What Now? with Trevor Noah - Meet Eugene Khoza – One of My Favorite People [VIDEO]
Episode Date: April 17, 2025In another “My Favorite People” episode, Trevor chats with South African comedian and dear friend Eugene Khoza. From processing loss to abundance, from friendship to religion, from hanging on to l...etting go, nothing is off limits in this hilarious and profound episode. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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So what made you decide to go into podcasting?
Decide to go into it.
Is that your podcast? is that your podcast is that
your podcast voice I'm gonna have to edit around all of Eugene's veneck okay
because how do you do how do you do subtitles on the podcast any veneck
that you say I'm gonna just throw in an American guy's voice there so you'll be
like but Epstein and then instead of
like the guy ends out something then he'll be like Epstein he did it
and then I'll just tell the audience every time you hear this voice he's
spoken another language and I didn't want to lose the authenticity of the
conversation so I didn't I didn't edits around it the authenticity of the conversation. So I didn't edit around it at all. But I had...
That's funny.
Yeah, but I...
Because you have to do subtitles.
But I want you to know that it's subtitles.
Yeah, what I mean?
You see me.
This is What Now with Trevinoa. Whenever you want some water Eugene?
Oh, thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Oh yeah.
This is the awkward part.
How you start a conversation.
It's the worst part of every conversation.
Why don't we start with a prayer?
This is actually why our grandmother started meetings with prayers. Oh yeah, to cut the awkwardness. Yeah, because it's to cut the worst part. Why don't we start with a prayer? This is actually why our grandmother started meetings with prayers.
Oh yeah, to cut the awkwardness.
Yeah, because it's to cut the awkwardness.
Because now you can't just come together and be like, your son has a drug problem and your
husband is cheating.
If you start with a prayer, then it opens up.
But it was also a Township Power move.
Because everyone here will know whose house this is.
Because you can't lead a prayer at...
You can't lead a prayer at somebody else's house.
When you pray in a South African household, right?
First of all, like I don't know if your grandmother did this.
My grandmother used to give her address and she used to give like where she's from and
her name and everything.
No, my grandmother never did that.
No, really, my grandmother would do that.
She'd be like, my way to San Marzullino, eh, Camalamongo, Francis, Noah.
And then she'd be like, Stalala, 626, Orlando East.
What a location.
Yeah, who you are, where you're from, whatever.
And I remember I asked her once, I was like, why are you doing this?
And then she was like, why do I assume?
She said, I must just assume that God is always listening to me.
She said, that's not fair.
And if you think about it, most South African prayer in general, I think is very like considerate
of God.
It's very much like, we know that you're doing stuff and we know that like, you know what
I mean?
Yeah, but I think because of missionaries, we never as black people thought that God
is with us.
God was brought to us.
So we always have to identify ourselves and also separate ourselves from the non-believers.
It's funny now that you say the missionary thing.
I actually think a lot of that was real
Hmm. Is that like because think I always think about this I go like imagine being a
Black person anywhere on the continent, right?
These people come with religion
Right, and then they tell you that the reason things are going bad in your life is because you don't have
This this God in particular, because there was religion.
There were different religions all over the continent, all over South America, all over
these places.
They would force the native people, they would force them to buy goods from them that nobody
else wanted to buy at predetermined prices.
They would say they would do the work of like donkeys and mules and all of that stuff.
But the main thing was they also came in with religion.
So everywhere in the world, I can see this, this, this vibe where people have
come in with religion saying to you, Hey, all these bad things that are happening
to you are because you don't worship God.
And then it must've been weird because the natives are like, you, you are the
bad thing that's happening to us.
They're like, yes, exactly.
If you had prayed and you have penicillin, this wouldn't
be happening to you. I thought you didn't need penicillin because you can pray. And
this is go put on clothes. Not cancer time yet. But also churches in the township, that's
where you would see family structure.
Yes.
That's where you'd see people dressed up nicely because parents used to leave very early.
So you never see them wearing nice clothes except for on a Sunday.
And then also cars as well.
You'd see your principal or the local doctor.
They would park their cars.
So church has always been aspirational.
I don't think anything has changed from back in the day to now.
And also, it's missionaries offered people to go to university.
Nelson Mandela was that beneficiary.
So a lot of people that went and played cricket and went to school because of churches.
So a lot of people are very conflicted when it comes to religion and this topic because
somehow they benefited from it.
Now they can't separate themselves from the lies of it as well and the oppression of it
as well. But people in other countries who are not part of the system of going to that, because if
you think of a church, such a small building for a big community, so it's already on its, by merit,
it already is an exclusive club of people, the believers. There's the believers that are believing
in proxy, there's the believers that are dedicated in coming here and giving money
and dressing up and showing up.
It's a place for people to gather once a week to come and say what they need to say.
So Tina, the organization of it ended for us when church ended, but for people in power,
it kept on continuing the whole week through, because people who run the church run the
church.
They don't have other jobs.
The believers have other jobs.
The Pope's job is to run the church. The other ones, it's for them to go and collect money and come back and give it back to the Pope.
I'm conflicted when it comes to church because I think...
You love church?
Yeah, I love it.
I love churches. I don't love church.
No, no, no. But I...
So, you know, when I look at what we're experiencing in the world today,
there's no denying that church and religion is responsible
for a lot of, I mean, you name it and label it, right? Pain, conflict, what, what, what,
what, what, what, right?
Birth control.
You name it, whatever. But when I look at what people's lives have become, I can't help
but wonder how much worse it's going to get when church falls away. So go to any thriving European country.
Church is gone now.
When I was in the Netherlands, all the churches that used to be churches are now…
So the Airbnb is now?
Yeah, they've just turned into other things.
Really?
Yeah, it's like there's a restaurant or this is a something.
It's not a church.
So cathedrals are gone?
No, no, no.
It's not a church.
Churches are dying.
In fact, funny enough, in the US, you know that story, you know when Trump was saying
like, hey, the Haitians, they're eating dogs, they're eating cats, blah, blah, blah, that
whole thing.
So they went to that part of Ohio and they interviewed people.
And not only were they saying that the Haitian immigrants have revitalized the local economy,
they went to the church.
And then the pastor said the church was about to die.
He said the church was dead. And now because of the Haitians, the church is a thing again,
and it exists. And they come there and they use it and there's a congregation. And now
the church makes money and they can be a community hub again. So that's why I say I'm conflicted
when it comes to church, because I think it's easy for us to dismiss things in general in
life. Like we always want to say good, bad.
But to your point, I can't think of a place that is responsible for more community and
connection than a church.
Because a church, you didn't need money to come to it.
As we live in a world where more and more clubs are predetermined, you know, like race,
class, all these things.
Religion was one of the few things where you could opt in.
You could walk in off the streets and say, I want to be part of your club.
And the person would be like, yeah, you're part of the club.
No way.
Like where do people connect for free with other humans on the internet?
Yeah, but that's not connecting.
That a hundred percent is connecting.
Right.
That's not connecting.
You know how you mentioned that's not connecting.
You think the internet is connecting? Yes. Okay what level of connection? You know how many times I've spoken to you on WhatsApp? Which has
five at a time. But imagine if we met on WhatsApp. It wouldn't be the same.
No I'm saying if we met on WhatsApp. But we have a couple of times. No man met. I'm saying if our
initial introduction as human beings was on WhatsApp. This would be a video call right now if we had met on
WhatsApp. This guy. I think where religion and church is concerned, and I hear your
point about it almost feels like as humans we need structure. Yeah. And I
remember days when my parents were not at home, well my dad was always not at
home, but when my mom was not at home. Well, my dad was always not at home.
But when my mom was not at home, I would have the most amount of fun.
When I was the youngest, I used to think I need this woman here.
But as soon as she said there's food in the fridge, you know where the TV remote is, have
a good time.
And I'm going to be gone for eight hours.
I was like, can you leave sooner?
The overtime there.
Because in my world, that's when I realized I don't actually need someone
to tell me what to do. I learned that very early. So some people need structure and some
people don't. But I think also people are deep and steeped in religion have abdicated
their responsibility to be good people to someone else to a higher power. So when they
go to a pastor, when they go to their reverend and when they speak to God on their behalf,
they feel like they don't have to be good people. They can always ask for forgiveness.
But I feel like if people who go to church took that same mentality that they have for that hour and a half at church
and actually spread it around in real life every day, day to day, the world would be a better place.
Because I think love should be preached more than religion.
I don't think someone should tell us Jesus died on the cross for all of us to be here and then it ends
there. Look, I don't think you're wrong, but stories
help. Like stories just help. So if you say to somebody, sacrifice is the most powerful
thing you can do. Someone's like, okay, what do you mean by that? I think there's something
really powerful in someone saying, Hey, man,
this stranger that you don't know died for you and your sins.
There's a deep gratitude that comes with that.
Yeah.
But the Bible is a big book of suffering.
Yes.
It's always someone.
Life is a big book of suffering.
You see, so it's all about someone did something and then found redemption.
Someone did something and then found redemption.
Yes.
There's never someone just having a good time.
There's lots of people having a good time in the Bible. Who? Lord's
wife turned into salt? Job? Because she looked back. Job whose investments were tarnished
and then he had to... Who? Show me one person in the Bible who had a good time. Who was
someone who had a good time? People were in the bellies of the whale, people were kicked
out of Eden, someone was asked to go sacrifice his son. They were having a good time before
they were kicked out of Eden. Yeah, somewhere someone had to go, it's me. Yes, but okay.
So what are you saying?
You want the Bible to show me then a TV show where nobody suffers.
This is entertainment.
But where are the good times in the Bible?
No, there's lots of good times.
There's lots of good times.
There's lots of good times.
King David had good times.
Until what happened?
Until he died.
What did King David do?
Well, I mean, he killed Goliath. That was his
journey of becoming David, the King. So he was a wise king. Yes, he was a wise king. But then he
also, he was the one who killed the guys, the woman's husband, right? So he was having a good
time. Put him in the artillery. Yes, but he was having a good time. But he was having a good time.
Was the wife having a good time? Did the husband have a good time?
Did the extended family?
Eugene.
The funeral cover.
So, okay, now let me ask you this.
Let me ask you this.
Which TV show has people having a good time?
The Apprentice.
No, I'm joking.
No, but seriously, which TV show?
No one's having a good time.
I hear what you're saying, but I mean, like, if you're telling stories,
there is no story that is worth listening to if it's just like, I went there,
what I wanted to happen happened
Yes, and then I came back and everything is great. That's not a story
So then every sermon in church, obviously picking from this book and they decide maybe we're gonna preach about job
Yes, there's gonna be how job suffered and then how's you suffering right now and how you can end your own suffering by doing what?
By bring it away. Okay, so job did not pray away
So I feel like.
God said to him, who are you to question me?
But I feel like, yeah, what's happening is.
Then he was like, yeah.
I feel like you're trying to get me now to defend religion.
No, no, no, no, not at all.
But I'm not.
I'm trying to get you to defend the characters.
No.
In the great book of Oz.
I mean.
So what I'm, but it's fine.
What I'm saying is it doesn't matter what the book is.
Okay.
Even if we talk about the Wizard of Oz, right?
I don't need. No, but really. You want to talk about The Wizard of Oz, right? I don't need, no but really.
Talk about The Wizard of Oz, we've got three hours.
I don't need Dorothy to be real.
I don't need the Tin Man to be real.
I don't need the lion to be,
but these are the concepts that stick with me.
The Wicked Witch of the West.
Yeah, if someone wrote me a textbook about courage,
about decency, about like, then what?
But you remember it when it's a story,
you connect to it differently, you understand it.
Dorothy goes on a journey, you get what I'm saying?
Like all of these characters go on a journey.
And so I think, I hear what you're saying
and I agree in a perfect world,
everyone would be able to do for themselves
what they require another to do for them.
But I don't think that's fundamentally what makes us human.
I think humans need that.
So that you as Eugene may not need somebody to tell you what to do maybe in one or some aspects
of your life. Yes, not in all. Yeah, but then there'll be some places where
you find there's a deep reward that comes from somebody guiding you and that
for me is the good of churches. So like when a church is run well,
when a church is not like the minister having
a private jet and the congregation starving, I'm saying when a church is run well, it really
just is a community center where people come together. They share like an idea of problems.
They talk about how there's something on the other side.
Group counseling.
But yeah, it's group counseling.
Yeah, it's group counseling.
So why are you being so difficult when you know what it is?
I think it's group counseling. Yeah, it's group counseling. So why are you being so difficult when you know what it is?
I think it's a podcast. Why not?
You see what you just did now.
You just did the Bible to me.
You could have just come in and made it good times, but you brought suffering.
You brought strife.
You brought pain.
Why did you do that?
Okay, my laugh trumped my thirst. Oh man.
I wanted to do them both at the same time.
Oh man.
Oh my sunburn.
Oh wow.
That's what you get.
Oh man.
Yo I'm burnt eh.
What were you doing?
I forgot that I could get this burnt.
What were you doing? I forgot that I could get this burnt. What were you doing?
I was playing pickleball.
He need difference between pickleball and paddleball.
Because I've heard you speak, you and I went to go play a paddleball for the first time.
Yeah, paddleball.
I worked myself in the face.
That's the problem with paddleball is people hit themselves.
Oh, it's a thing.
Why didn't you tell me this that day?
I didn't know until you started.
You were the first person who let me know this was a trend.
You know what I mean? So pedal ball is squash mixed with tennis and then pickle ball I would say is table
tennis mixed with tennis.
So is the racket smaller?
No, the racket is just different.
It's like a flat paddle type thing.
It's like a piece of polycarbonate or something.
I don't know.
It's like a big table tennis.
Also that's where the similarities come in. Yeah, I would say that. And the ball. And
the ball. And the ball. Like the way it sounds, the way it moves. Sounds? Yeah. Because it
does like a... Oh, okay. So when it hits the... Yeah. But the pedal has more of like a...
By the way, if you want to buy my new album, sounds of record sports, you can follow, you can find the link in the description.
So we were playing the only, the only time that people could come together
with their schedules was at like 10 11.
And then the UV index was 10.
I just learned about UV indexes by the way.
Yes.
So the UV index was 10.
Yeah.
And then I just got like a burn around my,
you know. So the people that you were playing with, they were only free at around 10 in the
morning. Yeah, it just happened to be. Normally we played like when the sun is setting.
Do all of your friends that you play pickleball with have jobs? Yes. What do they do? What's the-
You want everyone's job. The one who was there at Picapo.
There's a lot of people.
You want everyone's jobs.
Beningai.
Someone works in marketing.
Another person works in, I don't know, the finance industry.
Another person's unemployed.
Another person works in advertising.
Another person works in, I don't know, trading or something.
Another person works on radio.
Another person is a lawyer. How far must I go with this, trading or something. Another person works on radio, another person is a lawyer.
How far must I go with this?
How many were you?
10 or so?
Yeah, maybe.
Yeah.
So you all coordinated.
You must come and join.
You'd love it.
I know.
You'd love it.
Do you find it weird when you are hanging around with, because you know how we grew
up.
It's not like after we finished metric grade 12, it's not like we went to
university and studied a degree and then we went into the job market and gained
experience.
When you look at the friends that you have, let's say the group that you're
playing pickleball with and you like, when are you now you're in lawyer
advertising, whatever they've put in years into this career that they have.
And they're now asking someone, can I not be around Mara can attend so set long enough with my friend and do fun things, which they
actually really do enjoy. Do you, do you look at your friend? Because it happens
to me when I still used to have friends with jobs, and I'd look at them and I go,
I had the system because I don't understand how they do it. When I, when
you hang out with them, how do you pretend to be normal? Because in that
situation, you are not normal.
You're the one you could have done this at six in the morning.
But we're all normal.
John, because I think of it this way.
I know what you mean.
Yes.
But I think of it as
the audience.
How you know how I mean it.
Okay.
Cause I don't want to be the only guy who said it.
No, because we all know.
Yes.
But when you're with friends, when they start talking about David orders, you're
like, yeah, or contract renewals, you're like, hey, smoothie.
Okay.
So on the one side, being a comedian or being in any type of career where there
is no boss slash job slash firing and hiring slash is weird because you're
right, there's nothing that forces you to go somewhere per se.
And there's also nothing that guarantees you anything per se.
So there's no payday when you work in comedy.
There's no, oh, it's that time of the month.
No, but what I mean is there's, there is none and there is like it's when is it
coming, when is it not coming, how is it coming, how is it not right?
But I don't know if you think of you as being the business in a weird way,
you do become more normal.
I think when I meet people who run their own businesses or their own little companies or
their own whatever thing, we feel the same. Because you work as much as you want to work.
And then your work is generally directly tied to, you know, how much money you make generally.
But just like me, you have friends that are in business and then you have
friends that are employed.
Yeah.
Do you feel like you're code switch when you're with the two?
What's the difference between the two?
No, actually, you know what?
I think one of the, one of the things that freed me the most was the more I
spent time with professionals, the more I realized how much they employed, no
professionals, like, you know, like I studied law and I studied accounting and
I studied like those kinds of people.
The more I realize that most people are just winging it in life.
Yes.
Genuinely.
Yes.
Genuinely, genuinely, genuinely. I think one of the worst things that ever happened to me in life is I've gotten to meet, like, some world leaders where I go like, oh boy, we're in trouble in the world. Because we assume that most people's positions come with a certain
aptitude and expertise that's applicable to everything. But we do most people, right?
Yes, absolutely. You're right.
Like Elon Musk is a good example. Elon Musk is the richest man in the world. Now, like
doubling, you know, what is it, like 400 million or whatever now these days? The next person
is 200 million. So like Elon, yeah, no sorry 400 billion,
did I say million? Ah, okay. See this thinking is smaller than yours.
And I warn you about these things when we are sitting.
So Elon Musk, because of that, just like wanders into every space and is given the full latitude
where nobody questions anything.
So, you know, it's funny coming back to the Bible, actually. One thing I appreciate about the Bible
is that if you read it properly, it does show you the complexity of the human being.
So in the Bible, there are good people who then go on to do terrible things and live a horrible life in the end.
There are bad people who have a good moment, but you see humanity in its full complexity
is what I find if you read the Bible.
So even the person that you go is a good guy.
You go like, oh, this is a good person.
Read the Bible and you're going to see there's parts of the story where you're like, they
did what with their son?
They did what to their mom? They did what to their neighbor?
They did, then you're like, damn, I don't know if I can, I mean, I guess King
David was good, but also how could he do this?
Right.
And I think some of that thinking is necessary for the world.
So when, when you're with your friends with normal jobs and then you being, you
playing pickleball and then they tell you, I have to go pick up someone at one.
Or when they say, Hey, my boss is there.
Do you look away?
Do you, when they look at a car in a car park and go, yeah, that's nice.
Is there a part of you that joins into?
Yeah.
Do you, do you look at them and go, yeah, that's also nice.
But because when you're not saying it's nice because you can't afford it or you can't buy it or you can't have it. Yeah. Do you, do you look at them and go, yeah, that's also nice.
Because when you're not saying it's nice because you can't afford it or you can't buy it or
you can't have it, you probably driven it and enjoyed it.
So I'm trying to figure out what I'm trying to figure out.
Because that's what I struggled with.
I'm saying when people with normal jobs, like now when we're coming here.
By the way, what jobs have you had in your life?
I worked at a car park.
Doing what at a car park?
Um, there was like, uh, before there were pay as you go tickets, I introduced
that system with my friends actually at the mall in Pretoria.
So there used to be a booth at the end, at the exit and entrance of every car park.
You come in, there's a boom.
You come out, there's a booth.
So I used to take the ticket and go, Oh damn.
Was this your first job?
First, first job.
Yeah.
When I was 16.
So that's what I did.
And so on weekends and school holidays. They give you the ticket, they pay and then I
couldn't do it till yeah. Yeah. And then the machine says 16 ran. How did you feel when you saw your
first automatic boom machine thing? The pay on foot tickets system. Yeah. When people could do
it without you. Yeah, I was happy. Really? Yeah, because I was in Matric at the time. Then I was like, I don't need you, I'm out. And I left. Oh. But I was happy. So there wasn't a
part of you that was like, ah, they took our jobs. No. I was happy. But one thing I always, the one
thing that changed my life, because I worked, I started the car park at the mall. And then when
I reached Matric, I worked inside the mall.
What did you do in the mall?
I worked at a CD store when those things still existed.
CD like music?
Yeah.
Damn.
And then all your jobs are defunct.
Yeah.
And I also had...
You're basically like the Grim Reaper of jobs.
Yes, when I come in the industry ends.
When you see Eugene coming to the job, you must know it's over.
I'm even warning you in the future.
If you see Eugene show up and be like, hey guys, I'm now going to be working. You're like, ah, this industry is on its way out.
Cause you just went for like defunct job, off the defunct job.
Yes. Another defunct job. I worked at CNA and my job was to man the magazine
counter. And then my job was to go there and tell people who are on dates while
they're waiting for the movies to start to stop paging through the magazine.
I was going,
Oh, you were one of those guys.
And then one day I caught a smart guy. You were one of those guys who was like, you're not allowed to read.
Yes. And then he was like, I was like, no, but you're not allowed to read the
magazine. He was like, but if I go to another magazine, I was like, technically
you caught me.
Elon. So that's what I did as well. So, but the one day that changed my life is I met the guy that owned Brooklyn mall, a
guy called Mr. Watson.
Okay.
He used to come there once a week.
He drove a Jaguar.
His driver drove a Jaguar and he would sit at the back and his wife would be in the main
coat living in the summer.
And then one day when they're entering the new system of pay on foot and then he happened to be the guy next in line and
Then I helped this driver and then I saw him and I remembered I've seen this guy so many times
Then he asked me what my name was and I told him ask me how old I am. I said, yeah
He's like so you do this every day. I'm like, no, no, not every day only on holidays and weekends
And I said, what do you do this every day? I'm like, no, no, not every day, only on holidays and weekends. And I said, what do you do?
The audacity.
My manager was behind me going, and then he said, no, I business, but I live
and I do things and I blah, blah, blah.
Then I said, yeah, I want to do what you do.
I want to come to the mall during the week for no reason.
Then he said, if you wanted, you can do it.
I hated doing rich people say that.
And then I only found out later in life when I worked inside the mall, that
that was him, because now he was inside the mall.
Remember I was in the parking lot when I first met him.
And I got a job inside the mall.
Then I met him and everyone was just, the shop owners were always happy to see him.
The restaurateurs were always happy to see him.
Then there's the guy that owned the mall.
And I think that was my first real realization of what being loved and being
powerful, that combination, what it meant. He was very powerful man. But people loved
him. And I think there was a side of him that also loved them because he didn't have to
be there. And that was a principle I took throughout my life. And I've spoken to you
about this before. I said, only do things that I love. I only hang out with people that I like.
I don't go out to force a lesson of pain on myself and try to test how far my
patients can go with something I don't enjoy.
So I'm only at places where I feel I'm wanted.
I'm also at places where I feel like I want to be.
And that was only from that interaction twice with this man who have never met again.
Damn.
So I like that you, and not in like a dismissive way, but I love that you
formed such a positive idea around this human being knowing the little that you
did.
Yes.
Do you know what I mean?
Yes.
That's what I want to take away from him.
No, but I'm saying like, that's a beautiful thing.
Cause this person you met, you met them twice.
Yeah.
And that's what you took from them? That's all I took from them. Because I realized how much power there was. Because also I started
seeing it around. Because obviously if you work in a CD store, people come there to come buy music,
but also to buy time. So they hang around. So when I would see people at the mall at 11 in the morning,
I would like, what do you do that allows you to be at the mall at 11? I want to do that. So it
became my quest to come to interview people while they're buying their CDs or listening
to me.
What was it about the mall that you were so?
It's abundant.
Okay.
Everything is there.
You don't go to the mall to win the shop.
People go to the mall to look at things that they like and they can just buy them or they
just go to hang out with people that they like.
The mall was a gathering place.
It was obviously, obviously 20 years ago.
Yeah.
So you said that malls are dying now?
To an extent, yeah.
I go to malls.
I like going to malls.
I like walking at malls.
I go to Mall of Africa all the time.
When I go to a new place, I go to a mall.
Just in America, I haven't gotten a chance to go to it because I like Central Park more
so.
I walk around and go to churches.
But I like malls. I like the feeling of abundance.
I think that was my first glimpse of it.
I, when I was working at the mall, I knew at the end of the month, what I wanted to
do with my money.
And you always go to the mall?
No, no.
Things I'd see.
At the mall?
Yeah.
I knew what sneakers I wanted.
I knew what headphones I was going to buy with my money.
I always enjoyed the feeling of abundance, but also it taught me a certain discipline
in life that just because it's there, it doesn't mean you must take it.
Sometimes you just have to wait.
Sometimes you can just walk past it.
Sometimes the idea of being around it is even better than owning it.
I could go into a sound system store and just listen and just have a good time.
I didn't have to take it home.
And then they would come and say, so please, please, you can't be listening.
Please.
Please.
So I remember me, I was reading magazines in your store and remember what you told me.
Yeah.
Do you think that came from how you grew up?
Like what, what was it about, about abundance that, that connected with you in that way?
Cause you didn't grow up with abundance.
As cheesy as that sounds, it was my, my mom, my mom used to, she was a nurse.
She's retired now.
She had four kids.
I was a third one.
What she would do every month end was she would come to school and pick us up.
Pick one up.
So we had a roster.
So every month end, one child gets a turn to go to town with her.
Oh damn.
But she made a point to come before break at school, go to the principal's office.
Did your mom have a car?
No.
Okay. That, no, cause I was wondering why one.
I was like, damn, this is a crazy system.
Okay.
No, so you're getting in a taxi.
Yes.
That's why she has to pick one.
No, no.
Also it's what's gonna happen in town when we get there.
What's going to happen?
You'll see.
Okay.
Sorry.
And then she would come to school and then talk to the principal.
And then I'd be like, there she is.
Then she would come to my class.
Would you know who she's coming to fetch?
Of course.
It's me.
No, but you said there's a roster and you rotate. No, no, no.
We're not at the same school at the same time.
Oh, OK, OK.
Got it, got it, got it.
So she'd come.
I thought your mom was doing like a lottery system.
No, no, no.
You all at the same school and then your mom would walk in.
You just see her head past those big windows at school.
And then they were like, Eugene, your mom is here.
Then I'd be like, oh, man, my mom.
Take my backpack and we're out.
And then we'd get in and we'd heart fight each other
in the passage there.
Then we'd get in a taxi and then off we go to town.
Then when we go to town, the first thing she did
was we go to the park.
Then we sit at the park and then she'd say,
think of anything that you want,
that you want us to buy today.
Think of anything that you want.
Then I'd be like, bye.
Yes, yes, yeah, I want that one.
Bega, ninja tight, lady. Yeah, I want that. Okay, okay, I want that one. Bega, ninja tight, lady, I want that.
Okay, okay, I'm done.
So you're done, sharp.
Then we'd go and buy all the things that I wanted.
And then I realized how many things I passed
going to the things that I wanted
that were insignificant at that point.
Then you buy all the things you want.
And then now we're doing groceries.
Now we get to the nuts and balls of it. Now she buys groceries for the whole house.
And then what she used to do for all of us was she would buy a slab of chocolate
for all of us and a tub of one liter ice cream for all of us.
That was ours to do as we wanted.
So that's what she did.
She showed me abundance and my mom had a concept when it's finished, it's finished.
I've never struggled with loss, with loss of anything, especially
finances. You've known, we've done things with cars and had fun and made money and lost
money and do whatever. I've never struggled with that concept at all because she taught
me when it's there, it's there. When it's not, it's not. But as long as you're here,
you can always make it again. But just like you pass the things that you didn't want at
the store to go to the things that you wanted. Those things will always be there.
So I've learned abundance from her.
And what she would do is she would take the rest of the month's money and give it to you.
And then say, when someone needs something, they're going to come fetch it from you.
So you understand that it's there, but it's there to be used.
So the value of money for us was it buys bread.
It's a taxi ride for someone.
It's a school thing that popped up out of nowhere.
It's this, it's that, someone coming to borrow money from the house.
It's that.
So the value of money was never to look at it as a thing that exists to make you feel
good.
It was there to help facilitate things that just might come up in life.
Some things are small, you end up with more money.
Some things are big, you end up with less money, but it was there.
So she would go, if it was there when it was needed, it did its job.
So I look at life like that and I'm glad for those lessons in life because I've had a chance
to look around.
And that's why I was asking you about friends with employment.
I was not making fun of them at all.
Because I have friends like that as well who would say, I have a day off.
A friend of mine on our way here called me, but I didn't answer his phone.
But he sent me a text before saying, do you want to go ride in the mountain tomorrow because I'm day off. A friend of mine on our way here called me, but I didn't answer his phone. But he sent me a text before saying, do you want to go ride in the mountain tomorrow because
I'm day off? But I'm like, my life doesn't work like that. I can go ride any day. But
if you have to think of it like that, then it means your world is centered like that.
Yeah. I think both of them come with pros and cons.
No, absolutely. So as much as you can say your life, you don't require a day off to do something.
Yes.
But the gift and the curse of it is that like freedom is hard work.
I've experienced this, let's say on like a really flippant level.
If I go on a vacation and everything is planned, I have a great time.
I know where I'm supposed to go. I know at what time I have to be there.
I go to the museum, then I go to this, then I go to... I'm having a great time. I'm like, oh wow, because I'm not thinking.
And when you're not thinking, you don't make the wrong choice. When you don't make the wrong choice, you don't have regret.
You don't feel... There's none of that. You don't go, did I do it or did I not do it? Right?
And I think there's a little bit of that when you are employed versus if you are like doing your own thing.
Is that when you are employed, there's a certain level of someone's telling you what you have to do on what day, by what time.
And that's liberating in many ways. It's like having a personal trainer. It's liberating.
Have you ever walked into a gym and just looked at the weights?
I've done go to gym.
But you've never walked into a gym? Gym is kindergarten for people with regrets. Is that a no or yes? Yes. You
walked into a gym. Oh man. So I get what you're saying.
But I didn't know that thing about, I didn't know that about your mom.
Yeah.
Like I knew that, I knew that vibe with your mom.
It's funny.
I'm trying to think of like how I process loss.
You see- Wait, so, okay.
Help me understand this.
Are you saying that you are not loss averse or are you saying that when you experience
loss you like whatever?
Yes.
Both of them.
Yeah.
I feel like my upbringing, my conditioning and also the way I view life has made me survive
loss better.
I have things that I love that I don't use.
You have things that you love that you don't use.
Yes.
Okay. I have things that I love that I have lost.
Okay.
Both of those things are not with me currently, or I can choose not to be using them or with
them.
Does it make sense?
Yeah.
Okay.
I walk past my bike all the time in the morning.
I choose your motorbike.
Yes.
Okay.
I choose.
And sometimes I can go four months without riding the one and, but it's there.
But if I wake up one day and it's no longer there, the feeling of it not being there won't be horrible to me.
Oh damn.
Because I deal with it all the time.
I look at my daughter, she turns 16, now started grade 11.
Your daughter's 16 now?
Yes.
She's turning 17 in September.
You know, this is probably one of the reasons I don't want kids,
they just make time move then.
Yes.
The only time I feel like time has moved is when I think of how old people's
children are, dude, your daughter to me is still like a five year old.
Yes.
Cause you met me a year before she was born.
Yeah.
Yes.
So to me, she's still that five year old that you saw.
Smart five year old.
Yeah.
16. Yeah. 16. So she, I look at her and I look at how she thinks and how she processes things.
And she's taught me that letting go is actually the best thing you can do. She's been with me,
obviously, for ever. Yeah. And we've lived in different places, in different houses,
and she's at different rooms. And she's changed schools two, three times in her life.
But the way she moves around the universe
amazes me all the time. She looks at life as something that's going to happen anyway.
She looks at life as something that's going to happen anyway.
Yeah, she doesn't look at it as a thing that's going to happen if she does something.
Yeah, okay. I understand what you mean.
So I've started to look at life like that. When I see something new and exciting,
I move towards it. When I was at new and exciting, I move towards it.
When I was at the parking lot, I walked around cars
because I love cars.
That was the best part of my job.
When I went into the mall, I faced abundance.
When it happened once a month, when I was young,
or once after four months when my mom takes me to town,
now it happened every day.
When I started doing comedy, I realized
you can hang out with your friends and laugh all the time.
We had more fun offstage than onstage.
We would travel and then someone pays for it.stage. We would travel and someone pays for it.
You sleep in a hotel and someone pays for it.
And then people would pay to hear me talk for 15 minutes and I would go back and I would
still have fun and time with my friends.
So all of my jobs and my choices were all linked to my passions.
I've never had a job I hated.
I've never had a job that lended me in places I didn't want to be in.
I've been fortunate in that way.
I'm, I'm abundant in so many.
Our friendship led me to so much abundance.
I got to experience being in a private jet with you.
I got to experience in a penthouse and man, I got to experience those things
through you, through our friendship and our love for comedy and our pure natural
gift that was just to stand in front of people and have a good time.
So when I close my checking account every night, that's what I do.
I look at the things and the people that I love and I go, did they bring me closer
to my passions and my, my joy and things that I would have never come close to.
Had I not had these things and I go, your job is done.
So it's not different from the water of cash my mom had.
And as you say, if someone comes and needs something, take it from there.
Don't ask too many questions.
They came because there's a need, but they know that you have it.
So I send everyone to you and I say, he has it, go get it.
It's an interesting lesson to learn.
So I choose to do that.
We're going to continue this conversation right after this short break.
short break. I know that I'm loss averse.
Yes.
You know, but I think I'm also lucky that I haven't lost much in life.
Like I realized this when my grandmother died.
It was a crazy realization.
Yeah.
I've never lost a loved one.
It was a huge loss.
Like I've genuinely never lost a loved one.
And then I started thinking differently about everyone in my life who has, because I was
like, damn, this is, for me, it was even like a, it felt like a slither of a feeling that
another human being could have, because my grandmother died at the age of 96, 96, 97.
So, you know what I mean?
In a weird way, I wasn't around for all of it, but like you
have like a hundred years to prepare. Like we always think of hundred as this magical
number, but I was like, we knew she was going and she was healthy till the day she died,
died in her sleep, the way you dream of going. Peacefully gone, go to bed, good night everybody,
see you tomorrow. Ha ha, jokes on you, there's no tomorrow. She was gone. You know what I
mean? But the feeling that I had was like, I couldn't believe what I was experiencing, like the
grief, the loss, the all of that.
So are you saying that you don't have that experience?
You don't have that feeling?
I do, but I process it quicker because I know it was going to happen anyway.
So it's my choice to live in it.
So when it happens, I immerse myself in the feeling and then let the feeling pass through
me.
So what I used to do before, I would let the things get stored in me.
I had this huge anxiety when I was growing up of what's going to happen to me after school
and it ruined most of my high school life.
Literally, literally after school.
Like every day you go, what's happening when the bell rings today?
No, no, when school finishes.
Oh, like school as a concept.
Yes, when high school finishes.
Yeah, when high school is done.
And I look back and I have these gaps in my memory of what fun I could have had in high
school had I not had that worry.
If someone had a crystal ball to show me how my life would have turned out, I would have
enjoyed every moment of that school.
It was the best time I've ever had, but I was too concerned.
You know, I was worried about what's going to happen because in my world, people who did well were
people who were educated, who were successful, who were studying something and have gotten
a job.
So my chances were lower and lower and lower as I saw myself getting to grade 11.
Because of the school you went to.
Exactly.
And then I knew that my chances of being successful.
So when I was in a car park, I was like, I can be happy by proxy. I'm here. I'm looking at these fancy cars. I'm around them all day long and I get
paid to be here. I love music. I listen to music and then I get paid to be here. I walk
around the mall. I get paid to be here. I do comedy. I get paid to do this. I chose
a path. It was either do the worrying and die or do what I love and just live.
But I chose that because it was my only option.
I had to learn the lessons and remember them from my mom.
So I just carried them through.
So you're able to apply that to inanimate and animate objects.
So the loss of anything and anyone, do you process it the same or is there a difference or give me an example of like something you've
lost like a thing that you loved versus a person that you've loved.
And then I want to understand like how you process it or is it the exact same way?
It's the exact same way.
Because remember if I lose a watch that I loved and I wore every day, right? Sentimental value as I remember
the things that I did to get the watch. Right. I remember the places I wore the watch in.
Those memories are with me. So the watch is with me because I'd never wore it to my sleep.
I never wore it to a shower. So the watch is with me. When my son passed away, I also
realized in the three months, I spent the most amount of time with him.
To even the day before he passed away.
It was just the two of us for a few hours. The last picture I took was when we were just together in a room.
How old was he when he passed away?
Three months.
When he passed away?
Damn.
So when I think of that loss, whether it's a watch or a loved one, I think of what do
I miss about not having this person
around? Grief is an extended phase of regret, things that we never got to do with that person.
I got to do all I could do at the time that he had. Had I been absent for three months
and he passed away in three months, I would have been so distraught because I would have
nothing to miss. But now I miss him, the person that he wasught because I would have nothing to miss.
But now I miss him, the person that he was, because I knew him.
If I lose my watch, I miss my watch.
I don't miss the things that the watch did for me.
It's an object.
It told time, another object can tell time.
If it was about money, I can buy another one.
But him, there's no more time that I could have extended with him.
It ran its course. I'm not dealing with guilt of something I did wrong or something I could have done
better. But I was going, I wish we could do more. But when I look at my daughter, I go,
we can do more. She's here now. Oh, wow. Right? If I look at a watch, I go, there is, there
are more watches. I can go buy another one, but I can't cry for things that never happened. How do you think that like affected your, how you are a father with your daughter after
losing your son?
She became my parent.
We have this running joke where I say in our life before this one, she was my mom.
And then now I get to pay her back, but it looks like she still has to do it again.
She was just a happy person every time.
I would look forward to the day she comes back from school. And Then she would high five me and tell me all sorts of stories. She
had no time for my sadness. Like I would be like, today, she's like, let me tell you now. Then she
would go on and on. Then it became my exercise to remember her friend's names. Cause now I didn't
want to be left behind in the story. And I was like, this person is laughing. She's smiling and she only met her brother the day he passed away at the hospital when
he was certified dead.
Damn.
So this kid who faced that, what I had, I had three months of seeing him because he
was incubated, but he couldn't have contact because he was born too early.
So obviously a child would have brought germs into the house.
So he couldn't be in the same room with her.
So the only time you saw her was then.
So I compared our losses.
And in retrospect, you must think of it this way,
as a sibling, she would have had more time with him
than I would have ever had as a parent.
He would have outlived me.
So she has never had that three months with him, but I had.
So what right did I have to wallow in self pity when all I could be doing now is telling
about how great this person was.
Because she's telling me about strangers at school and about how great they are.
And here we are.
And then she was there teaching me how to be strong.
She was my mom again, without word of cash saying, yeah, spend it on things that matter.
And if someone comes and asks for it, give it to them generously.
Don't ask questions, just share.
She was that person for me and she still is for me.
When I was walking down now to come into the car, she was like, do you have your phone?
And I was like, yes.
You have something for your lips.
Yes.
Give a part bank.
Yeah.
So like fit check.
There's a, there's a beautiful saying.
I don't, I don't remember where I heard this.
I think it, I think it was actually Esther Perel and we're having this conversation and we're talking
about like children and life and everything.
And she said one of the most beautiful things ever.
She said, one of the most underappreciated aspects of having a child is that it forces
you to forget yourself. And, that's deep. Yeah.
And I remember being like, well, wait, what do you mean?
And she said, no.
She said, you take for granted, but until you are responsible for the life of another human being or another creature, really,
the only life you're responsible for is your own.
And so you live the most selfish of existences, whether you like it or not.
Yes.
I'm hungry.
I'm tired.
I'm sad. I'm tired. I'm sad.
I'm happy.
I want to do this.
I do not want to do this.
It's only when you introduce another human being or living being into your life that
you're responsible for that you have to, if you are any type of decent person, you
neglect that now.
You forgo it.
Yeah, you forgo it.
That's a better word.
Yeah, you forgo it.
It's a different type of meaningful and it's like a, in a weird way, it's a stupid thing.
But I think of people when they get dogs.
It's pretty crazy.
It's completely understandable. Yeah.
Yeah, because a person gets a dog.
And then now they have to go and walk the dog.
They have to go outside.
They have to, but in a weird way, they have to push them out of themselves.
So, there's a day you didn't want to go for a walk.
Now you're walking.
Do you know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
And I see that with people and their kids, especially people who have
either learned the lesson or have had the opportunity to fully learn the lesson.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
But they forget themselves and in a weird way, then get to meet other
versions of themselves that they forgot.
Life is about us meeting our teachers.
Life does not have built-in meaning.
Life is meaningless. And you see that when
you lock yourself in a room and do nothing. Everything else happened without you. Traffic
happened, restaurants were open. Until you get out the room and you interact with the world,
then meaning happens. Then you walked a long distance, then you ate this great thing,
then you played pickleball with your friends. So life has no built-in meaning. We give it meaning.
But what makes life interesting is we're here to learn lessons and we keep meeting our teachers
along the way.
And one of the reasons why I think our friendship, you and I, has enjoyed so long, and it's actually
almost the same age as my daughter's relationship, is because of your childlike nature.
You look at the world with wonder.
You don't look at anything as impossible.
I remember one time you and I were driving somewhere and we're stuck in traffic and you
said, Eugene. And I said, yes, So that's how we talk to each other.
You said, you know what we must do? And I said, what? He said, we must buy a plane.
Oh, that sounds like me.
I said, yeah. You said, yes, we must buy a plane. And I was like, planes are expensive. You said,
yeah, yeah, but they're small ones. You know, you can buy a Cessna. You know what we can do?
If four comedians come together and we put a hundred a hundred a hundred
I mean if we need to go somewhere then we can just fly the plane that I was like
But what if we need to go different is it? Yeah, then we'll book shows then we can all fly in together
We can fly in fly out then we'll make it home again. You're like, yeah, and I was like, okay
There are many times that you and I did things
I mean we never did.
Yes.
Just for anyone listening, but this was because we were very far from even the idea of buying
a plane.
But fast forward 13 years later.
No, no, no.
I'm with you.
You see what I'm saying?
So you've always had that.
The day you immigrated to America, I remember I was at your house.
You said, come over.
And then I came.
Then we played Army of Two.
And then you're like, oh, I have to go now.
Then I was like, where are you going?
You're like, I'm going to America. then I was like where you going? You're like I'm going to America then I was like is there a restaurant?
Can I come too? What's going on? You're like no no I'm I'll snap then you packed your bag you
switched off the thing and you're like oh you can have these games I'm not gonna play them anymore
so I was like are you really leaving? You're like, yeah. Then I was like, but what time do you need to be there? Like, I need to be there 30 minutes ago.
Then there you were in great tracksuit pants.
You were gone.
You, you went to go start a new life and a new career elsewhere.
And I always looked at you and I go, I was telling a friend of mine when you
first started to become prominent in American culture or in the American
space, I said, this guy would have been successful even though he was a plumber. started to become prominent in American culture or in the American space.
I said, this guy would have been successful even though he was a plumber.
Comedy did not help him become successful. TV did not help him become successful.
With anything, it would have been fine because he just looks at things like a kid.
He looks and he goes tinkers and he opens at the back and he touches this thing.
With America, he was like, where's the most comedy clubs? Where's the most comedy?
He narrowed it down to a place. Okay.
How many shows can I do?
Okay.
How many people can I see?
Okay.
How many, how many, how many, how many, how many?
You look at things like that and I always look at your life and I go, if I was like
you, I would have been where you are.
If you were like me, you would have been where I am.
The wonder and the beauty of how we are as two people is we're not alike.
That's why you and I can sit and speak about everything but comedy.
We speak about cars, we're not alike. That's why you and I can sit and speak about everything, but comedy.
We speak about cars, we speak about life.
So I'll always have time for a person who looks at life like that. And I think we've both shared that.
So it's funny.
I think of, when I think of comedy and how we shared it, it was the same thing.
We both had a deep love for the idea of the, Because what made comedy specifically unique
at that time in South Africa was,
it wasn't a thing.
Like a thing thing.
Do you know what I mean?
If you said to anyone in South Africa,
your parents, your friends, anyone,
I'm gonna be a comedian, I'm gonna do comedy,
people are like, what is that?
And there was like a few people, not even a generation,
a few people a few years ahead of us who were doing it.
You know, the David Gowes and the John Flissmusses and all these, but it wasn't like a long-
Wasn't a thing.
Yeah, it wasn't a thing.
Wasn't, you know, a long history tradition.
So what I loved was we were a ragtag group of enthusiasts, you know, like hobbyists.
That's what we were doing when we were doing comedy.
Were these people standing in a field with homemade airplanes and were throwing them
and being like, how far can yours go?
So what I've learned is if you turn the wings like this and if you get what I'm saying.
And it's funny because I think you have kept that more than anybody I know.
You might say I have childlike wonder.
You are the most hobby obsessed person I know.
I don't know anyone who's had more hobbies than you.
Everything from trail riding motorbikes, racing, race bikes on a track,
um, shooting guns at a range.
Uh, you started golf.
Oh, there we go.
Golf.
Then you went through like a running phase, like you were doing like 20 kilometers, 10 kilometers. You started golf now. You started golf? Wow, there we go. Golf.
Then you went through like a running phase, like you were doing like 20 kilometers, 10
kilometers.
Then you, I mean, now that I say it out loud, I feel like you're turning into a white person.
This has been a long journey.
I'm actually only now that I'm saying it, like looking at it, I'm like, wait a minute, Eugene. Oh man. When I look at what you're doing. I'd like to be around. Oh boy. No, but you, but you, yeah.
You and her taught me that.
Adventure.
That's what it is.
Go for it.
That's what it is.
You've always been the adventure person.
Yeah.
You show me that all the time.
When I see you doing something, I'm like, adventure does pay off because you go on this
wilder and you look at.
Yeah, but no, no, but where we're different though is, and this is why I admire you, where
we're different is you.
It's an admiration contest.
Yeah.
You're a little bit different.
You're a little bit different.
You're a little bit different.
You're a little bit different.
You're a little bit different.
You're a little bit different. You're a little bit different. You're a little bit different. You're a little bit different. You're a little bit different. doing something I'm like adventure does pay off because you go on this wilder and you look at it. Yeah but no no but where we're different though is and this is why I
admire you where we're different is you it's an admiration contest yeah and we'll
see who wins you you I think one thing that's always inspired me about you
I'd like to exclude myself from that competition. Ryan is out. There's no admiration I hold for any of you.
And you know what Ryan that's what I love you, is you don't need to compete with
other people.
That's why I admire you.
And now it's time for today's self-care toolkit segment brought to you by Amazon.
Whether it's delivering medication to your door with Amazon Pharmacy or 24-7 virtual care with Amazon One Medical.
Thanks to Amazon, healthcare just got less painful.
Okay, can we talk about comfort food when you're sick?
Because I feel like that's when logic leaves the building, all logic.
Like you'd think being sick would make you eat something mild and healthy. No,
no, for some reason when I'm under the weather, I'm like, you know what sounds good right now?
A giant plate of fries and three different kinds of sauce. You mix the sauce and it confuses the
disease. I don't know, there's something about being sick that makes your cravings totally
unhinged. Maybe it's just me and it's's different for everyone. For some people, it's toast and tea I've heard. For others, it's mac and cheese or pho and
ice cream. Yes, I've actually heard that ice cream with pho while coughing. I think part
of it is just nostalgia. Maybe it's our brains wanting to feel better and food as memory.
That one soup your grandmother made or whatever your parents gave you as a kid
when you stayed home from school. Maybe that's what it is. Psychological reward for sickness.
So maybe it's not about the food making you better. Maybe it's just about making you feel better.
And that's just as important. So profound. Well, we hope you gave you some ideas for your self-care routine. Today's
self-care toolkit segment was brought to you by Amazon. Thanks to Amazon, health
care just got less painful.
You've always inspired me and you've always reminded me to focus on being
successful at living
life, which is something that I think sometimes we forget as people because
I've always been good at living work.
You know what I mean?
Like I'm really good at that plumbing, electrician, you name it.
There's literally, I remember someone once said to me, they're like, what would
you do if you wouldn't do comedy?
And I was like, I'm like anything.
I would do anything because I'm like, yeah, anything, something
has to be done. You know, I remember my mom said to me one day, my mom and I were driving,
I don't know from church or somewhere, it was probably from church. We only really drove
to church together. But we're in the car. And my mom said to me, she's like really angry
and she's like, look at these, how can people be unemployed?
And I was like, mom, what do you mean?
How can people be unemployed?
Sometimes it's, and then my mom said, there's always something to be done.
My mom said to me, she said, you look in your life.
She said, before you say there's nothing to be done, just go for a walk and look
around you, there's something to be done.
I was a teenager at this time, but I was like, mom, that's not true.
Sometimes there's nothing.
And then while we're driving, she said, okay, let's look on the street. What something to be done. I was a teenager at this time, but I was like, mom, that's not true. Sometimes there's nothing.
And then while we were driving, she said, okay, let's look on the street.
What needs to be done?
I was like, what do you mean?
She's like, look at the street.
What needs to be done?
I was like, I don't know.
And then she said, does that grass look like it's been cut?
I was like, no.
She's like, so clearly that needs to be done.
She said, so if you go to that house and you say, let me cut your grass.
And I said, yeah, but what if they don't pay me? She said, yeah, then you can still cut it though. It will be done. It'll be done. She said, so if you go to that house and you say, let me cut your grass. And I said, yeah, but what if they don't pay me? She said, yeah, then you can
still cut it though. It will be done. It'll be done. And she said, and you'll
go and you'll cut and you'll cut. And she said, eventually, eventually somebody's
going to pay you to cut grass. She said, go and look for things to be done.
Cause there's always something to be done. The phrase my mom hated. And I still
like, I actually have to like work on the opposite now is whenever my mom,
like my mom, the phrase she hated was there's nothing to do.
I have nothing to do.
She's like, ah, there's always something to be done.
What do you mean?
But what that meant was it meant that I've always been completely comfortable in work
in the doing and the, but the doing in one specific place. Yeah.
But you have always shown me, like, I mean, first time I rode like mountain bikes in South
Africa was with you.
Oh, yeah.
Do you know what I mean?
Yes, I did.
Like, we, like, and I think funny enough, that's maybe one of the things that you blessed
me with in comedy is, had I not met you, because we literally started comedy about a week apart.
100% in parallel universes.
Literally.
You were there that day and I wasn't there and I was there that day, you were not there.
But literally a week apart, we started comedy in the same venue, in the same city,
in the same country, right? But I think the thing you blessed me with in comedy is,
you always reminded me to keep it as a hobby.
Like always.
You've almost always been allergic to it being a job.
In fact, every time people have tried to make it a job, I almost feel like you get like, you get offended in a weird way.
And had you not done that with me, I think I would have let comedy be a job.
Had you not done that with me, I think I would have let comedy be a job.
And then if you let that happen, oftentimes the joy and the wonder that you experience in the thing goes away.
Yes.
It's a have to.
Yeah.
It's a have to and not a want to.
Yes.
Our job as humans, we have to tap into our DNA and remember why we are here.
Why do you think we're here?
To live and fix the things that we didn't do last time.
I think our lives are a continuous journey.
Our souls know why we're here.
This body is just a vessel.
We're just here to remember.
It's time when we find passions and we find places that we are familiar with,
but we don't know from where.
It's because we've been here before.
We're trying to remember.
And that's what makes life interesting for me.
When I go to a place and I'm like, this is interesting.
I'm like, I remember there must have been something great here that happened somewhere, sometimes that brings me back
here again. And I live in that world of wonder where I go, I've been here before. I've done this
thing before. That's why when I lose something, I'm like, I must have had it before and I had it
again and it was time for it to go. So something can happen now. I need to feel something. My job
in this world with
this vessel, with this body, with all of the friends and the environment that it has brought
me in is to feel something. If I feel happy, I know I'm feeling.
You know it's so funny you say this. One of the most transformative thoughts I've ever
experienced as a person was I was, I think I was in Sweden and I was on a mushroom trip, right?
And you know, you having this beautiful experience
connecting with yourself, connecting with others.
But one of the things that really hit me was
the idea of energy, right?
And I'm not a woo-woo person per se.
I'm not very spiritual.
I think you're more spiritual than I am. No. No, I think you are woo-woo person per se. I'm not very spiritual. I think you're more
spiritual than I am.
No.
No, I think you are. And in a good way. And I think you remind me of that sometimes. I
can be very didactic. I can be very, ironically, to go back to the Bible, it's like if you
look at the Trinity, it's like, yeah, there's the mind, there's the body, and then there's
the spirit. This thing that exists in a world that you can't really, you don't think it and you don't feel it, but it is right.
And, and the thought that I had was energy, everything that's happening in
the universe is energy, right?
Like it's, but like actual, like even physics energy, I'm not saying like, ah,
it's energy, I'm saying it's actual energy, right?
But I'm not saying it.
What did you add a sound effect?
Is that album still available?
Oh, it's energy.
No, I don't mean that.
The sound effect energy. I don't mean, not even it's energy. No, I don't mean that. The sound effect energy.
I don't mean, not even dismissive to that, but I don't mean that.
I get you.
And I was thinking to myself once, it almost feels like our purpose and our idea,
and it's funny that you just said that, is to express the idea of what it means to be
by being in relation to, you know?
So like, I think of like light is a good example.
I always find it crazy
because physics is such a complicated thing.
My brain, I really struggle to understand it.
I listen to it and I remember things,
but I go, I don't understand it.
But like one of the craziest concepts to me is the fact
that I'm not seeing you,
I'm seeing the light that is reflected off you.
Right.
So when we see a flower, we're not seeing the flower really.
We're seeing the light that the flower is reflecting.
And when you expand that sort of infinitely, you know, throughout time, you
go, that is what we all are.
What we all are is reflections of energy and light that are, that is helping us.
To experience the thing that is happening and then to your point I remember thinking huh I was like what if the idea of what
we call God or this thing that we've all you know in different religions different place different
whatever's we want to call it what if it itself is trying to experience the thing and that's why everything is. Yeah. Do you know what I mean?
100%. It makes total sense. It's just that as people, we avoid that because it will now make
us question everything that we are. The choices that we made, the people that we know, the places
that we've been. Yeah. And I think of all of that as an experiment.
It's a giant experiment.
We're in a petri dish and someone is busy going.
I think of it as a giant experiment.
It's 100% true.
It's 100% true.
Like actually, I think of it like when scientists shoot lasers or they shoot like even a telescope.
What you're doing is you're getting a reflection of something, right?
You're getting light from a far distance away and you're getting information from it.
And I wondered like, we could literally be the lasers that are being sent to come
back with information.
So you driving the way you drove in a weird way, I know this sounds crazy, but
in a weird way, you're teaching the entire human race how to drive.
Yes.
And then you eating, like I always go, I'm so grateful to people who ate certain
foods and died so that I know which foods I can eat.
I think of it for pets.
I'm like the first person that tried to tame a wolf.
Now we have puppies.
It's pretty crazy.
Yeah, cause someone tried it.
By the way, have you seen?
Yo, doing it for you, Trevor.
So you can walk in a mall with this thing one day.
Have you seen the videos of those guys
who still do that now?
Who tried to tame wolves?
No, not try.
Who tame wolves? Not tame, Eugene. What do you mean? There's the videos of those guys who still do that now? Who try to tame wolves? No, not try. Who tame wolves?
Not tame, Eugene.
What do you mean?
There's these videos of people who are out in the mountains, then they see wolves, then
they call the wolves like dogs.
And then the wolf is not obviously, it's not a dog, but it like looks at them, it approaches
them.
And it's actually quite amenable to you as a person.
And then they start playing with it. And then you see the wolf going, what is this that I'm experiencing?
This is good.
Yeah.
Why, why is this clothed monkey making me feel good?
Like that's what the wolf is experiencing.
And, and then like they say that this is probably how it happened, et cetera, et cetera.
Yeah.
Domestication, et cetera.
But, but it's, it's amazing to see that stuff.
It's still like the, did you say we're dating? Wow. Yeah, domestication, et cetera. But it's amazing to see that stuff.
It's still like the, did you say we're dating?
Wow.
Look, one concept that blew my mind away and also changed my life was when I read somewhere,
I don't remember where, where it says everything that you're experiencing is what you want
to experience.
So everyone in my life is a character that I created for me to have the sum total of
a life experience with feelings and emotions and a quick fast forward to the journey that I need.
What I signed up for before I was born, I knew which characters must come into play for me to
achieve what I need to achieve.
Damn.
So for you to be here in a room with me is because I wanted it to happen.
In the back of my mind, somewhere in my lesson, in my past life, this should have happened
so that I can lead to something else.
Same with you.
So we keep meeting these soul families, a group of five individuals that will make a
great impact in your life as you go along.
So even if it's the first stage of your life, there'll be five that you can mention that
matter. As an adolescent, there'll be five that matter. In your career, there'll be five that
matter. Those are soul groups. So those are people just come in into your life and they exist purely
for your assistance. They're here to push you. They're here to teach you. Even heartbreak is a
lesson. Not all good time. That's why I was asking you in the beginning, why do you think pain features
so much in the Bible? It's because heartbreak is an accelerant.
Hurt and pain and loss is an accelerant to feeling something.
You can be comfortable all your life and not feel anything else, but as soon as you feel
loss and pain, you will remember that you also had a good time.
So that's what pain and suffering is for, but suffering is voluntary.
So you suffering, you choose it and use it as a medication.
You take it in doses so that you can remember how good you have it.
Someone in a hospital right now who has no chance of leaving doesn't have this privilege
that you and I have to walk downstairs, to walk around, get in the car, press buttons,
and that's all they want at this moment.
But they've had it maybe for 50 years and never cared for it, but the suffering accelerated
the memory of the good times that they had.
So if you think about life like that, you can walk around the mall and see hundreds
of people, but if you think about how many people you've called and said with and chatted
with, in most cases, the one exceed number five is that group of people that you can
rely on and trust, and they always accelerate you to go further.
And those are the people that will bring heartache, they'll bring laughter, they'll bring lessons, they'll bring admiration and adoration at the same time, because you need
those two to balance. As much as you admire someone, someone needs to adore you. That's when the
base romantic relationships work. When there's a crot man in the group, someone gets admired and
someone adores the other person. They adore the fact that they admire them and they admire them
for the fact that they adored them.
So that's how things work.
This balance that we're always seeking and just knowing that once you start feeling something,
then something is happening.
Growth is pain.
Kids go through that all the time.
Oh, my elbow.
Oh, my back.
Because they're growing.
Then they go and rest and everything feels better again.
But as adults, what do we do?
We just go and try to make pain not exist
because we feel like when we're feeling pain, we failed.
And when you're feeling pain, you're growing.
When you're tired, like we walked the other time
and we felt it, then we did something.
I think it's the ultimate dilemma though.
100%.
I'll tell you why I think it's the ultimate dilemma
is because I think we should be careful
to not make life about pain.
And I'm not saying you're saying that, by the way.
No, absolutely.
But I have noticed there's been a…
And maybe this is not a new thing, but just generally I've noticed a lot of people seem
to use pain as the meaning.
Do you know what I mean?
They go, that's why we're here.
And I'm like, no, no, no, no, no, pain is part of the experience.
But I think we should be careful to not make pain the experience. Do you get what I'm like, no, no, no, no, no, pain is part of the experience, but I think we should be careful to not make pain the experience.
Do you get what I'm saying?
And the reason I say this is because we should also remember,
in the same way that we cannot only exist in fun, good, easy, comfortable, warm,
we also don't exist in cold, boring, hard, painful. We don't exist like that. Look
at animals throughout Africa. Why do they migrate? Think of the fundamental concept
of migration. It's an animal going, oh, this land is about to become arid. It is about
to become cold. It is about to become unlivable
We're gonna go seek out another place and oftentimes to your point that journey is hard
But the thing that they're seeking is not hard
And so sometimes I get like a little there's like a little spidey sense that hits me the wrong the way where I go
Like sometimes I go like guys
I think we're learning the wrong lesson or we're applying the lesson incorrectly
Because people will be like I'm looking for the pain and I'm you're not saying that but I'm saying you go like pains a lesson I love that but people go no I look for pain. I look for the thing I look then I'm like no no no no no no
I argue
Looking for the thing on the other side looking for the rainbow getting to it is the pain. Hmm. You know I'm saying
Yeah, the journey that is the pain you want know what I'm saying? Yeah, the journey.
That is the pain.
You wanna go and see the view from the highest peak.
Yes.
The hike is the pain, but I get a little thrown off
when people now sell the pain
and they make it seem like that is the,
it's like, no, no, no, no, no.
Understand that that is part of it.
You cannot get to a tall peak
without experiencing the pain of the hike.
And when you get there, as you say, funny enough, I love that.
That's a beautiful way to put it.
It's an accelerant.
That pain of the walk makes you appreciate the view even more because you're like, wow,
I can't believe this because I don't get to see it and my knees, my legs, my body, my
feeling, my whatever, you know?
You know, the thing is the average person does not know the difference between suffering
and pain.
The first time I came across that was it was Victor Frankl, I think.
Really?
Yeah.
Uh, Victor Frankl who was a psychotherapist and he was a Holocaust
survivor and I remember reading his work and he developed a lot of it, I
think, in the Holocaust.
And he said, what he learned there was pain is real, suffering is a choice.
And a lot of people were angry at this.
And he said, no.
And he said, I realized this in the concentration camp.
He said, these Nazis were there and they were wanting to exterminate me and my people.
And he said, but every day I was like, I can smile if I want to smile and I can choose
to enjoy my day.
Now people, if you say that, people will be like, that's crazy.
But he was like, no, no, no. He's like, this to me is real. This part of my reality, I'm
defining. This conversation. Yeah. And you know, you know, when you realize how real
it is to your point, the pain and suffering, I always think of it in traffic. Depending traffic, depending on how you feel traffic is either just a thing that is happening or
it is the end of your life.
I even think of it like this, funny enough, like a podcast is a great example.
When I have a podcast that I'm listening to that I'm enjoying, there is no traffic.
There's literally no traffic. I'm listening to a conversation and I'm listening to that I'm enjoying, there is no traffic. There's
literally no traffic. I'm listening to a conversation and I'm driving. Sometimes I
get angry that I get there sooner than I was anticipating because I haven't
finished the episode. Now I'm sitting in a parking lot going, oh man, oh man, oh
man, I thought there's gonna be more traffic. Yeah, but you get what I'm saying?
Now I'm at, I've either reached the house that I was going to, or I've reached the destination,
the office that I was driving.
But I'm angry that there wasn't enough of the traffic because I enjoy listening in a
car.
So perspective.
You know what I'm saying?
But if I'm trying to get somewhere, now all of a sudden I don't have a podcast and traffic
is the worst thing that's ever happened to me.
And so to your point, funny enough, that's where it's pain versus suffering.
Right?
The pain is real.
Yes, your Wi-Fi is slow, but you're not suffering.
Yes.
So animals know this better than anyone.
So they migrate because they know that if they stay here, they're going to suffer and
that's optional.
So they walk towards the pain so they can
avoid the suffering. So that's what the thing is. So it's an accelerant in that way that
you need to walk towards it. But if you stay, you suffer. So suffering is always regret
of things you would have done had you enjoyed the pain.
Yo damn that's deep. I thought I was talking to a comedian. Yo, I wasn't prepared for this.
Oh, I wasn't ready.
That's a deep one, man.
So you're there doing it.
Yeah, no.
But just say that again.
So suffering is if you stay and then pain is what you go through when you walk away from suffering.
So it's like you choose, do you?
Because it's going to be regret.
No, you can apply it to everything.
Yeah, it's going to be regret.
Going to the gym is painful. Painful.
Being overweight is suffering.
Being unhealthy and dying.
Yeah.
And making other people have to.
No, and not being able to walk upstairs, carry your kids, lifting.
You're suffering.
Yes.
Should I have met, should I have canceled and said, ah, I'm busy.
And I didn't go, not going to sit here and suffer and regret.
We could have been doing this.
I could have just been here.
I walked towards it.
I had to do this.
I had to do that. Yeah. I don't want to get up now. Oh, should I get dressed now? Oh, let me I could have just been here. I walked towards it. I had to do this.
I had to do that.
Yeah, I don't want to get up now.
Oh, should I get dressed now?
Oh, let me go.
Then I'm here.
Then the pain.
Then I'm here at the mountaintop, like you said, and I'm looking at this view.
Animals do it instinctually.
They know that if they stay, they suffer.
If they move, they feel pain, but it's ultimately worth it because it's an accelerant to good
times.
Always when you have to have a little bit of pain, the reward is far greater.
So when people have become numb, like you said, that's where the pain starts.
That's where the meanness in people is.
That's where the impatience is.
That's where the intolerance is.
Cause we've, we now avoid suffering and pain at the same time.
Now you're living, now you're numb.
So that's why I say when the day finishes and I'm in pain, I know that there's
something nice, not when I have regret. I shouldn't have gone there. Why did
I even go with my instinct? I shouldn't have gone. Why? But if I'm going, oh my neck, oh
this, oh my finger because of doing this all day, oh this and that. I've never regretted
those days. I always wake up the next morning and go, I know exactly why this part is sore.
But because that pain accelerated me to learn a new skill and learn how this
person, we've sat in cars so many times, you and I, and then we don't like
sitting in cars, but we love cars.
And then in the car, we know that we play music in the background and I've
always criticized your music choice, but it allows conversation because we're
not just saying, ah, no, no.
It allows conversation.
I was playing there Tchaikovsky and all these and I'm like Trevor, is this an elevator?
Like sort of.
And then we're there, we have these conversations, we're in a contained environment in traffic
like you said, but we don't see the traffic and we get to have these conversations extendedly.
But then when I look at myself, I'm like, I hate being in a car for that long.
But when we're together, we're having this conversation.
It accelerated that for us.
It facilitated that.
So when we start looking at people, events, time, our bodies and objects as an accelerant
for us to remember who we really are and what we're here to do, then life becomes this journey
where regrets don't exist because everything that happened that I didn't enjoy was accelerating
me to my growth.
And why would I hate something that made me grow?
I loved all of it.
That one missing that half, most of the day of school that day had homework to
catch up on because I couldn't trade that for the world when I'm sitting with my mom.
I often think when I was 10 years old, my mom had just turned almost 40.
She was young.
She took the time.
She could have hung out with her friends. I'm 43 right time. She could have hung out with her friends.
I'm 43 right now. She could have hung out with her friends. You know?
It is weird to think about how young our parents were.
Yeah, but she chose to. She made sure she swapped shifts with someone. She took that
shift. She would take me and they would hang out. She'd listen to- So I think of those
times and I go, if I think of the homework that piled up and my friends were telling
me about the soccer match that they had after school, bloody blah.
And I'm thinking about the time I laid in the grass with my mom in the park.
And I'm like, I couldn't swap that for the world.
Now I appreciate the effort she put into making sure that she accelerates my growth by feeling
that little bit of pain of homework catch up.
She accelerated me in knowing who I really am.
I love nature.
I love being at the outside.
I love being at the park.
I love laughing.
I love dreaming and just lying there and looking up and having a good time. So when I look at my life in
my late thirties and forties, and I look at my life in my tens, and I'm like, there was always grass.
There was always a park. I was at Berger's park, a park in Pretoria that's derelict.
And I got to spend time in the most prestigious park in the world that people dream of going to.
And I got to lie in the grass there and daydream again about my life.
And things that I thought of three years ago in that park, I have them now.
So I'm not wrong.
Somewhere somehow there's energy that's vibrating towards helping me get to where I'm going.
What do you do when you feel disconnected from that?
And maybe I'm wrong. Maybe I'm even projecting, but I think one of the things I've noticed you and I
both share is there'll be moments where we feel disconnected from that.
And then it's like, we don't want to go outside.
You don't want to be part of the world and you don't want to see the thing.
And you don't, you know what I mean?
How do you, how do you get back to that?
I look at pictures, phones are the greatest invention ever.
I look at places that I've been to and I remember the feelings that I had there.
Then I go, what is the quickest way I can replicate this if I can't go there?
Then I'll find a patch of grass and I'll find a park.
Then I'll find sunshine.
I'll wear my walking shoes and I'll start walking for kilometers and kilometers.
You've got walking shoes?
Yes.
What are they?
Adidas shoes, but I use them for walking.
It's just walking shoes.
No, they're running shoes, but I use them for walking.
I thought it's like, this is the only they can do.
No, no, no.
Like if someone chased you, you're like, hey buddy.
You chose the wrong day, man.
Oh snap!
Oh man, I got my walking shoes on.
Oh, I would have gotten away from you.
When I look at those and I put them on, I know I'm going to walk now.
And I know what that means to me and what I'll remember.
The thing that we do worst in our lives is not to remember.
We must remember.
You and I have memories between us.
We don't have anything physical.
Yeah.
Nothing at all, but we have memories.
We go, that guy, there was this time when we did this.
Then we laugh.
Then we move on to other people and other things.
And then after that, we remember things that they did.
And we come back to the memory again.
So that's all I have.
So when I feel like dive deep into that hole of suffering, then I
realized this self-imposed, my bike is outside.
My thing is there.
My daughter's in the other room.
My PlayStation.
So I go, why are you choosing this?
And I go, yeah, but yeah, but I go look at my sneakers and I go, I can wear
those to go outside right now.
And it's within my grasp and reach.
And I tell you now, whenever I walk, I see the cars that I love.
I see the, I see a Porsche 911 walk driving and I'm going, if I was in my room, I would
never seen this.
Is this a coincidence?
There's a, so there's a French philosopher.
He talks about luck and the surface areas of luck.
Wow.
Right?
I know I'm going to butcher some of it, but I remember it for the most part.
Essentially what he talked about, and this was like a long time ago, but what he talked
about was how luck is always happening.
It's continuous, okay?
However, there are different types of luck that you can choose to participate in.
And so he said, the first type of luck is dumb luck.
Pure chance has nothing to do with you.
And that luck is who you were born to, when you were born, where you were born, what you look like, what the certain things.
It's like, Hey man, things that are outside of your control completely outside of your control.
You were born in the Philippines. Okay. You were born in the Philippines. You were born in Estonia. Okay. You were born in Estonia.
That's it. Right. That's like a dumb luck.
Then the second type of luck that he talks about is luck of motion. And this is where things start to get interesting.
So he goes, there's luck
that happens to you merely because you start moving, right? Both literally and figuratively.
There's luck of motion. So if you lie in bed all day, you can never bump into somebody
by chance in the mall, on the street, in a rest, none of it.
Motion. Motion.
Motion.
Yeah.
But now remember, it's very important to remind people and myself all the times, I
go like, remember luck can be good or bad.
So I'm not saying this is like a good thing.
I'm just saying it is, right?
Because if you don't get out of bed, you can never stub your toe.
Right?
Like that, yeah.
So it goes both ways.
As soon as you start to increase your motion, there is going to be a higher probability
of luck happening in your life.
So you've created your luck and lucky people generally are people who try and facilitate
more motion in their lives because they consider themselves lucky.
So you'll go, why did you buy a raffle ticket?
I'm a lucky kind of guy.
Then another person's like, I don't have any luck.
That's why I don't even bother buying it.
But that motion sets in place the effect that you then experience.
Then you have the third one, which I think is like a luck of awareness.
They have different names for it, but luck of awareness.
And that one is literally what you, ironically, you see, let's say you, you
did your motion, you left your house, you went outside, the Porsche drives by.
So you've got to experience the Porsche, right?
Wrong.
You experienced it because of what?
You were aware it was there.
Do you know what I mean?
So now you go, wow, I'm so lucky that a Porsche drove by and a Porsche is my favorite car.
Yeah.
But you're also lucky because you were aware of it.
If you were walking around with your head in your phone and headphones on,
now you weren't aware of what was happening.
So there's some people who go, I'm so lucky to have such great people in my life.
Yes, but you have to be aware that you have great people in your life.
Otherwise you are not going to be lucky to have great people in your life.
Awareness is one of the key ones, the awareness of luck.
And then again, that awareness can go the other way.
If you are aware of the negative more than you are aware of the positive, you will feel like you have terrible people in your life. You have terrible things happening to you. There is you live in a terrible country. Like you know what I mean? Like people like that. I'm amazed by the way, when I travel the world, regardless of where I go, there are some people who think they're living in the greatest country ever. And some people who think they're living in the worst country. Doesn't matter where I go. I've talked
to Americans who say, this is, oh my God, I can't believe I'm so lucky to be in America.
I mean, have you seen this country? And then I talked to Americans who are like, I can't,
I mean, this is the worst country. I wish I could live anywhere else. Then I'm like,
so the two of you are in the same place. What are you aware of that the other one isn't?
Or what are you choosing to be aware of? So that's the luck. You've got dumb luck, luck of motion, luck of awareness.
And then the last one, this reminds me of you, is luck of uniqueness or luck of specialization.
And this is a luck that'll only happen to you if you choose to engage in something that
requires an active and specialized thought. You are way less
likely to meet Lionel Messi if you are not in football. Do you know what I mean? Not saying you
will or won't, but I'm saying you're way less likely to meet Lionel Messi if you're not in
football. You're way less likely to meet a Supreme Court Justice of the United States if you're not in football, you're way less likely to meet a Supreme Court
justice of the United States if you're not in law.
Less likely.
I don't know why it's less likely to meet Eugene Koza if they're not both in comedy.
Comedy was our uniqueness.
Can I add something else to your dumb luck?
When I came back from PE two years ago, I found this place on the internet without
even looking, without even viewing it.
I just moved in.
We just moved from the beach house.
The place you live in now. And then without even viewing it. I just moved in. We just moved from the beach house to here.
And then you bought the house 12 minutes away from me.
Yeah, dumb luck.
But no, that wasn't dumb luck, funny enough.
That was luck of motion.
Because you chose a place and I chose a place.
But the last one, to your point, the most important one was even us, Ryan, if you think
about it, like comedy.
We've chosen to like hone in on this thing like a,
you know, I remember telling Dave Chappelle,
we were, I think it was like his 50th birthday
where this happened.
50th birthday, one of the other shows.
And anytime Dave is performing somewhere
and I can go, I'll go.
And then Dave loves comedy and he loves comedians.
So Dave says to me, he's like,
yo, are you jumping on? And I was like, no, I'm Dave says to me, he's like, yo, are you jumping on?
And I was like, no, I'm not jumping on.
And he's like, why not?
Then I was like, Dave, I'm not jumping on because I didn't come to do comedy.
I came to watch comedy.
And more importantly, I came to watch you as Dave Chappelle.
I'm here to enjoy the show.
Then he's like, no, but you got to jump on.
You got to jump on.
Come on.
Why, why you not jump?
And he was like, and then I had to like think about it hard.
Cause he, he didn't, he sort of didn't understand.
He was like, do you not want to jump on?
Cause it's my show, dude.
I was like, you crazy.
What do you, then I realized what it was.
I was like, Dave, you, you have to understand that I also love this thing beyond me doing
it so much that getting to come in like appreciate, cause I see how much you love it.
So if I come here and do the comedy, some of my awareness is dulled because
I'm thinking of myself. I'm thinking of my jokes. I'm thinking of my point of view, my
performance. All of it. I'm thinking like I'm thinking of me and now I get to miss you.
You as Dave Chappell. I get to miss arguably the greatest comedian of like our generation
because I just wasn't aware because I was self aware.
You know what I mean?
Don't go anywhere because we got more What Now after this.
Those steps that you've just mentioned, what I would do before this conversation,
I would clap them all together into motion.
Okay.
Got it.
I would look at it as I did something and they did something and then we did something
happened.
I wouldn't look at it as the way that you broke it down.
It makes so much sense now.
And I also feel like we've become lazy to dream.
I think most of us, that's the one thing we have for free, our imagination, our
dreams, just lay back and just think of what you want and it will appear in front of you.
And I learned this weird concept.
I was telling this friend of mine, I said, everything that I've had that I enjoyed and
that I acquired immediately was I never put time to it.
I said, I have this thing and I have it now and I can't wait to touch it and feel it.
And that thing happened.
But there's things that I've always put far ahead in my life.
And I said, yeah, one day, one day, one day, one,
cause I've been nonspecific about what I want.
The thing keeps becoming a dream.
And I said, I'm very aware that also that can be
an addiction on itself, postponing your own joy,
success and happiness into the future.
Because somehow you feel like you yourself,
you're undeserving, you're not worthy, you're not ready.
So you keep saying one day I'm going to make a lot of money.
One day I'm, what's a lot of money.
And then you keep saying that because you don't want to be, because you want
to commit yourself to it, you know, same way I don't write my set down.
There's things I'd never wanted to commit myself to.
And now I'm specific.
If I want to see a 9-11, a red one, I'll say to myself and I'll see a red one.
And I'll see it twice in a day. And I'll be like, yeah, I saw it because now I'm aware.
Now you've made me aware.
That is my awareness.
That's heightened.
Yeah.
But I also was in motion and uniqueness and I was specific.
Yeah.
And I also get specific about what I want.
So I'm learning that now recently that I must be specific with what I want.
I even see it in my mind's eye.
Can I, can I tell you why why what I think it is though?
Yes. So I argue that most of the time the reason we're not specific with what we want is because
we do not know what we want. I believe that all of us as human beings we do not know what we want.
Hmm. I think we know what we don't want but we don't know what we want and I think we know what we don't want, but we don't know what we want. And I think if you live life thinking, you know what you want, you're going to find yourself
constantly disappointed when you get there and realizing that it is not doing what you
thought it would do.
Right?
So all of us grow up, you're a young boy, maybe some girls as well, depending on society,
whatever you go, I want a Ferrari when I grow up.
But nobody has ever sat us down to say, why?
Why do you as a four year old who has never paid any bill in your life think you want
a Ferrari?
Because you know how to drive.
Why do you think you want a Ferrari?
Then because it's fast and because it's red and because it's like, yeah, but why?
What are all those things going to do?
What is it that you, and then what happens in life?
Boys grow into men who then work to get towards something.
Girls grow into women who work towards something.
And then they get the thing.
They get the Ferrari.
They get the wedding.
They get the big house.
The job.
They get the job.
The salary. They get all these things.
And then what happens?
There's a deep emptiness inside you.
And that deep emptiness is the realization that the thing that you want has not made
you feel like you thought it would make you feel because you never had it.
So how would you know that it would make you feel that way?
Because you've never had it.
And this is the thing that I literally realized this for my life.
And then I challenged my friends and anyone I talked to about this.
They'll go, man, I really want that thing.
Then I go, why do you want it?
No, because you know, if I can, man, if I can get that job, then I go like, okay, then
what will happen?
I'm just going to, then I'll feel like my life is, then I'm like, you're lying.
You're lying.
Do you know how I know you're lying?
Because you've never had the job.
So how do you know that the job will make you feel that way?
We all want to feel a certain way, but we don't know what the thing is that will compliment
or help us feel that way.
We don't know.
That's what brings me to the initial subject that we started with when I said when we hang
out with people that have normal jobs, because we get to experience their milestones from the outside.
So when someone, that's what I said to you, when someone looks at a car and says, that's
a nice car.
You and I remember a time when they looked at another car and said, nice car.
When we hear them going, I can't get off because of, but we, you and I remember a time when
they wanted the gig.
Yeah. But now- I hope I get this job. off because of, but we, you and I remember a time when they wanted the gig.
Yeah.
But now I hope I get this job.
So that's why I said, Oh, this is coming full circle.
That's, that's where I find when I'm with friends that have structured normal
jobs, that's where I get to measure what people's needs really are versus what they want are because they they wanted this thing so bad. They dreamt about it.
They knew if they reached this level and get this kind of a job and position,
this is what it means.
But when I'm with them now, I don't have the time for this anymore.
You know how much things here cost.
The thing that they dreamt about the most.
You know, it's so funny.
You are, I mean, I've never said this to anyone because it would be weird, but
you are one of the reasons I left The Daily Show.
this to anyone because it would be weird but you are one of the reasons I left The Daily Show.
I'm sorry.
No.
Because you knew how he felt about people with jobs.
What an evil man.
No, you're one of the reasons. You know why? There's a conversation you and I had many years ago, maybe like 10 years ago, somewhere there.
And you said to me, again, as usual, we're in a car, we were driving somewhere.
And you said, make sure you learn how to starve yourself before somebody starves you.
And I was like, what? I was like, yo, this is deep.
Cause like we were going to buy Nando's or something.
I was like, this is a strange, is this like a euphemism for, are you telling me
you're not going to pay what is happening here?
And then you said, no, you said you must learn how to starve yourself
before somebody starves you.
And I was like, what were you talking about?
And oftentimes you'll say crazy things to me.
And I'm like, we're friends.
So I just listened.
But when you, when you broke it down, you said, if you have never starved yourself,
you do not know what it is like to starve.
And so when you are starved by somebody else or a situation,
you will now be panicking
because you don't know what it is like to starve.
You know what I mean?
So to use like a silly analogy,
if you lift weights, the day you need to lift something,
you are familiar with lifting as a concept.
Yeah.
You've lifted things to yourself.
You've made yourself lift heavy things.
So now when you have to lift a heavy thing, you know how to lift a heavy thing and you're
not like, ah, it might still be heavy, but at least you know how to lift things, right?
And when you said that to me, it stuck with me and we talked a little bit more about it.
And I remember when I was going to leave The Daily Show, the thing that stuck with me was
how very few people considered the notion that I could want something that wasn't what was supposed to be wanted.
People were like, but why would you leave?
It's the Daily Show.
And I was like, yeah, and it's a beautiful thing.
They're like, yeah, but why would you leave?
Then I'm like, why do I leave a park?
I go to a beautiful park.
But now what?
So you want me to just live at Central Park now?
Yeah, but it's so stunning.
I would. There are people, you say that, I think you would. But you're like, yeah, just because
it's beautiful doesn't mean that it never has to end. You know, coming back to what you're saying
about endings. Like literally, I'm not even joking, you taught me that, like in so many ways. I was
like, yeah, but when does it end? And I'm not saying you have to do it to make it end, but it's like, yeah, but when does it
end? And it was so interesting having some of the, some conversations with
people at the Daily Show. Some people who I said to them, I said, so are you
going to be here forever? And then they would just look at me and go, Oh, well,
actually. And some people were honest enough to say, well, actually there's
this project that I was actually going to leave and I'm thinking of doing something.
So you too, at some point are going to leave, even like a viewer.
There's some people who will say, I used to watch the show all the time.
I really loved you on it.
Why did you leave?
Then I go, but you used to watch.
When did you stop?
Then they go, well, I stopped after the pandemic and then, but I love the show.
Then I'm like, yes, but you stopped watching and you didn't now hate me.
You just stopped watching and that's beautiful.
So if you are able to acknowledge and understand that things are going to start,
things are going to end, things are going to be in between.
Like, like why, because if you, if you're not careful, you're no longer aware.
Hmm.
You're numb.
It was, can I tell you, I'm eternally, eternally grateful.
Right.
When I think of the daily shi I go like, man, it was one of the hardest
things I've ever done in my life.
And I've told you about, it's like, you want to talk about pain.
One of the hardest things I've ever experienced in my life.
And also one of the most rewarding experiences I've ever, ever had in my life and also one of the most rewarding experiences I've ever ever had in my life.
But to stay in it beyond the pain now just turns it into like a suffering now.
Now you're choosing this pain.
You know what I mean? I think it was actually Letterman. I think it was Letterman who said in
his farewell, this is when he was announcing that he was
leaving.
It's like they say in this business, you know, you got to know when it's time to move on.
You got to know when it's time to leave.
And for me, that day came and I stayed 15 years longer and today I'm announcing that
I'm leaving.
But I like, and it was such a, it was a good joke, but it was like, it's a poignant thing
that not many people could like really, but I connected to that.
I was like, oh yeah, man.
It can end and how many of us can truly say that we have exercised our choice to
end the thing when we could end the thing.
When we wanted to.
Because most of the time life is doing things for you.
Yes.
When does the ride end?
Oh, when it ends, they tell you to get off a roller coaster.
You they're like, please.
They're like, hey man, get off.
So you never get to choose to end a roller coaster ride.
They tell you that the restaurant is closing.
So you don't get to choose to like walk out when you want to walk out.
Sorry, we need this table.
They tell you the movie's over.
You don't get to choose.
Netflix tells you the season is finished.
You don't choose.
And if you look at it, we are experiencing fewer and fewer opportunities to choose when to end the thing and when to begin a thing, which is a weird,
beautiful blessing to have because there's one thing we don't choose when
to end and when to begin and that's life.
You don't choose when your life is going to begin and you don't choose for
the most part when your life is going to end.
And so in, in like a genuinely, that's one of the things that you've always like
I've always looked at you like a crazy person but in a good way I always think my friends
genuinely most of my friends I think are crazy for different reasons. But I looked at you
and I go this guy's crazy. Why did he do he just so he walked away. So he stopped that.
So he's not doing that. So he's not and and you're like, yeah, it is crazy only because
it's not normal, but it's not crazy because it doesn't make sense.
People react to extremities all the time because we want to feel, people don't know that they
want to feel something. When they watch a football match, they want to feel something.
They want to feel joy or disappointment. There's two teams playing.
Yeah. There's nothing worse than a boring, goal-less draw.
Yes. When people come to your show, they
want to feel something. Sometimes they think it's laughter, but it's not. It's actually
getting to know the person next to them. They want to be around normal people and hear normal
conversation. People want to feel. So when people that are seen as outliers are reacting
towards the universe from what they're feeling on the inside as individuals.
The whole spectrum of people that they know gets to feel something simultaneously.
So when you're acting on something that you're feeling inside as an individual, as Trevor, around people,
myriads of them that know you that you don't know, when you're acting on your feelings,
it ripples towards everyone else that knows you.
You don't have to know them.
And then they start feeling something. You don't have to know them.
And then they start feeling something.
They feel disappointment, they feel anger, they feel like you're being ungrateful because
they're in places where they're feeling something they don't want to, they are suffering.
When are you going?
No, the pain of knowing that you will feel this way is worth it for me because staying
was suffering.
As an individual, I had to make this decision to have this pain so I can end the suffering,
so I can walk towards something else.
So we get to feel that from other people.
A lot of people felt it.
I was lucky enough to be around at the Daily Show on your last week and I could see the
reaction of how it made people feel.
I could feel the rumblings of the audiences before the take started to happen.
I could sit with you at the office before well, before you went on the show.
Then we got to walk in the streets and go have food.
And all I knew was you made the right decision.
And I wish people that know you and I could know you the way I know you,
because they would know that that what you did came from a good place.
I knew that you took care of the people that work closely with you.
And some people that will never know that you took care of them in that space, in that job, in that particular environment.
You left an everlasting legacy of kindness, of working together, of having everyone have
a voice.
I hope so.
I was in one of your writing sessions and I would feel like the energy say, something!
And then you would be like, yeah, say, but if you don't want to also say or can also
not say, but that's the culture that you bred. But those are the things that people are gonna queue up and tell you about. That's
what you must know innately inside of you as a human being that my reactions are always
gonna cause a ripple effect to people that know me that I don't know, but they're only
reacting towards who I am, not what I am. Cause you've changed what you were. You were
a host, but who you are is Trevor. You you were. You were a host, but who you are is Trevor.
You've changed what you were a boss, but who you are is a friend.
You've changed all of those things.
And of course there was going to be suffering.
There was going to be suffering from people don't want to let you go, but you
let them go first because you're teaching them.
A lot of what you guys are speaking about, I just, a lot of them touch very
similar to like Buddhist principles of like non-attachment, living in the now without worrying too much about
the future and our thoughts of suffering are suffering. It's suffering.
It is suffering.
So even if you're not suffering, you're thinking about suffering if you're suffering. But I
think the main one that you guys are speaking about that's like the same thing over and over is the thought of non-attachment. So non-attachment
to the job, you know, non-attachment to financial things and worldly things and-
Or titles.
Or titles, you know, a lot of what you guys are speaking about, I think is non-attachment.
You know, one of the biggest lessons I learned in
processing, leaving the daily show was when I'd have conversations with people on
the outside and on the inside, but I realized something that we oftentimes
haven't been taught to go back to the beginning of our conversation about loss
and life, we haven't been taught that things will end and we haven't been taught to say
goodbye in a healthy way. So what we do is we wait for the thing to be gone, then we start saying
goodbye. Like I'm eternally grateful to my mom and to my gran for fully preparing me for the fact that my
gran was going to die.
Even though she wasn't on her deathbed, it was like, Hey man, it's imminent.
And my gran would even joke about it.
But now it meant that while we were talking, we were saying goodbye and we would say goodbye
like a goodbye, like, Hey man, okay, go go.
I'm going back to New York.
Okay, bye.
Bye, Trevor. Okay, bye bye.
Bye bye.
Bye bye.
I might not see you again.
Now you're like, damn, you know, you're like, now you almost want to be like, don't say
that.
I was like, but why?
I might not see you again.
Because if you learn how to say goodbye, when the thing is still there, you get to say goodbye,
as opposed to always regretting
that you never got to say goodbye.
Stop yourself.
Yeah, and I think about this with like all of it.
I go, I think about like even us as people in relationships,
you know, like how many of us are guilty of feeling
that something is fading for another person
and not saying goodbye.
Instead letting the thing die in front of them and not you get what I'm saying because
we just we haven't been taught that.
Yeah, relationship objects.
Like think about companies.
What have they taught people?
What have companies taught people?
No, you must say goodbye when you cannot work anymore.
The company will retire you.
When doesn't want you anymore.
Yeah.
But why don't you retire the company?
You can't afford it.
You can't afford to starve yourself.
You're not taught to us.
Why don't you buy your company a pen and say like, Hey man, congrats on having me for 10
years.
I'm out.
I like that.
Buy the company a pen.
Yeah.
Why?
That's funny.
Just think about how we've been taught it.
You know what I mean?
And by the way, it's actually interesting how like, like, have you seen how emotionally
reactive people get to people who choose like suicide, like, like I said, and I'm not saying
like sad suicide, you know what I mean?
Because I think there's a difference between like people who are experiencing like a deep
depression or they feel like the world is ending.
And someone has said it beautifully, like suicide is a permanent solution to a temporary
problem.
That's a different thing.
I'm talking about somebody who goes, I have terminal cancer.
Have you seen how, how allergic people are to, yeah, euthanasia?
How, like how allergic people are sometimes?
No, you, you, and it's like, the person goes like, Hey man, I have a terminal
illness, I'm still able to move.
I'm still able to laugh.
I'm still able.
And I'm enjoying these things.
And you know what guys, I've had a great time.
I'm out.
I had a good run.
Yo, people are like, no, how dare you?
You've got to fight and you've got to this.
And they go like, no, no, no, no, no.
I'm fine.
I've got to say goodbye and I want you to say goodbye.
And I want you to see me like this.
And now, but the reaction that people give them, man, and I understand it both ways,
by the way, I don't think one is wrong or right, but I understand it.
I understand somebody going, no, I want to say goodbye
when I'm ready.
But to your point, and I know I'm guilty of this,
sometimes you'll never be ready,
because you're not practicing saying goodbye.
You haven't starved yourself.
And so if you haven't practiced it,
and if you don't know how to say goodbye,
you'll never be ready.
Because then when are you ready for somebody to die?
Always.
But you get what I'm saying?
You're never ready.
Yeah.
And then when it happens, you then now experience the thing and now you, now you had a gravestone
going like, I didn't say goodbye.
I wish I could have said this.
I wish I could have said this.
You know?
So it's really weird how literally you're one of those people who, where I go like,
yeah, no, Eugene, if there's one thing you taught me in life, it's like, yo, man, practice saying goodbye.
And I think, unfortunately, and in some ways, fortunately, because there's still the linings, I guess, life has like really amplified the lesson that you've taught me through the losses you've experienced.
How did the last day feel?
Did it feel like a, you're walking out and you could come back again anytime. Did it feel like you've walked out of this door before, or did you know
you're leaving the chapter behind?
The, the week my grandmother died was the first and only week I've canceled shows at The Daily
Show.
In the seven years.
Yeah.
I had an appendix surgery.
I came back to work.
I missed one day of work.
Came back post-surgery.
I've had knee surgeries.
I've worked, you know, you name it, through the pandemic, all of it.
My grandmother dying was the first time I canceled shows at The Daily Show.
And I'll never forget when I said, hey man, we're canceling the shows, the network said, okay, we'll get the correspondence to host. And then I was like,
no, we're going to cancel the shows. And they said, we understand that you're grieving,
but yeah, we're going to like, in a weird way, like the show must go on. And I remember thinking,
my grandmother came on and did an episode for The Daily Show.
We needed an episode.
We were in South Africa.
My grandmother welcomed us into her house and she's not even that kind of person.
But it was amazing to see these people.
She's part of this thing.
I'm not just the one mourning.
The Daily Show has to mourn this thing in some way because it was a part of it.
And so that all happened and I'm at home and I was crying like I've never cried in my life.
And then everyone came over.
And I'll never forget this.
David Kibuka came over, Joseph O'Pio came over, David Meyer came over.
Friends from one from America, one from Uganda, one from South Africa, and they all came over
to the house.
Eugene, we sat there and I cried, and then we laughed harder than I can ever remember
laughing in my entire life.
We laughed talking about families and funerals and death and, you know, grandmothers and we, yo man, we laughed and
cried and laughed and like, you don't even understand.
And I remember the feeling that I was having in that moment was a feeling of deep gratitude
that I had got to experience this human being who was my gran. And in a similar way, that definitely didn't have the same
level of profoundness. I felt that on the last day of the Daily Show. There are few
things more blessed in this life than being able to grieve when something is still around. Because grief is
unprocessed joy. It's all rushing into you at the same time.
Mixed emotion.
It's beyond mixed, it's all of it at the same time. It's every smile, every hug, every kiss,
every laugh, every meal, every, it's all coming in at the same time. And that's why your body
feels that I feel is like it's all of it at the same time. And that's why your body feels that I feel is like, it's, it's, it's, it's all
of it at the same time, every hug, every kid.
One motion.
Yo man, one, one thing happened and now it all comes to you at the same time.
But do you know how wonderful it is to experience that when the thing is still
alive, do you know what I mean?
That's what I got to do with the daily show.
The show didn't get canceled.
I didn't get fired.
What a beautiful way to, to move on.
You're still healthy.
We got, yeah, we got to grieve it, but still be there.
We got to, you know, it's, it's, it's that phrase, which I, I, I, it's always stuck
with me and I love it.
I go like, man, I wish we could all attend each other's funerals while we're still
alive, because then what would we say? While I'm here. What, how wish we could all attend each other's funerals while we're still alive.
Cause then what would we say? While I'm here.
How would we connect?
You know how many people you're gonna see
at your friend's funeral that you didn't connect with
because you were just like,
but now at the funeral you'd be like,
hey man, we should get that drink.
Hey man, we should, why don't we hang out anymore?
Cause of the things that you would say.
That's exactly.
I wish we.
But why don't we have a funeral while the person is still alive?
Now we're going to go there and tell the person how we feel about them. Now we're going to tell
a funny story about how wonderful they are as a person and the stupidest thing they ever did.
Now we're going to connect with each other. But why do we only wait for death to remember life?
And so it's not impossible. It's not impossible. I just think it's hard because
as you say, we get lazy. We're taught we don't have to do it. We've been sold this idea that
it's not, you never, it'll come, it'll, no, but like genuinely I go try it.
You know, we had this type of conversation, but not obviously in this depth while we were
standing there, you came back and we're standing at your place.
And then I looked at the shoes by the door and I was like, wow, there's so many shoes here.
And then you looked at me and you said, Eugene, people are not supposed to walk in with shoes in this house. This is my place in New York. Then I was like, oh, as I looked at my feet and I saw my shoes on my feet.
And it's just that, you know, this obviously personally, I'm a very private person on social media.
I don't put out my life, but if there's one thing that I wish people knew about
you, a few things, how nice you are as a human being. Aw, shucks.
Thanks, Yiji.
How generous you are as a person.
And I'm talking about your time and how loving you are to everyone.
Because I think us all as your friends, you know our stories personally.
As your friends, we don't feel like we are part of a group.
Everyone feels like they
know you and you know them. And when I experienced you at work, remember I know you from Horror
Cafe. I know you from your polo. I know you from great tracksuit pants running to the
airport and going to start a new life and a new career. And then I get to see the same
guy at the helm of this huge institution, what became an institution in American pop culture.
And I see the same guy who asks the PA, have you eaten?
Is there something that I can do?
Did you order that thing?
Is that thing?
Thank you so much.
I appreciate you.
Good night.
And I see you doing that.
And I'm going, I wish people could see this and know this about you, how nice and caring of a person
you are.
I've never caught you on a bad day.
They've never caught you on a bad day.
You are genuinely nice person.
And I always, whenever I think of what we are going to do, when you say, let's hang
out, I always go, I know what I'm going to get here.
If there's one thing that's going to happen here is I'm going to experience generosity,
kindness, not a bad word about anyone and
just pure childlike joy.
And you know, people around you will never have less of that ever as long as you are
still here and the day you're gone, because we're all going to go some point.
But this is what you must know about yourself is you have it in you.
It's not a thing that you earn through money, through fame, through success.
You were born into it.
That's why your grandmother asked you to lead a prayer.
She saw something in you that the world was soon to see, and she just wanted you to take
center stage and claim it, that there's an inner power in you that makes people gravitate
towards you, that make people go, I believe in what you're saying.
And a lot of what you're experiencing is because of that you were groomed to be
that person of a shining beacon.
You bring your friends together, you brought an office together.
And now here you are bringing all of us together and these people will get to
hear what I have to say because of you.
So you must be proud of yourself when you go to bed, when you're closing your
checking account, like I usually do take that one thing off, be proud of yourself for being a nice and kind person who has no bad word to say about
anyone.
Damn Eugene.
Yeah.
I mean it.
You know, it's funny, you just made me realize why I want to do this series of my favorite
people is literally because of what we said.
Yeah.
It's like one, people often ask me why I am the way I am.
Then I go like, I'm not the way I am.
I'm just a manifestation of the way we are and the we is all the people in my life.
So I go, you can't watch my comedy and not know Eugene Khaza.
You can't see how I think about life and not see Eugene Khaza.
And everyone in my life has that in a different way.
Absolutely.
Do you know what I'm saying?
But you like, yeah, man, you, you blessed me again.
Cause you, you've like clearly given me an idea of like why, cause I knew why I
wanted to do this, but I didn't know.
Like, or rather I knew what I wanted to do.
I myself didn't know like the why.
And I think this is, this is the why.
Thank you, my friend. Thank you. This is dope. Now let's go to say some bad words about people. I know
we've shouted out Buddhism here, but we haven't shouted out tabasim. He was the first one
who taught us to say goodbye. Tab taught us to say goodbye. Bye. Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
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Bye.
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Bye. Bye. Bye. Bye. Bye. partnership with Day Zero Productions. The show is executive produced by Treba Noah, Sanaz Yamin and Jodie Avigan.
Our senior producer is Jess Hackl.
Claire Slaughter is our producer.
Music Mixing and Mastering by Hannes Brown.
Thank you so much for listening.
Join me next Thursday for another episode of What Now? Thanks for watching!