Quick Question with Soren and Daniel - Dude Day at Chili’s
Episode Date: July 31, 2022Uncle Daniel! And we break our record for longest intro ever. And as always big thanks to our sponsors. Get $15 off your first month’s subscription plus free shipping: Nutrafol.com/men promo... code qq. Get 25% off your first order of $40 or more at NextEvo.com with promo code qq. Shop with confidence — get Honey for FREE at JoinHoney.com/qq
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I've got a quick, quick question for you, alright?
I wanna hear your thoughts, wanna know what's on your mind
I've got a quick, quick question for you, alright?
The answer's not important, I'm just glad that we could talk tonight
So what's your favourite? Who did you get?
What do I be? What's it up with?
What do we talk about? I saw a movie, Daniel O'Brien When will I be remembered? Was it afterwards? Where did all that go to eat? Oh, forget it.
Saw a movie, Daniel O'Brien.
Two best friends and comedy writers.
If there's an answer, they're gonna find it.
I think you'll have a great time here.
I think you'll have a great time here week tonight with john oliver author of how to fight presidents and guy who after 36 years still cannot properly time a haircut daniel o'brien joined as always by my co-host mr soren buoy
soren say howdy howdy folks i'm soren buoy from the square state of colorado
uh dan what do you mean you can't time a haircut you mean you you end up getting too long and you're like i should have done this weeks ago yeah i know roughly um like uh once a month is when i want to get a haircut
and then i forget when it comes up to that time and then i try to schedule it with my barber
and this has happened two months in a row where he was uh busy the entire week that I wanted to get it cut.
And so I had to schedule it the next week.
And inevitably, there is a period of my time where for non-sun and non-fitness reasons,
I'm just wearing a hat all day.
If I'm on Zoom calls at work,
and it's just like the hair is too long for me to do anything reasonable with it.
So it just becomes hat time.
Thanks to Nutrafol for supporting Quick Question. Nutrafol is physician formulated to be 100%
drug-free. They use natural medical grade botanicals in consistently effective dosages.
Nutrafol can help you grow thicker, healthier hair, and you can support our show by going to
Nutrafol.com and entering the promo
code QQ to save $15 off your first month subscription. We want to thank NextEvo for
supporting Quick Question, new great sponsor alert. NextEvo all natural products are backed
by more scientific studies than any other CBD brand. Try NextEvo Naturals capsules, gummies,
yum, mints, and topical creams, clinically proven to be better absorbed by your body.
Get 25% off your first order of $40 or more at NextEvo.com with promo code QQ.
Today's episode is sponsored by PayPal Honey.
That's right.
It has a new name, ladies and gentlemen.
It's PayPal Honey.
These days, it feels like online shopping is the only shopping we really do.
That's where Honey comes in.
Honey is the free shopping tool that scours the internet for promo codes and applies the best one it finds to your cart.
Get Honey for free at joinhoney.com slash QQ.
There are capitalist underpinnings that I don't understand where like suddenly there's a shortage of stuff or all of a sudden this one business has a ton of customers and they don't get it.
Like that happens with home improvement right now where you just can't
get somebody to come to your house but it feels to me that the same thing has happened with barbers
lately where like i just can't get an appointment yeah um like everyone suddenly is all getting
their hair cut at once and so i i did a new thing which is i now have two barbers oh so if one is full up the other one still i have
somebody waiting in the wings who still knows what i want and like how to cut my hair i actually
think my solution needs to be uh schedule it well in advance like when i get my next haircut
i should schedule like hey, a month from today,
let's just put another one on the books around the same time.
Yeah.
But it's, I mean, you don't know what your day, how your day is going to shake out a
month in advance.
Do you?
That's true.
I don't.
And you don't want to build, you don't have to like wake up one morning and be like, Oh,
I got to build my day around this haircut.
You did a haircut should be your finished work early.
And you're like, ah, I got a little bit of extra time.
I should go get a quick number three on the sides.
Yeah.
And it's, it's, it's generally for me like, oh, it's, uh, it's starting to get a little
bit long here.
I'm like one or two days away from this looking bad.
I better schedule it now.
And they're like, hey, we can't see you for nine days.
Oh, oh no.
What a completely unpredictable situation.
There's a very funny thing that happened in uh we use a website called back then for all of our photos of our children um it's just storage it's a
photo share uh sharing and also storage and if you look back you're like my children love to
look back at pictures of themselves and like see the story of their own lives for obvious reasons.
And it's real funny when they get to the pandemic pictures because I was cutting Ronan's hair for so long.
And I even cut Gilly's at one point.
And the haircuts are so bad throughout the pandemic of my children that I'm like, oh, man, I really made you suffer through that.
My son gave Collen a picture of himself
for mother's day and i'm like oh i fucked this picture up for sure like this is a picture that
will live on her on her desk forever and it's like every time i see it i'm like nah we should
have done better we should have gotten a better haircut because this is not it's not doing it
and i get kind of like a bowl cut for a little while unintentionally i just don't know how to cut hair and at the end i was like and now we have
a straight across the front bowl cut basically i do think that's one of those things that will be
very funny eventually but i i also acknowledge that we're not there yet like when we it's still
fresh the first family christmas together where we all took a
picture and we were wearing masks at the time i was like this is going to be such a funny time
capsule and i looked at it recently and i'm like nope very upsetting deeply traumatic i remember
being very sad that day this sucks maybe maybe five more years i don't know there when my daughter
was born i had her in the hospital my wife was asleep and I
was just really coddling her because she was crying and I walked past the bathroom mirror of
the little room that we're staying in and I see that I we had to wear masks the entire time this
was April of 2020 so like the height of the terror where no one really knew what this thing was yet
and no one knew if we were allowed to go outside or what so I'm wearing a mask and holding my daughter and i walk past amir and i'm like oh i should
capture this moment she will be very interested to hear about the pandemic and like what that
was like like maybe she'll see this picture someday be like why were you wearing a mask
and i'd be like ah let me tell you about this time and you know at this point in time i'm thinking
no that will just be her life forever.
The mask will not seem strange.
The mask will be like, yeah, of course you weren't wearing a mask.
You were in a hospital with a bunch of other people indoors.
Yeah.
Do you remember at the start of the pandemic when I was wearing suits every day as a bit?
Yes.
I don't feel great about that.
Whenever my phone is like, hey, here's just like a we made a
slideshow of portraits and i see me wearing a suit i'm like oh man somebody somebody helped that guy
whoa we were all brand new it was like being a teenager again you're like i gotta negotiate
this world i gotta figure out how i fit in i definitely thought at the time like
wouldn't it be funny if i was wearing a suit during the pandemic walking my dogs i need to
be outside every day to walk my dog so wouldn't it be funny the guy who puts on a suit and maybe
even a little inspiring and i was like no man you should have just realized pretty early on
this isn't about you get in some fucking sweats get real comfortable real quick i i run past a house every day that at
the beginning of the pandemic they put out their christmas decorations with matt so like they had
an inflatable bear but it's clearly like a santa type bear and they put a little mask on it just
as like a hey we're all in this together kind of thing. Let's just here, look at something nice.
Look at something cute.
The bear is still out.
At this point, I'm like, you're going to have to
pull the trigger and just take that thing down.
I know it's going to be sad for you for a moment.
There might be somebody driving by occasionally and be like,
oh man, they took the bear down.
It's too long. The bear is now sun-soaked.
It's already in certain areas of it
that are getting really pale.
Inflatable, you said?
Yeah.
This has got to be cosper-hootive too.
What are you using to inflate that thing?
It's electricity.
Some kind of motor?
Yeah.
I don't know.
It's got a little fan attached to it.
They have the lights out.
They don't turn the lights on anymore,
but they have the bear out and it was
nice at first because you know it was it was the beginning of the season and it was like weird time
for christmas decorations but everyone was like i get what you're doing and then christmas rolled
around and they didn't have to do anything and it was like oh all right you made it and then
christmas rolled around again at this point it's the middle of summer again and i'm like you just just pull it
i mean pull the plug take it off life support well soren is interesting that we were talking about
uh kids back there uh quick question well let me just look in the rearview mirror oh yeah there it
is there's us talking about kids okay go ahead yeah uh would you let me babysit your kids yeah of course oh really oh in a heartbeat
yeah oh that's very nice to hear i uh did my my first adventure in what i would describe as
babysitting like i've hung out solo with um my nephew but he's 10 and we've just had like
dude days essentially at the beach or at chili's or whatever and i think
i've i've sort of been around the older nieces and nephews when uh my oldest brother and sister-in-law
when they were off at like parent-teacher conferences where i'm mostly just like sitting
around for a couple hours while fortnight is being played and coloring is happening and
studying is happening yeah the parents have scheduled what the kids will be doing
and you just show up to monitor your it's a study hall yeah um but a couple of weeks ago my uh other
brother and sister-in-law were in a bind and they had a wedding to go to and they're like hey if
you're free or interested uh will you watch the five and two-year-old and like give them dinner
and put them to sleep yes it was that kind of thing
that uh i said yes immediately to and hanging up the phone i was like they wouldn't ask me to do
that if they didn't think i could so even if i maybe don't think i can i i gotta just ignore
that voice and listen to their trust uh and it was great. It went super well. It was very fun.
It was really just,
I think I'm,
I was,
it was easy because
there's plenty of stuff to do
and also it's very exciting
for them for me to be there.
This is a new thing
and they know it's a new thing
and they're not like surprised by it.
It's like,
oh, you're going to have a fun night with uncle.
And I brought
a new game. I brought, they didn't have Don't Break with uncle and uh i brought uh a new game i brought they didn't
have don't break the ice so i brought that and that was a hit do they still make that game or
do you have it from like the 90s oh they still make that game and i have a 90s version of uh
don't wake daddy that that came with my beach house that is fully broken but they still like
it anyway okay we played don't
break the ice and they were like can uncle can you set this up again i was like buddy i will set this
up 10 000 fucking times tonight where if this is gonna keep you occupied until it's bedtime then
yeah there's no shortage of how many times i'm gonna set this game up now did the two-year-old
ruin the game no not at not at all. Great.
Yeah.
They're both, they're really good with each other.
We played games and had a big dance party.
They really like picking songs with the Amazon robot that lives in all of our houses, the smart speakers.
That's a fun game for them to just request songs and then dance and do fun tricks.
And before we know it, it's time to eat.
Before we know it, it's time to wind down with Sesame Street, which still fucking rules so hard.
And then it was story time for bedtime.
And this was, my brother prepped me for this.
It was like the two-year-old, she is going to, you're going to read a couple of books to two of them.
Then go off solo with the two-year-old. And then go back to the five-year-old, she is going to, you're going to read a couple of books to two of them, then go off solo with the two-year-old,
and then go back to the five-year-old and read books to him.
And the two-year-old is going to want to negotiate.
And you just read however many you want.
Read two books.
Say you're going to do two books.
And I was prepared.
Like, they do this every night.
I know what I'm getting into.
And I was like, all right, it's time for a story.
And she pulls out five books.
I said, let's do one book.
She said, five books.
I said, let's do two books.
And she said, how about four books?
All right.
Why don't we do three books?
So, Soren, we did six books.
Yeah, I know.
I know how this goes. i don't know how that
happened that was a that was a real real surprise to me i thought i thought i'd got us down to three
and then here i was reading my sixth book let me ask you a question did you did you just like fire
straight from one into two or did you give a little preamble before even number two where you're like now this is the second to last book that we're going to be doing uh no i thought
that the the i went straight from one to two but i i thought my strategy was sound because she when
she laid out five books because she opened it opened it with five yeah she laid out five and
i said one uh and then when i got to two i was like i picked one of
the books i was like so we're gonna do two and i'm picking one of them so you just have to pick
the other one because i wanted her to feel like oh my choices like it's not just the amount of
choices it's like the the quality of choices i really need to make a decision soon. Uh, because uncle is, is clearly a shrewd negotiator and
surely he won't be here for 40 minutes reading literally until the second I'm asleep.
And that is certainly what happened. Did you notice recently you went out for a little while,
you're out in the sun, hot summer day. And you came back in, you went, is my,
is my scalp sunburned? You just don't have the same coverage you used to have. What happened?
Well, Nutrafol can help. You don't have to choose between better hair growth and your health.
There's a holistic solution for men that promotes both healthier hair and whole body wellness.
So get ahead of thinning hair with Nutrafol's whole body approach to hair growth. No drugs,
no compromise. Nutrafol is the's whole body approach to hair growth. No drugs, no compromise.
Nutraful is the number one dermatologist recommended hair growth supplement clinically shown to
improve your hair growth, thickness, and visible scalp coverage.
No more sunburn for you, my friend.
Nutraful's hair growth nutraceuticals go beyond genetics to multi-target the root causes of
thinning, including stress, hormones, nutrition, metabolism, aging,
and lifestyle. It's basically like having somebody doing all the work for you on top of your head,
where instead of you thinking about, oh, what could be all the causes for my balding? What
is actually happening here? Nutraful says, you know what? Sit down, hang tight, have a Dr. Pepper.
I got this. Physician formulated using natural medical grade ingredients, Nutraful's drug-free patented technology provides consistent,
reliable results without compromising your sexual health.
I know you were worried.
So was I.
Sexual health is fine.
In a clinical study,
men show progressive improvement in hair growth and thickness after three to
six months.
Nutraful is also trusted and recommended by more than 3000 top doctors.
You can grow thicker,
healthier hair, and you might as well support our show while doing it.
Go to Nutrafol.com slash men and enter the promo code QQ to save $15 off your first month subscription.
This is their best offer anywhere, and it's only available to U.S. customers for a limited time.
Plus free shipping on every order. Get $15 off at Nutrafol.com slash men spelled N-U-T-R-A-F-O-L dot com slash men promo code QQ. Have you ever tried a CBD product and wondered if it was working?
Spoiler alert, that means it wasn't. Next,vo Naturals developed smart sorb technology, clinically
proven to help your body absorb CBD four times better than regular CBD oil, because oil just
doesn't mix with your water-based body. Oh, it works faster too. If you feel stress coming on,
you won't waste time wondering, is this working? I use NextEvo's gummies because I love gummies
and I love anything that can help me feel
less stressed or relax after a long day. The gummies were great. I had them after a long day.
I was hosting a party with some friends and their many children here at my beach house,
and it was all done. It was a successful party, but I was still wired from the party of it all that after I
cleaned my house, I tried these CBD gummies and I relaxed and I slept better and I felt less stress.
It was great. SmartSorb technology improves CBD's ability to be absorbed, getting into your system
in as little as 10 minutes. Most CBD oil found in tinctures, gummies, and capsules achieves between 2%
and 10% absorption. Yuck. Which means more than 90% of what you think you're getting
is actually wasted. NextEvo Naturals are scientifically formulated to deliver more CBD
in a way your body can actually use and fast, proving 29 times better absorption in the first
30 minutes. NextEvo isn't just another CBD company.
Their all-natural products are backed by more scientific studies than any other CBD brand
developed by experienced consumer healthcare and pharmaceutical professionals.
It's vegan.
That's good for me.
GMO-free, gluten-free, THC-free capsules and gummies derived from 100% U.S.-grown hemp.
Stop wondering if CBD is right for you.
Try NextEvo Naturals Capsules, gummies, mints, and topical creams
clinically proven to be better absorbed by your body.
Get 25% off your next order of $40 or more at NextEvo.com with promo code QQ.
That's 25% off at NextEvo.com, promo code QQ.
Yeah, we get stuck in those situations a lot where like Gilly's favorite thing is to say one minute
it doesn't matter if she hates what she's doing
it's like it's just her being in control
so if we're like we're gonna stop doing this and start doing something else
she's like one minute
and we're like okay one minute it is
and then you get to the end of that one minute
and guaranteed she's gonna go one minute and is. And then you get to the end of that one minute and guaranteed she's going to go one minute.
And you got to be like, no, we gave you the minute.
And then there's a little fight.
Like there's a little tussle where she's like, no, one minute.
We're like, no, we gave you the minute.
The minute's over.
And occasionally we cave and we're like, all right, just one more minute.
That's so, what an easy offer.
A minute is so short.
You know that.
She doesn't know. Yeah. And sometimes it doesn't an easy offer a minute is so short you know that she doesn't know yeah and
sometimes it doesn't have to be a minute i mean sometimes like i get to 30 seconds i'm like i'm
done with this yeah we're done with it we're done you had your minute um but uh she just they they
like contest everything it's every single thing that you try to do they contest it and then
so you just have to kind of like pick your battles along the way.
Yeah.
I have a question about the five-year-old.
Okay.
Did he do some substitute teacher type of shit?
Was he like, oh, before we go to bed, we always get chocolate chip pancakes.
Are you going to make those?
Not a single bit.
I think he might have been really prepped by his parents to help me.
He was on, like, super good big brother mode and, like, making sure she brushed her teeth,
making sure if they were going to both get something, like, if they're both going to get a story
or both going to get an episode of the shows they liked, she was going to be able to go first.
He was very, very much like...
I don't want to use her name.
I don't know if I've used her name before.
But let's just say Skeletor.
He's like, Skeletor, you get to go.
Make sure Skeletor gets her snack.
Make sure Skeletor gets this.
I think he was just psyched to have a job going into this
where it was like, yeah,
oh, Uncle and i are gonna help
babysit tonight right we're gonna hang out yeah but we gotta we gotta babysit this kid yeah
uh that's what a great peacekeeper what a good older brother yeah it was super great super fun
uh i i don't think i could do it often because i would have fully read a thousand books if asked to. And also when I put everyone to bed,
I like a lunatic,
uh,
did nothing.
They were still hours before the parents would get there because they were at a wedding and they were like out having fun.
And I was like,
all right,
I,
I know I've been here before and I've watched movies with them when the kids were asleep but i don't know i don't want to take any chances waking them up so i just sat in total silence and darkness
downstairs uh doing like three weeks of archived crossword puzzles on my phone and and just like
waiting in the dark for hours because i didn't want to run any risks of right you don't want
noise happening and waking them up yeah i that's not crazy i think that's pretty normal i think there's
a lot of parents who still do that where they're like it doesn't seem sustainable because like you
put the kids down and it's 8 30 it's like well i i have to eat dinner now well you can see how
like parents get locked into like a weird trap they paint themselves into a corner where they will put the kids down and they're like and i don't they just went down
i don't want to wake them up so i'm going to be very quiet and then the child gets used to
no noise at all and so the minute that you're like try to break that mold you're like well
i mean i could watch something now it's a different noise that they're not used to whereas
if like right from the jump if you're
like they go down there's gonna be sound there's gonna be sound and for the first two weeks this
child might wake up a couple times but uh after that they'll just get used to to the fact that
there's ambient noise while they're sleeping and they will sleep through it but it's you can't like
anticipate that in the moment yeah i did realize i like i put them both down and i went i got downstairs and
i was like okay now i just have to wait uh two and a half hours for the parents to get home
and then i can oh i need i've needed to go to the bathroom for quite a while i should do that
actually that's a real thing that i have been putting off and i haven't been thinking about
yeah i'm it is it's a terrifying moment to be in charge of somebody else's children yes um and i think
obviously i have no context for it but a terrifying moment to be in charge of somebody else's children
when you're not used to being in charge of children at all oh you're like yeah there are
things that i'm not even i'm sure there are things i'm not even considering that i'm supposed to be
doing right now yeah um but i will say that the nice thing about being in charge of somebody else's children is that kids
generally are a different child with brain with somebody new and not totally new i mean you're an
uncle but the kids are not the same kids with their parents that they are for a teacher or
something like that your kids are way better for other people than they are for you because
they know that they can lean on you emotionally and that like they're
going to test some limits and stuff because they want to and they need to but they won't do that
with somebody new they'll kind of put all that on pause and be a different kid like there are kids
who the parents will say oh my child doesn't nap he just won't do it and then the kid goes to
preschool and naps every single day and the parent is like mother fucker i do in addition to being it being
like incredibly fun and uh a thing i'm legitimately very a service i'm very happy that i got to to
provide for them to give them a night out uh i it also gave me a tremendous confidence boost
where it just so happened that the day after I was babysitting, my neighbor called me
and he was in a real bind
and could I watch his dog for a couple of days
and I was like, buddy, I can do fucking
anything. You got me
just the right time.
And it was very easy. I didn't have to
like the dog didn't have to
mingle with Jackson ever. I just went
up to this guy's place and walked the dog
a few times a day.
And we had a grand old time. Uh, we went on very long walks and had a blast. And now the dog comes up to my porch and says hi to me every day. And, uh, it's buddy, I gotta tell you, it's, it's,
we're too far into this now for me to reveal that I don't know this dog's name and I just started calling it Daenerys immediately.
My neighbor, I'm sure,
told me in person once
what her name was.
I hope that this is a chocolate
lab and you've just...
No, I mean, it's
like a five-year-old beagle.
It doesn't look anything like Daenerys.
I just knew that it was a girl.
In all of the text exchange that I had with this guy, her name was never used.
And I just immediately was like, all right, Daenerys or Dany.
And now at this point, I am too embarrassed.
I have to stop myself from saying that every time I see her.
Right.
Because I'm sure that's not her name.
That would be the greatest
coincidence of all time if it was and i i feel like if i started calling her daenerys it would
shoot my chances if ever be granted any responsibility for her ever again that my
neighbor would be like that's not her fuck i told you her name and i would be like oh i forgot and
then he would be like it's on her collar what's the
matter with you it's on her collar like all dogs you i'm yeah i didn't think to check and i thought
it would be safer if i just uh brainwashed her with a new name really sorry if that's made your
life difficult at all it's as far as like just shots in the dark i think that's a pretty intelligent choice
because you got a girl dog five years ago i think yeah and yeah chances are and then also
you've picked a car you've picked a character from television who has like six names
like if this dog could be named uh callie and you could still call it nares yeah like because
lisi like lisa like any there's so many names that this dog can have and you could still call it Daenerys. Yeah, that's true. Because Lysi, like Lisa,
there's so many names that this dog can have
and you're still within bounds to call her Daenerys.
Yeah.
I feel like that's a good choice.
She eventually warmed up to it.
It was startling for her at first.
Yeah, she was never responding to it in the beginning.
Thank God you stuck to your guns then Yeah, she was never, she was never responding to it in the beginning. Thank you.
Thank God you stuck to your guns then and didn't just like pick a bunch of names and see what she responded to.
I do.
It will be humiliating.
I don't, I don't think I could ever ask him to do the same for me and take care of Jackson because his dog is the easiest dog in the world.
And he's like, she stays in a crate.
She likes the crate. Wake her up, take her for a walk, give her a snack, put easiest dog in the world and he's like she stays in a crate she likes the crate wake her up take her for a walk give her a snack
put her back in the crate at the end of the night take her for a walk give her
her dinner put her back in the crate and if you ever need anything for Jackson
let me know I'm like no he likes a little bit of hot water mixed in with
his dry food in the morning and I usually take him on six walks a day and
even if I'm not walking with him I like to sit with him next to me on the couch.
He likes to be on the porch.
I move his bed around
so it's always in the sun on the porch.
You know what?
I'm just going to not go on trips.
I'm just going to hang out with my dog.
Yeah, it's having a pet now.
I realized like I had a lot of indulgences that I curved with my children where I was like, I know that this is bad in the long run.
I've got to set a precedent early on with our routine and everything.
So I'm not I'm not giving them that two hour bedtime window where I'm like, and now we do this.
Now we brush our teeth and now we read another book and now we have some hot chocolate, like any of that stuff.
Like you kind of want to do with your kid initially because it's fun for them.
But I have all those indulgences with my cat.
Like because I don't care.
And so like the cat is now the cat doesn't eat unless you're petting it at the same time.
So you got to be in the room with it, giving it some pets.
And it's not going to eat while you're giving it the pets.
Like while it's getting the pets, it's putting its tail up and arching its back like make sure don't miss this spot hey oh you
forgot it right here um but uh then you like take your hand away for a second it's like yeah now
i'll get a few bites in my mouth okay go back to petting go back yeah yeah it's just like it's
untenable but i don't care it's it's so easy to make pets happy, and it makes me feel very good.
And I'll cook him rice and give him a thousand pets and let him just hang out with me as I move from couch to kitchen to porch and do my job all day.
Because I don't know.
There was a moment when we were getting this podcast ready where whatever reason, your microphone or your headphones weren't working.
And you couldn't hear us, but we could hear you. And you said to your dog, Jackson, please get on the couch.
And you hear him go, roof.
And you're like, and you said, thank you.
And he went, roof.
And I was like, they just, they're just talking to each other.
I did.
You're being generous in that description.
I was losing my cool a little bit just they're just talking to each other i did you're being generous in that description i i
i was losing my cool a little bit because it's uh it continues to be a hundred degrees and i was
dealing with uh sound issues with my microphone and my headphones and uh every time uh our sound
engineer and editor super producer gabe hardest would call me it would it calls through
my computer at the same time that it calls through my phone yes and so i'm getting that noise doubled
and then one time when i was on the phone with gabe troubleshooting this someone else some spam
number was calling me and jackson starts barking and i'm like not not you too i need i need i need Not you two. I need something to cooperate with me right now.
So I raised my voice at him.
And then I'm sure some part of me knew, oh, you're on the phone and into a microphone with people right now. So there's a chance someone can hear you.
So be on your best behavior, Daniel.
It's interesting because it didn't come across that way.
It came across like you raised your voice with him and then it sounded like you immediately were like, I shouldn't have done that.
I'm sorry, bud.
Thank you.
Thank you for doing that.
I do that with my children in public where they're doing something that they should be doing.
Or like my son is doing something that we talked about a million times.
And like, I know he's better than that. so like i'll go hard at him i'll be like
ronan what are you doing like in a way that seems if you're not uh if you don't have the context of
our every days like if you're just somebody passing by and you see this a child doing nothing
and then a dad being like what are you doing put
your shoes on you'd be like Jesus that dad is tough on that kid but and so like I catch myself
in public or my backyard I'm like I don't want the neighbors hearing this it does sound like a
terrible person I found my cheat that I found because this happened once before with Jackson
being loud while I was doing a podcast with uh our, our friends, Michael Swayman, Abe Epperson.
And he was barking at the delivery person. And, uh, I,
I do what I usually do when he barks, which is Jackson.
Thank you for letting me know that he's here. Good job.
That's what I want you to do. Thank you. That's enough.
And Michael was like, that's a really good strategy.
You're not like yelling at him
and it doesn't make him sound like he's doing anything wrong.
And I want to be clear,
these are words Jackson doesn't understand.
I'm using the tone of yelling.
You could say anything,
but if you say it with the right voice and making a face,
then he's gonna feel bad.
He doesn't think I'm thanking him for shit.
Thank you.
Thank you.
I got it.
Jackson's front legs fold and he turns,
twists just his lower body down onto the ground to be like,
I'm as low as I can be.
I'm so sorry.
Good job.
You're protecting us.
That's what I want you to do.
Yeah.
Hey, how do you feel about online shopping?
And how often do you do it?
Do you feel like you're getting the best deals when you're out there online?
I always think, you know what?
I bet there's some coupons for this somewhere online,
and I'm just too lazy to go find them.
Well, thanks to Honey,
manually searching for coupon codes is a thing of the past. Get in my rear view mirror searching. Honey is the free shopping tool that scours the
internet for promo codes and applies the best one it finds right to your cart for you. It supports
over 30,000 stores online, ranging from tech and gaming products to popular fashion brands,
and even food delivery. So you make sure that you're always saving the most money
that you possibly can when you're shopping online.
So now, here's how it works.
Imagine you're shopping for something online.
You're on your favorite sites.
What is that little hole in the wall, the mom and pop one, Amazon?
You're there.
When you check out, the Honey button drops down,
and all you have to do is click Apply Coupons.
You wait a couple of seconds, and honey searches the entire internet for
coupons for that site.
And if honey finds a working coupon that will save you money,
you just watch the prices drop and you can add honey to your iPhone too.
Just enable it on Safari and you can find savings on the go.
My family and I are going camping very soon.
I'm very excited.
It's the first time my daughter will go.
I needed a sleeping bag for her.
So I went online.
I looked around.
I found a sleeping bag that I liked.
I went to go pay and I thought,
wait, let's apply those honey coupons.
And honey saved me $15.
And it was so easy.
It was easy.
It's literally the click of a button.
It couldn't be easier.
It was the least I could do, literally.
If you don't already have honey, you could be straight up missing out. It's free and installs in a few
seconds. And by getting it, you'll be doing yourself a solid and supporting this podcast.
Get honey for free at joinhoney.com slash QQ. That's joinhoney.com slash QQ.
Thanks to PayPal honey for sponsoring quick question.
Thanks to PayPal Honey for sponsoring Quick Question.
Well, I'm glad that you've gotten all this experience with,
first of all, that you got to level up,
like that you got to move from kids to a dog.
Yes, thank you so much.
Yeah, because you don't want to start with dog.
That's scary.
No, absolutely not.
Because they can get anything in their mouth.
They can just pick stuff up off the street and just start chewing on it.
The kids, you give them Legos, you give them whatever.
They know what to do with their kids.
They know, yeah.
But I'm surprised that you think I wouldn't let you babysit.
You're an attentive person.
Yeah.
And that's really all you want from a babysitter.
You want somebody who's like, oh, this is the job.
I'm going to do my best job at it. Yeah. And that's it. I mean, even if you have somebody who's like oh this is the job i'm gonna do my
best job at it yeah and that's it i mean even if you have somebody who's brand new to it all i think
you still want somebody who as that's what i would always take over anything else is somebody who's
like well i will focus on this entirely yeah i guess it doesn't it doesn't bother you that that
uh like i haven't changed it i hadn't changed a diaper and i and like like the
idea of i i made a sandwich for the two-year-old and gave it to her and she looks at it and she
goes that's too big like all right oh yes that's right your tiny mouth and your tiny body that's
right i will cut i will make this smaller for you all right okay good though it's also probably because they have the the older brother is there and in those senses
like i know that ronan knows gilly's routine he knows what she can and can't like if you gave her
baby carrots you'd be like uh she won't eat that she can't she'll chew it for a little while and
then she'll spit it all out and kind of a paste. That's excellent big brother stuff. But if he hears this podcast, he will know that he could completely manipulate me.
I'm ceding authority to him now if I ever watch your children.
He would love that.
And he would do a great job.
He is such a rule follower just in his nature.
Like he's, I mean, six months from now, he's ready to babysit. Honestly. Yeah. If, if I wouldn't have been, you know, if it wouldn't have been be an issue where the state would take away my child, my children, I would be like, yeah, Ronan, you're ready. You're ready to babysit. He loves the rules and he knows the system. And he's like, this is it. This is my opportunity to be in control. Excellent.
be in control excellent oh well should we should we get into the show of ours come on that was the show i started mine with quick question oh i'm sorry i have a quick question for you the reason
i'm being whiny about that is like i've brought nothing else so oh that's fine i have all right
i have plenty for you um this is actually also related to children, but tangentially. Quick question, Dan.
Do you read a hard version of the newspaper?
Not like it goes hard, like the paper version.
I read the adult newspaper where they tell you the real shit.
Yeah.
That was forged in the school of hard knocks.
Yeah.
No, absolutely not.
Okay.
We get a paper.
We get a Los Angeles Times on Sunday, which means that we also get a comic section.
And I don't know, when was the last time that you read Sunday comics?
It's got to be like fucking middle school or something.
Yeah.
Long time ago.
Yeah.
Now, I've always thought of the comics in a newspaper as like the watering hole of the newspaper
because no matter what demographic you've got,
everybody's going to have to go to the comics at some point.
It's accessible for children but also for adults
because sometimes they try and do topical things there.
Sometimes it's very nuanced.
Like there's satire in there
about current events like doonesbury's always like that even the kids aren't necessarily getting that
part um there's a lot of like stoicism and taoism and the peanuts like there's a lot of there's a
lot to be had from the comic section and also it's right next to horoscopes it's right next to the
games like crossword sudoku so everybody at some some point is like at least cracking the comics and maybe like reading one while they're having cereal or whatever.
I read them now because my children are interested in them.
And I got to tell you, they suck so hard, like harder than you could imagine.
Yeah.
These are all syndicated comics.
It's not just a Los Angeles thing.
They're so unbelievably awful now.
And I don't think it's that I just grew out of them.
I mean, Garfield has always been kind of like a very milquetoast, dumb comic.
But Garfield's not in there anymore.
There's a bunch of other comics that are, I would say, way worse than that.
That feel like so lazy and half-assed and at the same time very desperate are they when you were
mentioning like doonesbury and peanuts and whatnot are uh is that real are they still making those
doonesbury is yes peanuts is not but peanuts gets recycled occasionally uh yeah is that guy fucking dead or what right charles schultz i think he's gone yeah all right but he i think that they're still
i don't think i don't i can't tell i don't think they're doing new peanuts but i you know these
don't look like recycles either um uh or at least i'm not recognizing them as that, but there's like, so there's, um,
the pearls before swine is one of them that like, uh,
there's a few other ones.
There's one that's like a,
that's really trying hard to be the far side.
It's usually a single panel.
And then stuff like Marmaduke is still in there or Blondie is still in
there.
And everything still looks like the 1950s in those comics and the jokes though
are it's clear that like somebody has a cell phone in it or something like that so i guess people are
still making those and boy man the comics are so rough it's like if you i'm trying to think of like
even before you had a column and you were like really proud of what you would create in a week,
like at school,
if you had to do something regularly and you're like,
well,
what am I going to do this week?
And you just start,
you just kind of like start phoning it in.
You'd be like,
well,
in this one,
I'm going to make a,
I'm going to make a joke about negative space.
So for three of my four panels will just be blank.
And then my last panel will be inside baseball joke about writing comics.
Like you start trying that kind of stuff.
And that's what the comics are now.
It's so bad.
That's excellent.
Why do you...
I guess a follow-up question is why do you...
You read the newspaper every week?
No, I don't.
But Colleen does.
She's not on social media or anything.
She's not getting it on the internet.
So she's catching up on her news every single night.
The kids are asleep.
She's done with her work.
She will go have a little cereal in the kitchen, and she will just read the paper.
Huh. That seems really pleasant yeah it feels like it's from a different time doesn't it yeah
she actually reads it by the lantern that's filled with whale blubber that we keep good yeah yeah
but it's it's a uh it's definitely the only part that I read is the comics.
And while reading it, every single time I'm reading it,
I groan at the end and Ronan goes, what?
And I'm like, well, here.
And then I'm trying to explain to him,
like dissecting the bird to find the song.
Like, here's what this is and here's what they're trying to do and here's why it's not working.
And he's like, okay, moving on. It's why it's not working and he's like okay moving on
it seems like it would be a very interesting
thing to study and I'm basing that entirely
off of our friend
Jamie Loftus' podcast about
the Kathy comic strip
comic strip, ACKcast
because
I
I know nothing about
Sunday newspaper comics.
Like, truly nothing.
I remember Farside and laughing that.
I'm aware of, like, the existence of Marmaduke, Garfield, Heathcliff, Blondie, Doonesbury, Dilbert.
That's still there, by the way.
All the major hits.
Oh, good.
Good.
All those major hits oh good good all those major hits but like I don't
I don't really know
I guess I'm the most familiar with
with Charlie Brown
there was always a very simple straightforward
set up and punch line
within that show that was
largely about
Charlie Brown being a fucking
loser who all of his friends
torture and abuse.
Yeah.
But, like, in general, I don't know anything about these comics beyond broad strokes.
So, like, learning about the Kathy comic strip for really the first time, before this podcast, if you had to put a gun to my head and ask me about Kathy, which a lot of people, to be fair, have done.
kathy which a lot of people to be fair have done uh i would mostly go from like oh i remember a 30 rock joke about kathy where it was described as kathy saying chocolate chocolate chocolate
and that feels like a fair enough catch-all for that comic strip like i didn't know that that
it was like year-long adventures where she had the same off again, on again, boyfriend.
And then she eventually married and there was like workplace disputes and
she had this abusive boss.
Like I,
it's fascinating to me because as a,
a complete outsider,
I assume comics artists are just like,
all right,
what's a two panel thing that my stupid character can get into today?
What can, you know, the Hager the Horrible,
what dumb caveman thing or Viking thing, whatever,
can he do in two panels this week?
It hadn't occurred to me that they were like, and of course they are,
building long narratives two or three strips at a time across literal decades.
I really assumed it was
just going to be like one joke a week that i write uh what can the family circus get into now all
right they uh they walk around in a park all right let me just draw that and then next week
starting from scratch again they walk around in a zoo and i write four zoo jokes in each thing
so mike davis has talked openly about how he
created garfield and he said that it's it is similar to that where he's like after a while
he got it was so locked in that he takes one week a month where and during that week he will just
fire off like 14 comics it'll just be like all right and then this and then john probably comes
in he's let's see he's hung up on the vet,
but Garfield's like, Garfield's not having it.
And like, and he just like that,
he just spends a week writing and then that's it.
And then he's done.
And he's just like, doesn't finish it.
We almost tried to do that with After Hours once
when we got that show pretty locked in,
where it was like, you know,
if we just work really hard filming for a week,
we don't have to do these for a fucking year.
We could just
bang these out if nobody sleeps for a monday to monday we could get a lot of these done
um so i guess part of the problem is also that i'm reading calvin and hobbes with my son so
i have a family friend aaron marsh who sent ronan um every single like there's like three
giant hardbound ball volumes.
Each one of these weighs about 20 pounds of all of the work of Calvin and
Hobbes,
like from the start to the end and Ronan loves it.
He don't understand a single joke in it,
but he loves the idea of a,
like a panel starts,
you're presented with a concept,
then you get this turn,
then there's like something else that happens.
And finally there's a payoff. And sometimes I'll check in with him. I'll be like something else that happens and finally there's a
payoff and sometimes i'll check in with him i'll be like did you understand what happened there
and occasionally he does but a lot of times he has no idea but he just likes the he likes calvin
he likes the idea of it that there's this six-year-old and every single one of them this
isn't like a highlights or best of calvin and hobbs this is every single calvin and hobbs they
ever made or bill watterson ever made. And so as I'm reading it,
they all hit. Like they're all,
not all of them are as good as other ones, but like
even the lowest one
is so good. It's still like
it's clearly, you put a lot of thought into it, and
in the design of everything, like how
Calvin's looking at his mom as he's filling up
a water balloon, like that kind of stuff,
it's all very funny and good.
There's clear choices
every turn and then i turn around open up the los angeles times and i'm reading pearls before swine
and they're gonna do it's just like this mouse with no shading and a pig talking to a pig about
cancel culture and i'm like what the fuck is this what happened
oh i'll have to check it out I guess
I wouldn't
but we were talking about with Kathy that's what
Bill Watterson did really well was that he would
have these one offs or these like bottle
I don't know
what you call a bottle panel or like a bottle
comic but then
he also will have ones where like and now
Calvin and his family in July he'd do one where he'd be like now Calvin and his family
are going to this lake
for a camping trip and you're gonna get
six panels of
them just being there and so it doesn't matter if you
come in in the middle of it because you're like oh okay
I guess Calvin's camping but if you bother
to go through all of them together you're like oh
there's like a really cohesive story here
yeah it's good
so good
i guess i should i should show more respect for comics artists and not just assuming that you're
doing act chocolate chocolate chocolate act well i have to wonder what for 14 years well yeah like
far side that was clearly like a lot of thought went into all some of those like are still just thinking about them make me laugh so hard and it's one panel um but i i just have
to wonder what happened like i i'm thinking about what it means to be an a comic artist now so
you're drawing and you're writing at the same time so that's clearly two skill sets that have to go
together for this and are they just paying peanuts and that's why you just have like these people who are like i'm not getting paid enough to care about this i don't know because that because
because dilbert's dad seems like he's uh impossibly wealthy in a way that's very infuriating
he does it feels like yeah i wonder if that's because they branched out into commercialism like you can get like a a stress ball of dilbert
and stuff like that but it it is like dilbert i will say unfortunately is one of the ones that
like you can count on to at least understand structure like you understand no like it's doing
it it's always going to do the same type of joke but the joke is always going to be like this the catch-22 of corporate america and like and you just it devolves and devolves and
devolves into like how is this company still around and then you're like by the end you're
like yeah that's a that's a fine comic i get it i get what he's doing and so it's that's a little
frustrating because i uh dilvers dad is just such a prick. He's the worst, yeah.
But when Ronan will ask me to read them, there's always certain – first of all, he has no interest in Doonesbury.
He's like, no.
I've learned my lesson.
I got burned by Doonesbury.
But we'll get to other ones and he'll just be like,
Leo or something like that.
And he'll be like, let's read this one.
And I'm like, I know this one always sucks this one always is a weird one where like
nothing happens nothing happens it's like a parent sitting there watching tv a child walks by with a
stuffed rabbit and then there's nothing against patient parent watching tv and they hear a noise
and then all of a sudden this rabbit is giant and the kid is wearing science goggles i guess and you're like what that's not
a story what did i just witness um but i will say also that it got me really interested in sudoku
again because i'm just sitting there looking at it constantly and fiddling with it and i got really
fucking good at sudoku by myself dan really i don't think i was ever good at sudoku
i don't think i don't think i was ever into it um i there are like little tricks that i realized
along the way it's like i guess that the rewardingness the rewarding feeling you would
get from learning something on your own where there are tricks that i've discovered along the
way where i'm like oh i'm at a point now where I will never get stuck again in one of these.
I know exactly what to do and what matters.
And there's like no one to share that with.
I can't be like, don't go to Colleen and force an impossible one in her face and be like, look, it says impossible on the side, but it's done.
Yeah.
yeah i've been consumed with uh two major games that i play or like two genres of games that i play every day that take up my my mornings before the rest of the world wakes up one of them is like
this entire slew of wordle and wordle adjacent games i was talking to a bunch of your friends
about it uh your birthday weekend where there's like Wordle is a very popular guess this word in, in guess this five letter word in six guesses game. There's also hurdle guess the guess the
song, uh, one second at a time. Like if you can get it in one second, get it. If not skipped the
second, second there's, uh, I think it's called framed where you have one frame of movie.
There's another one called actoral, even though it should be actoral. And that's where you have one frame of movie there's another one called actoral even though it should be
actoral and that's where you get like someone's imdb filmography but the letters in every movie
are just x's so all you have is like oh my god spaced out x's the year the movie came out the
genre it was and how well it like what its imdb score is and then your buddy joe chandler sent me moviedle which
they condense a whole movie into one second and they screen the second very quickly so i go through
all of these my my huge rolodex every single fucking day and it was taking up most of my
mental energy in the morning and then the new New York times where I do the crossword,
I guess I play three games.
I do the crossword every day and I've been doing,
uh,
spelling bee,
which is like a jumble.
You play spelling bee at all?
No,
you just get a bunch of letters.
Uh,
and you have to see however many words you can make in a day based on those
letters.
And they have to be a real
word and they have to include the center
letter in every word that you
use and they have to be minimum four letters.
That was a game that I'd been playing
idly for so long
just like picking it up every once in a while
and they
recently, like two or
three weeks ago, added
stats.
They're now keeping track of how I'm doing.
Oh.
And it's destroyed me because the,
I don't think there's like a maximum number of words
that they will like definitively say,
but they will say like,
this is the most you can get on this words is 198 points or 200 points
or 67 points whatever it is that's there they've decided like it's this is where
the best the best players get the highest amount of words and like the
rankings are nice amazing great let me see let me pull it up oh so it's beginner good start moving up good solid nice great amazing and if you get what
they've determined uh the highest score is they call you genius so now my app keeps track of how
many times i've been a genius and it's throttled my
productivity absolutely destroyed me you see you've been a genius a few times yes
that's what a tough life that is I've been a genius looking at last week, 11 of 18. Oh, my God, Daniel.
Yeah.
See, the other games you were describing about movies and IMDb pages and stuff,
I was like, I feel like Daniel's Tyler Durden created this while he was sleeping.
This seems like a game that's exclusively designed for you.
But this other one, I'm amazed that you're destroying like that.
Everything's got at least three letters, I assume.
At least four letters. At least four
letters. Wow. Yeah.
And you're...
You know a lot of words, buddy.
There's seven letters, and the center letter
has to be used in every word that you
spell. Is there any consequence for just, like,
guessing? Like, being like, what are these
four letters together?
There's no consequence. No, it'll just say that's not a word.
It's not like you can guess
infinite amount
of times and stumble on words that you didn't
know were words.
I've certainly done that where
I'm like, maybe
dower is a
word. I'm only saying that because it's
in front of me. I knew that dower was a word.
But it's a d-o- I knew that dour was a word. But it's a...
D-O-U-R is kind of a strange word
that you don't think about often.
And I've certainly been in situations
where I was like, let me just...
This kind of sounds like a word,
and I've been right.
And there's no honor in that,
but they don't keep track of honor.
Keep track of genius.
So you don't also see how many attempts you've made in each one
no thank god i mean some pieces are falling into place for me there's no one to pull me aside and
and be like hey you you uh you found a round that was a that was a great one you got a lot
of letters off that one and then you played it six more times.
Did you just keep forgetting that you found it?
Yes, I did.
Or maybe I thought you forgot.
I had a game that was similar to that on my phone,
which was basically a crossword type of thing.
But it gave you a certain number of letters
as they were associated with one another
in a big crisscross fashion. And then you had to it gave you a certain number of letters as they were like associated with one another in a big crisscross fashion and then you had to just add it be you
had a jumble of words at the bottom and from those like seven letters sorry not words seven letters
at the bottom you're like oh i could make winter out of this and winter fits up there and then it
would just auto populate once you made winter and like so it was that kind of thing where i was also
then realized in playing the game that there was a clock at the top and it was the end of the game for me.
I couldn't play it anymore because I was obsessed with the time and getting this done in a certain amount of time.
And so I didn't focus on the game at all.
It was only me missing the clock over and over again.
Man, I did that.
This is certainly asshole behavior of me.
I did that. This is certainly asshole behavior of me. But we talked about doing the crossword in the very early days of this podcast and how fast I like to be on the Monday puzzle and try to get that as fast as possible.
And someone started DMing me on Twitter with no other context, just their Monday crossword puzzle score,
their time. And I
would reply back with my faster time.
And I did that
every single Monday without fail.
This was their entire relationship with me.
It was like, how did I do this week?
And I'm like, sorry, bitch.
Meet you by a minute and a half. Wake up earlier.
And then he eventually
just stopped doing it
did you feel anything no i was like good either find a lesser opponent
or better yet stop it this game is not for you yeah
shout out to that person that was a perfectly sweet interaction to have with me
uh all right well i think we can end the show here yeah the show is called quick question but
you knew that already we are recorded edited and produced by the irreplaceable gabe harder
i haven't it's been a while since we've checked on his website. Gabe, do you have a website yet?
Actually, yeah.
I just finished a website.
Gasp.
Gasp.
Yeah.
Unfortunately, it's not my website.
Son of a...
But I built a really cool website.
Actually, I built a website for my mom,
who's an author who just had her book published.
Whoa. Excellent. what is this website?
What's the website?
So the website is KateAnger.com,
spelled like anger.
It's Kate, A-N-G-E-R.com.
Nancy Turner loves it.
All the links to pre-order it right now
or to get it, the Shinnery, a novel.
Wow, by Kate.
And she's going with Angier?
Angier.
Angier.
Sure.
Because Kate Anger is pretty cool.
It's a pretty cool name.
Yeah.
The Shinnery is inspired by an actual 19th century honor killing in Stonewall County, Texas.
Wow.
A story of coming age, betrayal, and revenge.
The Shinnery is inspired by the author's family history.
Holy snaky uh but yeah
i'm working on my website too so i'll let you guys know wow me too but uh could you just mark this
and and cut all this just i'm worried about time we try to keep the podcast super tight you know
everyone get your copy of the shinnery at kateanger.com.
Kate.
Anger.
Anger.
Well, that's pretty cool.
Do we have to do all the other stuff?
Can't we just end it?
No, let's end it there.
Yeah.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye. I've got a quick, quick question for you, alright? I wanna hear your thoughts, I wanna know what's on your mind
I've got a quick, quick question for you, alright?
The answer's not important, I'm just glad that we could talk tonight
So what's your favourite? Who did you get?
When will I be remembered?
Was it afterwards? Where did all the good things go?
Oh forget it, I'm sorry, movie Daniel O'Brien Two best friends and comedy writers
If there's an answer they're gonna find it
I think you'll have a great time here
I think you'll have a great time here on it new