If I Were You - 513: Gym Flirting (w/The Dumbbells!)
Episode Date: November 8, 2021Friends and fellow Headgum podcasters Erin McGown and Ryan Stanger are in the zoom room discussing getting sliced, drinking ice, and near death experiences.See omny.fm/listener for privacy information....
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This is a headgum original.
There it is. That was it.
Really good. Really good stuff.
Ryan, Aaron, thoughts? I don't know. Are you guys, do you remember the Adams family? Is that in your wheelhouse?
Oh, yes. Adams family is awesome. And that was a great theme song. That was awesome.
You know, the trick with that kind of thing is making, if I were you, like the phrasing on that is tough and making it work.
But I think that's a skilled, you know, like they talk about Sinatra being able to, you know, he had really good phrasing outside of whatever people think about his voice.
He could kind of fit words and phrases in.
Interesting.
Yeah, I think that was the really masterstroke was like making, if I were you, fit in that kind of, you know, whatever that, you know, whatever a smart music way to say that is.
Yeah, instead of Adams family, it's if I were you.
Yeah, that was tough. So basically this guy is actually in a band called Dear Lincoln who submitted some theme songs before.
Yeah, I've always liked that band name.
Good name.
He's sort of the Frank Sinatra of if I were you show submissions.
We were going to do a lounge show for him. He's a crooner.
Tuxedos and tattoos. He says, I know it seems like I took that sweet, sweet cash that you sent for the Hogan family theme song and retired, but that $10 ran out fast.
So to reclaim my throne, here's the Adams family theme song, the only and only one week past where it would actually be timely to use.
I don't know why the Adam Stanley would be.
Oh, because of Halloween. Yeah.
Yeah.
You used it the week after.
Well, he sent it the day after. So I'm sorry.
The deadlines are tough, you know.
Yes.
I don't want to wait another year.
Isn't it out right now, like a new version of it?
Yeah, I think there's a new sequel to their CG offering of the Adams family.
Interesting.
Yeah.
Okay.
So we might have missed Halloween, but it's still timely.
My band has been pretty silent as of late, but if you could promote my band, Dear Lincoln, it would be awesome.
DearLincoln.com.
So there you go. Thank you, Dear Lincoln.
You did a great job.
Is it D-E-E-R?
What do you think?
I want it to be Dear Lincoln.
With the top hat on?
With the top hat on?
I do want it.
Like a little grassy meadow with the fucking top hat.
Getting shot like Bambi slash Lincoln itself.
Fucking John Wilkes shot Bambi's mom.
Yeah, there we go.
Whoa.
Too soon.
It goes all the way to the top.
Aaron and Ryan, thank you so much for joining us.
From the Dumbbells podcast on this here, Headgum Network.
Yeah.
Correct.
Yeah, thank you.
Thank you for having us.
Thank you for having us.
Big news over at the Dumbbells, over in the Dumbbells world.
Are we breaking?
Are we breaking news?
Kind of.
I mean.
Breaking news.
Like no one else has heard this news.
This is hot, hot, hot information.
Okay.
Okay.
I'm ready.
Yeah.
So Aaron, whose voice you've been hearing is has taken the official co-hosting duties
from former co-host and founder Eugene Cordero.
And so, yeah, Aaron's stepped in.
She's taken the reins.
And so we had like a little mini relaunch that's been probably a couple of weeks now
when people have heard this.
Eugene will pop back in and out when he's got time.
But for people that know and follow Eugene, he's, he's, he's shooting the man.
Yeah.
The Mandalorian, the fucking, the Loki show.
Yeah.
It's got a lot of stuff going on.
Like two kids under four.
So.
Yeah.
So you're not mad at Eugene.
I was hoping there would be some sort of B for animosity that we can start.
Just to drum up some controversy.
Just like jealousy of his career.
But that's.
Yeah.
Okay.
That's a good starting point.
Yeah.
Like it has to have an origin story.
Yeah.
But that's like across the board.
Yeah.
Everyone was jealous of him right now.
So the trick was to find somebody with another E name.
For ends.
Yeah.
That had done guest co-hosting in the past.
So we're checking two boxes here.
And then it's also talented and dynamic.
Something that I don't have.
So I was like, I gotta, I gotta.
It's time.
It's time.
One of the hosts was dynamic and talented.
Might as well.
So enter Aaron McGann.
And yeah.
So here we are.
Everybody's up to speed now.
Everybody's caught.
Very passing of the torch.
Can't wait until what me or Jake is successful enough not to host this show.
You think it'll have, because it's been like, what, eight, nine years at this point.
I feel like it would have happened by now, right?
Yeah.
Well, the thing is that we phoned it in so hard that it would be kind of weird if one
of us left.
Right.
Because it's like how busy would we have to be to not fart out another 45 right every
week.
And we do.
We do fart it out.
I can't stress that enough.
Yeah.
They've.
Yeah.
Okay.
Good.
I'm glad to hear that.
Cause I'm, that's what I'm here for.
I've got my fucking asshole up to the microphone and I am.
It does sound like my voice that is weird, but a lot of wizardry in the sound department
over at head gum making this all kind of work somehow.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it's up to, it's up to your, your eyesight as well.
You keep the microphone and the, and the camera really close together.
Ryan is recording this whole thing.
Jim Carrey style.
And he does that when it's just us too.
So I'm glad you guys are here.
He does that when he records the ads solo as well.
Yeah.
Yes.
For sure.
Let me ask you something about Squarespace.
Reading talking points, facing away from the microphone.
You don't need to do that.
You think people do that to tone Locke ever?
I mean, he was the one that had to do.
That's a good call.
He's the one who saw the ass.
Yeah.
A lot of that kind of back and forth with that, that whole scene there.
That's, but fortunately he's got two hit songs.
So that runs a little interference.
Yeah.
Funky Cole Medina.
Something else.
Sort of washed away that entire scene from him.
So he doesn't have to think about it anymore.
Actually, I rewatched that movie over quarantine.
Problematic.
You know, a little problematic, very silly.
So, very silly.
So funny.
I mean.
Yeah.
Jim Carrey is just a sort of a comedy genius.
So that sticks around.
I rewatched the mask.
That's what I rewatched over quarantine and really goes off the rails,
which I guess that's a lot of movies, but I was like,
I do not remember this.
Like it just was insane.
Yeah.
And I mean, it was fun.
I think it was still fun.
Not, I don't think it was as problematic as I think.
You're right.
Yeah.
It was pet detective.
Yeah.
Some people call it Ace Ventura.
Some people call it pet detective.
But I've never heard of pet detective.
I like to just call it pet detective.
But you guys remember in the second one where he comes out of the butt.
I call that one when nature calls, but yeah, it's also.
That shaped my childhood.
Like I saw that in theaters and like I think about that every time I see a rhino.
Yeah.
It shaped your adulthood as well.
Yeah.
It's continuing on.
That part's funny as hell.
He gets hot in there.
So he has to take all his clothes off.
So he's like nude coming out of it, right?
Yeah.
Like he's giving birth to a human.
That's funny.
We should just be talking about Jim Carrey movie.
Let's see.
What's the one, the majestic, the one where he buys a movie theater for some reason?
Oh, yeah.
I think that's.
Oh, I never saw that one.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That was really problematic too.
I don't know.
It doesn't stay.
What is it called relevant?
It doesn't add.
What word am I thinking of?
It doesn't hold up.
It does.
Hold it out.
Hold it out of here.
It's hold up.
It doesn't hold up.
Wow.
You couldn't think of the word hold up.
It's actually two words.
One of them is up.
The other one is I already forget.
What is that because of what's happened, you know, with theaters these days?
Yeah.
Just the whole movie past thing.
It was tacky.
Yeah.
That movie today would have just been Jim Carrey getting a Netflix account.
And it would have been over in 38 seconds, I guess.
Starting a streaming service that would again last 38 seconds.
Consolidating six media companies.
You know, it's like, oh, I'm great.
Yeah.
Blowing through $2 billion of venture capital in a year and a half.
I'm not afraid to call out the fucking big wigs on the show.
You know what?
A lot of people are like, you know, kowtowing around it, trying to like stay in place.
No, fuck that.
We have Bezos on next week.
Really?
Yeah.
You got Bezos coming on?
Ask Bezos.
Bezos is coming on.
Yeah.
Is he doing testosterone replacement therapy?
Because that guy has transformed.
He's had a glow up.
He's had a glow up.
Yeah.
He's looking yoke.
Yeah.
But he got, didn't he get divorced?
Yeah.
That's what it was.
That happens when you get divorced, right?
You either get jacked or you get...
He looked like...
He could have gone either way.
When he first came out, he looked like the fucking, the little old guy that they would
do in the Simpsons, you know, that like little tiny old...
Hans Molman.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He looked like...
And now he looks like Mr. Burns.
Which is, you know, kind of a lateral, but at least he's taller.
Yeah.
It looks like Homer when Homer got jacked.
That's cool.
Yeah.
When he climbed the Matterhorn.
Yeah.
Okay, we got some real questions from real people.
This first one is about diet.
Okay.
We need a fake name just to preserve this guy's anonymity.
We can't out him.
Otherwise, people are going to be coming up to him on the street saying, weren't you
that guy in that If I Were You episode?
So, Stanger, do you have a fake name to refer to this person as, as we try to help him out
of this moral dilemma?
Tristan Ludlow.
That's great.
Tristan Ludlow.
Wow.
That's really cool, actually.
The name of an agent for sure.
Yeah, that's a hot name, yeah.
Nobody named Tristan Ludlow has ever had a problem, but I guess let's try to imagine.
Dear JNA, I'm looking to get sliced.
I go to the gym regularly, but diet seems to be a hurdle.
I'm currently on the LeBron James diet, which is where you only eat meat, fish, veggies,
and some fruit while abstaining from carbs, sugar, and dairy.
I guess that's the LeBron James diet now.
That being said, do y'all have any other tips?
Y'all seem to be in pretty good shape, and it'd be cool to nail some healthy habits down
in my mid-20s.
Good luck with the Patreon.
Love, Tristan.
Wow.
Mid-20s.
I didn't really think about diet in my mid-20s, but I guess it's starting earlier and earlier.
Yeah, that was a big reveal.
Like, you're picturing somebody else and the guy's like, you know, I'm 21.
Yeah, I'm looking to get sliced.
I'm looking to get fucking sliced.
How old were you guys when you realized that?
Oh, carbs are actually contributing to maybe fat in my body.
I remember that was like an aha moment in 2005 for me, where I'm like, I guess I shouldn't
have bagels every morning.
That's actually putting on some pounds.
Yeah, I had a, because I remember growing up, I had this teacher in high school named
Mr. Berman, and he was an honors English teacher, and he was super cool and ripped,
and he would eat plain bagels.
And I remember thinking like, wow, this guy's such a health nut.
He's eating a plain bagel, fat, no fat free.
Yeah, fat and bread sort of flip flopped at a certain point in like the early aughts,
where it was like, you can have as much fat as you want.
We should have told you that earlier.
Yeah, and meanwhile, Berman is just a genetic freak, you know.
A Billy Scoop Fury.
Yeah, exactly.
Do you guys know Billy?
He just eats a pound of pasta a day and remains with 0% body fat.
Oh, Scoop Fury, yeah, he's done the show before.
Yeah, and he's crazy ripped.
He's like 1% body fat.
It's unbelievable.
Yeah, so you can't really dictate what you should do based on Billy's diet or Mr. Berman's diet.
No, so for me, I was going to the movies with this girl I was seeing,
and she was a little older than I was.
And I was maybe just getting done with high school or something,
or maybe summer before college.
And so she was really fit.
I met her at the gym and she had a bunch of fit friends.
And they're all like maybe two or three years older than I was.
And I remember I got like a big icy and then like some skittles or something.
And one of her friends like, aren't you worried about all the fat?
And I was like, what?
This is all fat free.
So it's a cherry icy, you idiot.
Did icy survive?
Are there still icies?
I totally forgot about.
Yes.
I like the lid because you had and like you would have to fill like the lid, you know, like it had had a domed lid.
And then you would, it was pumped with hair so you could like fill the fucking lid out.
But anyway, she called me out and she was like, you know, sugar,
what do you think happens to that sugar?
And I remember when we were seeing like Armageddon,
like the whole time my fucking world was rocked.
Like I could even focus on the movie.
It's like the meteor hit you.
Oh, truly.
Yeah.
Did they, did they create those straws, icies with the spoon at the end of the straw?
Was that like a proprietary thing?
Or did they, did they buy that from a third company?
I hope they made it themselves because that was a genius move.
They did make it themselves.
And actually they make more money licensing the strong than they ever, icies are free.
Yeah.
It's really all about the proprietary tech.
That's a good tech talk, a tick tock that I'm going to post later.
You know, you don't know this, but icy is a billion dollar industry because of the straw innovation.
They actually lose money on the drink.
They got the patent in 1990.
The Spoonie with two E's.
The Spraw.
It's a half spoon, half straw.
Spraw E.
Aaron, when did you get your carb world rocked?
I don't know.
I think, like I, I, when I like lost my big amount of weight, I, I think at some point
I like, I was doing, I did the subway diet.
Wow.
That's Jared style.
Yeah.
That's where you just eat a $5 foot long and look at child porn.
Yeah.
You crank it enough that you lose 4,000 calories a day.
You go to prison where they give you three squares, low carb though.
Yeah.
So that's exactly how I found out about carbs.
Um, no, but I was doing that, like trying to eat those sandwiches and then, um, I think
I like, they started some again, subway started doing like salads.
And so that's kind of, I was like, Oh, interesting.
I'll switch it over because I heard bread was bad, but I didn't know why.
And so I did, it was around like my early twenties when I started like switching to less
carbs, but now I eat carbs and I think carbs are, they get a bad rap.
Yeah.
We're going back.
We're going all the way back to carbs are now.
You gotta go back.
Carbs seem kind of fun.
It's, I, to me, it's always sugar, sugar, sugar is bad.
I don't like sugar, but our carbs sugar.
Yeah.
But like, well, I guess what's the difference between carbs that like turn into sugar and
just like straight up, they all, they all do.
They all turn into sugar.
I mean, so depending on what the source of the carbohydrate is, um, is basically how
complex or intricate it is until it ultimately becomes sugar.
So when you hear people talk about complex carbs, it's the least refined, least processed.
So, you know, finding something in kind of like a vegetable form or in, you know, if we
want to say like whole grain, like in a whole grain form.
So there's more fiber.
There's more, you know, there's more stuff going on.
And so it takes your body a little bit more work and time to break it down into glucose,
which gets converted to glycogen, which either is used for movement or stored ultimately.
Yeah.
That's what I was going to say as well.
So I'm glad that we have the exact same.
Say that again.
Now that, so Jake's saying, cause Ryan just.
Life coast breaks.
Glisserine.
Glisserine.
Nice.
Glisserine.
Jake just gained 38 pounds while making that joke.
Yeah.
So, I mean, if he's on the quote, LeBron James diet, which is like, I guess every diet is
the same diet.
It's just has different names.
This is keto.
This is caveman.
It all seems like the same to me.
Right.
The rock.
Yeah.
It's like, I want to know if he's doing the LeBron diet for real, how much he really needs
to lose.
That's what I want.
It's tough because it's sliced, you know, it's, it's vague.
What is that?
Well, how much do you need to lose to get sliced?
Being sliced to have to be like, you know, your zero percent body path.
That's sliced.
It's sliced beyond shredded or it goes sliced then shredded.
Slices.
Slices seems to be beyond shredded to me.
I feel like shredded gets tossed around a lot.
I don't hear slice that much.
But that's interesting though, because like just in terms of like food prep, shredded
seems like it's got more, it's like thin, it's stringier sliced.
You could do that with like a ham.
Slices.
I want to be a thick sliced.
I'm on the ham diet.
I'm, you know, I don't want, I'm not going to be shredded because I still want to
like enjoy my life every once in a while.
Jake, you make, you make a great point and you've convinced me.
So I retract what I said earlier and I, I mean, yeah, two abs.
You don't need six.
Just two to four.
Jake invented shredded bread.
It's the greatest thing since sliced bread.
So you just sort of finely coarsely chop a loaf.
You just eat it like big league chew throughout the day.
Put it through one of those paper shredders.
Just like ram a fucking sourdough loaf in one of those suckers.
Like a meat grinder, but it's just dough on the other side.
I guess that's spaghetti.
Yeah.
We invented spaghetti.
Wow.
We read.
Yeah, we did.
We're doing a lot for America and the world.
Yeah.
Tristan doesn't sound, Tristan sounds like he's, he's on track.
He doesn't need to get rid of carbs all the way.
He just needs to be a little more, maybe just dial it in.
I agree.
I was going to say, I think that you could probably benefit from
auditing your diet, Tristan and anybody that's maybe feels like
they're doing a lot, but it's not working the way they want.
Just really screw down on what exactly you're doing.
So you could, there's tons of like fitness apps that are free.
My fitness pal app is one that gets referenced a lot that you
can add to your phone.
They're really easy.
They're really intuitive.
And that'll just give you a baseline.
So you're like, okay, this is how, these are how I'm representing
my macronutrients.
And this is how many calories I'm having every day.
And this is probably how much I'm burning.
And then you can just start to like make adjustments there.
So I'll try like kind of, you know, scaling back the calories,
a little tiny bit, or I'll try adding the calories or I'll
take in more protein or whatever it is.
And then you can be really systematic about it and see what
works and what doesn't, as opposed to just kind of like
guessing, you know, I think otherwise you're just kind of
taking shots in the dark.
You don't have any control on your variables.
And the other thing I was going to say about LeBron is I did,
I did hear him on the Tim Ferriss podcast.
Do you guys know who Tim Ferriss is?
Oh yeah, I think I listened to that interview.
Yeah.
Super, he's a dry motherfucker.
I mean, he's as dry as it gets.
And the podcast can be a little bit of a slog, but for a time
he got interesting guests.
And I heard LeBron on there and he was so excited to have him
on and he's always like, he wants to know what people's secrets
are and what books they read and how they sleep.
He's always trying to unlock the key to, you know, what it,
what it is that makes them great.
And so he had LeBron on and they had LeBron's trainer.
I think it was when they were, they were kind of demoing
ladder or whatever their supplement company is.
And so he was like, what do you, what do you eat and what's
the diet like?
And LeBron obviously eats healthy and works super hard,
but he said, you know, I'll have chicken parm and then like a
glass of wine, but I keep it in moderation.
And Tim Ferriss just short circuited.
Like he couldn't, he didn't like freak out on air, but you could
hear it like in his mind.
Just like you're eating chicken parm and a glass of wine.
That's the key.
He's that during halftime.
Yeah.
He could not get his fucking wrap his brain around that.
What the fuck?
Like he's like, you know, he's weighing his food.
He's, you know, getting tea that he picks himself, you know,
and like meanwhile, this guy's just an NBA star and like he's
just a little chicken parm, a glass of wine, you know,
I guess it helps that he's played 30,000 minutes of NBA
basketball.
Yes.
Yes.
Have you done that?
Have you done some high intensity workout every year since
you were a fucking teenager?
No.
I work for four hours a week.
No.
Well, that's something that people don't talk about.
And I think people are talking about it more, right?
Like more with social media and stuff and, and trying to be
more body positive is that like, like if you're a personal
trainer, you're working out like for so much.
You're working out so much.
I can't even like, I heard like a Peloton girl does like eight
hours of exercise a day.
Seems like a lot.
It seems high.
It seems.
It seems high.
Well, how many hours are in a day real quick?
Yeah.
Let's figure this out.
Work backwards.
Yeah.
Something like that.
We don't know for sure.
Nobody may know.
But it is like you, you get this idea of what you can do as
like a person with a job, a family, a life.
And then you're like, I'm not seeing these crazy.
I'm not getting sliced shredded.
Any of those words.
And you're like, what am I doing wrong?
And you're like, well, maybe you're not like a psycho.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Maybe it's what you're doing right.
Yeah.
So I tell people like, like it's okay.
Like if you have goals, that's good.
And what Stanger said is good, like keep track and all that
stuff.
But it's also like, okay, you're on a, life is long.
Yeah.
Let it be a journey, you know?
You're in your early twenties.
You don't have to cut your carbs in your early twenties.
Like where do you go from there?
Right.
Right.
That's the time to eat them.
I'm dealing with some middle-aged malaise existential
crisis.
I'm anyway, I'm 16.
Let me know.
What does it mean, man?
Why are we here, buddy?
I'm just worried about global climate change and how it'll
affect me going forward.
I'm 11, but yeah, I need advice.
They should be worried.
Yeah, actually.
And my advice to an 11-year-old is like, you're fucked.
You're gone.
Yeah.
Sorry about that whole, what we've been doing.
Live hard in your twin-aged years because you don't have a lot left.
Yeah.
Go to space camp or some shit.
Yeah.
And then we'll head off this planet with the Bezos.
Yeah.
All right.
Let's take a break, answer some more questions on the other side of these messages.
Oh.
Thank you to Helix Sleep for sponsoring this episode of our show.
Hell yes.
Thank you for making the sleep test, the sleep exam, and letting me ace it and become the
doctor of the mattress.
Yes, sir.
Yeah.
So Helix makes a really great mattress line and you take a little sleep quiz to see what
mattress is right for you.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, right.
Jake's been bragging about completing this two-minute, honestly, like Buzzfeed light
quiz.
I know how to sleep for the better part of the decade.
Excuse me.
I don't brag about completing it.
I brag about acing it.
Because you got the mattress and it was great or?
Yeah.
I got the perfect mattress.
Thank God.
You took that test.
That's right.
And if you want the perfect mattress, you can go to helixsleep.com slash if I were you
for 20% off all mattress orders and two free pillows.
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Thank you, Helix.
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When we're back, Aaron and or Ryan, do you guys have any?
Oh, it's a little bit too big to find it.
Wow, I'm coming.
Gross.
Uncooth.
Sorry about that.
Yeah, uncoothed advice.
Is that?
We should start warning people about that, yeah.
That was Jake making some lewd joke.
That was off-color.
I'm the one that says gross at the end of that.
You say mom, I'm coming.
I say gross.
Okay, I did have questions, so I'm glad you guys clarified that.
She could be ready to go and you're on your way out.
Yes, exactly.
Yes, that's sort of what I was expecting.
That's it.
Yeah, okay.
That felt right.
Okay.
All right.
Uncoothed advice.
What do you guys got?
I've been meditating for a while and I got pretty disciplined about it and I would do
different apps and all this kind of shit and it felt good.
It never, you know, I don't know if you guys have ever experimented with it or tried it
or got on a roll with it, have you?
I've experimented and not been able to get on a roll.
I can fuck around for like a week or two.
Sure.
Okay.
So, to some degree, like, you maybe feel like generally better, but who knows if it's some
kind of like placebo effect or it's never like you do it and you're like, whoa, I feel
enlightened.
Basically, for me, it like works for the next 20 minutes to an hour.
I'm always like, wow, yeah, that was really nice.
And then by the end of the day, I'm like, I'm just as stressed as I was before.
Now I have less time because I was fucking saying a word for half an hour or so.
Shit, I missed an email.
So yeah, so I've had like similar, you know, stops and starts with it.
And this kind of most, most recent time around, I'm doing like this variation of TM with,
which is transcendental meditation.
And that's like what David Lynch and a bunch of like celebrities and stuff do it.
And essentially what it screws down to is it's two times a day, 20 minutes each session.
You have a mantra.
If you do, if you sign up through TM, you pay a bunch of money and you do like a little
ceremony and then they give you your mantra.
It's secret.
You don't tell anybody.
And it's basically like a nonsense word that just kind of makes a sound like kachong or
something like that.
You know, and then so you just say this mantra over and over while you're doing, like while
you're having your meditative experience.
So anyway, the benefit of like pain and going through the whole process is that it gets,
it creates this perceived value.
Like you're more likely to do it.
You spend a thousand bucks or whatever it is, but that's prohibitive for a lot of people.
And then also you can start putting too much on to the meditation or have expectations of
what it can and should do for you.
And then that can keep you from doing it.
And then also, you know, twice a day can be a little bit too much of a commitment.
But I was reading this by this guy, a book by this guy and he talked about saying like
meditation should be for everybody.
And he said, if you just take what the basics of TM and just say the word, like just say
a sound over and over again, like rum.
And you just think of the mantra as something that you gently kind of tend to, you don't
use the mantra to try to get, you know, like yourself completely present or try to beat
away thoughts that are going to come up and happen.
Like you'll be thinking about like, oh, I'm wasting time or this is what I'm, what else
I have to do today or whatever.
And then people would like kind of like beat it back with their mantra.
And he's like, don't just let the thoughts happen.
And over time, just kind of tend to your mantra while you're saying, you know, saying it over
and over again.
And then do it for 20 minutes and just commit to one time a day.
And then if you like that, then eventually do two.
And anyway, it seems really simple and like not that much of a crazy breakthrough, but
I just took what this guy said and applied it.
And it did, I feel like I've been a lot more consistent with it.
And I've managed my expectations of what it can do for me.
And I do feel better for having done it.
And the sound that I'm making over and over again is rum, R-U-M, rum, rum, rum, rum.
You can't give it away.
Yeah, I thought it was a secret.
No, that's if you do the real, like the, the, the, the woo woo TM secretive thing.
Like mine, I just made up a sound, you know?
And so.
Wow.
Is it actually rum?
Rum.
Yeah.
Damn.
It's also alcohol.
And you're drinking rum.
I've been drinking a lot of drugs these days.
I don't know why.
I don't know if it's related or not.
It does time up exactly to when I started doing this.
Wait, how long have you, how long have you been doing?
I would say maybe like two and a half months, three months.
So good run.
And then sometimes I'll do it twice a day, but I don't feel like I'm
failing if I don't, if I don't hit the second time, you know, because it's
just that one time.
And then it's also, you know, the freedom of like, I don't worry about
if I'm like, I feel like I'm doing it wrong.
Like there's no right or wrong to it.
It's just like, I'll sit there and then, you know, sometimes it's a shitty session.
I feel like I'm crazy distracted and way out there with what I'm thinking.
But when I, you know, I'll just start rumming it up, rum, rum, rum, rum.
And then I'm like, you know, rum it up.
Such a funny word.
It makes, it makes sense.
But just to think about, do you think about rum when you're doing it on
accident?
I don't like, it's now gone.
You know, if you keep saying a word over and over and over again, it just,
you start to like lose what the word even means or what it is.
So now it's like kind of disappeared from being, you know, rum, but people
should check out reserve bar.
And that's what I thought you were going to say.
I thought you were going to be like, you know what?
I'll give you a word for half the price of TM.
You can save some cash and it's rum, Venmo, 30 bucks, do it or don't.
That's the move.
Do it or don't.
I got your word.
You will do a secret word for you.
Have you been my one?
Tequila.
All right.
Transcendental meditation light.
Aaron, what do you have?
Okay.
Okay.
I know it doesn't have to be about fitness, but I'm going to go the fitness route.
Okay.
Cool.
Why not?
So I think that my unsolicited advice is if you are in a household with you and
another person or multiple people or whatever, I believe that everyone should
be able to squat the weight of the person that they live in a house with.
Wow.
Okay.
So that's my unsolicited advice.
That's not always possible, but I would say that the weight.
So if I'm living with a girlfriend who lives, who weighs, you know, somewhere in
the triple digits, I have to be able to take two pretty heavy dumbbells, barbells
and squat with them.
Or you're talking about actually lifting her up and squatting with her.
Well, you don't have to actually lift the person, but if you have a person in
there down, you could try, but I, but I'm talking about just having the knowledge
that if something happened to this person and you needed to get them somewhere that
you can and, and have that strength in your body to do that and to do it in a
way that won't make it worse.
So that's, so that's the thing that I'm like, I'm learning, talking with people
about is like, I pulled your head off.
No, you know, yeah, you do not, I could totally squat my wife, but if she was
holding anything, if she had a bag or something, I might have to take her shoes
off before I rescue or empty them because it's fucking, it's bare.
We're barely empty the bag, but I think you need to figure out if your wife can
squat you, that's the, that's, that's what we get to figure out.
Yeah.
That's what I want.
That's hard because the, the smaller person is smaller and then the bigger
person weighs more and that's just the two bad things about trying to squat that
other person.
Yeah.
So you could give your, give your wife a bag and see if you can.
I definitely can't, but we're going to start training her to be able to squat
me.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Cause if I pass out in a fire, babe, I need you to be able to lift me up and
carry me out fireman style over your shoulder, down a flight of stairs and out
the front door.
I did.
Um, I, uh, I've talked about it on the show and some people know, but I did go
into sudden cardiac arrest in my sleep.
Yeah.
Yeah.
About two years ago, maybe, and my wife had to shove my big ass out of the bed and
perform CPR on me.
Oh my God.
That was like a thing too of like getting, you know, he's like, you know, close
to 200 pounds, it's just literally, literally dead weight in the bed.
And she had to like get me out of the bed on a flat surface and then do.
She saved your life.
Save my life.
She was able to do it.
She had to do it for seven.
I think like seven to 10 minutes until the paramedics got there and then they
had to do that, uh, the fucking different paddles on me.
Yeah.
That's insane.
Were you awake for any of it?
I don't remember any of it.
And I even, I even, like it darked out maybe two or three days before it happened
too, because I was in a coma.
I was in a coma for three days after.
Yeah.
I was like a holy shit.
When was this two years ago?
I was two, maybe three years ago now.
Yeah.
I mean, it was, it was crazy.
Well, wasn't it like right at your birthday or something crazy on my fucking
birthday?
Yeah.
Ho, it's a Friday night.
I went to bed.
I mean, I didn't party or anything.
That was the big thing was that the people at the, I got, I went to St.
Jude's hospital, no, um, St.
Joseph's in Burbank and, uh, they were just waiting on a toxicology report
because somebody my age are like the guy who's doing drugs.
I mean, there's no, there's no other reason why you would go into cardiac arrest.
You know, in, yeah.
And do they say what happened?
Like, do you know what happened?
You know, it's really mysterious.
They, um, that I got.
So of course got all kinds of health checkups and, you know, they're, they're
immediately thinking like, okay, is there something going on, like blockage in
your heart, um, because cardiac arrest is different than a heart attack.
A heart attack has to do with the plumbing.
So something gets clogged or a valve stops working or whatever.
And then the blood doesn't, uh, fill and release from the heart the way it
should, and then that can cause cardiac arrest.
Cardiac arrest on its own is electrical.
So drugs could disrupt that.
Um, you know, anything that kind of disrupts that like frequency, uh, you
know, suffocation or, or any of that stuff.
And so for me, it was just a complete anomaly.
It was some kind of like, uh, electrical anomaly.
They don't know why it happened, but it just, it did.
It's rare.
So how did your wife know that it was happening?
She heard me making weird noises in my sleep.
Um, probably like,
and did she know how to do, she called, she called 911 and the guy
talked her through it.
Cause the way you do CPR now is you don't do, you don't do breaths.
You literally just pump the person's chest.
Do compressions.
Yeah.
Oh really?
So punky Bruce, you lied to me because when she took cherry out of that
refrigerator, you got to, you got to hold the nose.
You got to put, uh, fix your lips, breathe into their lungs.
And then that might, at the time, that might've been, you know, punky.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That was fine.
Holy shit.
Uh, yeah.
So she, yeah.
So she has, she's just pumped the chest the whole time.
And then, um, and then the fucking paramedics did too.
And they've, they, uh, broke one of my ribs that, oh, that often happens too.
You know, but I'll take it, you know.
Yeah.
So you wake up three days later in a fucking hospital day.
Yeah.
I won't.
Happy birthday to you.
Yeah.
Happy birthday.
Crazy.
I woke up and I could see my, so I saw there's a bunch of it's St.
Joseph.
So there's a bunch of religious iconography around.
And then, um, the ICU nurses were speaking a different language.
They were, you know, some of them were from another country and we're
speaking their language.
And so like, I heard like another language and I'm like, and then I saw my
parents and I was like, what the fuck happened?
Cause I don't rager.
I see my parents once a year, you know, like, I don't know, once or twice a year
or something like that.
And so I was like, mom and dad here.
No, I'm trying to think like, was on vacation and something happened or what,
you know, you're trying to do the math on what happened.
And then so, yeah.
And then they explained everything to you and you're like, okay.
All right.
Yes.
Wow.
Still didn't.
Thanks.
Good to, good to know.
Uh, all right.
Starting to take wires off.
Yeah.
Horrifying.
So anyway.
Yeah.
So see, you need to be like, I, it's, it's, it's a crazy story, but like, how,
like, how big is Nancy?
She is six, two, three, 50.
No, she, you're married to a defensive and she's like, she's five, five, you
know, 120, 120, something like that.
Yeah.
So significantly smaller than me, but Aaron, Aaron's got a whole, you know,
Aaron's husband is paralyzed from the waist down.
And so, yeah, that's a whole,
but that's what, that's what started me thinking about this kind of stuff is
like these, um, you know, I'm in multiple like groups that are with, uh,
like the partner of someone with a spinal cord injury and you don't see a spinal
cord injury coming, you know?
And so all of a sudden, thankfully I was in, in good shape when the accident
happened, but same with my husband, he was in good shape until the accident
happened.
And it was this like, this thing where you're like, Oh, like my husband fell
out of his chair.
How do we get him up?
You know, how do I, do I have the strength to deadlift my husband or squat my
husband?
You know, so that's kind of got my brain on that track.
And then I've realized like how many people their partner needs to be like
physically, actually physically strong for like real life, tangible things.
And, and you don't think about that before, like, you don't think about that
normally until you have to.
And so I'm just like out here trying to like, like tell people, like, please,
like start now before hopefully nothing ever bad really happens.
Like you think about being strong in terms of being hot, kind of, at least I do.
You know, you're ripped, you're sliced, you're like, this is fucking hot.
Yeah, yeah, you have to like lifting someone it like out of a chair
into a tub or something or help.
That's also like, it's, yeah, it is hot, but it's definitely, you don't think
about your strength being, at least I don't think about my strength being useful.
I just think about it being fucking sexy.
Yeah.
Right, right.
And it, and it is, but it is like, I'm like, if we can get like the mentality
of it to shift just a little bit, it could still be hot.
It's still like, right.
It's not just vanity.
It's like, it's, you can strong and useful.
Yeah, strong and useful.
Yeah.
So, and, and a little hot.
You want to be a little hot.
I want to be sexy still, but I'm down to help someone if they're about to die.
Just, can you take a picture of my lats when I do it?
And you know what, if they love you, they will, they love you.
My wife, performing CPR, Selfie, most likes she's ever gotten, you know, so.
She went live.
She went live.
With like a filter on, like it kept, like a filter kept coming on her face.
And then she put the camera on me and the filter.
It was like a French beret and like the Eiffel Tower in the background and stuff.
That makes sense.
Yeah.
You were, you were speaking in tongues at the time, so it was fine.
But at least your eyes were bigger.
Your cheekbones were higher.
Your nose was right.
Your skin was not a beauty mark.
Little dear antlers.
Wow, holy shit, you guys.
I would say that your stories have inspired me to not take anything for granted,
but I know I'll just sort of forget about it and get really angry.
Next time my postmates arrive without like the pad tie that I specifically ordered
without peanuts or something, I'll sort of lose all perspective on this whole
moment in time and I appreciate you guys sharing it with me.
But I wish it would would make me a better person, but I know it won't.
God, that was awesome.
Yeah, we love it.
Yeah, that was that was good.
I think you should be angry if you if someone gets her order wrong.
Yes, I do.
I say I'll think like the universe is conspiring against me
and it'll send me into a days long slump.
You blew it.
Why do I you want to keep?
Hey, Keith, you're missing part of my order.
Yeah, you you've camped outside of a tie place and just applauded, right?
Every time people come and go to work.
Nice. Oh, really nice.
Is there extra limes on that fuck?
Because whenever I specify that, it never seems to arrive.
And I guess peanuts, whether they were specified or no.
I had this client that I was training for a while
and he was a really successful guy and he was telling me about a friend of his.
He worked for Mattel and a friend of his that he worked with also worked for Mattel.
And it was I don't know if it's still going on,
but the guy was in some country in South America and got kidnapped.
And it was one of those things to where they would kidnap high profile people
and then try to get a ransom. Oh, my God.
Yeah, they did a movie about it.
Proof of life.
Everybody's favorite Russell Crowe movie.
But how do you do?
They and so he and he was like he said the guy never took care of himself
was very overweight and in struggling with his health and he got kidnapped
and, you know, was very dramatic and he was, you know, hidden away from his family
and it was horrible for his family and they managed to kind of track him down
and get him and they were able to pay the ransom and get him back.
And so I was like, wow, did he did he turn it around?
I mean, is he like a whole new lease on life?
And he and my client looked at me and said, no, he's never been heavier.
I was like, oh, all right, well, I guess there's two ways to go.
The other way, I guess.
I thought for sure I was like, now a guy runs marathons
and he's never wasted a moment.
He's like, no, he's this double down on all his vices.
He's down to Netflix and chill his life away now that he sort of got it back.
She's actually an old lease on life.
He's he's renting on life now.
Horrible interest in nothing going towards the principal.
Yeah.
I mean, I can't believe he didn't lose weight when he was kidnapped.
Is that OK to say?
I think they wanted to keep them fat and healthy so that if they ever
had to send his family a finger or something, they would.
He's in good. He is like a like a handsome Gretel type situation.
But that's another good unsolicited advice.
If you're ever like hearted up for some cash, I mean, I don't want to say
it's a good idea to kidnap someone.
But yeah, I would have worked out for these people, right?
They ended up getting I think everybody everybody won.
Yeah, I mean, yeah, I haven't seen the Russell Crow movie.
I mean, Mattel has the money.
I mean, I'm sure they could find it.
It's just it's honestly they should be doing that anyway.
Yeah, they're like a more equal distribution of wealth.
Yeah, sometimes it takes a kidnapping to sort of create this new but better.
We've all fucking bought enough goddamn Barbies
that somebody could, you know, go towards somebody's a couple of meals.
You know, they're struggling a little bit.
Why not?
God damn, yeah.
All right, let's take another break and come back.
We really have to answer more.
Sorry, yes, come on.
Yes, yes. OK, we got it. We got it.
Thank you to Aura Frames for sponsoring this headgum podcast.
You know, Aura Frames is sponsoring not just this episode,
but the entire headgum network.
Jake, wow, that's correct.
I mean, this might be the Goat Father's Day gift.
I think it actually is. Yeah.
Yeah, not just Father's Day, but if for any not so tech,
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Yeah, for me personally, these things are perfect.
I'll tell you why.
As you know, I am expecting.
Yeah, my first child.
We got one for Jill's parents. Oh, wow.
We got one for Jill's grandma. Holy smokes.
We got one for my parents.
So there are three of these bad boys in our family right now,
but they are they're a great, really easy way to like
stay in touch with your family.
You can upload as many photos as you want directly into my parents' kitchen.
It's really nice. Oh, that's cool.
So you take a photo of anything, perhaps a baby,
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This is actually how we how we told Jill's grandma.
She was pregnant. We got her the Aura frame.
We plugged it in.
Jill's grandma was pregnant.
Really nice asshole.
This was actually a really sweet moment for me and my wife.
And you're trying to make a joke of it.
I was just being goofy a little bit like,
this is how I told my grandma she was pregnant.
Yeah, yeah, kind of like she misheard it or something like that.
Or the way you said it was kind of like could go either way.
By the way, Jill's grandma is pregnant. Oh my God.
Jill's grandma is 90 and pregnant. It's pretty cool.
And you told me with a digital photo frame.
Holy smokes. And we let her know with an Aura. Yeah.
Thank you. The Aura announcement.
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I'd love to upload just a picture of me like at a pool or something.
That could be funny.
Yeah, like your banana or your dog
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Yeah, exactly.
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Thank you, Aura.
And now back to the headgum podcast you were listening to.
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All right, folks, we are back.
Here's another one, about a 22 year old guy from New York.
How about Aaron?
Do you have a 22 year old New Yorker?
Oh, um, Anthony.
That's pretty.
Oh, very.
New York.
Hey, Tony.
Last. Yeah, I just watched a soprano.
So I think that's in my brain.
That's not.
We'll do it. Fouchy.
Last name. What do you think for the last name?
Just like the Sopranos.
Yeah, soprano, soprano.
Tony Soprano writes, what up, folks?
I'm a 22 year old guy from New York.
I am a new member of a gym and I've recently been going more and more.
One thing that comes with this is seeing a lot more people, specifically ladies.
I want to start off by saying that I don't think I'm a creepy guy
and I give everyone their space and let them do their own thing at the gym.
And that's what I would want others to do to me.
However, my question is, is there a way to talk
slash flirt with people at the gym without coming across as a complete predator?
Every time I want to talk to someone,
my conscience tells me that I'm just interruptive and very annoying.
Please help PS.
I listen to the pot every Monday at the gym and seeing Amir's
insane streak of turkeys inspires me to push myself even harder.
So thanks. Oh, Jake gives out awards at the end of the episode.
One golden mic for podcasting excellence and one turdy
for somebody that didn't do as well as the winner of the golden mic.
And five hundred episodes in he's won every single time.
I'll tell you a turdy for not knowing hold up.
You couldn't come up with the phrase hold up.
So that that'll definitely be a turdy.
Yeah. And then golden mic wise, he also.
It feels weird to make the guests split it.
Yeah, I don't want to choose favorites.
So I'll just give it to me for that kind of amazing act of diplomacy.
Yeah, King Solomon style.
He doesn't want to split the award.
I'll have it, which is the opposite of what King Solomon ended up
with the kid at the end of that at the parable.
OK, is there any way to flirt with someone at the gym without being creepy?
Or is it an inherently creepy place to flirt?
Oh, I'm creepy, so I'll recuse myself.
Well, I'll say I think I think it would be the same anywhere.
Just kind of like read the room.
If you see like if someone's lingering around where you're lingering,
like you can flirt, that's OK.
I think just like, but like start small because, you know,
people are in a vulnerable space.
Like you don't know how comfortable they are in a gym.
So you want to give them kind of like as much of the
like a warm up, if you will, as possible
so that you don't overstep your bounds
because that's also like you don't want to shit where you eat.
So you don't want to get weird, quick with someone there.
So yeah, take your time.
Be chill, normal, cool.
Yeah, it feels like if you're going to talk to anybody,
talk to them about gym related stuff first.
Yeah, you know, your surroundings, the gym.
I like who can squat.
Never mind. Forget it.
Do you think you can and then you go limp?
You're a dummy in her arms.
Sort of forced upon her a trust fall.
So she has. Will you be my hero to me?
That's sexy.
Congratulations on your young demo.
That's exciting. A lot of 20.
Yeah, 20. That's is that not the case with dumbbells?
I don't know. I think there's.
Yeah, but it was just it's we got 30 is probably that's good.
That's better. That's more of an alpha consumer.
We'd like to reach a little bit more of an older audience
brand-wise, but we'll sort of take what we can get as our audience
ages into an income tax bracket.
That's more monetizable.
It's important for. Wow.
Will you fill out a form and tell me your income this year?
You're learning at the gym.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, just repeat what he's saying.
You'll be fine.
I'm already nervous to talk to you.
Tony, you got to watch for
headphones and if people are listening to music and you can kind of tell
if somebody is like in the zone with what they're doing, you don't stay out of it.
But if you're getting some good eye contact and a smile and it comes up
organic, that's really your only way in.
I used to I worked at this gym and I saw this girl that was so beautiful
all the time that would come in there and train later at night.
And I later found out she is a playboy playmate.
I think playmate of the year.
Her name's Karen McDougal.
People can look her up.
She ended up having bad politics, which is a bummer.
But she is I didn't know that at the time and she's stunningly beautiful.
I swear.
I promise.
Yeah, I didn't know.
And she's a crazy, gorgeous.
And so I always wanted to talk to her and I worked at the gym.
So I was like, oh, maybe this it's not as weird that I'm just like, hey,
you know, because I would see her every night.
She kind of she's in the later crew of training.
And so I was always waiting for like this moment I described like the organic
moment. And so she had small earbuds and I didn't realize it at the time.
And so she was in there and she was training legs really hard.
And on the rate, like on the like the satellite sound system, I think like
Old Man by Neil Young was playing like, old man, look at my life.
I'm a lot like you.
Like this is like crazy song.
And so like while I was kind of stacking stuff up by her, I said, this is
very inspirational music to train legs to.
And so and she was like looking straightforward.
And then she kind of saw that I was by her and she was like, what?
And then like had her earbuds in and I was like, oh, never mind, never mind, never mind.
And she was like, no, no, no.
And then like set her dumbbells down and then popped her earbuds out.
And she was like, what?
And I was like, oh, this song playing is very inspirational.
It's a different song.
Yeah, I mean, it was I have the tiger.
I was sunk and she couldn't have looked more bothered.
And rightfully so.
And it was not my intention.
The joke was a five, maybe.
And then she heard it in the moment.
I've told her in this story before and and then after, you know,
having to do the explanation and the the long runway and the wind up to it,
it got downgraded to a negative four, maybe.
Yeah, well, that's tough.
A category two storm by the time it hit land,
which is her taking off her earbuds.
Yeah, I'd be I'm like this guy.
I'm so paranoid.
I won't even like talk to people in social settings.
I'm like, I want to err on the side of not being a creep so much that
like somebody has to approach me for me to talk to them.
And even then, I'm pretty icy at first.
I mean, it's very like I have been hit on at the gym before and it does.
It is a balance of like I come I pay to come here.
So I can't like just like stop coming here now.
And it feels so it is like I understand.
So really just take it easy and like and and just like really over cautious.
And I like it's smart to be over cautious because you guys pay to go to this place.
You don't want them to feel trapped or weird.
And it's not like a bar.
It's not like a social setting where you're like you're expecting
somebody to come up and talk to you if necessary.
There's no social lubricant other than the runner's high that you're getting.
Which I don't know if it's real.
I don't know if it's real.
Yeah, or should we dispel that myth right now?
You won't get the the pheromones, the releasing of the serotonin
when you're working out really hard.
Yeah. Yeah, I've never had runners.
I have you had runners.
I stay on I never feel it during.
But I there's times where I was like, man, I remember running and feeling good.
But it's it's never like it's never when I start the run.
I'm never like, oh, here it comes.
Yeah, it's more it's like sometimes you're happy and you're also running.
Yeah, I think that's right.
I also get eating high and staying at staying in bed high.
I get high occasionally whenever.
Yeah, I've I've been high and and I've never felt like that when when around running.
Yeah, it's a different high entirely different.
Yeah, Jake, I assume you've been sort of scrolling through pictures of Karen McDougal.
You started typing before he even said McDougal,
you were sort of typing into Google search off.
I could see, you know, you're retina was my yeah, my screen is shared, unfortunately.
We should say that this is no FAP, November, one of our sponsors this month.
So no FAP, November sponsored our podcast.
That's right. Yes, because it's a huge movement.
Yeah, absurd.
It's actually no FAP, November.
Wow, yes, that's where you grow a mustache
and stop masturbating for an entire calendar month.
It's better title than the other no.
The other way to say it, I don't know.
Which is what? Oh, no, no, not.
Yeah. Oh, I don't know.
I said no FAP. Yeah.
Oh, this is a competing nonprofit. Sorry.
Well, you can not if it's from a wet dream.
Yeah, the slight difference between nothing.
It gives you there's a different permission structure to coming.
It's also all those kids
have got allergies and stuff to that need to do. Yeah.
Yeah, you're allergic to almonds every month is no nut.
That's a good tweet. Jake, write that down for me.
Write it down. Yeah.
Appreciate it.
Sorry, I have a lot of tabs of Karen McDowell right now.
She's wearing a MAGA hat nearly all of them.
That's fine.
But that's it. So it's great.
Yeah.
All right, sweet.
Aaron, Ryan, tell us again, Dumbbells, a fitness podcast.
Yeah. So Dumbbells, right here on the headgum network,
people can check it out every Wednesday.
We we kind of
in our relaunch, we're trying to do some different things
than what we've done before.
So we're trying different classes.
We're taking suggestions from the listeners,
trying different workout equipment,
different workout products and drinks and all that shit.
And then giving people the goods on air.
Recently, we did a pole dancing class.
We had our instructor come on and talk about that.
Then what else did we do?
We did Dance Church.
That's the episode that came out today.
Is that the dancing class on YouTube where it's like this?
Sort of. It's like it's like kind of like a
it's like an all-inclusive sort of it's
like kind of like free dancing, but it's not it's not free.
But it's like kind of it's a little less structured than like choreographed.
All abilities like so you can you don't have to be you don't have to know
the routine going into it.
You can just go in there completely cold and not be a good dancer
and still have fun and get a good workout, I would say.
That's cool. Yeah.
But we're going to go bouldering.
We're that's that's up next.
Oh, yeah. That's what I'm about to do right now.
They're great. Really? Yeah.
Cool. I'm excited to try.
I have really long nails right now.
So I'm excited to see how that goes.
It'll help you stay on the wall.
Yeah, I think so.
Take an Wolverine style.
Wolverine, yeah.
And yeah, we want to do there's a bike class on the beach
that we have to do Stanger. OK, you tell.
Yes, let's see. I'm sorry.
We've got to figure it out.
It feels very elitist, but I really want to do it.
Yeah. Yeah, that's the problem with like, you know, making this relatable
to people that listen is like we're in LA.
So it's like we're doing a Malibu, you know, stationary bike class
at J Lo's teaching, so everybody should do that if they want to get in shape,
you know, yeah, but hey, look, we're going to try the weird shit
and we're going to report back on it. All right.
We're having fun.
We're trying to get people involved and, you know, fitness can be boring,
but it can also be awesome and fun.
So we're trying to mix it up.
I like it. Yeah.
Yeah. I mean, if you're listening to this podcast,
you clearly have time to waste.
You should you should probably listen to a podcast
that actually makes you a better person.
And that's definitely the dumbbells.
It is definitely us for sure.
No problems there.
Just come by.
We'll teach you something.
Slice. Yeah.
Get sliced. Yeah.
New slogan.
But you can email us at AskTheDumbbells at gmail.com.
You can tweet at us Instagram at us at the dumbbells.
Hell yeah. Thank you so much.
Good work. Yeah. Thank you.
And if you have any ideally non-fitness related
because we're not really experts, but we'll tick we can get or theme songs
or emails if I reshow at gmail.com.
Remember that dear Lincoln opening theme song?
I remember. I like that.
That's right.
We got a pretty epic closing theme song.
It's three minutes long. No joke.
That's why I figured it was better for an outro than an intro.
Yeah. Let me look up who wrote it.
While I do that, Jake, do you have any parting wisdom,
closing thoughts as I scroll through and see who the hell.
Yeah. The key to November is to just found it.
OK. It's from I just muted Jake.
It's from Lewis Cochran.
Eight more years. Matt Pope featuring Lou Green.
All right. There you have her.
Thanks so much for listening this week.
We'll be back as soon as possible.
Thank you again to Ryan and Aaron.
Bless up. Bless up.
Bless up, guys. Bless up.
Ciao for now.
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You want but don't need. Listen in free since 2013.
So if I were you, what would I do?
I guess I'd record 500 more for you.
I guess I'd record 500 more for you.
Yeah. If I were you, what would I do?
Everybody's here.
I guess I'd record half a thousand more for you.
Yeah.
Shmuel, the pitch.
Listen to Jackie.
Navigate for a Bench.
Everybody's here.
Everybody.
Everybody.
Everybody's here.
Everybody.
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
you