Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - Our Rafting Trip | Ear Biscuits Ep. 345
Episode Date: August 15, 2022What happens when a bunch of dads go on vacation? That’s right! Everything goes smooth and nobody’s late to anything! In today’s episode, Rhett and Link talk about their recent trip to Colorado ...with their college buddies. It’s always great to reconnect with old friends while biking through a new city or speeding down a river holding on for dear life. You’ll also learn all about Denver’s haunted airport! Don’t forget to check out Society Showdown: Ultimate Party Game Champions live finale. Visit mythicalsociety.com for details! 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 round table of dim lighting,
we're taking you down the river.
We're gonna take you down the rapids.
We're gonna lose some people off the boat.
Oh no.
And we're not gonna be able to find them.
Maybe it's my friend from college.
Oh wow.
Or maybe it's my friend from internet
who was also my friend from college.
You consider me your friend from internet?
First of all, you didn't even say the internet.
I was kinda hoping you would be wearing
your Willie Nelson shirt that I got you.
You know, I went to the Palomino Festival.
Yeah, and every day you show up with a new damn t-shirt.
I'm like, how many t-shirts did you buy at this festival
that I was also supposed to go to,
but I was too COVIDed to go to it?
So I went, pretty bitter, without you.
Every day you show up with a t-shirt
and it's like rubbing it in my face.
Let me say two things.
Just take the t-shirt off and rub it in my face.
No, you don't want that.
Number one, this is a shirt that I did not get
this shirt at Palomino Festival.
I got this shirt while I was on my vacation
in Santa Barbara at a surf shop
because this is like a collab.
It's just a shotgun Willie.
Between Willie Nelson and I think PacSun?
Some brand.
Does it say it?
Brixton.
Brixton, that's different than PacSun.
Brixton would be sold at PacSun.
But the T-shirt that I got you,
I saw this awesome Willie Nelson t-shirt
that said Willie's Reserve, and I was like,
oh yeah, Link'll love that.
But that's like where he,
people go to like shoot game, right?
No, it's Willie's Weed brand.
I did not know at the time that this is
Willie Nelson's cannabis company, Willie's Reserve.
So just be careful where you wear it, Link.
Be careful where I wear it?
Be careful where you wear it.
Probably shouldn't wear it on the internet.
I haven't worn it.
Matter of fact, I threw it away.
Have you even tried it on?
I usually launder my shirts first.
Interesting.
I guess normal size people can do that.
Cause you're, I wear a large t-shirt
but I want it to fit medium point five.
This is funny because this morning,
okay I saw this shirt hanging up, my wife had washed it,
we used to have this agreement that you cannot wash
and dry my t-shirts but that was back when t-shirts
were a little bit skinnier, a little bit tighter.
And then I upgraded to the XL and I was like,
oh, XLs basically, well the style has changed, right?
So they've gotten a little bit bigger.
She washed this and I have a pretty good sense
of just looking at a shirt on a hanger
knowing if it's gotten too short and I was like,
oh no, she messed my shotgun Willie shirt up.
But I put it on and it actually fits okay.
Because before I put it on, I was like,
am I gonna have to start getting two XLs
and then laundering them and drying them real hard?
Apparently not.
Shotgun Willie is a great song.
I think it's also the name of the album.
Sits around in his underwear.
And it's, I think it became one of his monikers
after that song came out.
Yes, right.
But that's not what we're talking about today.
We're talking about we went back to Colorado.
Yeah, we did.
We're just kinda doing that.
You know what, we're really into the Denver airport
and all the conspiracies around it.
I'm fond of.
And we wanna visit the Denver airport
as much as possible.
I'm not fond of the Denver airport.
It's rather large.
We're not gonna really get into the.
There's a red-eyed bronco on the exit.
The conspiracy theories, but if you want to,
if you're that kind of person, you know me,
I'm not into conspiracy theories
unless I'm doing a bit on GMM.
There's tunnels.
There's all kinds of theories about this thing.
It was built in 1995, I think.
It cost $3 billion more than the expected budget,
which is a lot of money.
It took a lot of extra time.
Because they built a tunnel all the way to Fort Collins.
So people are like, there's a tunnel that goes
like 100 miles to Colorado Springs, I think is the theory.
There's like, the Illuminati supposedly uses it.
The most interesting thing is there is that big Bronco
that's out, first of all, it's in the middle of nowhere
outside of Denver, just on the plains, right?
Yeah.
And then there's this big giant blue Bronco,
of course, like the Denver Broncos.
It's their mascot.
But this thing is massive and has these lit up red eyes
that don't always, you don't, it's like you have to drive past it
and at a certain angle, boom, it's like the thing
just kinda lights up and looks directly at you.
It lights up?
Well it's, they're always lit.
I was driving the rental car,
so I didn't get to see the eyes.
And the thing is, you know what the name of the thing is?
Blucifer.
Really?
Yes, and the artist, this is freaky.
Only that statue or the mascot for the football team?
I think only that statue.
Okay.
The artist was killed by the statue
while he was building it.
Uh-uh.
How?
A piece of the horse fell off
and cut an artery in his leg and he bled out.
Nuh-uh, nuh-uh. Ied out. Nuh uh, nuh uh.
I ain't making this stuff up, man, Wikipedia.
Yeah, somebody else is making it up.
No, no, no, no, so there's a lot of things.
There's all these weird, there's images around the airport
and there's, people think that there's some sort of
Nazi thing going on.
I think that all of that, and interestingly,
the Denver airport, like the CEO of the Denver,
if you go on the Denver airport website.
The CEO of an airport?
They have, yeah, it's a big job.
They have decided to embrace, not the Nazi part,
but the conspiracy theory stuff,
because they were like, we spent some time
trying to dispel these things and now we just embrace it
and it's just part of the fun of the airport.
Because there's like gargoyles around the baggage claim or something to
like ward off evil spirits. But it's just like architectural decisions or whatever.
But that bronco killed the artist.
Wow.
That's like the desk of GMM killing one of us.
Man, I hope we're rolling on that.
Which could happen. Or the round table of dim lighting. If you had to be killed by Killing one of us. Man, I hope we're rolling on that.
Or the round table of dim lighting. If you had to be killed by the GMM desk
or the round table of dim lighting,
which, and it was because an artery was cut
and you were gonna bleed out, which one would you choose?
I don't think the round table of dim lighting
could cut you.
It's round.
The GMM desk could probably cut you
with one of those corners.
It's dim in here though.
You might, there's a hazard with visibility.
That's true.
So anyway, we enjoyed the Denver airport.
It's a beautiful airport other than the conspiracies.
So this trip was a long time in the works.
Just to give you a little background,
when we on this podcast started,
we released our lost years, this is pre-pandemic,
like I mean, like weeks before the pandemic really hit
in 2020, we released the lost years.
You have a little hair that I feel like
needs to be addressed. Oh yeah?
Got it. Did I address it?
Yep.
Okay.
And you know our- For those of you listening,
it was not a pube.
Our friends- It was on his head.
We gave, you know, our friends back home,
you know, their faith is still intact.
Now I'm not gonna speak for them.
Friends back, only one of them is back home.
But like our friends from college that we, you know,
we were in and out of touch with,
like we're still friends,
but we're not like actively talking to them all the time,
like active friends pre-pandemic.
But at different points when we were visiting back home,
at least one friend, like I gave him a heads up,
gave Harm a heads up, like hey,
we're gonna talk about our spiritual deconstructions
on the podcast, I'm approaching this with some trepidation.
And you know, so I was able to have some good conversation
because we experienced being involved in Campus Crusade
and like our college years and all that stuff with them.
These were our closest friends.
So it's like giving them a heads up,
kind of telling them it's coming.
And the general response was of support.
You know, and like, hey, I'm your friend, I'm here for you.
As you go through this,
who knows how this is gonna all come out.
So that's when we started like reengaging
and kind of upping the ante on our friendship, I think,
right before the pandemic.
Then when the pandemic hit, well, no,
before the pandemic hit,
as the Lost Years podcasts were coming out,
we had, I believe we had a video chat or two
where we were like talking to them about it
because they said they wanted to support us
and it's one thing to say that, thoughts and prayers,
but it's another thing to say,
hey, how are you doing?
I'm sending you a text, let's talk.
And then like we're all getting on video chats and talking.
Then when the pandemic hit,
we were like, it kind of shifted to being about talking
about our shared experience in the pandemic
because you got Harm in North Carolina,
you got Greg who, you met Greg on this podcast months ago.
He's in Washington State and Tim was in St. Louis,
Baltimore is what I was gonna say, St. Louis at the time, he's in New York State now
and another friend in Japan.
Yes.
And so in this group, we got a guy who's like
heading a seminary, we got a guy who's a full-time pastor,
we got a guy who takes pictures of real estate properties.
Yes.
But is very involved in his church, you know?
So like, that's where they're coming from.
But we were such good friends in college.
And then the pandemic really strengthened our friendship.
And I remember early on, it was like, man, this is nice.
This is a source of strength to be able to connect
with these people.
This is something we talked about over many podcasts
and like highlights of the year, I think we brought it up.
So our friendship got reignited.
Who knew the pandemic would last so long?
We would do a video chat every week, every couple of weeks.
Pretty much said it from the beginning.
Okay, yeah, fair point.
If you go back, yeah, 2023,
we're still gonna be thinking about this.
But even early on, like the first six months
of the pandemic, as we were like having these video chats,
this idea started to percolate of when this is over,
we should all get together.
We should do something.
We should like, and then we're like, let's not all get together. We should do something. We should like, and then we're like,
let's not all get together in North Carolina, boring.
Let's have a trip.
But I think it's important because I do,
this isn't, the point of the conversation
is not to talk about the fact that
we're in a different place spiritually
and the nature of our friendship.
We're just gonna talk about the time that we had together.
But I do wanna just address that a little bit
because I don't know, you know,
I tend to engage more about this stuff than you do, right?
Like if somebody says something to me on the internet
about it or ask a question, I'll get into it.
I enjoy kind of going back and forth
with people who disagree with me about things a little bit.
And so, you know, I kind of give off the vibe
that like I kind of still want to talk about this.
I mean, I'm releasing a damn album
that's all about my spiritual deconstruction, right?
I'm kind of, I'm sort of in, I'm in that camp.
Right.
So I'm kind of inviting conversation. I'm inviting challenges and that camp. Right. So I'm kind of inviting conversation,
I'm inviting challenges and that kind of thing.
And I do think that people might be like,
oh, you guys have sworn off anything to do with church
or Christianity, and you may think that it impacts
relationships and friendships,
and I just think it's really interesting.
And it depends on the nature of the person, right?
Because there might be people who are like,
you have made these public statements
and you have established yourself
in this particular position
and you're kind of in opposition
against evangelical Christianity
from a philosophical standpoint.
And therefore I can't have a relationship with you.
There are people who would take that stance
but that's not the stance that we've taken.
I'm still in very close relationships with a lot of people
who are still very much evangelical Christians.
And I think that, you know, and I'm not gonna speak
for these dudes because I think that they can speak
for themselves, I think that.
By the way, I am too.
I got my former church friends.
I got a few key ones.
Yeah, and all I'm gonna say is that
while we definitely have disagreements
about some fundamental things,
it's like the foundation of our friendship is love
and that love is still intact.
And that love surpasses our disagreements.
And we had a lot of really lively discussions or whatever.
It's not argumentative and it's not like,
it doesn't get heated.
I think we all, at least a certain set of us in this group,
kind of enjoy talking about these things
and talking about things from a philosophical,
spiritual standpoint or whatever.
And it's just kind of a, I think that these guys,
I think what I'm trying to say is these guys
are a great example of how Christians can interact
with people who have deconstructed.
Yeah, and you know what?
I think I have some thoughts about it,
but I wanna come back to it
after going through the whole trip,
because I think that kinda sheds light and perspective
on the thoughts that I have about it
in response to what you're saying.
So I think this is going in a good place.
Maybe I'll just put a pin in it,
just kinda come back to that as kind of a bookend thing.
All right.
The other way to look at this was,
I mean, we just had this desire to get together
and do a trip because we were really enjoying reconnecting.
And yeah, we talk about the pandemic so much,
we talk about our lives, it's not like we talk about
our spirituality constantly.
It moved into just being one of the many things we would talk about our spirituality constantly. It moved into just being one of the many things
we would talk about.
And then it, so the trip finally happened, you know?
We said, let's meet in Denver,
it could be a central airport for people coming
from all over the place.
And then we can, you know, let's get an Airbnb
where everybody can have their own bedroom.
I really appreciate you making that determination.
That was a huge, and it's not easy to find
when you got like five guys, you each need your own room.
That's a big house.
Going outside of Denver, we were near Idaho Springs
and we were like, what can we do around there?
Whitewater rafting, baby.
This is perfect, this is a perfect like midlife
college boys somehow still friends, let's get back together,
let's do something a little death defying.
You know, City Slickers.
Haven't seen it but my understanding is that like
it's a midlife crisis movie.
You haven't seen City Slickers my understanding is that like, it's a midlife crisis movie. You haven't seen City Slickers?
I would love to see it, it's just, you know,
I'm a busy man.
We didn't talk about GME in the first five minutes.
Was that a stipulation?
Was that a stipulation or is it just we had to say it twice?
It's an internal thing.
Okay, so we're gonna say it.
So I'll say it right now.
So I haven't, yeah, I haven't seen
Slitty Slickers.
Slitty Slickers?
That's different.
That's porn.
That's the porn version.
I haven't seen that either.
Oh speaking of which, Slitty Slickers, Slitty.
Sick that slit.
Slitty Slickers, Slers, slitty sickers.
Wow.
Good Mythical Evening is right around the corner.
Yes it is.
And who knows, maybe we should watch that.
That's a good transition.
We got a lot of stuff planned.
Get your ticket now for the live event
exclusively on Moment House.
Watch it as it's happening.
Whatever happens, you will see.
Yeah.
It's gonna be R-rated.
There will be drinking.
It's gonna be full of surprises for us
and we might have some surprises for you.
September 1st.
Mark your calendars, clear your schedules.
Go to goodmythicoevening.com and grab that ticket.
So yeah, we made plans to go whitewater rafting
and hang out at this Airbnb and do some other stuff
and I mean, it definitely felt like that kind of midlife,
it wasn't like City Slickers?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Probably, I think we are most likely,
we're probably actually a little bit older
than the City Slickers were, Billy Crystal,
Clistol. Yeah.
Billy Clistol is the porn version.
Billy Clitstil. Stop it version. Billy Clitstall.
Stop it.
I was trying to get it right.
Hey man, you gotta save some stuff
for Good Mythical Evening.
I'm just warming up.
Okay.
But yeah, the thing I was thinking was the dad energy
that was kind of permeating everything.
Like when we all got into the SUV to go somewhere
and like you made the, he was like,
isn't it interesting to be here
and to not have to say something like,
does everybody have all the stuff they need?
Has everybody taken a leak if you need to use the bathroom?
Do you have your phone?
Right.
When a bunch of dads get together
who are the ones who are constantly saying those things
to their families, it's like everybody's just like,
you don't have to worry about anybody.
Everybody just got themselves figured out.
It was so great.
And when we had to check out by 10 a.m.,
everybody's scrambling, doing their thing,
everybody's pitching in to like take the trash out
and put the sheets in the right spot
and the towels in the right place
and this, that, and the other.
And we all get in the rental car, the towels in the right place, and this, that, and the other, and we all get in the rental car,
and I look at the clock, 10 a.m. on the dot, baby.
Yeah, that would not have happened
if I was with my family.
Not a chance.
And I definitely wouldn't have a smile on my face.
Which confirms I am not the problem.
I'm not either.
Because when left to my own devices,
I get out of the place on time.
Right.
I'm not the problem.
I'm not saying my beautiful wife is the problem.
It's probably the children,
but it could be my wife as well.
I don't know,
because I haven't experimented in that way
to isolate her.
I don't know.
So it could be my beautiful wife's problem.
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It felt good, you know, and everybody, everybody was pretty laid back, you know?
Yeah. I don't know.
I don't know, some of us are,
we got different gradations of being laid back,
but there's like, I was driving, that made me feel good.
I actually felt like I'm driving.
If you had to rank the laid backness of the group,
one to five.
Yeah.
Who's the most laid back and who's the least laid back?
Greg is the most laid back.
And then next it may be,
I'm debating between Tim and you.
I think it's you.
It's definitely you because there will be times
when I was driving and then all of a sudden
Tim would be the one speaking up saying, we just passed the grocery store
that we were supposed to go to and if you don't,
but the town that we're going to is up here
and if you go to that place first,
if we go to that liquor store first
and then come back to the grocery store,
then it's gonna add 40 minutes to our trip
and I was like, I did not know that, brilliant.
Let's turn around.
So it takes a level of like, I'm actually,
you know, I had a GPS on and then he's back there
in the backseat with another one on,
just like catching my errors, which is great.
And then I would rank, who's left?
Me and Harm.
Oh this is a debate.
You're both Enneagram ones.
Yeah.
Which already.
And we're the ones,
it's between the two of us is the reason
why the trip happened, let's be real.
No, yeah, I think this is one of the,
this is why different personality profiles,
which we kinda analyzed through the grid of the Enneagram,
but it just means different personality types.
You need some ones in your,
it's helpful to have some ones in your group
just to make sure that the things,
the logistic gets planned. Everything goes perfectly.
And since I was more planning things.
But then you need some other people in your group,
other non-ones in your group,
so that you can actually have a good time.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, you can't have it all at once.
You gotta set it up, and then you gotta spike it.
I made a lot of the plans,
but Harm was the one who would be like,
whenever we found out it was Tim's birthday,
and he was like, I wanna eat a steak,
and then you're like,
we're gonna get you a steak and then you kept throwing out
steak places and then Harm would be like, that's too far.
It's like he's got his moments of asserting that bad idea
doesn't fit within the parameters of perfection,
which I appreciate.
I felt like I didn't have to be the one
to evaluate everything and because I was kind of
the leader, I was the leader.
Okay.
I was the driver and I knew the itinerary.
I wasn't really the leader but I felt like
that there were checks and balances between Harm and Tim.
I'm gonna put, I'm gonna put Harm at number one,
I'm gonna put me at number two.
Okay, that's interesting.
And then I'm sure I'm gonna hear from him later.
Okay, speaking as an innocent bystander.
Maybe we were tied.
Yeah, I think my assessment is that
while Harm is much more
of a one-one than you are a one-one, right?
Because you are incredibly disorganized and forgetful
and absent-minded in a way that most ones don't.
Like you lose your keys, you come to work.
Yesterday you came to work, oh I left my laptop at home. You come to work, you usually don't. Like you lose your keys, you come to work, like yesterday you came to work,
oh I left my laptop at home.
You come to work, you usually don't have your ID.
If we need to go someplace and you need an ID,
you're like ah, my ID is.
But me being a one only translates into
then I just felt like a failure.
But Harm, he's a very buttoned up one.
Yeah, he wears more buttons than me.
But so it's interesting, you have a chaotic energy
but you're also a one, so I think that when your oneness
comes out, it can come out in sort of a semi-aggressive
nature in a way that harms never comes out.
The only time that I got testy was when that last morning
when we were stalling to go to the airport, we couldn't find anything worth doing
after visiting Red Rocks Amphitheater, which was awesome.
We had a few more hours and then it was just like,
we got on scooters in like downtown Denver
and it was like, that is not, I was not impressed.
Well you made that very clear.
I was not happy, I was like, you know what,
next time, we're just gonna get up
and we're gonna get on the plane and get the hell out.
Like that's the other thing about,
and maybe it's the one thing too,
is that like the whole time I was assessing
what are we learning here for next time?
And I found out the only person I could talk to that about
was Harm really.
But there was that moment.
But that was nice. There was that moment. But that was nice.
There was that moment.
What are we gonna do next, Jared?
Next to last day where I pointed out
where I was like, you said something like,
you're like, you said something about this town
that we're in, I was like, okay,
in the past two hours you have complained about
this town, this restaurant, this walk
that we're on right now, like you could complain about a lot of things.
And that was what I would call your aggressive oneness.
Should have never have gone to Aspen.
I'm just saying. I think that's what it was.
So what I'm saying ultimately,
I'm not throwing you under the bus,
but I'm putting you at number one.
Because while I think that harm is the most one-one
in a lot of ways, the aggressive oneness is more likely to come from you.
It's the same between the two of us.
But I know how to cut loose too, man.
Well that's, sure, yeah.
I know how to let it go.
That's why I let go so aggressively.
I just like, I let go with reckless abandon.
That is how I would describe it, aggressively letting go.
But then it's like, it's just like, yeah.
Like, I don't know how this Good Mythical Evening
is gonna go, I don't mean to keep bringing it up,
but we're on the precipice of it.
Like the last one, yeah, it was just like a big release
of one, like letting go of oneness and just like, just being, just letting loose, man.
Well the people around you have to take cover.
It's a little bit like a tornado, you know.
Yeah, I'm trying to learn that.
So I'm getting better.
But yeah, it's nice to just totally check out of oneness.
I love that.
And there was a hot tub.
And there was a hot tub.
Which allowed for that.
And a fire pit.
We need to promote some craft, right?
And a lot of bourbon.
Let's do that and then we'll get into the specifics.
Over on the Mythical Society,
we've been doing these games.
What have we been calling it?
The Society Showdown.
Society Showdown.
We've had Team Rhett versus Team Link.
You can go on the Mythical Society
and watch the previous iterations.
We played an epic game of nasty food Jenga.
Then we played our new party game
that you can get at Walmart,
on walmart.com called We're Still Good.
We played that, had a lot of fun.
And then, but the, first of all, you've won,
you're up by three points. I'm winning.
But we have a live ultimate society showdown.
We're gonna determine the final champion
between Team Rhett and Team Link.
I don't even know what we're doing.
A series of live competitions.
Davin is dreaming this stuff up, he's our game master.
Yeah, he was on Wheel of Fortune.
And so, you gotta be a third degree member
in order to watch the live finale.
This Thursday, August 18th at 6 p.m. Eastern,
3 p.m. Pacific, only on the Mythical Society.
Join Third Degree to watch this live finale.
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well, it's archived.
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Do you want to talk about rafting? Yes, we both had our sights set on—we all did. Rafting was, you know, if you think
about a central, sort of the center of gravity of this, the expectations around
this trip was around this adventure that we were gonna go on rafting.
And it was like, oh yeah, it's Colorado.
Like, you know, it's gonna be super intense
and it's gonna be big. Well, I wanted to find one
that was, I said, adventurous, not boring.
I want class four, I want class five.
We've done the Upper Gauley in West Virginia,
which has, I believe, Class 5s.
It was very intense.
Doesn't it go to Class 6?
Yeah, let's just say yeah.
I think at certain times,
the Upper Galley will go to Class 6.
So in Idaho Springs,
the Clear Creek runs through there,
like right next to the freeway
or whatever they call it.
It's beautiful.
Beautiful big creek. And so there's a lot of white water rafting on that.
And so we did the upper Clear Creek
and they said it was like a half day trip.
And we get there, there's like six rafts going out.
We're in a raft all our own.
We got pictures to prove it.
And there were class fours and then a couple
of what they called class fives at the end.
No.
There were only class fours?
We did not go above a class four.
Okay.
I think it's so dependent on the water levels
and by the time that we were there,
the water levels were starting to get lower.
Basically the end of the season
for this particular thing.
Shout out to Amber, our guide, who is a mythical beast,
and as we were settling in and getting our equipment,
she came up to us and said, pick me to be your guide.
She said, I'm the best.
And I was like, yeah, well, that's what I said.
She said, pick me to be your guide,
and I said, are you any good? And she said, I'm the best. And then was like, yeah, well that's what I said. She said pick me to be your guide and I said are you any good?
And she said I'm the best.
And then when we got on the river she said
actually I have the least of experience
of anyone that you could have chosen today.
But she was great.
But she was a mythical beast.
She was a mythical beast and she was a great rafting guide.
And we can't blame Amber for the nature of the water
at that point.
Because when we were planning this,
we said we wanted the most intense rapid
that we could get our hands on.
We wanted to be out there for the longest.
Kara was sending emails to different companies
and people were sending back, they were like,
how in shape are these guys?
They were picturing like Kevin Bacon from it's like, these are good questions.
They were picturing like Kevin Bacon from a River Wild.
Are they experienced?
It's like, just tell them whatever they need to hear
for us to do this stuff.
Because what I was kind of thinking secretly the whole time
is that we could create a situation
that would feel like a thriller movie.
Like not necessarily like the River Wild
where it turns out the guide is a murderer, spoiler alert.
Right.
Or a banjo player.
More like.
With a bow and arrow.
I wanted there to be some legitimate peril.
Somebody's gotta get rescued.
Hell yeah man, we got a podcast to make.
Right.
And you make it on the river.
And but then they were like, well,
you can't really do the class fives now
because that's not really active, but you,
we did all we could do, but nobody got hurt.
Well. And nobody died.
Amber said, we can go for a swim,
we can topple this thing over at a certain point
if you want to, and I was like yes.
And then Tim was like I'd rather not.
You know?
He was cold and it was raining.
It was actually the most peril that we were in.
And he played it's my birthday card.
I was like seriously?
I was like can we at least take a vote?
Amber's like well it's his birthday.
I'm not gonna turn you guys over.
That doesn't mean it's not gonna happen,
but I'm not gonna do it on purpose.
It almost happened.
But the scariest I was, was at the beginning.
In the parking lot?
The parking lot, like trying to get into this water
and there was a thunderstorm coming through
and it was just like.
Lightning. Lightning.
On the ridge.
Feeling very close.
I was like, now I realize that by definition,
the river is the lowest point in the valley,
so I guess unlikely to get struck,
but I am the tallest person in this boat.
Yeah, you were.
You know what I'm saying,
so the lightning's gonna find me first.
And you were wearing that pointy metal hat.
Yeah, right.
But it was really cool to like push off into the creek
and then it's raining, it's thundering,
there's a little bit of lightning.
It really gave it a sense of peril.
I like that.
Yeah.
Because that was the easier part of the ride.
And you know, we were very responsive.
We were, you know, you get a woman barking orders
in the back of a boat and boy, we're aiming to please.
Yeah we are.
We in fact, we're talking about how much we needed her
to tell us how good we were at whatever she told us to do.
Yeah that was first.
The first question I asked her was how are we doing compared to the average boat?
This is a very McLaughlin question to ask.
And she was like, you're doing average.
Like she said, and I was like, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
So what do you mean?
She was like, well, there's been a couple of times
that not everyone has responded.
And I think she was talking about me.
I was like, well, I'm in the front of the boat.
You gotta speak louder, Amber. You blamed her. I blamed her. I was like, if I'm in the front of the boat, you gotta speak louder, Amber.
You blamed her.
I blamed her.
I was like, if you say it loud enough,
the rentster's ready to go.
So then after that I was really listening.
Yeah.
And then she said, okay, you're doing better than average.
And me and Tim, who are both threes,
we both felt good about that.
Yeah.
And then you start going down,
I mean the whole trip, it said it was a half day trip,
but I think they count a lot of other stuff.
That's accounting for everything,
like leaving your home and getting back.
Yeah, so we were actually on the river for an hour,
which was a disappointment, I'm just gonna be honest.
It would've been nice to have a trip.
An hour is a short amount of time
to actually do something when,
you gotta do something longer than it takes
to prep for it and recover from it.
Well not recover from it, I'll take that back.
What about sex? But prep for it.
Yeah, yeah, I think so.
Is foreplay prep?
No, foreplay is sex, man.
Okay, I'm just trying to figure out.
Save that for sex timber. Okay, I'm just trying to figure out. Save that for sex timber.
Okay, all right.
So yeah, and because of the rain, we were moving faster.
Which was actually good.
The water was coming up.
So yeah, I mean we almost got dumped in the drink
at the end and there's a couple of class fours there
at the end and they both have the word beaver in the name,
which is great.
It's like you gotta really nail the slot of the beaver
and then you're really diving into it
and your side, I mean, I thought you were going,
like you were going backwards, like you were deep.
Like the whole boat was going in on you
in the upper right hand corner.
We got a pretty good action shot of that.
Yeah, I'm not in most of these photos.
So I don't really, I don't care much to show.
You were blocked a little bit.
I was in the back.
I got in the back of the boat thinking.
It was the front.
That's your problem.
I knew it wasn't.
I got in the back of the boat thinking, you know what,
I'll let the boys experience the front of the boat
because there'll be a point when we switch and then.
Not if it's an hour long. When we switch, then I'll be in the front of the boat. Because there'll be a point when we switch and then. Not if it's an hour long.
When we switch, then I'll be in the front of the boat
for the best part.
So I selfishly deferred to make myself look better
when really I was a bad person.
I didn't get in the front of the boat by choice.
It was the only spot left.
It was like, okay, you guys don't wanna get in the front,
I'll get in the front, me and Greg got in the front.
I wish I would've gotten in the front.
My favorite part of those photos is Greg's face.
Progressively, everyone had a different sort of like,
most of us were smiling, I kinda had a sort of a,
I do what my dad does when I'm getting ready to go to,
You're gritchy, you got your lucky jaw.
But I was still trying to enjoy myself,
but Greg looked just,
Astonished. Frightened. in a couple, there's a couple
of really great shots.
We're showing them to you right now.
He's done a lot more death defying river action
up there in Washington too.
He's been kayaking and he's doing all kinds of stuff.
Which kind of brings me to the next point which is
we got a little taste of adventure
but everybody wanted a little bit more of a taste.
So the thing that we're talking about now
is next time potentially doing one of these
curated adventure trips where you've got like a guide
who leads you through.
Now they do this kind of thing.
Something overnight.
Like a two day, one night at least.
Well they do this kind of thing in Alaska
and I think Alaska may be too ambitious and too far away,
but maybe there's something in the continental United States
that doesn't require too much travel,
because we're all busy,
where we can get somebody to kind of lead us through.
So I'm not saying I'm putting the call out there,
but if you're like a mythical beast guide,
and I don't mean like-
Let's put the call out there.
And I don't mean like you want to be a guide.
I'm saying that your job,
you are a be a guide. I'm saying that your job, you are a professional
adventure guide who leads people on these curated
adventure trips.
We want to do, and it.
In the United States.
It could be city slicker-esque.
It could be full cowboy, it could be mules going down
into the Grand Canyon, staying at the bottom
and coming back up.
It could be a big raft.
It could be a dude ranch.
I mean if we wanna go full city slickers.
Then I would need to watch.
You know I watched Top Gun, the original,
so I could watch the new one.
I could do the same thing for city slickers
for the next thing.
So I was like can we do a rafting trip
down through the Grand Canyon?
But then we'd look at how big those boats are.
We want something private or semi-private
and we want it to be rustic.
We don't want mixed company here.
But yet we want it to be posh.
We want it to be taken care of.
We want to almost die but live the most life
we've ever lived and we wanna do it
with our college buddies and we want you to make it happen.
Yeah so I guess just use hashtag,
hashtag ear biscuits on Twitter to either.
We've never solicited.
Point us in the right direction.
So hard for something.
But listen, again, I'm gonna say right now.
It could be Alaska.
It needs to be in the continental.
You gotta be legit though.
It needs to be in the US.
Like you gotta be legit.
I don't mean like, I've been camping.
Don't waste our time. Don't waste been camping. Don't waste our time.
Don't waste our time.
Don't waste our time.
And we won't waste yours.
Okay.
But it needs to be over a long weekend.
You do this for a living, okay?
Let's get more parameters. It needs to be over a like-
A weekend?
We flew in on Friday and we flew back on a Monday.
That's what it needs to be. It needs to be a four day weekend.
It needs to be like a two day trip.
So the Saturday and the Sunday is the stuff.
So we're kind of limited in that way, okay?
So we're counting on you.
Mythical beast in connected places.
Somebody's gotta, I mean this is a thing that people do.
If we don't start cashing in on our fame now.
Yeah, we gotta do something.
What are we gonna do?
Right.
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 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.
I'm just a common man, I drive a common van.
My dog don't have a pedigree. Who sings that?
John Connelly.
Who's that?
He's a country singer from like the 80s.
Well, I guess I don't know him.
If I head my way, I'm gonna stay that way.
Other highlights for me.
We can't be common anymore, Rhett.
You gotta live it up.
I really, first of all, I did enjoy that dinner we had
and we were, and our waitress was a mythical beast.
Emily.
Who, when we came in.
You made it weird, you said we were in our waitress,
which was really weird.
I said and our waitress.
Okay, good, that was your mind in the waitress, which was really weird. I said and our waitress. Okay, good.
That was your mind in the gutter.
No, I just heard the words.
And that was a situation where we came in the restaurant
to celebrate Tim's birthday and Emily was a mythical beast
and said, follow me, I'll be your server.
Pick me.
And was an incredible,
not only was she an incredible waiter,
but she also told us that we should go hang out in Golden.
And we made the mistake of not planning anything
our second day.
I just thought we were gonna lounge at the house
and just look at each other and say,
"'Wow, so good to see you."
But it turns out we wanted to do more.
The taste of adventure.
Golden, Colorado, you can take a tour
of the Coors Brewing Facility,
but you gotta make a reservation like six months in advance
and it can't be worth it.
Right, I mean.
I mean.
At the end of the day, it's Coors.
Clear. You know what I'm saying?
Clear Creek. No matter how awesome
this is, at the end of the day, it's a Coors.
I'm sorry.
I like it for what it is, but I didn't reserve anything.
Right. And I won't.
Clear Creek runs through Golden,
and there's tubing that happens,
like, there's like, I mean,
this is like the bustling little town.
It's like a cute, nice little town.
And people can rent tubes or bring your own tube
and you can either take a shuttle
or you can walk along the creek through the middle of town
and just put in like a few miles up.
And it's rapids.
Oh yeah.
And there were still a few people
with beverages in their hands when they were going down
but at a few points it's like your beverage is gonna be spilled.
But there were a lot of people.
And then it goes straight into the Coors plant.
The water was not, we didn't do the tubing.
We thought about it, but we were like,
we got on clothes to hang out here for the rest of the day.
We don't wanna smell like the creek and then trying to hang out at for the rest of the day. We don't wanna smell like the creek
and then trying to hang out at a beer joint.
So we did what we did in Aspen,
which has become a tradition now.
You rent electric bikes and you ride it along the river.
The boys didn't know about this.
Like we had to, it felt like a silver bullet,
like a revelation.
You know, when we're like, we're gonna ride e-bikes.
Cause once you know that there's a body of water
running through an outdoorsy town.
And a path next to it.
Yeah, especially with people tubing.
Smooth path.
It's like you know there's gonna be e-bikes.
We found them, we did like a, e-bikes are freaking fun.
They are more fun, I think, than scooters.
Because you can go further, especially in this instance.
Like on our tours, we would always do scooters
in whatever town we were in.
And so like for city navigation, it's fun.
Yeah.
But when you're in like a rustic town
with like a river or a stream, you wanna cover more ground,
and I think the e-bike is the way to go.
It's a nice, fun, high speed tour.
It was definitely a highlight.
We saw a frickin', was it a mountain goat?
It was a bighorn sheep.
Bighorn sheep, dude.
We saw a bighorn sheep.
Just sittin' up there on the ridge.
I think that's kind of uncommon.
We got to the end of the path,
and by this time, we were in a canyon,
and we're on the outside of town.
It's beautiful.
The way that they've laid this place out,
like the hiking pass and the biking pass,
it's just like, they've done great planning.
And we had to turn around, and I just happened to look up
and silhouetted against the ridge line
is this bighorn sheep.
He was kinda leaning over like.
But you got the perfect outline of his horse.
Those look like middle-aged boys from college.
It definitely had a nature,
if we had anything other than our phones,
we could have gotten some,
I think we got just a couple of pictures
that we're now showing you.
We wouldn't have seen him if he wasn't
silhouetted on the ridge.
But I think that was pretty uncommon.
It's uncommon to see those things that close in a town.
I've never seen one.
I've never seen one, but I have now.
Elk are very common there.
You guys were flipping out.
Yep, I saw an elk and I was like, well that's uncommon,
and then I saw like seven more elk on the way to the house.
One of the things that I noticed.
I recommend Golden, I recommend tubing.
They got an RV park right there by the thing,
and if you got young kids and you just wanna
take them tubing, it seems like a really cool spot
to just hang out.
One of the things that I noticed,
and now having been to Colorado two times
in a short period of time,
the apparel.
Yeah.
So there is a Colorado style,
and again, I've been to Aspen.
I wouldn't call it style.
So it doesn't matter how rich you are,
I wouldn't call it style. So it doesn't matter how rich you are,
you wear, you look like you could do the following things
and you would be ready for it.
Eat a croissant, have a coffee, maybe take a phone call,
hike a very long ways, ride a bike,
ride on the back of a bighorn sheep,
like you can do all those things with what you're wearing.
Take a shit in the woods.
It's like tight athleisure wear.
Athleisure wear, yeah.
And it is a thing and they all wear it.
And it's not, I mean some of the ladies, you know,
I would say that it's working for them, in my opinion.
But it isn't necessarily fashion forward,
if you know what I mean.
Yeah.
Yeah, I didn't see, it wasn't a lot of that
like hipster athleisure, like I'm going camping,
but I dropped thousands of dollars to look right to do it.
It's a lot more practical than that.
It's like this more practical than that.
It's like this clothing will dry very quickly.
Yeah, and it's,
And it's aerodynamic.
And it doesn't really draw attention to itself.
Like everything, you know,
It's all muted colors, blacks,
You know, if you go down into Hollywood or Beverly Hills
or any cool spot, Silver Lake, anywhere, you know,
people wearing stuff to express themselves,
to draw attention to themselves.
Yeah, you can't really express yourself with this stuff.
Everybody's just really trying to optimize
their performance.
It could, I mean, let's be honest,
it might be the future of clothing.
Because it is the most-
I like expressing myself, man.
It is the most like Star Trek clothing
of any clothing choices.
I didn't think of it that way, but yeah, you're right.
If you see futuristic clothing in a movie,
it's usually form-fitting, tight,
looks like it would dry very quickly, is breathable.
Propel bullets in rain.
Maybe they understand something that we don't. Because we definitely look like a couple of.
Don't forget the nice hatch to shit in the woods.
We look like dudes from LA who are in Colorado.
With three guys from other places.
Yeah.
No offense guys, we're not the same.
Greg had a.
I'll come back to that.
Greg has a little bit of a.
Athleisure.
Athleisure wear, like some high tech.
He actually had shoes for rafting.
Yeah, yeah, because he has another friend named Rhett
that drags him somewhere to do stuff.
Everyone should have a friend named Rhett
to drag them places.
Right.
And get, I gotta buy special shoes for this?
A highlight for me was watching the home videos.
You know, when I digitize the stuff
that went on the Mythical Society,
it was like the never before seen stuff
we're putting over there.
I also dug up these home video,
like we had the video camera around our apartment
and you know, it was me, you and Greg,
and then the next year Tim moved in
and we would just pick that thing up and film us.
We weren't making videos.
Well actually sometimes we were making video,
like comedy sketches just for ourselves
that no one would ever see, but usually it was just like
we would turn it on, point it at somebody,
and they would just start dancing.
Or you'd point it, like somebody was on the toilet
and then you'd walk in there and film them.
A lot of people sitting on toilets,
couple of times guys in showers,
and a lot of dancing.
You might need to explain yourself a little bit here.
People might get the wrong idea, Link.
Get whatever idea you want.
I mean, I don't know why we did it,
but we were just, it was slice of life, man.
It felt so freeing.
Felt freeing.
Yeah.
But it was so fun to like sit down and watch.
I mean, we probably watched an hour of footage.
More than that.
I'd say we watched two hours.
And then, I don't know if it was related to that
or the night before, but it just occurred to me
when we were sitting around talking one night,
and I was like, you know what?
It's a special thing that we have.
We have this bond that we formed in our college years
where you're forming who you are.
And I mean, we were forming so much of our worldview
and our purpose and where we were headed in life
and what we believed.
And of course, a lot of that stuff has changed.
And then on top of that, you know, we're internet famous.
And so all of these questions that I think I have
in the back of my mind,
I realized that I had the perfect opportunity
with this group of guys to like gain some data here.
And it really boiled down to one question, which I asked.
I was like, you know what, we were so close then,
I'm so glad that like we've reconnected,
we stayed connected enough over the years
to like fully reconnect and spend this weekend together.
Am I different?
Am I a different person than I was back then?
And I really wanted to know, I was actually,
I think it more so, as I said it,
I realized that it was like,
that that question went pretty deep for me.
And the immediate response was like,
just like a grinning and like people shaking their heads,
like, no, you're not different.
And it felt so good to me.
Like, it was just like, that was my favorite moment.
Having people that knew me back then,
that still know me now that I trust completely
and that I know will shoot straight.
I knew it wasn't lip service.
Because you have people who make assumptions
for whatever reasons, it's like okay,
you moved to California, you changed your beliefs,
you this, that and the other,
you're not the same person you were,
you let X, Y and Z things change you.
And it's one thing to get that from your family,
like from my mama, it's like I know,
I can tell that my mom still loves me
and she's still proud of me and she doesn't,
she's not like looking at me like what happened to you?
But it's a different thing with friends
who are like they have every right and in that moment,
they would have said I believe.
Like you know what, yeah, you're different dude.
But still the same as someone, you know,
it was an unequivocal, no, you're the same person.
And it just, to use the parlance, it ministered to my soul.
I felt like I needed to hear that.
Are you afraid that you've changed?
I guess so.
You know, because we do get that messaging
from people who don't, some people don't have business
saying it or assessing it.
Well, I think what you're asking,
because all of us without exception have changed.
In so many ways.
In a lot of ways, right?
But I think the question you were asking is like,
am I essentially the same person?
Yeah.
Which I think is actually, which is.
That's what I ask, am I a different person?
To me that speaks to the reason that there's not a,
I think we can have very fruitful,
even fun conversations about things that we disagree on
because the conversation is happening
from person to person.
Let me kind of explain what I mean by that.
Okay.
You know, one of the things that I, of course,
this is something that I think about a lot,
it's the whole premise of the first song
from the James and the Shane project about believe me,
like take me at my word, actually.
Yeah, exactly.
And I had a, and I talked a lot about
in our deconstruction stories that like,
I think what ultimately everyone is after
is just see the humanity in people.
You want someone to see you for who you are
and see the humanity.
But when you are completely steeped in your ideology,
you put it up as a shield and that's the thing that kind of defines who you are completely steeped in your ideology, you put it up as a shield and that's the thing
that kind of defines who you are.
And that's the thing I respect so much
about these guys, right?
Obviously, they're coming from a different place
and they've come to different conclusions.
Now, and I'll also say places,
you know, they're not all in the exact same place.
And I'll also say that
every single one of them in their own way has had very deep considerations
about their worldview and their fate.
It's not some like, oh, these guys just believe this
because of where they're from or whatever.
It's like they have a.
Thoughtful.
It's a thoughtful approach to the conclusions
that they have come to.
We've ended up in different places for myriad reasons.
But then we can come back and we can have these
conversations where it is a human talking to another human.
Whereas so many of the interactions that you can have
with someone of faith, and also someone who is of a faith that you used to be of
is that it is a conversation with a project, right?
It's like this person is a project.
This person, the person who has left the flock
is in the wrong, has to be corrected,
has to be brought back into a right relationship.
Or even loved back into it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Not, you know.
If sort of the premise or the foundation
of your relationship is one of trying to bring them in,
trying to bring them back to essentially agree with you,
then that influences the entire conversation
in the relationship.
And honestly, if these guys saw us in that way,
we wouldn't be like, yeah, let's go hang out
and have a weekend together.
No.
Because I can't, listen, I'm not gonna be your project
and I don't want you to be my project
because I'm not trying to change their minds
about anything either.
So I think that the really interesting thing is that
we can have these conversations that are real,
that are honest, that are, you know,
no holds barred in a lot of ways,
but also it's just like, there's no offense
and there's no defense, there's no defensiveness,
because we're connecting on a personal level.
And we all- That's all you can ask of somebody.
Because we've all, well I would say you and I
have definitely and probably the other guys too,
I know that we all in our college experience
have had moments of like making people into projects,
like trying to persuade
or change people's minds and that is like the main
through line of the relationship.
It's like this carrot that's dangling out there,
this ulterior motive beyond just being friends.
That's a complication
or a potential side effect of having an evangelistic mindset, right?
Is that that's the main motive of a friendship.
And ironically, it's something that we were trying
to address from the inside out when we worked
in Campus Crusade at times and also with things that we were developing
in terms of things that we talked about.
But I guess my point is we've all been on that side of it.
So I think we're very sensitive to it.
Like you know when it's happening
because we used to do it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So now.
It's like a magician suddenly doing tricks in a group of magicians. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Right? So now. It's like a magician suddenly doing tricks
in a group of magicians.
Yeah, we all. Oh, you're doing.
We all kind of know what.
You're doing the thing that we all know how to do.
That that would never work.
And I don't, you know, over the pandemic,
having all those video calls and the conversation,
we would talk about all the spiritual stuff,
but then we would also move on.
And then at times there'd be like pointed questions.
But the pointed questions would never be
from a point of persuasion,
they would be from a point of
Curiosity. And care.
Yeah.
So, and you,
because we could sniff out anything else, any of us could.
So I think that laid a groundwork
for us to have such a great weekend,
and for us to have great active relationships now.
I think another piece of it,
so totally remove this spiritual journey part of it.
There's something, I mean, it's just special
to have these college friends.
I've heard of people who've had this,
like even my aunt Tisi, she's got her group of,
I think it's high school friends who they still get together
and hang out like every year or so, you know?
It's really cool, you see those things happening.
You hear about, oh, I'm getting together with my girls
and my boys from way back when.
There's something special with that type of friendship
that if it's lasted that long and then
there was just an ease to it.
Like it was not complicated.
We've had, we've made friends, really close friends
that then things have fizzled out or things change.
You know, you go through friends over time.
And like, I really value the friends I have now
and we could have a great time going on a trip.
And I think that there's complete trust.
But it's something different about,
and even in like the most vibrant of friendships
and I think it's because we lost friends,
maybe that's what's behind this for me.
We lost close friends, you know,
over the past six years or whatever
that there's something a little bit,
it plants something that's a little bit tenuous.
Oh, there's a tenuous nature.
Like this may not last forever. As gooduous nature. Like this may not last forever.
As good as this is, it may not last forever.
But then I feel like that's totally gone
with this group of guys because it's been so long
and it's just about, and it was so uncomplicated
for us to hang out that weekend
that there's zero question in my mind
that it's gonna be something we wanna do again
and, because it's not loaded and there's no question marks.
I think it's just, we just have fun.
I think a lot of it has to do with friendships
that are formed in those really pivotal moments
in your life and college is one of them, right?
I always talk about it and I know that things have changed
so much just as a society and as a country
and college is so hard to afford and like you can't,
so many people can't have that experience
but essentially whatever's happening to you
between the ages of 18 to 21 to 22 is so significant
that whoever you are in close friendships with between the ages of 18 to 21 to 22 is so significant
that whoever you are in close friendships with at that point, there's a great chance
that the good ones you're gonna stay in touch with
and you're gonna be able to step back into that
because you all changed together
in a really accelerated way that you'll never change again for the rest of your life
as much as you changed during that time.
Yeah, I just, I wish that for my kids.
I see that Lily's got a group of friends,
actually high school friends that like,
she's still getting together with.
High school friends is common to happen as well.
So that makes me so happy that like,
I think this is a good group of people.
They're good people.
You know, they're not a wreck.
There's not drama.
You know, it's like, it's hard.
It's hard to not have drama.
That's the thing you learn with like,
you get teenagers and their friendships.
Good God, I mean, not even, I mean, preteens.
So much more, so much drama.
You know, and if you can find a place
where there's little to no drama,
you can build connection, I mean,
it could last for 22 years and counting in our case.
And you know, it's a cliche.
In fact, even my mom said this on the phone
when I talked to her the other day, she was like,
and I bet y'all picked up right where you left off.
Then that is, that's how some of those friendships start.
My mom gets together with her college roommates every year,
every year since college has gotten together with them.
Really?
I think there's like four or five of them
that were like suite mates or whatever, but.
They go to a water park?
It depends on you know, it depends.
Mostly water parks.
Of course, the pandemic put a wrench in that but so I don't
know the last time that they did it but you know,
that is yeah, she understood like I mean,
she saw us together in some of the pictures.
On Facebook.
Yeah, and she's like, you know,
I know exactly what that's like to get together
with your old friends in that way.
And you basically, like with her,
there was a nickname, her maiden name was Callan
and somebody had mispronounced it.
They call her like Callan, I think.
And so they're just like,
that's what her name is with them.
She's got like her own name with them.
That's cute.
And so you just kinda like, you return to this place
of like before life got complicated, you know?
Yeah.
And so you kinda step back into that.
And also it helps when, you know,
we're all basically dealing with,
I mean we're in different places.
Same stage of life.
But same stage of life, like we've all been married
20 years.
Yeah.
We've all got children.
Multiple children. Multiple children.
Yeah.
And so it's just like, those things right there,
you immediately have a whole bunch of stuff to talk about
in terms of life stage.
In a way that we don't often, doesn't often happen.
I mean some of our closest friends here in LA
are similar life stage, been married the same amount of time,
kids of a similar age.
But that's kind of uncommon, first of all it's uncommon
in LA to meet somebody our age who's been married
for 20 years.
Like that does, we always surprise people.
Yeah. 21 years now.
And also somebody our age who has kids our age.
Yeah.
You know, you kinda have to go back to people
who came from where you came from
and were on the same track.
Graduate college, get married, have children.
That's the track.
And there's not a lot of people out here
who are on that track.
So it's cool to connect with people
who kind of made all those same types of decisions.
It was a success.
It was life-giving.
Especially because no one died on a boat.
But if somebody had almost died,
this podcast would have been that much more entertaining.
And that's why, I'm gonna say again.
Is this your rec?
If you're a legitimate guide out there,
who can make us feel like we're gonna die.
Okay, I don't actually want to.
I wanna feel like I might, could die.
But I'd also like a nice meal.
Do good dinners would be great.
And then, you know, I guess I'd like a mattress, honestly.
I need like an air mattress situation.
Yeah.
I need, you know, I don't do well
if I'm sleeping on the ground.
And hammocks, I can't really get comfortable in those.
Play hard, sleep great.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
We're looking for like a glamping situation.
Play hard, eat hard, sleep hard.
Serious perceived peril during the day.
Right.
Perceived peril.
Like if there's gonna be a grizzly bear, it's trained.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
And in a cage.
You know who you are, okay.
Hashtag Ear Biscuits.
I've got two recs.
The first rec is I wanna remind you
about Good Mythical Evening
because it's gonna be a good time.
Goodmythicalevening.com, get your tickets.
It's live exclusively on Moment House.
Second rec is, get your tickets.
As is not uncommon on this podcast,
we will talk about something
that people were talking about
months ago that we discovered because we're
middle-aged dads.
But you may also be a person who didn't watch this
the first time around, and that is that
Nick Cage movie, The Unbearable Weight of
Massive Talent, I think is the name of it, the one
with Pedro Pascal. Yeah.
It was a delight.
Well. It was a delight.
I'll have to see it.
Yeah, I would say that and then City Slickers.
Okay.
And then you do a double matinee.
And as always, if you want to let us know a response, a correction, a question,
any type of interaction, you can call us and leave a voicemail.
1-888-EAR-POD-1
Talk at you next week.
What's up, Brett and Link?
Don't know if you guys want to hear me say this,
but my dad is a southern man born and reared in Texas,
and he, in fact, spent many mornings in his tighty-whities
in front of his family of six.
When I was younger, since my family are all immigrants from Austria,
it's like Austrian culture for everyone in the house to always be naked unless you're going to go out.
So my whole childhood, I was running around naked with my siblings, with my mom, my dad.
Everyone was just naked in the house all the time.
Once I started going through puberty, I realized how weird that was.
And I was like, nope, never doing that again. And so now I'm the only one in my household who's
not naked. Hey, Rhett and Link, this is Katie. I was just listening to your episode about Rhett's
terrible vacation. I wanted to emphasize, I also just got back from North Carolina
on a beach trip with my family. And after the first few days, I got COVID too. And I had to stay inside the entire time
away from my family and not on the beach.
So Rhett, you're not the only one
who had a terrible vacation this summer in North Carolina.
Hi Rhett and Link.
My name's Elise.
I live in Ohio and I am absolutely obsessed with whales.
So Rhett's story about whale watching,
being on an ear biscuit
was the absolute best crossover of my life.
Thanks for talking about my obsession.
Bye.