episode is originally scored by someone.
Okay. Which is.
Well, if you're going to talk about creativity,
you better be creative.
That's overkill for a podcast,
but I definitely appreciate it.
Spark and fire.
I,
you know,
any,
there's like Patton Oswalt talking about like coming back with a special
after his wife's death.
And,
and then there's just people that I didn't even know about.
Like the,
the,
the thing I was telling you about the take your, don't take yourself too seriously, but take your work very seriously. That's from this
guy, Mark Bradford, who's a visual artist who creates these incredible things. Um, these
tapestries where I have to tell you about this because I want to go see him. I think he's got some in LACMA, but he takes like a medieval tapestry.
Okay.
And he takes a picture of it, you know,
like he takes a picture of a medieval tapestry
or takes a picture that, he finds a picture of one.
Then he prints it out on this giant sheet of paper
or a canvas or something, so it's like feet across.
And then he starts putting stuff onto it, all these different materials. It feels kind of like junk, but putting it in there, inspired by and basically
kind of like, oh, here's a horse here, I'm gonna make that horse out of this thing,
and then I'm gonna make this guy out of this thing. And he builds it, and he
builds it, and he builds it. And so he's actually creating interpretive layers
of an original work of art over time
through different materials.
And then he takes acid
and he starts peeling back some of the layers with acid
and he sees how it happens.
And sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn't.
And it's just this remarkable...
I was so inspired listening to it. I'm not doing a great
job of articulating it. But the idea that he's starting with this original thing, that's this
inspirational palette, and then building these creative layers on it, and then trying to capture
something that's a multi-layered interpretation of this original work of art. And because this
is such an amazing thing,
and he does it so amazingly,
he's become this very in-demand visual artist
that's got his work everywhere.
And he's just very inspiring to listen to,
talk about this process.
You haven't even seen the art.
Look at you.
No, but I'm like, I wanna know this guy.
He's in LA, I wanna know him.
Oh, you wanna be his friend.
I wanna be his friend.
He's also 6'8".
Oh.
So I like, you know, I don't know a be his friend. He's also 6'8". Oh.
So I like, you know, I don't know a lot of tall people.
He can reach tall tapertries.
Tall people tend to have the demeanor that I can match with.
We like making ourselves...
Why's your face turning red?
We like making ourselves small and doing big things.
I like tall people.
I'm tall.
Shout out to tall people.
Spark and fire.
All right, There it is.
Hashtag Ear Biscuits.
Let us know what you think about all this.
Please leave us a voicemail with how you're processing things.
1-888-EAR-POD-1.
Yeah.
Hey, Red Link.
My name's Barry.
I'm a longtime fan, especially the podcast.
I just wanted to say that I'm blown away by the digging a medium-sized whole video that you guys made on the Red Link main channel.
When y'all talked about moving away from TV and embracing more digital content, I think this is like a perfect example of that.
I'm just really proud of how good that video is and I wanted to give props
to everyone involved in making it. In my opinion, it was a masterpiece and I hope it's indicative of
more of future content. So thank you guys a lot. I mean, I'm just blown away. It was awesome.
Thank you, guys.