Wonderful! - Wonderful! 343: Unstacked Moons
Episode Date: September 25, 2024Rachel's favorite piece of childhood folklore! Griffin's favorite quiet everywhere friend! Music: “Money Won’t Pay” by bo en and Augustus – https://open.spotify.com/album/7n6zRzTrGPIHt0kRvmWo...ya Equal Justice Initiative: https://eji.org/about/
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Discussion (0)
Hi, this is Rachel McElroy.
Hello, this is Griffin McElroy.
And this is wonderful.
Welcome to Wonderful to Podcast where we talk about things we like that's good
that we're into.
I don't know much about astrology,
but I really feel like my moons are starting to
stack up in a way that is beneficial
for my futures and fortunes.
So your moons have been unstacked.
Wildly.
And just now.
Like a Jenga tower fell right the hell over.
And now you feel like.
They're not quite in whatever, there's like a real,
syzygy, is that the word for when the planets align?
I think so, it's such a cool word.
Anyway, I feel it.
Like, Survivor's back on the air
and Hockey's about to start back up again.
Like, do you know what I mean?
Like it feels like the weather's about to get cooler
and so long pants and long shirts
are about to start happening again
around the same time as Hockey and Survivor is on television.
Do you know what I mean?
So when Survivor and Haki aren't on television,
your stack is unstacked.
I'm also, I've been touring,
like I've been traveling every couple weeks,
that's about to slow down.
Get that moon in there, that's Io.
Although you are about to travel.
Baby, this is what I'm saying, it's not Syzygy yet,
but we're getting close.
Do you not feel, it feels like you are not experiencing
this lunar event.
And we've talked about this a lot.
I am not a superstitious person,
except when it comes to saying that things
are on their way up.
Okay, so then I would say you're an extremely
superstitious person.
You're the only person I know actually in my life,
and I don't have a lot of people who I'm in close contact
with, certainly not on the level that we're at,
you are an extremely superstitious person.
In the event that like, if I say like,
oh boy, the boys are sleeping good now.
Yeah, God, how dare you.
Like that fucking activates you on like a deep core level.
Yeah, I don't think this happened to me
until we had children.
You think the kids made you superstitious? Yeah, I think that think this happened to me until we had children. You think the kids made you superstitious?
Yeah, I think that a lot about having young children
is very, very hard, and a lot of what my life is
is thinking like, well, it's gotta get easier, right?
And then I found a lot of times that if I thought like,
oh, things are really getting better,
that that was not true at all.
No, yeah.
And then I started to get uncomfortable
with even acknowledging it.
Having kids is crazy, man,
because it's like most other stuff before that,
you could kind of white knuckle and get under control.
But this is one where, yeah, I understand.
I think I walk a much better path now
in terms of saying that good things are happening,
because I know that it's not your favorite.
Yeah, our kids have been sick like three times
in like the last two weeks.
Yeah, it's been absolutely.
You know.
But that's what I'm saying, the moons are like,
they're not there now.
But they're stacking.
I wanna be clear, it would be crazy for me to say
the moons are in syzygy.
They're moving towards that.
But they're trending, they're-
They're sub-stack. They're waxing, they're- They're sub-stack.
They're waxing, they're sub-stack, waxing.
And I just, I don't know, I guess I'm the only one
who's feeling this, but I'll check back with you,
I guess the next lunar cycle.
Yeah, I don't know, the problem with this superstitious level
that I operate at now is that I can never
acknowledge anything good.
So I've gotta figure out-
Maybe that's what astrology's about for.
Some kind of middle ground.
I wish there was an astrology
that was just about moon stuff.
Not so much about birthdays and stars and planets,
but just moon stuff.
I like that.
There is just moon stuff.
But can you read signs?
People always talk about how like, you know,
like the moon is in retrograde or something, right?
I think planets are the ones that go with it.
Planets, moon, can.
Again, we're showing our asses.
It's pretty hard right now.
Do you have any small wonders?
Oh, man.
Hmm.
Hmm.
Hmm.
Pumpkin. Hmm. Hmm.
Pumpkin.
Hmm.
Pumpkin?
Yes, yes, muffin.
I mean pumpkin, yeah.
I think we all, we should each, at the beginning of the year,
be given a card that we print out
that says pumpkin stuff on it.
And then on the podcast,
if you're ever out of things to talk about,
you can punch your pumpkin card,
and it's, I think, one a year,
and then you can kind of coast on it,
because pumpkin's always so good.
I got this big box that has like three pumpkin bread mixes
in it.
Now I am somebody who used to take like a can of pumpkin
and like really-
You used to really go wild for it.
Really go for it, but now it's like, you know,
just a mix and I can put some eggs and oil in it
and that's great for me.
Well, also the rate at which I and our two boys
devour those pumpkin muffins,
I would feel guilty eating them that fast
if you put more work into them.
What's really, what's this like,
it speaks to our level of courtesy in this house.
I will make pumpkin muffins.
If I make 12 of them, 11 of them are gone within 48 hours.
And then one will just-
Sit forever.
Because everybody in the house is like,
well, I don't wanna have the last one.
No, never.
The problem with pumpkin muffin
is it's always a good time for pumpkin muffin.
Like if I'm, there's a wide range of hunger experiences
I could be having that could be like perfectly sated
by a pumpkin muffin.
Muffin is a really big food group in our house.
It sure is.
I think every day at any time, one or both
or all members of this family are consuming muffins.
Well, it's just kind of perfect, right?
Cause it's like, who doesn't wanna eat a sweet piece
of bread about the size of their fist?
All the time, like all the time.
I get it, it's kind of perfect.
I'm gonna say I have some new glasses arriving today
that I'm very, very, very excited for.
It's a Warby Parker frame.
I guess I can say they're not sponsoring us this week,
nor have they, I think, in a little bit.
But I'm really looking forward to kind of a different style,
bit boxier, bit taller of a frame.
I love new glasses day.
We are about as far away from each other on the spectrum
of sort of like glasses investment and excitement,
I feel like, in that you get like one pair
every three to four years.
I don't really need to see them to operate in the world.
My glasses are more for like,
if I'm in front of a computer for a long time,
if I'm driving at night.
Like if there's a situation where my eyes
could potentially get tired, then I need glasses.
But like when I'm out in the world, I don't.
So like for me, it's not really a priority,
because I would say half every day I'm not wearing them.
It's just, I look forward to it so much,
because it's like a new facial,
it's like you get a new nose.
You have a new mouth now.
There's something wildly different on your face.
That's cool.
Well, this is like, and we've talked about this,
this was really transformative for you
when you became a glasses guy.
Yeah, serving real Ryan Philippi realness in high school.
What does that mean to you?
Cruel Intentions Ryan Philippi.
Yeah.
Do I need to be more specific
than Cruel Intentions Ryan Philippi?
How were you serving that?
Close your eyes.
Close your eyes. Imagine Ryan Philippi in the movie Cruel Intentions, Ryan Philippi? How are you serving that? Close your eyes. Close your eyes.
Imagine Ryan Philippi in the movie Cruel Intentions.
Did he wear glasses?
Jesus, Jesus please us.
I think he did.
Oh, interesting.
I have this vision of like preppy,
fricking sort of snobby Ryan Philippi.
Show me pictures of Ryan Philippi
from the movie Cruel Intentions.
I started to type it out and it was taking way too long.
Oh shit, maybe he doesn't have glasses in this movie.
I think there might be a scene.
There's like a scene, yeah, so that was you?
I mean, kind of, I'm not massaging my stepsister,
I think was the plot of that movie, but yeah, you know?
That's something we all aspired to.
So just to back up.
Yeah.
So you, in high school, when you got glasses,
you began serving Ryan Phillipe?
Yeah, I tried to.
Okay.
I tried to, I mean, I couldn't,
I wasn't a strong lad, and so there were,
there's a certain subset of large headed,
glasses wearing scrawny boys that one can aspire to,
and for me it was Ryan Philippi and Cruel Intentions.
Okay.
So cool.
Yeah.
The movie kind of sucks actually,
now I think about it.
I will say, for all women of my age with my coloring,
Tina Fey was the glasses icon for a very long time.
Yeah, I think I can see that.
I remember your first pair that you got.
My first pair was very Tina inspired,
and then I got a second pair and then I stopped.
That's it, two pairs of glasses your whole life.
I am potentially on my way to my third pair.
I like to go get glasses every four to six years.
And now that's probably not how you're supposed to do it.
In fact, I know pretty confidently
you're supposed to go every year, but I'm busy.
Sure, busy bumping into walls and-
Getting headaches.
Tripping, just McGooing all over the city.
You go first this week.
I do.
What do you wanna talk about this week?
Oh, I hope it's enough of a topic.
Love to hear that, great start.
I wanted to talk about the cool-ess.
You're gonna have to say that again.
I wanna talk about the cool-ess.
The cool-ess?
Yes.
Okay, are you talking about the thing
that everyone learns to draw in middle school
with the six lines?
That I am.
Oh, fuck yeah, baby.
Let's talk all day about the Cool S.
I have to imagine that you would have dug up
an actual name for this thing in your,
no, I know what the Cool S is, clearly.
Okay, I just wanted to confirm.
But is that really what it's called, the Cool S?
If you do a search for it,
there is actually a Wikipedia entry called Cool S.
Ha ha ha ha!
That fricking rules, man.
The Cool S consists of 14 line segments.
Wow, that sounds like a lot more
than I would have assumed was in the Cool S.
Yeah, there's like a step-by-step.
We'll see, I mean, what you're probably thinking of
is the original six. Okay, so yes, that's true.
There's three stacked on three,
and then you connect the lines in a way
so as to make a, what looks kind of like a number eight,
but is very much-
Sort of a figure eight where the back line folds
behind the front line, right?
But so it looks like sort of a cool S.
Kind of a cool S.
I guarantee, people may be hearing this
and not know what we're talking about. I guarantee you at some point you've seen the cool S. Kind of a cool S. I guarantee, people may be hearing this and not know what we're talking about,
I guarantee you at some point you've seen the cool S.
Yeah, yeah, this is something that I learned as a kid.
I can't pinpoint the first time I learned
to draw the cool S, but like.
It looks so cool still, to this day it looks so cool.
Do you think if you, well I know that you can,
because you did it in sidewalk chalk recently.
Yeah, so when I am given a piece of sidewalk chalk
or a marker or something to draw,
I have two things I can do.
You have a dog.
I have a dog face, and I got cool-esque.
Cool-esque.
I didn't learn anything else.
I don't know anything else.
You closed your notebook.
Remember, you could turn the word boy
to look like a boy's face,
and then there's one where you could turn 15, I I think the number 15, you can connect some of that
to make it look like a Homer Simpson.
Oh.
I did not learn these.
Yeah, man.
I don't remember the Homer Simpson one though.
I just remember cool S and dog face.
So if I had to sit down right now,
I don't know if I could draw a cool S.
Bullshit, you could totally draw a cool S.
Even looking at this, so here's the thing, right? You're saying that I'm looking at sit down right now, I don't know if I could draw a cool S. Bullshit, you could totally draw a cool S. Even looking at this, see here's the thing, right?
You're saying that, I'm looking at the diagram right now,
so this isn't really a fair quiz.
Are you gonna do it?
You want me to do it?
Well, I'm saying I'm looking at a diagram right now,
so it's a little bit cheating.
Okay, I'll try.
Cool S, so you get the two rows of three lines.
Yes.
I know you'd connect the, you do some bottom and top triangle lines. Yes. I know you'd connect the,
you do some bottom and top triangle work.
Yes.
And then you go zoop, zoop.
Oh, I made it backwards.
I made a cool sort of two.
Here's the thing, right?
If you think too much about it.
I fucked it right up.
The reason I know that I can't
is that I saw your cool ass in sidewalk chalk
and I thought I'm gonna give that one a whirl
and I couldn't.
That's what is, that's like a cool two.
Yeah, you're backwards.
But I messed it, I messed it up babe.
I think the way they describe it in the step-by-step guide
in the Wikipedia entry is the middle step,
so you draw your six lines.
Yeah.
And then you take the first two lines at the top
and you connect them to the second two lines at the bottom.
So you've got a little diagonal.
And then once you have that,
that's when you make the triangles.
And then-
I feel like I'm missing something.
I feel like something's wrong with my cool ass.
Hold on, let me look at it.
It looks fucked up.
No, I think that's right.
I mean, it's not quite as narrow.
Yours is a little chunkier.
Maybe that's what it is.
Don't be mean to my cool ass.
There's nothing wrong with a chunky ass.
Trying to frickin' shame my thick ass.
That never works.
So I thought of this like last week and I thought,
I'm just gonna Google cool S and see what I can find.
And your instincts were right, it sounds like.
That's what it's called.
I mean, there is literally an article.
What's fun about it is that the origins are very unknown.
And I kind of love that about like the stuff
from when we were kids before there was internet.
And everybody, it seemed like simultaneously
was learning how to draw this cool ass
without any prodding on a global scale.
I mean, it's school folklore almost, right?
It wasn't like George H.W. Bush
had a campaign platform that was like, cool-esque.
We're gonna get the cool-esque going.
Like, there was no global push for cool-esque,
and yet we all were.
There was no mechanism through which
to distribute information about the cool-esque.
You would just see it on a chalkboard one day
and be like, damn, that-esque is cool as hell.
How do I get me one of those?
I know, how do I get that cool ass?
Apparently, you can find early cases of it
as far back as the 70s.
Okay.
So it's sort of like Cool Ass and Ziggy
were sort of like strange bedfellows.
Kilroy?
Kilroy?
That's the guy with the thing.
I get Kilroy and Ziggy confused so much.
Similar contours.
Kilroy's the little guy with the nose
and the fingers poking up over the edge, yeah.
Cool.
So there's a book called Faith of Graffiti,
which is photographs that were done by John Nair.
It came out in 1974 and that symbol appears.
Appears in it, okay.
Numerous times in the 70s.
Okay, cool.
There's all these like ideas as to where it came from.
Some people thought it was like a Superman S.
No way.
Which can't be confirmed.
I can, I can unconfirm.
It's definitely not a Superman S.
That is not what Superman's shit looks like.
And then, do you remember Stussy?
Stussy, yes.
It was like a surf company that was real popular
in the like 90s.
Yeah.
And everyone's like, oh, it's Stussy.
It's not, there's no connection to Stussy whatsoever.
It wasn't there one called like Ocean Pacific
or something like, or maybe it was,
no, yeah, I think it was Ocean Pacific and Stussy,
I feel like were the two big brands.
You saw a lot of definitely,
definitely not surf kids
living in Huntington, West Virginia, where.
No access to an ocean immediately.
No.
Okay, so what was interesting is that there was,
perhaps unsurprisingly, a Vice article that came out in 2016 where the the
author of that article tried to track down and like actually reached out to
like people connected to these things so reached out to like a comics library in
Burbank, California,
and they confirm there's no like all Superman,
no old shield, nothing.
No Superman logo looks like that.
You can reach out to Stussy,
which has been around since 1985.
Where'd Stussy get it?
It's not the cool S.
It's not?
Yeah.
Oh, okay. They don't use that S. It's not? Yeah. Oh, okay.
They don't use that S.
Okay, I thought they did.
And then Suzuki was another speculation.
Yeah, I don't think Suzuki rocks that way.
They're closer though,
if I'm remembering the Suzuki logo correct.
Well, now I have to Google the Suzuki logo.
This fucking segment, baby,
has sent me down some real rabbit.
I was really worried the segment would be seven minutes,
but with all this Googling, I feel like we're really.
Okay, the Suzuki logo, I don't know why I know
what the Suzuki logo looks like,
but it's fucking close, man.
Yeah, similar.
It's close.
Yeah.
If it had that behind line,
now we're talking for the cool ass.
So the author of the Vice article reached out
to a professor in language and media
at Middlesex University in London
and was like, hey, what's the story here?
And he said, ultimately it's just fun to draw
and that kids probably started doing it he said ultimately it's just fun to draw
and that kids probably started doing it because it's kind of like a Mobius strip
and you know it like connects to itself
and it's like fun to.
A sort of non-Euclidean S.
It's got like a Escher quality.
Sure.
It can't be drawn continuously
but it does have a perpetual flow is what he said.
And that yeah, it was just like a piece of like child lore.
Like there's no like particular origin.
What was funny is that after that 2016 article came out,
there was a guy from Australia who was moving to New York
who literally read that article and decided to trademark
the cool ass.
So in 2020, Vice did another article on Mark May,
who read this original article and was like,
let me see if there's a trademark.
And what was funny is that a college student in Boston
had trademarked it.
And the student was studying healthcare
and was about to use the S as a logo
on a line of soft clothing
to be worn by people with sensitive skin.
But Mark was like, hey, how about I give you
a certain amount of money?
And the kid was like, sure.
And then he got it from this.
What's he doing with the cool,
is he going school to school across this country of ours?
Like cut, you owe me $4.
No, so he gets interviewed specifically,
like, are you going to be like-
Doing something with cool ass?
Yeah, like going after people.
No, his idea, he's been approaching artists on Etsy.
He's trying to run a shop where he sells cool ass merchandise.
I'm fucking back on board, man.
He says he has no plans to like go against people punitively
for using the cool ass.
It's more like he, he more says he like,
he wants to maintain it.
He says, quote, I wanted to trademark the symbol
to preserve it.
Over the past hundred years,
the symbol has permeated itself into almost everyone's lives
irrespective of race, religion, upbringing or beliefs.
I just consider myself the caretaker
of the now heritage listed S."
Okay, I wanted to show you his Instagram account.
Oh, this is gonna be good.
His Instagram account is the S thing.
The S thing?
The S thing.
I bet that's confusing to look at.
He seems focused on tattoos largely.
Okay. Just different S tattoos. There seems focused on tattoos largely. Okay.
Just different S tattoos.
There's one I thought you would like.
Okay.
Which is just a Shrek.
That's Shrek.
It's a cool S with Shrek ears and it's green.
That's good.
It's a cool S with Shrek ears.
There's also somebody who got a tattoo
of the step-by-step instructions on how to make the cool S.
That would have been helpful about five minutes ago.
One with a cool S, just spelling Sleigh.
That one looks homemade in a way
that I actually kind of like.
He also has like a shop.
So I mentioned that he was-
I bet the S in the word shop looks like so tight.
He's trying to merchandise.
So we've got some S key rings.
Yeah.
There's some like kind of nostalgia.
This is not a sponsored post folks at home.
Rachel is just really enthusiastic about the,
the sort of the platonic ideal cool S.
Yeah.
I just, there's these, I mean, it is,
it's like pieces of like child folklore,
like these things that like,
I've talked about Foursquare before,
like one of our very earliest episodes.
I did Flores Lava and it was very much the same thing,
of like, yeah, no one, kids just started doing it, man.
And there's just these very specific rules
that somehow like travel the country
and the cool-ass is very much that thing.
Yeah.
Of like, obviously you didn't learn in school, I wasn't Googling cool-ass is very much that thing. Like, obviously you didn't learn it in school,
I wasn't Googling cool-ass.
It's funny because despite the amount
of journalistic shoe leather that has gone into
figuring out where the cool-ass came from,
I feel like there's still a missing link.
I feel like there's still a piece of the story
and the ur-cool-ass.
Yeah, I think some of it is probably,
there's probably some graffiti origins
based on what I saw,
and obviously that is harder to pin down,
because largely you can't attribute a lot of it
to particular people.
But yeah, I don't know.
I love cool-ess.
I thought our listeners,
the portion of them that are closest to our age
would be really excited to hear about
what the Cool S has been up to.
Yeah, that's awesome.
Can I steal you away?
Yes. Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
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Are you ready for this? Are you ready for this? You ready? Yes. Wi-Fi. How's that hit you? How's that treat you? It's all over the dang place pretty much. We're using it literally right now
and if you're not on the go, dear listener,
you might be using it too.
It's your quiet everywhere friend
that puts the world in your pocket
and that's just wild to think about.
You heard of this thing?
You heard of this thing called Wi-Fi?
I remember, I don't know if you had this experience,
but I remember still being like,
I need to find a coffee shop
that will specifically sell me Wi-Fi
and or give it to me with purchase
so that I can do my internet work.
Like not really understanding what Wi-Fi was maybe
even a little bit.
No, and honestly, I mean, if you ask me now,
I would just say it's the thing
that lets me get on the internet.
I don't know more than that.
It's peak, Katie, you've seen the clip of Katie Kirk
from like the Today Show in some episode,
maybe like mid 90s, late 90s, where she was like,
do you know about internet?
Internet, that's the one with email, right?
Like, I feel like, yeah, when I think about Wi-Fi,
I feel like that is how I sound.
I read a lot about Wi-Fi and how it works.
Do you feel like you can talk about it?
I feel like I can talk about it.
Okay, that's more than me.
I think I can talk about it.
I mean, the easy way to talk about it is,
I travel a lot when I'm at an airport
or at a hotel or at a venue and I get on Wi-Fi,
the amount of instant relief I feel
is embarrassing, honestly, to admit.
It's the first thing I think about
when I get in a hotel room of just like,
well, let me get up on the Wi-Fi.
Where do I find this information?
Yeah, but there's a whole history to it
that is honestly, I think, pretty interesting,
but to describe what Wi-Fi is.
So internet comes into your house
or whatever building you're in, goes into a router.
That router has antenna on it
that it distributes data through radio waves
to other devices in your house.
Every device that you have that can use Wi-Fi
also has an antenna.
So it can send and receive to the router,
which is connected to the internet.
Before you'd have to put a cord in there.
Yes.
You'd have to attach your device physically to this router.
So when we had a family computer growing up,
and if we wanted to do internet stuff,
usually playing EverQuest,
we had to sit down
and jack in to the computer, which was pretty close
to our phone landline because that's what we had
to plug the computer, it was pretty fucked up.
That's the basics, right?
It's radio waves sent and received through little antenna
in your phone, laptop, but especially from your router.
So all of this is able to happen
because every machine that uses WiFi
is built with a uniform set of hardware standards
using set radio frequencies.
And all of this standard
makes using the internet through wifi possible
because everything is speaking the same language
is the easiest way to think about it.
The radio waves, the frequencies that they submit at,
basically everything kind of works the same way
and that's the only way that wifi works
because if this company had a different type of antenna
that transmitted at different frequencies,
all of a sudden it doesn't work with that router
and this thing doesn't work with that thing.
So Wi-Fi is that.
Wi-Fi is the rules.
Wi-Fi is the protocol that every device,
the standard that every device
that uses wireless connectivity follows.
Because otherwise, if everything was built different ways,
which is, there is a part of the history
where that was the case,
just it defeats the whole purpose of Wi-Fi, right?
So that standard, that technical standard for networking
is called IEEE, IEEE 802.11.
Sounds pretty cool.
That stands for the Institute of Electrical
and Electronics Engineers,
which has like a group in it that sets that standard
and that group is designated 802.
So IEEE 802.11, I guess it's the 11th version of it.
I lost interest in it from that point on.
I started to get, once you get into the IEEE,
it's like they stop using words and start using numbers.
As soon as internet technical stuff starts using numbers,
I'm like, no fricking way, man.
Internet Explorer, Explorer, Explorer.
Internet Explorer, Explorer, Explorer version 802.
So like basically, wifi is only possible
because every device transmits on the same frequencies
using uniform rules and hardware specifications
and that standard is what is what Wi-Fi is. A brief history in 1985 the FCC
opened up what's called the ISM band which is basically like a range of
radio frequencies right if you think about a radio can transmit it anything
capable of sending signals can transmit at any frequency you know this set of
frequencies was under FCC control
because it was, that's just how they rocked.
But they said in 1985,
you can use this for commercial purposes now,
you can use these radio frequencies.
And those radio frequencies are what IEEE 802.11 uses, right?
So 1985, FCC opens it up and lots of different companies
start dabbling in different sort of like
wireless applications.
One of the first ones was like having a wireless cashier
thing at like a convenience store.
That was like one of the first earliest
proto-Wi-Fi applications.
But like I said, as companies started to work on these wireless communications pieces of hardware,
none of them talked, none of them could communicate
because they were all built to different standards
and different rules.
So in 1997, the IEEE came up with this 802.11 protocol,
basically saying like, this is what everyone should use.
Like if you want this thing to work,
if you want Wi-Fi as an idea to work,
like everyone has to play by the same rules
and follow the same rules.
And so a bunch of companies like Nokia and Motorola
and other sort of like big, big, big name players
came together to say like, okay, let's do it.
Like, let's all get together.
So in 1999, all of these different companies,
all these different corporations who were making devices
that they wanted to work sort of wirelessly over Wi-Fi,
they came together and they formed a joint nonprofit
called the Wireless Ethernet Compatibility Alliance.
And basically all these different companies,
rival companies were like, listen,
like we're trying to knock each other out of the market,
but like we all gotta follow the same rules
or else Wi-Fi doesn't work, right?
Like if we want this technology to be incorporated
in any of our shit, we all have to play along.
We all have to do, so they started this nonprofit
to basically standardize Wi-Fi.
Say if you are a company making wireless products,
you gotta follow this rule
because it's what all of us are using, right?
And so it worked. like all these different companies
joined up and they formed this nonprofit
to make sure that everybody was following the same rules
so the wireless communication could work
on these different devices.
Then in 1999, they hired a marketing firm called Interbrand
and they're like, hey, this thing is called IEEE 802.11,
that sucks, that's a shitty name
and like no one's going to give a shit.
And so after a bunch of different testing
and coming up with different names,
it was this firm, Interbrand,
that came up with the name Wi-Fi.
Which like the etymology is a little bit confusing.
A lot of companies, as they started to make these devices,
use the term wireless fidelity sometimes,
but like according to Interbrand,
that's not really what it stands for.
It's not like short for anything.
It's just that wifi sounds like hi-fi
and hi-fi has connotations of like premium, crisp, fast, good.
And so that is why they call it wifi.
So just after they came up with this name, wifi,
which then they started to tell people, you know,
on a consumer basis, like, you gotta get this Wi-Fi.
Like then all of a sudden it was just like a snowball
and now everything uses Wi-Fi.
The group changed their name to the Wi-Fi Alliance,
which still exists, this massive group of corporations
who are all making sure that their shit works together.
They just get together and they like say,
well, keep it up, see you next year.
Do you wanna guess which city
Wi-Fi Alliance is based out of?
I mean, somewhere in California, right?
Austin, Texas.
Oh, huh.
So, I mean, that's just,
that part of the history of Wi-Fi is just crazy to me.
The idea, I don't know that it would happen nowadays, right?
The idea that companies would say like,
there's this thing, there's The idea that companies would say like,
there's this thing, there's this thing
that could be the future of like internet, you know,
whatever, but it's only gonna make sense.
It's only gonna work if we all come together and do it.
And there's some differences, like,
have you heard of like five hertz versus like two point,
I always forget, like 2.8 hertz,
like the router can transmit different sort of like signals
and some are faster.
So there's some differences,
but mostly everybody's playing by the same rules.
The idea that companies, rival companies of this scale
could come together today and be like,
listen, Apple and Android, like we despise each other
and Apple has this whole like strangle hold on iMessage
that makes people feel like they can't,
like it's so gnarly the fight now
that it feels impossible that they would ever come together
and be like, but you know what, let's do wifi.
Let's get together and make wifi.
So I remember going to a friend's house in like 2000
and they had an Apple Airport,
which was one of the first like commercially available
routers that basically only worked
with Apple devices that were able to connect.
So Apple made a laptop, I forget the name of it,
that was able to connect to Wi-Fi.
And seeing my friend surfing, browsing the internet,
not connected to anything,
blew the brain out of the back of my skull.
Like it was unbelievable.
I couldn't understand what was going on,
how it could be working.
And that was 24 years ago.
So I think I figured it out a little bit more by then.
But-
I still don't understand like sometimes
if a lot of people are using it, it doesn't work well.
Yeah, I mean, if you think about-
There's just like a finite number of bips and boops
that you can pull from.
Well, it's also a finite number of bips and boops,
and more like this range of frequencies
that you are transmitting data to and from.
Like your router has ways of kind of like shepherding people
so that like you're not stacking on top of everyone.
But I think that probably gets,
I'm talking out of my ass now,
but based on my rudimentary one hour of Googling,
it seems like I would imagine that like,
it gets harder to like traffic cop,
like all of those different like sending
and receiving sort of signals,
if a bunch of people are trying to use the same thing.
Anyway, that's Wi-Fi.
I just thought it was cool
and I still think Wi-Fi is cool.
And now I think I understand how it works a little bit.
And so I'm gonna take our router apart.
After we're done here, and I'm gonna boost it up.
I've been thinking about some ways to boost our speeds.
Yeah.
Cranking the antenna out,
just taking it out and putting it like up higher. Yeah. Faster speeds a little bit. Yeah. Cranking the antenna out, just taking it out and putting it like up higher.
Yeah.
I don't see any reason,
wrap some tin foil around it
so it can like really get fucking jammie.
Maybe we all wear little antennas all the time.
That's so good.
I think there was an episode of Pete and Pete
that was about that.
Do you wanna know what our friends at home
are talking about?
Yes.
Katie says,
my small wonder is when you can still see the moon out during the day.
It delights me so when I get to see the night sun
hanging out in the crisp blue morning air
as if to say, you will not dim my shine.
Yeah.
I do like the night sun.
That is a fun little peek-a-boo.
I do like it.
It's like, hey buddy.
I feel like there's certain times of year
where it gets up there wicked early.
It's like four o'clock and it's like, hey, here I come.
Anna says, my small wonder is a new juicy expo marker.
Every time I pop open a brand new one with a sharp nib
and strong color intensity, I'm happy.
Are those the dry erase ones?
I think so, yes.
Yeah.
Yeah, I like that.
That is satisfying.
My Sharpie preferences are so much more defined
than I ever thought they would be in my life
because of how much signing we do of things.
Yeah, it's true. Like we sign posters
before every show and we, whenever we put out a new book,
we sign like a bunch of copies of it.
So I gotta get me one of those nice fat chisel tip,
like broad Sharpie babies. I can't have that fine point shit anymore. I need that chisel tip like broad Sharpie babies.
I can't have that fine point shit anymore.
I need that chisel tip.
Do you have thoughts on this?
I don't, I have absolutely no thoughts.
That's okay.
Thank you to Bowen and Augustus
for the use for our theme song, Money Won't Pay.
Find a link to that in the episode description.
Thank you to Maximum Fun for having us on the network.
Go to maximumfun.org, check out all the great shows
that they got popping over there. We got some new merch
up in the merch store. There's a Taz 10th anniversary coin in there that's really great.
And that's at McElroyMerch.com. And we have a few more live shows from Mbibam and Taz
coming up in Phoenix and Denver and Indianapolis and a couple other places. So go to bit.ly slash McElroy Tours for more information
and to get tickets to those.
It's gonna be a lot of fun.
That's it.
I feel pretty worn out.
I just talked about technical stuff really hard.
For a long time.
Are your moons still stacked?
Or do they feel less stacked now?
I will say we had to stop in the middle of this recording
so we could pick up our suns.
Do you understand now?
I get it now, I get it now.
I get that me saying something
does not influence the universe.
Yeah.
But I do, there is a word called hubris.
Yeah.
And I do kind of believe.
Yes.
Maybe it's a wifi thing, it just sits in the space.
I think it's the moons. I think it's the moons.
I think the moons when you try to channel their power
in the way that I did at the beginning of the podcast,
they have a way of kind of like pushing back against that
and making your child sick.
So that's why I think all medicine is fake.
It's really just moon stuff going on.
I can't explain though why when somebody
like wears a particular shirt
or turns their hat a particular way,
they think it's gonna impact a sports team.
Like I don't believe that.
No.
But I also believe that saying a series of words
can influence the future.
So clearly there's no real winner.
Well then let's maybe just observe each other
in a moment of cautious, terrified silence. Maximum Fun, a workaround network of artist-owned shows, supported directly by you.