Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - Our Top 12 Creative Influences | Ear Biscuits Ep.323
Episode Date: February 21, 2022Rhett and Link reveal both of their top 12 creative influences (and like 15 honorable mentions) & important people in their lives that have shaped who they are today, and why they created Mythical. Fr...om big names like the Coen Brothers & Flight of the Conchords, to personal influences like Rhett’s dad and a childhood friend, these incredible people helped sculpt their comedic sensibilities and reignited their passion for creative projects. Check out Link’s “Magical Merle” playlist here: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/317lYys3xObyFC1c8dZssm?si=4bf5487355ad4f00&nd=1 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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This, this, this, this is mythical.
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. Welcome to Ear Biscuits, the podcast
where two lifelong friends talk about life for a long time.
I'm Link.
And I'm Rhett.
This week at the round table of dim lighting,
we are talking about our top-
12.
Creative influences.
We usually, now we've done top 10 episodes
where it's like top 10 favorite films
or top 10 favorite whatever.
We don't top 10. Game shows, television shows.
We wanted it, we've had this one on the list
of things to do for a while,
but I think we've both been a little bit intimidated
and the process by which I got into this
only confirmed my intimidation.
So much so that literally 10 minutes ago,
I was like, dude, we gotta make this 12
because I just feel like I'm selling people short.
I don't know how I feel about the 12.
I don't know how I feel about the order.
I just, I feel almost creatively crippled right now.
You know what?
Hey, let's take a deep breath and let's shed that.
This is just a construct for us to have a conversation
about the people that we believe have,
they've entered our psyche,
they've impacted us to various degrees
that then it has made its way into the,
it's permeated us to then come out in our own creativity.
And yeah, it's quite an exercise to connect those dots,
but let's just say these are not definitive lists.
Let's also say that I know that I forgot people.
Oh yeah.
But none of them are listening.
And part of that is gonna probably come
when you've got somebody on your list
and I'm like, oh dang. Hopefully, yeah.
We don't know each other's list.
I've got 15 honorable mentions
that I'll mention at the end.
We have not seen each other's list.
We're gonna alternate starting with 12.
I'll go with 12. And we're gonna do the traditional method,
which is, I'm assuming there's some crossover,
that if a person says, my number 12 is blankety blank,
and then the other guy's like,
my number two is blankety blank,
the person who's higher goes first in talking about it.
Oh.
The person who ranks higher, ranks that person higher,
gets to talk about them first.
But they have to talk about them earlier
than they were ready to.
Right, so it's a little bit of a compromise.
So you have to do something you don't wanna do.
And I'll say that more so than other lists,
and it's always been tough,
that the actual ranking is much more arbitrary.
The ranking could be upside down as far as I'm concerned.
Really all the way to the top because-
Yeah, yeah.
How do you measure these things?
It's how you evaluate it, which we can get into,
I think we'll get into those specifics
as we roll these people out.
Yeah, there's a difference between inspiration
and influence too.
And so depending on the person, sometimes there's a direct connection inspiration and influence too. Right.
And so depending on the person,
sometimes there's a direct connection
with something that I experienced or learned
from a person that then directly impacted something
from our career.
Other times it's just kind of the idea of their approach
or the way that it made me feel,
or it's much more nebulous in general.
So it's kind of all over the place.
Well, last thing I'll say-
That's true of creativity.
Yeah, well, last thing I'll say
before we break into the list
is that this is not an uncommon question in interviews,
like who are your biggest creative influences?
And I think that we've always had this,
or I feel like I've had this, I don't wanna speak for you,
I've had this sense that like, I don't like speak for you, I've had this sense that like,
I don't like, you know,
I'm not formally trained in anything.
I went to Harnett County Public Schools.
I didn't do anything creative in training.
I went to engineering school.
I've always get this weird feeling
and super high imposter syndrome
when you start talking about creative influences
because I don't have a creative background.
I've just lived and breathed creativity my entire life.
And so I don't know what to say in those situations,
but when I really dug down
and started going back to the beginning of like,
when did you start thinking about creative things?
I started realizing that there's a lot of people
who have influenced me. Oh, you have influences.
No, and I don't wanna say like,
oh, I don't have influences.
I'm just saying that I get intimidated by the question.
Yeah.
And then even when we said we were going to do 10,
I was saying, maybe we should do five.
And now I've talked you into doing 12
and I've got 15 honorable mentions.
It's just, this is a weird process.
I'm excited to talk about it though.
I do not want you to mention your honorable mentions
because they may be on my list.
No, no, no.
If you say somebody who's on my honorable mentions,
only at that point will I be like,
ah, they made my honorable mention.
I'm not gonna say that until the end.
Whenever I would get that question of creative influences,
because it's so hard to nail it down
and without a prepared answer or doing the exercise
that we've only started to do for this episode,
I would fall back on,
I don't, you know, I'm not a student
of a lot of the things we do.
A lot of what we do is kind of like,
we are among the group of people that invented it, honestly.
Yeah.
So there hasn't been people in like the world of creatordom,
if you could call it, to emulate that went ahead of us.
Right. Because it didn't exist ahead of us. So if you look at it, to emulate that went ahead of us. Right.
Because it didn't exist ahead of us.
So if you look at it that way,
and I always thought of that as an asset.
So like, okay, this sets us up to be more original
and more ourselves and people can emulate us
if they want to.
But really it was, I think part of it was just
being intimidated by the work that we started to do.
Who wants to start?
You want to start with number 12?
Sure.
I'm going to start, I put this person at number 12
because I felt like putting them at any number was weird.
And they either had to be at number 12 or number one,
and I put them at number 12 because you'll understand.
My dad, okay? Okay.
So I just started with- Jimmy.
My dad as a creative influence.
Now I've said this quite a bit about how-
I totally get it.
My sense of humor is largely informed
by the way my dad's sense of humor is.
And the things that he thinks are funny
and the way that he interjects himself into a conversation,
the way that he, once he sort of has an audience,
the way that he would begin to entertain that audience.
I've said forever that if I wasn't a comedian,
I would be a professor.
Well, that's what my dad was for his entire life,
basically, starting in like 1980.
So he had an audience.
He had an audience every single day.
My observation, because I definitely think
he's also a comedic influence on me.
Like I can, even to this day,
you'll make a joke and I'll be like, that's a Jimmy joke.
Oh yeah.
And it's like, if it's dry and a little,
I want, let's see, how do you describe it?
It's-
Dry.
Like not derogatory or judgy, but it's observational
and it might, sometimes it might be kind of like
in good spirits making fun of something or somebody.
There's a bit of that.
And there's a confidence in it.
There's a confidence in his- There's a confidence in his- There's's a confidence in it. There's a confidence in his humor.
He was good in small groups.
Like, I mean, a classroom is an awkward size.
If you're like, I've never been a standup comedian,
but if you are, it's like when you're speaking
to a big room or an arena even,
when you go bigger, it's a different thing.
But when a room gets too small,
it's like you're talking to people
in like a doctor's waiting room.
It's like, that's intimidating.
Like for us to be behind the desk on GMM
and to know that there's a million people watching every day,
you just kind of get over it.
First of all, they're not there.
There's just a lens.
But second of all, that's different than,
even my experience now, if I'm in like a hangout
and like you're telling a story
and then all of a sudden it's just like
the eight people are listening to your story,
that's a different vibe.
It kind of puts you in a different spot.
But your dad is good in those situations.
He is good, but I think the thing
that I've really taken from him is that,
because I'm also not, I'm not very comfortable
in those sort of small and medium sized groups.
Now I can be, and I can then go into my,
but I have to kind of shift from-
It's a mindset.
Personal Rhett to entertainer Rhett.
Yeah. Because a lot of people might think, oh, a mindset. Personal Rhett to entertainer Rhett. Yeah.
Because a lot of people might think,
oh, I bet you when Rhett and Link are hanging out
with their friends are just funny, funny, funny.
It's not true.
It's just not true.
Partly because it's a profession in some sense.
Yeah.
But there's also a power dynamic
that comes with being recognized as the person who's currently
has the power to speak to a crowd.
So a professor has that, a comedian has that,
they have the microphone.
Yeah.
I tend to, that's where I'm at my best
is when I have the power.
You know, I'm not in a negative sense,
but when it's just like, all right, monkey dance,
that's when I do well.
But if it's just like,
everybody's just kind of being personal in this situation
and now you're gonna say something funny.
You're right, my dad is really good at that.
He's good with the quips.
He's not, he wasn't as much of a storyteller
or there's all types of genres.
He does have some really funny stories.
He's got some funny stories.
Well, I haven't heard as much of those.
It's more of like the one-liners.
Someone else is talking and then he'll lean over
and say something to you.
Like give you a little private commentary.
And he also has things like,
if you're like, I remember,
I don't remember exactly what he said, but I'll paraphrase.
Like getting on an elevator at a,
like a tourist attraction, like, okay, 15 people get on an elevator at a tourist attraction,
like, okay, 15 people get on an elevator
to go to the top of the Empire State Building or whatever.
Right?
And so you're with a bunch of strangers
and everybody's, no one talks, right?
So like one minute into an elevator ride,
my dad will be like, so how's everybody doing today?
You know, it's like, he'll do something to break the ice
when he senses that there's an awkward situation.
But he's not one of those,
some people may do that because they're friendly
and they're outgoing.
He's doing it because the choice to do it is funny.
Oh yeah, definitely.
But he is friendly and outgoing, but that's not why.
But the main reason he's doing it
is because doing this now is funny.
So as I think about just obviously genetic influences,
but also environmental influences in the way that I,
and the things that I think are funny
is so largely influenced by him genetically
and the way that he behaved growing up
that I got to put him on the list.
And it probably makes sense for him to be number one
since it's like 50% of my DNA.
But it's like, I just put him on the list.
He's your dad. He's on the list.
He influenced you in a lot of ways.
He's not an entertainer.
But like the comedy, it was just,
it sprinkles in and it comes out occasionally.
Like if you say, if one of us is gonna be the one
to make the dry quip,
it's absolutely gonna be you,
and you can trace that to your dad.
The one liner and your dad didn't raise an eyebrow,
but it was that same effect.
Yeah.
My number 12, I'm hoping to surprise you with this one,
with a, oh yes,
because that's how I felt when I actually thought of this one.
Ross McElwee.
Ross McElwee is-
Oh, you put him on your list?
Number five for me.
Oh man, I thought you would have forgotten him entirely.
Not only is Ross McElwee my number five,
but my wreck today comes from Ross McElwee.
Okay, well, let me help you out with
just kind of giving some background on the guy.
He's a documentary filmmaker from the 80s and on.
He was first famous for Sherman's March.
The longer title is Sherman's March,
a meditation on the possibility of romantic love in the South during an era
of nuclear weapons proliferation.
You're really stealing my thunder.
That's my wreck, man.
Well, I have to give him context for who this guy is.
He also released an autobiographical documentary
in 1993 called Time Indefinite.
But so I'll let you, why did you put him so high?
Cause yeah, I could have put him there too.
Set the scene.
When we watched that first film Sherman's March,
I remember thinking.
Well, where were we?
Do you remember when in our life we were watching it?
It was like right after college?
It was, I'm pretty sure it was in context
of starting to make our own documentary
looking for Ms. Locklear.
I think it was the thing that led us to do it.
Definitely.
But I don't think we made the decision to do it
and then watch it. We kept referring back to it.
Well, so-
Because we were getting into documentary films.
The thing that we liked so much
that I really connected with so much about this guy
is that he made documentaries
that were incredibly vulnerable, personally vulnerable.
They were really a personal exercise in,
it was self exploration and self discovery
through the lens of other people, right?
And so- He was in his,
he was the main character in his documentary.
I call self insertion,
self insertion documentary, which is not a great term.
Which again is exactly what we did
with Looking for Ms. Locklear way back in the day.
Also think supersize me.
Yeah, the thing that I love so much about it
is I'm really drawn towards documentary film
where the thing that's on display is the people first,
not a subject or an agenda or a cause.
Now I like political documentaries.
I like documentaries that all of a sudden change
the way that you think about the environment.
I like those.
Humanity on display, I totally agree.
But it's about the people.
And that's why, now I didn't put Errol Morris on my list.
He was an honorable mention.
I love Errol Morris for the same exact reason,
but Ross McElwee is the one that we first connected with.
And then the way that he-
Well, he's from North Carolina.
Yeah, it was so relatable.
There was another film, Bright Leaves,
which is about his connection to like,
his family's connection to the tobacco industry
in North Carolina.
So we had this connection
and we definitely were referring to it
and were actively inspired by what he did in 1986 and on
when we were in 2003 looking for Ms. Locklear.
And not just looking for Ms. Locklear,
but I would say the entire Commercial Kings series,
all of our I Love Local commercials,
it was based on that same principle.
If we just love people and we love people
who've never been on camera,
are not prepared to be on camera.
And actually one of the things
that I am most sort of creatively restless about
over the past 10 years has been the fact
that we haven't been able to get back to that.
Yeah, I'll go one step further than just commercial kings
and say, again, it was 2003 when we were filming
Looking for Ms. Locklear, didn't come out till 2006.
So this is like pre-YouTube, pre-vlogging,
really taking hold in any meaningful way.
So the fact that he was autobiographical, vulnerable,
it was putting his story out there,
but he was the guy controlling the camera.
He would set the camera down, then he would walk out
and he would be in front of it and he would,
there would be different scenes that he would set up.
We emulated that directly in looking for Ms. Locklear.
But this is a vlog precursor, you know, in a lot of ways.
And it was, so it was more artistic.
And even though we never, I mean,
we were very late and hesitant to vlogging,
we had this seed planted from this era in our creativity that gave us an appetite
to connect directly with our audience
and not just create things for an audience
to enjoy separate from us.
So that's why I think he's so important.
But not, I mean, not as important as I thought he was.
Yeah, again, I just put him on,
I had to put him somewhere.
All right, what's your 11?
My 11 is, maybe this will surprise you, C.S. Lewis.
Okay, I get it.
For you, especially.
I'll keep this one relatively short.
So C.S. Lewis, of course, you know, famously known,
he's famously known as like a Christian theologian
and an author, but the thing that I really connected
with him about was the Chronicles of Narnia,
which not a huge fan of the movies, let me just say that.
I'm definitely a Lord of the Rings guy
when it comes to the movies and ultimately in adulthood,
the books of Lord of the Rings.
But- It's crazy that they were
like really close friends. They were contemporaries, yeah.
J.R.R. Tolkien.
I've been to the bar where they,
I've been to the bar next to Oxford where they hang out.
I remember, you told me.
So the thing about C.S. Lewis
is it's the first fantasy literature that I ever read.
And it's so approachable, it's so easy to read it
as like a eight, nine, 10 year old.
And I consumed the Chronicles of Narnia voraciously
at like the age of 10 and just fell in love
with these stories.
I mean, you can read, I mean-
It was your Harry Potter.
You can read them-
Because there wasn't a Harry Potter.
And you can also read them in like a couple of nights.
There's so much shorter.
And the thing that I love about the Chronicles of Narnia
is it starts in the real world,
and this is true of much fantasy,
but it starts in the real world,
and then there is a wardrobe
that gets you into a fantasy world.
And that is a concept that I've never been,
it just, it's like it went into my soul
and connected with me on this cosmic level.
And I am so intrigued by any story
that follows this convention.
We're starting in the real world
and there is a pathway to another place.
Any movie that does that and does it well,
I'm all in the whole time, right?
It's one of the reasons that I don't think
that my soul connects with-
I don't know why the first thing I thought about
was being John Malkovich, but go ahead.
But it's also, I like secret rooms,
and it's the reason that we put that weird locker
in the first season of Buddy System.
It's like, oh, what if we open a locker
and they had a secret bike in there?
You know, I love that convention
and love to put it in things, but-
Also, our novel, The Lost Cause is a bleak creek.
Yeah. I mean, you go-
Same thing, yeah.
You've absolutely got that in the creek.
And so that way of thinking about the world
and way of thinking about-
Portals.
Taking what is possible or taking what is impossible
and bringing it into the possible sort of tangible world
is something that it permeates the way
that I think about story.
And that comes from C.S. Lewis.
I mean, that was the first, it was in me already, right?
But he's the one who brought it out and it was like,
oh, there's a whole world, there's a whole life,
there's all these possibilities that exist
in this world that you can get through.
And as a kid, many, many times,
I would be walking through the woods
and I would see like a tree that had like a hole in it.
And I would be like, okay, is that my Narnia?
And I would pray, God, if this is Narnia, let me in.
Like, you know, I wanted to be in it so bad.
Pray to God.
Yeah, well, I mean, cause you know,
that was my way of thinking.
Pray to Aslan.
And so, si es los.
I don't wanna say anything else
cause we got a lot to get through.
My number 11, can I surprise you with this one?
Robert Rodriguez.
Okay, he was on the list and I knocked him off.
Okay.
He's honorable mention.
All right, whatever.
It was tough, that was tough.
Robert Rodriguez, film director, producer,
early films are Desperado, Antonio Banderas,
and Salma Hayek, really good movie.
Super cool.
From Dust Till Dawn, Spy Kids, Sin City.
I mean, he's even, I hesitate to mention,
he directed many episodes of the Book of Boba Fett.
At one episode of The Mandalorian,
because of his like, his Robert Rodriguez take
on like the Western gunslinger vibe
made him a great choice for that,
even though he's getting a lot of backlash
for the book of Boba Fett being kind of tepid.
I'm not gonna go there.
But back in 1992, his first film called El Mariachi
in 1992, his first film called El Mariachi
was just a homemade Western,
but like a gangster Western, like a guy was carrying a guitar case with a,
am I getting this confused with Desperado?
He had a guitar case-
No, that's Mariachi.
That then he opened it up and it had this,
it had a gun in it.
It's been a long time since I've seen it,
but we discovered him in the context of Quentin Tarantino,
who maybe is on your list,
but I actually replaced Tarantino
with Robert Rodriguez on my list
because he wrote a book in 1995.
Rebel Without a Cause.
Rebel Without a Crew.
Rebel Without a Crew.
And he basically chronicled making El Mariachi.
I mean, it has this really homemade feel to it.
But he shot it on film and he like did it all himself.
He did not have a crew.
And he didn't even have actors.
He had these friends and like acquaintances
and pulling favors to like make this epic,
super, super cool vibe violent movie
that you could tell he made it himself,
but the conception and the creativity involved in it,
just it overrode the homemade nature of it.
And like, you could definitely tell this guy
was a tremendous talent.
Yeah.
And given the landscape of entertainment at the time,
I believe he got a lot of attention,
if not won awards at Sundance.
I don't know the details.
Yeah, that book was transformational for us.
Again, he was on the list and I-
And again, it was like 1995, 1996.
Like we're in high school,
we're like talking about going to film school.
I didn't read it when it came out.
I remember- You don't think we read it in high school? I read't read it when it came out. I remember-
You don't think we read it in high school?
I read that, I remember reading that after college.
After college?
That's when I read it.
So you may have read it earlier.
I read it after, I just remember reading that book
and thinking, first of all, we've always been like,
if we've got an idea,
we're gonna find a way to make it happen.
And when you connect with people who think the same way,
and we always felt like outsiders.
He scrapped everything together.
We weren't like living in Hollywood,
we weren't doing the traditional thing
of like becoming a PA and working your way up
and then meeting the director one day.
We were just a couple of guys in North Carolina
and then you see this guy who's writing about,
just do it, just make it,
if you wanna make it happen, make it happen.
And there's a couple of principles in that book
that really stuck with me.
The one that we repeat time and time again
is whenever you're working on a project
and a film is the most applicable one,
but after you get the footage, cut the trailer first.
Oh yeah, that's where we got that.
You know, once you've cut the footage
or once you've gathered the footage,
cut the trailer first because the trailer gives you
this vision that you can look forward to.
You create a trailer that has the vibe
that you want the film to have
and it gives you this, you know, true north to look at.
It makes it real.
Especially if you're doing it all on your own.
I mean, this dude was scoring his own films as well.
You know, he was literally doing the score
to everything back in the day.
Yeah.
So yeah, we did that for Looking for Ms. Locklear.
And then you also can show that trailer to people
and they get excited and it helps you-
It's a way to get financing.
Keep going. Yeah.
So yeah, there was a lot to learn there from that book.
We took a lot of inspiration, but it was,
you know, once we were making our documentary,
we were filmmakers.
We were filmmakers.
We entered it in film festivals.
We won some awards.
Got shown on PBS, man.
Got shown on PBS in South Carolina.
Hey, I'll take it.
I'll take the Carolina.
The underbelly of North Carolina.
I'll take the Carolina.
Yeah, but we could apply that label to ourselves
and we could say we've done it and we're doing it.
I mean, we were on staff with Campus Crusade
still at the time.
We were also that.
But it's like, hey, we have a film.
So we are filmmakers.
We are achieving the dream.
And it was, and he gave us the confidence to do that.
Yeah.
And you know, Daniel, the Smosh CEO,
his previous job was working very closely with Robert.
And so maybe we'll have an opportunity to meet him.
We could, I'm sure we could.
Sometime in the future.
Maybe he was working at El Rey. Be great to shake his hand. Tell him thank you. Wherever you're going, Robert. And so maybe we'll have an opportunity to meet him sometime in the future. It'd be great
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We need to pick up our pace. Yeah, yeah. I'm going to move through a couple.
I've got some faster ones. I'm going to move through this one pretty fast.
Yeah, yeah, I'm gonna move through a couple. I'm gonna move through this one pretty fast.
Number 10, Dolly Parton.
My number 10 is Dolly Parton.
Hey, we're all happy.
And we only did this because of Jenna.
And Jenna's in there, no, we didn't.
But she might be your number one.
I don't know, is she gonna be on your list, Jenna?
She's, Jenna's number one.
Yeah, and the numbers are arbitrary.
So we're neck and neck here.
Go ahead.
Okay, so I don't consider myself
a long time Dolly Parton fan in terms of,
you know, when I was listening to Merle back in the day,
even when I heard that he had written some songs about her,
like Always Wanting You is supposedly written about her.
Always wanting you, but never having you.
Yeah, he had a big crush on her.
I always was,
when I would hear a Dolly Parton song,
I would be like,
oh, that's a great song.
And I was obviously attracted to her.
But it wasn't actually until
Dolly Parton's America,
the podcast,
was that a Radiolab production? Yeah. Is that what that was? Dolly Parton's America, the podcast,
was that a Radiolab production? Is that what that was?
Yeah.
That was probably last year or the year before.
And it was just an incredible podcast.
And I began to really understand
how much of her story I identify with.
Now I don't come from the mountains of Tennessee,
but I come from the plains of North Carolina.
Plains.
The idea of being someone who,
because of where you're from,
there's not a lot expected of you.
And you kind of feel like every time you come into a room,
you are bringing that expectation with you.
Now she exemplifies that in a huge way
because people thought that,
oh, this is this little country bumpkin.
And she was like, no, no, no,
I'm not just some country bumpkin.
I'm an incredible musician.
I'm an incredible songwriter
and I'm an incredible business woman.
And I'm gonna have an amusement park
and I'm gonna have this place where you can eat
while people are on horseback.
And not just that, but she is an incredible humanitarian
who has found a way to be very vocal
about marginalized people and very inclusive
as a personal brand without alienating,
which is very difficult to do.
She's alienated a number of people on the right
at this point just because she's standing up
for marginalized people.
But she's found a way to maintain a very broad audience
in a way that is unifying people
in what can be a very, is super divisive right now, right?
Yeah, and we seek to do that.
I mean, to sum it up,
it's a brand ethos built around her true self.
You know, so it's, I think that's how I summarize
the creative inspiration.
Number nine for me is iJustine.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
You know, of course-
I have a creator on my list, it's not iJustine, okay.
Of course we're friends with Justine,
we're not in constant contact,
but you know, we'll go a long time without talking to her.
But she was probably sponsored
by Constant Contact at some point.
Yeah, that's true.
And so were we.
You know, we came up together on the internet,
but she was ahead of us.
Yep.
And I think she was tremendously influential
in that she embraced cutting edge technology
to set herself apart.
And we noticed that.
You know, it was when this website, Justin.TV
started making it possible for you to live stream.
She was one of the first people to say,
I'm gonna live stream my life 24 seven.
I don't know how long she did it, but it was,
I mean, it might've, it was at least-
It was a year.
It was at least weeks.
Somewhere between weeks and years.
I don't remember that part,
but I remember watching her go about her life
as a student of what we were coining the phrase
as intern attainment.
So, okay, is this even possible?
Is this a good idea?
We didn't know the answer.
We found it out by watching her.
She didn't know the answer.
She found out by doing it.
Yeah.
And she set herself apart.
She got that edge by being on the cutting edge.
And it was something that we adopted as a strategy.
And I think that directly led to us doing
the Rhett and Link cast live.
So-
Pretty definitely.
Every, you know, we partnered with Ustream.
She was also on Ustream.
And we did a live internet broadcast every Thursday night
from our basement studio in Lillington.
Which is the precursor to GMM.
Yeah, that is what became Good Mythical Morning.
We talk a lot about Good Morning Chia Lincoln
as being the precursor to Good Mythical Morning.
But two guys at one desk and one microphone,
that was right in Linkest.
Absolutely. That's where it started
as a genre for us.
It was live for an hour for an entire year.
And those archives live exclusively on the Mythical Society.
Weekly, if you wanna see them,
they're on the Mythical Society.
And we-
But that's where we-
We compare notes too.
We developed our chops of the conversation
that are reflected in what we're doing right now,
what we do on Good Mythical Morning behind the desk
every day.
And we didn't have a lot of people
to compare notes with at the time.
Right.
And she was one of the few that was, you know, that we reached out to and talked to and learned a lot from.
I've created her on my list as well for similar reasons a little higher up.
Okay.
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 leah
mary 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 crunchyyroll or on the Crunchyroll YouTube channel. Number nine for me, Jordan Peele.
Yes.
So it's interesting.
Jordan is a huge influence on two levels.
Yeah.
The first is just very simply
before he was the Jordan Peele that you know,
when he was just the Jordan Peele of Key & Peele, right?
Which you also knew. Yeah. And you know when he was just the Jordan Peele of Key & Peele, right? Which you also knew.
Yeah.
And you know, it's arguably just as visible.
So there's three aspects that I'll quickly cover.
The first is the fact that just, you know,
as a sketch comedian, somebody making sketch
that was connecting on the internet in a huge way,
both Key & Peele, huge inspirations for us.
We could only hope to get to be a fraction
as funny as they are in their sketches.
And even getting to a fraction of that
would be an accomplishment.
The second thing of course,
is what he has accomplished as a filmmaker,
which is just bringing comedy and horror together,
horror, comedy, and social commentary together
in a way that's not cheesy at all, no one is doing it.
People are trying to emulate it,
no one has emulated it yet.
And when he first did it, it was, I mean,
it was just, it floored you.
Yeah.
Because it was so good right out of the gate.
And it was like, this is-
This guy's been sitting on this the whole time?
Yeah. Which is the third thing.
And for me, the most significant thing is the transition
from a sketch comedian to a powerhouse filmmaker.
And producer.
You know, in being in this town for the past 11,
going on 12 years, by the time this comes out,
I think we'll have been in LA for 12 years.
And it'll be our 12th anniversary here.
Being here for 12 years and being someone
who is primarily recognized as a YouTube person,
a YouTuber, a YouTube sensation,
you bring that into every room,
you bring that into every meeting,
and it's not a good, it's not a plus. every meeting, and it's not a plus in this town to be a YouTube sensation.
Right.
You come in with a bunch of baggage
that then you have to unpack and explain who you aren't
and what you are capable of creatively.
And listen, we've been able to do so many awesome things
and I'm very creatively fulfilled,
but a lot of the things that I really want us
to be able to do, the fact that we have a YouTube presence
is actually, it works for you in getting you in the room,
but works against you once you're in the room.
I think it's true of entertainers in general.
They put you in boxes.
You put you in a box, no matter what that box is,
it's really hard to get out of.
And the fact that he got out of that box
in such a decisive-
And such an Oscar-worthy way.
Successful way.
Yeah.
I look again, I mean, that's not gonna happen with us.
Okay, I'm just gonna be, I'll just go ahead
and break the news in case you wanna believe that.
We're not gonna just suddenly make a movie
that is going to blow the world away
and win a bunch of Oscars.
I mean, I would hope, and that's what we aspire to,
but chances are that's not gonna happen.
But just being able to make that transition
in the way that he did is so inspirational,
almost intimidatingly inspirational.
All right.
I could have put him on my list.
Number eight, I'm gonna go back.
I think I'm gonna steal your thunder here
because I'm gonna stay in the world of entertainment.
And I'm gonna say the Vlogbrothers, John and Hank Green.
My number eight.
Hold on, is this your number eight?
It's my number eight.
Okay, my number eight is Hank and John as well.
So there we go.
You go first.
That was Dolly.
I just talked.
You know, they're friends of us, they know of ours, they know how much we respect them
and it's flattering that they also respect us.
We, again, with no one to go ahead of any of us,
it's, you cling to the people who are holding on
for dear life and trying to build an outpost on the frontier
of what's becoming the future of entertainment.
And for them to have a similar relationship as brothers,
we watched them closely before we knew them.
They weren't in the same room together usually,
but they had a connection that was on display
that then they very overtly fostered into a community.
They named their fans, the Nerdfighters,
they developed an identity that was bigger
than the two of them, that they participated in,
like a technical digital community of forums
and interactions through a tool called Ning at the time.
We're like, we're just gonna do what they did.
We're gonna do it, we're gonna create a Ning community.
We're gonna name our fans.
We're gonna let them,
we're gonna empower them to name themselves.
But we're gonna suggest Mythical Beasts.
Right, and then we're gonna choose that one together.
Yeah, so the Mythical Beasts moniker
was a direct emulation of their Nerdfighteria,
which then that becomes the name of our company.
And so the branding shifting beyond the two of us
is something that we got from them.
And also how entrepreneurial they are.
Yeah.
And like starting VidCon and like-
There was no endeavor. They're always was no endeavor that was off limits.
And then John and now Hank having this sort of talent
wrapped up in being able to write that they're kind of
sitting on as well and then unleashing that in the world
in a really significant way that isn't,
they're being recognized for their accomplishments,
not because they had a YouTube channel,
but because they're genuinely talented at writing.
And again, that's inspirational to me as well.
Number seven.
I feel bad putting this man on the list
in a place that isn't of preeminence,
but Merle Haggard is my number seven.
Now I-
My number seven is Merle Haggard.
Oh, really?
Yeah, I guess we're thinking the same thing.
It's crazy how this ended up happening.
And you know, there's, okay,
I'll let you couch this one because there's different,
you know, this is a tough one. Well, I'll just you couch this one because there's different, this is a tough one.
Well, I'll just be honest with you.
There was a point in which Merle was not on the list
because when I was thinking about him, I was like-
We're not country music artists.
I love his, I absolutely love his music,
but from his creative influence,
what kind of creative influences he had?
Is that how I think about Merle?
Or I think about this guy that just,
I love the way he does what he does.
But then I started realizing, oh no, like I've sung,
we talked about it, we were recently on a ski trip together
with our boys.
We were coming back down,
we were actually, as we were going up there, I think.
No, coming back down, we listened to Merle,
a playlist that you've put together.
Yeah.
Which I asked you to share with me
and you still haven't shared with me, by the way.
Yeah, I wanted you to ask me again.
But it's basically the best Merle throughout the years,
which we pretty much agree exactly on what that is.
And I just don't, I'm not a guy who makes playlists.
And so I need you to make them for me so I can enjoy them.
Yeah.
But in listening to that playlist,
one of the things you said was,
you know, this stuff is just so,
we listened to this so much
because we grew up in a different era.
We grew up in a time where you had tapes
and it was the tapes that you had that you played.
And so it was like,
it was like building 10 Spotify playlists
and never departing from them for like a 10 year period.
If you were to do that,
you think about a way that music
and the person behind that music would seep into your bones.
You couldn't even shuffle it.
Yeah, right.
And so the way, first of all,
the way that we sing is heavily influenced by Merle Haggard.
The way we think about melody
is heavily influenced by Merle Haggard. And so that think about melody is heavily influenced by Merle Haggard.
Music is a big part of what we do
and has been even a bigger part of what we do in the past.
So it isn't that there's something that Merle has done.
This is more of the indirect influence sort of thing
that like you're around somebody and it seeps into
and you know that it's influencing
the way you go about things?
I think I can make it a little more direct.
I think that we would pick songs of his
and we would dissect them.
I think there was like an art appreciation aspect to,
we would sit in the car, we would pick it apart
and appreciate parts of it.
So we never had like art appreciation classes
to really understand the value of how art can move you.
It just wasn't an emphasis of ours in high school.
But it was something that we found ourselves doing
impromptu through his music.
And we would marvel at the subject matters
that he would choose to,
the pictures he would paint
and how we would say things like,
there's nobody else writing songs like this on the radio.
There was an innovation in our minds.
There was a, it was unique.
And the choices that he was making,
the thing that we talk about a lot is-
It was self-expression.
Well, in the way that- It was different.
In the way that he brought,
when he gets into the late 70s, early 80s,
which is our favorite era,
and I'm also, I'm beginning to say era instead of era.
Okay, you sound, I guess, smarter.
Just because era sounds like you might be saying era, error. Era, okay, do it. So era, just so you know. Okay, you sound, I guess, smarter. Just because era sounds like you might be saying era,
error.
Era, okay, do it.
So era, just so you know.
All right, okay. I think it's like
the official New York Times pronunciation.
I don't know.
How did Merle say it?
Era.
No, no, he didn't.
So the thing that he was doing at the time
is the choices he was making musically with instrumentation.
The fact that he was like bringing in this jazz influence
out of nowhere and all of a sudden there was a saxophone
in country music and no one was doing that kind of thing.
It wasn't like when you listen to music
and you're just like, I just like the way this makes me feel
and this is just a cool vibe.
It was that, but then it was just like,
oh man, this was an exercise in curation
when he was making these songs,
the way that he brought these specific people together
to make this specific sound.
And just the other day, when we were listening
to that playlist, I was just reminded, I'm like,
no one has done this.
The singularity of his voice and how we could study
its development helped us understand
the identity of an artist.
Yeah.
You know what, I wanna take an aside.
On the ski trip coming back,
you know, I had made that playlist like months earlier
and I was just laying in my bed and I was like,
I'm gonna take all of my favorite Merle Haggard songs
and I'm gonna make a playlist.
And so, you know, without,
we know all of his discography so well
that like without even listening to him,
I could go album by album and just pick the songs
that like are just magical.
That's what I call the playlist.
Magical Merle. Magical Merle.
That sounds like something we would have written
on a cassette. Exactly.
In 10th grade. And you know what?
I never listened to the playlist.
And then when we went skiing-
You never listened to that playlist?
I never went back and listened to it.
And it's probably been nine months since I made it.
And so when we were coming back down,
we skiing with the boys
and then we're driving back that afternoon,
I got in the car and I thought of the playlist
and I was like, this will be perfect.
I'm gonna start playing this thing.
And I didn't tell you any of this,
but I started playing the, I said, I made this playlist,
this Merle playlist. And that's all I said. And I started playing the, I said, I made this playlist, this Merle playlist, and that's all I said.
And I started playing it.
And we drove all the way down the mountain,
absolutely beautiful sunset on coming from Big Bear
on what's in the rim of the world road.
You actually, for those of you in California,
you don't come down to the 330 to San Bernardino.
You stay on the mountain and go past Lake Arrowhead
and stay, it's called the Rim of the World.
And if the sun is setting, it's crazy.
It's amazing.
It's like an incredible ride.
And then once the sun sets,
you can see like all of Los Angeles.
And then when the lights end, you know,
that's the coastline.
And it was so beautiful.
And to me, it was, the boys were on their phones
or falling asleep in the back, exhausted from skiing.
And it was a flashback to when we were in high school
and we would just sit there in the car,
drive around aimlessly and listen to these Merle mixtapes
that we would make for each other.
And it was a pristine moment.
And at a certain point, we get down the mountain,
you fell asleep a little bit, you wake back up,
the playlist is still going.
We're like, we're not really talking that much.
But when we were, we were usually talking about the music,
which is what we would do.
And it had been, I mean,
it had been so long since we had done that.
It was like, I just remember thinking, this is perfect.
This is so, this is a special friendship moment.
And we got back to my house where you had parked
and we were gonna part ways
and it was basically the end of the playlist.
Like I-
It was when it got back to like the 60s.
Yeah, well it was, yeah, when I was,
stuff that I wasn't as interested in.
So the playlist came to an end basically.
It was perfectly timed for this trip.
I didn't even know it.
And at the one point where like you woke up
and it was still going and we were talking about it
and you said, you know, send me this playlist.
But you didn't.
I gotta tell you, I realized at that moment
that that is my love language.
You making playlists?
No, somebody saying unprompted,
hey, what is this?
And it's happened a couple other times.
They're like, what's this music that you're playing here?
I was like, oh, it's a playlist I made.
Hey, and then a few days later, get a text.
Hey, can you send me that playlist you made?
That is my love language.
So you're a DJ?
So yeah, I'm a DJ.
I mean, like really, you missed your calling.
You shouldn't be a hairstylist, you should be a DJ.
But the tie to the fact that like,
without either one of us talking about
what I'm saying right now,
to me, that was your way of saying,
hey, this resonated with me,
this means something to me too, this took me back.
Send me that playlist.
Yeah, because the Merle discography is so big,
I just find myself, there's like a couple of albums
that I'll bring up on Spotify,
and every single playlist that people have made
on Spotify sucks because they always put
"'Okie from Muskogee' as like the first song."
There's two reasons I haven't sent it to you.
People don't understand Merle Haggard.
Like 99% of people who like him don't understand him.
It's my contention.
Yeah, so it's, but we do.
It's something special that we had
and that we relived in that moment.
So, hey, it was a very special moment.
It was very special, but it would be even more special
if you would just send me the playlist.
The reason why I didn't send it is
because I'm thinking about tweaking the order.
Okay. But the other reason is-
Well, you can tweet the order
and just keep sharing it with me.
It'll update automatically. Okay, that's true.
I wanted you to ask me again
because it made me feel so good when you asked me.
I was like- That's a little selfish.
Yeah, it was. That's a little selfish.
All right, I'll send it to you.
And you know what? I will also share it with little selfish. Yeah, it was. That's a little selfish. All right, I'll send it to you. And you know what?
I will also share it with you.
I will tweet it out.
So go to my Twitter, it'll lead you to my Spotify.
I'll tweet it out.
And then if it changes over time,
it's because I'm adding, I'm optimizing it.
Yeah.
Magical Merle.
Number six, right?
Yeah. What's your number six?
Number six is Flight of the Conchords.
Oh, I didn't think about them.
Really?
Yes, okay, this is great, glad you did.
Okay, so if you're not familiar with Flight of the Conchords,
I'm sorry, but this is Brett and Jemaine.
Jemaine Clement, who lots of people call him Jermaine
Clement, but it's Jemaine Clement,
which I guess is a Kiwi name.
Yeah.
So these are New Zealanders that are kind of in the,
Jemaine has gone on to become an actor
that you would recognize from many different movies.
You might recognize Brett from Lord of the Rings,
Fellowship of the Ring as an elf,
but just as a very brief.
I mean, he won an Oscar for writing the music
for the Muppet.
The Muppet movie, yeah.
So he's kind of gone into the songwriting thing
and I think Jemaine is more doing the acting thing
and producing it.
Jemaine is a co-creator of-
What We Do in the Shadows.
So Jermaine was in What We Do in the Shadows.
And so he's collaborating with Taika Waititi
who didn't make my list, but is an honorable mention.
Oh yes.
I love Taika, but he's more of a recent influence
and I only know about him through Jermaine.
And that comedic tone, that Kiwi tone,
it's something that just blew us away.
It just is like nectar into my mouth.
But obviously you're- I just love it.
Yeah, so what we do in the shadows
is probably my favorite television show, comedy.
Yeah.
Currently. Right.
But the specific thing,
so Flight of the Conchords is the two man band
that Brett and Jemaine formed
probably right around the time that we were coming up
and trying to get our comedy going.
I specifically remember- Early 2000s.
I specifically remember- MySpace?
Well, no, I remember being on a trip.
Oh.
A Campus Crusade for Christ trip that we were going on,
like probably 2002, 2003, where we're traveling around doing our little comedy show
that's really just an evangelism training seminar
for Christian students.
But we have funny songs.
We had a lot of funny songs.
That turns out weren't nearly as funny as these two guys.
Well, I remember being in a hotel room.
Yes, I remember this.
Turning on HBO and all of a sudden
there's these two dudes singing.
It's a standup special,
but it's two guys on a stage and they're singing songs.
Business Time is probably the first one,
which is a song about having married sex
and it's incredible.
And I was just married to sex.
Immediately, like, oh gosh,
these guys are so much funnier than us.
Like I was shot in the gut.
Yeah, this has happened so many times in my life
where I feel like I'm doing something
and then I see somebody who's actually doing
what I think I'm doing and then I see it happening.
I'm like, damn it, I'm not doing it.
I'm not actually that good at this.
Yes, we look at each other
and almost thought we had to turn it off.
We didn't turn it off.
We watched the whole thing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And then-
I hated them.
I love hating them.
We just couldn't talk about it
because they were so good, but it was so,
so it wasn't inspiring.
It was challenging.
It was infuriating.
It was sobering.
Yeah, and I would say that every effort
that we've made in musical comedy over the years
has been an effort to emulate them
on some level without completely biting what they're doing,
what they did.
Oh yeah, every line has a comedic effect.
There's no filler and they each have a character.
And so that we were students of what they did.
And this was all before the HBO series came out
that was an adaptation of their first album.
Yeah, which had like a music video.
It's the reason-
Which obviously influenced Buddy System
and that there's music videos.
It's the reason that Buddy System has a music video
in every single episode.
But the thing I'll say is that-
We actually went in,
we calculated our comedy songs
like as we were developing an audience on YouTube.
As visuals.
That and we specifically talked about
how not to be compared to them by doing things differently.
So we wouldn't just seem like a hack ripoff.
Basically just avoiding like guitar,
funky white boy music kind of thing, you know.
Or Kiwi accents.
Yeah, yeah.
I would have, I have a recurring dream
of meeting one or both of them over the years.
And it's like, it's an anxiety dream.
Oh yeah, because you know they don't know who we are.
But the thing is is that,
you know, when I listen to our music,
and again, we don't do a lot of comedy music anymore.
It's like, we can only have, there's only two of us,
but, and they don't do it anymore, really.
I mean, they're doing it individually,
but when I listen to our music, anything that we've created,
I always find fault with it.
And this is any artist, I guess,
but like I listened to our music and I'm like,
yeah, I go, well, I'd love to rewrite that right now.
Oh, I'd love to make that actually funny.
Right.
But in my mind, I'm never not comparing it
to what they did.
The moment of discovery of that special
with like no point of reference at all.
Yeah. We turned it on.
It just was on HBO.
Two guys sitting on stools, playing music,
doing the exact same thing we were doing.
And I was like, whoa, whoa, whoa, what's happening here?
It was really surreal.
Yeah.
And I was like, whoa, whoa, whoa, what's happening here? It was really surreal.
Yeah.
My number six is David Letterman.
So what number did you put David Letterman?
Cause I know you put Letterman on your list.
Number one.
Oh, I stole your number one.
I knew this was gonna happen.
I knew he would be on your list
and I knew that he wouldn't be number one.
All right, say what you will.
I think he's more of an,
I think you watched more Letterman than me
and you stayed up later than I did.
Well, I still do.
And you watched, so you watched more Letterman.
Okay, so again, this was a struggle
because David Letterman is not an artist
in the strict sense, right?
He's a late night show host.
But this for me is kind of embracing-
I don't know, I disagree with what you just said,
but go ahead.
Well, no, no, I'm saying that,
I do believe that it's an art,
but what I'm saying is that
it's not a traditional artist category.
It's not a musician, it's not a filmmaker,
it's not a TV show runner, it's not a writer.
Okay, yeah. It's a guy,
it's a personality.
But the reason that he's my number one
is because in the same way that my dad sort of serves
as this foundational influence
as the things that I find funny
and the way that I end up being funny naturally
is very influenced by the disposition
of a guy like David Letterman.
I've actually come off of that quite a bit
in the past probably five or six years,
just as people's tastes in comedy has changed.
So the dry, he had a dry delivery
and it was kind of a knowing slyness to it.
Well, and most people, if you're younger
and your only experience with Letterman is the CBS days
and specifically like the last three to four years,
he just, you would just be like, this is an angry guy.
This is a guy who's not happy, who's kind of mean,
doesn't seem to like anyone, doesn't seem to like himself.
Yeah.
I think that's how the younger generation responds to it.
And if you look at some of the way that I kind of behaved
in some of our earlier content,
you might come to the same conclusion.
It was a calculated thing.
I was like, this is the role that I'm playing.
And as I realized that a lot of people
who enjoy internet content are not into that,
they don't want to see somebody,
they don't like meanness
and they don't even really like slyness as much.
So I'm a lot more jovial of a guy
in terms of my comedy at this point.
But if you go back to his earlier stuff.
Well, he was kind of like that.
He was that way, but the reason he's my number one.
He was smilier and he was silly too.
Super silly.
It was a strange combination of silly and dry.
Yeah, well, the reason he's my number one
is because for better or worse,
the thing that we are and I am most known for
is being one of the two hosts of Good Mythical Morning.
Like again, at the end of my life,
the thing that will have had the most impact
in the entertainment world will be all these episodes
of Good Mythical Morning that I've made.
And we, I approach the way that we think about that show
and the way that we embrace both some kind of structure
that is presentational, that feels kind of traditional,
that feels like a television show
in a way that a lot of YouTube content doesn't feel.
Yeah.
That's a huge part of Good Mythical Mornings,
consistency, reliability, and sort of point of view.
But the other piece of it is this unhinged, completely,
this unhinged, completely,
silliness, just a embrace of silliness
to the point that it gets weird. He did a segment called, Will It Float?
And it was just taking an object,
putting it in water and then describing
if it was floating or not.
Yeah, and he incorporated his mom into his content.
The reason that we have our parents
in our content in that way,
he would call his mom and talk to her on the phone.
Yeah.
He had, he did these,
if you go back and look at the bits,
now there's a really good book about this.
Yeah, can you Google the Letterman biography?
Cause we read it, we got Stevie to read it.
It was like, I mean, it reminded us,
stuff I had actually never seen,
but like the ethos of Good Mythical Morning
is much more like the early and successful
Letterman late show
than it is Wayne's World. I will say that.
Wayne's World not on our list.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
And you kind of fell in more to that Letterman thing.
Just tell us when you got there.
But for me, I think of you as more of a Letterman type
and then I kinda like,
my comedic sensibility, I don't know who that is.
I think I can see more of Letterman and your dad and you.
I actually have a hard time seeing
and I don't have anybody on my list
that's like that version for me.
Don't say Paul Schaefer.
Don't say, that was a joke. I knew you wouldn't say that. Don't say Paul Schaefer. Don't say, that was a joke.
I knew you wouldn't say that.
Don't say Don Knotts.
I mean, I do think that,
I do think that like Dana Carvey is a type,
not just because you look like him,
but I think there is a,
is that it?
Yeah, Letterman, the last guard of-
The last giant.
Last giant.
The last giant of late night.
Yeah.
And if I recall, this book is also pretty honest.
You know, he's a complex character.
He did a lot of things that he regrets
that obviously I do not endorse everything
that he did as a person
or even everything that he did comedically.
But I watched so much Letterman with Ben Greenwood
growing up.
Ben Greenwood and I, and Ben Greenwood,
again, I guess in some senses, Ben should be on the list
because Ben was the one that was really into late night TV.
My dad was not into late night TV.
My dad was not into that kind of comedy.
He also didn't stay up that late.
But Ben would be like, we're gonna watch Johnny Carson.
And oh, and he's like, oh, and when we really want would be like, we're gonna watch Johnny Carson. And oh, and he's like, oh, and when we really want
something really silly, we're gonna watch Letterman.
And we watched Letterman on NBC.
You know, the dude was sitting there with his curly hair.
The late late show or whatever it was called.
Tennis shoes.
And he would just do such,
watching an adult do such stupid stuff.
It's really made us who we are.
The parallels, yeah, from the book,
he was a weatherman and he like had this,
and then he moved into being a comedian and a host.
He took a circuitous path to entertainment.
Just like we did.
He had an interesting relationship.
Well, he had a relationship with his producer.
Like they were together for years.
And she's very instrumental in the book too.
So it's like, that's an interesting thing
that there's like a Stevie as producer kind of thing.
But not as a relationship.
Not as a relationship though.
But like there were entire episodes
where she would trick him.
Like it would be a joke on Letterman.
Like he wouldn't-
He would get mad.
Yeah, he would get mad.
But it would be live, live to tape.
So there's a lot of stories there that we related to
and that make that very formative.
So I don't know if I accept the Dana Carvey.
I know I look like him and there's a tone,
but he's a character actor. I think I'm just talking about the...
He never played himself.
You're not gonna like the, I'm not, the word zany, right?
You don't like the word zany, but if you're like, okay,
this guy or this guy, who's the zanier one?
Well, it's like- You know what I'm saying?
People are gonna pick you.
If there's the dry and then there's the,
if the opposite's wet, it's like, okay, I'm the wet guy.
You're the dry guy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it's, yeah, but I don't know exactly.
I'm curious, you know, you can hashtag your biscuits.
Let us both know who else, if you're a student of comedy.
Beyond just who I look like. There's a distinction. And who else, if you're a student of comedy.
Beyond just who I look like. There's a distinction.
And who Rhett reminds you of.
Again, this is an oversimplification.
But the thing that we say quite a bit is that
I'm usually funny on purpose
and you're usually funny on accident.
Now that's an oversimplification
because a lot of your accidental humor is purposeful.
It's a different mode.
You don't know what's gonna come out of your mouth.
You don't know exactly what's gonna happen,
but you go into a sort of like a trance-like state.
I mean, Good Mythical Evening, obviously,
is the perfect example of this, but it's like-
It wasn't a trance, but yeah.
It's more chaotic. Yeah. You know, it's chaotic- It wasn't a trance, but yeah. It's more chaotic.
Yeah.
You know, it's chaotic, which is great.
Maybe there's, and that makes me think of a Martin Short,
but I didn't watch a lot of Martin Short, you know?
So it's not, I'm not actively emulating somebody
and I can't identify them.
Actually, that's really good,
because if you watch Only Murders in the Building,
which I did, and I enjoyed it, not my favorite, but I enjoyed it.
I am the Steve Martin, you are the Martin Short.
Right. All day long,
without a doubt.
Right. If you have to put us
into that duo, that's how it tracks.
I think that works.
You know?
Yeah, I think that works.
But we're still open to others.
Hashtag your biscuits.
Sorry to steal your number one.
Yeah, that hurts.
Just like that playlist.
My number, so now we need your number six.
No, your number five.
My number five, you already stole that as well.
Ross McElwee.
Okay, my number five is Seinfeld.
That's my number two.
Oh God. Okay.
Yeah, and you know, I'll just-
I'm really interested what your top three
are gonna be now.
For Seinfeld, I just boiled it down to like
the relatable observational humor is something
that became a cornerstone of how-
Anything we write.
What we would build to connect on YouTube.
But it was instinctual
because we were so obsessed with that show.
I actually put Seinfeld slash Larry David
as one thing, right? Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, you got it too.
So, because Larry David was the one
that was really fueling the writing of all that stuff.
Yeah. I mean, obviously Seinfeld
was very much, it was coming from his standup,
which was super observational.
What's the deal with this?
But bringing it into the real world
and into a real conversation,
Larry David is a genius at that.
And obviously he does it,
it's on display in Curb Your Enthusiasm,
which I love as well.
It's, I think the thing that-
He's the George Costanza character in Seinfeld.
The thing that, it so resonates with me as a writer, right?
And that's why I put them at number two,
because if I start thinking about a,
okay, you got these two people in this scene
and we need to accomplish this plot-wise,
but they need to get there in an entertaining way.
So they need to be having a conversation about this.
Well, the way that Larry David sees conversational humor
is it's the same thing that it's comes from this tendency
that's in both of us, which is,
hey, we just hung out with it.
You were just talking about it on the last podcast.
We just hung out with this guy.
Let's talk about that hat.
Let's pick him.
Let's talk about the hat he had on.
Right.
Did you see what he was doing?
Did you see what he was doing
with his left hand and his nose?
Yeah.
Explain that to me.
Right, and it's nothing in Seinfeld,
there were no jokes.
It was not joke oriented, it was conceptual.
Right.
Conversational.
Yeah.
And so it very much is how we like to write.
And it gets very specific and it gets, it's like,
oh, you typically wouldn't think
that we should be having a conversation about this,
or this is where the humor should be coming from.
It feels like, I don't even know
how to articulate it very well.
But when I watch, and the only way I really watch Curb Your Enthusiasm
these days is like on TikTok.
I hate to say it, you know?
Oh, I gotta get in on that.
A clip will just come up,
whether it's on the Curb Your Enthusiasm actual account
or just somebody has reposted it.
And I'm just like this moment where something happens
and I'm just like, ah, man, this is like, that's so great.
So that's your number two.
Yeah, you've taken my one and my two away from me.
What's your four?
Coen Brothers.
What we were just talking about made me realize
that they weren't on my list, but yeah.
The Coen Brothers are not on your list?
I just forgot.
I just forgot.
But yeah, it's that same thing.
It's a different, it's character driven comedy,
which we've talked about before,
is another big part of like,
finding ourselves really loving their comedy
and then trying to figure out why
and having conversations about it.
There's so much about the Coen brothers, I can say.
One, they're a partnership, right?
Yeah. Which is obviously very relatable to us.
They, there's a creative evolution
over the course of their career of them like
trying something and you see these like glimmers of it
and like Blood Simple and which we would,
we were like, we kind of went into our like
Coen Brothers like film study kind of, our version of that, like, let's go watch Blood Simple and we were like, we kind of went into our like Coen brothers, like film study kind of our version of that.
Like, let's go watch Blood Simple
and make ourselves like it, right?
Yeah. You know?
And then which, and then you get what I think is the,
just for me, maybe for you is just the quintessential
perfect expression of them as filmmakers is oh brother.
You know, that's where it gets into this thing that is
the humor, the music, the characters,
everything just lines up in a way that they're,
and they basically just hit it out of the park every time
now, as far as I'm concerned.
I mean, there's a couple of times where I'm not quite
as into the subject matter, I don't quite relate as much.
But we, yeah, and we talked about this on the,
you know, our top 10 films.
It's kind of, there's that overlap there.
But it's just an, they're so aspirational
because they do what they do, what they do so well.
And I think, again, underneath everything
that we've accomplished has always been this desire to make movies, you know?
And I still wanna do it.
And yes, we have written one.
You know, and I just don't think I'm ever gonna let go
of that desire to be a filmmaker,
not instead of or in place of what we do,
but in addition to what we do,
because there's just something about
the way that you can bring all this creative energy
into a time and place over the course of a couple of hours,
and you can get it done in a year or whatever,
from start to finish.
There's just something so attractive about that process.
And when I think about how that's ultimately
sort of the white whale for me personally,
of like that's the last one I'm always chasing
is I wanna make that movie.
They are the embodiment of it having been done perfectly.
My number four wouldn't have been on my list
except that like in a recent conversation,
I was reminded of them.
John Boy and Billy Big Show.
Oh, wow.
Okay, I thought about them for a second and yeah, yeah.
Well, because- I didn't put them on.
In high school, we were listening to their morning show,
still going to this day,
but they were a duo that was, they were radio personalities. So it was, you know, they were a duo that was,
they were radio personalities.
So it was conversational and you'd be with them for like,
for summer, like on the job with my dad,
like painting houses, we would listen to it in the truck.
We'd listen to it while we were painting.
I would listen to the whole three or three hours
every single weekday.
And, you know, they'd come back from commercial and say,
all right, we're gonna call so-and-so
and it would be the different,
they would have sketches where it was like
they were playing different characters.
But it's like, you had this keen awareness.
Well, I don't know if I knew at first,
but eventually I was like,
they were playing all these two guys are beating everybody.
These people aren't calling in.
I have comedians come in and guests,
but they had their own world with,
it was like self-contained.
Yeah.
That was, and you became a part of it, you know?
And like you do, you got to know them as people.
And I think that we have this understanding
of the audience experience for Good Mythical Morning
and for this show,
because we had that experience with them.
That's why it was so thrilling when they, like I said,
they invited us to,
once we started making those viral videos.
We gotta be on the show.
The commercials, we gotta be on the show.
And I took my dad there and John Boy took us to his ranch,
his farmhouse and we hung out and stayed the night.
I actually got a text from Carl.
Carl the cook?
Yeah, he went to my old-
The guy who made their barbecue sauce?
Yeah, he said, I'll send y'all some barbecue sauce.
The guy who got drunk and said,
man, has anybody ever told you, you look like a falcon?
Yeah.
Your face looked like a falcon.
I couldn't figure out how to get in touch with him
because- Falcon, man.
The, it went to my like Google number
and it's like, I couldn't see,
but we got to get in touch with him.
You know, I mean, the more you talk about it,
the more I realize- But all the character work,
the sketch work.
So much of that influence.
And it was audio.
It was like what we did as kids.
We would do radio shows, stuff on tapes.
It really influenced a lot of the characters
that we created in the early days.
The redneck characters. The redneck guys.
You know, big time.
Which we've had like all different,
we've had an array of them.
Yeah, and when you talk about just the amount of-
Y'all keep them straight up there.
Actual exposure to a potential influence.
Right.
I mean, that's what you did.
You turned on John Boy and Billy
on the way to high school every single day.
Yeah, so it's like we absorbed their sensibilities.
Yeah.
And we got to know them as real people too.
So you saw both sides of it.
All right, I think I've wiped you out.
No, I have one more, my number three.
All right, what's your number three?
I think I know someone that's in your top three
that is on my honorable mentions, but I'll let you say it.
But my number three is Weird Al.
Okay, Weird Al is my number two.
Okay, I mean, so you get to talk about him first.
I regret when Weird Al came on Good Mythical Morning
that we didn't like-
Worship him?
Worship him.
Yeah, give him offerings.
And like-
Give him some like a burnt offering.
The first cassette tape we both ever owned was Weird Al.
And I still have mine.
I wish I would've brought it that day and had him sign it.
We should have him back on the show. We should. We should.
That was during GMM 22 where it was so hectic
that it was like, oh, Weird Al's here?
I don't even have time to process that.
Yeah. He's playing his accordion
on the show?
Yeah, but there's also like a woman
who looks like a stripper.
It was a strange episode.
What was, I don't even remember.
It wasn't all about him and that was,
it was a disservice to the great Weird Al,
number two creative influence on my list.
Because I, you know,
I got engaged with this comedy music
and it just like made the most sense.
Like I wasn't even a music fan before that, really.
Yeah. Like I was, because my older step sister liked music and I wasn't gonna a music fan before that, really.
Because my older step sister liked music
and I wasn't gonna like anything she liked.
Until Weird Al.
Box you out of music.
I was like, she is, I mean, he is so,
this just totally makes sense.
Yeah, it was like it was tailor made, tailor made for us.
And it's strange that like,
I didn't know on every one of his albums,
I didn't watch his movie.
So it wasn't like I was a super fan,
but at such a formative time in our lives
when we were like really hitting it off
and like making those dumb tapes that we were making,
we weren't writing songs together yet,
but it was just like that stuff, it's foundational,
in terms of comedy and obviously starting our career
as musical comedians for the most part.
And one of the first things really, you know,
apart from some of the things that we did in high school,
and then a couple of the videos that we made in college,
the first thing that we did together as a comedic duo
was comedy music.
Yeah.
It was those first couple of Christmas conferences.
Oh no, I'm talking about like,
you're down with Halloween,
like rewriting the words to that.
Yeah, yeah, that's true.
Rewriting the words and getting up on stage
at the fall festival.
But anytime that we were performing, yeah.
So we did it there, we did it in middle school.
But then in college,
performing those Campus Crusade things,
it was just like, all right, we're gonna get up there
and we're gonna do this funny song
about the unibrow
or whatever together.
And it was, our voices kind of went into a sort of nasally
weird owl place that-
Kind of nerdy.
People talk about, a lot of our early stuff
sounds very weird owl-y.
Yeah.
And that was, you know,
it was because we had listened to so much Weird Al.
It was just, it was in our bones.
Okay, so that was my number two.
That was your-
So yeah, so I've taken my two,
you've already taken my two,
this Seinfeld, Larry David, and one Letterman.
All right, so I gotta clean it up.
My number three-
You have three more?
I have two more,
because Weird Al's my number two.
Oh. My number three, You have three more? I have two more, cause Weird Al's my number two. Oh.
My number three, I put Questlove.
Like, I'm a huge fan of Questlove.
And just, he's a huge creative inspiration
that is a, within the last two years,
an addition to my list.
Of course, he's a hip hop icon
as a member and drummer for The Roots.
He's a band leader for Fallon,
which is The Roots on Fallon.
But in terms of like Meek, you know,
you talk about me wanting to be a DJ and telling that story,
like it's a product of like me connecting,
you're like looking at me like you're shocked or something.
No, I'm interested to hear this.
Because I would not have guessed this.
Just really identifying
how much I enjoy music
on an appreciation level.
Of course, with our Merle Haggard obsession,
like way back in the day,
I remember I went to Heather Wilson's house
and her dad had a magazine called,
it was a country music heritage magazine.
And it like talked about like the best country music albums.
And I was like, I remember thinking then,
I like, I took the magazine, I still have it.
So like back in high school, it was something,
I was very passionate about country music
as an offshoot of our passion for Mo Haggard.
But you know, like I go to 11 when it comes to like,
like the collection mentality and like,
like the pre-Wiki wiki mentality
of understanding everything about country music.
And I started to think I could become
like a country music museum curator.
Like maybe that can be something I'll do.
I remember thinking about it.
That's why I kept that magazine all these years
and still have it.
And then it was over the pandemic,
there was like a rekindling of that,
which led to like the listening party broadcast
that I did with Britain and stuff like that.
But it was a result of like me starting to watch
Questlove's broadcast on Instagram
where he would like do DJ sets.
And he would start talking about the music
that he was playing and it was like, I mean, he has an encyclopedic knowledge
of all these things.
But he has, I'm not a fan of the Roots.
I've never listened to the Roots.
I'm a fan of him in the way-
They did back us up while we did our,
you know, down with Halloween rap on Fallon.
Yes, we did, which is-
We've been backed by the roots
on performance before. Which was huge.
I mean, that was a career and friendship high point for us.
But like the fact that he branches out into,
in middle age, you know, he's like five years older than us,
but he's using everything from his career
to now do, to capitalize and do the things
that he's passionate about.
So he's writing books.
He wrote a book about creativity called Creative Quest,
which I've read some of.
He executive produces a hip hop documentary on AMC
called Songs That Shook, which is amazing.
And now he's nominated for an Oscar
for best documentary film for Summer of Soul,
which is, it's like the Black Woodstock, basically,
that was never, the footage was never released.
And he's nominated for an Oscar for it and he deserves it.
And it's, you know, so the way that he's branching out
and engaging everything that up from a career standpoint,
up to this point that like he's leveraging is cool to see.
And so it's very encouraging that like he's leveraging is cool to see.
And so it's very encouraging that like,
we talk about the things we wanna do
like you were doing earlier.
And it's, you know, I see a guy like him,
that's like a, he's an elder statesman of music.
And he hasn't, he doesn't just do one thing.
He doesn't just do one thing.
He does a lot.
So when we think about our legacy
and we think about the things that we have yet to do,
those are two different things, but they interplay.
And so even if it's something like us investing
in the next generation of creators
with our Mythical Creator Accelerator,
you know, it's just another example of,
hey, we're gonna pay it forward
but we're still here for it.
Oh yeah, we're still here. We're not retiring.
Still a lot to do.
So yeah.
Well, Questlove actually.
We met him once.
If I'd have known that you felt that way about Questlove
when he was playing the drums for us rapping,
I would have probably been more nervous.
I came to grips with it afterward.
I wasn't as-
Okay, it was after.
Yeah, because it was more pandemic related.
All right, so I just have my number one,
which is for both of us.
You don't have any left.
Yeah, but I mean, I gotta,
you want me to guess who it is?
Yeah.
Is it Wes Anderson?
No, I went in a totally different direction.
Cause I was like, he was an honorable mention,
but I was like, Link loves Wes Anderson so much
as you can put him number one, but I was like,
as your list goes on, I'm like, that can't be number one.
Okay, and this is for both of us.
You're not gonna disagree with this because again,
with everything we've talked about.
My number one, I'm putting Benny Inzor.
Whoa!
Yes, baby!
Wow.
Yeah, okay, I mean, yeah.
I mean, it just didn't cross my mind.
But now that I've said it, it totally makes sense, right?
Oh yeah. Okay.
Maybe you've heard his name.
Maybe you know from the book of mythicality
is talking about him or all the times we've talked about
our high school band, the wax paper dogs and in a Z
it was the 90s.
So Matt Inzor was in our grade.
His younger brother, John was one year younger,
but their dad, Benny,
he played the piano at the church that we went to. We always knew him growing up.
He was one of the youth leaders and also a dad.
He was a soccer coach.
When my mom got divorced and me and her moved
into our own places, the two of us,
it was across the street from the Enzo's,
which they still live over there.
So it's like in the small community,
he was very present at church, at soccer, in the community.
And then at school later on.
That's right, and then he worked,
he was like the guy who in charge of the detention.
I wish I had to go to one.
At the high school.
I had to go to detention and the guy in charge of it
was my keyboard player.
In my hands.
Yeah, so it's like,
Benny Ensor started through the church,
he started a cafe for the, like a coffee shop for-
Yeah, this is true.
I didn't think about it,
but now that you're putting it all together, yes.
Because I know we didn't, besides your dad,
we didn't think of it in terms of personal,
interpersonal relationships.
We talked about it in terms of like external
celebrity influences.
But yeah, he started the Maranatha Cafe coffee shop
to have Campbell University students could hang out
and it was a way for the church to create a space,
a safe space for them to hang out, listen to music.
There was an open mic night,
which then we as high school students involved in the church,
we helped facilitate, move chairs around.
We helped renovate the building and decorate it.
And Benny was a huge music fan and musician.
He's a great pianist, also played guitar.
Yep.
And a huge Allman Brothers fan from like,
and so he was a hippie.
He kinda, well, he had a hippie vibe.
He had longer shaggy hair.
He didn't look like any of our other parents.
A must-have for a Fu Manchu.
Yep. Yeah.
And he would, he took all of his old records
and then we decorated the Maranatha Cafe
with all of his records.
So it wasn't Christian music.
It was like 70s albums, wall to wall,
that became the wallpaper.
It was like super cool.
Yeah.
And it was his baby.
And because-
Of course, because of the-
Open mic night.
The fact that the Maranatha Cafe existed
and there was this open mic night,
that was what gave us the courage or the opportunity, we didn't need the courage,
the opportunity to be like, well, of course,
we're going to perform at the open mic night.
And that was when Eric Woodruff had a guitar
and he could play the guitar.
John Inzor had a bass, he was learning bass guitar.
He was definitely learning.
And of course, Eric was learning too,
but he was the most proficient at the time.
Yeah.
And I remember the first song we ever wrote
was about the, ironically, given specifically
my deconstruction story, was about creation.
And it was basically about how creation proves
that God exists.
And that it happened in seven days.
Yeah, yeah.
But the reason why we-
It made fun of the organic soup in life,
you know, spontaneous life, but it was-
We had to write Christian-
It was horrible.
Oh yeah, we had to write Christian songs
because to play the open mic night,
you did have to play Christian music.
It was a Christian cafe.
But that's where Benny comes in
because Benny listened to our creation song
and was like,
boys, you know, if you're really serious about playing music
you should probably learn how to play cover songs.
Like you should learn how to play other songs
that have been written.
And he was also like, and I've got some old songs
that I wrote like 20 years ago that you could also play.
And so that was the beginning of us.
Cause again, most people who sit down,
even if you listen to music a lot,
you sit down to write a song,
even if you can play a few chords,
you don't understand song structure.
You don't understand like,
oh, there's this number of measures in the verse
and there's a bridge and there's a chorus.
And like, there's a structure that it follows.
If you just start writing, you have no idea.
Benny saw that immediately. And then was like, here's some songs like, hey, can you just, what if you just start writing, you have no idea. Benny saw that immediately and then was like,
here's some songs like, hey, can you just,
what if you just played,
I can see clearly now the rain is gone.
Yeah. Or Country Roads.
By John Denver.
And it was, that's how we learn how to sing.
And that's how I learned how to play the guitar
because it's, you know.
But he also said, and I can also be in the band
to help you actually make this into a band.
To like keep the beat.
I'll play keyboard and like, if you need a beat,
there'll be a beat on my keyboard.
We didn't have a drummer yet.
Early in the day, right.
And we started writing songs.
He brought out, yeah, like he had all these songs
that he had written in the 70s, like handwritten,
and he like taught them to us and we sang them.
Yeah.
And it was like Allman Brothers meets John Denver,
sung by two guys who tried it,
who were trying to sound like Hank Williams Jr.
Right, it was a train wreck.
I think there's a whole other podcast
just about wax paper dogs,
but I just wanna say that like,
we threw ourselves into this band
and because there was an adult in the room
who we considered, it was like he was a peer.
He was John, Matt did our sound and did all the tech stuff.
But we were a group of peers
and he didn't elevate himself above us.
And we had so much fun.
We threw ourselves into it.
We committed so wholeheartedly to it.
And there's something about being in a band
that really helps you develop creatively.
We were making thousands of creative decisions
in every time we would get together.
Yeah.
And so you start to learn to work with four other people.
And you learn how, you learn how,
you learn to trust yourself creatively.
And you learn to put yourself out there.
Cause what ended up happening is within that first year,
we went from an older guy giving us his music
and having the drums be on the keyboard
to me and you sitting in a room somewhere writing a song.
And we started writing.
Yeah, we would have never had the courage to do that
without his influence.
Yeah, you and I were writing music
for the Wax Paper Dogs together, writing music and lyrics.
And then the other thing we were doing
is we were making them a little funny.
Like they all had to be like veiled.
Well, some of them were like overt Christian
and some of them were veiled,
and some of them started to get funny.
And that's where we-
The only surviving recording actually is funny,
a little bit funny.
It's a racial reconciliation song.
Yeah.
But it has a reference to a professional wrestler.
Right.
So, I mean, we can get into all this in more detail later,
but for now, just like we did in the book of mythicality,
we're like giving throwback thanks to Benny
because in a lot of ways, I don't think we would be here
because as creators, he really fanned that flame
and gave us a sense of identity as creative people
that translated into what we wore,
the music we listened to.
By the time we went off to college,
we looked, we have fully embraced
like the nineties alternative thing,
unlike anybody in our high school
and unlike anybody we associated with in college.
So it wasn't just an artistic thing.
It was a complete identity.
It set up our personalities in some ways of
always feeling like we didn't quite fit,
but kind of taking a little bit of pride in that, I think,
to be transparent about it.
Oh yeah.
Yeah, that's a good one. I think, you know, to be transparent about it. Oh yeah. Yeah, that's a good one.
I think Benny will be, you know,
I texted with John not too long ago,
so I'll let him know that Benny gets the shout out.
Yeah, okay.
Love you, Benny.
Now, okay.
We went ahead and talked ahead of time about one thing.
We didn't give any heads up
on who was gonna be on our list.
But the thing that we had a conversation about
was that if this list was in fact factual,
that we would be each other's number one.
Right.
You know, because-
We can be each other's zero.
So we'll be each other's zero.
Obviously the most significant creative influence
that is embodied in a person in each of our lives
is each other because we don't do any creativity
for the most part where we're not directly consulting
with one another and it's a product
of our collective imagination.
Yeah, I mean, and I'll also give a shout out to Stevie
in terms of, you know, it's like,
she's become a creative soundboard for us
that like we hatch things.
And then we always know that there's like,
the next phase is getting Stevie's buy-in
and like her applying her filters to the,
and first reaction to the next thing we're hatching.
Yeah, Stevie has been-
And then obviously shaping creatively
everything you see at Mythical
that we're involved in or not.
She's the first filter besides each other
for everything we do.
Yeah.
I wanna shout out Jessie, my wife as well.
I tend to discuss-
I love that we're using the term shout out. We're bringing it back. I wanna give heartbeat props to my wife as well, I tend to discuss like- I love that we're using the term shout out.
We're bringing it back.
I wanna give heartbeat props to my wife.
Because I very rarely think about anything creatively
that I don't consult her about.
Anything that I write, I give to her when I'm done.
And if I get stuck creatively a lot of times,
because I do a lot of stuff at home, cause I do a lot of stuff at home too.
I do a lot of writing at home
since I don't have enough time to do it at work.
So she's been a huge influence.
And also, you know, go back to the fact
that both of our wives were the ones
who sort of encouraged us to make a creative thing
our profession back in the day.
So- Oh, absolutely.
But yeah, and I was saying,
so we're making each other our zero on the list,
which sounds bad, but I think it's good.
Cause there's like, there's not any at every single point.
I surprised you with the Questlove thing,
but basically there's so much overlap.
It's like 99.9% creative overlap over so many years
that like we touch so much that even the things
that we don't touch in the other person's
creative endeavors, the presence will be felt.
Which is why you'll probably relate to,
I'm just gonna quickly run through the honorable mentions,
the ones that were in the initial batch,
but then got pushed off.
Wes Anderson. Okay.
Spike Jones.
Quentin Tarantino.
Rob Reiner.
Donald Glover.
Yeah.
Errol Morris, as I said.
The Lonely Island.
Yeah.
Taika Waititi.
Robert Rodriguez.
The Duplass Brothers. Okay. Will Smith. Yeah. Taika Waititi, Robert Rodriguez, the Duplass brothers.
Okay.
Will Smith.
Yeah. And Werner Herzog.
Okay.
All right, well, let's wrap this thing up.
This has been a long one.
So I guess I stole your rec.
Yeah. Sherman's March.
So let's just make this a double rec
because we mentioned two things that are really good.
The first thing is Ross McElwee's,
which it looks like McElwee, M-C-E-L-W-E-E,
Sherman's March, great documentary.
I'm sure you can get it on Amazon or whatever.
And then that Letterman book,
"'The Last Giant of Late Night."
I think if you're in a creative profession
and you're just trying to figure out
how to define yourself creatively,
or you've got a creative endeavor
that you're currently in the middle of.
I think that can be a pretty inspirational book.
David Letterman, The Last Giant of Late Night.
All right, it's been a fun one.
Hopefully you're inspired, your creative juices are flowing.
Tell us who your creative influences are,
hashtag Ear Biscuits.