Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - Our Post-Vaccination Wish List | Ear Biscuits Ep.285
Episode Date: April 26, 2021Restaurants, movies, friends! Listen to R&L talk about some of the things that they are most looking forward to after getting fully vaccinated on this episode of Ear Biscuits! To learn more about li...stener 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 round Table of Dem Lighting,
we're talking about life post-vaccination.
We're talking about when I'm fully vaccinated,
I'm gonna fill in that big old blank.
And we're both half vaccinated.
Half-vaxxed as of this recording.
And soon to be fully vaxxed.
And so we're gonna talk about the excitement
and the anticipation and then the re-entry
into more of normal life
or just how we've anticipated that in our brains
versus the reality of starting to carry that out.
And also talking about a phenomenon
called re-entry anxiety.
Oh, and you're not talking about space travel.
No, I'm talking about-
Or sorting the mail.
No, not talking about that.
But yeah, so I think there's kind of a dark side
to getting on with our lives,
having been vaccinated.
And of course that's not to say,
we're recording this and then releasing it
a few weeks later.
So just in full disclosure, there's-
We're always a little bit ahead of the game.
There's some things that,
we're not as current as possible
and things change and update so quickly.
I just wanna put that out there.
Yeah.
And you know what?
Because we're talking about vaccines,
there is a lot of vaccine hesitancy out there, right?
So, you know me, I can't just move along.
I can't just get my vaccine and not say anything about it.
So here's what I wanted to do
before we get into the rest of the episode.
Yeah.
I wanted to make my vaccine pitch,
my pitch for why I think you should get the vaccine.
I got it and I think that you should get it
if you're not in a risk group and if you qualify.
There's a lot of information floating around
and it sways people.
Most people like me, you just wanna make a decision
and get on with your life and I don't go on Facebook.
I don't do, I find myself avoiding engaging
in a lot of the information and the deep dives
because it stresses me out and I just want to get on with it
and move past this.
And that's not necessarily a healthy thing,
but I know that there's a lot of people like me out there
that are, well, they haven't gotten vaccinated
and they don't know if they are,
but just looking at the information
and all the conflicting opinions is very intimidating,
overwhelming, anxiety inducing,
and you just wanna curl up in a ball and avoid it.
We live in a very interesting time
where it is legitimately very difficult
to move forward with decisions like this
without at least some sort of hesitancy
because of the way the information
and misinformation spreads, right?
And because there's so much attachment
to what these decisions mean about who you are,
who you're affiliated with, what your core beliefs are.
Everything has been politicized.
It's very, it's loaded.
All these decisions and perspectives
are so loaded.
Well, here's what I'm gonna try to do.
I'm gonna try to put this in, again,
I'm not a scientist, I'm not a doctor,
you already knew that.
I'm a guy who eats weird things on the internet
and has a podcast with his best friend.
Hi, Link. Hey.
But I am a concerned citizen
and I've been thinking about this in a way
that I hope can cut through a lot of the numbers
and the arguments and a lot of things
that can get kind of confusing and misleading
and just kind of talk to you as a friend.
Now, first of all, if you think that
the medical establishment is an extension of the deep state
and the vaccine campaign is a scheme to inject microchips
into people to control them, this pitch is not for you.
Okay?
You can fast forward
or you're probably not listening already.
But if you are listening,
I do have something for you at the end,
so please stick around.
This is my pitch for those of you who are on the fence.
You have reservations about the vaccine.
You've heard about the side effects.
What about those blood clots?
Weren't these vaccines developed really quickly?
How do you know that they're safe long-term?
And by the way, COVID isn't that dangerous.
Why would I get a vaccine with unknown side effects
when I'd probably be fine if I got COVID?
If you thought anything like that, this is for you.
Okay, so let's start with the ultimate purpose
of the vaccine.
The vaccine is not primarily about protecting you
individually from the virus.
Vaccines are our best available tool
for eliminating disease across a population,
in this case, all of humanity.
This is how we end a disease.
So framing the decision around your own personal risk
is kind of missing the point.
This isn't about you as much as it's about us.
It's not a me thing, it's a we thing.
Now, speaking of the we thing,
if we don't reach herd immunity,
there's a real risk of COVID continuing to evolve
and form variants, and we're gonna be dealing with this
for a very long time.
The more people who get the vaccine,
the more likely we beat it.
And even if we don't reach herd immunity,
which given the vaccine hesitancy
and the limited rollout around the world,
there's a very real possibility
we will not reach herd immunity as we would like to,
but even so, more vaccines mean less of a problem
with COVID for everybody down the line.
So it's not like a lost cause by any means.
Now, you may have heard that the vaccines
don't stop infection or transmission,
but they only lessen the symptoms.
You might be asking, why do I have to wear a mask
after I get vaccinated?
Well, scientists are actually very hesitant
to make claims until they have good data.
It's kind of their thing.
But they're getting a lot of data very quickly.
And the latest data indicates that these new vaccines
not only prevent severe COVID and hospitalization
almost completely,
but they also very likely prevent infection
as well as transmission.
Therefore, the hesitancy to move beyond masks
and social distancing has been because we wanna make sure
that that is the case, okay?
That's a big part for that, a big part of that.
But what about the risks?
This seems to be the thing that most people talk about.
What about the risks? Specifically, the thing that I that most people talk about. What about the risks?
Specifically the thing that I hear a lot is,
if the mortality rate of COVID is so low,
is it worth taking the risk of getting the vaccine?
Well, the mortality rate of COVID isn't that low.
I mean, there are a lot of factors and data still coming in,
but COVID is likely at least 10 times more deadly
than the flu.
But I'll give it to you.
Even if you get it,
especially if you're not in a risk group,
you very likely will not die from COVID.
Now for me, a healthy dude, not that young, 43,
but I'm not in a risk group.
I don't have risk factors,
but it's the long-term complications from COVID
that are the most concerning to me personally.
Long-term symptoms affect people of all ages
and have occurred in people with mild, moderate,
and severe COVID-19.
These can include lung damage, heart damage,
lasting fatigue, joint pain, neurological disorders,
loss of taste and smell, sleep disorders,
and these are showing up in significant numbers.
Okay, but, okay, I get that.
But what about the risks of the vaccines?
Well, let's start with the blood clots
from the J&J vaccine, the Johnson & Johnson vaccine,
because that's what, at least right now,
as we're recording this,
that's what everybody's talking about.
Six people out of about 7 million who were vaccinated
developed blood clots.
And as of today, as of recording this,
one of those people has died.
That's horrible, that's upsetting.
But just to put that into perspective,
it's about one in a million chance of getting a blood clot
and a one in seven million chance of dying
from a blood clot from the J&J vaccine.
To put that into perspective,
you're much more likely to die in a car accident
on the way to get the vaccine
than you are to get a blood clot from the vaccine,
much less die from the vaccine.
But keep in mind, they still paused the J&J vaccine
in many places because of this risk,
because the scientists are actually very concerned
with safety, so much so when there's this statistical blip
on the radar, they stop to evaluate.
They're not trying to take advantage of you.
They're not trying to use you as guinea pigs.
They're actually showing that safety
is their number one priority.
Okay, but that's J and J.
That's only like a small percentage of the vaccines.
What about mRNA, the Moderna, which is what I got,
and the Pfizer, which is what you got?
This stuff's unproven, right?
I mean, we are just a bunch of guinea pigs
being experimented on.
Well, we have a lot of good reasons to believe
that mRNA vaccines are safe,
likely safer than traditional vaccines
for a number of reasons.
So they underwent some of the most rigorous
safety testing ever, fast, quick, yes,
but rigorous nonetheless.
But what about the long-term risks?
Well, these vaccines are actually not that new.
Trials were conducted for mRNA vaccines in 2009
for prostate cancer, 2013 for rabies,
and mRNA vaccines were already in clinical trials
for HIV, cancer, and Zika patients
before the development of the COVID vaccines.
And nothing found in those trials led to hesitancy
to move forward with COVID-19 vaccines.
This isn't something that was just pulled out
of the back pocket of scientists and doctors
in response to this pandemic.
It was something they had been working on
for quite some time.
And the mechanism of mRNA vaccines
is a new approach to vaccines,
but it's actually really straightforward
and there are lots of advantages, including safety.
Now, there's a lot of misinformation about this,
but messenger RNA doesn't get anywhere near the nucleus
of the cell that contains human DNA.
And it disintegrates quickly after the message
that it is communicating is read.
It does not alter your DNA because it cannot alter your DNA.
Now you may have read on the internet about scary things
like antibody dependent enhancement,
the idea that getting these vaccines is gonna cause you
to actually have a higher chance of dying down the line
from getting COVID-19, especially a variant,
or that there are ingredients in the vaccine
that might cause cancer.
All of this was taken into account
when developing the vaccine,
and there is no reason to believe
that these are risks from the vaccines.
Just plain and simple,
there's a lot of good literature on all of this
and how these things were studied in depth
throughout the development,
including the antibody dependent enhancement,
which is something I see a lot of people talk about.
Now, does that mean that nobody will have adverse
short-term or long-term complications from the vaccine?
Of course not.
People are going to have adverse reactions to this vaccine.
And with so many people being vaccinated,
we're going to see significant,
you know, statistically small, but significant
because anything that happens to a person
is significant and worrying in some people, right?
The most common adverse reaction
is gonna be an allergic reaction.
That's kind of what we've seen so far.
But we have every reason to believe
that the long-term complications from COVID itself
pose a much higher risk.
So here's the bottom line.
The only way to justify vaccine hesitancy
as it relates to vaccine risk
compared to the risk of COVID itself
is to drastically overestimate the risk of the vaccines
while drastically underestimating the risk of COVID itself.
Do you see what I'm saying there?
People who have hesitancy about the vaccine
tend to also diminish what the real risks of COVID are.
It's kind of like saying,
I'm not gonna go on that flight to California
to free solo climb the face of El Capitan
because flying is dangerous.
Or maybe a better example,
lots of people who are scared of flying
have absolutely no problem driving to the airport,
even though they're way more likely to die in the car
on the way to the airport than in the car on the way to the airport
than in the plane on the way to their destination.
This is an irrational fear based on risk perception,
not actual risk.
And the same thing is happening with a lot of people
who are getting the vaccine, who are not getting the vaccine.
Same thing is happening with a lot of people
who are not getting the vaccine.
So in summary, step one,
properly framing the issue is key. Assessing whether or not you should getting the vaccine. So in summary, step one, properly framing the issue is key.
Assessing whether or not you should get the vaccine
should be framed first as a community issue,
not as a personal one.
The collective risk to everyone is much higher
when you don't get the vaccine.
In step two, you gotta properly frame the risk.
We have good reason to believe that your personal risk
from getting the vaccine is significantly less
than your risk from acquiring COVID
and experiencing adverse effects.
Now, this is still taking into account the fact
that you voluntarily get the vaccine,
but you won't necessarily get COVID.
You see what I'm saying?
People are like, well, I don't choose to get COVID,
but I'm choosing to get the vaccine.
Doesn't that inherently increase the risk of the vaccine?
No, the COVID risk is still greater,
just being a person who lives in the world.
So even if you're thinking about this as an individual,
it still makes sense for you and your personal safety
to get the vaccine.
So please, for all of us, get the vaccine.
Now, if you're a conspiracy theorist,
thank you for sticking around.
That's why I've just been hanging out here.
You may be wondering why I took this time
in our sometimes comedy podcast,
usually comedy podcast to put together this message.
I'm gonna come clean.
I'm a part of the deep state.
I'm being personally paid by Dr. Fauci,
who is a friend of mine who has my Venmo account
to communicate this message on behalf of the deep state
to the end of being able to control as many people
as we possibly can in the long term future.
Dr. Fauci and I regularly attend, sorry, Link,
I'm letting you know this for the first time as well.
Yeah, I'm kind of floored. Regularly attend
Hollywood parties together, at least we did before COVID.
We look forward to going back to those parties
where mainly the thing that we do,
I mean, there's cocktails and there's mingling,
but we kind of do that for like 90 minutes
and then we all go to the basement
and that's when we do the real good stuff,
which is drink the blood of children.
Now you may be wondering,
how do I have such good skin at the age of 43?
It's not some sort of like face washing
and exfoliation routine,
it's regularly drinking the blood of children.
How is that?
It's got a metallic taste.
Okay.
But we put it through a Brita.
Oh.
And you still get the stuff that you need,
the adrenochrome.
Gotcha.
If you wanna stay young, if you wanna be in control,
if you wanna be on the side of the people
who are gonna win in the future,
join me and Dr. Fauci, drink the blood of children.
You heard it here.
And yet I haven't been invited.
Okay, cool.
I didn't think you were ready yet.
Okay, there it is, the laptop's going away.
You know, I appreciate you organizing those thoughts
and putting that out into the world
because it's easy to be overwhelmed by information.
I think a lot of it has to do with
people are making decisions based on who do they trust
and why and what do you really want personally?
Like what are your motives and your values
and how do those things all add up?
So there's a lot of people who are just,
it's just, it really comes down for a lot of people
and I think this is my experience a lot of times,
just who are you following?
Who are you trusting?
Yeah.
And why?
Really, why?
Well, we could do not just a podcast,
but a whole show on how you choose
where you get your information from
and what the point of that is
and how you can trust medical,
I mean, first of all, some of the numbers that I threw out
and the statistics and the data,
I know there's a lot of people who are just like,
well, you just believe all the propaganda data.
You don't believe the real data,
which I can find on the internet.
Again, there's not, that's such a pervasive problem
in our society right now.
There's nothing I'm gonna be able to say
that's gonna sway you on that.
The only thing I can ask is just continue to be open-minded
and self-critical.
I'm not gonna try to change your mind on that.
I'm just gonna joke about Dr. Fauci.
I'm not joking though, it's true.
I drink the blood of children.
I wanna make that clear.
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All right, so let's shift gears a little bit into what now?
We've made our decisions.
We're about to, you know, in a couple of days,
I'm gonna get that second dose in my arm
and then I got two weeks later and then I'm totally free!
And this is what I've been looking forward to
since the very beginning of lockdown.
And then you, you know, so I think there is an evolving
set of guidelines associated with what you can and can't
and should and shouldn't do once you're fully vaccinated.
So disclaimer at this point, again, this is three weeks old,
even the moment it comes out because of when we're having
to record this conversation.
So we defer and direct you to the latest
and greatest guidelines that we are not giving here
in what to do and not do when you are fully vaccinated.
Okay?
Having said that, I think we can safely assume,
or for the purposes of this conversation,
so we don't have to keep coming back to that point,
I think that the way that I'm thinking about this question
is I'm just kind of saying,
if things were to suddenly get back to normal
and I was able to do all the things that I did before,
how do I perceive those things
and what am I thinking about those things,
whether that be going to a movie or a concert or whatever.
I don't know exactly when those things are gonna happen,
but I'm just saying for the purposes of this conversation,
I'm thinking about like the next year
and the freedoms that might come back.
Yeah, and so let's start in that positive aspirational
place and then I'm sure we'll talk about
the anxiety flip side of that and kind of dealing with that.
And even some of that I've personally had a taste of already
and it surprised me.
But let's just start at the,
I mean, what are the first things,
just like throw out words.
Restaurants.
Okay, for me.
That's a big one for me.
Movies, I haven't been to a movie.
Movies, I'm on board with movies.
Well, we'll come back to all this.
Concerts.
Yeah, in a way that I've never felt about concerts before,
I'm like, now's the time.
I'm gonna be that concert guy.
Extended family visits.
Going back home to North Carolina.
Parties. Parties.
Now you're really getting into it.
Parties with people that you know
and parties with people that you don't know.
Wow. There's two kinds
of parties. Okay.
So I'm talking get togethers
and then I'm talking like parties.
I'm talking about the me and Fauci in the basement
with drinking the blood of children with a stranger
and not worried about anything,
especially the children.
I don't know how many times
I'm gonna keep coming back to that
because I know it's offensive to people,
but I just can't help it.
I'm really tempted to just keep going harder in it,
but I don't wanna do it.
People are just gonna, I mean.
But by the way, totally unrelated,
we've got our friendship rings on today.
Same ring.
Look at that, right?
Hold up your hand there, look at that.
Friendship ring day, this is a previous your hand there. Look at that. Friendship ring day.
This is a previous sponsor.
We have not discussed this.
So as a total aside,
I feel like we need to get this out of the way, okay?
We are wearing the exact same ring.
It was a sponsor, Manly Bands.
We might as well say it again.
Right.
And one of the stipulate, not stipulations,
but one of the opportunities was you get to get a ring.
Well I'm not gonna promote something
unless I can experience it and know that I wanna promote it.
But you, so yeah.
You requested just the silicone ring
because they have like the,
basically like a rubber ring that you can wear
when you're doing like activities and stuff.
A lot of people wear them full time
so you don't have to worry about like your,
we know some people who've got their fingers taken off
because of wedding rings.
Because the ring got hung on something.
But you're like, I wear,
there's a lot of sentimental value with the ring
that you have because it was your grandfather's ring.
So you're not gonna take that off.
No, I'm not gonna replace my wedding ring.
So you asked for the silicone ring and I was like,
well, I just bought my wedding ring for like 200 bucks
before we got married.
I'll keep it around, but I've always wanted
to have a wooden ring because you know me and wood.
That's not how I remember it at all, Rhett.
You have a revisionist brain.
You have a super revisionist brain.
Just because we disagree about something
doesn't mean that you're the one that's right.
So let's be clear on that.
And we do have a witness.
Are you gonna tell me that you chose that ring?
No, I'm gonna tell, I'm gonna say, okay,
we were given, these are pricey rings.
They're gonna send one as a sample,
but they're not gonna send two.
That's what we were told.
True that.
So then it was like, oh, well, who gets the ring?
But that was when you said you didn't want
to change your wedding ring because it has sentimental value. was when you said you didn't want to change your wedding ring
because it has sentimental value.
That didn't mean I didn't want a ring.
Huh, I didn't know that.
Exactly, because then you just said what ring you wanted.
But I was like, I'm happy to change my ring.
And then I'm like, you know what?
If I really wanted a ring,
this will be the point where I would say,
I'd like to try out a nice ring, but I elected not to.
And then you were like, oh, they have wood rings.
So then you chose this ring that we both are wearing.
Okay, that's the part I thought you were taking issue with.
I was like, you know what?
I'm interested, I was like, do they have one of those rings
that won't rip your finger off, a rubber ring?
I'll take one of those, because they're cheap.
And we'll try it.
Now, by the way, at this point,
having gotten a sample that we did not pay for,
I will gladly pay for another one,
but I did not pay for this one to match you.
What happened was the ring that you ordered came
and it was too small.
I don't know, you screwed up the sizing.
Yeah, I did.
Your fault, not the sponsors.
Yeah, because instead of sizing,
we told them what we thought my size was.
And then I'm like, I bet it will fit my finger.
So the ring that was too small for you
fit perfectly on my finger and then I had it.
On your right hand.
And you didn't have one.
Right.
But then you ordered another one
because you really wanted it.
Even though now we got, I was like, I got him.
I know he's not gonna love this.
We have friendship rings now.
So you're gonna keep wearing that?
Yeah, and I'm gonna call it our friendship ring.
And while we're talking about rings.
Because I know that makes you a little uncomfortable.
While we're talking about rings,
I've been wearing the Oura ring.
This is basically a fitness ring, biometric.
It measures biometrics.
It is a fashion statement,
but that wasn't my primary reason for wearing it.
Oh, I ordered one of those too.
Well, yeah, we both have new Oura rings coming.
And so the question is,
Yeah, we're gonna have.
We're gonna have two rings that are the same?
I think that's kinda cool.
We should have gotten different
because there's multiple options for Oura rings. We should have gotten, maybe they's multiple options for our rings.
We should have gotten,
maybe they'll send us two different kinds.
And when you look into that, okay, sorry for the aside,
but yeah, I enjoy having a friendship ring with you.
Don't you? I'm sorry that I accused you.
You do have a revisionist mind,
but I thought that what you were saying was,
you were gonna say is that you chose this ring.
I was like, hold on a second. No, you didn't. You knew I wasn't gonna you were saying was, you were gonna say is that you chose this ring. And I was like, hold on a second, no you didn't.
You knew I wasn't gonna replace my wedding ring,
so you assumed I didn't want a ring.
And I have nine other fingers, that's all I'm saying.
But I didn't know you were gonna start doing
the multiple rings on hands thing,
because I kinda just started doing that.
Oh, see that's your, see that can't,
but, and I'm stating, and I'm saying, you know what?
Multiple rings can't be your thing. Okay, and I agree with that. Just like glasses can't, and I'm stating, and I'm saying, you know what, multiple rings can't be your thing.
Okay, and I agree with that.
Just like glasses can't be your thing.
And beards can't be yours.
We are gonna morph into one person.
I mean, listen, I don't have an appointment yet,
but I just wanna go ahead and give you a fair warning
that glasses, the last time I went to the eye doctor,
over two years ago, I was told that I needed glasses.
And you haven't gotten them
because I'm the guy with glasses, but you're starting to send me over two years ago, I was told that I needed glasses. But then- And you haven't gotten them because I'm the guy with glasses,
but you're starting to send me over the precipice
because I've noticed that how big you want things
that we need to read blown up.
And I'm like- Right.
That's kind of getting to be too much.
Yeah. I mean,
the dude really can't see if they're having-
I'm having trouble, I'm having trouble seeing it.
Okay, so back to post pandemic.
Let's go back through these things.
The first thing that came to my mind was movies.
And then right when I'm on the precipice of like scheduling
and I'm telling the kids, I'm like,
I don't even care what movie it is.
Like I'll see that King Kong versus Godzilla if I have to.
Even though I have no interest whatsoever in seeing it,
I just wanna be in a movie theater.
And someone told me when I got to this point
in the conversation with him, they said,
you can rent out a whole theater now because,
I mean, you gotta pick a slower time
and just have all your friends show up.
I'm like, no, no, no, I wanna be where there were strangers.
I wanna do the old thing.
I don't wanna do this rent out the theater thing.
And I don't care what movie it is.
And I know exactly where I'm gonna go.
My favorite theater, Arclight Cinemas,
the only theater at the highest standard
where they charge the same amount,
no matter if you're a kid or whatever.
So it deters, there's so many reasons besides just like
not incentivizing bringing more kids
in a disproportionate amount.
And for those of you who are not from Los Angeles
and haven't been to Los Angeles,
haven't been to an Arclight Cinema,
just a quick little summary of why they're the best, okay?
It is more expensive.
They control every aspect of the environment.
Are you gonna control the conversation?
Well, it's kind of my thing, you know,
it's my favorite theater.
Well, it's also my favorite theater.
Can I have a favorite theater too?
No, you can't have the same favorite theater.
It's everyone's favorite theater in Los Angeles.
They bring someone out before the show.
You know how sometimes like you're at a movie theater
and like it's not loud enough or it's too loud
or it's not in focus and then you're like,
am I gonna have to be the person to get up
and miss part of this movie and go tell the guy
who's serving popcorn that they need to tell the guy
who's running the thing in the thing
that this is not working?
No.
That doesn't happen at Arclight.
They bring a person out who greets you, everyone,
and says, hey, my name's Darryl.
Welcome to this showing of King Kong versus Godzilla.
It's a great film.
I enjoyed it.
This is how long it lasts?
This is how long the previews are gonna be?
And I'm going to be standing over here to the side
to make sure that the picture and the sound quality
are perfect before we move on. Yes. They do it. So you don't have to talk to the side to make sure that the picture and the sound quality are perfect before we move on.
Yes. They do it.
So you don't have to talk to the doofus
who's serving popcorn.
Not everybody who serves popcorn is a doofus.
It's just, in my experience,
I've had to go talk to a doofus before about this
and that's why I'm frustrated.
And you know what?
That doesn't happen at the Arclight.
And it literally is the first thing
I've been looking forward to doing.
And if you take your phone out and text at the Arclight,
you will be-
There's a laser that comes from behind the screen
and it'll obliterate you.
Yes, you will be murdered.
You're just, yeah, you're taken out.
Right.
Because that inhibits everyone else's experience, okay?
If you care about film, or should I say cinema,
you care about this.
But they bring in a clone of the person.
So if like- No one ever knows.
If you're there with loved ones
and you're really enthralled in the movie
and you know, somebody pulls out the phone,
yes, they're obliterated,
but they're immediately replaced with a clone.
And their phone is gone though.
All of these reasons make it the number one thing
I've been looking forward to.
And they just went under.
All this conversation about them.
They waited until the end of the pandemic,
like literally right now to announce,
oh, you know what?
Can't do it anymore, guys.
Can't hang on any longer.
We're gone.
Like weeks before everyone can start,
I don't understand the timing.
I'm so frustrated. And not just Arclight. Now I't understand the timing. I'm so frustrated.
And not just Arclight.
Now I gotta find another theater
that I'm willing to watch movies in.
Not just Arclight,
but because Pacific Theaters bought Arclight,
Pacific Theaters, which I think is the theater
that's at the Americana, that's not opening either.
Crap.
Oh, well, I think other companies will have to come in
and still make a movie theater.
What are they gonna turn it into like a jump gym?
Like one of those trampoline places?
No, they gotta still make movies there.
I literally don't,
I now have to find a new movie experience
because I was exclusive to it.
I've heard there's still reason for hope
that there might be, like Jesse said,
it had something to do with like,
this is like a thing that happens.
I think that there are also a lot of people in Los Angeles
who are making a huge stink of this already
because this is a film town.
We all stay through the credits at the end of the movie.
It's, I mean, it's a super film snob town
because this is where so many movies are made.
Okay, maybe there's hope.
And so I think that we may come together as a community
and say we don't just wanna watch movies at our houses.
We don't wanna just watch movies at theaters
where they don't have it in focus
or it's not loud enough.
Yeah. We wanna watch movies
at the Arclight.
Okay, I'll hold out a little hope.
It's kinda like that thing where a company goes bankrupt
and then like a few months later, they're still around.
Right. It's like, what?
Some sort of like tax ploy? Like Trump.
Yeah.
What happened?
What was the last thing
that filled you with wonder
that took you away from your desk
or your car in traffic?
Well, for us,
and I'm going to guess for some of you,
that thing is...
Anime!
Hi, I'm Nick Friedman.
I'm Lee Alec Murray.
And I'm Leah President.
And welcome to Crunchyroll Presents The Anime Effect.
It's a weekly news show.
With the best celebrity guests.
And hot takes galore.
So join us every Friday wherever you get your podcasts and watch full video episodes on Crunchyroll or on the Crunchyroll YouTube channel.
So that was literally my number one.
If you were to put your number one, is it restaurants?
No, it's not number one.
It's not number one because I really like my new television.
I finally did the 4K OLED television.
So what is your number one?
Eating, I mean, restaurants.
And there's just something about eating at a restaurant
versus getting takeout from a restaurant.
Oh yeah, I mean, I've really forgotten.
I think I'm gonna go to a restaurant and be like,
oh, yeah, this should have been my number one.
Like the food tastes so much better.
Like we supported our favorite restaurants locally
and they'd send you their like signature dishes deconstructed
so that everything doesn't over meld together.
You lose the presentation of the food.
You lose, and many times you lose the freshness of the food
because it's coming to you in a bag.
You also lose a big part of it for me is just the ambience.
I mean, for me, eating is about all the senses
being stimulated, right?
And I love eating at restaurants.
I love the entire experience.
And yes, I understand that there are restaurants
that are open for outdoor dining
and that there's socially distanced dining and-
We haven't been doing that.
Right, so-
Because we've been following heightened protocols
associated with production so that our limited crew,
we can all protect each other and continue making our shows.
Our standards are higher
than just the general California standards,
which are already higher
than the general sort of national standards.
So we're admittedly behind, but it's like,
but even in my own brain, I've locked off the restaurant zone
because it hurt too much after a few months
at the beginning of the pandemic to dwell on it.
So now I'm finding it difficult
to reopen those compartments.
But I think when I go to a restaurant,
the other part I miss is that,
yes, you still got the whole phone situation in your pocket,
but how it sets the stage for connection,
you stare across the table at somebody,
me and Christy on a date,
a date is much different out
than trying to recreate it in your own home.
Matter of fact, we just got to a point
where we thought we were gonna do the date thing
and then it just didn't happen.
Yeah, we held on for a little bit.
It just didn't happen.
We did a thing for a while where we would,
I would turn the lights down, put on some music,
and we would eat at our little sort of breakfast nook
and then we would make the kids eat in a different room
or like eat in the dining room.
And I don't know, it worked for a while,
but it's just so hard to maintain the separation
and the discipline.
Yeah, and then you're still doing the dishes
and the preparation.
Yeah.
Even if you order out.
Yeah.
You know, it's like just being waited on in a restaurant
is so awesome.
Yeah, I mean, I love the experience.
And I mean, I'm starting to get excited now
because it's like, I mean,
I think I'm gonna be at a restaurant
and I'm gonna be like, wow, I feel like a king.
Like there'll be just this renewed appreciation
for the whole thing.
Look, someone's coming up and just anything I want.
Well, and that's the thing.
I can just tell this stranger and they'll go away
and they'll come back with it.
And that's one of the many reasons
that the cost of living in Los Angeles is so high,
compared to North Carolina, for instance,
is the event, like we're so close to so many things,
including so many great places to eat.
Like there's just so many,
you can never eat at the same place twice
and keep having these completely dynamic,
excellent dining experiences.
I'm not saying you can't get it.
So it may be one of your favorite things in LA as well.
I mean, it's one of the things I'm like,
when I think about how much money I pay to live here,
I'm like, you kind of have to start reminding yourself
of the advantages because especially one of the reasons
there's been this mass exodus of people from Los Angeles
during the pandemic is because they're like,
if all I'm doing is hanging out at home,
why am I gonna be in this tiny little expensive place
where I can go to a less expensive, larger place
and have the same experience, right?
I totally get it.
We're not moving because we have a,
we've built our lives here and we've built our business here
but it's like, I'm ready to experience the city
that I'm paying so much for.
Well, I mean, I came so close to buying a van
that I wouldn't live out of it,
but I would travel and semi live out of it on little trips.
And that's taking a back burner now.
It's like I can rent somebody else's van
whenever I wanna do that.
But yeah, so that's the update on that aspiration.
It was, I had the tunnel vision of the pandemic goggles.
Yeah.
And I'm gonna rent a van again.
Trust me, I'm gonna do it.
But I'm pretty sure I'm not gonna buy one.
The other aspect of this is parties.
Now, again-
Well, before we get to part,
let's go with the friends,
because I think that's the incremental thing.
That's what I'm saying, there's two aspects of this.
And so I'm saying that the first part,
which I've experienced a little bit of,
is getting together at people's homes, right?
So we got together with another, well, okay.
So there's a couple that was fully vaccinated.
Jesse and I are, you know, Jesse's fully vaccinated
and now I'm vaccinated.
And once you're a few weeks out from the initial dose
of these Moderna or Pfizer, you're very well protected,
especially if you're around other people
who are vaccinated, right?
And so we made, so there's, we see each other
and we see this one other family,
but there was a friend who we hadn't seen in over a year
who was at this family's house and texted us and said,
hey, I'm over here.
I'm fully vaccinated.
They're totally cool if you guys come over.
And it was a Friday night.
And it was probably, it was like 7.30 or 8 p.m.
It was like eight, I already, here's the thing.
I already, I had my plan.
And my plan was we were gonna watch a movie.
And I don't even know what it was, but I had it picked out.
And then we got the text and I was like,
ah, I kinda had this plan,
but I haven't seen this person in a year.
Yes, let's go.
And we go over there.
And I mean, again, there's like hugs.
First thing was we're hugging.
This is a little bit unusual, right?
Just I haven't hugged a lot of people in a long time.
Now you're not a hugger.
So when that happened, what was your experience?
Because there are people who are huggers
and they're like, that might be the top of their list
to have like physical connection with friends.
I'm not a hug instigator, but I'm not an anti hug.
But you're not.
I'm a good hug receiver.
Right.
And like I'm a good hug reciprocator.
You're kind of neutral.
I think you could take it or leave it.
I think I could too.
No judgment here.
How was it?
So given that you could take or leave a hug
in normal life, was it therapeutic?
Was there a release?
I don't want- Or was it the same?
I don't wanna be dramatic.
So- Don't be dramatic.
I'm just saying- Be honest.
Yeah, I'm saying that I'm gonna be honest
and say that it was really good,
but it wasn't like,
man, that feels good, that feels different,
that's like a giant step forward.
It did not feel that way for me.
It just felt, in fact, as we then sat down
and began to have a conversation around the kitchen table,
it began very quickly to feel like old times again.
And I actually consciously sort of stepped out
of the conversation and went into my own head
and thought to myself like, this is interesting
because I feel like I'm totally here again.
Like I feel like the past year is just a memory.
Now I know again, it's gonna be a slow process
of getting back to normal.
And I know this is not, I say this,
you know, being sensitive to the fact
that this is not the case for a lot of people,
but it just kind of hit me.
I was like, hmm, I'm immediately back in the same mind space
and social space and social experience that I was
before all this happened, like having this conversation.
But I could tell that not everyone at that table
felt the same way.
And you should also say who from my family
was or wasn't at that table.
So we began to talk about you
because you and Christy had also received the text
from this person to come over.
Yep.
And there was a conversation
and the conversation was, they were like,
do you think Link and Christy are coming?
I was like, well.
This is between you and Jesse,
are you already at the table?
Already at the table. I was like, well, you know, Link and Christy are coming? I was like, well. This is between you and Jesse, are you already at the get together? Already at the table.
I was like, well, Link and Christy,
the Neil plan may already be in effect
and this may be difficult for them to dislodge from this.
And then we had a conversation.
And you pretty much knew what that plan was.
Well, and I'll just say, it's funny because,
okay, so it was the McCarg's house.
And because Mike said,
it was the McCarg's house.
Because Mike said, well, here's the spectrum. On this end of the spectrum, in terms of,
I can't remember the term that he used,
but it was basically like social flexibility
or something like that.
He was like, you have the Neals and the McCarg's.
Yep, together on one end.
And at the opposite end of the spectrum.
Very socially inflexible.
You have the McLaughlins.
And I was like, well, let me butt in and say,
that is true, the McLaughlins and the person
who was the guest there.
I was like, that's true of my wife,
but I'm kind of in the middle.
I kind of straddled the fence on this one
because I will admit that it was not easy for me
to just drop what I wanted to do and watch a movie and come over. Like I tend to kind of getaddled the fence on this one because I will admit that it was not easy for me to just drop what I wanted to do
and watch a movie and come over.
Like I tend to kind of get into a plan.
And as soon as we finished that conversation,
knock, knock, knock, your wife and daughter show up.
But noticeably, you're not there.
Yeah.
So just to rewind a little bit,
yeah, we're sitting down, like we've,
it's eight o'clockish, so all the Neils,
without prompting now, we all gather in the TV room
on the couch and we put on Survivor every single night.
On Friday night you did this?
Even Friday night.
Like I gave up a long time ago on trying to like say,
but on the weekends we're not doing Survivor.
That's a weeknight thing.
On the weekends we're gonna like do our own things
or we're gonna watch movies
or it's gonna feel like a normal weekend,
not just like another night,
like every single night we watch Survivor.
Friday night with your kids?
Even me, I was like, this is too much guys.
And I lost, I lost the argument
and then I was okay with that.
And then months later, I'm really okay with it.
And then this one night, it's like any other night
for the past year, we look forward to this,
we relish in it.
If anything breaks that up up just within the home,
somebody gets mad.
It's like if somebody is not as into WandaVision
as the rest of the family,
introducing like putting WandaVision above Survivor
or has been a problem.
Yeah, how do you watch other things
or how do you watch movies?
We double up, we don't watch movies. We double up. We don't watch movies.
We watch what-
We don't watch movies.
We watch- I'll just be honest with you.
If it's whatever is on Disney Plus
that we're all, the new series that we're all gonna watch,
we watch that on Friday
and then we watch Survivor afterward.
It's ridiculous.
I know it is.
We're so extreme in this way.
What are you gonna do?
Like at this pace, you're definitely gonna run out.
We are halfway through the season 39 finale.
How many seasons are there?
40.
So you're getting closer to running out.
And last night, we paused it
at a strategic halfway point of the finale
because it was getting to be, it's a school night,
it's getting to be bedtime.
And I'm like, guys, I don't think we should go.
Like tomorrow night,
we're gonna watch the rest of the finale.
And then the next night,
I know you're gonna wanna just start with season 40.
That's the last one.
And we've heard that it's like the best season.
I don't wanna go to it.
I wanna wait.
Ah, the complaining starts.
Like, no, dad, you're being crazy.
And it's like, there are some episodes,
seasons that we skipped.
I think we should delay the gratification of season 40,
go back and watch some of the, we're so into it now,
let's watch some of the seasons that people said sucked.
That- You've become dependent.
We are dependent on Survivor every single night.
To survive.
So I'm like, listen,
we're gonna blow through season 40 in two weeks.
That's the pace we've been on.
We kept increasing.
I mean, it is this like dependent compulsion
leading to addiction kind of trajectory.
You're gonna have to figure out some sort of-
And I'm trying to point that out to him last night.
I'm like, listen, guys, we need to delay season 40
so that we can build it up more and look forward to it.
Even if we skip three nights,
I wanna keep that season 40 dangling out there
until it's closer to season 41 coming out.
And then I'm also talking about
when Lily goes off to college, I'm like,
you know, what are we gonna do with Survivor?
She's like, we'll just watch it and talk about it.
I was like, no, no, no.
We wanna save Survivor for holidays
when we're all back together
and then we're gonna watch those seasons.
This is how small my world has become.
Two weeks ago, we talked about
wanting to look into communes.
It was very tongue in cheek,
but it was rooted in this feeling that I have
of I really liked the control
and the perceived is different kind of safety
that has nothing to do with COVID or pandemics
of just smallness of this is my world now.
And I know what to expect.
And it is fostering some things that aren't healthy
and that are, this is what I discovered. And it is fostering some things that aren't healthy
and that are, this is what I discovered. And this was a moment, it was a test.
We were sitting down and then Christy looks up
and she's like, we're invited over to the McCargs
to see so-and-so and he's over there now, he's fully vaccinated.
And she locks eyes with me.
And I bet if you were to ask her what she saw in my eyes,
I think it would be fear.
And it had nothing to do with the friend
or how much I love and miss him.
And it wasn't just about a threat to the routine,
but it was, things are changing.
Now we had already planned to get together.
This was a Friday night.
We had already planned to get together on Sunday night.
At my house.
And I was getting mentally prepared for that.
And then this was dropped in my lap and I'm like, well, you know, I was getting mentally prepared for that. And then this was dropped on my lap and I'm like,
well, you know, I was getting ready for Sunday
and now this thing right now, right now?
And there were some mitigating circumstances in our house.
I had actually just gotten the vaccine the day before
and experienced a headache.
And then I thought I felt totally good that day,
the second day, which is the day in question.
And I went for a bike ride.
When I got back, the headache came back.
I did too much too soon on day two,
shouldn't have done that.
I actually didn't feel good.
And there were other members of the family,
you can figure it out by matter of elimination,
that just, that were reticent for their own reasons.
So that led to, I'm gonna stay at home with them
and we can blame it on the kids,
but I have these things going inside of me
and I don't know what's happening in my brain
and with my emotions, but I just, I don't,
I'm not willing or ready to do this.
I'm not motivated enough to overcome these feelings tonight.
I'm working forward to being ready by Sunday.
And then I ended up, we watched Survivor without Christy
and Lily, because they gave us permission to,
and I felt dirty and horrible and I said,
it didn't feel right and I don't wanna ever do that again.
And then I went to bed and my head was killing me.
And so I was glad I wasn't there.
I wouldn't have been a positive contributor to that reunion
even though I hate that I didn't get to see our friend
and I don't want him to think that it had anything
to do with him specifically,
but it really brought to light things
that I was just not aware of at that moment.
And then, so we can get back to the positives,
but we might as well go through this anxiety
because that's what I, I never thought,
I never had what I would call
social anxiety, I don't think.
It's so hard to remember.
So you think that that's what it is for you?
Well, maybe that's one way to describe it, but-
What if you were invited to,
let's not just say it's a get together with people
that you know and you've seen a bunch
and then one additional person,
but like an actual social thing, like a party.
Like I do, like even when we have like,
when you do, you did your monthly game night
and you had extent, like more friends show up for that,
including us.
Back in the day, pre-COVID.
Pre-COVID, there were, sometimes,
I do notice that there's a little heightened level
of anxiety that I experienced associated with,
even with that, but some of it's just excitement
that can feel like anxiety.
So I didn't really know what was going on,
but I will say that there are plenty of times
that I'm not totally at ease,
even with like my second tier friends
that like I totally trust and enjoy and love.
So there was an inkling of that,
that I recall from pre-COVID.
But now on Sunday night when we got together,
I gotta tell you,
the thing that you saw when you looked around the table
and you could see in people's eyes,
they were experiencing something that you weren't,
you felt totally normal
and maybe exhilarated to be back together.
Even on Sunday night when we all got together,
I actually felt when we left, I felt a little discouragement.
You know, there's a lot of self judgment
that I, you know, that tends to come into play with me,
but there's, I'm a lot more in my head right now
because of this whole reentry thing than I even realized. I'm a lot more in my head right now
because of this whole reentry thing than I even realized.
I did notice that you were quieter than normal.
I felt weird.
You know, it was just like,
because it's a combination of getting reintroduced
to something that I feel like should be
just like flipping a switch.
But it wasn't, and it wasn't anybody's fault
and it wasn't, nobody did or said anything
to make me feel weird.
It was just, I, and another part of it
might just be sheer unmet expectations.
You know, you build something up and you look forward to it.
Then you let go of it.
And then you realize it's coming back.
And now there's fear in the equation,
but you still have this hope that like,
this is gonna be so dynamic.
This is gonna be, I mean, I never been to prison,
but I would be interested to talk to somebody
who has experienced reentry from prison.
It's probably a little more intense.
More intense, but there's a sliver of parallel at least.
I could tell that I made note that multiple people
both on Friday night and on Sunday night,
were not acting like themselves.
And, or what I remember of them in those settings, right?
And I did notice that about you.
I was like, Link's being like, typically,
he's very talkative.
Sometimes we have to pull him back a little bit.
Yeah. But that is not-
And I really thought I would have been like-
That's not happening. Especially with the prep,
I'd be like, I don't wanna come on too strong.
But okay, but what I ended up doing was,
after dinner, we're all kinda like hanging out
and I needed to use the restroom.
So I went upstairs to use it
and I will do this at most get togethers at my house.
I will go upstairs and then I'll be like,
I'm gonna just hang here for a second.
But that was, and I did that on a Sunday night.
You did disappear for a little bit.
But I always do that and always did that.
It wasn't longer than I would believe
like an involved dump would take.
I don't even think it was a dump.
I think I just.
Oh, I know.
I'm just saying you had a P.
The amount of time that you took was undercover.
You gotta keep in mind,
you don't wanna like draw attention
to how long you're in the bathroom.
Right.
But people started thinking things,
they started assuming things.
But that's my introversion.
That's my, I got, okay, I got time for people
and I got energy for people, then I have to pull it back.
But I actually, as it was happening,
because I'm also in my own head about this a little bit,
I was like, is this, am I having like,
my energy has been impacted by this pandemic
and I've got low capacity for people right now,
then I was like, no, no, no, you're just an introvert
and you did this before the pandemic.
So I just kind of went back downstairs,
but in the midst of the conversation, like,
all right, we're having a conversation.
To me, I was also thinking and noticing it.
I was like, I kind of feel like I'm just back
where we left off, but I can tell that more than a few people
are not at that place because our conversation
feels different.
There are more gaps.
There are more, there's more like awkward.
Why do we keep talking about dogs so much?
Like, that's the thing I told Christy.
I was like, you know, I was disappointed that like,
I kind of thought we would talk about
what we were experiencing,
kind of what we're talking about now.
And I was like, I feel like I would have had a better time
if we could have just talked about that.
But maybe you talked about that some on Friday night
without us and then, and I was like,
but we ended up talking about dogs,
like on four different times.
Like we were over here eating and then we moved over here
and then we went inside and it was just like,
I was like, we don't have as much to talk about.
We keep going back to dogs.
I don't know.
That's what I thought.
But you also, you've always attached expectations
to what conversations will be.
Yep.
That's not a pandemic thing, that's a link thing.
There's many times, and this is sort of a gripe
between my wife and you, this is like one of the sources
of conflict between Jessie and you,
is like Jessie'll start talking about something,
you'll be like, ah, can we,
let's not talk about that right now.
Right.
She's normally not dogs.
Cause like I could have said, I think legitimately,
you know, we've talked about dogs three times tonight.
I'm curious, how are you guys doing?
Cause I feel weird as shit right now.
You know, it's like,
but I also didn't have the energy
and I didn't wanna do that at that moment.
But you know, I do own the conversation police thing
because it is an outward manifestation of my inner critic
and the control thing that has to do with expectations
associated with connecting with people.
Whether that's like the dynamics,
I think about it too much. Oh, who's included? Who's interesting? Can we, you know, are we, you I think about it too much.
Oh, who's included?
Who's interesting?
Can we, you know, are we, you know,
it's too much, too much for people.
So on that piece of it.
So yeah, it's kind of like parsing what's true
of my former self, what's new in the mix now,
what, and this being a process.
You know, I even, you know, I did a search
because I know that there's people who are dealing
with this more like, and to a greater degree,
there's people who might've already been agoraphobic
or have some sort of social anxiety already
that wasn't something like me that's like, did I have that?
Is that where this is coming from?
Nearly 50% of Americans say they feel anxious
about resuming in-person interactions post pandemic,
according to a report
from the American Psychological Association.
A phenomenon psychologists have dubbed re-entry anxiety.
Hey Kiko, put an echo on that, thank you. on psychologists have dubbed re-entry anxiety.
Hey Kiko, put an echo on that, thank you. Re-entry anxiety.
Yeah, I've heard a lot of people talking about it.
You know, I just wanna go through this
and I don't wanna get bogged down in it, but SCL Health.
I think this is like Colorado Hospital, doesn't matter, very practical advice to deal with
if you're struggling with reentry anxiety,
just like a handful of things.
First, they say start small.
If you haven't left the house in much over the last year,
don't suddenly rip off the bandaid
and walk into the most crowded marketplace you can find,
start small, plan a hike with a few friends,
work your way up from there.
Slowly confronting your sources of fear
with a little more exposure each time.
Exposure therapy is what it's called by doctors.
This next point really resonated with me.
Start soon.
If anything is making you anxious,
you should confront the issue as soon as possible.
The longer you wait, the more the anxiety foments
and works itself up.
So not only does social isolation
have short-term health implications,
it can impact mental health long-term.
It doesn't mean you should throw a party
and you need to be subject to the guidelines
as we've said up front,
but a little socialization goes a long way.
You got to say, I'm engaging in this process of reentry
and I have to take baby steps
and I need to start soon or now.
Another thing was, piece of advice
was looking at the big picture.
A good thing to do is to ask yourself
what truly makes me happy?
And whether that's family, the outdoors,
returning back to life,
let the big picture be a major motivator
to overcome the fears in comparison to them,
in combating reasons to not start or delay.
You know, I was gearing up for Sunday,
I wasn't ready for Friday. I listened to myself and, You know, I was gearing up for Sunday, I wasn't ready for Friday.
I listened to myself and, you know,
but if there wasn't a Sunday plan,
I might would have felt differently now
about my decision to not go on Friday.
And then two more things, buddy up,
find someone you know and trust who's in a similar phase
or has a similar experience and understands you
that you can buddy up with and support each other
through the reentry process.
Talking about it, I mean, even this conversation
is freeing for me, because it's like,
hey, you've heard what's inside of my head,
I've kind of given you this emotional brain dump,
so to speak.
So it's, I think the next time we're,
like if it's next weekend,
that we're in a small group setting,
there might be an opportunity for you to say something to me
or me to say something to somebody else
who's opened up to me, that type of thing.
I think it really helps.
And then, yeah, they note in the end,
for some people it's gonna be a breeze.
Like the way you described it could potentially,
I could experience jealousy or envy
or beat myself up because it's not as easy for me
as it is for you.
And that's no fault of yours.
And it's my responsibility to process that
in a way that doesn't drive a wedge between us
and somehow then send a message
that you can't enjoy your reentry experience.
That's not fair to you.
It remains to be seen as well.
Oh, but hold on, I just wanted to make one more,
but the main point I was trying to make
that they were making at the end was,
if you come to a roadblock, you can seek out help
that's beyond just a friend, you know,
professional help to get you through this
and ain't no shame in that.
What were you gonna say?
I think the thing that I am,
I'm not gonna be surprised if I experienced some anxiety.
I'm interested to see is a big crowd.
Like if you're like, we're going to a basketball game and there's a herd of people
like going through this small door
and then they're all crowded together.
Like I can only assume that when that kind of thing
starts happening more and more often,
so not socially distanced, large gatherings,
people packed into places, people at concerts,
people are gonna panic.
You know, I think the reasons for the anxiety,
they may not be rational, but a lot of them,
they probably come from different places.
Like I can imagine that one of them is just like,
I'm seeing a lot of people close to me touching things.
I'm watching their mouth move if this is like-
Oh gosh, the mouths, just the scene of mouths.
People touching things.
And so if that's something that you struggle with
is just the idea of the germs of it all,
the humanity of it all, then that could be something.
And then it just may be, oh, social anxiety.
I don't know how to say the words that I used to say
when I meet people.
But that whole surrounded by people,
I'm not saying I anticipate it's gonna be a problem,
but to me, I feel like if I'm gonna have an anxiety issue,
I doubt that it's gonna be with my friends
that I see on a pretty regular basis,
but it might be in a group of strangers.
Like that could be where something like,
oh, all of a sudden this is such a new experience.
And again, I mean, I guess there,
it depends on where you're at in the world.
It depends on where you're at in the country.
These are, I'm sure there are people listening
to this podcast who are in states where they're like,
it's kind of just been the same for a long time for us guys,
are like, you guys are crazy and California's nuts.
And we're affirming their decisions along the way.
And it's like, well, we're not trying to affirm
your decision if you didn't lock down
or wear a mask or whatever, but.
Yeah.
So yeah, when it comes to parties, like with friends,
I'm committed to like getting back to that magic spot.
But then like, then beyond that, okay.
Because to me, it's not about catching anything
or exposure or the, I don't know, I don't worry about that.
It is the social thing and it's just like
getting reacquainted with that.
So it's like the parties with strangers.
It's like, oh yeah, it's like, I was on the fence
about how much I enjoyed that beforehand.
So that's like- Well, that's the thing
that's kind of odd to me is, you know,
we've done at least an episode of the show
about our approach to Hollywood parties.
And I'm not talking about the Fauci parties
where I drink the children's blood.
I'm talking about like industry parties
where you dress up and you have cocktails
and their music is too loud.
Neither of us have ever been a fan
of those kinds of parties because of the whole,
I can't have a conversation with you right now
because I can't hear you because of the music
and is this for clout?
Or like, what is the reason I'm walking around this party?
Who am I trying to talk to?
Am I trying to tell John Mayer that I love him
or am I just trying to meet somebody that I might work with?
And both, as we've established,
you tend to be more comfortable with being like,
well, I'm just gonna go up to little Dicky
and start a conversation.
And I'm like, well, I'll let you go to little Dicky
and start a conversation.
And then once you're in, I'll come and join it, right?
As we hilariously told the story one time.
But interestingly, it's so funny that the whole story
about Lil Dicky involves him telling you
that his name is Dave and now the show that he makes
is just called Dave.
The way that it plays, every time I see that show advertised,
I just think about that story.
I can't bring myself to watch it for that reason.
My prediction is that everyone's gonna have
some latent sort of anxiety in this.
And again, I'm not minimizing,
there's people who are really struggling
and this is a serious thing
and they are going to need to get professional help.
I understand that that's not my situation
and I have empathy for the people who are going through it.
But I think that everybody is going to have,
there's gonna be awkwardness when you go back to that party
with the music and the talking to each other,
which was already difficult for everyone involved,
even though we tend to not talk about how difficult it is.
Throw in the fact that like,
I haven't been in an environment this loud,
let alone with this many people.
When that, my hope is that out of an,
in an effort to kind of help us all ease back in,
that the DJ will be like,
man, I'm gonna go a little easy on these people.
I'm telling you. You know what I'm saying?
Cause I just think that there's so much opportunity
for parties to be transformed.
I mean, we did a whole chapter of this
in the book of mythicality
about how we didn't like loud parties.
I just feel like there's an opportunity here
to not just go back to the bullshit party
where you can't hear anybody.
Yeah, I got more thoughts on this
that relate to something else that we've been talking about
and laying groundwork for.
But you're not gonna bring it up now,
you're gonna bring it up later.
I'm just telling you so that we won't forget
to talk about it later.
Another thing, I talked about the prisoner
being released analogy,
but it's also think about like an astronaut
who's been in the International Space Station
for like a year and then they come back to Earth
and they're like, even though they've worked out
and everything and they've stayed healthy
and they've been focused on what it is they've got to do,
then they come back to this world
and all the gravity takes its toll, you know?
And it takes a while to like even figure out
how to physically walk properly, I think.
Doesn't that happen?
I'm sure, yeah.
Depends on how long you've been up there.
And relate to people, you know?
So I'd be interested to see what they're saying about that.
I'd take a, there is an astronaut masterclass,
but I don't think it's related to this.
An astro class?
Yeah.
So I'm interested in one of those.
Let's bring on an astronaut to talk about
how to reenter the world socially.
Not sure that, oh, okay.
If he makes a connection to that, yeah.
Okay.
Or she.
Women can be astronauts.
That's true.
If they make the connection to that.
There we go.
So,
There we go.
So,
this is just kind of putting a capper. At least this is how I hope,
I hope we're rounding a corner that like,
you know, there's not gonna be any,
we don't have to return to any type of lockdown.
Like, I don't even wanna talk about that.
I'm hoping this is a bookend on an experience
that if you go back and listen to our conversations,
as we were entering into it,
we were thinking of things like,
okay, we're living history.
There are opportunities associated with this.
Let's embrace this moment for what it is.
Let's be as responsible and healthy as possible,
but let's also embrace the experience of it.
So when we're done with it,
we have lessons from it and we can move forward.
I'm not ready to say that yet
because we're realizing
that we're still having the reentry is an experience
in and of itself that I want to have that mentality
of I'm embracing this moment by moment as part of history
and giving myself grace to be on that process of reentry,
that it's okay that it's not flipping a switch
for every single person
and that we're not on the same pace,
but we are on pretty much the same trajectory
of moving past this.
And the ones that we love,
some of them need an extra hand
or a little more understanding, more patience to get there.
And I think the fact that a lot of us,
a lot more people can relate,
people like you as an example that wouldn't have said
that you had any sort of social anxiety who are like,
is this what I'm experiencing now?
I think a large number of people experiencing that
is a great opportunity for more people to relate
to those who had social anxiety disorders
before the pandemic started.
Yeah, and to astronauts.
And to astronauts.
So we can, you know, never hurts
to have a little more empathy in the world and to have those conversations
about other people's perspectives.
Yeah.
It's my rec.
I'm gonna give it to you.
I recommend this week that you go through your old shoes.
Put on a pair of shoes you haven't worn
since the beginning of pandemic.
You know, you got those shoes that are in the,
you shoved them to the back of somewhere
and you're like, I'll bring these out for something.
I'm not necessarily talking about dress shoes.
Well, it doesn't matter.
Whatever, walk a mile in someone else's shoes.
That someone else being your former self.
I think it's a, I don't know,
it's just like a practical, physical act of embodiment
of reconnecting with your former self.
And then after walking in those shoes all day,
you realize why you haven't worn them in a year
and it has nothing to do with the pandemic,
then you give them to goodwill
or if they're really horrible, just throw them away
and let it go.
And consider it an act of embodiment,
an exercise in remembering your former self,
but also deciding that you're not obligated
to still be that person moving forward.
Maybe there's things you wanna change. You looking at my shoes today? I was seeing if you're like wearingated to still be that person moving forward. Maybe there's things you wanna change.
You looking at my shoes today?
I was seeing if you're wearing a different,
I haven't seen you wear a different pair of shoes.
I don't take the advice I give.
Oh, okay.
Walk a mile in someone else's shoes.
I think it's good advice.
I think there's a third option.
Do it.
That somebody just told me about
because I have a tendency to go through
all my old clothes and shoes,
and then donate all of them,
which I think that that is priority number one
is to donate.
But somebody said, you know,
you should save some stuff that's more notable
and indicative of the time period
because your kids will want to wear it at some point
or want to be like,
this is my dad's old shirt from 20 years ago.
These are my dad's shoes from 20 years ago.
And I think that there's, again, give away most of it,
but keep a few pieces as memorabilia for your children.
Somebody just gave me that advice
and I don't even remember who it was,
but I was like, that's a good idea because I don't have,
like I think about the stuff that I wore in college
and I see it in these pictures, but like, it'd be cool if I could be like, that's a good idea because I don't have, like I think about the stuff that I wore in college and I see it in these pictures,
but like it'd be cool if I could be like,
Locke, here's the shirt I wore in college.
You gonna wear it in college?
Or just do you want it just as a piece of history?
So keep them for that reason.
No, give away most of them.
Keep some of them.
The experience is the more important part.
It's not really about what you do with them afterwards.
I just, it just hit me, you know?
All right, hashtag Ear Biscuits,
let us know what you think.
What's your experience on reentry?
And I am genuinely interested if there's anybody who,
what I had to say about vaccines
made you think something new and different.
I would, I continue to be interested in being able
to be a force for good.
And I wanna know if I just pissed a bunch of people off,
didn't change anybody's mind, or if you're like,
oh, actually I'm gonna do this now.
Just for my own personal data points, let me know.
Or just tell me why I'm wrong, I'm also very open to that.
Hashtag Ear Biscuits.