So... Alright - Talking and Not Talking About It
Episode Date: March 19, 2024Geoff talks about recent events at Rooster Teeth and his life. Sponsored by Shady Rays http://shadyrays.com code ALRIGHT24 , Raycon http://buyraycon.com/alright Learn more about your ad choices. Vis...it megaphone.fm/adchoices
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So, I realize I can't not talk about it. I have a bunch of these in the can. You know,
we run a pretty... All things considered, we ran a pretty efficient ship. And so,
when news like this breaks, and you've already got a bunch of content in the pipeline,
sometimes it can be hard to switch gears.
But not for long, right?
I won't be a problem much longer anymore.
Anyway, so it would have been very easy for me to just throw in one of the other episodes
that I've already done.
But I feel like that would be unfair
to everybody who's tuning in
to hear what I have to say
about Rooster Teeth ending.
Allow me to disappoint you.
I can't not address it,
but I also can't bring myself
to really talk about it.
And I honestly don't know,
Christ, I don't know when I'll be able to. The last 21 years,
really, honestly, the last 25 years have been a creative journey that has completely and totally
changed the course of my life and the lives of of a lot of other people the last 21 years of
roosterteeth specifically i said 25 earlier because my you know this began with with bernie
and gus years before um we did roosterteeth red versus blue was like the third or fourth project
we did together at that point um so if i look back at the beginning of the journey of Gus and I and Bernie and Matt plugging away on stuff, it's it began a lot, a lot earlier than Rooster Teeth. We had to have those early projects to get to the point where we could make a Rooster Teeth, right, where we could we a quarter of a century of my life. I'm 48.
And 25 years out of 48 is a lot. It's most of everything that's ever happened to me of consequence.
It's the last 21 years specifically, speaking about this Rooster Teeth journey,
has encompassed and been comprised of the absolute best moments of my life. And, uh, also the
absolute lowest points and worst moments of my life. And in the middle of all that, uh,
I grew up and I had a child.
And I had two children because I had rooster teeth.
I made a million friends and co-workers and family members.
And we created a community, you, that supported us along the way and helped us do it in this, what always felt like to me, symbiotic relationship.
And I don't know how to unpack that.
I really don't.
I don't know how long it's going to take me.
A couple of episodes in, I talked about how getting sober affected me on a personal level.
And that was the first time I'd opened up about that outside of my therapist.
Took me probably six years to get comfortable enough to be able to, not even comfortable
enough, just to have enough distance and perspective to be able to understand and articulate the
feelings and the emotions and the impulses and the things that I went through, right?
And I say that to say, I don't know when I'll be able to do that
for the last 21 years of Rooster Teeth, if ever.
I'm also, things are a little wild here at Rooster Teeth,
as I'm sure you can imagine.
And so I don't have a ton of time
and we're trying to get these last weeks of episodes cranked out
as best we can but but um so i say all that to say that i'm not going to edit this episode i'm
this is just going to be a raw recording so i apologize for my foibles and my my missteps and
and the dumb moments where i put my foot in my mouth or say the wrong thing i I just, I don't know. I just feel like this should
be an honest expression. And I don't really, if I start editing it, I'll be lost in the,
in the rabbit hole of trying to get it perfectly. And, uh, and then I don't have the time or the
energy or honestly, uh, the desire to affect the message in that way. I'd rather just speak from the heart and be honest. And so with that said, and I realize I'm five minutes into this and I've kind of been talking about it,
but I'm not really. I'm kind of talking around it. I'll say this. I was on TikTok
yesterday, maybe. And my daughter, Millie, had a TikTok that came up that I didn't know she'd made.
She's 18 now.
She's a grown-up, an adult human being.
And she made a TikTok that...
Fuck, man.
It kind of broke me.
It was her thank you to Rooster Teeth for her weird and wild childhood.
And it was just pictures of her growing up in and around the place.
And it was really sweet and beautiful and a poignant TikTok,
if such a thing, if such words can be used to describe a TikTok.
But it really struck me watching rooster watching rooster teeth and millie grow up in equal measure is something i didn't realize i
was doing and uh and looking back something about that tiktok something about watching
seeing those key moments in millie's life and watching her age and thinking about the things
that were going on in the company at the same time that she was growing up and realizing that we were all growing up together. And this other child I had, Roosterteeth,
was right alongside her. And they're both growing and changing in wonderful and unexpected ways.
I don't know if any of you are parents. And I don't know. I mean, I think every parental journey
is probably unique in a million different ways. But I think some things that
hold true. And if you are a parent, then you know exactly what I'm talking about. And if you're not,
someday, if you want to, I hope you get to understand this. Your only goal in life is to protect and nurture and safeguard
that precious little soul, right? That's what it's like at first. That's what it was like for
Rooster Teeth at first for me. And then at some point, that's your whole world right protect this thing keep it safe keep it healthy
and it becomes all encompassing and all consuming in your life
but then as they grow and figure out toys and games and learn to speak.
It becomes something different.
This idea that you have to protect them at all costs, that's still there.
But it becomes like the backdrop.
You're so used to doing it at that point that it becomes the base
of what the relationship is going to become.
It's really weird because at the beginning,
it's all you can think about.
And then you get used to doing it.
You get good at it.
You get comfortable with it.
And then the child is growing and changing constantly
and becoming more complicated and elaborate.
And suddenly this protection thing, it just becomes the floor of what you do. It's the least of what you do. And I don't mean to say that it becomes less important. It's just you, it they develop tastes and likes and dislikes.
It's fascinating and it becomes more complicated.
And that much the same was true for Rooster Teeth as it grew.
And I became used to the idea of keeping it safe.
And then it started to grow and change in unexpected ways.
And that was fascinating.
And then at some point, your kid just speaks.
They just talk.
And then at that point, they can have conversations.
And when you can have conversations, they become opinionated.
And that's this whole other level where you're now getting to watch them become the person they're destined
to become, right? I definitely felt that at Rooster Teeth. I definitely got to a point where
you get to a point where you realize that this is another person with its own interests and
passions and desires
and likes and dislikes and and loves and hates and no matter how much you want to impart your
wisdom or ideas or interests onto that person it's up to them to figure out who the fuck they
want to be and you can gently guide but they're gonna become the person they want to be and rich teeth was definitely mirroring that at the time that my daughter was and then at some point
you turn around
and this thing this human this person is all grown up
and they're is all grown up.
And they're...
They're, in many ways, just as grown up as you are.
And they can...
You'll be very surprised the first time your adult child comforts you
in a way that feels like another adult peer comforting you and not your
child. I don't know how to describe it. It's a wild feeling when you realize that this person
that I've spent the last 18 years raising and growing and nurturing and protecting and caring for is now.
Like now this is the point where they can turn around and do it for you.
And that's a wild moment.
And it's weird to think that that's where I am.
Right now I have a daughter who's going off to college
who I couldn't be more proud of.
And I have this other kid, Rooster Teeth,
who I guess is a deadbeat,
who isn't going off to college. It's just weird to see the different trajectories for the two things that I loved so much that grew up together. And I didn't realize it at the time
that they were growing up together. I may have
said that a few times, like, I got two kids, Rooster Teeth Millie, Millie Rooster Teeth Millie.
But I didn't feel it in the way that I understand it now. And that's the problem with perspective,
right? Is the more you have, the more you glean and understand. Sometimes the more confusing
shit can be. And I don't have nearly enough perspective to look or to be able to
articulate the very raw complicated emotions that i have both good and bad
about the end of rooster teeth um i can tell you that there are a tremendous group of talented
passionate people that are all now entering into the world to look for their
next chapter and their next phase. And I can tell you that I will do everything in my power to help
them succeed. And I hope you will too, because they're all truly remarkable people. And I hope
that each and every one of them finds the success that I've been fortunate enough to
find in my life. And, you know, there's a lot of questions about the future of where things are
going. I'll just be frank with you. My priorities in this order are face,
and my, in this podcast, so all right. It it is in many ways the hardest
thing I do even though I do it by myself
and so
and
while I find it to be very rewarding
getting to spend time
with Gus and Eric or getting to spend time
with the F*** Face crew is far more important
to me and so
that's the order of importance
I'm moving forward with to figure out
what the next chapters are in my life. So to say I want to continue this podcast, and I hope I do,
and I suspect I will, but it may take a backseat to Anma and F***face as I try to figure out how to
keep those going in some form, as we all try to figure out how to keep those going in some form as we all try to figure out
how to keep those going in some form and we will rest assured we will uh I guess I guess that's
about what I can say I guess that's about what I have in me to say I uh I'd be lying if I said
I wasn't a little lost and exhausted, but also incredibly energized and ready to tackle the next, I don't know, the next adventure, I guess.
Unfortunately, we're in a bit of a waiting period as Rooster Teeth winds up.
And, you know, we have to see that through and do it properly and be fair to Rooster Teeth and the memory of it. We can't abandon ship and jettison and then go start new shit immediately. I just don't think that's the right way to do it. I think Rooster Teeth deserves better. I think you guys deserve better. And so we're going to see this through to the end. And then we'll have another conversation about where things go.
where things go. Oh God, I've had so many conversations with myself about this. I've been so all over the fence and all over the map. And, um, man, yesterday I decided I needed a bike ride.
I was, I was just like vibrating. I had so much nervous energy and I was just like nauseous and,
and, and, and feeling hopeful and, and, and terrified in equal measure. And so I went for a bike ride.
It always kind of grounds me. And I was kind of wishing that I was religious,
or that I believed in astrology or tarot or something in a way that I could glean some
kind of insight from it. I was laughing that I wish I understood
tarot enough so I could give myself an own one of those like three card readings. I think it's like
your I don't even even if I said it, it would be wrong. But you know, you can do like a full reading
where it looks like a clock or you can do a quick reading with like three cards that are pulled. I
think it's like past, present, future. I don't know, home, heart, I don't know,
but you're supposed to glean something from those three cards.
And so I thought, what if I do that with music, right?
Like, music is the most important thing to me in terms of mood stabilization and working
through shit.
And so I put my playlist on random and I said,
I'm going to pay special attention to the next three songs that I listened to. And that'll be
my message. Maybe let's see. It could be stupid, but let's see what I can glean from these next
three songs. And just to put it in perspective, I just have one playlist I listen to.
It's on Spotify.
It's under my name.
It's called Now.
It's just whatever I'm listening to.
And it's got about 450 songs on it.
So there's a lot of variety.
I have no idea what to expect.
A lot of stuff that is on there I haven't heard yet because I'm constantly adding and
removing stuff.
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slash all right. All right. So the first song that popped up was by Clowncore, which if you've listened to the podcast, you know, is a very silly, irreverent band that started on TikTok.
That's insane. That is like clown jazz. Hardcore would be kind of how I would describe it. It's just, it's all over the map. And I don't know the names of the songs.
I don't know the name of any song.
I don't know about you.
When I was growing up, when we had physical media,
you would buy a record or you would buy a CD
and you would go home and you would listen to it
and you're a disc man and you're a record player or whatever.
And then you would open up the booklet
and you would look at the liner notes and you would go home and you would listen to it in your Discman or your record player, whatever. And then you would open up the booklet and you would look at the liner notes and you
would study them. All the lyrics were there, information about the band was there, pictures
were there. And it was a very important companion to the music, I really thought. It really added
to the experience. And now that we have technology and we no longer have physical media and i have access to essentially the recorded history of music in the world via spotify it's completely
and totally changed the way we absorb and and listen to music at least in my personal life
so this in one of those ways is i don't know shit about shit anymore right so this clown
core song comes on and it's real poppy and kind of jazzy and upbeat. And it's silly. Most of their stuff is silly. And I'm just listening to it and enjoying
it. And it kind of picked me up a little bit, honestly. Made me laugh and chuckle a little bit
to myself. I was remembering the clown core concert I went to where they played in the
port-a-potty. And they were just like, they had all the morphed penises around and it was just fucking wild. And I'm just kind of riding my bike
and laughing around town lake, by the way, it's South by right now. So there's like 300,000 people
around Austin getting drunk and trying to find live music. And so everything is packed, even the
hiking bike trail. So I'm riding around town lake, just kind of laughing and dodging people and
listening to this. And I think, Oh, I don't know what the name of the song is, I should look it up. So I look it on
my phone. And the name of this song, and this is what got me is infinite realm of incomprehensible
suffering. That struck me when I heard that. Uh,
then the song was over and,
uh,
the next song was a, uh,
Shannon and the clams song,
which,
uh,
I,
I kind of took the,
the clown core to be my past and,
uh,
the middle song to be my present,
which was Shannon and the Clams.
And the song is called Flowers Will Return.
And I'll just read the lyrics to you.
In my mouth is a hard word to say.
I can identify with that.
Tangled in a strange old way.
Shake me just one more time.
You know, I can't do anything but try.
I definitely identified with that.
And then the chorus, which really fucked me up, is I want you to learn.
I want you to learn that flowers will return if you just give it time.
And man, I needed to hear that. That kind of floored me that I heard
that. And it kind of kicked me right in the stomach. And man, that felt really important
to hear. And from probably my favorite band right now too.. And I only have like three or four out of the 450 songs on this playlist are Shannon
and the Clams.
I've been listening to a lot of other stuff that's not them lately.
And so that, I don't know, man.
That felt like it's something that the universe wanted me to hear.
And so I paid attention.
And then the third song that played, which I considered, I was thinking this would probably be my future, right?
It's the song by the band called The Lillingtons.
It's a punk rock band, kind of a Ramones clone.
One of the Mass Georgini-produced bands.
They all kind of have the same poppy punk sound.
He's a real good producer.
They make real good music. I really like their album, Back Channel Broadcast. But this is off
an album called Death by Television. I don't know it as well. I had just thrown some songs on.
And this one I'm not super familiar with. But it's called, and I guess this is my future,
I Need Some Brain Damage. And the lyrics are, don't want to wake up at 6.15,
don't want to go to work at the Dairy Queen,
don't want to watch TV,
don't want to read.
There's only one thing that I really need.
I need some brain damage and I need a fast.
Beat me till you put me in a body cast.
There's only one thing that I really need, baby.
Give me bruises, make me bleed.
I'm feeling unsituated.
Ain't that the truth?
I'm going to beat my head against the wall.
Ain't that the truth?
Till my brain has become inflated and I can't even think at all.
I'm feeling sort of agitated. Give me some assault and battery. Now I need medicated.
Now I need surgery so I don't swallow my tongue. And that's a pretty dark,
that's just some pretty dark lyrics. But if you listen to the song, it is a very upbeat,
It's a pretty dark... Those are some pretty dark lyrics.
But if you listen to the song, it is a very upbeat, very tongue-in-cheek,
very teenage lobotomy Ramones, 20, 20, 24 hours to go,
I want to be sedated kind of vibe.
And it was also exactly what I needed to hear
and very tongue-in-cheek how I feel
and reminded me the message I took from it. I could
have taken a lot of messages from it, I guess, but the message I took from it, I chose to be a
positive one, which is that I can't take myself too seriously. I never have, and I shouldn't start
now. And, you know, flowers will return, and I'll be there in the future in some way to appreciate them.
And just trying not to swallow my tongue, I guess.
So I took it to be my tarot reading, those three songs.
And it may sound stupid.
It probably sounds stupid or ridiculous or immature or childish or like someone who's in desperate need of some kind of
message and is looking for them where they don't exist. But it worked. It meant something to me,
and it mattered, and I really appreciated that. And then, ironically, the next song that played,
which wasn't a part of this, was a song
by Piebald, one of my favorite indie rock bands, maybe punk band, indie band from the 90s. A song
called Grace Kelly with Wings. And I thought that that was interesting as well, because
there were a lot of moments that I realized I wanted to do this podcast in very different ways.
But one of the biggest was listening to that song one day, riding around and thinking about how fun of a song it is and how
much I wanted to share how interesting I think it is. And how fascinating I think the lyrics are,
because they kind of take you on a journey and about how I wish I had a way to share how much
I like this song with other people because I think other people will like it. And it was one of the original seeds of the idea
of doing this podcast was I want to share,
I want to talk about the song to other people.
I need a vehicle to do that, right?
And so it playing right after this little experiment
was kind of like another message like,
hey, this is also important.
This also mattered to you.
I know you just said it's lowest
on your list of priorities going forward, but this also mattered. And so I'm not prepared to talk about
Grace Kelly with Wings. It's kind of a long song and there's a lot to it. And I really, in my head,
I had this really fun, long way to kind of dissect it. I don't know when I'll ever be able to get to
that. So I'll just say, if you get a chance to listen to that song, it's a phenomenal song. It takes you on a journey. It reminds me a lot of the of how Paul
McCartney in the Beatles and Wings used to love to do tempo changes and to smush different songs
together. And so it really takes you on sort of a sonic journey. Right. And I'm not trying to
oversell this song. It's just an indie rock song. But I just think there's something really charming to it.
It came out in like 1999.
It's very of a time.
But I think like the lyrics,
it starts off by the first lyrics are,
it's much more than a dress.
It's a Grace Kelly movie.
And I don't know if you know who Grace Kelly is.
If you're younger than me, you might not.
If you are my age or older than you know who she is.
Grace Kelly was a was an actress in the in the 50s and 60s.
And she was known for being like one of the most beautiful and glamorous women on Earth.
And she had some huge,
she was a huge movie star,
had huge success.
She won Academy Awards,
at least one Academy Award that I know of.
She was in Dial M for Murder.
She was in Rear Window.
And she is like
about as glamorous and respected and fancy i think as you can get and then
she fell in love with i guess the prince of monaco? I think that's what it was.
She went to Cannes Film Festival
and then she participated in a photo session
with this guy, Prince Rainier,
who was the Prince of Monaco,
and they fell in love.
And then she married him
and she became a princess.
And I think her career, I don't know.
She probably continued to act for a little while after that,
but I don't know how long.
And then, yeah, and then she spent the rest of her life
as royalty, which it's just a wild story.
And I would love to talk more about Grace Kelly someday,
and maybe I will.
But the point I'm trying to make is the lyrics to that song, I always love because it starts off with this guy talking to his partner,
his lover, whoever they are. And he says, it's much more than a dress. It's a Grace Kelly movie,
which is, I think, such an insane compliment, such a really powerful and beautiful compliment to tell someone you're not just wearing a dress, you're wearing an entire movie from the most glamorous person in film at that time right like uh i just think it's a really it's a really sweet and and really
powerful compliment to give someone and then it kind of goes into this idea it that part's it's
it's just very very sweet and then it the song kind of switches almost immediately and they're
talking about uh and you can take this literally you can take this a lot of different ways but
they're talking about a cactus that they need to take care of and it need it they've got to water
it the cactus needs more light we've got to take care of it and it's in this droney kind of almost
when i listen to it it reminds me of the days when you were young and you were drunk or high
and you're having a conversation with somebody and you feel like, uh, you just
remembered something or you just had a thought that's really important and you want to hang on
to that thought. Like, you know, I'm drunk and I'm forgetful and you know, my head is full of fog
and I'm cloudy and buzzy, but it's important that I hold onto this and you just repeat stuff.
I used to do this all the time when I was drinking, when I was heavy drinking, I would repeat shit over and over
again to try to commit it to memory. Um, and very rarely worked. And, uh, and that's kind of the vibe
I get from this where they're talking about this cactus. And I think you can, you can take it quite
literally and say that there, he and his girlfriend or whoever she was, they really did have a cactus
they were trying to take care of. Or you could say that the relationship was the cactus and that they're trying to nurture it and give it more light and
more water and getting covered in in pricklers the entire time and i think that's the beauty of
music in general is that it's open to interpretation and it can mean whatever you want it to mean
it then continues in this kind of seeing like dreamy
droning way that uh that i really like and at some point it starts to it starts to build into
this little crescendo where he keeps talking about the dress and you like and he's you can
see my benefit from it which i don't know if that means he's got a boner or if it's something
i don't know more about just like how it touched his heart or whatever but he it starts to like
thrum a little bit and he's repeating himself and he's like and you can see my and you can see my
and you can see my and then it like transitions into like a heavy metal song for a little bit
and then it pops back out into this like pop punk kind of i I don't know, just fun moment
where it becomes a different song
and he starts singing like in a different,
like totally, totally very different.
And he's like, and so my feet got cold
and so I put my socks on,
but now I'm back on track,
just like 10 yard fight.
So what if it's in my eyes?
So what if it's in my eyes?
So what if it's in my eyes?
And if you listen to that,
I don't know what you think when you hear it,
but I don't really care about the socks and the feet uh but what he says now i'm
back on track just like 10 yard fight 10 yard fight's obviously a football term it's the name
of a football uh video game back in the days and then he says so what if it's in my eyes what he's actually saying there is um back on track was the name of
an album by a band called 10 yard fight there was uh it's a hardcore band um straight edge hardcore
band from boston in the 90s there was this well in the 80s there was this thing called
the youth crew uh which was straight edge hardcore movement um and in the 90s there was a revival
uh sort of of it and there uh there were bands 10 yard fight which is literally a straight edge
band that was football themed and uh bands called floor punch bands called bane Punch, bands called Bane.
In My Eyes was another band,
and there was this movement in the late 90s,
this revival of the youth core.
And this band Piebald is, like I said,
like an indie rock or maybe a pop punk band,
you would consider them.
But we all swam in the same waters back then, right?
And there was a lot of cross-pollination.
The scene was small enough that you were,
chances are you were in a lot of different scenes at one time because they were all, like I said, just kind of cross-pollinating.
So what he's really singing now, he's just talking about these...
He's trying to remember who put out the album back on track.
He's like, just like 10-yard fight.
And they did put out the album back on track.
But then he's like, so what if it's in my eyes,
which was a different band.
And it wasn't. It was 10- 10 yard fight but i just think that's funny because if you aren't
familiar with hardcore music at that time in that place and these are bands that were only around
for i think 10 yard fight was only around for three or four years if that you would have no
idea it would mean nothing and i think that that's one of the fun things about music is there's these little easter eggs in there for the people that understand and and um
who catch it you know if they catch it so they reference in my eyes and 10 yard fight both
great straight edge late 90s hardcore bands i i recommend if that's your thing you check them out
if that's your thing you've probably already checked them out. If you're interested in what Straight Edge Hardcore sounds like,
they're a pretty good place to start.
Judge is pretty good too.
Maybe even go further back than that.
But then it switches back
and then it finishes off as the song
with the Grace Kelly lines.
And it's just this like six, seven minute journey
where you go from feeling how much he is enamored
by his partner to thinking about how they're trying
to water and take care of this thing,
whether you're taking that literally
or to be their relationship, to then this breakdown.
Then it goes into like a heavy metal song for a
little bit and then it goes in this breakdown and he's just talking about some punk bands some uh
or some some uh i guess lesser known hardcore bands and then and then he ties it all up by
it being a love song again anyway it's just it was just a fun song and it's interesting and i
wish that i had done a better job of explaining it to you right now i wasn't really prepared to
talk about it i'm going off memory i don't really prepared to talk about it. I'm going off memory.
I don't really have any notes or anything because like I said, I didn't, I didn't really
intend to, to dissect it.
But once I got started, I couldn't stop.
I do recommend you listen to that song.
Maybe listen to all the songs I talked about today, but, um, but definitely that's a fun
one.
And it's one of the reasons I wanted to do this podcast.
So I'm glad I got to talk about it.
Great band.
They have another two or three songs
that I would love to talk at length about
that have just meant a lot to me in my life
in a lot of ways.
And I think are musically very clever and interesting.
And so I'll probably get around to it someday in some form,
whatever form this podcast takes going forward.
I guess I should probably wrap this up.
I will say this.
There'll be something next week, so please tune in.
And if you get a chance,
throw some support towards the other people at Rooster Teeth
that are losing their jobs and are
and are going to be looking uh on how to uh begin the next chapters of their life i know that they
would love to hear it and they could they could use it and and not just people on camera there's
a lot of really talented hard-working people everybody at rooster teeth is talented and
hard-working and and deserves uh some well wishes and some encouragement. And, um,
fuck, I guess I'm, I guess I'm like a solo dude now. So I got to promote my own shit, right?
Like I've never really done that, but, um, I, if you need a cameo, uh, I got, I got,
you look me up on cameo, I'll say happy birthday to your grandmother or somebody recently
had me recite a poem to them. So, you know, I'll do anything within reason as long as my clothes
are on. And then if you're interested in the sports card thing, ironically, a couple weeks
ago, right before all this happened, I started with a lot of help and support from my wife, started an eBay store for selling my collectible cards because I just I've got so many I need to start paring it down.
And and so look up Jeff Ramsey collectibles three.
My wife spelled it C-O-L-L-E-C-T-a-b-l-e-s so look up jeff ramsey collect apples three i get
to change that name in about three weeks takes a month or maybe two weeks i have left and then
i'll change it but um i'll you know selling some baseball cards don't buy any if you're not into
card collecting don't buy them to like throw me a bone just buy them if you want them and you're
gonna enjoy them um and then just keep on the lookout because as we have more information about the future of
face and the future of anma and i have information about the future of this we will communicate it
i will communicate it that goes for all the other productions that you love and have loved at
rooster Teeth.
There's a lot of people trying to figure out what next steps are.
Nobody wants to stop doing what they're doing.
This is everybody's passion, and we all want to find ways to make our passions work
and to continue to provide content
and get to be able to continue to provide content.
So yeah, just tune in next week.
Hopefully I'll have some more information for you.
Hopefully I'll have something interesting to talk about,
but I definitely will be here and I'll have something to talk about.
And,
uh,
man,
fucking from the bottom of my heart.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Every one of you for every single thing all right