Jordan, Jesse, GO! - Ep. 180: Mushroom Omelettes with Jonah Ray
Episode Date: June 20, 2011Jonah Ray from The Nerdist Podcast joins us to talk about crazy things going down in Hawaii. ...
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Give a little time for the child within you, don't be afraid to be young and free.
Unto the locks and throw away the keys, and take off your shoes and socks and run you.
I'm Jesse Thorne, America's radio sweetheart.
And I'm Jordan Morris, boy detective.
And this is...
Jordan, Jesse, go!
Icicles, tricycles, ice cream, candy, lollipops, popsicles, licorice sticks,
Solomon, friendly, go.
There's much talk of Hawaii, including my cocktail party story.
Our guest, Hawaiian native Jonah Ray.
Let's go.
It's Jordan, Jesse, go.
I'm your host, Jesse Thorne, America's radio sweetheart.
Jordan Morris, boy detective. Distinctly unpleasant weather. Oh, go. I'm your host, Jesse Thorne, America's radio sweetheart. Jordan Morris, boy detective.
Distinctly unpleasant weather today in Los Angeles.
You're not enjoying it?
I found it to be a little bit too hot, a little bit too overcast, a little bit too muggy.
What is this, Washington, D.C.?
Here's what I'm doing today that I'm kind of enjoying.
What's that?
Shorts, t-shirt, and a sweater.
See, I can't.
Yeah.
Jordan,
I've got a reputation
to maintain.
No,
I'm just saying
I'm enjoying
being in this.
It feels good.
Yeah,
Jordan.
Pushing up my sleeves.
Yeah,
Jordan.
No.
I have a life to lead,
Jordan.
I'm a family man now.
All right.
I get it.
I can't go around
in a fucking sweater
and shorts.
Okay, I mean. Who the fuck am I, Jordan? Hey, but you know, I'm living family man now. All right. I get it. I can't go around in a fucking sweater and shorts. Okay.
I mean, you know.
Who the fuck am I, Jordan?
Hey, but, you know, I'm living life for you there, Jesse.
Whatever.
Republican presidential candidate Huey P. Newton?
Well, you're cooped up here buying baby monitors and polishing your wedding ring.
I'm out there carousing, wearing shorts and a sweater.
What if the baby
says something important, Jordan?
And I'm not monitoring the situation.
Sure. What if shit goes down?
What if there's a particularly
noisy cat burglar that tries to steal
the baby? Yeah. An ineffective
cat burglar.
Or just a standard burglar. Are there still cat
burglars? Is that still a kind of burglar? just a standard burglar are there still cat burglars is that still a kind of
burglar well the value of cats on the black market has really plummeted yeah it's true there's more
and more being imported every year oh fuck let's bring in our guest sure he's uh he's hawaii's
greatest comedian according to the huffington post he's also one of the co-hosts of the popular podcast, The Nerdist.
Is it just Nerdist or The Nerdist?
The Nerdist?
You know, it's funny when you said that.
I was trying.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I've heard it referred to as Nerdist Podcast.
Well, it's Nerdist.com.
So maybe it's just the...
I don't know.
I say The Nerdist.
But if it's the podcast of Nerdist.com. From G4's nerdist.com so maybe it's just the i don't know i say the nerd but if it's the
podcast of nerdist.com from his name is g4's web soup there you go there you go something we all
know how to say his name is mr jonah ray hi oh it's great to have you on the program great to
have you back on the program it's been a couple of years it's been a couple years yeah it's i
can't even remember exactly when the last time was i think it might might have been in my first Koreatown apartment the last time.
It was in Koreatown.
Jesse Go.
Yeah.
Does that make sense to you, Jordan?
It does.
Does that sound right?
I can picture it now.
Your vinyl EP was a hot new release.
Shit.
So that was 2007.
We're fucking OGs of this podcast, Jordan.
We were all wondering how Iron Man was going to be.
I don't know.
You know what?
I think we were recording from a steel mill.
I think that's the background noise you guys went with.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Back when we had that gimmick.
Jordan.
We were recording in a place.
And you guys offered me a beer, and I took it and realized I was the only one drinking a beer.
Oh, we were just judging you?
It was weird.
It was a weird feeling.
And I could have sworn...
There is so much beer in my house right now.
Oh, leftover Max Funcon beer.
I have so much beer.
And I guess this year they just didn't do that good of a job at the bar
of not opening bottles until they were done with the other bottles.
So we just have like seven open bottles of vodka in my house right now.
Oh, no.
Like if this was a car and we got pulled over, I would be so fucked.
You got to put those in the freezer.
If it was Louisiana, you'd just have to put a piece of scotch tape over it.
That's about it, yeah.
Yeah.
Hastily.
I learned that at Max Fun Con, that that's the rule in Louisiana.
Really?
That when you go to those drive-thru liquor stores,
they will give you like a daiquiri with a
straw in it, and you just put a piece of tape over the straw.
So people drink and drive, and they keep a roll of scotch tape in their car to cover
their ass.
That's insanity.
There used to be a place in the Lower East Side, Kind of Your Pianos, I think it was
like El Sombrero, a Mexican restaurant, that would give you margaritas to go.
Oh, yeah?
Oh, my God.
A couple of my friends
when I was out there in 2006, I would just
go there and just
drink. We'd get them,
get one, just walk around
the neighborhood drinking, be done, go back,
get another one, walk around the neighborhood,
and just get blitzed. There's a place in
New York called Artichoke Pizza
that will give you a big styrofoam cup
filled with course lights.
Full of artichokes.
I wanted to change the subject.
You just walk around the neighborhood
until you get to that fucking sweet sweetheart.
Yeah, he's just the hot
butter burning your hand.
Just going down. You fill your pocket with
Miracle Whip to have a little dip.
You know, drinking outdoors and walking around is one of
life's great pleasures i think that's that's i think to me that is the soul maybe not the soul
but the primary reason to visit las vegas that's what i was exactly going to say yeah that's the
best part of las vegas is just that that fear is gone of those boundaries yeah those borders that
you can't pass you can just have a drink in your hand.
Hey, do you want to go over here?
Yes.
Let's go over there.
Yeah, you don't have to, oh, let me finish it up and get over there.
You can just go there with glass on the street.
It's a very dangerous place.
Oh, yeah, sure.
Yes, I mean, I support the rest of the world not being like that.
It certainly should not.
But I'm glad that there is a place where you can walk around outdoors yeah with a miller chill daytime daytime drunk is in outdoors it's just
it's it's it's fucking great it is really great me and my friend uh used to do this thing where we'd
uh fill up um big gulp cups of bloody mary's and then we'd uh drive down to the beach in santa
monica pier and then we'd drink them get
drunk kind of maybe go to the end of the pier drink some more at that mexican restaurant at
the pier or that little biker bar that's kind of at the foot of it and then just uh fall asleep on
the beach and that sounds so fucking gross it is gross yeah i've had a lot it was uh it was less
gross when it was about margaritas but when it's Bloody Marys just a fucking vat full of booze
and tomato juice
that is so disgusting
I could outdo that anytime
you might as well just be like
we go down to the liquor store and buy a
bottle of Clamato and take turns
taking swigs
I was once years ago
before I even knew what Clamato was
I was at some warehouse daytime party in downtown, and I went to this Mexican bar, and I saw a guy get this thing, and it smelled really good.
And I was like, I'll take whatever that is.
And I drank about five of them before a friend told me what Clamato was.
Oh, yeah.
I was like, yeah, it's like a tomato juice.
It's like a weird synthetic tomato juice.
He's like, no, it's tomato juice and clam juice.
Clam runoff.
Yeah, clam runoff.
If I'm not mistaken, Clamato's what you ask for, the one you raise your glass for.
It's the pick-me-up that picks you up.
They have the gelatas now, too, the mixed beer and Clamato that you can buy in big tall cans.
A better slogan for Clamato would be the be the pick me up that picks you up and is
partly made out of clam juice right just fucking full disclosure like it should just say on the
front of clamato it should say full disclosure this shit's made out of clam juice yeah it's just
a clamato we invented this by accident two things spilled and it poured into one of our mouths.
Sure.
Right.
And then a Bud Light later on. Yeah, exactly.
For some reason.
Because I've heard of red beer.
Have you guys ever heard of red beer?
No, what's that?
Or just tomato juice and a beer.
You know, like I knew guys up in like Tahoe that would just drink those.
Why would you do that?
I don't know.
That's fucking foul.
I don't know.
Tomato juice is fucking gross.
I think it's just the tomato juice you have a problem with.
That's the only thing.
It's like, yeah, so we would mix together
vodka and, you know,
just fucking ground beans.
Okay, I get that. Jesse likes
that. And then I was like, oh, then every once in a while we put
some tomato juice in it. Fuck that.
I had a delicious steak the other night
with a side glass of tomato juice.
What? Jonah, I don't drink, so it all sounds a little bit gross to me.
It is.
But the idea, right?
The idea specifically of a savory beverage,
like it's as though you were telling me right now
that you were going to have a vodka and bouillon.
Not a bad idea.
Chicken stock and bourbon.
There's vodka marinara sauce. You can get that at the Trader Joe's and bourbon There's vodka marinara sauce
You can get that at the Trader Joe's
That's a very good marinara sauce
You just have a nice margarita mix
Tequila
And a ramen packet
That also sounds good
All these things are great
Any way to figure out new ways to drink
I'm always on board for
Well, Jonah Ray is our guest
He's a braver man than I
We'll be back with more
In just a second
On Jordan, Jesse, Go
The program is
Jordan, Jesse, Go
I'm the host Jesse Thorne America's radio sweetheart Jordan Morris Boy detective The program is Jordan, Jesse, go.
I'm the host, Jesse Thorne, America's radio sweetheart.
Jordan Morris, boy detective.
Boom.
And I'm Jonah Ray, guest.
Yep.
Yep.
You can think of a nickname if you want to.
I'm Jonah Ray.
Hawaii's favorite son.
Hawaii's favorite son. You know, it seems weird to do that since I'm so incredible.
I'm incredibly white.'m so incredibly white.
I'm incredibly white.
Yeah.
When I did Live at Gotham, they really were pushing me to say – in my intro, they wanted to be able to say this next comic is from Hawaii.
And I said, you can't do that.
Why not?
We'd like to make it seem like we have comics from all over the place besides New York and LA.
And I was like, no, so you're going to say I'm from Hawaii.
I don't have any jokes about being from Hawaii or that I don't look like I'm from Hawaii.
And so I'm going to,
they're going to say Hawaii.
People are going to go,
Whoa,
a Hawaiian comic.
I'm going to walk on stage.
They're expecting poi humor.
Yeah,
exactly.
And like,
you know, it's like,
not only am I just this tall white guy.
You don't even have ukuleles on your shirt.
I don't.
I don't wear any,
uh, which you guys call Hawaiian shirts. Sure. Uh uh which are in hawaii they're just called shirts
no they're called aloha shirts no they're just called shirts they're just called shirts yeah
exactly they're called hawaiian and uh you have to request if you get just can i get a pizza you
have to request it without pineapple and canadian bacon right yeah you have to it's come standard
um but yeah that was, that was a thing.
I still don't really talk about being from Hawaii
because it would lead into getting really racist.
On your part.
On my part, yeah. I would not look like a good guy.
You hate your countrymen.
Yeah.
Yeah, because they
hated me.
If I ever, on Jordan Jesse Go,
we've discussed a few times the fact that I've never told that whole story about my dad in Hawaii.
I don't think I've ever actually broke down and told it.
Did I?
Gosh, I don't know.
I feel like I've heard it so many times.
Yeah, I know.
I feel the same way.
It's hard to know whether or not it was on the podcast.
I've told it so many times.
But then when we...
Remember, we did that episode.
We did an episode some months ago where we talked about our sort of like standard story that we tell somewhere when we need to tell an interesting story.
Oh, yeah.
This one is mine, and I just alluded to it.
Oh, that story about my dad in Hawaii.
And then I got like 10 emails, I've never heard that story before.
I think I must have told it
on The Sound of Young America
in the olden days
more than once.
I can't imagine not.
I could probably tell it at this point.
I'm going to tell it.
That would be actually kind of neat
if Jordan told it
and then you just let him know
if he was on the right track.
It's so like
because this subject has
because this subject has actually
come up, I feel like I'm... Sure.
And it's Father's Day.
It is. It's Father's Day.
This actually ties it in even better.
Number one, I want to say
that my dad is a great guy.
Oh, Jesus. I love my dad
very much. Here's the thing. I like him.
I like him a lot.
My dad has also been
uh my dad's been as regular listeners know my dad's been clean and sober for a really long time
because listeners know about me going to aa meetings as a little kid all the time um but my
dad one time uh when i was like a sophomore in college i want to say when i was heading off to
my sophomore year of college um we were driving from san francisco which is where
i'm from to santa cruz where jordan and i went to college and um uh we were sly and the family
stone came on the radio and my dad said oh uh whatever happened to sly and the family stone
whatever happened to sly and i at the time this was before his weird Grammy comeback that you may recall
with like the Mohawk and the Humpback
everyone remembers
and so I said I think he's sort of like a vegetable
I think he's off somewhere
vegetating he's sort of a recluse
he's sort of semi-functional
and my dad said
oh how come
and I was like oh you know drugs I think
and he said oh because of because he's on drugs or just because of the leftovers from the drugs he did before?
He did enough to last him the rest of his life.
Yeah, and I said, I think he did a lot of drugs and lost his mental capacity.
And my dad said, like a drug-induced psychosis or something.
And I said,
I guess, yeah, sure.
I was just sitting in the passenger seat
on my way to my sophomore year of college.
This is a weird buddy movie.
And my dad said, hey, did I ever tell you about
my drug-induced psychosis?
What?
And I said, oh no, you never have mentioned
your drug-induced psychosis.
This is the ultimate, in the last few weeks on the show, we've been talking about, like, shit that my mom and dad have just dropped on me out of nowhere.
Like, I didn't know my dad was married before he was married to my mom until I was, like, 16.
What?
Just lots of crazy stuff.
I mean, my parents had crazy lives.
It's not that they're keeping secrets from me.
crazy lives.
It's not that they're keeping secrets from me.
It's just that if they tried to list all of the crazy things that happened to them before they were 35 or however old they were when they got together and made me, it would just
be a list too long to list.
So my dad says, did I ever tell you about my drug-induced psychosis?
And I said, no.
It sounded like he was looking for an excuse.
He was kind of baiting through this whole slide in the family stone thing.
Any song could have been on the radio hey whatever happened
it seems it seems wood mac it seems inevitable in retrospect at the time i think it felt very
fresh sure um it felt like a a a new and amazing revelation um my dad said my dad lived in Hawaii for a few years in the mid-70s.
And he lived on the Big Island near Hilo.
And it was sort of a nothingsville at the time.
I think it's a less nothingsville now, but still not exactly
everywhere is filled. Yeah, Big Island is pretty
nothing.
So he just lived, I think, just in a forest
or whatever. I don't know
exactly where he lived, but
he said, I would...
What he would do is he would dig a hole,
he would live in there, and wait for someone
to try and bury a pig,
and then he would eat that.
And that's how he got food yeah um he would just wait for poi to fall into it you gotta make that um he said so he said to me i was it was when i was living in hawaii and i'd been eating magic
mushroom omelets for a week wow and then he his his follow-up to that was he's like of course
they weren't as strong as they are that that's i mean i don't understand when they when people say
like weed is like it wasn't wasn't as strong i know we they i know they scientifically like
breed marijuana plants now to be stronger but when when they say that shrooms still come
from the same place cow shit yeah right like is it like the the the cows are with all the
antibiotics and all the uh is there making more powerful mushrooms i guess so because
so my dad said he was in this sump hole there was this sump hole on the beach volcanic beach you
know so there's a big hole where the water goes into and he was
standing in this hole um and the hole went up to like his shoulders and it was about he said like
a third or half full of water and he was naked and he was having this vision and in this vision
there was this panel of judges 12 huge men, each about 12 feet tall, representing every race.
All 12 races?
All 12 races.
And he had to make a case to these judges as to whether he should live or die um in the sun paul and my dad is uh my dad is a veteran
and had been through a lot of really crazy shit in wartime yeah and had gone gone through crazy
shit as a kid too and um just he just had like a lot of shit had gone down to the point where at one point, one of these revelations that he dropped on me was, uh, he once spent a weekend painting the inside of his bathroom to look like the inside of a serviceman's coffin.
I know.
So my dad's like a pretty pleasant guy too.
Like I don't even want, like, he's not just like going around.
Jordan's met my dad oh sure
he's great yeah i would even say if i wouldn't have known if if i wouldn't have heard all of
these stories about him i would say that like this is almost like this is almost like standard
corny dad like yeah because is he kind of a square now yeah well he's well i mean it depends on your
standard for square i mean he's been clean and sober for a long, well, he's... Well, I mean, it depends on your standard for square.
I mean, he's been clean and sober for a long time.
He's worked in the peace movement
since, like,
since forever, essentially.
And so, I mean,
he's in his 60s,
so he's not exactly
wild and crazy, but...
Yeah, well, I mean,
square, just the kind of,
you know,
a guy that you wouldn't assume
ever got into any shit.
Yeah, I mean,
I think if you just met him casually, like, at the bank, you wouldn't be like, that's a guy who got into a lot of shit. Yeah, I mean, I think if you just met him casually
at the bank, you wouldn't be like,
that's a guy who got into a lot of shit.
Nice guy, a lot of goofy jokes,
pats you on the shoulder, hearty
pats. Yeah, really likes Jordan. He's a big fan
of Jordan's.
Anyway, so my dad was
in this... That's just because I gave him some mushrooms.
My dad was in this sump hole
being judged by the 12 huge men of every race and telling them about the shit he'd seen in war and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And how he was just living in Hawaii in the forest eating magic mushrooms.
Magic mushroom omelets.
I like the guy that takes –
See, yeah, that implies that he has methods of preparation.
Like what is he – I mean I guess eating magic mushrooms raw is one thing,
but he seems like he's preparing them in a rather intricate way.
That seems like a...
There's at least a range stove somewhere.
Yeah, it seems like a lot more complicated
than even just cooking up heroin.
It's sort of more of a process.
It's like an enthusiast's way of doing it.
It's like a vaporizer.
Like a guy who's really into pot,
he's going to go buy that sweet vaporizer. It's like a vaporizer. A guy who's really into potty is going to go buy that
sweet vaporizer.
It's like how
it seems like
rich guys back in the Hearst days
did a lot of
gay stuff, but it's probably just because they were real
bored.
I think that's the case.
You hear stories of
David Bowie.
He likes women, but he'll fuck anything.
Sure.
That's the same impulse that leads someone to buy some sort of bong slash gas mask.
Yeah, exactly.
Or make shroom omelets.
Yeah.
So he's arguing his case.
And at this point in his life, he genuinely doesn't know whether he should live or die.
point in his life he genuinely doesn't know whether he should live or die and finally he like puts his case to these 12 men and he says he thinks that it was probably hours that this was going on uh but
it's kind of hard to know and uh the 12 the 12 men of every race the 12 huge men of every race bring
in their verdict and it's that he should live and my dad is like crying because this is such an
this is like such an amazing vision that he's had which is when is like crying because this is such an this is like such an
amazing vision that he's had which is when the hawaiian dudes see him and so there's these hawaiian
dudes these native these native hawaiian dudes and they're like you know they say something that
you would expect him to say like hey fucking howley why are you naked in a sump hole on our fucking beach talking into the air?
And so they grab him and pull him out and start kicking the shit out of him.
Now, my dad was not that long out of the Navy, so he was a very strong man at the time.
And so he managed to beat them off.
He was also in sort of that same state that leads moms on PCP to lift cars off of their children.
He just got an extension on his life.
He was probably feeling like a million bucks.
And you don't want to embarrass yourself in front of the 12 races by getting beat up in front of them.
Yeah.
The Hawaiian 12-foot guy is just like, I am sorry about them.
Oh, wow.
So he beat these dudes off and ran off into the ocean.
I'm just trying to say beat them up.
Beat them up.
Fended them off, beat them up.
So he managed to get these guys off of him, ran off into the ocean, and the guys were wearing clothes and didn't want to get their clothes wet.
So they started throwing rocks at him instead of chasing him into the surf.
Because he realized once he's in the ocean,
there's only so far he can go
because he's not going to be able to swim to Fiji or whatever.
Yeah, yeah.
So they're throwing rocks at him.
And my dad, being as high as he is,
has a good plan for this situation,
which is he's going to catch the rocks.
Oh.
So he's trying to catch the rocks and he's getting
hit by some of them and catching some of them missing some of them um and finally the hail of
rocks stops and the hawaiian goes the hawaiian guys yell out to him hey howley we decided not to beat you up so you can come back now
and so my dad goes oh fucking great i thought these guys were gonna beat me up he comes back
they start kicking the shit out of him again hawaiian switcheroo yeah that's true this same
this you eat macaroni salad this same. This same thing then happens again.
He goes out into the ocean.
They start throwing rocks at him.
He thinks he can catch the rocks.
They tell him they've decided not to beat him up anymore.
He comes back again.
Then they start kicking the shit out of him again.
Until this Hawaiian lady comes out with a shotgun and starts firing at them.
And probably firing like rock salt or something, you know, something like that.
Like, I can't imagine she was shooting shotgun shells at them.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But like clears them off and they scatter in one direction.
He runs in the other direction.
And he comes up with a second good plan, which is he doesn't have any clothes.
He's not really sure where he is.
And he knows he's super high.
But on the other hand, he also knows he's supposed to live.
So he's pretty stoked about that.
So his plan is he's going to walk down the road naked until he gets arrested.
Because at least a police officer will like tell him who he is yeah
and so he does this he walks down the road for two days oh until he gets arrested and when he
gets arrested he gets put into the psych ward of jail jail psychology jail crazy person jail um and he is in crazy person jail for
uh i think two months what um before he is like coherent enough to be released from crazy person
jail and like he's you know he wasn't the only illegal thing he was doing was walking around naked. So he gets a legal slap on the wrist.
And so anyway, then he says, so I guess that's that's a story of when I had drug induced psychosis.
And he goes, oh, yeah, that was the diagnosis they gave me.
Drug induced psychosis.
Jesus Christ.
That's insane.
Right.
And that's that's just something he just dropped.
Yeah.
He just we were just having a pleasant conversation
going off to school, going off to college
for my second year of college.
I probably met Jordan later
that same day. This was the same
day that I met my friend Jordan Morris.
My dad gave me a talk
once we were driving down. I was moving down
to Los Angeles and he was
driving. You were driving from Hawaii.
He was actually, at the time
he was living in Tahoe and so
we were driving down and my parents are still together.
This is 10 years ago.
They just travel
from resort area to resort
area. Yeah, yeah, exactly.
They've also lived in Key Largo.
It makes them sound wealthy
but if people
have ever been to most parts of Oahu, they would know that it's not a glamorous or nice place.
They've lived on a few resorts on the Russian Black Sea.
Yeah.
But we were driving down, and this is now 10 years ago, and I was thinking about, I didn't really ever had a girlfriend at that point.
I had crushes on girls, and I had my heart broken.
about you know i didn't really ever had a girlfriend at that point i had you had crushes on girls and i've been had my heart broken for no you know were you moving with your parents or was
this when you moved to la to become a comedian this is when i moved down to la to become a
comedian how old were you at the time um i was um i just turned 19 and uh i i graduated from high
school i turned 18 but then i spent a year in hawaii just uh you know playing in punk bands and
hanging out.
Eating plate lunch.
Eating plate lunch.
I got some yesterday.
I got some yesterday in Little Tokyo.
It still holds up.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
No, that's a tasty kind of lunch.
Yeah, it is. Is that of a truck or is there a place that serves it?
No, it's Aloha Cafe in Little Tokyo.
Not as good as the L&L over actually on York.
That's a good L&L for any people listening in la that likes plate
lunch but um we're driving down and um you know i'm thinking a lot about just pretty much everything
in my life because like this was like the big move i didn't go to college i you know i told my
parents i was probably going to go to smc santa monica college when i got down there but that
was really just uh to placate them and uh and I was thinking about relationships and stuff like that. And I asked my dad,
hey, dad, do you get along with mom?
And he started to crack up.
And he's like, you know, I'll tell you.
And this is like we're driving through the night.
And there's a fucking blood red moon.
And it's just foreboding.
And we're on the fly.
There's a werewolf holding onto the back of your car.
Yeah, exactly. And my my dad says you want to see
something really scary there's a spider on your dad's face um but then i he laughs and he's all
you know i'll tell you this uh it's not that i don't love your mom i do i really do she's a great
mother to you and your brother uh just don't like her that much and with that and with
that information we came upon the crest into los angeles and then i have been here ever since
but it was just the weirdest way i always remember just that fucking moon the fucking
five freeway and you know just today you're married to show business yeah yeah yeah exactly
um yeah do you like Do you see that now?
Do you see the way in which like, oh, well, they're good domestic partners, but they don't enjoy it.
Knowing that, do you pick up on it?
Yeah, but I also see a lot of my – the older I get, I see a lot more of myself in my dad and I understand him a lot more than I ever did before.
My dad was like a pothead growing up and did drugs
and stuff like that, but it never really affected him.
It's not like he would disappear.
Now you understand
what that hair is under his arm.
Yeah, exactly. I don't know why our penises
look that way.
But knowing how I am now
and how I
make generalizations or I make statements upon how I'm now and how I, I make, you know, I make generalizations or I make
statements upon how I'm feeling at the moment, which is a, I still feel is kind of a childish
thing to do. Especially when you're telling somebody else that, because they're just going
to take that as that's how you are. That's how people listen to other people. Right. You know,
and like, so I, that threw me off for a few years and then I started to realize it's like, you know, when I started having relationships, I'd be like, oh, I don't really like my girlfriend, but I'm in love with her.
And there's different levels and different times and different ebbs and flow to any relationship.
And I just feel that I asked them during that moment of that time why it was okay for just my dad to drive me down to Los Angeles.
And my mom didn't feel like
coming you know I didn't think about it at the time are you sure that he didn't have this wasn't
his plan all along was Sly and the Family Stone playing on the radio I guess is what I'm asking
yeah um Neil Young was playing on the radio and I said oh I wonder what happened he's all I don't
like your mother that's a horrible segue I mean I feel I feel kind of like I still know Jack about my dad.
Maybe the solution is a road trip with Sly and the Family Stone.
But it has to be.
Here's the thing.
Ours are similar where we were off to a new place or kind of being left off on our own.
And I think that's an important time for a dad to kind of like do something.
He's like, well, this is it.
Get on that iceberg and float away.
I don't really see myself moving anytime soon,
but maybe when that Chick-fil-A on Hollywood Boulevard finally opens,
I can have my dad drive me to that.
And then we can talk about.
It's got to be a quick conversation there.
Sure, talk about, were you ever in love before, Mom?
Here we are.
I'll take two chicken sandwiches i went on a
road trip with my dad when i was 11 12 years old somewhere right in there 11 or 12 years old
and it could not have been more disastrous but let me correct that i in my imagination it could
not have been more disastrous until i learned about the road trip that my two younger brothers went on
with my dad when they were like
14 and 6 respectively
we were going to go
visit baseball stadiums
around America
we drove from San Francisco
we drove east to St. Louis
and then up to Chicago and Detroit
you're kidding me there's no fucking baseball stadium
between San Francisco and St. Louis no there is I to Chicago and Detroit. You're kidding me. There's no fucking baseball stadium between San Francisco and St. Louis?
No, there is.
No, there is.
At least the Rockies weren't around yet.
Yeah, this was...
I think the Rockies were brand new.
We couldn't get tickets.
They weren't at home at the right time.
There was some reason we didn't go see the Rockies.
We did see a minor league game in Colorado Springs, which was fun.
And yeah, we went to Kansas City and St. Louis and Detroit and both stadiums in Chicago.
Nice.
And all of that was great.
But going on a road trip with your dad at 11, especially, you know, my dad is a little bit of a madman.
I just can't.
I couldn't wish something worse on anyone.
And I don't know.
I mean, I think it was probably partly my fault.
I mean, in some way.
But on the other hand, I was 11.
And I was a pretty good 11-year-old.
So I don't think it was actually my fault.
No, actually, I take it back.
It wasn't my fault at all.
What happened?
Definitely my dad's.
The baseball stadiums weren't there.
Crazy fights.
Just crazy.
They were playing football at the baseball stadium.
Just insane knock down drag out fights
and i've learned since that like i'm politics did you guys bring up politics yeah
don't ever do that you're stuck in the car michael dukakis related
arguments at that point what year was that it was he was he was voting for Jerry Brown And I was voting for Paul Songis
But like I learned later
That my dad has post-traumatic stress disorder
And we actually talked about this on
We taped recently an episode
Of our friend Paul Gilmartin's podcast
The Mental Illness Happy Hour
Which was a lot of fun
And people will get to listen to he's he's
got a lot in the can so maybe in the next few weeks to a month but um uh one of the things
about my dad's ptsd is that he will not back down in a fight about anything ever and my dad might
swim into the water but he will not back down yeah no he will try and
catch the rocks and like my dad is a and he will also he will go zero to ten instantly so and he's
not he's not physically violent or anything like that um but he has no middle ground. Part of his PTSD is that you're always hyper alert.
And so his hyper alertness, when shit goes wrong or when somebody might be getting in a fight with him, like if there's something that would bristle someone.
He steps up.
He's 10 out of 10.
He's like fucking Clarence Darrow in the courtroom.
Like the level of intensity and commitment to his cause even if you're not
actually having a disagreement and that's like the number one thing i remember and i've learned since
like as a grown-up i realized oh here's what i can do if my dad is get trying to get me involved in
a crazy fight i just have to learn the difference between a disagreement between regular normal people and a craziness fight.
Yeah.
If it's a craziness fight, I can just leave or pretend to be asleep.
Right.
Like I can just go and come back and it's fine.
My dad is a very good person and a very reasonable person in every way except when except this symptoms of this post-traumatic stress disorder.
except when except this symptoms of this post-traumatic stress disorder and so i feel like that 11 year old trip every stop there was some insane thing about like me putting the wrong thing
on top of something else when i packed the car or something like that just absolute madness just
pure madness that's a bummer i could really just turn a trip. It doesn't get better.
But my brothers didn't even...
They were going to go on this fishing trip.
Because my brother John, who's now 21 or 22, he loves fishing.
Or at least he did when he was a kid.
Like genuinely...
Excuse me.
Genuinely loves it.
Like, I don't know where he got this interest because we lived in urban San Francisco.
So your dad took him on a cross-country road trip to all the fishing stadiums.
They were going to go, it was a northward.
To all the bodies of water.
It was a northward trip.
So we were headed to, the fishing is much better in your Oregon's, you're in the pacific northwest than it is in the san francisco bay area salmon and other fish i think they made it out and they were going to camp and my brother also loves camping like he loves the outdoors
he loves he's like he's in many ways the exact opposite of me in other ways exactly the same as
me and so he loves he did like swim on solo backpacking trips when he was like 15 and stuff.
And so this is his like dream trip.
And my brother Brendan, he was too little to give a shit one way or the other.
He was like seven.
Typical Brendan.
But they're going to camp, right?
They're going to camp.
Unflappable, that guy.
I think, if I'm remembering this correctly they drove for a day
camped
in my dad was
my dad was camping
my dad was sleeping
in the back of a truck
with a camper shell
and then I think
my brother and
my brothers were sleeping
in a
tent
so they camped one night
my dad was like
I'm not doing that anymore
so the next night
they were at a Motel 6 which is my dad's great passion in life, as Motel 6 is.
And they were fishing in the bathtub.
Yeah, yeah.
And so they spent the second night at this Motel 6.
And then my dad was like, fuck this.
We're turning around.
Whoa.
And they just drove back.
That's a worse trip to To just cancel the trip.
They just canceled it.
He just couldn't do it.
He just remembered, oh, yeah, I fucking hate camping.
Like, he got caught up in this world where he was a guy that likes camping and fishing.
Yeah.
And, like, my dad isn't a guy that likes camping and fishing.
He's just not that person.
Yeah, yeah.
I feel the same way every time I try
and watch Battlestar Galactica.
Everyone loves it.
Yeah, this is gonna be great.
Wait a minute.
Yeah.
Oh, man.
Can you imagine
if your dad was
Edward James Olmos?
What if you were
in a fight with your dad,
but your dad was
Edward James Olmos?
How fucking crazy
would that be?
He would just
out-quiet you.
No, you know this
That's actually been an ongoing thing with me
Trying to watch Battlestar Galactica
And failing
Why do you keep on trying then?
It seems like something I'd like
Everyone I like likes it
And you know
I kind of want a TV show
It's good there's a bunch of episodes
It's on Netflix
A lot of other good shows you can watch I know but guys And I kind of want a TV show. It's good. There's a bunch of episodes. It's on Netflix. I can just watch an episode.
There's a lot of other good shows that you can watch.
I know.
But guys, I'm pleased to announce.
And this is how it's always been.
I put on that first mini series.
Yeah.
And I either fall asleep in the middle or start doing something else.
Yeah, yeah.
I think it took this time.
Really?
Really.
I think it took this time.
I finished it.
I sat through the whole thing.
I liked it.
I'm excited about the next episode.
I'll tell you, Jordan, get ready for some disappointment.
That's what everyone says.
You're going to get one season in.
You're going to be like, this is fucking tremendous.
This is amazing.
And then you're going to get to that second season.
You're going to be like, oh, yeah.
So something's going on.
But I trust these people.
These are good people.
And then you're going to get late in the second season.
You're going to get into the third season.
You're going to be like, huh, it seems like shit's just happening now for no reason.
And then you're just going to be like, oh, my God, fuck this.
Now, that's if you're me.
Okay.
I'm going to keep waiting in.
Yeah.
See what happens.
I should continue on. I mean, you know, I'm glad I finally gave Doctor Who a chance, and now I'm going to keep waiting in see what happens I should continue on
I'm glad I finally gave Doctor Who a chance
and now I'm addicted
the new Doctor Who's are good
are you addicted to it?
it's so slight though
I'm not against Doctor Who at all
and I found the people
I had
as you guys did on the Nerdist podcast
I interviewed
Doctor Who himself.
Matt Smith.
The doctor.
You're not supposed to call him Doctor Who, I guess.
No.
And the guy who writes them all.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
The main writer guy.
And they were fucking...
Steve Moffat.
Steve Moffat.
These guys were...
And the lady who was the star of it at the time.
Yeah.
That red-haired woman.
A very beautiful woman.
And they just could not have been more charming
and interesting of people.
Just wonderful people.
And I watched the show and I was like,
this is kind of good, but...
Where did you start?
I started with...
With their season?
With their season.
Yeah.
Here's...
And this is what I tell people
if they're thinking about watching it and not
knowing where to start.
You don't really need any of the previous, you know, decades worth of episodes.
You know, you could, I tried to watch those just to see it.
And if you want to see a fucking shitty sci-fi play happen in one scene for 15 minutes, go
for it.
It's not good television.
But I was recommended to watch the episode blink.
Even with the magical combination of science fiction and scarves.
Uh, and it just, I never took to it.
And it was always weird.
You know, I never, I always knew about Dr.
Who, but I never get really give a shit about it.
But you watch an episode called blink blink and it's in the third season.
And it's just, uh, it scared me as much watching it as when I first watched Stephen King's It on TV.
Third season of the new show or the old show?
Of the new ones.
Gotcha.
It's a David Tennant era Who episode.
And it's the fear I had watching Stephen King's It.
It's one of the things that scared me the most as a kid.
I don't want to be scared. Yeah. I don't like it. It's good. It's thrilling. It's just one of the things that scared me the most as a kid. I don't want to be scared.
Yeah.
Man, it's good.
It's good.
I don't like to be scared.
It's thrilling.
I don't know.
You don't like being scared?
I'm just going to watch Larry Sanders over again.
Yeah.
I do that as well.
I saw that.
It's on Netflix.
It is.
Oh.
It is.
I'm going to take a moment to editorialize to our audience.
I don't mean to be one of these assholes that's telling you to watch The Wire.
I've already told you to watch The Wire.
You know, if you haven't watched The Wire at this point,
it's your own personal failing.
You know, it's fine.
You know that you're failing.
You know that you're missing out on the best show ever.
Look, that's fine.
However, if you listen to Jordan Jesse Go,
I think I have some knowledge of what kind of person you are.
I have a basic understanding
from three MaxFunCons
from countless meetups
all over this great world
I have some understanding
of who our audience is
just watch Larry Sanders
it is really one of the best shows ever
but here's a thing about
that show and if you look
at a lot of classic comedy from any
time in the past is that um if you don't get with it sooner you'll finally watch it and feel that
it's kind of had it's kind of hacky and you won't realize right away that the only reason it seems
like that is because it you it's you've seen it done and ripped off so many times after that if you go watch those old bob hope and ben crosby movies all those road movies they were
like really doing weird things really funny neat scenes interesting jokes breaking the fourth wall
like having a guy like pop up on screen and like look at like a big big fight scene in a road to
utopia i go wow that's a lot of extras probably cost a lot of money anyway just thought i'd say
hello and then the scene starts back
Up real you know and then but like you
You you see that and it's you've seen it before
But uh it's
Because that inspired and that's the thing about Larry
Sanders I know is people will watch it and be
Like well yeah it's kind of like this though it's like the
Reason that was that is because
This was I want to be clear I did not watch
Larry Sanders as number
One I could give a shit about what informed what in terms of my enjoyment of something.
And number two, I did not watch Larry Sanders when it was on television.
I did not have HBO. I did not even have cable.
I did not even have a color television until I was like 14.
All right, we get it. You read books.
No.
No I
I watched the first season
I remember when a big time Gene O'Neill
Bought the DVD when it came out
Which was when we were like seniors in college
Or something like that
And I was like holy shit
This show is fucking amazing
Why did no one tell me about this
And then I didn't watch the rest until they were
Finally stealable on the internet.
Oh, wow.
Which was not until five or six years ago.
So when you see something that blows you away, like it's the best thing you've ever seen,
you don't do anything about it.
Well, you couldn't steal.
You couldn't get it anywhere.
You could buy it.
It was not in print.
No, you couldn't.
You couldn't.
No, you couldn't.
The first season came out on DVD, and then it was a failure.
And then nothing else came out on DVD until a best of came out like maybe three or four years ago.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Not the very best.
Yeah.
And then the full series didn't come out on DVD until like a year ago.
That's right.
That's an expensive set, too.
And what I actually, I may have even bought bootlegs of it on ebay really i may have
bought bootleg vhs tapes of it on ebay uh and the larry sanders show it's just as good as it gets
you just watch it from the beginning i think it's the you know i mean i think uh i'm only kind of
half count the simpsons in this category and i don't mean to discount the Simpsons at all because I think the
Simpsons is also as good as it gets
but I think
it's probably the most brilliant sitcom
of all time and I'm
not going to count and I'm also not going to count
I also want to be clear I'm not
counting like
accomplishment
in that like I like
obviously I Love Lucy invented sitcoms oh yeah yeah yeah and
mash invented sitcoms with you know deeper undercurrents and you know all in the family
invented sitcoms as you know social satire coach had dauber, like, it is so, like, the comic acting on Larry Sanders is as good as you will see anywhere, in any film, in anything.
Yeah.
The comic acting of the three leads in that show is so exceptional.
And it's also written by basically every brilliant person who's ever written a joke before.
Yeah, yeah, no, it's incredible.
You know, and it's one of those things, too.
It's like when you do have a great comedy,
they all, you know, seemingly without exception,
Simpsons is a great example, just get run into the ground.
And it's really hard to like, you know.
Sad, it's sad really.
It's like, can we just call The Simpsons seasons three through eight?
It's like, well, no, you can't really.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, you know, it's just, it's so, it bums you out.
It's like, you know, I can't say I like The Simpsons really anymore because there are
probably more episodes that have been made that I haven't seen.
Right.
Yeah.
That I have now.
And sure.
It never used to be that way.
But yeah.
And I think, I think that's, that's also something cool about Larry Sanders is that it, that
it, that it started great
and ended great.
Yeah, I mean,
in the extras
of one of the DVDs,
I saw that he's talking
to Seinfeld
and they were talking
about ending early,
ending out on top,
ending before you feel
that it got a little
too far away
from the original
mission plan,
which I think is great.
I think more shows
should do that.
Yeah, you know,
although you have to
hand it to Seinfeld,
which is a television show that turned into a completely different television show
for two or three years there.
But that television show was also a pretty good show.
Yeah, man.
I rented that.
I Netflixed that last season of Seinfeld semi-recently with the intent of like,
is this as bad as they say it was?
No, it's hilarious.
Yeah, it's really funny.
It's crazy.
It's not tiny parlor pieces.
There's no whole episode set in Chinese restaurants.
There's madness, but it's really funny.
But anyway, just do yourself the favor of enjoying Larry Sanders.
Like, you just have such a treat ahead of you if you haven't seen it. And it's not a museum piece at all.
It feels very fresh. In terms of hairdos.
Well, certainly in terms of women's hairdos. And Larry's
suits are just outrageous. And the music
and the sets. If you ever wonder what you're... If you're wearing
a J.Crew skinny lapel,
skinny tie type suit right
now and you're thinking you look pretty cool,
just look at
Larry Sanders and his
shawl lapel suits.
Just his whole... It's like every
outfit that looks like he also could have got...
He maybe shared a wardrobe with Arsenio.
Well, even look at
Seinfeld. The way they were dressed.
They weren't dressed, besides Michael Richards, none of them really dressed like crazy characters or really of the time.
You watched them at the time, they were dressed just like people would dress.
But now you look back, and they're not very stylish at all.
But you look at them now, and it's like, oh my god, those are ridiculous clothes.
Yeah, the jeans in particular.
Jeans and giant white sneakers yeah yeah exactly and that's gonna happen to like a lot of us you know oh sure
i have to say though i will say this when we're on the subject and we've touched on a subject close
to my heart which is outfits but uh if you watch seinfeld in 2011. And you take note of the clothing that they're wearing.
I mean, obviously, obviously, Kramer is wearing his, like, 40s and 50s and later 70s and later seasons, 70s sort of crazy vintage clothes.
And they call him a hipster on a number of occasions on that show.
And he was a hipster, you know?
Yeah.
Like, you know, like, know like just like in the but more in
the dance more in the krebs sense like the 1956 type yeah but you know every early 90s wearing
a fez type every era has had their hipster so he he's wearing these he's wearing those crazy clothes
and and jerry seinfeld is wearing clothes that i that one would probably describe as stylus.
Yeah.
Like he is wearing the clothes of a cypher.
You know, because that was part of what his character was, was he's just a guy.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
And that's who he is.
He's a guy that wears fucking white sneakers and 501s, like washed 501s.
And a fucking big, thick buttoned up shirt tucked in.
That's why they can make an episode of it being so crazy
that he has a weird shirt or a big jacket.
Yeah, right. Sure. But
George Costanza's character
wears
exactly the kind of
and I mean, he's a sort of, you know, he's a
dumpist by nature, but
he wears exactly the kind of like
traditional American quote unquote
heritage clothes that were, to some extent were, to some extent are, the absolute peak of fashion circa 2000.
I'd say the peak of fashion circa 2010.
Like this absolute perfect, like the plaids and the tweeds and the anoraks and like all of those clothes were with a possible
exception of the heavily washed jeans um they'd be a little tighter you know yeah it's a very it's
a very odd thing to see it and think like you know what like if if george if you took the pieces that
george is wearing i mean obviously george is, they're putting him together in a way to undermine what a dope he is.
But if you took those pieces,
you know,
you could put those together
in a collection in 2010
and sell it to Barney's.
You know, it's funny,
I'm not one to get into the habit
of quoting Dennis Leary jokes,
but I think on No Cure for Cancer,
he brings up a good point about,
or, you know, About assholes that complain about smokers um good original material no but he's
talking about um the fact that like you know he was looking his like uh niece or nephew was looking
at pictures of him in the uh you know 60s or 70s and they're like oh you were a hippie and like
he's like why you call me him he's like you're wearing bell bottoms and you have you know
polyester shirts and you say no that's just all you could buy in stores right it's like it's like, why do you call me him? He's like, you're wearing bell bottoms and you have polyester shirts. And you say, no, that's just all you could buy in stores.
It's like you couldn't find normal pants.
They were just like, if you wanted to dress kind of like you were of your age, the only pants you had to choose from were bell bottoms.
And the only shirts you could really wear were polyester shirts.
And I think that's like if you just want to dress not stylish but if you just
want to dress up you know your age or just how you feel you know or you fit in like you're going
to dress like people are just going to call you a hipster or you can just take off your clothes
get in that fucking sun pole sure get up in that volcano hole and take care of business make your
case gentlemen make your case ask them okay we'll be back in just a second with more on
jordan jessico jordan jessico i'm jesse thorne america's radio sweetheart jordan morris boy
detective and jonah ray today's guest the guest the jonah i still can't think of a nickname no
no it's going well keep going going. Keep going down that road.
Jonah Guesty Ray.
Just freestyle.
Just bebop.
Podcasting is like the new bebop.
It is, sure.
Podcast.
I like it.
We're having a conversation, a musical conversation.
Sponsors for this week's program?
Sure. Shall we, Jordan?
Why wouldn't we?
We do this Jumbotron-style thing.
You can pay a low flat rate, and we'll have your message on Jordan, Jesse, go.
Oh, that's great.
Let's talk about sponsors this week.
Number one, Fuzzy Balls Apparel.
Our good friends at Fuzzy Balls Apparel who make cute and creepy T-shirts and things.
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I don't know if you had a chance to talk to him.
So did I.
It was a pleasure to meet him, speak with him.
They make charming products there online at the internet.
Fuzzy Balls Apparel.
Nice T-shirts, nice little collectibles.
Very adorable. Yeah. Very collectible. All online at fuzzyballs Apparel. Nice t-shirts, nice little collectibles. Very adorable.
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All online at fuzzyballsapparel.com.
Put JJ Go in the notes when you place your order and you will get a free gift there.
Stet Publishing.
This is a freelance editing firm based in Portland, Oregon,
with a broad base of knowledge about publishing
and the publishing industry, Jordan.
So they do all kinds of editing for writers,
everything from line-by-line copy editing
on the small-scale stuff
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So if there are writers out there and you need writing,
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And they also particularly love
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This sounds like an important service.
I think this sounds like a tremendous service.
They say they have,
and they also work on, here's among the things they're willing to work on, popular science writing, screenplays, homebrew board game rules.
Wow.
Whatever.
And Barack Obama fan fiction.
Anyway.
If you've got a story where Barack Obama has gills, these are your guys.
You don't know if he does, man. You don't know if he does, man.
You don't know if he does.
Yeah.
They'll give you a special...
I've never seen his neck.
They'll give you a special rate
if you mention that you heard about them
on Jordan Jesse Go.
And in fact,
they will also give you an additional special rate
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I guess like the aforementioned
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But that's probably just because they have a lot of competition
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You can find them online.
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Or you can just email them
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And finally, Jordan, finally, scroll.
A journal of video game appreciation.
This one is a listener named Alex bought this message on behalf of his friend Ray's project.
So this has been featured on the Retro Knots podcast,
which we were on last year at E3.
That was last year, right?
That was last year.
It was a lot of fun.
It was a ton of fun.
I talked a lot about Tecmo Bowl football, as I recall.
Yeah.
And I just talked about how I had no idea
what they were talking about
whenever they talked about anything besides Tecmo football.
Anyway,
it's an
independent magazine
that is both
nostalgic and
contemporary.
Issue one is about the history of
the Super Nintendo.
Did you have a Super Nintendo,
Jordan? I did have a Super Nintendo.
I had a Sega Genesis. Did you have a Sega Genesis?
I did.
I had both.
I got the Super Nintendo real late in its run.
You had two, huh?
I had two.
I knew this guy who had a Sega Master System.
Yeah, I knew that kid.
He had everything.
He had every one.
He had that one with Box Adventure.
Yeah, TurboGrafx.
That was TurboGrafx-16, yeah.
The only thing this guy didn't have was...
Did he have Panasonic 3DO?
He may have had 3DO. I was about to say he didn't have a cdi oh what's cdi c philips cd interactive i think
you buy that at blockbuster video if i'm not mistaken yeah exclusively there were uh there
are two zelda games for the cdi that have since been uh exiled from the canon of Zelda.
Really?
Yes, they are.
But anyways, that's its noteworthy thing,
is a lot of those full-motion video games,
and then two Zelda games.
They had that Sherlock Holmes Consulting Detective.
It was one of their key titles, as I recall.
Anyway, it cost $10 for the first issue, if you want issue, excuse me, if you want the print magazine or five bucks if you want it digitally.
The second episode is about to drop.
It's about Dragon Quest.
And issue one is 50% off if you buy it by the end of the month.
So it's all online at scroll.vg.
Scroll.vg.
It's a Journal of Video Game Appreciation. VG.vg. Scroll.vg. It's a journal of video game
appreciation.
VG. Video game.
Or venereal.tv.
Or venereal gazebo.
Venereal gazebo.
My gazebo.
All these links and all the links for all the sponsors
of the podcast are always available in the forum.
In the show's section of the forum,
there's a special, what's that called?
Pinned post. Yeah.
A special pinned thread, sticky thread
with links if you ever forget the links
and you want to look something up.
We always appreciate you supporting our sponsors.
And if you want to sponsor an episode of Jordan Jesse
Go, just email Teresa
at MaximumFun.org
and she will hook your ass
up. Jordan,
surprisingly affordable. Yeah, that's what I your ass up. Jordan, surprisingly affordable.
Yeah, that's what I've heard.
We'll be back in just a second on Jordan and Jesse Go.
Jordan, Jesse Go.
I am Jesse Thorne, America's radio sweetheart. Jordan Morris, boy detective. And Jonah Ray, today Goh. I am Jesse Thorne, America's Radio Sweetheart.
Jordan Morris, Boy Detective.
And Jonah Ray, today's guest.
When something momentous happens to you, please give us a call.
206-9844-FUN so that we can share it with the world in a segment called Momentous Occasions.
Gentlemen, shall we go to the tape?
Yep.
Hey, Jordan, Jesse, and possible guests.
This is Elizabeth in Missoula, Montana, and I'm calling with a momentous occasion. I'm having kind of a crappy day, and I was driving home from the store just now, feeling sorry for myself,
and then I saw a gigantic crow swoop down and pick up and carry away an entire hot dog beautiful sight and i feel much
better about the world okay have a good one that's even better if as it was happening in my mind
it's like it's not just the dog no it's a whole thing yeah like chicago style or something just
the entire tray with the soda along with it. That would be a good prize-winning
middle school science fair project.
Figure out what regional
style of hot dog
a crow prefers.
I was going to say,
to stay airborne,
obviously, weight is
very important to the birds. How big of
a hot dog, how many condiments can be on it
where the bird can still get licked? I think a crow can fuck up any size hot dog yeah yeah i think they can fuck up a
sausage baguette they can only fly a mile i remember dog jonah bagel dog okay well let's see
that's a thicker bread and i didn't think we were talking about the bread as much as the actual
sausage and casing but i'm gonna going to go say yes. Okay.
A croak of fuck up a pickle.
The secret to winning a science fair is to come up with some bullshit.
Yeah.
I learned that when I was...
I remember I was one of those kind of kids that couldn't do anything open-ended.
It just made me feel completely insane.
I'd be like, just give me some guidelines.
Give me a list of five things and I pick one. don't just tell me i can do whatever i want yeah so one year i tried
to make fuel out of garbage tried to make like i tried to like refine like i built a still and shit
it was really hard but it didn't really work at the end of it and And I was really, but I was like, but I fucking tried to do some really cool ass shit.
And,
uh,
my friend Java,
uh,
she and a couple of people,
they made postcards that said,
pick me up.
They had like a five question demographic survey and then they spread them all
over town.
And then they just made a list of like,
what were the characteristics of,
uh,
the people who filled out the survey and put a stamp on them.
I remember just being so pissed off when I was 13.
Like, really?
I could have just made some fucking postcards.
I'm sitting here trying to turn garbage into fuel, and I could have just written pick me
up on some fucking postcards.
Yeah, that's a smart move on their part.
I did.
Oh, it was so smart.
And I want to be clear.
Looking back on it now, I realize it was all their cleverness and my...
You overthought it.
I thought I had to do science.
You were trying to impress people as opposed to them just trying to do something easy to get a good grade.
They were trying...
Well, to be fair, they were trying to impress people too.
I think impress people is a...
I was trying to do...
I thought that science fair projects had to have a science component.
You're like Frank Grimes from The Simpsons episode.
Okay, let's go back to the telephone calls here.
Hello, gentlemen.
How are you?
I just wanted to call you about a somewhat momentous occasion that just happened.
I work in retail.
I sell all kinds of things to the public.
Let's start by saying that that was a really shady introduction.
He doesn't give his name, and then he said he works in retail.
He sells all kinds of things to the public.
He also has a cadence much like yours, Jordan.
If you listen to that back,
it felt like the same kind of cadence that Jordan had.
Oh, you know, this is just me trying to get in a plug for my new business, which is selling car speakers out of a white van.
Yeah, yeah, and other things.
So if you would play the rest of the tape, I will tell people which intersection they can meet me at.
Jordan's essentially Morgan Freeman in what that fucking movie called where they break out of jail?
God damn it.
Shawshank Redemption?
Shawshank Redemption.
Wow, you are a dad.
God damn it.
Yeah, that's the first dad quality.
Let's get out of prison, me and me.
Let's, the black guy helped me get out of prison.
Yeah, yeah, Shawshank Redemption.
I don't know if I want to get specifically into what it is I do, but I just had a customer walk in
who a relatively snappy-dressed fellow had...
He's asking for a Rita Hayworth poster and a spoon.
Had some pens in his pocket.
I'm assuming he's an engineer,
although he was wearing a Blue Devils baseball cap.
Wait.
And along with his...
He had pens in his pocket, so I assume he's an engineer.
Or any other job.
Yeah.
But seriously, though, who wears pens in his pocket?
In his shirt pocket?
Architects.
He's talking about his...
Comics.
Yeah.
Waiters.
Nerdy types.
Guys that work at record stores, pricing, accountants.
There's a number, not a large number maybe.
Jordan, how do you think accountants keep accounts in 2011?
Pens and paper.
They've got a green book that they open up.
They've got a ledger.
And then they put on their green visor. Yeah, exactly.
And then they put on their green visor.
Yeah, exactly.
Wearing a Blue Devils baseball cap.
And along with his pens and the recoutrements in his front breast pocket,
he had a very small cucumber poking out of the pocket.
I don't know why.
I don't know what the significance of the cucumber was, but we carried on a relatively civilized conversation for half an hour.
He bought some stuff from me and left.
And I still don't know what the cucumber was all about.
But anyway, I just thought I would share that with you.
God, way to wrap it up, guy.
You close on cucumber.
Number one, this is a great momentous occasion where a guy walks into your fucking store and he's got pens in his pocket and a cucumber.
That's a great momentous occasion.
We've never heard that before.
Oh, I bet the guy just works at a porno store.
That's what I was thinking.
That's probably it.
And that's why he's like, I don't want to get too into it.
I'm like, well, if you just sold products, can't you just say refrigerator store?
I don't know.
If it was a porno store, he'd be there to buy lube for his cucumber, wouldn't he?
Exactly.
Exactly.
But will that take a half an hour going over all the the different lubes, trying to figure out which one works?
They talk for half an hour?
Yeah.
And he doesn't want to get into it?
I don't talk to close friends for half an hour.
This whole phone call smells to high heaven.
Yeah.
Outside of the context of this program, I don't think I've ever talked to anyone for half an hour.
That's good.
This is H. Hector
from Yakima, Washington.
I just wanted to
broadcast a momentous
occasion for JJ Go.
You made that uh sound.
I was on a hike
and I
ended up seeing two rattlesnakes
off on the side of the trail
and they were
going through a sex act.
I had to pull out the
phone cam and
videotape them. At that point
I...
Then he got bit. I'm trying to find some antidote.
Enthralled with them
doing what they were doing.
When they were done, I
decided that was the end of the hike.
I headed back down the trail,
and at that point, I was charged
by a llama
charging down the hill at me.
I had pants around my damn ankles.
I quit hiking at that point
and rushed
over the river back towards my car
and ended my hike.
Thank you.
When did you find the briefcase full of money?
Yeah.
And shoot the dog in the head.
That's a kind of beautiful story.
I really appreciate people calling it.
I definitely like the endangering your own life to make a funny internet video.
Yeah, exactly.
Because hits on YouTube are worth more than your life.
That's really lovely.
Thank you, sir, for calling that in.
And thank you, rattlesnakes, for fucking.
And thank you, llama, for attacking that man.
What state is this in that has all this stuff?
Yakima, Washington.
Otherwise known, this is true, as the Palm Springs of the Pacific Northwest.
Why is it known as that?
I don't know. It was on a sign. A lot of gays in modern
architecture? I'm pretty sure it was Yakima
when I saw that sign.
I was on tour, and I was like,
Yakima, the Palm Springs of Washington.
That's funny.
Yeah, that's funny that they
did, like, that's what they picked. Like, I could see
calling some place the Paris
of somewhere, or the New York of
somewhere. Even the Las Vegas of
somewhere. Sure, absolutely, but yeah.
Yeah.
And then underneath there's an explanation of what
Palm Springs is because maybe not
everyone knows what that is. The Baker's Field
of the Pacific Northwest.
Maybe you've seen photographs of Frank Sinatra's
vacation homes. Well, in the 1950s
and 60s as modern architecture
blossomed, it coincided
with a new generation of Hollywood
stars who needed a new, hipper
getaway. Homosexuals were
just becoming a public thing at the time,
and they started moving into this
desert wasteland.
This is the biggest sign of all time.
Yeah, maybe it was just the
grunge scenes, Palm Springs.
Oh, right. And nearby, there was a shitty coachella type festival you know and everyone would rent in
yakima to go to you know whatever fucking town is near there you know i guess i didn't think
llamas were just out in the wild i guess i thought maybe llamas were like brought over from somewhere
like south america i didn't know that llamas were indigenous. This was not a wild llama.
No, I don't think there are.
This wasn't a misty of Chincoteague type situation.
I don't think there are any wild llamas.
Just like there's like, you know,
have you ever seen a fucking hamster in the wild?
No, that's true.
I guess not.
If you do, they're in a wheel and they're just going down the fucking path.
A naturally occurring wheel.
Yeah, exactly.
Like made out of a rock or a tree.
They made it out of twine.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's what they do for the first three years of their life is build a wheel. They build their own wheel. Yeah, exactly. Like made out of a rock or a tree. They made it out of twine. Yeah. Yeah, that's what they do for the first three years of their life is build a wheel to get around it. They build their own wheel.
Yeah.
They run in it.
We'll be back in just a second on Jordan, Jesse, go.
Jordan, Jesse, go. I'm you Love you, love you, love you, love you Love you, love you, love you, love you
Jordan Jesse Go, I'm Jesse Thorne, America's Radio Sweetheart.
Jordan Morris, Boy Detective.
And your guest for today, Mr. Jonah Ray.
Jonah Ray, of course, from Nerdist Podcast.
Nerdist the podcast.
The Nerdist Podcast the.
Nerd pod.
Laser sign podcast
Jonah Ray
Hawaii's favorite son
Except
For Barack Obama and probably a lot of
Hawaiian like native Hawaiian people
Yeah there's other comics there's Andy Bumatai
King Kamehameha
Yeah there's Augie T he's really
Popular comic in Hawaii
Queen Lily Okolani Queen Lily Okolani.
Queen Lily Okolani.
There was actually a prince.
Sarah Val.
Surfboard.
Sarah Val's book.
Yeah, her book about plate lunch.
There's Prince Jonah Kuhio.
He was a...
What about Israel complicated last name?
His name is Israel Kamakavika Ole.
The guy with the beautiful angel voice.
Yeah, he has also... Some also songs about sumo wrestlers he was um his his name he was known as brada is though
is brada is as in israel um i got uh beat up once he died when i was in in i think like seventh
grade and he uh because complications of eating too much um and uh of being a sumo
wrestler yeah at some point he was he couldn't even be a sumo wrestler even if he wanted to
you actually kind of got to be a little bit athletic to be a sumo wrestler i thought he
started out as a sumo right like he was in one of those sumo wrestling training camps or whatever
yeah yeah because they have these huge hawaiian guys yeah yeah and they throw them in that
training camp yeah i mean there was Yokozuna, I think.
He won for a long time, and he was Hawaiian.
And I remember it was like a big point of contention.
Iz had a song that my dad had on a tape that went,
Akebono, Musashimaru, and Konishiki.
Konishiki, he was huge.
Konishiki, I remember when I was in Japan when I was a kid,
Konishiki was a big deal
Because he was not
He was like a first tier wrestler
But not a champion wrestler
But he was like 6'8, 7'90 or something
Yeah he couldn't
If he didn't get you right away
He would lose
Because once he starts to tip
It's over
And it's like a cartoon where he hits and everyone fucking comes out of their seats
But I was going to say Israel back and be like oh he died um but it is and uh someone
said hey did you hear about brad is and i said this is probably one of the first like jokey
jokes i'd ever said in my life i said brad is more like brad was oh and then i feel a fucking
really aggressive tap on my shoulder.
And I turn around.
And it's his ghost.
And it's his ghost.
I was like, you're that fat that you can still... And the ghost yells, get him, fellas.
Yeah, exactly.
Even your ectoplasm feels like a hand.
Yeah, exactly.
So, a lot of saturated fat in his...
Right, right.
But yeah, yeah.
Prada is working like a vehicle.
Frank DeLima, he was a really big comic when I was growing up in Hawaii.
He had put out the joke book, and it's like, you know, it's like one section is Howley's.
All right, cool.
You make fun of just like white people, whatever.
Next section, you know, Samoans.
Next section, you know, Tongans and Bradas and, you know, Filipinos and then Japanese or book books.
You know, it's just all these different things. It's just the most racist book i've ever made more racist than
uncle tom's cabin i used to bring it out i used to bring it on stage and like say like if you
don't think i'm funny uh here's my background and i just read from the book there's only
only ethics and it's all just like you know it's written in pigeon English. Just like that.
Just like how they,
you guys heard of
the Da Jesus Kind book?
I know.
Da Jesus Kind book
is the New Testament
of the Christian Bible
written in pigeon English.
Or if you watch Y5O,
they call it Bird,
which is like
the most insulting thing
for some reason to me.
Oh, the new Y5O?
The new Y5O,
it's like a guy's like,
so you say,
oh, what'd you kind of go with this place and the guy's like oh i didn't know
you spoke bird yeah it's like fuck you just call it pigeon let people figure it out um but yeah
it's rewritten in pigeon english so it's all you know it's all so when this kind jesus guy
say make dead stay make for three days tree t-r-e-e right i guess what he come back
and he cured all the mahus which means like gays mahus mean gays it's just that's a really
cured them yeah yeah that's nice yeah it's a it's a that version of you can look it up online
there are you know you can find people doing sermons, reading from the book. It's real bad.
It's real bad.
I mean, it's just a place struggling to hold on to their culture.
They're just doing their best to have anything.
Because it's not even a culture of a specific race anymore.
It's just all these people that are all 17 different nationalities.
Right.
They're all 17 different nationalities.
Right.
It's the culture of a nation that happened to be a nice halfway point for whaling voyages.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know, it's just, you know, some Polynesian people came there a long time ago, split up, and then all started murdering each other. And then one guy, King of Manmea, united them.
That's the thing.
He united them through brutal murder.
Through the wars.
Like, his tactics were
insane if he would he would make alliances and then kill the kings on the other islands
and it's like you know you're so you fucking you know there's rows and everything it's like that's
just yeah but that's just history in general you know there's a point but at least they all cured
the gays yeah they found a way to cure so something good came yeah and then um yeah then it's you know
then it's great.
I mean, you have to take Hawaiian history when you, to graduate from high school there.
Oh, wow.
So, you know, I do feel that I, you know, I am part of the Hawaiian culture.
What do you learn about in that class?
You learn about what?
California missions, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, you learn.
The gold rush.
So you do learn a lot about like, you know, like you, the alphabet and like a lot of words
and a lot of the customs, a lot of games.
You go to a place like the –
Like Dreidel.
Yes, exactly.
Rocks on a fucking knit, like leaves knit together and then you slide rocks across it.
I don't really know how it works.
The most boring games.
Why would they make games?
There's fucking hikes and surfing to do.
But it's
Hey, well maybe
what they just needed was better editing
of their rule books.
That's true. And then that shit would have really popped.
Who could they call for that?
The Scroll Video Game Website.
To learn about the history
of Super Nintendo.
If you have thoughts
about the show, you want to give us a call.
JJ, go at MaximumFun.org.
206-9844-FUN is our telephone number.
206-9844-FUN.
Put it in your cell phone so you can call it whenever something important comes to your mind.
Jordan, this is an important week.
Yes.
This is the week of the Jordan Jesse Go review in iTunes.
Here's what happens.
iTunes has this ranking system.
And the rank, because iTunes doesn't know how many people are subscribed to a podcast,
it cannot know that.
There's no way for...
Apple doesn't look into your computer to find out if you're subscribed to a podcast.
So what that ranking is based on is basically, it's a mix of a couple of different things.
One is if you've clicked on it, how many people have clicked on it in the store.
So not even the subscribe button, but just clicked on it in the store.
And one really big one is how many people have reviewed it lately.
And because our show has been around for five years now, I think we don't do as well as we could in the rankings because
many of our subscribers have been subscribed now for years and they've said what they've needed to
say yeah and or they've just they just don't have a reason to click on the thing like if if oprah
started a podcast today her 50 000 fans or whatever would rush into iTunes and Oprah would be number one. Oh, so is this why every time Kevin Smith makes a new episode, it's an entirely new podcast?
Oh, I get it now.
I was wondering.
He's good at manipulating the fucking game.
Sure.
That's actually more just a matter of sort of time constraints.
Like you can only have 90 minutes in an episode of a podcast.
So if you figure 100 episodes, that's about 150 hours.
So that's just one episode for Kevin Smith.
So he just wants to keep starting.
He has a podcast's worth of content in a given.
But anyway, so this is our week for go into iTunes, review Jordan Jesse Go.
Click on it randomly for no reason.
Click on it in the store. Yeah,
you can click on it in the store.
Review all of the MaximumFun.org podcasts
of course, but just
please do that and just know that in addition
to showing other people
that you like the show and
sharing with other people what you think of the show,
it also makes a big difference in terms of
who wanders into iTunes
and sees it. So
go ahead and do that. And JJ
Go is our hashtag on Twitter.
More and more people have been using
that hashtag, Jordan Jesse Go.
It sounds like you're in pain trying to hashtag.
Everyone's using their hashtags.
Well, you know, I
like hashtags, but what I love
is hash browns
So it pains you to say the word hash
But then it ends up
You're not speaking about hash browns
I think you just named what's going to be on your tombstone
At the end of your life
Hated hashtags, loved hash browns
Or just Jesse hash browns
Gold miner I want to give a shout out to Brett Gunter Or just Jesse Hashbrowns Thor. Sounds like a gold miner.
I want to give a shout out to Brett Gunter on Twitter,
who reminded me about how much I wanted to talk about Larry Sanders
with a JJ Go tweet that was related to Larry Sanders.
And to Jing Yi, who tweeted,
it's as good a day as any to wear a Jordan Jesse Go t-shirt.
That's not necessarily the kind of,
that's sort of a half-enthusiastic tweet.
It seems like it's enthusiastic,
not as good a day as any.
Every day is a good day
would probably be the enthusiastic version of that.
It's hard to judge people's tweets sometimes.
Some guy that was a Nerdist Podcast fan
came to the weekly show I got with Kumail
at the Meltdown,
and he was like, went to the show, you're really
good at hosting and doing stand-up
keep it up.
I wasn't planning on it
but the random tweet is going to make me continue
on the thing I've been doing for the past nine years.
Right. You may be
like you want to give up.
Good job. You should probably just
keep on with it. Yeah. Keep on keeping on.
I think you got something there, kid.
Anyway, so thanks to everybody
who's been hashing their
tweet tags with
Jojo.
I got to say that my brother,
my brother and me are really kicking our ass
pretty squarely in that department.
But I think in the long run, I think in the long run, my brother, and me are really kicking our ass pretty squarely in that department. Yeah. But I think in the long run...
Yeah.
I think in the long run, number one, I don't think Stop Podcasting Yourselfs even have a tweet tag.
Yeah, so it's...
Yes, in light of our shortcomings, let's bring up somebody who's doing even worse.
Well, I'm saying we're middle of the pack here in the friendship contest.
I think we can overtake
these. These Johnny
come lately ne'er do wells.
Just because there's three of them.
Oh, there's three of them. That's a good point. I don't think
we can take them unless Jonah rolls with us.
I can do whatever the fuck you guys want me to do. I swear to God.
Can you get some Hawaiian guys on our team?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Will you pull out one of your teeth
in front of us? I'll do anything you guys want and just let me keep on hanging out. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Will you pull out one of your teeth in front of us?
I'll do anything you guys want, and just let me keep on hanging out.
Also, I need a place to stay.
Not Hawaiian guys.
I want Tongan guys.
Oh, Tongan.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Because Tongan guys are bigger than Hawaiian guys.
Yeah, yeah.
So everyone's like, Samoan guys are huge.
Tongan guys are bigger.
Tongan guys are enormous.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But they don't have as fun names, though, as the Samoan simone guys you know like the bullies of my school were tony tata who i think went to go play
professional football then there was tupu toa tui all these guys all fucking hated me all these guys
hated me did you have any filipino guys in your class that had cool names um no um i did have a uh
biology teacher that uh his name was Mr. Lulu.
First name, also Lulu.
His name was Lulu Lulu, and he was awesome.
I heard from my friend Maria Filipina.
I won't give out her last name, but her middle name is Filipina because she's Filipina.
And when we were in college, it reminded me of when we were in college,
the number one activity in a meeting of the Filipino club is to just discuss who has the cousin with the funniest and most ill-advised name.
As they all eat chicken adobo.
Yeah, like Maria Filipina.
Maria had a cousin named Filimer.
Oh, yeah.
For Filipino American.
Oh, Jesus.
Filipino American.
Jesus.
And then my roommate Mike had like three different cousins that had
different sort of regular
English style names
as in Nation of England
style names like John and
Phil and stuff like that.
They just had Bert at the end.
There was a John Bert and
a Dan Bert.
That just sounds like what they Burt. Yeah. Anyway.
That just sounds like
what they talk about.
Awesome.
I'm Portuguese,
so I got made fun of a lot
by a lot of the Filipinos.
Oh, yeah.
Because you make
a different style of stew.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
We make Portuguese bean soup.
Yeah.
Okay, well,
it's been a delight to have you.
You can, of course,
find Jonah Ray
on his podcast
on the internet
at Nerdist.com.
You can find Jonah on the tweeters.
What's your tweeter handle?
At Jonah Ray.
You can find him on television on your WebSoup program.
Wednesdays at 7.
Fucking download it.
You can find his work, at least, on the upcoming Nerdist television program on the BBC American Network.
And it's fucking tremendous.
Jonah Ray.
He's Hawaii's most beloved son.
Thank you for being here.
Oh, do you mind if I plug my weekly Wednesday?
No, please. Every Wednesday night at Meltdown Comics
on Sunset in Hollywood,
me and another really amazing comic,
Kumail Nanjiani.
One of the best in the business.
Yes, one of my favorite comics.
When he was on The Sound of Young America,
I think
I rarely will get emails from
public radio listeners. I think I got
eight emails from people
saying, who was that hilarious comic?
He is so fucking funny. It might have been because his name
is complicated.
But he's also very, very funny. Yeah, he's great.
So me and him host it together
and his awesome wife,
Emily Gordon, produces it.
And it's every Wednesday.
And it's a lot of fun, a lot of good comics, a lot of comics you had on the show here.
Like last week, we had Greg Proops.
Dimitri Martin stops by.
Z stops by.
Donald Glover.
Daniel Tosh stopped by.
Hey.
Yeah.
That was a surprise to everybody.
And he's like, hey, guys, did you know two million people watch my show?
I'm a pretty funny comedian.
Nothing against me.
But what's up with that?
Yeah.
He'll be the first to fucking say that, too.
I chatted with him a bit.
He is just as dumbfounded as anybody.
He's like, hey, hey, look, I'm a funny guy.
Everyone likes me.
It's not about me being bad.
It's just more people than Conan.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
You know what it is.
People just like seeing people get hit in the nuts.
It's just America's Fine Song Videos for a cooler crowd.
Yeah.
Anyway.
Yeah.
All right.
Sorry.
We'll talk to you next time.
All right.
Right here.
Thank you, guys.
I'm Jordan Jessico.
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