The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - PTFO - Share & Rawdog & Tell with Mina Kimes and Dan Le Batard
Episode Date: July 2, 2024Do athletes, coaches, and GMs give a s*** about what sports gasbags like Mina, Dan, and Pablo say about them? Early returns say: yes. Does Google suck now? Mina’s Reddit usage indicates: also yes. A...nd most importantly, could you rawdog a 7-hour flight? Or, do we just like saying the word “rawdog”? Also: enshittification, Mina gaslights her husband, and the grief-eating truffle pig returns. Is Google S.E.O. Gaslighting the Internet? (Kyle Chayka) Why Men Are ‘Rawdogging’ Flights (Kate Lindsay) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pablo Torre Finds Out.
I am Pablo Torre, and today we're going to find out what this sound is.
Can we get to the raw dogging?
Right after this ad.
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I do like Vita how, um, how our group chat for this specific show has just
devolved into us saying no to things Dan wants to talk about.
Welcome to my life.
It's not, it's my entire life.
I became the founder of a company so everyone could tell me no for things that I want. And then when I tell people that,
when I tell people the story,
somehow everyone looks at me and laughs
that I would be so naive to think
that as the founder of a company,
I would get to do the things that I want.
The fact that people laugh knowingly at that
when I would have at any point in my life said, yes, if someone founds a company, they get to do what they want. The fact that people laugh knowingly at that when I would have at any point in my life said,
yes, if someone founds a company,
they get to do what they want.
That's how that one works.
Just to open the kimono a little bit,
phrase I always immediately regret saying
after immediately I say it.
Yep.
You should make that your signature line.
You should make that something that is trailing behind you like an airplane banner.
It's sort of racist entrapment because
then people make a joke about moving Japanese
and I'm not Japanese.
You asked for it.
To let people inside the hanbok, which is a Korean.
This is so sexual and weird.
Anyways, whatever.
I said the group chat an article
from GQ about men raw dogging flights, which is funny. And Don, Dan, replied with the text,
I'm fine with that. Watching Celine Dion doc now, brutal.
It is. It was brutal.
Can I make a confession to you guys? I want to know if anyone else does this.
So my husband loves documentaries and like he,
Dan and him should live together because I think they would,
they share the same taste in cinema.
He wants to watch serious depressing documentaries.
And we also consume a lot of content separately
because I travel and I rush stuff while I work out,
whatever.
I really hope this doesn't get back to him.
But sometimes he'll say like,
oh, have you seen, you know, the Celine Dion doc?
And I'll be like, oh yeah, it was okay.
I straight up lie to him all the time.
Mena, Mena, since we've met you, you've lied about the movies that you watch.
What is this? What is wrong with you?
What is wrong with you that you feel the need? I don't think of you as a liar.
Is this the one space where you allow yourself to be fundamentally immoral?
I also kind of gaslight him. Sometimes he'll say,
wow, this looks really interesting, like a Lars von Trier movie.
And I'll be like, oh, we watched that.
Oh God.
And he's like, really?
I'm like, yeah.
You're like a corrupt, you're a corrupt nursing home aide.
Who's like, oh, you had your vitamins.
You already had your vitamins.
You don't need them.
We barely remember what happened like two weeks ago
now that we are parents of an infant.
You must have such the advantage now with that trick
because you're parents who aren't sleeping
because the baby's menace
and the gas lighting must work so much better now.
Pablo, you can surely relate to this.
The number of times the get out of jail free card
having a baby provides you is honestly worth
all of the lost sleep, all of the frustration.
I used it to get out of so many things.
Yeah, the amount of time I saved on just texting,
like just, when you text with me now,
they're just fewer three dot sort of like visuals of me trying to figure out
a paragraph worth of trying to say no,
and now it's just like, ah, daughter's sick.
Daughter's sick.
She's not sick.
Oh no, you can't do that.
That's no, that's terrible.
My new thing.
That's terrible karma.
Stu Gotz has killed his grandmother
about 14 different times to get out of things.
When I forget something, like I forget an obligation
or I'm late for a meeting, sometimes I hate,
it's so disgusting, but I'll go, mommy brain,
and everybody laughs.
Oh God.
It's bullsh**.
Who are you?
How did this happen to you?
If I had shown you this person five years ago What? What? Who are you? How did this happen to you?
If I had shown you this person five years ago
doing jazz hands and mommy brain to get out of things,
you would have been repulsed by her.
No, I would have had the kid sooner, honestly,
if I had known I could get out of going out.
Yeah, it's a hidden incentive.
What a perk.
Because it is my show, I'm going to use my power to start with my topic. Because you get voicemails to our voicemail line, 513-85-Pablo.
That is the number you call to leave us voicemails, story pitches, suggestions, sometimes questions,
mysteries you have.
And here's a call that I got that I want all of us together to solve.
Hey Pablo, Evan from Delaware again.
I read Bloomberg a lot, mostly for work, a little bit for pleasure.
Shout out to the legends, Matt Levine and Joe Wiesenthal.
It got me kind of thinking about ESPN because everything I hear is that unlike Bloomberg,
the people in the business absolutely could not care less about what ESPN or FS1 or local
talk radio or local fan sites, whatever, say.
Is that actually right?
I can imagine some of the owners caring a lot, but you hear a lot of coaches and GM say,
oh, you know, we're not managed by the media, you know,
they just don't understand, their criticism doesn't matter.
What I wanna know is what do people in the industry
think of typical sports coverage, if anything?
Awesome, thanks so much, love the show, bye.
So this is fundamentally a question about
how much does the stuff that we do here in sports media
actually get into the ears and
the brains of the people who make decisions who matter inside of sports teams and
My read on all of this is they care so much more than they want anybody else to realize
And that there's a lot of posturing about how it's these idiots. They don't know what they're talking about
But meanwhile, I mean I can tell you from knowledge and belief that the most important and influential people in sports are oftentimes the people
who have the most sensitive antennae to like what is being said. And that involves LeBron
James that involves owners of teams. Go down the list. I think you'll find really more
than anything else, a dearth of people who are actually unplugged from what people
in our chairs, broadly speaking, tend to say.
Mina, what's your view on it from, again, your perspective as a former business journalist?
Yeah, my experience is pretty NFL-centric because, you know, just conversations I've
had with players, agents, people who work for teams, and it largely reflects what you're
saying. They do all watch sports media. What I think is interesting though, and maybe worth
parsing out is they all consume very different types and forms of sports media. Your typical
player, what he's watching, what he's hearing is very different from what your
typical GM, assistant GM cares about or coach.
But you know, so I mean, I guess I'll just kind of spell it out.
I do first take, I hear much more often from players about things I've said on that show
versus people who work in front
offices are more likely to listen to my podcast or watch NFL live or see stuff on the internet,
frankly, which is a third part of this.
It's not television or podcasting or whatever, but they see tweets and video content put
out. But I would say like nine to one is the ratio
of guys I've encountered who are aware of some of it.
It is far more the exception that anyone,
athlete, player, or executive, or coach is not seeing it.
It's interesting because I do think there is
some generational stuff that you're
talking about there where the executives or the people in power might be
inclined because they are older to somehow care what still a newspaper
columnist is writing,
whereas a different generation isn't going to have any interest in that,
in how it is that they get their information.
But I don't think that you can do this by putting everyone in the same box, because
I will say that the people that I have met, who I would say have the most confidence about
their leadership, even though human beings are going to hear criticism and react to it,
they really don't care about criticism unless it's coming from people they truly respect.
And if it's them hearing something
they believe to be ill-informed or uneducated,
they may fight against that because they're like,
really, it's your job to build a bridge
to explain to people how it is I come by my expertise
and you're that ill-informed.
So they might hear something
and object to an accuracy in it,
but I have found that the people I know the most,
that I would respect the most in this industry,
they only care about criticism when it comes from people
they in turn actually respect as authorities
and then disagree with them on something.
I get that.
I think that's a reasonable, rational perspective,
but I don't know, man, I think about how Ryan Colangelo, the former 76ers executive, had burner accounts online. And this was seen as like, ah, he's so, what a whack job. He's so extreme. And then you realize how many people actually in this business are doing, maybe not as recklessly that, but doing a version of that. Mena, do you think McVeigh, like you've been around the Rams,
I would assume that someone like McVeigh
might have an objection to something you say
because he respects you.
He knows that the knowledge is real.
He knows that the care is real,
but he doesn't care whether somebody else
on Around the Horn who's just giving the opinion of the day
says that he's a bum, does he?
Someone like that, someone who's had real success,
real confidence at an early age.
Yeah, I think he and people of, I guess,
similar coaches or front office types are a little bit,
are dialed into what, like Peter King writes,
what we say maybe on NFL Live, perhaps perhaps in a way that they don't care.
I don't think Sean McVeigh is on the internet.
I don't think he cares what's said about him
on some of the shows that are less, I guess, specific,
shall we say, which kind of goes back
to what I was saying, Dan.
It really is, I think different people in the sports world
care about different voices,
and different voices matter to them.
I do think, though, like, to Pablo's point,
there are a lot of guys who we would respect or hold in pretty high esteem
who are very online, and I know that just personally,
because I've been shocked by it as well.
Conversations I've been shocked by it as well, conversations I've had.
I've tried to be a little bit more careful at times because I've had conversations with
people in front offices and we go to Indianapolis every year for the combine, which is sort of
where everybody interacts with a reference something I tweeted and it never even occurred
to me that it would cross that many levels to reach someone, but it does.
I also think that it's worth sort of big picture establishing how much the media has become a
really overlapping circle when it comes to who
sports teams are hiring to very important jobs.
Yeah.
And we can go to JJ Reddick with the Lakers, we can go to the revolving door of executives who wind up, Bob Myers,
all of these people in the NBA.
And there's more obviously in football and baseball.
But there was a naiveté that I had early in the business where I was like, look,
having seen the inside of a newsroom, I can only imagine what it's like when you get into a front
office and how different it is and have access to all the different and better information and I think as time has gone
on and as the internet of course and like more sophisticated reporting and
analysis has has also been published it's become obvious that there's
actually very little distinction or at least a shockingly small distinction
between what you can access as a consumer who gets maybe publicly available or at least premium
subscription stuff from like data sites and newsletters versus what people who run teams
are consuming themselves.
Mena, I would assume that you have run into some of what I'm about to say, which is whether
it's conference commissioners or athletic directors, or some people who come by power in executive roles,
how they've just been around for a ton of time,
and they might not actually know more
than some of the people who are covering the sports
with the most hustle, right?
That they've just arrived at a leadership position
after many years that is given through longevity
and through expertise,
and maybe those are the people
that would be most sensitive to media criticism,
because I'm telling you that my experience
with the McVeys of the world is,
no, man, I'm truly confident.
I have had success.
I believe I know more than everyone
because I get that validated a lot.
My successes on top of each other represent real confidence,
and so I'm not gonna actually be bothered.
No matter how much Mina and Harvard Boy
and LeBittard think they know,
I'm not gonna be bothered that they know more
than I do about something.
I do not.
My experience is it does not correlate
with success or intelligence.
McVeigh is, I don't think he's online.
So you know, you may bring that up,
but I'm telling you, Dan,
there are a lot of very successful people in football
who are very online or who pay attention to people.
I'm shocked that they care about their opinions.
I don't think it has anything to do
with like reaching a certain mountaintop.
I think different people are just built differently.
Like why is Kevin
Durant our greatest poster and most online? He is an incredible player, but you see him
responding to people and engaging and he's very like dialed into that. I just think that's
his personality. And I think there's people in football, there's people at very high levels.
I am telling you, there are very successful GMs who I know for a fact see everything and read everything.
And then there are ones who don't.
I think it's just, we always talk about this with ourselves, there are people in our industry
like who's online, are you reading it?
I don't think that you can draw, paint a broad brush when you talk about why people care
about others' opinions or why they're dialed in.
I really think some people just have different psychological makeups that make them more curious
Who make them want to sort of touch the third rail and you know, maybe even like listen
We're talking about being online. Listen to local radio. I there are GMs and coaches who do that. It shocks me
Jerry Jones still goes on local radio, right and maybe it's because he's of that generation
But it's also because I think even the wealthiest people and I hear I've talked to owners who
are like consuming stuff, you know, like billionaires. Yeah. And the reason I say like, even the
billionaires do is because this feels like a larger thing broadly about what media is.
So media, Dan, you know, has been hollowed out, degraded, is ever more marginalized, but at the same time,
it still represents the industry that is most synonymous
with public opinion and influence.
And if you're a billionaire,
I don't think it's a coincidence
that this is why Elon Musk bought Twitter.
This is why Jeff Bezos bought the Washington Post.
This is why all of these people who have everything seem to not be able to buy
approval. They can't buy the coverage that they want.
They can't get it from people who seem to be withholding it and therefore they are cast of course as
antagonistic and unfair to them. I think that the media
for all of its marginalization
still exists as such a boogeyman in the minds of people who
seem to have everything else, who are above all of this.
But because they hear it, they have a very human response that makes us all a version
of Kevin Durant, honestly.
We're all so much more like these people that seem to be unusually online.
Some people just really want to be loved.
And some people are more attuned to that. I want to flip it though
at Dan, because yes, there are McPhays and certain people that you know who only listen
to people they respect, but I think we all agree there's a pretty large section of sports
executives, coaches, players, whatever, who see what's said about them, who pay attention
to sports media. So accepting that as a given from our side, do you care?
Does it affect how you talk about things?
Knowing that if you say something about the heat,
Pat Riley is gonna hear it or whatever.
I mean, that's obviously a unique case,
but I'm just saying, like, because I actually,
now knowing that, it's very interesting to me
to see how it affects the way certain people
in sports media
talk about certain teams.
It's kind of fun sometimes to try to read the tea leaves
and figure out who is this for?
Why is this tone being taken?
Yep.
Because it's not always for the mainstream audience.
I think we should always have that governor, right?
The faceless cruelty that emboldens people
all over the internet to say things they would never say
to a human being to their face just because it's indecent. We should
always carry ourselves with what used to be the newspaper principle of if you
write the column excoriating someone you show up in that locker room the next day.
You do not hide from that. You do not say something on television and then never
interact with the people that you are criticizing,
but that is also from a different time, I would say.
I would say that sports radio sort of ate up that decency
by creating an atmosphere where anyone on a car phone
or anyone with a microphone could say anything
that fans were thinking that day.
And that's where this all got a little bit crueler.
I have found in my experience,
I want to talk about people here
as if it's going to get back to them,
because I don't want to run into somebody
that I've said something about,
and I feel like hiding under a chair.
Like, who wants to do that?
That would feel, I imagine the mirror
wouldn't look real good if something like that
was always in my life, that something that I was saying here
was coming back to haunt me
when I had to deal with the consequences.
I can think of, I've had a couple instances like that.
Yeah, what chairs have you guys hidden under?
That's the question that I go to next. I've hidden from couple instances like that. Yeah, what chairs have you guys hidden under? That's the question that I go to next.
I've hidden from Dave Wanstead.
I've hidden, I've physically,
I've physically hidden from him
because of the things that I said about his mustache.
Yes, in the Bahamas.
He had a cabana in the Bahamas
and I was like moving away into a different area
because I didn't wanna confront him.
And it was just mustache jokes.
That's a sad visual.
At the Combine a couple of years ago, a few years ago,
I can't remember, but it was in the last few years,
I met for the first time the GM of a team who I had not met.
I'm not going to name him.
And I was like, oh, I'm Mina Kai.
It's nice to meet you.
And I don't know, I always approach these
from the standpoint of they have no idea who I am.
That's just my, you know, I'm just a person.
And he's like, yeah, I know you are,
but not in a good tone.
Uh-oh.
Maybe.
Oh no, that immediately puts you on the retreat.
And he said, he's like, you know,
you've been pretty damn critical of my drafts.
And I was like, yeah.
And then he actually pantomimed me stomping on his neck and squishing his drafts like
I was like a person, I guess, putting out a cigarette.
And he did it for like two minutes.
I just had to stand there and watch his pantomime,
like me destroying his dress.
And I walked away and I was like, what, did I really?
And I was like, I left it off in person.
And then I remembered, I actually put up all of his drafts
on a full screen and just shitted on it on TV
for like three minutes, being wrong, failure, wrong, wrong.
So he was actually right.
Meena, I actually thought of that example,
not all of those details, but I did think to myself
when you were talking about where and how GMs
would care about this, the thing that you triggered
as a thought process for me, well, of course,
if a GM cares that deeply invested in self-worth
and work that job, then he would find people
who care similarly in the media and care about those opinions if the following factors were
true.
My job is incredibly subjective.
Do you know how hard it is, no matter how much data I have, to do correctly what Mina
is asking me to do?
And do you know how easy it is to criticize me when you may have a ton of information,
but you don't have as much as I do
because your entire livelihood isn't based on me
having to select this one player
based on the sensors that he's got in his pads
that my advanced scouting department
from three months of budget has been telling me about
and pressuring me to hire when the owner says,
I should pick somebody else.
Like I understand why that person would think,
how dare you question my expertise
at something that's this unscientific.
And I could never do what they, people sometimes ask me,
oh, do you want to work for your team?
Absolutely not.
It's so hard.
My job is just, I'm criticizing it
and Monday morning quarterbacking it.
I, yeah, I fully respect what he does
is very, very, very difficult,
but he did not do it very well for a very long time.
What I want people to appreciate though, right,
is that even information, beyond opinion, information,
like the newsbreakers, Schefter, Woj,
pick your favorite giant account that's been a
clearinghouse of information.
Those people have such tremendous power and influence when it comes to just how currency
is information in that sport.
I raise you this question.
Do you think there's a person who runs a team who does not leak to somebody?
Do you think there's a person who's like, you know what, I'm not doing the anonymous
source thing. I believe that exactly. Mina's pantomiming is zero. Everybody has somebody.
I'm glad for that clarification because it did not look like that's what she was pantomiming.
That is not what that looked like. Dan, it looked like what the GM yelling at her
was pantomiming what he felt like
as she was criticizing him.
No, I think it's what he wants from the media
is what I was pantomiming.
And I'm not gonna give it to ya.
Guys, I'm a massive, massive proponent of good sleep. Quality sleep is essential.
That's why the Sleep Number Smart Bed is designed for your ever evolving sleep needs.
You can choose what's right for each of you.
Whenever you like, need a bed that's firmer, that's me, I'm a firm guy, or softer, my wife
likes it a little bit softer on her side.
Only Sleep Number Smart Beds let you choose an ideal
comfort and support with your sleep number setting. It's the best bed for
couples. Sleep Number Smart Beds automatically respond and adjust to your
movements so you sleep comfortably all night long. Many couples say that one or
both partners sleep too hot or too cold. I'm a furnace guys, I sleep hot, my wife
sleeps cold. All Sleep Number Smart Beds feature cooling pressure relieving comfort layers for soothing sleep throughout the night.
JD Power ranks Sleep Number number one in customer satisfaction with mattresses purchased in store
and now during Sleep Number's lowest prices of the season, shop Sleep Number Smart Beds starting at
$9.99 for a limited time. Prices higher in Alaska and Hawaii for JD Power 2023 award information,
visit jdpower.com. Only at a Sleep Number store or sleepnumber.com.
This is something that we have kind of
had an ongoing conversation on this podcast about.
And I actually sort of alluded to this,
but as like a tangent,
and I thought this would be a good opportunity
to elaborate on.
The headline is, is Google SEO Gaslighting the Internet?
I was in the New Yorker.
It's by Kyle Chaka, who writes a lot about this stuff, has a book about it, I believe.
This article was specifically about just, I guess, to sum it up, how search has gotten
terrible and increasingly useless for a number
of reasons.
He uses the anecdote of a woman who operates a air purifier website that, you know, where
they specialized in it, they catered to SEO, they do good work and has been increasingly
punished in Google results as sort of indicative of this larger trend
where you just can't find stuff on the internet
because it's being taken over, like SEO,
which is always, it's been a thing for a long time,
but now increasingly it's being exploited
by useless websites, topping that,
Google now has this half-baked AI
It's not an option they force it on you at the top which many people myself included have found pretty useless
this is
Sort of indicative area. I rather reflects a lot of broader trends obviously AI
I think the general they call it it the intensification of the internet. But basically, you know, it's something you
see with social media, I think you see it with websites like Amazon, where these
companies as who are basically monopolies have become less and less
likely to cater to the actual needs of the people who use them online.
Twitter is the example a lot of people go to, a website that's become really trash.
But Google is an interesting one to me because it's been so, it's almost synonymous with the internet for me.
And reading this, I felt it really cohered with my personal experience of it. An example,
this is so, it's kind of, it's very Dan-like in that it's, I
come across as like a pretty, a doddering boomer in this story, but...
Dan has put on his glasses for this segment, by the way, just for the record.
Okay, so the other day, I was trying to figure out, can you
find the identity of a person based on their license plate?
I won't clarify why, but simple question.
How many people is Mina beefing with on a regular basis?
It is, I've always thought that you can find
someone's identity from their license plate,
but I don't know how.
It's funny that Pablo used the word beef
because I was thinking about the show Beef,
where one of the characters literally buys the identity of someone based on their license
plate.
Great show, by the way.
Great show.
We should recommend that.
It is very good on Netflix.
So I couldn't figure it out from Googling it because all the results on top were just
websites to buy it.
But the websites to buy it based on the search results, it looks like a thing you could buy. I bought one for a dollar trial.
Oh no.
It turned out you can't buy it. But then the next Google result was like, no, no, this
time you really can. So I bought that one for $10. Again, you cannot buy it. So I ended
up spending $11 on this just because I could not figure it out based on Google search results.
And I feel like that's just so true now when you Google anything, you can't figure
anything out.
I thought she was scamming sucker proof.
Like she can, I did not think that it would be easy, as easy to trick Mina on the
internet as it is to me, to trick me, Pablo.
So Google does suck.
So wait, but Dan, I want to, I want to define what incitification is.
This was what the American dialect society recognized as the
word of the year in 2023.
And I wish that we could have left it back then.
It turns out this is actually the story of all the things we use in tech.
And it's basically the story of how a company, a tech company will design a
product that's so actually useful to its consumers that everybody starts to use it. This is Google, right?
Which has basically become a... the closest thing they have to a public
utility online, like search. That's what we've turned to because they made search
really good. But at a certain point, all these tech companies, it sounds like, were
making a decision to prioritize the user experience over what they
would eventually need, which is to actually make as much money as they wanted.
And now we're at the stage of all of these companies are like, time to cash in, we have
all of the users captive, we have the people that we need using our product, and now they're
deciding to make them worse.
Because the way to actually make the money
is to stop making it as useful to people, to prioritize sponsored search results, to
prioritize the people paying you to get in front of your eyeballs, whereas it used to
be the thing that actually was what you wanted to find.
Now it's a thing where it's pay for play.
And this is true of Airbnb and Amazon and Facebook and Google and Twitter and arguably
Netflix, YouTube, Reddit,
Uber, all of these things have become worse because they have a critical mass of users and now they don't need to care about
acquisition of customers anymore as much.
And furthermore, Google also owns YouTube, lest you think that their power is just over there with Google.
They have an influence that is terrifying to me for a number of reasons,
not the least of which is I come from exiles, I come from communism, I come from a childhood
that has a whole lot of propaganda in it and the warnings of it. And those fears seem realized
in the modern age when corporations are doing things like this to reiterate some of what
Mina is saying there, okay, Because the Department of Justice did take Google
to trial for having a monopoly,
and this article is saying basically that Google reps
regularly lie, mislead, or omit information, right?
So if you're thinking about this as it got together in 1998
in a perfectly resourceful way,
let's just gather and organize the world's information.
If they've gotten so good at that since 1998, Mina,
that it is now a utility that we all need,
and if they've done that in whatever it is, 26 years,
what do you imagine the next 26 years
of this is gonna look like if we got it right for 26 years,
but now capitalism is going to take over.
Now tech company and the hedge fund and need to just gobble up every inefficiency everywhere
because the main currency is always going to be currency, not attention.
And Google is, it is a monopoly.
Like that's not, that's not up for debate.
I don't even know who you'd go to second anymore.
I listened to a great podcast on that topic, Dan,
which is kind of like, what's next?
If the internet is this sh** useless.
It was Ezra Klein episode with,
I believe his name is Neelay Patel,
he's the editor of The Verge.
The Verge.
And he talked about the possibility
of there almost being two internets,
like a second smaller internet that's actually useful.
And not for everything, but for some things.
And I think there is something to that
because Pablo, you were listing all the sites
that have gotten worse,
but one that I find myself increasingly using
because it has been a little bit more impervious
to algorithmic influence is Reddit.
I am a Redditor now.
And I know there's some really horrible toxic corners of it, no doubt.
But there's two things that I find harder to use on the websites I did before that I
have gone to Reddit for.
One is like discussions of TV shows.
Twitter is now basically useless for trending topics,
because you click on a trending topic and it's just crap.
Whereas Reddit, I can go to a TV show's thread,
like the Dragon Show, and it's funny,
and everything I want is there.
The Dragon Show.
Just saying. So there's that aspect of it.
But perhaps more importantly, to answer basic questions, you know, searching.
My kid, you know, something is stuck up his nose.
Do I need to go to the emergency room?
You know, Google is now basically useless.
I have found like actually concrete good information on Reddit threads because they're actually
written by humans.
I know that there's some AI dabbling around the corners of it, but for the most part now,
it's still one of the very few places on the internet where you can actually find humans
talking.
But that smacks of such a desperation, more than it is like a thing I want to credit Reddit
for.
It's just that we've gotten to a point where the
places we used to look for human reviews have now become so hard to trust. Partly because
by the way, like this is a story of the intensification of Twitter, right? Obviously we all know this.
The people who pay for the verified thing are now at the top of the comments section.
So you can't even get to the things that like seemingly more normal actual people are posting.
And so Reddit does not have that.
And so it's sort of like in the land of the blind, the one-eyed commenter is king.
Like I, part of me is also because a lot of this is about where can we get a bunch of
people talking like humans again.
It makes me think about how social media moved us away from websites into these platforms.
And now the websites, when I try to go back to them, are just impossible to find.
And it does call for like, what's the next product?
When Mina talks about the second smaller internet, I'm intrigued.
And my intrigue is only stopped by the fact that that sounds like a scam that I might sign up for,
which I give my credit card information for a site
that promised me a better internet.
Mina is going to pretend to have seen this movie,
whether she has or she hasn't,
but if you've seen Demolition Man,
what she's describing as the Redditors are the
Dennis Leary renegade community that lives in the
sewage system
of Sylvester Stallone's view of the future with Sandra Bullock. You're saying you go to Reddit
to get the real from the dirty humans who are still out there, not being artificial intelligence.
And it may be you said toxic corners in Reddit. My God, there's so much more real estate than the
corners that is toxic in Reddit. But the fact that you found some human purity somewhere there
that offers you solace is funny.
But the thing is about Reddit and the toxic corners
is you can avoid them.
You don't, you know, like, whereas I think
on these other, what, like, Twitter, TikTok, or whatever,
it's unavoidable when you use it, right?
It's thrown at you. Twitter, TikTok or whatever, it's unavoidable when you use it, right?
It's thrown at you.
Actually, when Twitter changed to where you said the first comment is like a crappy, you
know, blue check comment, it is like if you set your Reddit to always have the least upvoted
comment, which is not a thing, you know, and does.
It's kind of like the internet used to be this incredible grocery store, where
you could go and you could pick out the things you want to make a great meal and you had
this wonderful, it was like the promise of it was like, oh my God, you have all of this
choice, you have everything from all over the world. And now it's just somebody chewing
up gruel and spitting it into your mouth. Like, well, that's Twitter, at least.
Um, and yeah, like, I, the demolition man,
which I have not seen, but the analogy sounds good.
I truly have been able to find conversations
between real moms talking about their experience.
So I just traveled with my kid for the first time ever.
And let me tell you, so much good advice
from that part of the internet.
Because there aren't websites
that I can find good stuff anymore.
Every parenting website is bought out by affiliate links
and it's paid for by you.
You're like, oh, this looks like a good product.
Turns out the website is obviously sponsored
by the product and whatnot.
Social media is useless.
It is literally the only place
where I can find good parenting advice now.
I just like how in the cinematic story that Mina's trying to tell us, only now is she
becoming a strange internet creature.
Meanwhile, Mina established that the reason she doesn't trust Google anymore is because
she was trying to buy the information of whose license plate is this, as if that's not a
thing a person with an insane personal vendetta
who should not be trusted on the internet would be doing.
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Can we get to the raw dogging?
Finally, we get to the raw dogging.
It is an article by Kate Lindsay and it's why men are raw dogging flights.
And basically this is an unpleasant verb.
There's a picture here of Idris Elba on the show
that Pablo likes hijack, which is basically,
he's very restless once they take the phone away from him
because what do you do when you're addicted to the phone
and you're on one of these long flights?
I'm about to fly for 24 hours here.
And I don't believe that I have the strength, and you're on one of these long flights. I'm about to fly for 24 hours here.
And I don't believe that I have the strength,
stamina, the will to do what raw dogging
is represented by here,
which is to just look at the map
the entire time you're flying,
to not be on the internet, not be connected to anything,
not interact with others,
just go into some sort of trance
where you just bore yourself for 24 hours as a matter of will. I could not do this. I find
myself all the time reaching for my phone, reaching for other things, other stimuli, but I can see
when I read some about it how it could be meditative to some. If you can find yourself in some trance of serenity,
where you could do breathing exercises or something else, to be 100% present instead of doing what I
do, which is trying to figure out how to play the Tetris with my remote control. I don't think that
that's the best use of time, but you guys, neither one of you can imagine yourselves doing something like this, right?
On a long flight, seven hours, no reading,
no connection to anything.
So I was just going to, I was in Europe,
I was in France last week, back and forth,
about seven hours or so.
And the level of anger that I felt
when the wifi wasn't working was me and the times
Googling license plate levels of just fury.
I hate this idea. I do not relate to it except Mina in the aspirational sense,
which is that this is mostly a story, if we're translating this really,
about how desperate people actually are to like be off their phones.
And they're looking for some sort of like excuse or this framework in which maybe now I can be the person that I cannot be when I'm left my own literal devices on
the ground.
They're like, what if I try this radical experiment of, you know, revisiting what it's like to
have an imagination?
That feels like what the story is about.
Yeah, it's the kind of story that inevitably inspires a lot of people talking about how
it's such a sad commentary on modern existence that no one can even imagine going seven hours
without their phone as they tweeted out on their devices to brag about how evolved or
enlightened they are as not being people who aren't addicted to the internet.
It's also a story that, by the way, would viral
just because people like to say rock-hawking.
I just wanna say that.
This would not be a thing if not for rock-hawking.
I don't know if Dan has ever heard that term before.
I believe he's using it in a way
that is very dangerous in the future.
I have heard, yes, I do know what that phrase means.
I don't know why you would think, why, why?
Why are you defending that you know this?
I don't wanna talk about it.
Yeah, I don't know what, this is a weird,
this is a weird hail for Dan to defend.
I was being sarcastic, but there is something to it.
I, like you, like everybody, have had moments
where I've been disgusted with my,
certainly my addiction to my phone, but I would say
worried about my reduced attention span generally. That is something that bothers me. I think
it is something that should bother pretty much everybody. And like you said, Pablo,
this is a story is sort of really a prism to consider that more than it is a starting
point for a discussion on whether or not any of us are capable of doing this on a plane, let me talk about that.
I find that for me, it is a good exercise to take to force, and I do have to force myself,
which is what's being described here, to be away from not just the phone, but the internet for X period of time, especially if I want to think through something or be creative.
When I was a writer, actually,
I loved flights or Amtrak's without Wi-Fi because it would honestly,
I would be one of the very few places where I found myself
doing my best writing and most likely to get something done for exactly this reason. That's
very different from what's being described here. But I think the thrust of it is the
same, which is because we have so much distraction at our fingertips all the time, it does render
us incapable of certain types of thought and mental exploration.
Dan, we're seeing products all of the time now being sold,
by the way, sometimes in sponsored links,
elevated to the top of Google search results,
where it's like, hey, what we're selling now
is effectively a digital camera
where you can't see the photos that you're taking
so that you have to sort of like almost go back
to the analog world of
you'll find them when they get developed later.
I'm seeing people buy phones that don't have color,
where they're like, they're black and white, almost like brick phone,
I think it's called or something like that, where it's like,
all you could do is text on it.
I'm seeing products like, hey, here's a, basically a typewriter,
where it's like, all you can do is type and see the words
and there's nothing else on the screen.
And it all feels like a way of us trying to sell ourselves
what used to be the case,
because the pendulum finally feels like it's swinging.
But as a former writer, all of us qualify as that,
I do relate to how sometimes my brain being left alone
was the only way that I would get inspiration.
Like, what an a**hole thing I'm about to say,
but like sometimes the muse only visits you
when you're sort of unoccupied.
It is an a**hole thing to say,
but the part of this that I find speaks to me
in what Mina is saying is that all three of us,
as you said, used to be writers.
All three of us have forsaken that in search
of the cotton candy that gives us an assortment
of fulfillments now, but all three of us
have lives that are sprinting on a treadmill
on the content machine because this is what ESPN
has birthed of writers is three
people who spend a lot of time on this particular treadmill making things and I just realized with
what Mina said that on Wednesday, Juneteenth was a Wednesday and I had it off in the middle of the
week which I cannot remember when I had a day off.
And the number of times that I had the thought, oh my God, I have time to think.
I have not had time to think.
It was a revelation not but a couple of weeks ago, Mina, of what it is that you're articulating,
which is if you slow it down for a second and you remove the distraction,
because I've tried all sorts of stuff, breath work, meditation, stuff to stop the spinning
fishing reel that just sends wire out to sea all the time, and it was in having a day off,
a national holiday forced upon me that I noticed what it is that you're talking about and it's
something I've lost from writing
because I wrote four days a week.
There were three days to think.
That's gone.
ESPN makes you work 300 shows a week
or 300 shows a year that feel like 300 shows a week.
You guys have all lived in this space.
I'm guessing that you have less time to think
than you've ever had because you have to be talking. And there's no time to think
when you're talking all the time.
I don't have less time to think
because I'm on TV for an hour a day.
I have less time to think
because I'm addicted to the internet.
I am not going to for Dead Mike,
which I think is true of probably a lot of the listeners,
probably just as a facet of modern life.
I don't think this is an extreme example, the seven hour plus flight without the internet,
but I do think there is great mental utility in baking time into your day, even if it's
a 10 minute walk with your dog or whatever, where you are disconnected from anything.
And you have, in your brain has to go in certain directions.
I think I've found that my creativity in problem solving
is stunted when I don't bake any time like that into my day.
I feel like we're pretty close to a world
where there's going to be some tech startup
that is literally just trying to sell us our imagination back to us.
Where it's like, imagine I were to tell you,
you can envision any pornographic situation that you wanted.
Imagine you could have the life that you dreamed
if you only had the power to close your eyes and dream.
I think it's weird.
It's weird, Mina, that he made it pornographic, no?
I know.
Weird that he made it pornographic.
What?
Honestly, I'm just shocked he didn't say
raw dogging the muse.
That was the kicker of my speech,
that you f***ing interrupted. you interrupted sorry sorry god damn it raw dogging the muse
what did we find out today, guys?
I feel like something that I found out immediately is that we're perpetually in a therapy group
that we've assembled about our cell phone addiction.
That's very clear.
It seems like it.
You listen to these episodes.
It seems like we're talking about that a lot.
And I spend a lot of time scared.
We all need it, is the thing.
Yeah.
That's my first reaction.
I keep getting scared of the future while presently living in the future every week.
Dan, can you rod dog your flight for an hour and report back with results?
I can do an hour.
I can do breath work for an hour.
Much longer than that.
I can't.
Give us your mental STD check.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I have learned that you guys are afraid of Reddit, but I'm not.
Downvoting you.
You are braver than we are.
You are tougher than we are. You have lived in that septic system with your periscope and Dennis
Leary and all your pregnant moms that are giving you good advice.
When your kid hasn't shitted in four days,
you'll do whatever it takes to find out how to make him.
I'd ask Jeeves, yeah.
Bring back Jeeves.
Jeeves, can you help my kid poop?
Four days?
Oh, God.
I do, Mina, there is nothing like seeing
the compacted feces of a baby
after four days of not pooping
It is a geological survey. You will see layers. You'll see like a mantle a crust
It's a remarkable thing. Come on. Come on. We didn't need the crust
It's a good word, but it's not necessary there a mantle a mantle and a crust
It's not necessary there. A mantle, a mantle and a crust.
The shared triumph in a couple, by the way.
I know I admitted to gaslighting my husband
about seeing movies we haven't seen,
and that might set us back.
But you know what'll bring us back
when the kid poops after four days
and we look at each other?
That high five has never felt so good.
Dan, before you go off on a flight across the world,
what did you find out?
Well, what I found out, and unfortunately I found it out
before we even started this, that when I'm trying to connect
with friends and people I love over content that I think
we would all enjoy.
They've never watched what it is that I've watched,
and furthermore, they judge me as viewing sad things
that they wouldn't watch because their judgment
is better than mine or they wouldn't watch
the same things I would.
I just thought that this was a place we connected
and it hurts to find out here that you guys are secretly mocking me about it
Hear that sound oh
That's not a grief eating truffle
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