Pod Save America - Offline: Jon and Emily Favreau Answer Your Questions
Episode Date: January 2, 2022Happy New Year! Since the beginning of Offline, Jon’s opened each episode asking listeners to submit their questions about the show. Today, joined by his wife Emily Favreau, he finally answers them....For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, everybody. Welcome to Offline and Happy New Year. So since the beginning of this series,
I've opened every episode asking you to send us your questions about the show. And today
I'll answer as many as I can. But I thought I'd bring on a special guest to help me do
that. Here by popular demand, my wife, Emily Favreau.
Hello. Thank you for having me.
Our first pod together.
I know. Lovett's had me me. Our first pod together. I know.
Lovett's had me on. I have not had you on. Yeah. You've done like 500 podcasts. This is my first. Well, I had to convince you to do this. You were a little skeptical. I mean,
I feel like I agreed and then the rules were changed after I agreed. So we'll see how this
goes. Okay, cool. Well, that's fine. Great. Well, it's a podcast. We can cut anything.
after I agreed. So we'll see how this goes. Okay, cool. Well, that's fine. Great. Well, it's a podcast. We can cut anything. Okay. So you can dig into the mailbag. It's you.
Great, great. So I'm going to dig into the mailbag here. There were a lot of questions
and comments about your episode with the Surgeon General, Dr. Murthy. So the first one, Laura Short
said, I appreciated John's sharing of your experience as a first-time parent during the pandemic.
My daughter was born at the end of July of 2020, same, and so I feel like our parenting timelines are very similar. I was worried about whether my husband would be able to come into the delivery
room, worried about who we would let see the baby, worried about attending appointments alone and
hearing bad news, etc. I know from my first baby the difference a community of new parents
who are sitting around like WTF is life can make. Same Laura, same. And then Brad Moringer wrote,
quote, as Americans living abroad, our experience during these past two years has been truly unique.
In August of 2019, I quit my job in DC and followed my wife on a new adventure
to Romania for her work. We enjoyed about seven months of European living until COVID hit.
As the world was shutting down, we were given 48 hours notice that we were being evacuated to the
UK. We could only bring the suitcases we could carry and were not sure when we would be coming
back. We spent the next six months living in temporary housing in England until it became clear we couldn't go back and her company moved us here permanently.
Our lives were completely uprooted during a time when the whole world was upside down.
Like you mentioned on the podcast, I didn't begin to experience the effect it had on me until
several months later. But when it did, it shook me to my core. I went to therapy for the first
time in my life to work through what these issues issues and it was the best thing I ever did. I 1000% agree that as a society, we have not thought
enough about the mental health fallout of this pandemic. I appreciate your honesty and candidness
about your own experience. And I wanted to write this email to let you know how much the specific
episode impacted me. Keep up the good work and cheers from england it's funny we we received more feedback about
the vivek murthy episode the surgeon general episode than basically any other episode we've
done more than a lot of episodes of pod save america interviews that we've done um and i think
it it sort of speaks to what i hoped the show would be which is like not necessarily I talked to you
about this when I was trying to figure out the show like I didn't want it to just be a show about
like the internet and technology but a show about sort of connection and the way that we interact
with each other and how strong our connections are today and a lot of that right now is about
I think social media and politics but it feels like a huge of that right now is about, I think, social media and politics,
but it feels like a huge factor in all this is the pandemic. And I think we don't talk about
mental health issues around the pandemic enough, and I've been trying to figure out why. And I
think there's like a few big reasons. One, I think if you're healthy and privileged,
like we are, you feel like it's a smaller problem relative to the problems that a lot of
other people are going through right now.
So you don't really want to make it public to,
it feels like some kind of an individual failing if you have that problem.
And three, I think if you want, if you want more human connection,
if you want to be hanging out with friends more and seeing family more,
you've,
it feels like you're not maybe taking the dangers of the pandemic seriously enough.
Yeah, I agree with that.
And it's one of the reasons that we don't,
but I don't know, what do you think?
We've had a couple years of being parents in a pandemic.
Yeah, I mean, I don't know what being a parent
not in a pandemic is like, neither do you.
So I don't know, it's starting to feel like, how is this still going?
Like we just canceled our trip home to see my parents for Christmas that it feels, it
feels like last year, but then also like there's so many things we know that are better, but
at the same time, like we have a healthy, happy toddler and that's fun.
And I, I love like being with our family.
So I can't complain.
But yeah, it's definitely the lonely experience.
But then at the same time, like we're not the only ones going through this, you know.
We went to bed last night.
We both got in bed and we're just like.
We just started laughing.
And we just started laughing.
We're like, oh, another day.
Another day in the pandemic.
Two years running. Here we go started laughing. We're like, oh, another day. Another day in the pandemic. Two years running.
Here we go.
We realized we haven't, we've only lived in this house during the pandemic.
Charlie has only known life during the pandemic.
Yeah.
Like there's only been, we've only lived in a house.
There's only been masks in this house since we moved in.
I know.
It's crazy.
I'm so over it.
But like, I don't know.
But I don't know.
It was, it was nice hearing from a lot of people after that episode.
It was nice talking to Dr. Murphy just because I do think there's a sense out there that everyone is people have talked about this sort of languishing.
It's the feeling of languishing.
Adam Grant wrote a piece about this in The New York Times where like you're not necessarily depressed.
You're not necessarily great, but you're just kind of getting through each day and there's something missing.
And I think it's making everyone a little angrier, a little more on edge.
And it's showing up in our politics.
It's showing up just in life.
It's showing up on airplanes.
It's showing up like all over the place.
Yeah, I went Christmas shopping today and there was like a brawl in the parking lot.
Really?
Yeah.
One guy parked too close to another guy.
That's how it started. But like things were dicey people are pissed out there um okay next question okay we got a bunch of questions about parenting christy low asks can
you do an episode that touches on the impact of the internet and social media on parents and our
kids i constantly feel guilty about my own screen time
and my kids' screen time,
but it's also how we connect with long distance family and friends.
It's such a catch 22 lose-lose situation.
And then a lot of other people ask for advice
for new parents slash parents to be on kids with phones slash iPads.
And I just think before you answer this question
or I answer this question,
we should make it very clear that we don't know what we're doing here. I was just going to say that. I was
going to say like, we are not experts on this. Yeah. We do not know the answer here. Do you want
to? I will say that I do want to do an episode on screen time or just like the impact of internet
and social media on parents and kids i think
there's probably a lot of there are a lot of experts out there uh if you guys are just not
them we are not them no that's why i want to do the episode i love talking to people who are
smarter than me um if you all have recommendations for who we should do the episode with like please
let us know um and i think there's a range of episodes you could do. You could do the impact of screen time and the internet on parents and young kids.
You can do the impact on teenagers.
Obviously, there was a lot about Instagram and the effect on teenagers when the Facebook papers came out.
So there's a lot of topics there that I would actually love to cover.
But for us...
I mean, no, you're making it seem like we plop him in front of a TV.
I didn't even say anything yet.
That's what you're making.
I said nothing yet.
I will say that.
I think he's by himself right now watching TV.
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
He is not.
He is.
He's being cared for.
Doing a puzzle.
No, I mean, I just kind of, as with all parenting things that I'm figuring out these
last couple of years, I'm just trying to kind of like read the room and feel what feels
right for our family.
And for me, that means like letting Charlie watch trucks in the morning on YouTube in
our bed while I drink coffee.
And it's an experience that I really enjoy because I'm sort of waking up and cuddling with our son.
You've been up for like two hours.
You bring me a coffee.
But I don't know, like the snuggling and starting a cozy morning with his mom to me kind of feels like it outweighs like the negatives of like maybe YouTube trucks rotting his brain.
But I don't know.
No, look, we've read all the studies, right? It's like a lot of screen time is bad for kids
that are young. I just want to let you know I've not read the studies. I've read, I've read about,
I've heard about the studies. I've heard about these studies. I'm sure a lot of people tell us
it's not good. But here's the thing. First of all, number one, I think there's a lot of hours
to fill in the day. You know this way better than I do because it's all day for you and it's not all day for me it's like the
weekends and night for me and there's especially a lot of hours to fill during the day during a
pandemic yeah when you can't be doing a lot of public activities and have charlie play with like
a bunch of friends and be indoors and basically a whole range of activities are excluded yeah right
now um so there's a lot of time to fill
i do think that when we the limited time that he does watch uh screens or watch television we are
sitting with him and often like explaining to him what's on the screen and talking to him about it
you're better at that than i am i just well it's like there's also like educational television
thing thankfully the fifers um tell us about dan. I know. There's a lot of Blippi. Oh, my God, no.
Blippi.
We're trying.
So we try to do that.
And then I think if you balance out the limited screen time with a lot of reading, which we do.
Yeah.
A ton of reading to Charlie.
Right.
And then just a lot of other social interaction where we can and just spending a lot of time with him interacting.
Yeah.
And I mean, we have it so much easier. And then just a lot of other social interaction where we can and just spending a lot of time with him interacting. I think that's.
And I mean, we have it so much easier.
Like my sister has a three-year-old and like,
so that's been two years in the pandemic
of like Charlie being this age, you know?
And so.
We're lucky if he's at his age.
I think a lot of parents.
He was a little baby blob for the first year
of the pandemic.
And like, that was sort of great for me
because I like sat around feeding him, you know?
But it's been hard.
The screen time kid thing with kids that kind of like the one that makes me feel more stressed out is not him watching screens, but more.
I find myself being on my phone around him, especially because I'm with him on all day.
him, especially because I'm with him on all day. And I'm like, since I'm not working, I'm like finding myself looking for adult socialization on like Instagram or on Twitter. And so then I'm like
sitting with him, but I'm staring at my phone. And then I, that's what makes me feel like kind
of, I'm doing a bad job. Um, and so that's maybe a new year's resolution. Like I want to just like put my phone away and like do solid play time with
Charlie, as opposed to like one ear on him, one eye on TikTok, you know?
I have found myself doing that too.
I have been a little bit better about catching myself when I think about it,
when I'm on my phone and he's around.
And then something else,
when we were just talking about this sort of mental health challenge,
I find that the times where I leave my phone in the other room
or just make a conscious effort to play with Charlie,
talk to Charlie, watch Charlie play,
even if I'm not talking to him, I'm just watching him play,
it makes me a lot happier and more fulfilled.
We both talked about this.
Than half scrolling through Twitter or being on my phone and then saying like, okay, I'm watching
him, but I'm doing something else. Like just now, I mean, it wasn't always like this. I think when
he was younger, he wasn't doing as much. Well, you didn't really like him too. He was like five
months old. That's true. It's not true, Charlie, if you ever hear this. I wasn't good at parenting
until he was five or six months old. No, you five or six months old. You were just not into it.
I wasn't into it.
But now that he is talking and can play and stuff like that, it's really fulfilling and fun to watch him play.
And it's a good break from being on your fucking phone.
Yeah.
You know?
Yeah.
But again, you're with him literally all day.
And I'm so lucky that I can be.
But it's also like it's not realistic that I would just be like crazily
attentive to him right from the time he wakes up to the time he naps a lot of hours in a day people
it's a lot of hours that's why it's four o'clock and I'm having a glass of wine I'm having a
cocktail as well we're talking about being bad parents, so crushing it, crushing it, crushing it.
Okay.
Caitlin Reed asks, hi, love the show.
Not sure if you'll address this in a future episode, but think it would be really great to discuss the role and influence TikTok has, arguably more so than Twitter.
It also has the young audience who is likely not on Twitter and is where more and more
eyes and attention are going.
There's also some people who would like to see you focus on platforms
that aren't just Twitter and Facebook, which seem to be the most problematic.
Yes, we're going to do a TikTok show.
You are?
Yeah.
You don't even know what TikTok is.
That's why, again, that's why I'm going to do the show.
So I'm going to talk to someone who knows TikTok.
But this is actually the, like, Twitter is the only platform I talk about
was an admonition early on from Tanya Sominator, who's our chief content officer.
And me.
And you and, you know, digital gurus and you, someone who's on TikTok a lot.
Because I think Twitter, look, the reason that I focus on Twitter a lot is there's a bias because I'm on Twitter all the time, but also the presence of every journalist in the world and every
politician in the world on Twitter gives the platform huge influence relative to its user
base.
So there are a very small percentage of people on TikTok compared to Snapchat, Instagram,
TikTok, right?
But the news, the way that people understand the world
is through the media and the media is always on Twitter, right?
So Twitter has this outside influence.
But I think that especially in younger generations,
so many people are getting their news and information
or just are hanging out on TikTok and Snapchat and all that.
What else?
Young kids are hanging out on TikTok.
There's no way to talk about this without me sounding so fucking old.
You're so old.
I'm like truly mortified.
I think we should cut the line where John said kids are hanging out on TikTok.
No, keep it at it.
YouTube, Reddit.
I want to talk about all those platforms.
So again, recommendations.
Do you have recommendations of people I should talk to?
Well, I had to tell you who Charli D'Amelio was.
The staff talks was like we should have the D'Amelio sisters on.
And I'm like, I don't know what I'm going to even say to them.
I don't really know who they are,
except for you told me who they were.
Yeah.
Well, I think also not even just TikTok,
which seems like pretty outside your wheelhouse,
but I think you could learn.
But I think there is an interesting conversation
for you to have too on this show about Instagram
and like Instagram influencers and trolls and comments, because to me,
as someone who's on Twitter and Instagram,
less so Twitter than you are,
but like everyone's on Twitter less than you are.
Yeah.
I would say that Twitter's like kind of meaner
and Instagram is sometimes nicer.
But then again, but then a lot of people would totally disagree with me because I think I just have sort of nice Instagram followers.
But people who are like Instagram influencer, super famous on Instagram often are like hugely bullied.
And like their DMs are filled with people like telling them to like go jump off a building.
So I don't know.
them to like go jump off a building. So I don't know. I just think there's like an interesting conversation about looking at people's lives through Instagram and thinking there's something
and really there's something else. And what's going on on TikTok? Leo's trying to leave.
What's going on on TikTok? I actually haven't been on TikTok in a while, but.
I will say I remember one night when you were on TikTok and I did not like I hadn't been on much at all.
And then you're like, just watch it for a couple of minutes.
And suddenly I was like glued to it for a half hour.
Yeah, that's great.
So it is very addicting.
I can see that.
I don't know if that's a good thing, but.
Well, I usually I haven't been watching a lot of TikTok because you fall asleep before I do and it makes noise.
So I scroll Instagram because it's quiet.
Cool, cool, cool.
It's good to know.
Offline is brought to you by Helix.
Everybody's unique and Helix knows that.
So they have several different mattress models to choose from.
They have soft, medium, and firm mattresses.
Mattress is great for cooling you down if you sleep hot.
Mattress is great for spinal alignment to prevent morning aches and pains,
which I currently have in my back.
And even a Helix Plus mattress for plus-sized sleepers.
Love it? Yep.
Remember when you were matched with... The Don
Lux. The Don Lux. I love my Don Lux.
Of course, because you are a stomach
sleeper. You bet I am. Sounds like an
escort's name.
Okay. But it's not. It's a mattress
and it's very comfortable. It's awesome.
And you don't need to take our word for it. Helix was
awarded the number one best overall mattress pick of
2020 by GQ and Wired Magazine.
Helix has been recommended by multiple leading chiropractors and doctors of sleep medicine as a go-to solution for improving sleep.
John, this comes out on January 2nd. I bet Lovett's been sleeping off his New Year's.
Oh, yeah. Your big hangover.
You bet. You bet. The Don Lux is really helping me through that.
You bet. The Don Lux is really helping me through that.
Just go to helixsleep.com slash crooked.
Take their two-minute sleep quiz, and they'll match you to a customized mattress that will give you the best sleep of your life.
Helix even offers exclusive discounts for teachers, students, military, and first responders.
They have a 10-year warranty, and you get to try it out for 100 nights risk-free.
They'll even pick it up for you if you don't love it, but you will.
Helix even has a financing option and flexible payment plan,
so a great night's sleep is never far away.
Right now, Helix is offering up to $200 off all mattress orders and two free pillows.
Don't sleep on the pillows.
Oh, do sleep on the pillows.
Hey.
For our listeners at helixsleep.com slash cricket.
Offline is brought to you by Tommy John.
2022 is the year you don't put up with BS.
No more BS.
And that starts with your falling apart, scratchy, stained old sweatpants.
At least they went with sweatpants there.
Give your butt the upgraded desserts and lounge like a champ with Tommy John.
It does feel nice to upgrade your sweats.
And you feel like there's this great period of time when you get a new sweatsuit
or a new pair of sweatpants, and they
haven't yet become kind of stretchy and truly
decrepit. Or permastain. Yeah, and you're
sort of like, you're kind of not put together,
but put together in a great way. It's like you're
lounging, but in style, you know?
When you start the year wearing Tommy John,
you're that much more comfortable, so you can do everything
better. Tommy John's men's underwear
has breathable, lightweight,
moisture-wicking fabric with four times the stretch
of competing brands
and you'll feel
the same level of comfort
layering their luxuriously
soft loungewear right on top.
Tommy John loungewear
is so comfortable
and good looking
you can and will
be wearing them everywhere.
With over 17 million pairs sold,
Tommy John doesn't have customers.
They got fanatics.
They got fanatics.
We all wear Tommy John.
Always. Clothing. Wearing it right now. Loungewear.atics. They got fanatics. We all wear Tommy John. Always.
Clothing.
Wearing it right now.
Loungewear.
Underwear.
All the time.
We love it.
We have for a long time.
It's very comfortable.
Very, very comfortable.
Plus, whatever you choose from new underwear to loungewear, it's all backed by Tommy John's
best pair you'll ever wear or it's free guarantee.
Get 20% off your first order right now at TommyJohn.com slash Crooked.
Go to TommyJohn.com slash Crooked for 20% off.
TommyJohn.com slash Crooked.
See site for details.
All right.
Maricia0603 asks,
Who is the white whale that you've been wanting to interview but haven't been able to get?
And Nicholas Backhand, Maggie Jerome, and Hillarymit all wrote to suggest you talk to Bo Burnham
about his recent special.
Yeah, obviously.
Bo Burnham was one of the first people that I wanted to interview for Offline, and we
couldn't get him.
I know he doesn't do a lot of interviews, but if anyone knows how to get to Bo Burnham,
please let him know.
I want to talk to him for Offline.
We both watched that special sort of on a whim.
I knew about it.
You did?
Yeah.
And I said, this is supposed to be really good.
I think you'll like it. And you're like, oh, I don't I knew about it. You did. Yeah. And I said, this is supposed to be really good. I think you'll like it.
And you're like,
oh,
I don't know.
And we were blown away.
Yeah.
As everyone was.
Right.
But I don't know.
I just,
I thought it was so,
so good.
I really want to talk to Bo Burnham.
Anyone else?
Obviously Taylor Swift.
I thought you were going to say me.
But you're here.
I know.
Taylor Swift,
Taylor Swift,
we're going to talk to Lizzo
because she uses social, like her use of social media.
Lil Nas X is someone in the entertainment field.
In the political field, Prince Harry or Meghan Markle or both.
Okay.
Because they've dealt a lot with social, like Prince Harry talks about these issues.
I want to talk to my old boss, Barack Obama.
He has thought about these issues for a long time.
AOC.
I would love to do an episode with her about how Democrats and politicians use social media, which is not great.
So those are some of my.
Yeah.
Those are some of the big.
You asked white whales.
Those are some of the big ones.
I'd like to join any of those.
Yeah.
Cool.
Terry Lynn 92 asks, how do you turn off work to focus on family and how do you keep
from being angry in today's political climate? And Politigal asks, do you both talk politics
together? How do you do it? Is there a healthy way? Let's tackle that first one. Okay. I was
going to say, this feels like it should be for like a marriage counselor, not for a podcast.
How do you turn off work to focus on family and how do you keep from being angry?
Those are two different questions.
Yeah.
How do you turn off work to focus on family?
Well, for me, I am not working.
So my focus is on my family.
So your turn.
How do I turn it off?
You don't.
I don't.
I don't turn it off.
I mean, I turn off like work, work, but I'm sort of just like if things are going on in
the world, I focus on I'm looking at them.
Yeah.
Yesterday I was like yesterday when we're recording this, I should have said we're recording
this on December 20th.
You're hearing this on January 2nd, I believe.
And yesterday was the day that Joe Manchin blew up the Build Back Better deal.
And it was one of those moments that you've experienced many times where, like, we were all sitting around and you probably thought that I was.
I thought you were mad at me.
I thought you thought I was participating in the family conversation.
And instead I was just like quietly looking at my phone.
It's not like you're ever hiding it.
I always know when, like, it's interesting because you don't get into as many Twitter fights anymore,
which I appreciate.
But I used to know that something was going on
if you were like just suddenly in like a foul mood
and like I had done nothing wrong.
And I would be like, okay, something is off.
And so I'd look at Twitter and it'd be like 12 tweets deep
and like you're fighting with someone.
And it's like, I think you've done a better job at like separating that kind of behavior.
I agree.
But I can always tell when you're like deep in breaking news.
And I think I think credit to me.
I left I let you off the hook a lot.
You do. Oh, my God.
Because like your job is one that you have to be up on the news and it's like happening constantly.
that you have to be up on the news and it's like happening constantly um but i do think what might be more helpful that i should do more is i try not to i try to have it both ways by like saying
okay i'm gonna read on my phone the breaking news but i'm also here being present yeah i'd almost
read i should just like come into the office yeah and like look on my computer and do some reading
for 15 minutes and then leave everything here and then come back and just like separate
it a little more.
Part of it is a function of the pandemic too, which is like, I do think there are times
during the week it's easier where if I'm working all day and I'm at the office and then I come
home at five or six o'clock, then like the period where I come home at five between when
Charlie goes to bed at seven, we try to like eat, give Charlie a bath, do all that kind of stuff.
And then I try to like.
Put him in front of Blippi.
Kidding.
But like have two hours where I'm not on my phone.
Unless there's horrible breaking news.
Right.
Or great breaking news.
Or great breaking news, which we don't get to.
We have another part of this question.
How do you keep from being angry in today's political climate?
I mean, I don't think you can keep yourself from being angry.
I think you can keep yourself or you can try to avoid letting the anger consume you or to like always be expressing the anger or to wallow in the anger.
Like I was very angry yesterday at Man, like everyone else was. And I was
disappointed, but at some point you just to be like, what, what purpose does the anger serve me?
Right. Like, why am I depriving myself of joy over something that I don't know if I can control
and what I can control, I should focus on trying to control and changing. And this is much easier said than done, but it's what I've tried to think about for at
least the last year or so.
And then do you both talk politics together?
How do you do it?
Is there a healthy way?
We do talk a lot of politics.
Yeah.
I mean, our whole relationship, we've talked politics.
I think that's part of the reason we're married is because we had a lot of similar political
views and kind of, I was going to say the same level of interest in politics,
but you're-
You're a hero.
I didn't even realize when I married you
the addiction to politics you have,
but I'm interested in politics
and I come from a political family.
So, I mean, we definitely do it in a healthy way, I think,
just because it's the nature of your work.
It's the work that I was doing when I left to be with Charlie Moore.
I just think I can be very, we can be the most honest with each other about politics and the problems we have than with anything else.
This is like we've talked about this on the show a lot, is that part of the challenge with social media is you are public all
the time and everything that you say. And in real life, what you're doing when you're thinking about
politics or almost any subject is you're sort of working out your opinion and working out your
thoughts in real time. And you really can't do that on social media much because sometimes you
make mistakes or say stupid things or say wrong things or get angry like we were just saying. And I think when I'm really pissed about some conversation that's
going on or some debate that's happening in politics, it usually makes me feel much better
to come home and at dinner be like, oh, you wouldn't believe what was happening on Twitter.
You wouldn't believe this conversation or this debate. And I talk to you about it and we either
you say I'm right or I'm wrong. And it's it feels better right and i actually think i'm even though you're a real character and piece of work when it comes
to this stuff um i feel lucky that like i can go all day without being on twitter and like i
actually really do these days like i just don't want to be on it um and then but i always feel
like if something is happening in the world you're to tell me at dinner or you'll like text me some tweet and I'll look at it.
So I appreciate you keeping me informed on things.
Anytime. Anytime.
It's more fun than Twitter.
OK. At LJ Summer 38 asks, has doing offline changed your views about social media?
How does it change how you will approach the show?
Has doing offline changed your views about social media?
How does it change how you will approach the show?
So I think I used to have black and white views of social media, which is like use it or don't, constant consumption or delete my apps, which is just not realistic for me.
I think that these conversations have pushed me to find ways to use social media better and to also
gradually change my behavior instead of trying anything drastic. So you were just saying this,
like I'm still on Twitter all the time. I was going to say a lot, all the time. Let's just
say all the time. Let's be honest. But I'm doing a lot more reading of Twitter than tweeting,
actually. Yeah. You've registered that I'm not in Twitter fights anymore.
The Twitter fights actually have gone away maybe like a year ago. Yeah, I know, I know.
Twitter fights I've stopped a while ago.
I'm also like, I'm just not going to reply to people who come at me with like
an angry or accusatory or nasty tone.
Yeah.
Like I just, I don't feel like I need to give you a reply.
I don't feel like I owe you a reply if you're going to come at that.
Because again, I try to think if I walked up to someone on the street and someone started screaming at
me about something, I wouldn't respond well. Which is funny because you, I, whenever I see
mean tweets about you, I always want to reply and I like write things and you're like, don't send
that. Don't do that. But like, I'm much more confrontational than you are. Yeah, no, I don't.
I just don't. Like I would do that to someone in real just don't like i would do that to someone in real life yeah you would be like someone in life i just and i want to stand up for you
i but it's like it's just not i've done it so much in the past that every there's never
a twitter exchange with a random twitter person or a twitter person that i know
a person on twitter that i know it's a twitter person your twitter person
oh my god your people your brain is broken people, I know they're on Twitter,
that has left me feeling better.
Even if I feel like I've gotten the better of them
in an argument,
it has never, ever once made me feel better,
nor do I think it has actually pushed
some argument or debate forward.
So I don't think it's a good use of my time.
And I've gotten a lot better at muting a ton of people.
I don't, I try not to block either because once you block, they know you block.
And then some people, when you block them, then they take a picture of you blocking them.
And they're like, oh, look who blocked.
It's like not worth it.
You mute them.
They don't know you mute them.
And they're just gone.
It's a good idea.
And the other thing, I'm trying to think when I do tweet, like what am I putting out into the world right now?
Like is my tweet
giving people useful information? Like, is it amplifying a point or an argument I think is
smart? Is it drawing attention to something that I think is important? Is it maybe like trying to
make people laugh at a time when people are like stressed and anxious? Like,
is it something funny I'm retweeting? But I saw this, this tweet
today from Mary Mnookian, who's a friend of the pod and she's a state rep in Michigan. And she
said, and she tweeted, it takes literally no extra energy to not be a complete and total jerk on this
site or in real life, especially to folks who've gone through emotional trauma. Also given that
people often go through trauma silently, maybe just don't be a jerk to anyone
yeah it's just like something i've been thinking of lately as we talk about the pandemic and mental
health challenges and what everyone's going through right now like people are just having
a tough time and it's like do i even if i'm angry about something like the mansion thing yesterday
i actually didn't tweet about joe mansion yesterday partly because i'm like what is one
more tweet calling jo Manchin a fucking asshole
gonna do to the conversation?
Is it gonna change Joe Manchin's mind?
Is it gonna move us closer to getting
the piece of legislation passed that we want?
I don't think so.
So like, maybe I don't have anything to say and that's okay.
I'm proud of you for realizing that.
Yeah, it'll last until like tomorrow.
Yeah, definitely.
Oh my God, so many phone questions.
Questions about your phone use.
Alex asks, how often does John actually spend on his phone?
Kyle asks, how often do you tell John to put the phone down and focus,
whether it's about Charlie, Leo, cooking, being present, et cetera.
And Daniel asks, does John take his phone on the toilet with him?
What else are you going to take on the toilet with you?
Yeah, I mean, to be fair. Okay, wait, I will say you take your phone on the toilet with him. What else are you going to take on the toilet with you? Yeah, I mean, to be fair.
Okay, wait.
I will say you take your phone on the toilet with you like normal people do when they need to use the bathroom.
However, you also like pee with your phone in your hand.
Okay.
Like, it's insane.
Probably not healthy.
It's insane.
Like you are peeing and scrolling Twitter.
It's only like a 30-second activity.
No, no.
It's like, put your phone down.
First of all, that's gross.
Second of all, like, you're not going to spend a lot of time in there.
Yeah, okay.
So, yeah.
But do I tell you to put your phone down and focus?
I really don't because, I mean, I think it's a combination of
the fact that like, I never know if I basically do know what you're doing on your phone is work.
Like you're not just like totally ignoring our family because you're like scrolling like hot
girls on Instagram. Like if that was the case, I would be like, what are you doing? But you are like doing work.
And I mean, I don't know.
I like that just feels like a tricky bone to pick.
And you're like self-aware enough to know like,
okay, we're having dinner.
I'm gonna put my phone down.
We're both self-aware enough to sort of like,
we've known each other long enough now
that we can kind of read each other.
And I can kind of tell if I'm like on the phone
and we're like, okay, stop, stop at the phone.
Right.
There's some nights where like we've both had long days
and like we just want like some phone time, you know?
Yeah.
And that's fine.
And we're eating like some gross Postmates.
But when we like go out to a nice dinner
or I made dinner, it's the two of us
or it's the three of us with Charlie.
Like we're not having our phones out.
That's right.
Good.
Good for us.
KGP asks both of us, what is your average weekly screen time uh I just checked before the episode six hours and 15
minutes a week on your phone average yeah do you have yours um no because you know why
I turned it off when Charlie was little because I have a valid reason.
I have a valid reason.
No,
it's not because,
um,
I have the baby monitor on my phone and so I keep it open like all the time.
And so I sleep with it on.
So Nanit is your app.
The Nanit is on in the middle of the night.
So like it truly would,
it was saying like,
fucking technicality.
Well,
sorry.
Maybe you could turn the monitor on.
All right, I have some, I have some for Emily.
Swisky asks, how many times a day do you go on Instagram?
I was trying to figure that out.
It totally depends on the day
because some days I'm like busy driving
and like I'm not Instagramming and driving.
But then other days when like I'm just chilling,
I'm probably go on like five times a day.
But I have an alert on Instagram
where if I am on Instagram for longer than an hour
and 15 minutes.
You have that too?
You have that alert?
Yeah, you don't?
No.
Hamby told me about this during our episode.
For Instagram?
No, he has one for Twitter.
He has one for 15 minutes on Twitter.
And I was like, I-
15 total?
Yeah.
Hamby claims that he's on only on Twitter. That's such bullshit. He claims he's only on for
15 minutes a day. No, I set an hour and 15 minutes. I don't know how I determined that,
but usually at night I get in bed and I'm scrolling and it's like, you've been on Instagram
for an hour and 15 minutes. Is it time to close Instagram? And I'm like, yeah, I guess.
And you can override it. That's important. Yeah. You can override it.
All right. Maybe I'll do this for Twitter.
Yeah, you should.
Okay. That's good. S Danver asks, how do you feel about people tagging you, replying to you on
social? Like, like in like pod stuff's happening and then someone's like, oh, Emily Favreau.
Oh, I appreciate it.
I think it's fun.
Yeah. And then I like know that something funny happened today. And like, I got an alert.
Usually it's gives you an opportunity to make fun of one of us.
Most of us.
I mean, that's what social media is for, right?
Being social.
I enjoy adult interaction, which is limited for me these days.
Offline is brought to you by Outer Known.
If we could pick one person to have better style this week, who would it be?
Who would it be, boys?
I'd say Kyrsten Sinema.
Oh, you're going to poke that horn in his nest.
Because I'll tell you, I think what never goes out of style?
What?
Democracy.
Outer Known is offering men's and women's clothing where style meets sustainability.
Their mission is to provide great clothes that don't harm the environment.
Sustainability is not something that they take lightly. It wear it all the time. You know what's going to look weird in history? They have timeless style made to last for multiple years. We all have Ardenone clothes.
I love mine.
I wear it all the time.
You know what's going to look weird in history?
The fact that sneakers had a men's version and a women's version,
and they're identical except women's sizes are a size and a half or two sizes smaller.
Yeah, it doesn't make any sense.
It's just not a universal sizing.
Yeah, just whatever.
Anyway, Ardenone doesn't have to worry about that don't know it was founded by pro surfer and 11 time
world champion Kelly Slater best selling
items you got the blanket shirt all time
best seller super comfortable you're gonna want one in your
closet you might maybe a couple
a lot of colors to choose from for men and women
jumpsuits easy to get dressed in flattering
fit perfectly
sorry
take a second?
Swallow your drink.
Jumpsuits. Easy to get dressed in, flattering, fit perfectly,
range of style. It was a burp. It wasn't the swallowing.
It was a burp. Burp payment. We all could hear.
Guys, I couldn't control that.
What do you want me to do? Just take a beat.
Go to OuterKnown.com today
and enter the code CRICK at a checkout and you'll get 25%
off your full price order. That's OuterKnown.com
O-U-T-E-R-K-E-N-O
W-N.com
and remember to use the code CRICKET at checkout
for 25% off. Can we get John's
burpist in the studio? Check them out today.
Outernone.com and don't forget promo
code CRICKET for 25%
off.
Offline is
brought to you by Magic Spoon.
It's the new year and Magic Spoon is perfect for meeting your goals,
whether it's eating healthier or saving more time in your morning routine.
Let your audience know how Magic Spoon fits into their New Year's resolutions as well as your own.
I mean, my New Year's resolution is to continue what I've been doing for the last several years,
which is eat Magic Spoon all the time for breakfast and sometimes as a snack,
sometimes at night, all day long.
Magic Spoon. Yeah, like it's the antidote at the beginning of Temple of Doom. the time for breakfast and sometimes as a snack sometimes at night all day long magic spoon yeah
like it's the um the antidote at the beginning of temple of doom you know yeah you want to get it
get it in consume it we're all trying to eat better but healthy breakfast doesn't have to be
boring magic spoon has the amazing flavors you love but without all the bad stuff and it's amazing
as a midnight snack right before bed it's the antidote to the poison you just drank.
That's it.
Not going to do the accent. Zero grams of
sugar. That accent stays where it belongs in 1983.
That's right. Zero grams of sugar,
13 to 14 grams of protein, and only four
net grams of carbs in each serving. Only 140
calories a serving. Keto-friendly, gluten-free,
grain-free, soy-free, low-carb.
Build your own box. Available flavors
to do that, to build your own box. Available flavors to do that,
to build your own custom bundle.
Cocoa, fruity, frosted, peanut butter, blueberry, cinnamon,
cookies and cream, and maple waffle.
Try them all.
Get the frosted's the best.
Frosted is the best.
I would also very much recommend cocoa and peanut butter and cookies and cream.
It's hard to pick, you know?
Go to magicspoon.com slash cricket
to grab a custom bundle of cereal
and start your new year off right.
Be sure to use our promo code CROOKED at checkout to save $5 off your order.
And Magic Spoon is so confident in their product, it's backed with 100% happiness guarantee.
So if you don't like it for any reason, they'll refund your money.
No questions asked.
Remember, get your next delicious bowl of guilt-free cereal at magicspoon.com slash cricket and use the code crooked to save $5 off.
Thank you, Magic Spoon, for sponsoring this episode.
$5 off. Thank you, Magic Spoon, for sponsoring this episode.
Two big categories of questions remaining for you about the two most important people in your life after your family, John Lovett and Taylor Swift. Oh, man. Should we start with Lovett? Yes. Okay,
speed round for Lovett. T. Curl asks, favorite John Lovett story?
Hmm.
That's tough.
That's impossible.
I've known John Lovett for 10 years.
I don't have a favorite story,
but I have a favorite time of John Lovett in my life.
And I think that's right when we moved to LA.
John Lovett moved in across the street from us.
And that's like kind of the time when Lovett and I got really close.
Like we liked each other before,
but that's when we would like really got into it.
And it's also when you guys were launching Crooked Media from my home at the time.
And like Lovett used to like come over for dinner and like would end up like
watching TV and having a drink.
And then he'd like fall asleep on our couch in the living room
and he'd sleep over.
And then in the morning he'd send me a text like,
slept at the office again.
I forgot about that.
And things were just too close at that time.
A lot of people don't know, you think we're all close.
When we first moved to LA, Emily and I
rented a house across the street from my brother Andy and now sister-in-law Molly.
They were there first.
We rented the house across the street.
She was like, why are all these people moving onto my street?
Lovett rented the house literally right next to them.
Our other friend Josh from growing up rented the house two doors down from us.
And then when we started the business and Tommy was living in San Francisco, Tommy briefly lived in the guest house behind us.
So we were all in the same room. Tommy also never admits that he did that. He's always like,
oh, I wasn't actually living there. I'm like, Tommy, you had Amazon send shampoo to my house.
That's true. He did. Yeah.
Totally. But Levitt would just totally act like, one time he texted me, he was like,
okay, I'm going to drop Pundit off in a few hours. And i was like what what are you talking about because like the guy you guys were going on
a trip um and he was like yeah you're gonna watch pundit right and i was like i mean no you didn't
ask me at all he's like i could have sworn i asked you and i'm like no definitely not and he's like
well will you watch pundit i'm like what um so then I watched Pundit for two days. One time Pundit just showed up on our doorstep.
Yeah, that was tough.
Yeah, Pundit ran away from Lovett.
Pundit crossed the street.
But wanted to see Leo and was scratching at the door.
It was really cute, but also scary.
And Megan Oyer asks,
what's it like going shopping with Lovett?
This is multiple questions like this.
Honestly, I love shopping with Lovett.
It's one of my favorite activities with him.
You have to account for the fact that he's going to be
25 minutes later than he says we should go shopping,
which is actually works for me because I kind of
advanced the shopping trip and I pull selects for him.
And then he says, yes, no, yes, no.
He's super efficient though.
He's a good shopper.
He likes to take fashion risks, which I appreciate.
Unlike your husband. Yeah, he's not like only getting like, oh, that green He's a good shopper. He likes to take fashion risks, which I appreciate. Unlike your husband.
Yeah, he's not like only getting like,
oh, that green sweater is a little too green.
So yeah, it's fun.
And then like last time we went shopping last week,
we got a Wetzel's pretzel and Diet Cokes
and it was just like a great time.
Yeah, you guys have fun.
Kat Pennies asks, who knows more of Lovett's secrets?
I think you do.
I think I do. think i do and i will
say though love it doesn't have a ton of secrets he's sort of an open book no that's not true okay
well that's then you definitely know more of the secrets that i do love it is good at um keeping
secrets that's what i was thinking yeah because love it always says that he thinks so little about
the secret that he hears.
He kind of just forgets about it.
Yeah, that's true.
Like he's not, he doesn't like, he's not a gossiper.
That's actually not true.
Gossip?
I think he's not a gossiper.
He's not a gossip.
I think he's like pretty gossipy.
Okay.
I think we have truly different relationships.
Yeah, I think this is what I'm learning here in this episode.
And I think he does tell you secrets.
Like if you're in the office together, he'll confide in you. Yeah. yeah but for me he'll like call me with a secret you know what i mean and he would never
call you it's weird that you talk well i don't talk on the phone to anyone it's weird that you
talk on the phone to love it a lot um magnificent asks did john love it ever return that serving
platter actually two weeks ago when levin and ronan came over to play with charlie love it brought
the platter and i like had totally forgotten about it.
It was like a white platter from like Target.
And he was like, I was like, oh my God, thanks.
I forgot about this.
And he was like, well, then it's like a gift
because you forgot you had it.
So it's a gift from me.
But he did not return the mixing bowl that I lent him,
which he then used for Halloween candy
and got stolen off his front porch.
And then he tweeted, my big pink bowl got stolen on Halloween. And I was like, that's my pink bowl. Not yours at all. All right.
Taylor Swift speed round. Nat Van Dogg, least favorite Taylor Swift ex-boyfriend. Not Jake
Gyllenhaal because he gave us the best song of all time. That's a good argument. And you can't
discount that love. That's a real experience probably someone like boring like
like taylor lautner or something okay you don't even know who that is i do know taylor launer
here's the uh the movies with the vampires good work sorry uh go to swift album this is a tough
one i think for me it's red especially right now with the I was gonna say it's hard Taylor's version it's sort of like before that it was red yeah me I might
say the same for me too but now it's the now it's Taylor's version yeah Joni
Plunkett please rank Taylor track fives okay this is the only question I
prepared for I also prepared for this number go first coming in number one obviously all too well coming in number two
delicate my god so far you have mine three dear john yeah okay that's where we diverge
for my tears ricochet five the archer mine is all too well delicate tolerate it my tears ricochet
dear john interesting wow a lot more overlap than i thought
yeah pretty good uh and then the primary demon asks which release do you think is next um i think
1989 that's my guess there's lots of easter eggs that point to 1989 here's where i can't figure it
out is 1989 the chronologically, did it come
right after Red or where does Reputation
come? It goes 1989
then Reputation. Oh, so I think 1989 too.
Yeah. 1989 is just a better
album than Reputation too. It is.
I don't know. We could get into that.
Finally, a few more for both of us.
CMR95
asks, what do you do to stay connected
after the baby?
It's been hard to go on dates during a pandemic
Yes
Yes it has CMR95
We try to go on dates once in a while
Yeah
We're killing it
Well it's weird to say how do you stay connected
Because I feel like
We've been around each other non-stop
For the last two years.
Oh, that feels kind of rude.
I just feel very connected to you.
Yeah, no, I think it's more about, like,
putting our phones down.
Like, we're lucky, like, your parents live 30 minutes away.
Like, we've been able to, like,
they've come and stayed at our house with Char.
We've gone away for a weekend.
Um,
but I don't know.
I mean,
we left our house on a Saturday this week when your parents came and babysat.
And we were like,
we walked like right down the street from our house and got like coffees.
And we were like,
this is cool.
It feels like we're dating.
It was,
it was two o'clock on a Saturday afternoon.
We're like,
look at this date.
We're just walking down Larchmont.
This is fun.
Oh my god, that's so lame.
Keylofen2 asked, did Charlie say mama or dada first?
I think he said mama.
And then he stopped.
And then he started only saying dada.
Yeah.
He also says daddy.
Yeah, he only says daddy.
Now he says everything. Yeah yeah big talker now uh and silversmith asks emily who is leo's favorite human john how amazing is emily oh that's so nice
um leo's favorite human is me is me he likes me a lot no i agree but he i actually think that
since charlie was born,
he knows that you are like more attached to Charlie.
This is just all.
And he's like,
he's like sleeps over by my side of the bed.
Only cause you pull him over there.
He's with me.
He,
you don't take him to the office anymore.
He's with me all day.
Well,
we're sort of,
you know,
in and out of the office.
I know,
but I,
Leo, like Leo wants to be loved by me.
He wants to play with you.
Yeah, that's very true.
Sort of the same as Charlie.
Yeah, that is also true.
Yeah, I'm a big player.
How amazing is Emily?
Look, Emily saw this question and was like, don't say anything lame here.
So I guess I'm not going to say anything lame.
I don't like public affection.
I don't want to do this on the podcast. I will say this. I'll say this. I think that two years in a pandemic with a child
is probably as good a test as any for a marriage. And I think that knowing that both of us are anxious people, I will say that you for sure have been the steady
one for the last two years and you have made our lives easier and better and you have made us laugh
and you have like been a rock during this whole thing. You have. And I like that's something that
I've I mean, I find you amazing for 10 years as long as we've known each other, but for the last two years,
that's what I've appreciated most. Well, it's the, it's the cologne.
You should cut that. I'm joking, but mental health matters.
Thank you for doing this. This wasn't so bad, was it? No. no i mean i don't want to do it again but you
want to go on love it or leave it and do the rant well maybe you want to talk to you want to talk
about foreign policy with tommy and ben no that sounds a lot of options for other cricket podcasts
to do um no i'm launching my own you heard it here first perfect what's it going to be about
um it's gonna be about how many times charlie has pooped today
you go and keep it with ir. You have a lot of options.
I could talk to Alyssa and Aaron, my girls.
Yeah, I was going to say, this is just the beginning of your crooked career.
Happy New Year, everyone.
Thank you for listening to Offline.
And I should say to everyone, too, I know we're just going to do eight episodes of Offline,
but we're just going to keep going.
So there'll be more Offline in the new year.
Thrilled to hear that.
Thanks, Emily.
I love you.
Love you too.
Offline is a Crooked Media production.
It's written and hosted by me, Jon Favreau.
It's produced by Andy Gardner Bernstein and Austin Fisher.
Andrew Chadwick
is our audio editor. Kyle Seglin and Charlotte Landis sound engineered the show. Jordan Katz
and Kenny Siegel take care of our music. Thanks to Tanya Sominator, Michael Martinez, Ari Schwartz,
Madison Holman, and Sandy Gerard for production support. And to our digital team, Elijah Cohn,
Nar Melkonian, and Amelia Montooth, who film and share our episodes as videos every week.