Wonderful! - Wonderful! 175 Virtual Live Show!
Episode Date: April 7, 2021Welcome to the Wonderful Live Stream from January 2021, benefitting Austin Bat Cave! Rachel’s favorite brand of humor! Griffins’ favorite spooky literature! Rachel’s favorite controversial type...face! Griffin’s favorite flying mammals!For more information on Austin Bat Cave: https://austinbatcave.org/Music: “Money Won’t Pay” by bo en and Augustus – https://open.spotify.com/album/7n6zRzTrGPIHt0kRvmWoya MaxFunDrive ends on March 29, 2024! Support our show now by becoming a member at maximumfun.org/join.
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Hi, this is Rachel McElroy.
Hello, this is Griffin McElroy.
And this is wonderful.
This is a show where we talk about things that are good and things that we're into and things that we like.
And us being sort of side by side, not looking at each other is a vibe that I've never experienced.
And I don't necessarily love.
We're like morning news anchors.
We are kind of like morning news anchors.
Did you see this story about the little dog and he had a zebra friend i love that story tell me more it
ended in tragedy for both um this is uh this is this is fun this is a fun thing that we get to do
uh that we are doing in in partnership in in in support and support of the Austin Bat Cave,
which a lot of our fans and listeners,
we learned when we announced this show,
big into bats.
And we're maybe even a little disappointed
or even hugely disappointed that-
I was not anticipating the backlash
for this not being a bat organization i have things to say
about bats later on okay oh bats are gonna get there okay good but i'm just saying an organization
called austin bat cave that is not the austin bat cave which is which is all about encouraging
youth creativity and and writing and all that jazz um the idea of just like, this one cave needs money.
People were on board for that.
We're going to get new stalactites in this one.
The best stalactites money can buy.
How many bats can I support with $5?
I'm going to send a bat to college.
This is, if you've never watched our show before,
we really do just kind of talk about
whatever we used to talk about the bachelor, but then that, that turned sour, um, in the,
in the harsh light of day, we usually start by talking about small wonders. Do you have any
small wonders? Yeah. I wanted to give a shout out. Um, I, first of all, thank you everybody
for purchasing a ticket and attending this this viewing that we
have created unless you received the youtube link from a friend i'll be honest we didn't lock this
one down super tight this is not a uh a pay-per-view sort of mma match experience it's entirely
possible that somebody sent you the link and you're like, don't mind if I do. But I wanted to thank, there was a particular member of the Facebook group, the wonderful
Facebook group, Corey Lee Taylor Kuhn, who organized a spreadsheet of donations so that
people that could not afford tickets right now would be able to attend. So I wanted to
give a kind of a personal small wonder to that
because I recognize it is not easy for people to
scrape money together,
especially after the holiday season.
So thank you all.
If you did just stumble in here
and you are able to donate,
you can support Austin Batcave
by going to austinbatcave.org slash donate.
It's a really cool program.
We'll probably talk a lot about it during this
stream rachel's on the board and has been for a little over a year now i've done work with their
dnd workshops and stuff like that with kids it's it's it was really really wild i don't know that
i've ever talked at length about it no yeah griffin had the opportunity they have summer programming
and griffin had the opportunity to spend a day with summer campers
and teach them how to design a Dungeons and Dragons campaign. Yeah. Well, I sat in on theirs
and it was so fun. Like there was somebody was playing like a Hansel and Gretel D and D campaign
that was like pretty young kids. There was one that was like a house hunters, but with dungeons.
Anyway, the children are the future.
And I was just, you kind of put my small wonder to shame.
I was just going to say ham.
We've had, we got a big ham for Christmas, a sweet Christmas ham that we ordered from Central Market.
And it was for six to eight people.
And we're just two people and one sort of ham-averse child.
So really, it was just up to me and Rachel to tear this ham down.
Yeah, but you can put ham in a lot of things.
I mean, we have had ham sandwiches.
I have put together a ham omelet that I was quite proud of.
Yes.
Straight ham.
Just straight ham.
Straight ham in the dome. Can't beat that. Can't beat that. Yes. Straight ham. Just straight ham. Straight ham in the dome.
Can't beat that.
Can't beat that.
Thank you, ham.
Thank you, Central Market.
We have, so we usually will talk about a couple things each that we enjoy, that we want to highlight.
But before we started, Rachel sort of, okay.
Rachel was an incredibly, and remains a very talented writer.
But that goes all the way back to the cradle, honestly.
Rachel has always been an incredibly good writer of words.
And so we have some material from young Rachel that we're going to show in a moment that everyone should be very excited for.
But we also talked about some of my young writing.
And so we wanted to just sort of showcase our youth writing works.
Since Austin Batcave focuses on children age 6 to 18, they go into the schools.
They go into the schools. They do out-of-school time programming as well to support not just, you know, poetry as I was comfortable with, but also screenwriting and journalism, songwriting.
They've given kids locally tremendous opportunities to develop their writing skill. And so we thought we would share some of our own youth writing kind of in support of their mission and, you know, to show kind of how we got our start.
Yeah. If only I had had those resources sort of available. No, I'm not going to bring shame to Ms. Bentley, the teacher of my talented and gifted program where this journal was authored.
I found four journals last night. So if you're a fan of the show, please look forward to my talented and gifted program where this journal was authored.
I found four journals last night.
So if you're a fan of the show,
please look forward to a lot more of this potential new segment. Yeah.
Griffin found so many promising pieces of writing.
Oh my God.
That he thought he could potentially have his own poetry corner.
What you have to understand is they kept journals apparently through pretty
much all of elementary and middle school,
which is we're talking about turn of the millennium, which, hey fam, some stuff happened
around then that my child brain was not ready to write words about. And yet my teachers were like,
tell me how you feel about the war. And I'd be like, So I wanted to start,
this is my second grade journal.
I have a first grade journal
that not a joke.
I was tearing up a little bit
last night reading
because a lot of the entries
were about how much I liked
playing with my brothers
and walking home
just from school with them.
It was very, very sweet,
but not particularly fun.
So I have not heard these pieces of writing.
No, you haven't.
This is just a nice picture of a mountain,
and there's a guy with a pink shirt.
Love that.
That's not what I wanted to show everybody.
Did that count for your class?
Were they like, that's enough for today, sir?
I don't know.
That may have been an extracurricular drawing.
So some good stuff,
but we're going to kick things off at September 16th,
1994. There's a series that that date kicks off and I'm just going to read it as best I can.
I love baseball. It's my favorite sport. No offense for bowling and golf and other sports,
but I've hit some out of the park. This is my favorite sport.
out of the park. This is my favorite sport.
That's beautiful.
September 19th, golfing. Golf is really, really, really, really, really, really fun.
I was going to make it number one, but I didn't have room because of all the reallys.
This is my third favorite sport.
Now, just to get some context here.
The next page is from when Austin St. john uh the red ranger from the power rangers came to our school to do backflips off the stage and so i did i guess
draw a crude power ranger and write sign here austin saint john oh griffin didn't get that
signature the man was too busy doing flips that's awesome though were you so So were you big into sports? In reading these pages, I thought I was, but I wicked wasn't.
September 23rd, bowling.
I love bowling.
It is very fun.
My highest score is 363.
My lowest is 142.
This is my fourth favorite sport. September 26th, soccer. Soccer is 142. This is my fourth favorite sport.
September 26th, soccer.
Soccer is very fun.
I've had a couple of tournaments with my friends.
This is my fifth favorite sport and the rest are sixth.
So that's just a sort of listing of my favorites.
Have I awoken our child with my yelling?
I don't know.
I was concerned about that.
I was too. This is another thing we probably should have mentioned at the top. We just put our child with my yelling? I don't know. I was concerned about that. I was too.
This is another thing we probably should have mentioned at the top.
We just put our child to bed.
And sometimes that doesn't work out so well.
So we do have like a technical difficulties slide prepared to throw up.
I'll try to watch my volume in the future.
No, I mean, you were excited about bowling, honey.
I can't fault you.
Here's the best thing about computers.
I think a computer is like a friend.
The screen is the head.
The keyboard is the body.
And the wires are the feet.
I have Prodigy and Windows.
My favorite thing is you can talk with the computer.
Griffin.
There is some sadness in that one, I think.
But I would be very, I really like sports a lot.
So don't get too sad about it.
This is a quick one, February 13th, 95.
When I'm in college, I'll look big and strong and old.
My brother would be afraid of me.
I wonder which brother you were talking about there.
Probably Travis.
This one's probably the choicest nug.
And this is my final entry that I'm going to share on this particular episode.
And this gets back to what I was talking about, about news of the mid-90s.
The Oklahoma bombing is very sad.
I would repay him and send him to death on the electric chair.
Wow. Wow.
Wow.
Wow.
Wow.
I was apparently all about that life back then.
I didn't know you loved our country so much.
I loved our country.
Loved capital punishment.
Yeah, I guess so.
Hated the Oklahoma bombing, dude.
Yeah.
No, thanks, I said. Yeah. punishment yeah i hated the oklahoma bombing dude no thanks i said yeah i was like seven years old
why did they ask me to write about this no that's true why did they ask me to write about this i was
seven what is a good journal entry from a seven-year-old about the oklahoma city bombing
look like they should be familiar with your work, which is primarily sports-based.
About sports and how computers, my friend,
because you can talk to it and it has prodigy.
So they should have known this isn't
exactly your genre.
Not my forte, no.
Yeah, those are just some choice
cuts.
But what we have for Rachel
is not on the
page. Not on the page. do you want to set this video up
before we throw it to it okay please yeah so uh the clip I'm sharing with you is also from me as
a second grader uh my teacher was part of this curriculum in the school district that was called
success in reading and writing And they put together an instructional
video for all the teachers in the district. And so what they would do is they would bring a video
camera to different classrooms to show different creative ways you could teach reading and writing
in the classroom, depending on the age of your students. So we had the opportunity as a class to eat ice cream together and then describe, develop a list of descriptive words, talk about our experience eating the ice cream, and then write a poem on an actual little piece of paper that we had made to look like an ice cream cone.
Yes. And my teacher was very excited about my poem. And the cameraman had left our classroom and had gone to the third grade room down the hall.
And she sent me down there.
She's like, go, go, go, go, go read that in front of the camera.
And so I just dutifully walked down the hallway into the third grade classroom and quickly became kind of the star of the show.
A place where you really shined.
Kind of against my will. I was not a McElroy at that time. I was not a performer. I did not like
the spotlight. And I was not prepared for a bunch of students to be sitting around staring at me as
I read this poem. Yeah. So my exposure to this video was we had an incredible birthday party.
I forget whose it was but the theme
of the party was claim to fame so everybody brought like a newspaper clipping of like
something they had done when they were younger uh rachel brought this this tape and said yeah
here's this thing like i don't know i didn't want to do it but um i'm gonna play it now it's just
like my poem about ice cream and me and my friends and Rachel's friends, after the video had aired, were on the floor in Stitches because Rachel hadn't realized the sort of extremely suggestive nature of the poem that she had written.
And the inherent humor of that is only compounded by the fact that as you watch seven-year-old Rachel deliver this poem, you've never seen somebody so hugely sad, like so hugely upset with the world. And they are delivering this very suggestive ice cream poem.
I don't want to say too much more.
poem. And I don't want to say too much more. Every moment of it is a treasure. And I think we have it ready. If Amanda, if you can play the ice cream video. Okay, read me your first sentence.
That's very good. The tempting top. That makes it sound really tasty, doesn't it?
That's a very good opening sentence. I'm starting at the tempting top of the ice cream cone and working my way down to the cone.
I hope it lasts a long time. It's so creamy, fooey. I'm at the cone. Let's see if I can eat slower.
Oh no, it's starting to drip. Well, so much for eating slower.
Burr, this ice cream is cold. Boy, was that good.
It's probably, I don't know if you caught it. You can rewind it after the thing is done.
But at the very end of that video, you can actually hear her go, oh, like a moan escapes, a moan of just impotently flops over.
So I watched that a few times.
You know, my mom, because she was a teacher in the district, had a copy of this tape in our house.
And so I had watched it a few times and remembered that I looked sad. I remember that part of it. It was
only when we watched it maybe a year ago or two years ago with our friends that I realized how
suggestive the language was. Yes. And that brought a new level of discomfort. It's so good.
Our friends still reference it.
Once they realize that we've ripped it off the VHS and now have it in a very shareable digital format, it's going to be our Christmas present to them.
Anyway, that's our youth writing.
That's our youth writing.
Experience.
Yeah.
Do you want to go first?
Do you want me to go first?
Yeah. That's our youth writing experience. Do you want to go first? You want me to go first? Yeah, I just wanted to briefly, before we really got going, talk a little bit more about Austin Batcave.
Yes.
Griffin, could you give them the web address again?
Again, if you want to donate, it's austinbatcave.org slash donate.
So Austin Batcave is almost entirely volunteer driven. So they have a very small staff of less than 10 people.
And what happens is they send qualified volunteers that they train themselves out into the schools
to offer these different workshops.
And these volunteers are primarily working artists themselves.
So they'll be journalists, musicians, novelists.
And they're spending a lot of time both in small groups and individually working with students.
And some of the writing is creative and some of it is focused on like college essays.
So it's tremendously powerful organization and is really kind of empowering students all over the region, not just in Austin proper, but in the more rural surrounding counties as well.
I like the idea of them being
a tremendously powerful organization.
Like they run, they also run the government and the banks.
I mean, you know.
They might, no, if they ran the banks,
I don't think that we would be doing
this fundraiser stream for them right now.
Some of the students that go through the program.
Will end up working for the banks.
Right.
It's an upside down pyramid scheme.
Cool.
So yeah, I'm happy to have an opportunity
to support this organization.
And I hope that you all will spend a little more time
looking into it now that I've told you about it.
Especially with a lot of sort of school
going by the wayside this year.
They're doing a lot of work to fill in
the gaps. The other thing I should mention too, is that they are offering online adult courses
right now. So if you're, if you're somebody who's interested in kind of building your own poetry or
short fiction or personal essay skills, they have online instruction for that too. Yeah. Okay. Now
we're going to start doing the show proper.
Everything else has been prelude. It's about to get really good. That's not true. It's not going
to get better than the ice cream cone. But we are going to continue talking for a while still.
So would you like to do your first thing, please? Yeah. My first thing is kids jokes.
First thing, please.
Yeah.
My first thing is kids jokes.
Kids jokes.
Yeah.
Did you try to connect both of yours at least tangentially to the Austin Batcave theme?
Well, I wanted to focus on the youth.
Okay.
That's fine.
Yeah.
Kids jokes.
Boy, howdy.
We've been hearing a lot of these lately. The magical thing about it isn't necessarily the words that are said, but the way that we watch our son figure out how to really sell a joke.
He has learned punchline and he has learned that he really has to lean into it and he really has to emphasize it.
Yeah.
And it has become quite charming.
Yes, very much so.
To us only. to us only to us only um and and so much so that he
understands the construction now and this is something that happens to a lot of kids where
they like start to understand how jokes work and then they try to make their own jokes and they get
the intonation right but there's actually nothing funny about it and then you have to kind of be
like which is hard for us specifically us.
It's very hard for,
because he's still at the age where he will just say it again.
He will think they didn't hear me.
Now in his defense,
I also do that now at 33.
There's no way they could have not laughed at this intentionally.
So there must be some mistake.
Yeah. We've heard a, what do cows do for fun go to the movies um a lot why did the banana go to the doctor yeah wasn't
peeling well gotta love that one and that's it and those are the only two yeah those are those
are the two oh and then something about there's then something about there's a booger joke in there
too about picking. What did the nose say to the finger? Stop picking on me. Something like that.
Yeah. I mean, it's not good. He doesn't lean on that one a lot. I think he knows it's his weakest.
He knows the banana peeling well is the best joke. And he's right. It's the best of the three.
is the best joke. And he's right. It's the best of the three.
So to kind of give some context, I wanted to talk about kind of the origin of the knock-knock joke. Okay. Because I thought
that's kind of the formula that kids start to pick up on really early.
The knock-knock joke, people cite
the bard himself for introducing the knock-knock joke.
They always do. in macbeth uh shakespeare
has a line in act two where somebody says knock knock who's there and then they say
is it the name of beelzebub here's a farmer that hanged himself on the expectation of plenty. You really couldn't call it a joke.
I mean, Shakespeare, he, you know,
sometimes you don't always catch the joke,
but I don't think that was a joke.
My ribs have been thoroughly tickled.
But because of the knock-knock who's there format,
they kind of thought like, oh, well, there it is.
He started it.
Okay, but also somebody once got their door knocked on
and they answered, yeah, who's there? were they the first ones to invent the joke uh so knock knock jokes as we know them
really took off in the 30s uh they became really popular like swing orchestras would do like little
knock knock jokes in between their sets okay the they were on radio shows a lot. Businesses would stage knock-knock contests.
And knock-knock clubs formed in the Midwest, which I guess was –
What does that – what could that possibly mean?
I have to assume that it was like comedian, like comedy clubs.
Just going back and forth with just bars of knock-knock jokes?
Where's that?
Where's that, 8 Mile?
I would watch that film in a second.
And I can't imagine wanting to do an hour set of that.
Of just knock-knock jokes?
The audience would get tired of just going, who's there?
Who's there?
Who's there?
There was actually, there was also a knock-knock song that became a favorite of some big bands and was just, you know, kind of over and over again.
Let's hear that right now.
No, I don't have that.
No, we don't have it.
of an outpouring of professionals who thought that people that incessantly punned and did knock-knock jokes were exhibiting signs of mental illness and thought that knock-knock
jokes were representing kind of like manic behavior and that they were similar to the
other crazes that would obsess people at the time.
Knock, knock, Joe.
They were very concerned about it.
There is, this is actually funny.
So there is D.A. Laird, who was the director of Rivercrest Psychological Laboratory at Colgate University.
That sounds chilling.
That alone sounds chilling.
The fact that they were doing knock, knock experiments, it puts it on a whole other level, but the name itself is rough stuff.
So he suggested that they were catch-question games and saying that people that were likely to take up knock-knock jokes was just a way for them to appear smart and bright by exhibiting a pseudo-intellectual activity since no one could possibly guess the right answer to these games.
This person hates jokes and riddles.
You say that,
but here's the other thing.
He was the faculty advisor of banter,
the campus humor magazine at Colgate.
So he wasn't,
it wasn't that he hated jokes.
He was a comedy snob,
like way back in the thirties was just like,
I'm sorry.
I know what funny is and it is not that but
a comedy snob wielding the hammer of like psychological language is like on a whole
another level um i also just wanted to say this is this is something that may exist nationally
but when i was researching kids jokes there is something called the gotam Comedy Club in Chelsea that has kids and comedy shows.
So it's like summer programming, like a camp structure for kids that are interested in
stand-up comedy. But like, can we go watch it or is it like a closed? I mean, they have videos
online. Oh, that's awesome. I love good kids stand-up. It's like legitimately incredibly good.
stand-up it's like legitimately incredibly good and uh in the age of of online instruction they are offering online classes too so if you have a child much like our son uh who is over six uh
yeah i know he's not there yet but uh they are off for programming for for kids jokes that's very
good um can i do my first thing yes i'm I'm going to sing a jingle, the theme song, and see if you recognize it.
Because this may be another sort of age gap issue between the two of us.
That's not home improvement.
It's the theme song to the Goosebumps TV show.
Oh, I didn't watch that.
Okay.
But I'm not going to talk about the TV show because it was inferior in every way to Are You Afraid of the Dark.
What wasn't was the Goosebumps books series.
Wow.
The Goosebumps book series was a huge gateway for me into what I read in one of my journals.
I referred to as recreational reading, which is reading not required by school,
which I never, ever did.
It's the second best-selling book series ever
right behind Harry Potter.
It sold 400 million copies worldwide.
62 books have been published under the Goosebumps umbrella.
And they were, of course, written by R.L. Stine,
who I read some fun quotes from when writing about like the success of this book series, because he sort of stressed that like he wasn't Drugs and violence and depravity.
Which like in Say Cheese and Die, someone does die.
Yeah.
It's there in the title, Mr. Stein.
Like, I don't like the idea of R.L. Stine saying like, they're not that scary. When like, I'll decide actually what gives me nightmares because it's monster blood.
No.
Makes me very.
Did you read any Goosebumps?
I didn't.
No.
I had friends that did. I'm not sure why I never never got into it it might have been just the spookiness it was very yeah maybe you that's never been your sort of your uh literary flavor i would say yeah
not particularly no i think what helped me get over the fear factor was the fact that the books
were incredibly formulaic uh where there was a a child who was displaced in some way,
staying with relatives in the country
or at a camp somewhere or et cetera,
and they encounter something scary
and it troubles them for a while
until they seemingly beat it.
But then there's always a twist ending.
They always get you with the twist ending.
So it's not like a group of boxcar children or uh like a detective it's not the same it's not the same
kids ever except for when they do like they go to slappy land a few times you know what i mean like
they there's a few entries in the monster blood series there's probably some continuity there
um i wanted to talk about my favorite twist it was from welcome to camp nightmare which was the
ninth book in the series still pretty early on there's a boy named billy staying at this weird
camp and all these scary things keep happening and his fellow campers keep disappearing seemingly
killed and he finds out it's this evil camp counselor that's doing it so he confronts him
and like fights him and the camp counselor has a gun and he gets it evil camp counselor that's doing it. So he confronts him and fights him.
And the camp counselor has a gun and he gets it from him.
And that's when the camp counselor reveals the whole camp has been a test.
Because Billy is being tested to go and confront this alien species on their alien world.
And that alien world is Earth.
I should have seen that coming.
But you didn't. And that's how R.L.
Stein gets you.
Like, me reading that as a child was like,
this is the best, that's the best thing
I've ever, nothing is going to be better
than that. That was such a wild surprise.
There was a series of choose-your-own-adventure
books called Give Yourself
Goosebumps, which is really good.
And they didn't really necessarily
reinvent the wheel for choose your own
adventure, but they were genuinely scary.
There was one called escape from the carnival of horrors where one of the
like wrong turns was you had to choose which of two slides to go down.
And if you went down the wrong one,
the slide kept going forever and you were just eternally trapped on this
spot.
And that gave me like my first sort of
moment of existential dread in my entire life. So thank you. They were of course published under
the Scholastic brand. So like every Scholastic book fair, I would roll in, I would get my new
goosebumps. I would get my new anamorphs. I would get my new dinotopia. I would be in there for three minutes. I would just be like, bye.
That's all I need.
And I really didn't give it much credit until I looked over the list of titles while preparing for this segment.
And I have read so many of these books.
I severely underestimated my exposure to the Goosebumps brand because I didn't like reading.
So to wrap up this segment, I prepared a game for Rachel that I told you about earlier and I'm't like reading. So to wrap up this segment, I've prepared a game for Rachel
that I told you about earlier
and I'm very excited about.
It's called Goosebumps or Goofbumps.
And in it, I'm going to tell you the title of a story.
I have a lot of them.
And you're going to tell me
if it's a real Goosebumps book
or something I just made up.
Are you ready to begin this incredible game,
Goosebumps or Goofbumps?
Yes, I am. Okay. How worried are you right now? Well ready to begin this incredible game, Goosebumps or Goofbumps? Yes, I am.
How worried are you right now?
Well, when you prepared this game, did you
realize that I hadn't read any Goosebumps books?
I did realize that. I assumed that.
Okay. Are you prepared?
Yes. Attack of the
Gooey Ghost.
We gotta go fast. These are... Oh, so you're
not gonna give me a synopsis? No.
Just a title. Attack of the gooey ghost.
Goof.
That's you're right.
Piano lessons can be murder.
That's real.
Correct.
The cuckoo clock of doom.
That's real.
Yes.
My hairiest adventure.
That's fake.
That's real.
Zombies ate my homework.
Fake.
Correct.
One day at Horrorland.
Real?
Return to Horrorland.
Real?
Escape from Horrorland.
Real?
The Curse of Horrorland.
Is that fake?
That one's fake.
Wow, how did you do that?
I read a lot of books as a child.
Dracula stole my bike.
Real?
No.
Legend of the Lost Legend.
Fake?
That's real.
My best friend is invisible?
Real?
Real.
I live in your basement.
Real.
Real.
Beware of the purple peanut butter.
Fake?
Real.
Scary birthday to you. Real. That's real. Principal Frankenstein. Fake. Real. Scary birthday to you.
Real.
That's real.
Principal Frankenstein.
Fake.
Correct.
Frankenstein's dog.
Fake.
Real.
Frankenstein's dog bites back.
Real.
Fake.
I am Slappy's evil twin.
Fake.
Real.
Are you terrified yet?
Real.
Real.
You did really good at that game you got most of them
right i can't believe you caught my my horror land quartet trap that was i also uh have become
familiar with my brand yeah that's that's fair with like the the scientific work you do to
construct a joke of those real titles which one is your favorite because i find
my best friend is invisible to be so powerful like you don't have to read that book you know
everything that's going to happen in that book what is the purple peanut butter one i didn't
read beware of the purple peanut butter but it's a it's a it's a real that sounds more like sucian it does it sounds it sounds shell silversteinian
yeah frankenstein's dog i was surprised by that one that they got the frankenstein license yeah
that's why i thought they'd be fake like well i don't know what hoops you have to jump through
but i can't imagine it's easy to just be like uh i'm also gonna have a frankenstein yeah and my
hairiest adventure i feel like is an early. It's like an early in the series.
It's like a puberty book.
Yeah, it's just, there's no supernatural element in that one whatsoever.
It just teaches kids how to really explore their bodies in that time.
Yeah.
Listen, it was the 90s.
We didn't have access to a lot of helpful tools to teach us about the changes of our bodies.
We relied on R.l stein for that his books didn't have depravity in them but this was the next next best thing yeah
oh here right here right now we got a Dumbo Blomp, and this one's for Theo,
and it's from Prox, who says,
Happy birthday and happy anniversary.
I'm so glad to have moved states so we can wake up together each morning.
You make the world less terrifying.
I love cooking for you, playing video games together,
laughing at your good, good jokes,
and overhearing you listen to this podcast in the shower.
Every week you're my small wonder oh this is weird knowing that right now theo is hearing this in
a shower i feel like maybe we shouldn't be aware of that fact because now i feel like we're like
in there and this is a private place but i will say if you're gonna put the conditioner in
yeah give yourself a little time for that condition oh sure oh sure that's the first
thing i do i get the hair wet and then i put the conditioner in and then i a little time for that conditioner. Oh, sure. Oh, sure. That's the first thing I do. I get the hair wet, and then I put the conditioner in, and then I wash the rest
of my face and body and my butt and stuff. And only then do I do the rinse-a-roo. I try to give
it at least five minutes. Wow, five minutes. If I can. If I can, yeah, if I got nothing else going
on that day. Hey, how about this next one? This message is for Nicole.
It is from Jessica. Thanks for being the first adult I talk to each day and the last when the
melatonin takes too long to kick in. Thanks for always returning the giant thumbs up emoji my
butt sends and never picking up when I accidentally video chat you. Thanks for having three awesome
kids that I love and for loving mine in return
having you as a bff is wonderful that is so sweet it's so sweet i love that never picking up when i
accidentally video chat you i of my brothers or my dad
at like, I don't know,
2.30 on a Monday,
I'm like, that's not real.
That's unintentional.
We just spoke
earlier.
This is not real. That's your butt.
I will say your dad does always
pick up and he is always driving.
Yeah, he is.
And this one's for Beth
and it's from Bree who says,
I'm so glad I was such a class A nerd in college
so we could bond.
Through asexual epiphanies,
retail horror stories,
NaNoWriMo's and fanfic freakouts,
thank you for being my roommate,
hive mind,
honey nut queerio, soul sister.
My bad for making food with so much cumin.
When you moved in, I never realized you didn't like it.
Love always, cheese.
Oh my gosh.
Who doesn't love cumin?
Wow.
Well, see, this is like when we first got together.
Yeah.
And I made a lot of soups.
You did.
And I put peas in pasta and you very politely ate it for a long time.
That's true.
And then you were like, hey, by the way, I don't actually like peas.
Well, it's because when you say you don't like peas, people assume certain things about you that you're like a veggie-phobe, which I'm not.
I enjoy a vegetable, but just not peas or limer beans.
That's it, just those two.
So maybe this person feels that way about cumin.
Okay, no judgment.
It's just that counts out a lot of incredible
sort of food categories that sort of bums me out.
But I mean, I could just like,
I could pour taco seasoning like on into my open mouth
and just like make an afternoon of it.
That's true.
Okay. Can I read this next message? I wish of it. That's true. Okay.
Can I read this next message?
I wish you would.
This message is for Jeff.
It is from Clarice.
Thank you for being my best friend and a memory keeper with me.
I wrote you this poem eight years ago,
and it's still as true married as when we were falling in love.
You put stars in my eyes and life's greatest surprise,
finding you light up my heart
like it was waiting for you to start.
I love and adore and admire and look up to
and dream about you, babe.
That's so sweet.
And also very just duplicitous
to get a backdoor Rachel's Poetry Corner in here.
You know what I mean?
Like typically people have to pay quite a bit
for a Rachel's Poetry Corner.
Yeah, I know.
The estate of Wallace Stevens paid for my car.
That's true.
And Rachel does go to birthday parties
and we'll just do a poem.
We'll read poems there for you.
And I'm saying that you got you got you doubled up on
this service it's very popular you know there'll be somebody making balloon animals and then i'll
be over in the corner with like a very large book of emily dickinson yeah kids always choose me they
always choose you um what is your second thing i just saw it and i'm so disappointed in you
i wanted to have my computer up usually griffin and i do not share our topics in advance um, what is your second thing? I just saw it and I'm so disappointed in you.
I wanted to have my computer up.
Usually Griffin and I do not share our topics in advance.
No.
Um,
my second thing,
see,
I feel like you're preparing for a spit take right now.
My second thing is comic sans.
There it is.
I'm not even,
I'm not even in that. I find the stuff like battling over the Oxford comma or like really any sort of grammatical like snobbery, like very exhausting.
But man, I mean, I wouldn't use it.
I have had some experience picking like a typeface, you know, when I have done creative writing before yeah uh and there aren't restrictions
around what size and type of font you have to use but i don't have a lot of strong feelings about it
uh the thing that i think is wonderful about comic sans is kind of what the intention behind it was
initially okay uh and kind of the unintended benefits of it, I guess. Was it like a youthful, rebellious, like Times New Roman?
A little bit.
Who am I, my dad?
Look at my silly font.
I don't take anything seriously.
So there is a man behind Comic Sans.
His name is Vincent Kinnair, and he designed it for Windows 1995 when they were putting together Microsoft Bob.
Microsoft Bob. Does this sound
familiar to you? Was it like a text-to-speech helpful friend? This was like a desktop interface
that was supposed to look like a living room. And there was a dog on there. And the idea was that
it was supposed to be more like friendly and welcoming to younger people. Okay. So when you would open up the desktop, you could choose this option and then kids could
kind of more intuitively navigate the computer.
I mean, I must have had, like we had computers early.
I would be surprised if we didn't have this.
It didn't hang around.
I would not be surprised.
I think people probably, what font is this dog speaking in?
Get him out of here.
I need a serious Helvetica dog, please.
Well, and that was part of his thinking.
So he said it in an interview once.
This is Vincent Conner.
He said, quote, comic dogs don't talk in Times New Roman.
I can't believe it.
He actually said something like that.
He said, my original idea was it was going to be used for kids and it wasn't made for everybody to like it.
Okay.
So he was inspired by comic books, which is how he kind of developed this style, which was him basically drawing intentionally sloppy letters.
And he did not expect it to kind of take off and become this font that is used for everything in all environments.
Right. I wonder if he would be saddened by sort of the constant derision that the Comic Sans font now is the recipient of.
Well, and so that is kind of his point.
So a lot of people picked it up.
picked it up. So at the time in the nineties, notable companies like Disney and Apple and BMW were all using this font in their, in their materials. And people, you know, were kind of
getting used to this very accessible, like kind of goofy font. Uh, and it wasn't, it wasn't ever
supposed to be like in informal context. Yeah, sure.
And so his point still to this day, so in the early 2000s, there were all these movements against it.
Like there was a group of Canadians that campaigned to ban the font in 2005.
This is all very ironic though, right?
Like it's not like people were trying to actually.
I know, yeah.
I mean, I didn't see's not like people were trying to. I don't, yeah. Actually.
I mean, I didn't see any like legislation.
Okay, cool.
There were typographers in 2002 that, that gained momentum and kind of saying this font is terrible.
We need to stop using it.
And it actually had a lot of benefits for a lot of people. So it is obviously it's, it's good for
kids. You know, it's like, it's big, it's loopy, it's engaging. There's more space in between the
letters. Uh, apparently it's also really helpful for, uh, individuals with dyslexia because the
letters look so distinct. So if you're, if you're somebody who's potentially going to reverse
letters or have difficulty with words, the letters look like a B and a D look very
different. And the argument I read, I thought it was interesting. There was somebody in
Wichita State University that did a study of how people perceive typefaces and categorized the
responses of people's perceptions into three categories. Either a font was characterized as having a rugged masculinity, perceived beauty, or excitement.
Okay. Where on God's green earth did Comic Sans land?
Well, and that was the suggestion is that some typefaces are just distinctly inappropriate. Like they would have the people in the study rate the suitability of typefaces for formal documents.
Right.
So the idea was like, look at this resume, which font seems more appropriate for the resume.
And so there's just a kind of a suggestion that people are just generally good at looking at typeface in a kind of an artistic way and saying like, this is not
the right medium for what you're communicating.
That makes sense.
Just letters.
I found, so I'm not super familiar with this, but there was a Tumblr called the Comic Sans
Project where they would take corporate logos and redo them in Comic Sans.
I think I've seen some of these.
It's very entertaining.
Yeah.
It really kind of communicates that point of
this font is not suitable for
more serious products.
Absolutely.
I wouldn't use it for
a wedding invitation necessarily.
No. But I appreciate
if I'm going to sell ice cream
after
reading that poem. Let's say I open
my own franchise of ice cream.
And you could.
I would want a little sign in Comic Sans, I think.
I think that would, I think you could do much worse.
I think you could use any of the cursives. I still feel like they haven't made a good cursive
typeface that I've seen. Because I got so excited. My cursive was garbage that in school,
when I realized I could just type cursive and save myself a lot of time, I was so excited. My cursive was garbage that in school, when I realized I could just type cursive
and save myself a lot of time,
I was so stoked that I ran home to the computer
and tried to do it.
That's a huge disappointment.
I want to talk about bats.
I'm going to talk about specifically the bats
that do live under the South Congress Bridge.
There are a lot of people that probably came here
for some bat content.
Well, here you go, folks.
That you were delivering.
These are very specific bats.
There's a lot of them.
If you're not familiar,
Austin is six months out of the year,
home to a great deal of bats,
750,000 to one and a half million bats.
They live under the South Congress Bridge,
which is a big bridge that connects downtown
to the south part of Austin.
And every dusk, a biblical plague swarm,
I should have looked up what a,
what's the name of like a proper noun of a group of animals?
I used to know this.
I think I've done a segment about it,
but I already forgot it.
A lot of bats, like a big,
a conflagration of bats comes out of the bridge.
And it's this huge, you know, tourist attraction now.
People will come out and camp out on the bridge.
But it happens from March to September.
And then they scoot on down to Mexico.
They are Mexican free-tailed bats.
That is the type of bat they are.
They are also almost unanimously female bats.
And they come to our beautiful bridge. And then in June, they pop out a baby bat, a did not care for these bats. They were seen as something of a blight. And there was a bat conservationist whose name was Merlin Tuttle,
which is the, if you told me name a bat conservationist, I would say just off the
top of my head, Merlin Tuttle. And he moved to Austin in 1986 after hearing that we had
the biggest urban bat population
in the country.
And when he came here,
he realized that everybody
hated these bats.
And we're talking about like
exterminating this huge bat colony
under the bridge.
And so he kicked up this
huge public education campaign
to say like, hey, they're not going to bite you or turn you into a Dracula.
Like I know that every town hall meeting this dude went to, there was always one person like, hey, yeah, I've lived in this town for 25 years.
I have kids here.
I put down roots here.
I'm not trying to turn into a Dracula thing very much.
But he just stayed this staunch advocate for bats.
Something I learned, Texas Monthly does a feature called the Bum Steer Awards.
Have you heard about this?
No.
It's like they're Razzies.
Oh, that's funny.
It's like here's a Texan who has done something silly or bad.
They had their work cut out for them in 2020 uh they are still doing this feature in 1986
old merlin tuttle got himself a bum steer award from texas monthly because they all thought it
was so silly that this bat enthusiast guy uh the award was guano to texas dr merlin tuttle of
milwaukee the founder of bat International, announced that he wanted to move his organization and research to Austin, which he called Bat Nirvana Land.
What a goofball this bat scientist is.
Coming here and telling us about bat science?
Anyway.
He did incredible work because people were like, when I moved here, this was a thing of like, have you gone to see the bats yet?
this was a thing of like, have you gone to see the bats yet? And people will get their kayaks out under the bridge and they will camp out to watch these bats and people will take pictures. And it
is a whole thing. Uh, it is always on the list of like free low cost activities to do.
I can't wrap my mind around the headspace that the, that the kayak people are in.
I've never actually, here's the thing. I love these bats. I've seen them from a distance. Like
it's kind of hard not to see them all the time because there are other bat colonies
like i know there are yes on our way to round rock before to go to an express game we saw like a huge
huge cloud of that but i've never gone to camp out on the bridge to watch them because uh
i don't want to be close to that many bats.
Like I like, I like bats from a distance.
And like, if I'm outside and I see a bat fly by, I'm like, oh, cool.
If a bat gets in my house, that's the worst day of my life.
I don't like that one bit.
And being close to 1.5 million bats, I need a personal guarantee that none of them are
going to come into my bubble.
And I listen, Dr.
Merlin Tuttle would be so disappointed to hear me say this.
I like the bats, uh, aesthetically, uh, but I've never gone to camp out on the bridge.
Anyway, Dr.
Tuttle didn't give up, got this, this Razzie was like, no, I, this won't stop me.
Just kept trying to win folks over until eventually he did.
And, uh, I think on the back of the fact that, Hey, this could be a tourist attraction, which
it was.
Um, and which it was.
And then it was a big thing ever since.
People like our bats.
I can't say our bats when I just said I don't want to be close to the bat cloud.
Anyway, so the bats are almost entirely female. and after they give birth to a pup around June in five weeks
those baby bats are able to fly around
at night and do
the bat colony's
noble service to us Austinites
which is they eat it to bugs
yeah see that is the thing
that sold me on bats is that
the mosquitoes
really
handled by the bats
we grow them big down here in Texas too.
Big mosquitoes.
Each night, the batpocalypse, the plague that comes out,
devours anywhere from 10,000 to 30,000 pounds of insects.
Each night.
Wow.
And a lot of those are mosquitoes and harmful agricultural pests.
Every night, 10,000 to 30,000 pounds.
Thank you, bats.
So they go out to feed
and then they come back at the end of the night.
They're like, thanks, I'll see you tomorrow.
Yeah, make more bugs for us, I guess.
Yep, that's what they do for six months out of the year.
I wonder, I guess if you live downtown,
you probably have a noticeable reduction.
No bug, guaranteed from the bats.
Yes.
Anyway, bats are great. to sort of aid in the design of new bridges and like repairs for bridges or
modifications to bridges to make them more bat colony,
like friendly to like aid in the construction of the underside of the bridge
to make it more amenable for,
for bats when appropriate.
Like there are places where it is not a great idea in a small town to have
that many bats.
But I thought that was so neat. There's bridges out there that have like little sofas and tvs and like a little central
perk for bats so cute babe like oh i'm let's just just keep going little chandler bats they're like
oh could i be any hungrier for bugs yeah uh and then's like, you don't guano on the,
this is more Seinfeld now,
but like,
you don't guano on the first date.
Okay.
I don't know if they call
pooping guano-ing.
I don't think you can make a verb
out of guano-ing.
Anyway,
that's all that we have prepared for you.
One last time,
if you have enjoyed our show,
go donate to the Austin Bat Cave.
If you enjoy the idea of what the Austin Bat Cave does, and you should, go to-
I wanted to share every year they give students the opportunity to publish their work in these
big anthologies, which is a tremendous opportunity as a young writer to be published and to have the
opportunity to share your work with more people than, you know, just your second grade teacher.
Yeah.
Who must have read that thing about the Oklahoma city bombing and been like,
should I tell someone?
Anyway, the link Austin bat cave.org slash donate genuinely.
Thank you to Austin Batcave for everything that you do and for allowing us to,
to do this show in
support of you yeah and this this stream will be available after this evening uh so if you joined
us late or you know want to want to revisit the ice cream poem you have the opportunity to do so
uh that's it though thank you for watching and um thanks to Bowen and Augustus for the use of our theme song.
Money won't pay. And thank you to Maximum Fun for hosting our show.
If you are not a regular listener of the podcast, you can find our show on Maximum Fun.
And thank you to Amanda, who has stayed stayed on late tonight to help us run this stream uh because i don't know how to do it i
don't know how this works um yeah that's it thanks everybody yeah thank you have a good evening and
we'll see you we'll see you next we'll see you next time Money won't pay. Working on it. Money won't pay.
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