XCIX: ‘The Smoker Channels’ With Merlin Mann
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Hello, how are you?
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I'm good, how are you?
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You sound alright.
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How do I sound?
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You sound surprisingly good.
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Is this LTE?
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This is LTE.
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You're kidding.
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Verizon, good old Verizon.
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So the back story is that we…
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Stop looking at this picture.
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We were supposed to record 36 minutes ago and I was going to be ready when all of a
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sudden my home internet went out.
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And just like a hard stop, like nothing loaded.
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And then I started getting activation paid, like what you would get if you had…
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When you don't pay your bill.
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No, more like if you have a brand new, like brand new stuff, you know, like you just moved
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into cable town.
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Like you just moved here, you got your Comcast box, this is what you see.
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like actually trying to do the activation doesn't doesn't do anything
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and so you had the good idea we're texting and you told me to use my phone
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go to the Comcast site and see if they tell you that there's an outage and it
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it worked I logged into my Comcast account and it gave me a message here
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that says hello John John caps John is in all caps and out it has been reported
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in your area we expect this to be resolved by today and then you can
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describe I sent this to you yeah we'll include this image in the show notes or
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somehow in the art so everybody all of you deserve to enjoy this but Merlin for
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the historical record can you describe this this image sure sure I think it's
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uh it's clearly it comes from the same grand tradition as the blinking
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under construction GIF from back in the day. I guess the primary feature is a big white van that
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says Xfinity on it. Close enough, right? This is going to be a repair guy. And then a picture of a
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stock art guy in a red and black check shirt with a hard hat climbing a yellow ladder. So far so good.
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It's an image to show you that we expect this to be resolved by today. It gets interesting though
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because the ladder is situated with a very strange, incorrect drop shadow.
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He's basically, it appears to be about to fix an 11 foot high orange safety cone.
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It's a lot higher than 11 feet, I think. I think it's about a 15 foot safety cone.
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The guy's, there's one orange construction cone on the right side of the page that's upright,
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that's at least 10 feet high, and another one, another safety cone next to it that's fallen over.
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And this guy on a ladder is, he's on a ladder and he's behind the cone.
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He's probably about five feet behind the cone, climbing a ladder.
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Oh, and did I mention there's also a dog chasing a cat in the foreground?
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And then the really subtle part is in the upper right hand corner, for reasons I'm not
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entirely sure of, there's a bird flying by.
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You really have to see it to appreciate, but he looks like he's there to fix the safety
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cone and anyway they're working on that.
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Why is there...
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He took the time to put a drop shadow on everything but they aren't right.
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The drop shadow on the ladder has no relationship with the cone that he's theoretically fixing.
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just a drop shadow stops. It's almost as though we're seeing the cone drop from the sky just
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right next to where he happens to be climbing a ladder to nothing. So you pivoted. So I
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pivoted. Now we're doing it over LT. Yeah, I should probably close this but I kind of
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feel like I can't. I told you when we were texting, this is nothing against Cable Town.
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our great company but I swear to Christ every time I see or hear that word
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Xfinity I just it makes me see and I can't even tell you why I mean in the
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same way that like Farfik Nugent in the like late 80s was funny like Xfinity is
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offensive to me because that's their whole their whole branded line of
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something involving a cable lifestyle in your home is that right or business I
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think that's what they would tell you that that's probably probably the exact
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words that they used that when they came up with the idea that they would stop
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just calling themselves Comcast and that you know that they would that
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Comcast would be some kind of parent brand for all of their various
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endeavors. You know like their Comcast logo now they've they've taken the NBC
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peacock it's you know part of their like they're a content company now they have
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They have NBC they have universal and so like the the cable business is is now Xfinity
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And I believe that what you those words you just use is probably how they they they probably pitched it
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They would use the phrase SMB probably for small business. They still use that you still hear SMB
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Nope. Yeah. Yeah
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It's it's you know
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It's funny because you think about think about like when Dropbox came along and well one of the gosh half dozen things that was so
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mind-blowing about Dropbox is they were doing something that had been very
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difficult for any number of reasons to do before not least because being a
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commodity or being a utility is not interesting and it's not sexy and
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having dependable you know file syncing in that case was was an unsolved problem
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that was not on the face of it that profitable right so there's so many
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things that you know setting aside the fact that the sync actually worked which
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was mind-blowing but I mean you think about it your cable company now I'm sure
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you've seen that graph that's gone around about how the cable companies have like come together over the years, you know, like in the 80s
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There was like 30 different cable providers and now there's like four or whatever. Yeah
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So I mentioned that thinking was like we've got to have some kind of a way to brand
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The notion of this coaxial cable coming into your house that's gonna give you a suite of services, right?
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You got your internet connection. You got your TV. What else? Yeah. Oh, well, they got that like the home monitoring, right?
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You can get like security
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Isn't that part of the Xfinity package? I believe it is any lifestyle, right? Yeah, you get it
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That's not just a coaxial cable where you watch sports. No, this is an entire lifestyle Xfinity that you're your
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Landline telephone service. Yeah
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And they really want you to get that whole package boy. You call them up for anything and boy
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They really want to get what is it gonna take to put you into a phone today? I
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Have it I have the thing and we don't we don't have a single
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Landline phone that's actually hooked up to a phone jack in the house
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So we have a phone number and it never rings, but it costs
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I think it costs less than if we
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Just had internet. I don't know. I'm do I'm overdue to call them and to go through the pantomime
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I'm years overdue of the the like I'm sure it's Syracuse
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it probably does this you know once a yikey has like a reminder once a year because you really need to you call them up and
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say I'm going to cancel my service and then they say oh god no and then they
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give you know cut you a deal and give you faster service at a lower price you
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know like you're a new customer because if you're like me and you're a dummy and
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you signed up a couple years ago and you just let it go your promotional rate
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ended at some point and now you know I paid I don't know $200 a month for
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something I could probably you know pay a lot less for right that happened to me
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with AT&T I need to carefully look at this month's bill but I called them up
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To I think I was calling partly because there's a weird charge
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I guess I was also just asking about iPhone update availability
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Anyway, I ended up calling them and you know the drill where they like want to talk to you about the special offers and stuff
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Like that. No, that's why I don't do it. No. No, it's the worst but I have to say, you know, actually AT&T
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In my experience, I don't love that service or company
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I mean, I really don't but the people that you end up talking to are pretty great at AT&T sometimes but long story short
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This this woman was like well, did you know we were that like you could really bring your bill down
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I was like tell me about it
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What do I have to do to bring my bill down and she's like well
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We can just change it to this family data package and diddly-diddly-dee and now my phone bill dropped by like $100
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Yeah, I know exactly what you mean. No, but I'm of course, I'm naturally very
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Skeptical, it's very skeptical because you figure I was like and so of course now I'm looking for a catch guy. Oh my god
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What does it mean? We're re-upping for like another five years. We got to get a Samsung tablet
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Like what is it? What's the downside of this? No, it doesn't just you just pay less money
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Is that something you'd want to do? I was like, all right
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Stockholm syndrome, you know, I'm just like she's being so nice to me and I feel like you know
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I don't want to I you know, whenever I talk to a customer service person, I'm terrified
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I really don't want to incur their wrath because I don't know there's a few ways they can help you and about a million ways
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They could screw you up. All right, or yeah make things worse. Yeah, right all of a sudden you're you know
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You signed up for a $300 a month international data plan. Yeah, you're getting the the platinum overnight web package
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Always feels used to feel sometimes they've gotten better at this over the years business with go daddy
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I used to feel like I was running down a hallway
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Well, it doesn't frat boys were trying to hit me with a sock full of pennies like
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Can I just now I don't need anything tonight, I don't anything overnight I don't you think platinum just want this domain I
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I don't think Comcast knows what to do with their money.
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I really don't.
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I mean, they've spent a ton of it here.
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I mean, this is Capletown.
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I've said this before on the show where they've built the tallest skyscraper in Philadelphia.
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And now they're building another one like one block over that's going to be even bigger.
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And nobody really knows why.
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They've just got more money than they know what to do with.
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Yeah, yeah, I hadn't thought about this in this way too much, but sometimes it seems like you've got in the case of these or like especially legacy carriers from back in the day.
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You've got well there's the stuff we made money with in the past like a million years ago. There's an infrastructure that we built like all the investments we made over the years.
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And then there's this rapidly evolving market
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for what people actually want.
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And all of that stuff that we see as being very valuable
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just simply does not register for most people.
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And in my case, in San Francisco, I mean,
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I get one dot of coverage so much at the time with AT&T.
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Which luckily is great
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'cause I don't use the phone hardly at all.
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But it's interesting to me
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like how you take being a commodity business
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that's been around for a long time
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and because of the nature of the business
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can never really be that innovative that fast.
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So what do you do?
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Well, you sell iPhones, you sell Samsung tablets or whatever.
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But it's interesting, like what they want
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in the case of Xfinity,
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like here's what we want you to know us for.
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We want you to know us for this thing called Xfinity.
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And you know, the way that they're actually making
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all their money, who knows how they're actually
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making all their money, but they want to be known for,
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as well as this like lifestyle product
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that's completely up to date and innovative, you know?
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- Does that make sense?
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You know, it's just that you,
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when you're talking about like fiber and stuff like that,
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That's not something you do as easily as you change a logo.
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I mean, there's a lot of infrastructure behind what all these companies do.
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And certainly you can spin up various kinds of data centers and CDNs or whatever, but
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at the same time, I mean, that's all just changing so fast.
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Right now, Comcast is a coaxial cable that comes into my house that lets me stream things.
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And use the internet, but we don't have cable TV.
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We don't, you know, we should talk about my MLB experience, another great one.
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No, but for me, that's just that's a dumb cable that comes in and it's a zero or one
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It either works fine or it doesn't and that's that's the entire Xfinity value proposition to me
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Dogs chasing cats. Yeah, look at that guy. I see the cats got a drop shadow
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Yeah, they just like it's probably noon. It's in looks like it might be inside Johnny Ives bubble
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It's very white except for the Xfinity van and the cones and the man in the
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Bird doesn't get a drop shadow
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How come how come the I just noticed this is another detail here the icon next to get a it says get a one-time text
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when service is restored and the icon next to it is a
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Power power outlet 110, you know plug American electric plug. Yeah, I
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Don't get it yeah
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What are the other I see there's like a
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Read more is like a three dot interface here. If you click those arrows and go to the other pages. What do you get?
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It's it's changed because in the meantime, I've gone through the the one I signed up to get that text
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There's a hello John Xfinity fall TV sweepstakes
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You can learn more about the NBC's the voice
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What's this one here? The second one is refer your friends to Xfinity and get up to $500 in Visa prepaid cards
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Do you imagine how much money went into the series of meetings about synergy?
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I swear to God of which that's the result. I got it. I hold on a second. I gotta send you this
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Dog, it's the dog is still there chasing the cat. Oh
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Okay, I got it. The bird is still there. The bird doesn't move
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What horrific dreamscape is this?
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Refer your friends to Xfinity registered trademark and get up to $500 in Visa prepaid cards.
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So you got a whole bunch of kind of foreshortened perspective having Visa cards.
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You got Despicable Me running on a screen and a tablet with a game controller.
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yelling into someone's ear on a laptop image and then a dog chasing the cat the other way.
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One goes one way, one goes the other way. So what?
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There's the other.
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Yeah that's terrific John. You should do that. You should refer some people to Xfinity.
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Yeah I feel like I'm doing that right now.
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Yeah, yeah, yeah. That's an unrecognized revenue stream right there. I always have so many
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opportunities to suggest new cable providers to my friends.
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Just be having drinks.
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I'm there must be some reason for but why would they why would my reward come
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in the form of prepaid Visa cards like I'm a drug dealer or something why
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wouldn't they just give me credit on my bill I don't know or special access to
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behind-the-scenes stuff from The Voice I really don't get it that the grand prize
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you can win a $10,000 $10,000 I don't know if that's cash or in Visa cards
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plus a trip for two to the voice finale in Los Angeles Amy would love that I
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I bet she loves The Voice.
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I can't help but feel that ultimately Comcast should be a very like, or anybody like that,
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but a company with millions of customers all paying like $100 to $200 a month for service
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that, you know, it was like a one-time infrastructure layout to, you know, put the cable in the
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streets and through the poles and everything and into everybody's houses.
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I mean obviously, you know, there's to get from where nobody had cable and in America to where everybody has cable running into their house
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That's an accomplishment right, but that's all in the past. It's all there now. It just runs. It should it should really just be like
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like a 25 person company
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Just answering calls. Yeah, just answering some calls and you know, mostly mostly just you know field
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You know guys who go out in the field and troubleshoot problems and stuff like that
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Like there's no real reason for Comcast to exist as a very large corporation.
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Well, that's the irony. I remember gosh, years ago you talking about,
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wasn't that was a Comcast where they,
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you had to get the special DRM card for your cable box.
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He came out and he brought one that didn't work exactly one and then he came
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It was, it was two cable card, uh, Tivo.
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And he came out and it was like he had one that worked and one that didn't.
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and he's like i'm gonna go get some more cards as i was a are they in your truck
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and it's not how i got a pic you're going to have spares yeah
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and i think the next time i know it was always a different guy wasn't like the
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same guy give your skip in the great park is indeed that you have to make a
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new appointment
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yeah i mean appointment that's what i think that what he did in friday it's
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like i guess i'm waiting for you
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now and ultimately
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a guy came and he had one
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always with only two guards everytime and i'd always say label can you put out
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like on the third visit I was like can you please put down to tell the guy to
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bring a whole box full of these cards and he was like well we don't usually do
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that and I was like what do you think maybe you should I was like this is the
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third one just bring a whole stack of them obviously some of these things work
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some of them half work and some don't work so we wound up with with like on
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the third one we got a fully working cable card and then the second cable
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card got everything except HBO and my Showtime or whatever you know like
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Whatever the pay channels are premium stuff and I was like good enough
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So like every time we wanted to TiVo
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Like an HBO show we'd have a 50% shot that it would be just a black screen for the hour of the broadcast
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So we just set up the TiVo I say we Amy's actually the TiVo runner of the house
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She set it up so that any of the HBO shows that we wanted we would
00:17:45
◼
►
She would just set the TiVo to record all of them, you know
00:17:49
◼
►
like so like when the new episode of the sopranos came out just keep recording it
00:17:53
◼
►
over and over again because if you do you know and there's like eight copies
00:17:55
◼
►
of it on the TiVo one there's a good chance one of them is gonna work
00:17:59
◼
►
Xfinity it's all about improving your chances now we that was years ago we now
00:18:03
◼
►
have a new TiVo that I don't know what it's got some different kind of cable
00:18:07
◼
►
card right what it's good now but the beauty part of your what you're
00:18:12
◼
►
describing here we get the 25 people answering phones is I mean I I cannot
00:18:18
◼
►
begin to, first of all let's be honest, you're not gonna, I mean I'm gonna
00:18:21
◼
►
troubleshoot the shit out of everything that I can. Like I just sent you that
00:18:25
◼
►
Earl right? I know how to get to the Motorola surfboard, I know how to go in
00:18:28
◼
►
and do things, I know how to hack on this a little bit, I know how to go unhook and
00:18:31
◼
►
rehook every cable and you know I learned one time ago not to be that guy
00:18:35
◼
►
if you do call, but if I've reached completely reached the end of my rope I
00:18:38
◼
►
will, I will you know you end up calling them and you go through the thing you
00:18:41
◼
►
try and get you know pushed up to higher level tech support and stuff like that
00:18:45
◼
►
because everything apparently is a black box when it comes to doing anything with coaxial cable.
00:18:51
◼
►
And the irony is that, well first of all, when they do send somebody out to your house,
00:18:55
◼
►
you know, whenever, usually a week later, it's a complete, in my experience, a complete crapshoot,
00:19:02
◼
►
what you're gonna get.
00:19:03
◼
►
So like a lot of times you get like, you know, Bob Hoskins from Brazil,
00:19:07
◼
►
and this guy comes out in his white, you know, F-150 and he's got a magnetic sign on the side.
00:19:12
◼
►
It's like the equivalent of like holding a finger up for a mustache and I work for Comcast.
00:19:16
◼
►
He's got like a magnetic sign that goes, "It's okay, it's cool.
00:19:19
◼
►
I'm actually Comcast even though he's not."
00:19:20
◼
►
He's a contractor.
00:19:22
◼
►
And these guys come out there and what's funny is like every fifth visit, you know, like
00:19:26
◼
►
every two years I get somebody else to come out for some reason.
00:19:29
◼
►
They'll be like, there's been like probably eight people that came out and made a big
00:19:34
◼
►
mess and then every few years somebody comes out and cleans up the mess.
00:19:37
◼
►
This woman, this awesome, this awesome Gulf War veteran woman came out and she's like,
00:19:40
◼
►
I can tell you why it's not working because these dinguses just keep hanging up all these junctions
00:19:44
◼
►
You realize you're losing this much of a percentage of it. I'm like, wow, you're magic. She's like, yeah
00:19:49
◼
►
I just took out about 40 feet 40 feet of cable
00:19:51
◼
►
That's why you weren't getting a signal because they just kept spaghetti and new stuff in they don't want to drill a hole
00:19:55
◼
►
Oh my gosh, I'm gonna need a special form for that
00:19:57
◼
►
But you know
00:19:58
◼
►
It really depends on what you get there could be people who come out and just don't have the slightest idea how to fix
00:20:03
◼
►
Anything but the most trivial thing and other people who like you get like $500 worth of service from them
00:20:08
◼
►
I've had this similar experience exact same where it sometimes you know, you get you get the Robert De Niro character from Brazil
00:20:14
◼
►
Who actually knows how to fix things?
00:20:19
◼
►
I remember one time it was the same thing where there was a guy who was like testing our signal
00:20:23
◼
►
Outside the house and he was like, it's pretty good out there
00:20:26
◼
►
Yeah, you know, you know like he was good enough for even even that he just said pretty good
00:20:30
◼
►
He's like it's alright because but here at your in your living room. This is this is terrible. You lose something's going on
00:20:36
◼
►
So he like I don't know it was like some kind of terrible spiderweb of junctions. I had no idea
00:20:42
◼
►
I thought it was a zero and one thing but apparently you lose a lot of I guess decibels or whatever of strength
00:20:47
◼
►
With each, you know, however many feet of coax you add it can
00:20:51
◼
►
Yeah, there's a huge effect and if that's there if the one the one will flip back to a zero and just won't be enough
00:20:56
◼
►
To drive your router, right? You know those those like coaxial like why splitters?
00:21:01
◼
►
Y'all God yes, yeah, I sure do he came up
00:21:04
◼
►
He came up from like our downstairs like our basement with with this one
00:21:08
◼
►
And he is he's this is what he said he took out and it had like
00:21:11
◼
►
It was like it was literally rusted. It was it was rusty, and he goes well
00:21:17
◼
►
I took this out and he goes it wasn't even doing anything
00:21:19
◼
►
It wasn't there wasn't you know like the split wasn't going anywhere
00:21:22
◼
►
It was just somebody somebody used it to you know string more cable together
00:21:27
◼
►
We came home one day and came upstairs. Everything was dead dead dead dead. The bill was paid. Everything was dead. I
00:21:32
◼
►
Went downstairs and I did my usual troubleshooting on the incredibly ancient equipment
00:21:37
◼
►
and it was really obvious that someone had had basically had cut the cable to our house and
00:21:43
◼
►
Then wide off the cable to go into our neighbor's house
00:21:46
◼
►
And at first I thought it might be our mookie neighbors wanting to watch the Super Bowl for free or something like that
00:21:52
◼
►
But I called Comcast and what it became apparent once we got it one of the actual useful people out there
00:21:58
◼
►
Was that that was just what they thought needed to be done. They thought oh, we don't need this cable over here
00:22:02
◼
►
Obviously, there's only one house here. We'll cut this one off and just put this one here
00:22:05
◼
►
So they cut off literally physically cut off the cable and then reconnected it to our neighbors
00:22:10
◼
►
Like, you know like like a 1920s switchboard. I
00:22:13
◼
►
Think I've told this story, but it was many many years ago
00:22:19
◼
►
But when I was the best cable experience I've ever had was when I was in college
00:22:22
◼
►
Had lived like my last few years in college we had a big big six-bedroom apartment in West Philly
00:22:30
◼
►
and six, you know six roommates everybody got a room and we called to get the
00:22:36
◼
►
cable service and the guy who came out was I want to say Russian but you know, he had some kind of Eastern European accent and
00:22:46
◼
►
He's hooking up our cable up, you know on the up-and-up and I forget who it was
00:22:51
◼
►
it wasn't me, but one of my roommates said something to him about
00:22:53
◼
►
Talk a little bit of the code. Yeah
00:22:58
◼
►
For any extra services he goes he was like Jim because I've heard about there's some ways that you
00:23:06
◼
►
I don't want to say his name because I don't want to embarrass it, but he called him smoker channels
00:23:15
◼
►
He was like, you're here, there's something you can get the smoker channel for free.
00:23:29
◼
►
The guy just stops.
00:23:32
◼
►
And I thought at first when he stopped that it was like, like when you offer a cop a bribe
00:23:36
◼
►
and then all of a sudden it's like now you're in trouble for for giving a, you know, the
00:23:41
◼
►
cop a bribe.
00:23:42
◼
►
guy says and said would you you know would you like something like that and
00:23:45
◼
►
he's and and we were all like yeah yeah what would it take and he goes he goes
00:23:51
◼
►
well I could come back to I don't work tomorrow because I could come back here
00:23:54
◼
►
tomorrow and and do this on my own time and it would and I forget what he asked
00:24:01
◼
►
for I don't know like 200 bucks or something and we all agreed yes so right
00:24:06
◼
►
there on the spot he called in and we heard him he called in to like his
00:24:09
◼
►
supervisor and said yeah I'm at whatever our address was he goes yeah they no
00:24:15
◼
►
longer want service yeah they don't want any they can't afford it they don't want
00:24:18
◼
►
any things so just cancel it you know shut them off and he goes I'll see you
00:24:23
◼
►
guys tomorrow and he comes back the next day and he's just like in street clothes
00:24:26
◼
►
and he had like a box and he was it was like a he'd been brought everything we
00:24:32
◼
►
didn't have to do anything he just had like a cable box and he went out and
00:24:35
◼
►
climbed up like the pole outside our apartment and next thing you know we had
00:24:40
◼
►
a cable service that got us everything. We never paid anything for it.
00:24:46
◼
►
We paid the guy like 200 bucks one time.
00:24:49
◼
►
That would have been back then even. That would have been like at least 50 bucks a month.
00:24:53
◼
►
Something like that.
00:24:54
◼
►
I might be slightly misremembering. It might be that we maybe we had to...
00:24:59
◼
►
I don't think we paid anything. I think we paid nothing. We just had it all.
00:25:03
◼
►
That's how it worked back then.
00:25:04
◼
►
I mean, if you had the right box with the,
00:25:06
◼
►
I mean, it was all physical stuff.
00:25:08
◼
►
I mean, I remember around that same time,
00:25:10
◼
►
maybe a little earlier,
00:25:11
◼
►
there was an old trick with the kind of cable boxes we had
00:25:13
◼
►
for maybe Cablevision or whatever it was,
00:25:15
◼
►
where you take a certain kind of cardboard,
00:25:18
◼
►
there was a certain thickness,
00:25:19
◼
►
and you fold it on the end about certain amount,
00:25:23
◼
►
like a half an inch,
00:25:24
◼
►
and you slide it into the top of the cable box
00:25:27
◼
►
in the little crack, right?
00:25:29
◼
►
The little, you know, and you pull it back,
00:25:31
◼
►
Suddenly you get all the smoker channels you get everything really? Yeah
00:25:35
◼
►
Yeah, basically admit you get Showtime HBS Cinemax and whatever the other one was yeah movie channel. We got everything we got pay-per-view
00:25:42
◼
►
Kidding. No, we got because I remember I used to be into boxing, you know, not like seriously, but like it was expensive
00:25:49
◼
►
Those things are expensive. Yeah, like Tyson it was like, you know in the 90s and Tyson was still fighting
00:25:53
◼
►
I'm the one I remember specifically we even you know, we used to invite people over because you know
00:25:59
◼
►
you couldn't watch those things without you know without paying but we I remember
00:26:02
◼
►
the one remember the one it was crazy it was like boxing was like pro wrestling
00:26:05
◼
►
back then it was the one where the fan man it was an outdoor fight and the guy
00:26:10
◼
►
on a parachute came into the ring in the middle of the fight remember that I know
00:26:14
◼
►
I don't remember that my god this is this like really happened like in the
00:26:17
◼
►
middle of a Mike Tyson heavyweight bout this guy named fan man I don't know
00:26:22
◼
►
where his name came from but he had like a parasail and he like came into the
00:26:27
◼
►
ring and had like stop the fight and beat this guy up and get him out before
00:26:30
◼
►
they resume the fight
00:26:32
◼
►
Riddick Bowe vs Evander Holyfield. It wasn't Tyson, Holyfield. Look at that.
00:26:37
◼
►
Wow. That was real and I had that we got that for free. He passed in 2002.
00:26:43
◼
►
Sorry to say. Oh that's just fan man passed. I didn't know that. RIP fan man. It wasn't that many years after it
00:26:49
◼
►
happened. It was probably like what 95? 96.
00:26:54
◼
►
He's a parachute and paraglider pilot from Henderson, Nevada known for his appearances.
00:26:59
◼
►
His most famous appearance was the November 6, 1993 boxing match between Evander Holyfield and Riddick Bowe at Caesars Palace.
00:27:05
◼
►
Fan made headlines when he used his powered paraglider to fly into the arena, eventually crashing into the ring.
00:27:11
◼
►
Damn. Oh man.
00:27:14
◼
►
Dogs chasing cats.
00:27:16
◼
►
These dogs chasing cats. You gotta fix. The thing is, the cone that's standing up looks like it's fine.
00:27:22
◼
►
It seems like he would work on the 12-foot cone that have fallen over, but you know,
00:27:27
◼
►
I'm not an Xfinity mechanic.
00:27:31
◼
►
I want to take a break and I'm going to thank our first sponsor.
00:27:34
◼
►
These guys are great.
00:27:36
◼
►
Neid, these are our friends at Neid.
00:27:38
◼
►
Neid is a refined retailer and lifestyle magazine for men.
00:27:43
◼
►
Each month, Neid sources and curates a selection of exclusive products from brands around the
00:27:48
◼
►
world and they're presented in a monthly editorial, a lot like what you'd expect in any
00:27:52
◼
►
contemporary men's magazine. They shoot all their own photos, they hire
00:27:56
◼
►
independent photographers, so there's a lot of a lot of independent
00:27:59
◼
►
photographers who are making good money from this too. They just celebrated their
00:28:04
◼
►
first anniversary on November 5th. Now as we record that's just yesterday
00:28:08
◼
►
literally I mean this is we're talking right on the anniversary and so they're
00:28:13
◼
►
launching to celebrate that a full redesign introducing an all-exclusive
00:28:18
◼
►
all limited edition collection with their favorite brands from the whole past year.
00:28:24
◼
►
And they've also launched a new concept called Essentials, E-Essentials, where they're offering
00:28:30
◼
►
ongoing ever-changing collections for men's everyday staple items, stuff you need to,
00:28:35
◼
►
you know, like grooming products and stuff like that, coffee, stuff that you want to,
00:28:40
◼
►
you know, keep coming in on a regular basis.
00:28:43
◼
►
They've more than doubled their return window for stuff that you want to send back.
00:28:47
◼
►
launched favoriting of products which is makes it sort of like a private need
00:28:52
◼
►
specific version of Pinterest for the things that you like and best of all
00:28:58
◼
►
this is very important for my audience they've just launched shipping to Canada
00:29:04
◼
►
so in celebration here's what they've got talk show listeners now this is the
00:29:10
◼
►
thing with me need is they're sort of like a lean and mean organization and
00:29:15
◼
►
and I've heard him do the same thing on other shows like ATP.
00:29:17
◼
►
They don't have any kind of special coupon code or anything like that.
00:29:20
◼
►
You just sign up.
00:29:24
◼
►
You go to neededition.com, I believe is the URL.
00:29:31
◼
►
That's where you go to find out more and sign up.
00:29:33
◼
►
Need edition, not a edition like math, like edition, like it's an edition of the magazine.
00:29:40
◼
►
Go to neededition.com and that's where you sign up for this thing.
00:29:43
◼
►
But here's what you can do as a listener of the show.
00:29:45
◼
►
After you sign up and you buy anything, just shoot them an email at hello@neededition.com.
00:29:51
◼
►
And in the subject line, put "First Anniversary."
00:29:55
◼
►
And what they'll do is they'll write back to you.
00:29:58
◼
►
They'll probably say something witty.
00:30:00
◼
►
But then they'll look for your email address and their orders and they're going to throw
00:30:03
◼
►
in a whole bunch of extras, field notes, t-shirts, socks.
00:30:10
◼
►
I just got email from Matt at Neat Edition that they just got in literally like yesterday
00:30:16
◼
►
these new Ebbets Field hats.
00:30:18
◼
►
They're gray wool, really cool baseball caps with the Neat Edition logo, navy wool, really,
00:30:24
◼
►
really nice stuff, brown leather adjustable strap.
00:30:27
◼
►
Like these are like $50 baseball caps.
00:30:30
◼
►
They're going to first five, 10 orders that come in, they're going to just throw those
00:30:33
◼
►
hats in there.
00:30:35
◼
►
Everybody though who orders and you send them an email at hello@neatedition with first anniversary
00:30:39
◼
►
in the subject line you'll get free stuff and all of those people everybody
00:30:45
◼
►
who does that and sends them that email they also they're gonna add those people
00:30:50
◼
►
to receive 25% off everything for the next three months that's huge 25% off so
00:30:57
◼
►
there's a lot of percent big percent that's a great organization it's a great
00:31:01
◼
►
service and that I mean it's amazing what he's done with that in one year
00:31:04
◼
►
they are really amazing I think it's one of those things too where it's it's it's
00:31:09
◼
►
It's not like, oh, it launched and it got huge immediately.
00:31:12
◼
►
But I think it's one of those things that
00:31:14
◼
►
could be huge pretty soon.
00:31:16
◼
►
Because it's a very, very cool service.
00:31:17
◼
►
Because it just works for a certain kind of brain.
00:31:20
◼
►
My brain needs exactly that help.
00:31:21
◼
►
I don't want to see 11 different things that I could get.
00:31:25
◼
►
11 different shirts or 50 different shirts.
00:31:27
◼
►
Show me this cool thing.
00:31:28
◼
►
It's very well curated.
00:31:30
◼
►
That's exactly the same here.
00:31:32
◼
►
I can't make decisions.
00:31:34
◼
►
I don't want to see 13 different shirts.
00:31:36
◼
►
Just show me one.
00:31:38
◼
►
and then I'll give it a thumbs up or thumbs down.
00:31:41
◼
►
- So my thanks to them.
00:31:44
◼
►
No dogs, no cats at Neat Edition.
00:31:47
◼
►
I don't believe.
00:31:48
◼
►
- My goodness.
00:31:50
◼
►
I've got, are you a Levi's 501 guy?
00:31:55
◼
►
- Yeah, me too.
00:31:55
◼
►
So I've got four pairs of Levi's 501s
00:31:57
◼
►
that look like they fell off a hobo.
00:31:59
◼
►
And I have exactly one pair of pants that fits me.
00:32:01
◼
►
And they're from Neat.
00:32:02
◼
►
I got one pair of jeans that fits me.
00:32:04
◼
►
It makes me realize what pants that fit feel like.
00:32:07
◼
►
So don't wear them too much because they're a little bit jarring.
00:32:10
◼
►
I have bones to pick with.
00:32:12
◼
►
I do wear Levi's 501.
00:32:13
◼
►
And a couple years ago, I tried something else.
00:32:15
◼
►
I think I got something.
00:32:16
◼
►
I went to the-- got them from the Gap or something.
00:32:18
◼
►
I don't know.
00:32:19
◼
►
But then they didn't work out either.
00:32:20
◼
►
But my problem with them is they're-- what I want
00:32:23
◼
►
is I just want the exact same jeans over and over again.
00:32:26
◼
►
And you can't do that.
00:32:27
◼
►
They're always changing the name of the denim-- they've
00:32:33
◼
►
got 40 different names and styles of denim.
00:32:35
◼
►
I just want--
00:32:36
◼
►
to go to the Levi's site is completely overwhelming. I was going to try the same thing. I was like,
00:32:40
◼
►
"Okay, I'm going to find exactly this one, get this SKU, buy five of them, and then rotate
00:32:45
◼
►
them for the next five years."
00:32:46
◼
►
Yeah, I tried to do that. The ones I bought last time aren't there anymore. I bought them,
00:32:52
◼
►
and also the sizes are different. I bought a new pair with the exact ... They even print
00:32:58
◼
►
the size right on the patch on the back.
00:32:59
◼
►
Now, you've got to ... I learned this from a female friend of mine in college. He's like,
00:33:03
◼
►
Whenever I go try on anything in a store, especially if it's not like super
00:33:07
◼
►
expensive, if it's anything that's like, like, you know, anything that's not
00:33:11
◼
►
basically like evening wear, take four into the dressing room and try them on in
00:33:16
◼
►
the same size. And I'm like, you are high.
00:33:18
◼
►
There's absolutely no difference.
00:33:19
◼
►
And there's, there totally is a difference.
00:33:21
◼
►
And look no further.
00:33:22
◼
►
Go grab after, after the program, go grab a bunch of pairs of five Oh ones and look
00:33:25
◼
►
what country they're made in.
00:33:26
◼
►
So if you're wondering why, I mean, I've got some that are from Mexico.
00:33:30
◼
►
I've got some that are from like Central America.
00:33:34
◼
►
I mean just to say that it isn't like there's like this one lady in San Francisco that's
00:33:39
◼
►
making all these jeans.
00:33:40
◼
►
There's a lot of variation.
00:33:41
◼
►
I bet the cotton is different in a lot of them.
00:33:43
◼
►
You got to try them on.
00:33:45
◼
►
Yeah, but that's like what I did.
00:33:48
◼
►
I think you're exactly right but I hate it because that's not what I want to do.
00:33:52
◼
►
The whole point of knowing my size and knowing that I want Levi's model 501 is I want to
00:33:56
◼
►
just order them online.
00:33:58
◼
►
My clothes like other people buy beer or I just I'll just go like American Apparel white t-shirts boom
00:34:03
◼
►
Send me a pack of those
00:34:04
◼
►
But that's how I want it to be almost like a paper towel dispenser at my kids elementary school
00:34:10
◼
►
I want it to be so straightforward
00:34:11
◼
►
I buy exactly the same socks exactly the same shirts and then when they when they change for some reason you're like
00:34:17
◼
►
Oh this got really this got a little too silky. It seems really weird. I feel really undermined by the brand. Yeah, I
00:34:24
◼
►
I feel like Steve Jobs sort of had it right where he where you know everybody thought it was sort of eccentric
00:34:28
◼
►
But where he was like, this is it this I bought he had that Japanese designer
00:34:32
◼
►
I give him like 75 of those black shirts and that was it. I
00:34:36
◼
►
Think it's the smartest thing in the world
00:34:38
◼
►
You just don't want to have to you shouldn't have to think about that stuff
00:34:42
◼
►
And if you're the problem is once you become a little eclectic
00:34:44
◼
►
Then you kind of got to become really eclectic because you can't have like fucking clown shoes that you wear every day
00:34:50
◼
►
You've got to have some variation, you know, you have your driving mock. He was
00:34:53
◼
►
Because the smart part was getting like 75 of them at once rather than say just get the
00:34:58
◼
►
10 that you need and then as they wear out you'll get more because you can't trust that
00:35:03
◼
►
they're going to be there to get more.
00:35:05
◼
►
You really got to load up.
00:35:06
◼
►
Also good reason to maintain your weight as you get older.
00:35:09
◼
►
I think it's good motivation.
00:35:10
◼
►
Good motivation.
00:35:11
◼
►
A real-time follow-up.
00:35:12
◼
►
The story of Parachutist James Miller aka fan man is tragic.
00:35:19
◼
►
He took his own life.
00:35:20
◼
►
He was a young man.
00:35:21
◼
►
Took his own life.
00:35:22
◼
►
unusual that he would pass away at that. Yeah. That's well that's. But you know he had his
00:35:29
◼
►
moment you know. I suppose it's not surprising that the guy who parachuted
00:35:33
◼
►
live into a heavyweight title fight at Caesars Palace had had some mental
00:35:39
◼
►
health issues and I don't even mean to make fun of it. I don't know. You know I'm
00:35:42
◼
►
not you know what he did in the fight was funny him taking his life is is
00:35:46
◼
►
tragic but it's I suppose it's not that surprising. Did you ever read up on rock and
00:35:49
◼
►
No. You know about him? No. The Rainbow Wig John 3 16 guy? Oh yeah yeah. As a sports fan you should know he's
00:35:58
◼
►
he's he's had a lot of balls in the air over the years. Is he still around? I don't remember I
00:36:04
◼
►
think you know it started as well but it's funny because in my head I think what are the two of the
00:36:08
◼
►
two characters you remember from early adulthood like that would be parodied on The Simpsons like
00:36:14
◼
►
at a sporting event. Well there's the guy in the clown wig and there's the guy who holds up to John
00:36:19
◼
►
316 sign and the first amazing thing is that that was the same guy he changed
00:36:23
◼
►
tack at one point he went from rainbow wig to John 316 so that was him it's the
00:36:28
◼
►
same guy but I think at some point it ended again so it's making this really
00:36:33
◼
►
sad I think it ended up with some kind of hostage situation at some point and
00:36:38
◼
►
he you know got got taken away so for those of you who don't know this guy
00:36:44
◼
►
What was his name? I remember rock and roll and rainbow
00:36:48
◼
►
Roland Stewart there he is. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah Roland Stewart. How do you spell Roland? Send it on the road. LL Ian
00:36:57
◼
►
Stewart he was a guy who would
00:37:01
◼
►
He would he would obtain
00:37:07
◼
►
For sporting events that were optimally placed so that he would be on TV
00:37:11
◼
►
Like like, you know, he was he knew which tickets to buy that would be within the camera angle that you know
00:37:18
◼
►
It'd be frequent and and he what did he do first the rainbow wig?
00:37:22
◼
►
Yeah started out with the rainbow bit women, but it's sort of like Marlin's guy
00:37:25
◼
►
We were like tell me more about this guy
00:37:27
◼
►
Like how is it?
00:37:29
◼
►
Where he's at so many games in so many places and he's always he always ends up on camera and then of course
00:37:34
◼
►
enough to became a bit started out with the rainbow afro wig and
00:37:38
◼
►
then later on he went to the John 3 16. All right John then he used to I remember
00:37:43
◼
►
he don't it was always football game I remember he probably did everything but
00:37:46
◼
►
I remember seeing him on football games and he would he must have had a lot of
00:37:51
◼
►
money because you know that's there were expensive seats near the front and he
00:37:55
◼
►
had to travel a lot because it wasn't like oh he was a guy in Kansas City and
00:38:00
◼
►
he was always at Kansas City Chiefs games no he was like every he was like
00:38:03
◼
►
at the the game of the week every week wherever it was. It says Wikipedia his
00:38:08
◼
►
His first major appearance was at the 1977 NBA Finals.
00:38:12
◼
►
By the time of the 1979 MLB All-Star Game,
00:38:14
◼
►
broadcasters actively tried to avoid showing him.
00:38:17
◼
►
Then you get him here behind the goal posts,
00:38:19
◼
►
Olympic medal stands, Augusta National Golf Club,
00:38:21
◼
►
1982 Indianapolis 500, behind the pits of Gordon Johncock.
00:38:25
◼
►
And eventually he got commercials and stuff, but yeah.
00:38:28
◼
►
- I'm surprised that he got in at Augusta.
00:38:31
◼
►
'Cause Augusta seems like the type of place where--
00:38:34
◼
►
- Is that the Masters?
00:38:35
◼
►
Is that where the Masters is? - Yeah, that's the Masters.
00:38:36
◼
►
wouldn't hesitate to you know take a guy out maybe he had a green jacket like a
00:38:40
◼
►
green blazer and a rainbow wig so yeah like that he's like it was like the old
00:38:49
◼
►
time predecessor to this year's Marlins man who I have to admit I got I got very
00:38:55
◼
►
into this year with did you watch any of the baseball he know I did yeah it was
00:39:02
◼
►
it was absolutely fascinating and so this guy and I know this whole backstory
00:39:05
◼
►
story behind this and he like but it was pretty amazing because I can't remember where it started out
00:39:09
◼
►
But it was for some reason
00:39:11
◼
►
I think obviously it was most striking in the Kansas the games that were in Kansas City because it's a complete solid
00:39:16
◼
►
Cerulean sea of blue. I mean blue
00:39:20
◼
►
I mean, it's just solid blue and then this one guy in a traffic cone orange
00:39:25
◼
►
Jersey that says Marlins on it and he is right effing behind home plate
00:39:30
◼
►
I mean he's right there and he does this great thing
00:39:32
◼
►
Well, right when the pitcher starting to throw he stands up so you can see his Marlin's Jersey
00:39:38
◼
►
He I don't know what his problem is seemed to me like he couldn't stand still like I I am a baseball fan
00:39:43
◼
►
So I was mostly watching the maybe he had piles. I
00:39:45
◼
►
Was car bunkular he didn't seem to be paying attention to the game on a regular basis at times
00:39:52
◼
►
He was but there were he would chat up his seat mates nearby something. Yeah. Yeah
00:39:58
◼
►
He you know again, like you said it was he was quite incongruous in the games in Kansas City and hats off to the people
00:40:05
◼
►
of Kansas City for their their can like I don't know how many thousand forty five fifty thousand people fit in that stadium and I would
00:40:12
◼
►
49,999 and then were wearing Royals blue
00:40:16
◼
►
It was an impressive sight
00:40:18
◼
►
No, I think that spirit too. I mean that was that was a great series and they they fought hard and those fans really man
00:40:25
◼
►
and they lit that place up.
00:40:26
◼
►
- Yeah, it's great.
00:40:28
◼
►
But this one guy wearing a bright, flaming orange
00:40:32
◼
►
Marlin's jacket and hat really stuck out.
00:40:35
◼
►
And he literally, right behind home plate,
00:40:37
◼
►
I mean like, maybe like out of the 45,000 seats,
00:40:41
◼
►
like he was always in maybe one of the two seats
00:40:44
◼
►
that he would be most visible behind the batter.
00:40:46
◼
►
Like there's only like, there's one on the left
00:40:48
◼
►
and one on the right where you're that visible.
00:40:50
◼
►
And he was in that seat all the time.
00:40:52
◼
►
I don't understand, how can you guarantee,
00:40:54
◼
►
How can you buy that? I don't know. I, I, somebody,
00:40:56
◼
►
I think Jason Snell sent me an article about this and I looked at it briefly.
00:40:59
◼
►
I think he's a, like a medical professional,
00:41:01
◼
►
like some kind of a dentist and like he gets these tickets somehow. But I mean,
00:41:06
◼
►
if you think about all the work that goes into that, it was in,
00:41:09
◼
►
it was in San Francisco too. Right. Let's be clear.
00:41:13
◼
►
He was in San Francisco for a few games.
00:41:16
◼
►
Then he went to Kansas for a few games and so forth and came back. It's,
00:41:21
◼
►
I mean, it's, it's a real dedication. Yeah.
00:41:24
◼
►
Yeah, and those are I you know and who knows if like a thousand dollars. Oh, I think for the World Series
00:41:30
◼
►
It was a lot more I went on StubHub because I got curious and I was like, well, what would it cost and and like
00:41:35
◼
►
the seats in
00:41:37
◼
►
The what's the is it AT&T what's the the Giants that's what it is this week. Yeah. Yeah
00:41:44
◼
►
Well, but the Giants ballpark AT&T Park. Yeah. Yeah, I'm formerly SBC formerly Pac Bell
00:41:53
◼
►
It the ones that are that close right behind home plate were thousands of dollars on StubHub and it's like everything on StubHub
00:42:00
◼
►
I mean, it's you know, it's it's a it's a negotiating thing. It's not public a kind of gray market
00:42:06
◼
►
You know like eBay for tickets or something. Yeah. Yeah, it's a mate. You've never used it. It's amazing. It's truly amazing
00:42:11
◼
►
It's a great great service
00:42:13
◼
►
where you can resell tickets and they automate it and they
00:42:18
◼
►
They totally you can you know, like they stand behind every ticket that they sell so you don't feel like you're it's not like eBay
00:42:24
◼
►
like StubHub because you know like with eBay if somebody rips you off you you they have like a mediation but
00:42:30
◼
►
StubHub sort of stands behind it. It's like StubHub buys the ticket from the person and then you're buying the ticket from StubHub
00:42:38
◼
►
Oh my gosh, that's fantastic
00:42:40
◼
►
So really what you would hope eBay what PayPal originally kind of seemed like an S almost escrow
00:42:45
◼
►
But like really hands-on they take it and make sure yeah, and they and they have
00:42:50
◼
►
offices physical retail establishments and a lot of I
00:42:55
◼
►
Lot of major cities most major cities. So if you buy tickets at the last minute, you can go pick them up
00:43:02
◼
►
like I I bought tickets for a
00:43:05
◼
►
Yankees game in in August for the it was Derek Jeter day and I didn't know if we're gonna be a go and I
00:43:11
◼
►
bought them the day before and
00:43:15
◼
►
It was so easy. I'd we were gonna be in in New York anyway
00:43:19
◼
►
This is why I bought the tickets on for a thing on Saturday
00:43:22
◼
►
so we're staying over and
00:43:25
◼
►
Just there's a place in Midtown. You just go in and you show them your ID and
00:43:29
◼
►
Then they just handed me an envelope with the tickets. That's amazing
00:43:34
◼
►
Yeah, I had bought them like, you know a day before but then I have to wait
00:43:39
◼
►
I mean, it's a lot so that certainly must have been a lot of dough
00:43:41
◼
►
I guess maybe he got them for free or discounted or something, but it's a lot of dedication
00:43:46
◼
►
No, there's no way he had to buy them out
00:43:48
◼
►
But it's just crazy because somebody has that seat if there's like a season ticket holder and you're like a fan of the Giants
00:43:54
◼
►
Why would you give up that great seat unless he really made an offer you couldn't refuse?
00:43:57
◼
►
And it's just so funny because it's for his purposes
00:44:02
◼
►
It's not just like he wants a good seat. He wants to be he clearly wants to be on TV
00:44:07
◼
►
There's only like three or four seats
00:44:09
◼
►
They're into pound for pound. He's on screen more than anybody, but maybe the pitcher and the catcher
00:44:15
◼
►
Yeah, you know what? I mean if you think about it
00:44:18
◼
►
I mean that guy is except for occasionally like he might be
00:44:20
◼
►
Obscured by the umpire for a second
00:44:23
◼
►
But he seems to have a really good sense of like where to be to make sure he's on camera
00:44:26
◼
►
Yeah, definitely seems like it
00:44:28
◼
►
You know and it's and it makes a big like even being in the front row makes such a big for his purposes makes such
00:44:34
◼
►
A big difference compared to being in the second row. Yeah
00:44:38
◼
►
It's like something from a different age though
00:44:40
◼
►
Cuz if you think about guys like the like the parasailing guy or rock and rollin or Marlin sky
00:44:44
◼
►
I mean, you know, it used to be really hard to be famous
00:44:47
◼
►
Yeah, you know it took a took a lot of work to be famous
00:44:50
◼
►
So you you know you had to have a publisher for a book you had to have an agent to like try and even like
00:44:56
◼
►
Beg to get you on TV. It's just like today
00:44:59
◼
►
there's there's so many more avenues for becoming slightly famous that I kind of admire the
00:45:04
◼
►
The grunt work, you know on the ground
00:45:08
◼
►
A medical professional who decides to jet between cities to be on TV in the background
00:45:13
◼
►
It's it's wacky world, you know the the I'm sure you know this because you've got got into him too
00:45:20
◼
►
That the Royals tried to buy him out of those seats. Are you kidding? You didn't notice there?
00:45:24
◼
►
The after the first game the Kansas City Royals or you know, like the the organization approached him and said, you know
00:45:32
◼
►
We we you know, we'd like you to move
00:45:36
◼
►
We will offer you will trade you for this these tickets you already had for this seat
00:45:40
◼
►
we'll give you a luxury box or you know a seat in one of the luxury boxes and
00:45:43
◼
►
You know, you'll get the full. I don't know, you know food and beverage whatever
00:45:49
◼
►
Please please give up your seat and he was like now, you know, they and he you know declined because his whole goal
00:45:56
◼
►
You know, that was the whole point. I don't I think that I don't think they quite understood the psychology of the guy that the psychopath
00:46:03
◼
►
You know that lucky he is lucky to end up floating in whatever. I guess the Kansas City River
00:46:07
◼
►
That's that's I could see them getting pretty miffed about that
00:46:10
◼
►
You think about what that ad space costs for all those?
00:46:13
◼
►
You know the ads that are green screen back there and all the kind of as they say today optics of like how you present
00:46:20
◼
►
You know your brand it must have been super annoying to them
00:46:24
◼
►
Yeah, it makes me wonder how many people out there are gonna be inspired by the guy and then if it's gonna start like a
00:46:29
◼
►
resurgence in
00:46:31
◼
►
You know, yeah
00:46:33
◼
►
What would you call it?
00:46:35
◼
►
Stick out, you know, yeah. Yeah. I mean, you know, everybody needs a project
00:46:40
◼
►
It's important to stay busy, you know as you get older
00:46:43
◼
►
But it's like you never really notice the people there are always people behind home plate or behind the end zone
00:46:49
◼
►
You know, there's always fans in the front row and you just never notice them really
00:46:52
◼
►
I mean, I guess every once in a while you see Jack Nicholson that at Lakers game or something like that
00:46:56
◼
►
we show it but you know, you just don't notice the fans until they're
00:47:01
◼
►
Wearing bright orange Marlin. I had an uneasy moment in one game. It made me feel really old
00:47:07
◼
►
There was this I'm guessing probably the greatest dad in the world that had brought his kids to the game in Kansas City
00:47:13
◼
►
But there was this probably like 11 year old girl
00:47:15
◼
►
Sitting in like the fifth row and I was like man, it's like 11 15
00:47:19
◼
►
She's she's not pretty late forget her age. I was hoping the game would end cuz you know as a school night
00:47:25
◼
►
You don't think about it like take your dad taking you the world series
00:47:30
◼
►
He become an old guy and start thinking about bedtime
00:47:32
◼
►
What she has a math test tomorrow exactly exactly is your kid still a night owl? Yeah, he is
00:47:40
◼
►
He's a natural born and as soon as Saturday hits, you know, he's not you know school starts at 8 a.m. You know, Monday Tuesday
00:47:48
◼
►
You know right through Friday and then soon as Saturday comes he sleeps till noon. No kidding
00:47:56
◼
►
Man, I hate that daylight savings time. I can jump on this bandwagon, but man
00:48:01
◼
►
I'm so relieved when that ends it makes our life so much easier. I
00:48:04
◼
►
Couldn't disagree more. No, you don't like the savings time. Uh
00:48:08
◼
►
Yeah, I don't like that. It's like it's trouble
00:48:13
◼
►
It's very hard to get my kid to go to sleep when it's like even 830 and it's still light outside now
00:48:18
◼
►
You're saying you're pro daylight savings time. You like the extra daylight at night?
00:48:21
◼
►
I do hold on but that's I mean
00:48:23
◼
►
Let's thank a sponsor and we'll go with it because that was the whole thing I wanted
00:48:27
◼
►
to talk about.
00:48:28
◼
►
I'd love to go head to head on this.
00:48:29
◼
►
I think this is something America needs to hear.
00:48:31
◼
►
People have very strong feelings about this, Jon.
00:48:34
◼
►
Our second sponsor is our good friends at Warby Parker.
00:48:38
◼
►
You guys know Warby Parker.
00:48:40
◼
►
That's the independent eyeglass eyewear company that was founded simply on the basis that
00:48:47
◼
►
buying eyeglasses should not cost an arm and the like.
00:48:51
◼
►
I shouldn't have to pay 300 bucks just for a regular pair of glasses.
00:48:55
◼
►
And like we were talking about with the Levi's before, you ought to be able to buy them right
00:48:58
◼
►
there online and just have it be easy and not have to go into a stupid store and waste
00:49:03
◼
►
a whole day.
00:49:06
◼
►
Or be park, if you haven't heard, what you do is you go to their website.
00:49:09
◼
►
They have a whole bunch of glasses to choose from.
00:49:11
◼
►
You pick a bunch that you like.
00:49:13
◼
►
Pick different ones.
00:49:14
◼
►
Then they send them to your house for free, just empty without, you know, any kind of
00:49:18
◼
►
prescription lens in them or whatever.
00:49:20
◼
►
you can try them on see if you like them you know see if there's something stupid
00:49:24
◼
►
on the sides that you didn't notice when you were looking at him straight on you
00:49:29
◼
►
know I mean that's like you're making fun of me no I'm a sneaky Pete's I loved
00:49:35
◼
►
your sneaky Pete's but I'm saying I'm the type of person where I would I would
00:49:39
◼
►
ordinarily think I'm never gonna buy eyeglasses online because I have to see
00:49:43
◼
►
them in person I cannot judge this just by pictures well that you don't have to
00:49:47
◼
►
do that. You judge them online looking at the pictures just to have them sent to your
00:49:51
◼
►
house then you get five of them and you can actually sit there and examine them in your
00:49:55
◼
►
own hands. You pick the one you like and then boom a couple days later in they come with
00:50:02
◼
►
your prescription lenses in place. They also, they do a great great thing and here's the
00:50:12
◼
►
They start at just 95 bucks you go to Warby Parker calm
00:50:15
◼
►
And they start at 95 bucks. They have showrooms in some cities. I think New York has it to San Francisco
00:50:21
◼
►
I have one. I don't I don't I don't know of that. I've done the home try on several times. It's it's amazing home
00:50:28
◼
►
Try on you should never know. That's the thing. I remember one time million years ago
00:50:31
◼
►
I went to well
00:50:32
◼
►
I won't say the name but it was a site where you could go and like upload a picture of yourself and try the glasses on
00:50:37
◼
►
online and then I got the glasses and they're like clown glasses had no idea of the actual
00:50:41
◼
►
like you know you can't tell until you put them on your actual stupid face.
00:50:45
◼
►
All right there's just no way so here's the other thing though they for every pair of glasses that
00:50:52
◼
►
they sell they distribute a pair to someone need around the world they've partnered with
00:50:58
◼
►
non-profits there's one called vision spring but that's it 15 percent of the world population a
00:51:05
◼
►
billion people around the world lack access to prescription glasses. So if anybody out
00:51:12
◼
►
there who has bad vision, and my uncorrected vision is at this point in my life absolutely
00:51:18
◼
►
horrible. Like I would be, I don't even know if I could cross the street. If you think
00:51:23
◼
►
about what that would be like not to have glasses, I mean I don't know how I would even
00:51:28
◼
►
function. I mean the only thing I can see about six inches in front of my face uncorrected.
00:51:33
◼
►
So think about the fact that there's a billion people worldwide who don't have access to
00:51:37
◼
►
And you know, like if you were a kid, how you couldn't even see, how are you going to
00:51:40
◼
►
learn anything?
00:51:41
◼
►
So they're doing a great thing.
00:51:43
◼
►
Every time they sell a pair of glasses, they send one to people in need.
00:51:46
◼
►
I think that's a huge part of it.
00:51:48
◼
►
And it doesn't mean, you know, the prices aren't jacked up.
00:51:50
◼
►
It's not like you're paying double.
00:51:51
◼
►
You're paying less than you would pay at a typical eyeglass place.
00:51:58
◼
►
All of their glasses include anti-reflective, anti-glare coating.
00:52:01
◼
►
There's no additional cost for that, no upsell on stuff like that.
00:52:04
◼
►
Everything comes with a really nice case, cleaning cloth, everything you want, stuff
00:52:10
◼
►
Really cool kit.
00:52:11
◼
►
It's great stuff.
00:52:12
◼
►
I don't know.
00:52:13
◼
►
I've lost track now of how many Warby Parker glasses we've got here in the Gruber household.
00:52:18
◼
►
Sunglasses, everything you might want.
00:52:22
◼
►
And here's the thing.
00:52:23
◼
►
This is new.
00:52:24
◼
►
They've got progressive.
00:52:25
◼
►
I think it's new.
00:52:26
◼
►
Progressive lenses starting at $295 including the frames.
00:52:29
◼
►
progressives this is for my demographic now are
00:52:33
◼
►
That's where you have a distant prescription at the top of the lens
00:52:37
◼
►
I've got that and a transition to a reading lens near the lenses bottom
00:52:42
◼
►
And it's there's not like a hard line in between them that that says bifocal. It's just I don't know
00:52:47
◼
►
I don't know how they do it. They call it a digital freeform lens, which is the most advanced progressive technology
00:52:55
◼
►
It's applied digitally with a computer. So the design is more precise than traditional models of progressives
00:53:01
◼
►
See they got that that's that's where I'm at in my life with the glasses so
00:53:08
◼
►
Anyway, here's where you go to find out more go to warby Parker comm slash the talk show
00:53:14
◼
►
Warby Parker comm slash the talk show
00:53:19
◼
►
and my thanks to him if you need glasses, you need sunglasses just go check them out because
00:53:24
◼
►
you get to and what are they going to do here there you use that URL and you get
00:53:29
◼
►
free three-day shipping with your lenses so why not
00:53:34
◼
►
alright daylight savings time look at you don't do a quick check in it have you
00:53:39
◼
►
checked on your cable
00:53:41
◼
►
see just curious if the camera fix the cone
00:53:44
◼
►
hold on let me see
00:53:49
◼
►
If this actually works it's gonna be mind blowing.
00:53:54
◼
►
I didn't get a text from him so I'm not obvious.
00:53:56
◼
►
It's a one time text so you're only gonna get it if you're plugged in.
00:54:00
◼
►
You know what though, I was smart enough not to do it on the machine where I was recording
00:54:07
◼
►
our call on.
00:54:09
◼
►
But it looks like it is working.
00:54:13
◼
►
Hey Mazel Tov.
00:54:15
◼
►
No text from him though.
00:54:17
◼
►
Maybe they're not.
00:54:18
◼
►
to keep slugging along this way yeah well we can keep going yeah I mean I
00:54:23
◼
►
can't I say if it ain't broke don't fix it mm-hmm if the cone falls over and it's
00:54:29
◼
►
not hurting anybody just leave it there yeah what's that dog ever catches that
00:54:33
◼
►
cat all right so daylight savings time so you you're you're opposed to it and
00:54:46
◼
►
because of the summer months where it packs the daylight at I see I feel like
00:54:51
◼
►
we've got the whole thing backwards I feel like I could totally get behind
00:54:57
◼
►
because we it's not even like a six month six month thing anymore I thought
00:55:00
◼
►
it used to be been and I know they're always they changed everything around
00:55:03
◼
►
it's real confusing it's very confusing and I don't think it starts later and
00:55:08
◼
►
ends later now I know I know they changed it I believe so that it ends
00:55:12
◼
►
after Halloween right on purpose to make it safer for kids which is great but
00:55:17
◼
►
then I think it starts later - is that right I don't know I'm not quite sure
00:55:23
◼
►
about that but I it but the but the fact is though that there's more of the year
00:55:30
◼
►
that's daylight savings time than there is that standard time hmm right oh no I'm
00:55:37
◼
►
sorry I take it back they moved it back it's so the next one 2014 it started
00:55:41
◼
►
March 9th ends November 2nd. Wow, you're totally right December Wow, right
00:55:46
◼
►
So it's really just it's just November
00:55:49
◼
►
December so - yeah three three quarters of the year something like that. Yeah
00:55:55
◼
►
Yeah, maybe it's like a one-third two-third type thing. Mm-hmm. No, I think you're right four months
00:56:00
◼
►
Yeah, you're right and I can't help but think that it to me if they're gonna do something like that
00:56:05
◼
►
it's backwards because it's
00:56:08
◼
►
I'm amenable to the argument that when it's 8 45 at p.m. 8 45 and you're trying to put your kid to bed that and
00:56:16
◼
►
It's enough daylight where you could be outside playing ball
00:56:19
◼
►
That's a tough sell right like because now you feel like you're almost lying to your kid. You're you know
00:56:24
◼
►
How can you say it's bedtime? You know that it does seem dishonest, right?
00:56:30
◼
►
It's like you're saying it's bedtime and your kid hopefully hopefully your kid has a window in their bedroom
00:56:37
◼
►
And they can look and see that it's daylight
00:56:40
◼
►
It's you know, I understand that's a hard sell
00:56:42
◼
►
but those are the months where I I wouldn't be opposed to to rejiggering it like in the
00:56:47
◼
►
Around June, you know, it's a circle four months around June where it's longest and take an hour of daylight there
00:56:53
◼
►
my problem is I just get so I
00:56:57
◼
►
Don't want to throw the word depressed around because I don't I don't have like a clinical depression
00:57:02
◼
►
But I do suffer a little blue. I get I would call it like a melancholy like like
00:57:07
◼
►
Like this need right now this like today. I feel a little melancholy just because it's right now
00:57:14
◼
►
It's it's a rainy day here in Philadelphia. It's probably why my my cable went out
00:57:17
◼
►
It you know Comcast doesn't really hold up too much in the weather
00:57:23
◼
►
That's a that's a lot to ask of hardware John
00:57:28
◼
►
You know, that's true though. You remember cuz back when I did the show with Dan it really was the case
00:57:33
◼
►
This was before the guy pulled out that rusty why thing, you know, why splitter? No, it's true
00:57:38
◼
►
We're on rainy days when Dan and I would record the show years ago
00:57:41
◼
►
He would always he could tell because it was like my it was like all broken up
00:57:46
◼
►
Like the Skype audio was all busted up on a rain. It was very consistent that if it was raining my
00:57:51
◼
►
Connection could not handle Skype. That seems crazy
00:57:56
◼
►
Fixed I think but it's but anyway, it's a rainy day here
00:57:59
◼
►
No, it's like my wife gets home from work and it's dark and that's that's you know, it's no fun for me
00:58:04
◼
►
It's certainly no fun for her but for people who have like an actual job you're coming home and it's in
00:58:08
◼
►
After the time goes back right come on. It's dark at night. It's totally depressing
00:58:12
◼
►
Yeah, I use when I used to when I used to work you've many many years ago at the the Philadelphia Inquirer
00:58:18
◼
►
It was a type of place type of gig where it was
00:58:21
◼
►
You know, you'd show up at 9 and you'd left at 5 everybody left at 5, you know, like 455
00:58:26
◼
►
Everybody's putting coats on it was just that type of office. There was
00:58:29
◼
►
Nothing in the department. I worked in there was nothing, you know, no reason to stay
00:58:34
◼
►
And I remember leaving the one time was like I must have been like the first weekday
00:58:38
◼
►
I guess the Monday after we set the clocks back and it was pitch black
00:58:42
◼
►
It's just dark as night and you as you leave work at five. It just was very depressing. I think
00:58:49
◼
►
Well, let me let me this is what a dummy I am. Let me ask you this. Why don't they just change?
00:58:55
◼
►
I hear here's the thing it would seem really weird if they just change time and we said from now on
00:59:01
◼
►
Like daylight savings time is what we're gonna have all the time, but it sounds like that's kind of what you're advocating for
00:59:06
◼
►
It's like why don't you just change time so that we just we just toss in an hour here
00:59:10
◼
►
We change this stuff around and now we we have light at night that that's kind of really what you're saying, right?
00:59:15
◼
►
That is what I'm saying that makes it seem doubly crazy that we change it during the year that it's it's that going back and forth
00:59:22
◼
►
So I would be nice if there was I mean, I know I can't do a lot with the rotation of the planet and the angles and stuff
00:59:26
◼
►
But still, you know, I mean that that's the part that's weird is the is the changing part
00:59:31
◼
►
I think I think you could make a case and I'm not a scientist John
00:59:34
◼
►
I think you could make a case for saying we just need to permanently do this. This needs to be just time now. I
00:59:39
◼
►
Had it and it's just it's such a kick in the teeth
00:59:44
◼
►
I feel that when you've set it back in the fall that you know, like because you know the days were getting shorter
00:59:52
◼
►
as October went on anyway. You can see, "Hey man, I remember when it was still light out
00:59:58
◼
►
at six o'clock."
00:59:59
◼
►
I really noticed it this year. It seemed like it happened fast.
01:00:02
◼
►
I don't know. It did seem like that to me too. When I was a kid, it seemed like I was
01:00:08
◼
►
ignorant and stuff like that. I didn't even know what time it was most of the time, I
01:00:13
◼
►
guess. As an adult now though, and I feel like that sudden extra hour jump of darkness
01:00:19
◼
►
At what should be a reasonable time of day not like what most people would still call the afternoon not the evening
01:00:25
◼
►
It's just it's it. I don't know
01:00:28
◼
►
I'd almost rather even I I
01:00:30
◼
►
Would advocate switching to the daylight savings time year-round. I would just say let's just call that it set the clocks on that
01:00:38
◼
►
I can't believe I've never heard of that before but that because that seems like the kind of
01:00:41
◼
►
Whackadoodle campaign that I would have heard about by now and it kind of makes sense. Let's just get one guys here
01:00:47
◼
►
Here's your slogan. Just pick one
01:00:49
◼
►
That's the slogan. It does seem though, it seems like a hard hard thing for them to
01:00:54
◼
►
ever get off the ground. So what's the what's the downside of permanent
01:00:57
◼
►
daylight savings time? Because I have to tell you just in fairness I could get
01:01:00
◼
►
behind your wackadoodle scheme as long as it's consistent. The hard part the
01:01:04
◼
►
hard part is like I say like in the summertime I mean we just need an idea
01:01:08
◼
►
and I understand the light changes like I say angles rotation but like there just
01:01:12
◼
►
has to be some idea that if I'm I don't sound like I'm trying to do some kind of
01:01:15
◼
►
social engineering trick on my kid to get her to go to bed at 2 p.m. or something like
01:01:20
◼
►
You just need to pick one.
01:01:21
◼
►
Well, the downside whenever I get on my hobby horse about this, I hear from the morning
01:01:26
◼
►
people, it's the morning people, is that all of a sudden now the morning people have, it's
01:01:31
◼
►
pitch black and they always try it out.
01:01:34
◼
►
It's always, and everybody always trots out the children, but then kids are waiting for
01:01:37
◼
►
the school bus and it's pitch black at 7.15 in the morning or whatever and that's no good.
01:01:43
◼
►
I don't know.
01:01:44
◼
►
To me, and it's like, I think there's like a farming angle on it, but to me it's like,
01:01:49
◼
►
well the farmer should just get up when the sun rises. Don't worry about what time it is.
01:01:53
◼
►
I don't understand why are the farmers so time constrained? Do they need to get to AA?
01:01:58
◼
►
Like why does it matter what time the sun is up? Is the grain store closing? Like,
01:02:03
◼
►
I don't understand exactly how that, you know what I'm saying? It only makes sense if there's
01:02:07
◼
►
other stuff the farmers have to do as well as work in a field. Otherwise the clocks don't mean
01:02:12
◼
►
Fuck all you just go work in your goddamn field whatever you need to it
01:02:15
◼
►
Isn't like you look you look you pull out your pocket watch and go Oh deary me
01:02:19
◼
►
It's for I better start wrapping up now get back to work farm farm
01:02:23
◼
►
Yeah, I don't I don't know what the deal is with that and I did here now
01:02:27
◼
►
You know and and just right here in my own household, you know as I endlessly bitched about the daylight savings time
01:02:34
◼
►
rollout last week
01:02:36
◼
►
Amy even said well, you don't take the kid to school every day. It's pitch black. It was pitch black last week
01:02:41
◼
►
It's nicer now that we you know look it actually looks like morning when I'm taking them to school
01:02:45
◼
►
So I appreciate that
01:02:46
◼
►
I don't know maybe the answer is is that sometime around November like through from November through like New Year's
01:02:52
◼
►
We should all just stay in bed mmm
01:02:55
◼
►
And well, I think the the depressing lack of sunlight really supports that I think if we all just agreed to just be a little bit
01:03:02
◼
►
More logy you know logy our way into Christmas. Yeah
01:03:06
◼
►
Well, is there also an angle of energy saving isn't that another angle of it? Oh
01:03:11
◼
►
Definitely. I think that's I think that was the explanation behind the why we kept it and well and why we've expanded it. Mm-hmm
01:03:19
◼
►
all right, why we've added made more and more of the
01:03:22
◼
►
of the calendar year daylight savings is
01:03:27
◼
►
That it I don't know. I'm not quite sure what the argument is though. I have to be honest with you John
01:03:34
◼
►
I'm still deeply confused just about time zones alone
01:03:38
◼
►
I was talking to Mike Hurley the other day and I was asking him whether they get Christmas in a different season than we do
01:03:43
◼
►
I honestly don't understand anything about how any of this works and I still have to basically mentally draw a
01:03:50
◼
►
Picture to understand which time change causes what difference and that my brain is just not wired to totally understand this
01:03:56
◼
►
I'm bluffing my way through this a little bit, but I honestly find everything involving time
01:04:01
◼
►
completely bizarre. Well you know what the China does right? What? Did you know
01:04:08
◼
►
that China does not have they don't believe in time zones? So China is a
01:04:12
◼
►
land mass. Well it's a land mass roughly comparable to the United States you know
01:04:18
◼
►
it's about you know it's the same sort of shape too it's you know wider than it
01:04:22
◼
►
is tall and it's about the same width like if they went with time zones they
01:04:25
◼
►
would span four time zones like the continental United States does but they
01:04:30
◼
►
don't do it. They just have the clocks are set to Chinese time
01:04:34
◼
►
and that's it. And so if you're on the well, regardless of like
01:04:37
◼
►
how how far north you are, because I mean that we're no
01:04:39
◼
►
West, it would be no East and West. No, but I mean, also, you
01:04:42
◼
►
know, as you go higher up, like in Washington, like their days
01:04:45
◼
►
are really short. You know, I mean, as you go further, oh,
01:04:48
◼
►
right, right. The days are shorter. Yeah, yeah. And like
01:04:51
◼
►
people in Florida get a little bit more, a little bit. It's all
01:04:54
◼
►
completely perplexing it. If somebody told me that this is
01:04:56
◼
►
one of those Capricorn one situations, and the whole time
01:04:59
◼
►
thing was a bluff I would have no trouble believing it I find it all
01:05:02
◼
►
completely perplexing no but it's it's like totally serious we're like there's
01:05:06
◼
►
one time in China just Chinese time and I think it's I think it's optimized for
01:05:11
◼
►
their East Coast because that's you know that's where all the big cities are Wow
01:05:15
◼
►
and but if you live on the in the western side of China you the Sun
01:05:20
◼
►
doesn't even come up until like 11 a.m. and you just they just sit there live
01:05:25
◼
►
their lives accordingly like maybe I don't know maybe school doesn't start
01:05:28
◼
►
11 over there. I feel like I've seen like three different documentaries in the last year that lead me to believe that the whole modern concept
01:05:34
◼
►
Of time and being on a certain time comes out of the railroad schedules. Is that right?
01:05:39
◼
►
Yeah could be yeah
01:05:42
◼
►
Because I guess there was a time when like each train company had their own time that they kept and it became very important
01:05:46
◼
►
Obviously if you're you know changing trains that all's got to work together. I
01:05:49
◼
►
Don't know. Yeah, but it's nice though. See it. There is a certain appeal to that
01:05:53
◼
►
so it's like in China, it depends where you live if you think of
01:05:58
◼
►
What you know what what is a good bedtime for a child?
01:06:02
◼
►
You know it might be off by three hours depending on if you're in the east or the west
01:06:05
◼
►
But if you tell somebody I will we will we will have this conference call at two o'clock in the afternoon
01:06:11
◼
►
Everybody and everybody knows it's at the right time. I think that's very appealing
01:06:16
◼
►
That's why I mean like if I could ever get my brain around it going to pure GMT
01:06:19
◼
►
I find something very appealing about that like that. It's always this certain time like that's that's that's the one we all refer to
01:06:24
◼
►
I mean even just you know trying to schedule stuff with people in this you know increasingly
01:06:28
◼
►
It's the central time zone that really screws me up because it's just enough off from the two main areas
01:06:34
◼
►
Screws with my head. Yeah, I'm not good with that either and and you know what you're right
01:06:38
◼
►
The central time is worse because so I did the layer tennis commentary
01:06:41
◼
►
Yeah, two two weeks ago must have been two weeks ago wasn't last week and that all runs on Chicago, yeah, and I
01:06:52
◼
►
It's good for me. I was ready an hour early
01:06:54
◼
►
Funny part is you know, I'm on the west coast here on the east coast and you know, the East Coast wins always
01:07:00
◼
►
You know Eastern Time is the winner. It's the canonical time in America. Everybody else just has to like do the math
01:07:05
◼
►
Central is the only time zone where I periodically go the wrong way
01:07:09
◼
►
Like I know you guys are three hours later than us
01:07:12
◼
►
But for some time for some reason sometimes when I'm when I'm doing the mental math, I get the central time zone wrong
01:07:17
◼
►
So I'm basically putting them in the Pacific Ocean sometimes
01:07:21
◼
►
Yeah, and it I don't know it just doesn't seem we're gonna the timeline do you understand the international?
01:07:27
◼
►
What's it called the internet international dateline? Do you understand that? No, uh
01:07:31
◼
►
If I make diagrams and draw I can I can somehow get us we went to New Zealand
01:07:38
◼
►
It still makes no sense to me that well
01:07:40
◼
►
You guys had a crazy flight because you had to get all the way
01:07:42
◼
►
Over to here before you could even have the terrible flight we had but it was like a 15-hour flight
01:07:47
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But I remember arriving in New Zealand and we felt pretty good
01:07:50
◼
►
My wife had some nausea from you know traveling but I was cock of the walk
01:07:54
◼
►
I felt fine coming back from New Zealand. I was out for three weeks
01:07:57
◼
►
If I was that possible, I don't know I found that to be worse too
01:08:02
◼
►
They're getting back from New Zealand was it just felt like I felt like I had mono. I mean, I was I felt like I was drugged
01:08:10
◼
►
You know Michael Lop Michael Lop lost a birthday. Oh, no
01:08:16
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Maybe this was not the year. It was the seven later. Yeah, you didn't go. Yeah
01:08:20
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Yeah, it was the second time I spoke at web stock and Michael Lop
01:08:24
◼
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Got on an airplane in SFO the day before his birthday and when he stepped off the plane in
01:08:33
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It was the day after his birthday. That makes no sense. I swear to God
01:08:38
◼
►
You know, you know what it's feel like to be like a leap year, baby. Yeah, and I
01:08:44
◼
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You know, yeah, he's a big boy, you know, he wasn't it wasn't sad about it
01:08:49
◼
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But like I told Jonas and Jonas was just blown away
01:08:52
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►
I mean if I got nine year old kid like to think that you lost your birthday because it's really unjust
01:08:57
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Yeah, and he like that was like the thing like when he went back to school because Jonas came with us again
01:09:02
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And then it was like well, you know, what'd you what'd you do?
01:09:04
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It was like you went to New Zealand
01:09:05
◼
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It's like wow
01:09:06
◼
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That's awesome
01:09:06
◼
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I happen and then his story was my dad's friend
01:09:09
◼
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Lost a birthday and he'd like explained it and all of his friends were like that's outrageous
01:09:13
◼
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It's the saddest story ever
01:09:16
◼
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If there's anything that can make kids unionize
01:09:19
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Like missing out missing a gift-giving holiday, right?
01:09:24
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It just it does it confuses me how that could happen though. It just seems like it should be a different time
01:09:30
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What was he for? I always see for Halloween this year. Oh
01:09:36
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Oh, Sherlock Holmes. Oh, wow. I mean with that with the hat and everything. Yeah. Well, there's only really one way to do it
01:09:43
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You kind of have to go she's gonna go Cumberbatch
01:09:45
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Yeah, but I don't know that that's a that's not canonical. Yeah, it's like it's not recognizable you you're not gonna
01:09:52
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You kind of got to go. I don't know what that hat's called. But yeah the Sherlock Holmes hat right? That's cool
01:10:00
◼
►
What what what so does he read it or like movies? Like how did he get into Sherlock Holmes?
01:10:05
◼
►
He's into the he's into the the new movies the Robert Downey jr. Ones. I enjoyed those very much
01:10:12
◼
►
Are those kind of swashbuckling
01:10:17
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►
Yeah, there's yeah, especially the second one the second one's a little it's it's you know a little Indiana Jonesy
01:10:23
◼
►
It's not it's not a very into light. You know there's some of that, but it's it's a more action-oriented Sherlock Holmes
01:10:30
◼
►
Nice, that's a good one
01:10:34
◼
►
My kid was Hermione Granger from Harry Potter. I saw the picture
01:10:39
◼
►
She was a dead ringer. She she kind of nailed it. I think yeah. Yeah
01:10:44
◼
►
That's good. It's it's you know, but this is it was nice because the last couple years before that we'd done Marvel
01:10:50
◼
►
Related, you know costume superheroes. So I thought this was a nice change
01:10:54
◼
►
yeah, Jonas Amy Amy knocks it out with the
01:10:59
◼
►
Look at that photo. Look at that guy. Yeah, it's got a little pipe in his hand. It's got the magnifying glass
01:11:05
◼
►
That's so great. I love his cloak. Yeah. Yeah good stuff. Yeah, so Amy sources all that stuff on the internet
01:11:12
◼
►
She kind of runs that joint doesn't she? Yeah. Yeah, same here same here. He's getting old
01:11:18
◼
►
I mean he's 10 so he's I think he's running out but he's done. He's done just about all the big ones
01:11:22
◼
►
He's done trying to think he's done Buzz Lightyear. That was really young Buzz Lightyear
01:11:27
◼
►
Han Solo Indiana Jones the my favorite was the Clint Eastwood man with no name. Oh, that was great
01:11:35
◼
►
I remember that his Indiana Jones was really good too. I remember that one
01:11:38
◼
►
Trying to remember what else is in there Oh
01:11:42
◼
►
Doctor who he did. Dr. Who last year. Oh, he's like Matt Smith. Yeah. Oh, that's awesome. Yeah, that was a good one
01:11:50
◼
►
Yeah, everyone
01:11:51
◼
►
He's kind of my canary in a coal mine for what's happening in the world when I hear you talking about like Minecraft and YouTube
01:11:57
◼
►
and stuff like that. I feel like I'm learning a lot about what's coming up through you and him.
01:12:02
◼
►
Yeah, I'm looking, you know, Moltz wrote a YouTube book. Not a YouTube book, a Minecraft book.
01:12:09
◼
►
Wow, that's cool.
01:12:10
◼
►
It's coming out, it might be coming out tomorrow.
01:12:13
◼
►
Oh, that's awesome.
01:12:14
◼
►
I can't wait to read it because I gotta tell you, this Minecraft thing, I still don't get it.
01:12:20
◼
►
Terrified by it. I'm utterly terrified. We went to Scott Simpson's birthday party over the summer
01:12:26
◼
►
and it was her first exposure to Minecraft on a screen.
01:12:29
◼
►
'Cause I've, yeah, let's be honest,
01:12:30
◼
►
I've kept her away from it.
01:12:31
◼
►
'Cause everything I've heard from everybody,
01:12:34
◼
►
you know me, right?
01:12:36
◼
►
Like I'm not that guy.
01:12:37
◼
►
Like she can play with, she can do stuff on the iPad.
01:12:39
◼
►
I'm not like, we're not crazy about that kind of stuff.
01:12:41
◼
►
But every, to a person, every mom and dad says
01:12:44
◼
►
the same thing, which is there's the life that I had
01:12:46
◼
►
with my kid before Minecraft and the life after.
01:12:49
◼
►
It'll probably be fine.
01:12:50
◼
►
But I, she's seven, I'm enjoying these days.
01:12:53
◼
►
And so I'm circumspect.
01:12:56
◼
►
It's pretty immersive though, huh?
01:12:58
◼
►
- It can be.
01:12:59
◼
►
Certainly, you know, the best I can get it.
01:13:04
◼
►
I really can't wait to read Moltz's book
01:13:06
◼
►
'cause I really, it's like nothing else
01:13:10
◼
►
that I've ever seen before.
01:13:11
◼
►
There is a way that you can play it like a video game
01:13:13
◼
►
where you're running around and there's these creepers
01:13:16
◼
►
that are like zombies that you have to avoid
01:13:18
◼
►
and you need to build shelter for the nighttime.
01:13:21
◼
►
But that's not really, that's not what kids are doing.
01:13:24
◼
►
It really is-- - It's more like Lego, right?
01:13:26
◼
►
- Yeah, it's more like virtual Lego.
01:13:28
◼
►
The Lego company should've bought Minecraft.
01:13:31
◼
►
It's crazy that Microsoft, either them or Disney,
01:13:34
◼
►
I can't believe Disney didn't buy them.
01:13:35
◼
►
Because I really think it's got staying power.
01:13:37
◼
►
- There were so many kids in homemade Minecraft costumes.
01:13:42
◼
►
For Halloween. - Oh yeah.
01:13:44
◼
►
- But it was a very inefficient,
01:13:45
◼
►
it was mostly you'd see a kid with a blocky kind of tunic
01:13:47
◼
►
and then holding up the box
01:13:49
◼
►
that should've been on their head
01:13:50
◼
►
They can't see a damn thing
01:13:51
◼
►
But they were they were blocking mcmain craft or whatever his name is
01:13:54
◼
►
I'm trying to
01:13:59
◼
►
It's mostly about the building the collaboration you yeah the game itself and forgive me because I've never played it
01:14:05
◼
►
But so basically you start out in this world and you got to stay alive you got to build stuff you have to mine
01:14:10
◼
►
And then that enables you to get things and then you make comp combinations of different things make other things. That's kind of the idea
01:14:17
◼
►
yeah, and it's like you you dig to get raw materials and then you can turn the raw materials into things and
01:14:24
◼
►
The whole game is super hackable
01:14:28
◼
►
Like you just unzip a jar file and there's all you know
01:14:32
◼
►
It's like going into it like in Mac terms like opening up the application package and you can go in there change all the stuff
01:14:38
◼
►
Out it's like res edit for pixels. Yeah, it's very much
01:14:43
◼
►
So it's exactly like the way we hacked our stuff with res edit 20 years ago
01:14:48
◼
►
That's what the kids are doing with the Minecraft extensions and mod packs. That's not like that
01:14:53
◼
►
But yeah, and it's like and they play, you know, and this is the part where it starts to get like hey
01:14:59
◼
►
What the hell's I got it
01:15:00
◼
►
I kind of have to step in here as a parent like make sure this is alright is when they collaborate on a server and
01:15:05
◼
►
And it's all open. This is the thing
01:15:08
◼
►
Can't you get like your own?
01:15:10
◼
►
I was seeing the penny arcade guys are talking about this like you can get like a private server, right if you absolutely
01:15:14
◼
►
Know and it's really like as a responsible parent. It's like you kind of my you know
01:15:19
◼
►
You kind of have to limit it to private servers, you know
01:15:21
◼
►
It's like you can't just go and play on the servers where people are, you know
01:15:25
◼
►
You know could be anybody it's like, you know, so he's got one
01:15:29
◼
►
You know, it's cheap. I don't know. It's like three dollars a month or something like that. But Jonas has his own server
01:15:37
◼
►
It's like, you know, like getting a web hosting account cost like three three bucks a month
01:15:40
◼
►
And but then him and his friends
01:15:42
◼
►
He just gives an address to his friends and him and his friends from school can play together and it's just like the six of
01:15:48
◼
►
Them I think it's like a private room. Yeah, and you know and they build stuff together
01:15:53
◼
►
it's crazy like he showed me like him and one of his pals from school built like a
01:15:57
◼
►
Place for their characters to live like a skyscraper, you know with like a you know, pretty cool pretty it was pretty cool pad really
01:16:05
◼
►
Like way up high though like massive massive building really pretty cool. That sounds like a lot of fun. I
01:16:11
◼
►
don't know I
01:16:14
◼
►
It's very freeform. That's the thing. It sounds very creative and collaborative
01:16:18
◼
►
Yeah, and the thing is is the the company behind it. It's it's really genius and it is sort of a triumph of
01:16:25
◼
►
Openness where you know, like I said the game is hackable
01:16:31
◼
►
But if you want to play online, it's not like you have to play with the official Minecraft online
01:16:37
◼
►
Server and you have to pay for it or whatever anybody like can run their own Minecraft server
01:16:43
◼
►
It's all just you know, you know, like the game is is commercially you have to pay for the game, you know
01:16:48
◼
►
I'm sure but you do you license a copy like a seat?
01:16:52
◼
►
It's gotta be so boring for people
01:16:58
◼
►
Let me understand this television has channels. How does that work if you paid? How do you change them?
01:17:03
◼
►
All right, but like the the iPad app is like $6.99 and that I think that's not bad Wow, okay
01:17:08
◼
►
Yeah, but but it's weird though. The iPad one is weird
01:17:12
◼
►
Like it's really it's like solo like you can't can't you can't play the iPad one on the I was gonna say if it's Java
01:17:18
◼
►
I don't even know how they made the iPad one since the whole thing's written in Java
01:17:22
◼
►
But anyway, you play on a computer and you can connect to any server and anybody can run a server
01:17:26
◼
►
and so there's public servers where there are thousands of people running around and
01:17:30
◼
►
You can just set up your own server anywhere you want and have just you and you know
01:17:36
◼
►
You're two pals and you know, it's nice and peaceful and quiet. Hmm
01:17:39
◼
►
But you can chat, you know, yeah while you're on the server and that's where you know
01:17:44
◼
►
There's some parenting that needs to come in. Mm-hmm needs it, you know can't just be how do you how do you if you do?
01:17:51
◼
►
Do you how do you limit access to that you got hours for that or yeah, they got it's got to be like
01:17:55
◼
►
you know certain time you got it you know make sure your homeworks done first and
01:17:58
◼
►
she's my kids in frickin first grade and by the time we pick her up from after
01:18:02
◼
►
school and she does her homework like we've got I feel like we've got like an
01:18:04
◼
►
hour before bedtime so maybe maybe the thing here is to just is to turbo like
01:18:09
◼
►
you guys do and just push push bed down to like 1130 well you can't do that at
01:18:14
◼
►
school night Jesus well you know she'll figure it out she could nap she could
01:18:18
◼
►
nap during recess or something I guess I have to admit as a parent I do feel like
01:18:23
◼
►
Jonas's school seems pretty good on homework they don't he seems to get a
01:18:27
◼
►
lot less than a lot of kids seem to now nationally are you guys a common core
01:18:32
◼
►
state no I don't even I know I don't think we are it just seems to me I as a
01:18:40
◼
►
parent I have the exact same perspective on it that I had when I was actually in
01:18:44
◼
►
school which is this is bullshit I've been yeah you had me all day right right
01:18:50
◼
►
Like that's a long day like 8 a.m. Till 3 in the afternoon is an awful lot of chunk of your time
01:18:55
◼
►
Why is there more work to be done I don't I've never I
01:19:01
◼
►
Hack it feels like a behavioral hack because like with my kids she brings home like worksheets like right now
01:19:07
◼
►
She's doing fractions. And so it's a lot of like show, you know, two-fourths show three-eighths, you know
01:19:14
◼
►
By filling in these pie pieces and it really seems like and this is not bad
01:19:18
◼
►
But it is what she did at school. It's just they want her to do more of it at home
01:19:21
◼
►
Which to my mind like I get the idea of the repetition in practice even the kind of you know
01:19:27
◼
►
Primacy and recency thing of trying it in different places like I can get all of that
01:19:30
◼
►
But this is one of those few legacy things that feels like something from our childhood
01:19:34
◼
►
We're really legitimately school was about teaching you to follow rules and I was about teaching you to like habituate yourself to certain kind
01:19:40
◼
►
You know what? I mean? Like yeah that has changed so much from when we were kids
01:19:45
◼
►
I mean, I don't know if you ever have gone through stuff with your kid with like creative spelling
01:19:49
◼
►
We're like kids are encouraged to just try to spell stuff. However
01:19:55
◼
►
It did me at first we had a conference with the teacher about it
01:19:59
◼
►
But you know, I was a kid
01:20:01
◼
►
There's no way you would see something on the wall outside your classroom with a typo on it. I'd be now with red pen. I
01:20:06
◼
►
Jonas's school that I don't know when I don't think they started
01:20:12
◼
►
Trying to enforce correct spelling until fourth grade like like first second third grade
01:20:17
◼
►
It's to spell it spell everything however you want and somehow the teachers are adept at reading it
01:20:22
◼
►
But I would was like I don't need I can't even you gotta unhook your mind and just in my case
01:20:26
◼
►
You got to read it phonetically
01:20:27
◼
►
I mean it depends on which teeth my daughter is missing because she'll pronounce things with a lisp like when she writes it
01:20:33
◼
►
But but but I was I was a little concerned in a way that I'm usually not where I was like
01:20:38
◼
►
Is this okay? Is she wired right? Like should that's exactly what I miss?
01:20:41
◼
►
I I had the exact same experience and then I would open my eyes as I went to one day
01:20:48
◼
►
I went to pick him up at school and outside his classroom was the it was
01:20:53
◼
►
some project that the whole class had done everybody's was up on the
01:20:57
◼
►
Tacked to the the court board
01:20:59
◼
►
runs on the on the hallway and I started looking at everybody else's in this class and they were all exactly the same
01:21:05
◼
►
Like in terms of spelling illiterate
01:21:10
◼
►
It's embarrassing at first because you're like, but is mine the only kid who doesn't know how to spell, you know words
01:21:16
◼
►
Alright, I thought oh shoo. That's a big relief. I kept thinking there's got to be we're gonna get an uncomfortable
01:21:23
◼
►
teacher conference where they're gonna say hey
01:21:25
◼
►
He's got it and then no it never happened and then like all of a sudden in fourth grade though
01:21:29
◼
►
They started like correcting their spelling and the kids were all like what the fuck? Yeah, right exactly
01:21:35
◼
►
Well, I you know, I I get it I think I mean it's who knows why anything does anything John
01:21:40
◼
►
It's so it's so conceited for us to imagine that we can understand anything as laypeople about how something works out or does it
01:21:47
◼
►
But I will say you know what when we brought this up with her teacher
01:21:50
◼
►
I'm sure this is super interesting to people who want to know about the Apple ecosystem, but people but but we went in there
01:21:56
◼
►
Like hey, is this is this a good thing? She said look it's first grade, you know
01:21:58
◼
►
She's at that time six
01:22:00
◼
►
Like we I just want her to come in here and write as much as she can every day and I was like
01:22:05
◼
►
But shouldn't she just be writing a lowercase letter A
01:22:08
◼
►
40 times on a page like we did?
01:22:10
◼
►
And the funny part is she does.
01:22:13
◼
►
She loves, I think she has graphophilia.
01:22:16
◼
►
We put on like a Harry Potter audio book
01:22:20
◼
►
when she gets home from school,
01:22:20
◼
►
and she sits there and makes art and draws and writes
01:22:23
◼
►
for like two hours.
01:22:24
◼
►
I never would have.
01:22:25
◼
►
I mean, I would have scribbled a little bit
01:22:27
◼
►
and colored maybe at her age,
01:22:29
◼
►
but now she's doing stuff.
01:22:30
◼
►
She's teaching herself cursive by tracing.
01:22:33
◼
►
had zero just in cursive when I was seven six or seven years old no teaching
01:22:37
◼
►
it now to herself because it's fun because it's all it I guess just all
01:22:40
◼
►
seems doable so why wouldn't I just teach myself cursive I guess my only
01:22:45
◼
►
interest in it when I was that early is I want to be able to read my parents
01:22:48
◼
►
and stuff not like like diaries or whatever but it seemed like my parents
01:22:52
◼
►
had this secret language that I couldn't understand like my mom would write a
01:22:56
◼
►
shopping list and I couldn't read it right right right right well you know
01:23:00
◼
►
It's to state the obvious. I think you know when you have stuff that you want to read when you have an incentive
01:23:06
◼
►
I mean the obvious example being like oh a list of ideas for presents or something or anything like whatever stuff on screen
01:23:13
◼
►
And in my case with my kid comics like she can suss out a huge amount of the story from the sequential art
01:23:18
◼
►
But then she can also like put together enough of the words to know what it says without me reading it which I find
01:23:25
◼
►
Fantastic, you know, it's it's weird though. Cuz like I'm I'm I have really mixed feelings about a lot of stuff with the school stuff
01:23:32
◼
►
We've got the common core here, you know
01:23:34
◼
►
Which is the I guess the progeny of no child left behind
01:23:37
◼
►
Was lots of things you have to teach a certain way you got to be tested a certain way and some of it
01:23:42
◼
►
Did you have new math when you were a kid remember new math and your parents were always confused
01:23:47
◼
►
They there's kind of a new version of new math that is completely mind-boggling
01:23:51
◼
►
Yeah, I didn't like the way they taught math and it did I I don't think it worked very well for Jonas I
01:23:56
◼
►
Math is he's just not not a math person
01:24:00
◼
►
Yeah, and I was I took to math like a fish to water
01:24:03
◼
►
Like I was always very very I never I don't even know how I learned everything
01:24:06
◼
►
They you could just show it to me as a kid
01:24:08
◼
►
And I figured it out some kids just see stuff and it's just in
01:24:12
◼
►
Really maybe because I'm a slightly visual person
01:24:14
◼
►
I think about like some people people with perfect pitch basically see notes in the way that I see colors
01:24:20
◼
►
people with met see relationships that I don't see and I think some people are really just wired that way and
01:24:26
◼
►
Boy, god bless the man or woman who can identify that in your kid and and know what that's gonna mean for them both up
01:24:33
◼
►
And down as they go forward the thing that they didn't do
01:24:36
◼
►
And I don't even know what the what the teaching method is, but they when I was in first grade
01:24:40
◼
►
We memorized everything you had to memorize 6 plus 7 is 13 7 plus 6 is 13
01:24:46
◼
►
seven but yet memorize them all and we had speed tests and that's all I remember from first grade math is
01:24:52
◼
►
You know, we'd get like a sheet with 40
01:24:56
◼
►
You know basic addition problems like that and you'd only have like 90 seconds or two minutes to do it
01:25:02
◼
►
And if you know it was expected that some of the kids weren't even gonna complete the whole thing because it was not just about
01:25:07
◼
►
Accuracy was about you know getting fast at it
01:25:09
◼
►
Jonas's school never, you know
01:25:14
◼
►
Encouraged any kind of memorization of anything and in fact really I just remember times tables like in third grade going on forever and ever
01:25:20
◼
►
No, and in fact they were allowed to
01:25:23
◼
►
Like with times tables, you know, like could you just like the the matrix, you know, the sick, you know
01:25:29
◼
►
The numbers across numbers down. Yeah, you go down and over and you can get the the product
01:25:35
◼
►
They were allowed to use that chart when they take tests Wow and it to me is crazy because it's like well
01:25:41
◼
►
That's what the test was when we were kids.
01:25:43
◼
►
Yeah, and it takes them forever to complete a math test.
01:25:49
◼
►
That's amazing.
01:25:50
◼
►
In third grade, that's what we did every day,
01:25:52
◼
►
is we practiced products.
01:25:53
◼
►
And then we had the same, in a different order, mixed up.
01:25:57
◼
►
We did the same 100 problems then,
01:26:00
◼
►
and that's what we did every single day.
01:26:02
◼
►
But my take on it as a parent is I'm certainly
01:26:06
◼
►
interested in this education, but I'm not
01:26:08
◼
►
going to pretend like I'm an education expert
01:26:10
◼
►
and that the people who are education experts,
01:26:14
◼
►
just because this confounds my common sense approach,
01:26:19
◼
►
I don't wanna be that guy.
01:26:20
◼
►
- There are so many of that guy, Jon.
01:26:25
◼
►
- My wife does a lot of stuff with PTA.
01:26:27
◼
►
She's really involved in the PTA.
01:26:29
◼
►
And there are so many of that guy, or gal.
01:26:32
◼
►
And it's just the person who comes in
01:26:34
◼
►
who read something in The New Yorker,
01:26:35
◼
►
and they got some ideas about how to really shake things up.
01:26:39
◼
►
It's nothing different from your 22 year old friend who's giving you advice on child rearing.
01:26:43
◼
►
You know it's like I'm and let me just say in terms of disclosure nothing in this world is
01:26:48
◼
►
more humbling or educational for me than walking in like volunteering in the classroom going on a
01:26:52
◼
►
field trip and I realize how much I am doing horribly wrong compared to these teachers and
01:26:56
◼
►
I'm the one with all the smart ideas right I went to college and stuff.
01:26:59
◼
►
You've been such a dumb ass.
01:27:01
◼
►
So I don't go into the you know I'm certainly thinking I it seems to me that they could it
01:27:07
◼
►
it would do well if they would just spend a month or two honing in on memorizing, you
01:27:11
◼
►
know, some of these math facts. But I don't go into the teacher conference and say, here's
01:27:16
◼
►
what you should do, you know?
01:27:17
◼
►
Yeah, yeah, I kind of don't, I have to admit, I don't understand how you would not do that.
01:27:22
◼
►
But then I look at her homework, and I'm sure you've seen numerous things, there's probably
01:27:25
◼
►
whole tumblers devoted to the whackadoodle way they're supposed to do math now with these
01:27:30
◼
►
word problems and stuff like that. Fact, fact, fact, families and stuff like that. Where
01:27:35
◼
►
It's you know, and again, it's kind of a meme, but you'll see stuff where it's like, no,
01:27:41
◼
►
no, you don't subtract 111 from 217 like that.
01:27:45
◼
►
You have to do this from that and this from that.
01:27:47
◼
►
And then imagine that there's a hundred of these and three left over.
01:27:49
◼
►
And I'm like, I honestly don't know how to do math that way, but I guess there's a reason.
01:27:54
◼
►
I guess there's a reason people like you probably like, you figured out a lot of the tricks
01:27:58
◼
►
about getting close to something and then figuring out the rest, right?
01:28:01
◼
►
You figured that out a long time ago.
01:28:03
◼
►
You know what I'm talking about?
01:28:04
◼
►
people have that, learn these tricks for a quick estimation and
01:28:09
◼
►
then getting it right after the estimation.
01:28:10
◼
►
I bet you've been good at that forever.
01:28:13
◼
►
>> Yeah, it's always just came naturally.
01:28:15
◼
►
The one thing I remember being very proud of myself for is at some point,
01:28:20
◼
►
I don't know when, I don't know when I learned everything.
01:28:23
◼
►
But it was third, fourth, fifth grade, somewhere in there, probably before fifth.
01:28:27
◼
►
But at some point, but we hadn't learned long division yet as a class.
01:28:32
◼
►
we took a standardized test.
01:28:34
◼
►
What did we used to take, the Iowa test?
01:28:36
◼
►
- Oh right, yes, yes, yes, that does ring a bell.
01:28:39
◼
►
- I don't know why we took the Iowa test,
01:28:41
◼
►
but we used to, I grew up in Pennsylvania,
01:28:43
◼
►
but we took the Iowa test of basic skills.
01:28:46
◼
►
And it was like the SAT for grade school kids.
01:28:51
◼
►
And there was long division on it.
01:28:54
◼
►
And I was like, ooh, and I kind of had like test anxiety.
01:28:58
◼
►
But I somehow figured out a way to get the answer.
01:29:01
◼
►
Like I somehow taught myself long division before we ever learned it.
01:29:05
◼
►
And I remember my teacher asked me, I had totally aced it.
01:29:08
◼
►
I got like an, I think the highest score, it was like a percentage.
01:29:11
◼
►
I got like a 99% on the math.
01:29:13
◼
►
And my teacher asked me, how'd you get this one?
01:29:15
◼
►
And I explained it.
01:29:16
◼
►
And he was like, that's fascinating,
01:29:20
◼
►
cuz that's not the right way to do it, but it is a way to get the answer.
01:29:24
◼
►
>> Yeah, it's funny, if you think about it,
01:29:25
◼
►
when you ask somebody to show their work, on the one hand, it's completely sensible.
01:29:28
◼
►
Like especially something like long division,
01:29:30
◼
►
showing your work is an indication
01:29:33
◼
►
that you understand how to solve this.
01:29:35
◼
►
But what it really shows is you learn how to solve this
01:29:38
◼
►
in the way that I taught it.
01:29:40
◼
►
'Cause the thing is, at least in arithmetic,
01:29:44
◼
►
maybe not in higher math, but in arithmetic,
01:29:45
◼
►
there's an answer.
01:29:47
◼
►
Like this times this will always be that.
01:29:48
◼
►
There's no quantum mechanics at the basic arithmetic level.
01:29:51
◼
►
And so the thing is, if you can just look at a problem
01:29:54
◼
►
like whatever, 17 times nine, and know what that answer is
01:29:57
◼
►
without having to show your work.
01:29:59
◼
►
It seems kind of weird,
01:30:00
◼
►
'cause some people just see those numbers.
01:30:03
◼
►
I mean, I really admire people who can do that.
01:30:04
◼
►
Where they just, you know what I'm talking about?
01:30:06
◼
►
It's almost like a Rain Man kind of thing,
01:30:08
◼
►
where some people can just see that.
01:30:10
◼
►
They don't need to show the work,
01:30:11
◼
►
'cause there's no work to be shown.
01:30:12
◼
►
It's just that this times that will always be that,
01:30:14
◼
►
and I know that.
01:30:15
◼
►
- Soon as you said 17 times nine, I thought 153.
01:30:20
◼
►
- Is that what it is?
01:30:22
◼
►
- Are you kidding?
01:30:23
◼
►
- Because you just do--
01:30:30
◼
►
153 spotlight says right because you do ten times you do ten times nine to get 90 and then you do seven times nine to
01:30:36
◼
►
Get 63 and you add them together. Oh my god. I hate you. Oh
01:30:39
◼
►
My god, you might you might as well be like telling my future from tea leaves. I can't believe you
01:30:44
◼
►
Do you know what that we had one time with the teacher conference?
01:30:47
◼
►
This is I love I love having you on the show
01:30:49
◼
►
But one time I did talk to him with Jonas's teacher about it a little not in a way where I was trying to prescribe
01:30:54
◼
►
How I thought they should teach math
01:30:56
◼
►
Sprouts things he found on the internet
01:30:58
◼
►
No, not at all
01:31:00
◼
►
It's just sort of like what's your take and and her explanation and I do believe this is there's there's not as much point to
01:31:06
◼
►
Memorizing this stuff going through life because everybody has computers with them everywhere. They go, you know
01:31:12
◼
►
It's she's sort of like more or less, you know
01:31:15
◼
►
And but in a way that made a lot of sense to me that what you know
01:31:18
◼
►
If we teach them these story based ideas, but know that you know on the assumption that they're going to actually use
01:31:25
◼
►
Calculators and stuff, you know to do it. They'll understand the what's actually necessary. I don't know. There's something like that. Hmm
01:31:32
◼
►
Like what's the point of learning all this stuff if you don't you know
01:31:37
◼
►
If you're never gonna actually do it by hand anyway
01:31:39
◼
►
Well, you know back to that idea though of what's what people's natural kind of faculties are
01:31:44
◼
►
To use that word story in a slightly broader sense
01:31:48
◼
►
I mean if you think about how many of the things you learn in elementary school
01:31:51
◼
►
Will either be either connect with you or they won't based on whether you get the story
01:31:56
◼
►
So the problem is if you get hit history taught in an uninteresting way or by an uninspired teacher
01:32:01
◼
►
You see it as a collection of facts to be memorized instead of seeing that as a story, you know
01:32:06
◼
►
And there's a reason why until I went to college
01:32:07
◼
►
I still continue to call everything and including arithmetic just math because that was math not understanding
01:32:14
◼
►
There's there's a bigger story to tell here than plus-minus, you know times and divided by you know what I mean?
01:32:20
◼
►
it's like but there are some people who really have that natural affinity of being able to just look at these patterns and it and
01:32:24
◼
►
It makes sense and maybe they're learning a word for what that's actually called
01:32:29
◼
►
But you know gosh, I just feel like having to have a teachers
01:32:33
◼
►
Who are able to to suss that out and then put up with the parents who come in and give them things they found in?
01:32:39
◼
►
Mother Jones. Yeah
01:32:41
◼
►
What a job I do I do think and it sounds like it's the same
01:32:46
◼
►
With with your school. I do feel like the one dad so the math, uh, you know, I don't know
01:32:51
◼
►
What do I know I I kind of think they're doing it wrong, but whatever
01:32:55
◼
►
But with the writing I do kind of see where they're going and where I do object to the idea that
01:33:02
◼
►
Spelling doesn't count but eventually it does start to count but I do that
01:33:05
◼
►
We had the same thing where there they just want the kids to write
01:33:08
◼
►
Stories like from like first grade on and I do see that there that's very different
01:33:14
◼
►
I don't remember ever just writing. I mean when I was in first grade we used to you know
01:33:18
◼
►
I mean it was the what you were writing about was a McGuffin
01:33:21
◼
►
The the whole idea of having like what you did over Thanksgiving when nobody really cared with the what you did over Thanksgiving
01:33:26
◼
►
They wanted to make sure you could still write in cursive and knew how to punctuate it and spell it right, right?
01:33:31
◼
►
Where is it? No, it wasn't really telling writing anything. It was about demonstrating you had the mechanical skills. You've been taught
01:33:38
◼
►
Yeah, whereas now it seems like it's more about they really want to train those muscles in their minds at an early age to be
01:33:45
◼
►
able to express take your thoughts and express them and
01:33:48
◼
►
That worrying about spelling is just all it's just roadblocks to getting that out on the page and you know as a professional
01:33:56
◼
►
Writer there is a line. There's certainly a very common line of advice for adult writers people writing that your first draft
01:34:05
◼
►
you should just go just get it on the page don't worry turn off the thing that makes red underlines and stuff like that and
01:34:11
◼
►
just go and get it out on the page and then go back and
01:34:16
◼
►
Do the stuff like oh you didn't even uppercase that the character to start that sentence you you know
01:34:22
◼
►
You misspelled some words you you know, totally need commas to close. Don't worry about that in the first draft
01:34:28
◼
►
I don't really write like that. I kind of well cuz you know, I don't need to but but what you're describing
01:34:33
◼
►
- I totally agree with you, 'cause what I feel like,
01:34:36
◼
►
and I might be oversimplifying this,
01:34:37
◼
►
but I really do feel like something
01:34:41
◼
►
that always inhibited me a little bit was,
01:34:43
◼
►
if there was one thing where I got it a little bit,
01:34:47
◼
►
it wasn't things like English language arts, you know?
01:34:50
◼
►
And the idea of having to write a paper
01:34:52
◼
►
was not the thing that worried me or was fretful to me.
01:34:56
◼
►
The thing that I didn't like was having to go
01:34:57
◼
►
and do the process of doing the index cards.
01:35:00
◼
►
I'd like to index cards, I always have,
01:35:01
◼
►
but having to do the index cards,
01:35:03
◼
►
turn the index cards into an outline
01:35:04
◼
►
that you have to turn in as part of the theme.
01:35:07
◼
►
Whereas I feel like, man, I could write this thing
01:35:09
◼
►
in my sleep, but all these other,
01:35:11
◼
►
this weird artificial scaffolding
01:35:14
◼
►
that I guess proves I learned your process,
01:35:16
◼
►
like that always got in the way.
01:35:18
◼
►
And I think there's still that voice
01:35:19
◼
►
in a lot of people's heads if they wanna write anything
01:35:22
◼
►
where they're gonna, they would never in a million years
01:35:25
◼
►
turn off the red underlining
01:35:26
◼
►
'cause that's how they know they're doing it right,
01:35:27
◼
►
even if it doesn't make any sense
01:35:29
◼
►
what they're actually writing.
01:35:30
◼
►
No, I had the same thing.
01:35:32
◼
►
We learned in my school, elementary school,
01:35:35
◼
►
and it was year after year, it wasn't just one teacher.
01:35:38
◼
►
It was the curriculum was this sort of formal...
01:35:41
◼
►
You mentioned the index cards.
01:35:43
◼
►
I actually forgot about that.
01:35:45
◼
►
I remember the outline, but I do think that there was a time
01:35:47
◼
►
when we were supposed to use index cards too.
01:35:49
◼
►
- When you went to the library, did your research.
01:35:51
◼
►
There was, in my case, a pretty prescriptive way
01:35:54
◼
►
you're supposed to make notes on every index card.
01:35:56
◼
►
- Right, and the outline had weird rules.
01:35:58
◼
►
you had to start with uppercase letters
01:36:01
◼
►
and the next level of hierarchy was lowercase letters.
01:36:04
◼
►
- And that all went into the grade.
01:36:05
◼
►
Like if you used a numeral two instead of a Roman numeral two
01:36:08
◼
►
at the wrong place, that was marked against you.
01:36:10
◼
►
And it's like, what better way
01:36:11
◼
►
to disrupt somebody's thought process
01:36:13
◼
►
than by having them think about what kind of digit to use
01:36:15
◼
►
to brainstorm.
01:36:16
◼
►
- Right, just to get your ideas out, right.
01:36:19
◼
►
And I remember the Roman numerals part,
01:36:22
◼
►
'cause that was something that I was never good at.
01:36:25
◼
►
Absolutely never good at Roman numerals.
01:36:28
◼
►
once I got past five it was you know with the whole thing where you put the ones before the digit and
01:36:34
◼
►
Never never worked for me. I mean I still have to sit there and when I'm watching like like a Super Bowl
01:36:41
◼
►
Kind of location. I still have to mentally sit there and do it the equivalent of arithmetic to figure out Oh
01:36:47
◼
►
39 I have no idea if the Super Bowl is right except
01:36:51
◼
►
No, I don't I when they hit 50 50 was awesome because it was I don't even know what it was
01:36:59
◼
►
Just like an L or something like CM I
01:37:02
◼
►
Don't know. I hate the Super Bowl with the Roman normal. It's just freaking I've I really I wish I would have made like a public
01:37:09
◼
►
Campaign for it. I you know, it's really unnecessarily pretentious given the audience
01:37:13
◼
►
Once they guess it seems fancy
01:37:16
◼
►
But once they hit 50 that's where they should have stopped and just you know
01:37:22
◼
►
Just Super Bowl 2014 Super Bowl 2015 get in some ugly numbers
01:37:27
◼
►
It's all ugly at this point. It's really bad. It was yeah, it only made sense
01:37:33
◼
►
It's like with the rocky films. Yeah, they use Roman never go beyond the number of rocky films that you know what?
01:37:38
◼
►
That's Gruber's rule. No. Yeah, it's your do if you need more than that you use a usual use a numeral
01:37:44
◼
►
That's yeah exactly rocky the the upper bound on on Roman numerals is where that was like seven something like that nine twelve
01:37:52
◼
►
I don't know but they made the most recent one they didn't put a roman numeral behind even they wouldn't break the rocky rule like
01:37:57
◼
►
They stopped adding roman numerals and made like in a rocky forever or something Rocky Balboa. Yeah. Yeah, that's it Rocky Balboa
01:38:07
◼
►
head on that guy
01:38:09
◼
►
Rocky films god. I love Wikipedia. I'm looking at it right now. Here we go. They went to Rocky 5
01:38:14
◼
►
That's that and then they went to Rocky Balboa Creed one called Creed
01:38:18
◼
►
That must be upcoming. I think I heard about this
01:38:21
◼
►
spin off. It's Creed's grandson? Michael B. Jordan? Is that the guy from The Wire?
01:38:29
◼
►
Yeah I think so. Damn look at that. It's uh it's what's his name it's uh is that
01:38:33
◼
►
Wallace? That's Wallace. Wallace is everywhere now this is crazy. Yeah.
01:38:41
◼
►
So they went to Rocky 5 and then that's it. You know what I'll you know I'm just
01:38:46
◼
►
gonna say on the strength I'm okay with 7. I think 8 is ugly. I think 9
01:38:51
◼
►
is excreble I don't know I don't look at an IX oh see when you start going
01:38:56
◼
►
before the numbers oh that's just dick although I think I told you this when I
01:39:00
◼
►
was a kid our creature feature was on WX IX channel 19 which you got to give him
01:39:06
◼
►
credit that's pretty great X IX yeah yeah because it's you know it's got like
01:39:10
◼
►
a nice what's that called too clever by half now but the palin palindrome that's
01:39:19
◼
►
Yeah, right, right, right a symmetry. Oh, yeah, exactly. There's a there's a pretty visual symmetry. Mmm
01:39:26
◼
►
The Roman neural system
01:39:30
◼
►
How did they even how did it's amazing that a
01:39:35
◼
►
Culture that came up with that had any success at all. Let alone like a continent spanning Empire
01:39:42
◼
►
Oh hundred percent it really seems like the kind of thing you make deliberately difficult to confuse normal people
01:39:49
◼
►
It's like one two and three all right. You're on with you, so here's how it works. This is a one okay?
01:39:56
◼
►
It's one mark. Here's two okay. You make two marks. Can you guess what three is is it three marks? Yep, and what about four?
01:40:05
◼
►
Right immediately. What's a V hang on? We're not there yet first learn IV you gotta learn IV before you learn V
01:40:10
◼
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Right at that point in the discussion you only have to get to four before you automatically
01:40:16
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Like whoever came up with it you got to say no, it's uh, I think that's a it's like a Turing thing
01:40:23
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►
It's like it just it doesn't make sense
01:40:25
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You have to know about five
01:40:28
◼
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It's like those directions where like you realize you should have read them all the way through before you started
01:40:36
◼
►
We like you know that eight has something you were supposed to have done back in step four it's
01:40:40
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Exactly exactly that's probably why my cable went out
01:40:44
◼
►
I skipped skip step. I didn't read step eight before I did step six
01:40:50
◼
►
No, but you know how it's like like our our decimal notation it breaks down after a certain large number
01:40:57
◼
►
and that's why we switched to the exponential notation for very very large numbers and
01:41:02
◼
►
You know that's and that's something I'd never made sense to me or it made sense
01:41:06
◼
►
But I always had to go back and look it up and it's just telling you how many zeros are on the ten or something
01:41:12
◼
►
But it's because you know for dealing with those truly staggeringly large numbers writing it all out doesn't make sense
01:41:19
◼
►
Roman numerals break down at four
01:41:21
◼
►
It's one thing with pie
01:41:24
◼
►
Like people have their reasons for wanting to get in 50 to 50 places in pie and that's a level of complexity
01:41:29
◼
►
That we accept even if not to always totally understand but to have an idea of a fucking broken for that's I
01:41:36
◼
►
Mean, it seems like that's a good first draft, but let's try that again
01:41:40
◼
►
Now can you do four single strokes is that acceptable as an alternative I think IV is canonical I
01:41:47
◼
►
think as I recall I believe that it's it's
01:41:52
◼
►
It's sort of like the in an English language. It's like it's gonna get the the italicized informal
01:41:58
◼
►
Oh the INF yeah, yeah, I think you're right. Yeah. Well, I don't know if you know, but I'm a third I
01:42:04
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►
Am I my father and my grandfather share my name or I share their name
01:42:09
◼
►
I should say so I've had I've had to live with walking around putting Roman numerals after my name and
01:42:14
◼
►
Nothing makes you seem like a bigger dick faster than having Roman numerals after your name
01:42:20
◼
►
That's always the bad guy in like an 80s 80s comedy
01:42:23
◼
►
For legal purposes you you you have to well, they're dead now, so I think I can fly on that a little better
01:42:29
◼
►
Yeah, but I'm sitting here look at this one is an I five is a V 10 is an X 50 is an L
01:42:35
◼
►
So you can't even that was it to X X X X X?
01:42:38
◼
►
So I was right it was there was the one glorious year where the super it was like Super Bowl L
01:42:44
◼
►
Right, but even that it was at least it was understandable
01:42:48
◼
►
But even that it kind of looks stupid right because when you think it sounds like a Samsung tablet
01:42:53
◼
►
Right, when you think Super Bowl, you think a lot of X's and you know.
01:42:58
◼
►
And you know what, one of the reasons I feel like it stuck is that X, you know I've said
01:43:03
◼
►
this many times in the show, X is clearly the coolest letter of the alphabet.
01:43:06
◼
►
Yeah absolutely.
01:43:07
◼
►
Like the whole logic behind calling the Mac operating system OS 10 is just that the X
01:43:15
◼
►
It's got diagonals and diagonals look great, it's just diagonals.
01:43:19
◼
►
And they cross, it looks super.
01:43:22
◼
►
X-ray vision, you know, that's you know, the the letter for secret agents
01:43:27
◼
►
X-rated films, you know
01:43:31
◼
►
Right. It's you know, that's what you get on the smoker channels. Yes, when you get your smokers. That's right
01:43:36
◼
►
No, it's been and I feel like that's why the Super Bowl stuck with it because they got to put a lot of X's in
01:43:41
◼
►
The name. Why did they always do Roman numerals for years on old movies?
01:43:45
◼
►
Is that you got the tradition or a rule or like an industry thing?
01:43:50
◼
►
You know what? I mean when you saw for the year. Yeah, they would always show on TV shows and movies to show
01:43:55
◼
►
The year was made it would always be in Roman numerals. I
01:43:57
◼
►
think it was just like a format, you know, like like a
01:44:02
◼
►
Like a tradition yeah. Yeah. I think it was just like a tradition Tarantino did it on one of his
01:44:09
◼
►
Like retro like that Roadhouse movie or whatever the hell it was called
01:44:14
◼
►
Yeah, when you see it like a title screen that's got a Roman numeral date on it that that really is like a throwback
01:44:20
◼
►
Yeah, it's like the expendables maybe can't tell I don't know. Let me take a break
01:44:25
◼
►
I got another sponsor to talk about I want to I want to tell everybody about him
01:44:28
◼
►
It's another longtime friend of the show return sponsor our good friends at igloo igloo
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Now they that's the intranet you'll actually like
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It's built with easy-to-use apps like shared calendars Twitter like micro blogs file sharing task management and more
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So you put your team together, you start your own little Twitter microblog thing on igloo
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and it's like you have a Twitter that is private to your team instead of being out in the public.
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But that way you can just comment on things, keep it all within your team for privacy purposes.
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Now they have responsive design, everything works great on your phone, your Android phone,
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right away. It's all responsive. You can review documents, you post project updates, change
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administrative settings, or even complain about why there's a U2 album stuck in your
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iTunes right there from your phone. Everything you can do on Igloo you can do right from
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the phone. When you design your igloo, you have a whole bunch of choices. You get to
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change the changes you make, carry across all devices. So it's not just like, oh there's
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this one special look for the iPhone, but then when you make the design changes you
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only see them on the desktop. No, the design changes you make go all the way from your
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brand new retina iMac right down to your iPhone. They have a file preview engine, fully HTML
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compatible so you can preview everything online yeah add comments new versions of
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files everything you want to do here's the thing they want to talk about this
01:46:20
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thing called Gartner's magic quadrant now this is all outside my wheelhouse
01:46:25
◼
►
this is Casey's terms is out in the parking lot but but it's a big deal for
01:46:30
◼
►
for people who work you know probably a lot of you who are listening to the show
01:46:35
◼
►
who work out there and were things like white papers or things you encounter all the time.
01:46:41
◼
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So just this past week, Gartner released their famed magic quadrant for social software in
01:46:48
◼
►
the workplace. That's a white paper they put out every year. Igloo appears for the sixth
01:46:54
◼
►
consecutive year. That's right alongside, this is who they're up there with, Microsoft,
01:46:59
◼
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Google, VMware, Salesforce, and SAP. So it's a report that values the size of the
01:47:07
◼
►
vendor. In Gartner's terms this is viability. Igloo is praised for their
01:47:13
◼
►
responsiveness and customer experience. Here's an excerpt right from the
01:47:18
◼
►
Gartner's profile of Igloo. This is Gartner's words. Feedback from Igloo's
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reference customers was consistently positive. They praised the products
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◼
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quick deployment configuration and customization flexibility with self-service options for
01:47:32
◼
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non-technical users, control over branding and information organization and ease of use.
01:47:38
◼
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They also praise the responsiveness of Igloo as an organization.
01:47:43
◼
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So really there it is right there.
01:47:45
◼
►
It's a third party, you know, Gartner telling you exactly the things that I've been telling
01:47:49
◼
►
you about Igloo for months.
01:47:50
◼
►
telling you uh it was all kinds of responsive
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◼
►
right and it well what it is is it easy it supposed to ask their whole point
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◼
►
their whole point is that all these internet's these legacy ones like
01:48:01
◼
►
SharePoint and the old portal technology
01:48:03
◼
►
were a huge pain in the ass they were confusing to set up confusing to
01:48:08
◼
►
and confusing as hell to use that's the big thing
01:48:11
◼
►
I think is that they were confused I remember I when I had you know had jobs
01:48:15
◼
►
the share always all those kinds of apps always even if you got the open source
01:48:20
◼
►
You always kind of felt like it was the worst of every world they were they were difficult to deal with there were some
01:48:25
◼
►
They're real flimsy. They were real ugly to use and nobody wanted to use them. It wasn't just that they weren't fun
01:48:31
◼
►
It was just that you every time you I would use those kinds of apps
01:48:34
◼
►
I would think like I don't understand who this is for and I've yeah
01:48:37
◼
►
I've used igloo and like you understand it you go in there you turn on the stuff you need turn off the stuff you don't
01:48:42
◼
►
You get exactly what you want and it actually works and it is fun to use right? It's you know, it's to me
01:48:47
◼
►
it's like the difference between like the old smartphones before the iPhone and it would
01:48:51
◼
►
be all these things and I don't even know what this is. What is this? How do I even
01:48:55
◼
►
make an event in the calendar? I don't even know how to get there. And then you got the
01:48:59
◼
►
iPhone and it's like, "Well, I get it. I just tap this calendar and there's my calendar
01:49:03
◼
►
and I hit this button. I go back to home." Well, Igloo is like that for team sharing.
01:49:08
◼
►
Here's the thing that's amazing to me. Free to use with up to 10 people. So if you have
01:49:14
◼
►
A small team that's less than 10 people, you just get to use it forever, like in perpetuity
01:49:19
◼
►
going forward without even paying for it.
01:49:21
◼
►
They're cool with that.
01:49:23
◼
►
And if you are from a bigger organization, you can try it out with up to 10 people before
01:49:29
◼
►
you spend a nickel to make sure that everything I'm telling you about it is true.
01:49:34
◼
►
And then they have really great, you know, once you go past 10 people, they have really,
01:49:37
◼
►
really great rates that are way less than you pay for competing, crappier internets.
01:49:43
◼
►
Where do you go?
01:49:44
◼
►
here's the address igloo software.com/the talk show igloo software.com/the talk show
01:49:54
◼
►
and then they'll know you came right here from the show so my thanks to them
01:49:58
◼
►
good people really good people MCM LXVI that's the year I was born what a mess
01:50:09
◼
►
It's horrible.
01:50:14
◼
►
I almost feel like it's one of those things like dropping in some casual Latin where it's
01:50:20
◼
►
It's exactly what it's like.
01:50:21
◼
►
I'm specifically mentioning this because I'm pretty sure you won't know what it means.
01:50:24
◼
►
Sui generis.
01:50:27
◼
►
And I spend a lot of time learning it.
01:50:31
◼
►
So now I'm going to--
01:50:32
◼
►
I don't want to sound fancy per se.
01:50:36
◼
►
Just dropping in some Roman numerals.
01:50:39
◼
►
And what kept this Novus Ordo Cyclorum?
01:50:42
◼
►
It's kind of a thing that's on my mind right now. How's your internet doing?
01:50:48
◼
►
I think it's good. Nice.
01:50:53
◼
►
Hey, so before we wrap this up.
01:50:56
◼
►
I don't want to say anything. It's your show.
01:50:59
◼
►
But I've noticed you had some length creep.
01:51:02
◼
►
And I don't know if it's not just, it would be nice to think that it's just Syracuse who
01:51:07
◼
►
I'm guessing broke your record.
01:51:09
◼
►
But there's been a lot of leakage time wise lately.
01:51:12
◼
►
Yeah, I don't know what to do about that.
01:51:15
◼
►
I'm not against it but I think, yeah, given that we're not talking about ecosystems, it's
01:51:19
◼
►
probably better we keep this one short but, you know.
01:51:22
◼
►
Well no, let's go meta on it though.
01:51:23
◼
►
That is good though.
01:51:24
◼
►
I do, I've absolutely posited, there's no denying it.
01:51:27
◼
►
This show has gotten longer.
01:51:29
◼
►
I used to try to keep it to be an hour because I thought an hour is what a show
01:51:33
◼
►
should be. I did. I've never done anything for an hour. I've never done anything physical for
01:51:40
◼
►
more than an hour and I've never done anything involving talking for less than
01:51:44
◼
►
an hour. I almost never hit that hour but by trying to keep it an
01:51:54
◼
►
hour I felt like it would you know it would keep it from going to two hours
01:52:01
◼
►
and then you know it would be like an hour and 37 minutes or an hour and 45
01:52:05
◼
►
minutes and now it just blows past the two-hour mark every show and a lot of
01:52:10
◼
►
people love it and here's the funny thing too I and I think part of it comes
01:52:15
◼
►
to the fact that that podcasting is still like a nascent medium like nobody
01:52:24
◼
►
It's still it is it our our idea of what they should be and when people will listen to them how often they'll listen to
01:52:33
◼
►
Them has it. It's still liquid, you know
01:52:36
◼
►
And I think online videos where when I first started I did this thing briefly called the Merlin show
01:52:40
◼
►
Which is an interview show I did for a while
01:52:42
◼
►
It was a tremendous amount of work for what we ended up getting but everything I heard from people was you can't put this thing
01:52:48
◼
►
Up, you can't have a YouTube video. That's more than 10 minutes long
01:52:51
◼
►
There is nobody in the entire world that will watch a video ten minutes, really
01:52:55
◼
►
That's like the stairway to heaven of online videos and it's like I don't know
01:52:59
◼
►
I think a 15-minute interview is not that much to expect with somebody but people just shake their heads data for podcasts
01:53:04
◼
►
I don't know if you remember this but a lot of the advice I heard early on was never go past 30 minutes
01:53:09
◼
►
Just because the files are so big and nobody will listen to anything for that long
01:53:15
◼
►
There there are technical factors like how long it takes to download and how much it costs to distribute and you know
01:53:23
◼
►
multiply the length of the show by the number of people doing it and
01:53:27
◼
►
The quality of the audio, you know, especially back when we were everybody was hosting it themselves with metered bandwidth
01:53:33
◼
►
I mean that was those were created in the pre-libsyn days. I was and this is not that long ago
01:53:37
◼
►
I mean we're talking like five six years ago. Yeah, like five six seven years ago
01:53:43
◼
►
It was a huge when when Dan and I first started doing the talk show
01:53:47
◼
►
It was just the download cost was a huge thing. It really was well if you think about it. It was closer in
01:53:53
◼
►
Relatively speaking in the in the grand scheme of things
01:53:57
◼
►
It was closer in time to the days of postage stamp size QuickTime videos then of like like I just watched
01:54:02
◼
►
Tim and Eric's Totino's commercial in 1080p and I watched it like five times and I don't think they're gonna be hurting because I did that
01:54:09
◼
►
YouTube can handle that but really seriously when podcast started and I went and got my first Libsyn account
01:54:13
◼
►
It was the first thing I knew of I mean, you know
01:54:15
◼
►
You can get this to an extent with Squarespace Libsyn was the first one I knew of that had unmetered bandwidth
01:54:19
◼
►
Which seemed completely untenable because it was so expensive if you had it on your hosted account just sitting there
01:54:26
◼
►
Your bandwidth would be gone in an hour. Even if your show wasn't that popular you're done
01:54:30
◼
►
Yeah, you couldn't have a 30 meg file that more than a few people downloaded
01:54:34
◼
►
yeah, and there's things to like
01:54:39
◼
►
the fact that people listen using different apps.
01:54:43
◼
►
So one person might have two or three downloads of the show
01:54:47
◼
►
because they've got one in iTunes at their work
01:54:50
◼
►
and they've got one in iTunes at their home
01:54:52
◼
►
and one in Overcast on their phone.
01:54:56
◼
►
And it really, really adds up at some point,
01:54:59
◼
►
but in today's world, the bandwidth is effectively free,
01:55:03
◼
►
which is crazy.
01:55:06
◼
►
I used to get we used to get complaints a lot when we went over an hour people would say man
01:55:11
◼
►
I love your show, but you got to keep it under an hour on the show with Dan
01:55:15
◼
►
Yeah, and this this version
01:55:18
◼
►
No, not this version. Yeah by the time because this version I think is it coming up on two years?
01:55:24
◼
►
I think it's coming up on I mean like like I'm off the top of my head
01:55:27
◼
►
Syracuse a guy English readers
01:55:30
◼
►
Stratechery guy like those all three of those were really good episodes
01:55:34
◼
►
They were really good talk show episodes and I bet not one of them was under two hours
01:55:37
◼
►
No, no, I think Syracuse was over three hours. Yeah, sir. Cusa was like 303. Those are all three and really good and it was for
01:55:45
◼
►
You know and Dave Whiskas actually literally does edit the show and a lot of times they the the version that gets published is a little
01:55:53
◼
►
shorter than what is recorded but
01:55:56
◼
►
The Syracuse this show we recorded the day before this cocoa conference in Philly was gonna happen
01:56:03
◼
►
Coco love which actually was a remarkably good. It was just a little 150 person indie Mac developer conference here in Philly
01:56:09
◼
►
It was really really great. I can't believe it was the first instance of it. That's great. It was that that's great to hear
01:56:17
◼
►
That's still thriving, you know, I've been to first conferences and they're never they're always they're cool like the first singleton
01:56:25
◼
►
Was great, but like the second Singleton was way better because they had like, you know, they knew like 15 things to do better
01:56:31
◼
►
They knew to get a better venue everything this Coco love conference
01:56:35
◼
►
I can't believe it was the first one because it was like a really great venue and everything ran on time and really great
01:56:41
◼
►
But anyway, Dave was speaking at it
01:56:44
◼
►
And Brent Simmons was flying in so and he needed you know
01:56:49
◼
►
He was gonna spend but I really wanted the show to come out that day Friday
01:56:52
◼
►
So Syracuse and I recorded knowing we better not screw up. Hopefully we won't you know, we don't want to have any kind of necessary edits
01:56:59
◼
►
so 303 was like
01:57:03
◼
►
That was I don't think I don't think Dave would have cut anything though, but we you know, it was a very tight show
01:57:09
◼
►
He's a he's very compact. I mean you'll remember that when he and Dan talked about
01:57:13
◼
►
Goodfellas, I mean was an hour longer than the movie
01:57:21
◼
►
if there ever if ever you know, sir, I
01:57:24
◼
►
it sounds crazy that your discussion of a movie would be longer than the movie, but if it happened with us and
01:57:30
◼
►
What was the one we did Glengarry Glen Ross? It's actually easier than you think
01:57:34
◼
►
Yeah, well because you can you know, if it's a really if it's truly a good movie there are details
01:57:40
◼
►
There's little things that go by like this in the movie, you know in a snap
01:57:44
◼
►
but that if you really stop and think about are worth a
01:57:48
◼
►
lengthy discussion especially if you're somebody like Siracusa with that movie
01:57:51
◼
►
or me with Glengarry Glen Ross maybe maybe like another one for me would be
01:57:54
◼
►
like Big Lebowski or there's certain movies where it isn't just that I like
01:57:58
◼
►
them it isn't just that I think they're really good it isn't just that I have
01:58:01
◼
►
things to say about them it's just that there's so many things nobody's ever
01:58:04
◼
►
bothered to ask me about that I thought yeah I know you're like this there's so
01:58:08
◼
►
many things I've been thinking about about this thing for years that no one
01:58:11
◼
►
has ever asked me about and this is the only chance in the entire world I'm
01:58:13
◼
►
I'm gonna get to talk about this unified field theory about like, you know
01:58:17
◼
►
In your case like a single point perspective with Stanley Kubrick
01:58:21
◼
►
Like how many times when I get to talk about that?
01:58:22
◼
►
How many times you get to talk about the way Steven Spielberg uses thirds of the screen?
01:58:27
◼
►
It's like I'm probably the only person ever noticed this but like I got a lot to say about it
01:58:30
◼
►
Absolutely, I you know and
01:58:35
◼
►
Like I said rewind a little bit in the early days
01:58:38
◼
►
We used to get complaints when we go over an hour
01:58:40
◼
►
from some people and I understood it because I totally see like I you know it and I don't want to be
01:58:46
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corny about this but it is
01:58:49
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In a way that it's an honor that people read my stuff and read my writing
01:58:54
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It's in some ways even more of an honor that
01:58:56
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People listen to this show or when I appear on other people's podcasts because it's even more of your time
01:59:02
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It takes longer to listen to a podcast just jump in and sip a little bit off of a 300 word blog post
01:59:08
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I mean if you're gonna sit down to an interview if you're gonna tuck into a Syracuse interview, you better bring a sandwich
01:59:13
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You really a lot of people
01:59:15
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Jonas was just saying to me about how when he notices when he plays video games like Nintendo games and they put
01:59:22
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again the cutscenes and they're the characters on screen talk and they put the
01:59:27
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Subtitles underneath that he always reads them even though, you know
01:59:31
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They're talking and I said, you know why I said I do the same thing
01:59:35
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And I kind of don't like and I said, you know why I think it's because you read faster than you can listen
01:59:39
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And he's like, yeah, that's true
01:59:40
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Like you've already read the dialogue before they're even halfway through the sentence and it's like, you know
01:59:45
◼
►
So people can read Daring Fireball way faster than they can listen to the show
01:59:48
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So it's a real honor and so when people would complain that the show is too long
01:59:51
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I'd think well, you know
01:59:52
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You have a very good point because it's a privilege that you're giving me even an hour of your time
01:59:56
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But I don't get any complaints anymore
01:59:59
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I don't know if there are people out there listening right now who?
02:00:02
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Silently hate that this show has expanded in time
02:00:05
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You should write to me and let me know because you know, I'd be interested to know that
02:00:09
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But what I've been hearing lately is people who love it, you know, well my feelings on this have really
02:00:16
◼
►
Evolved I don't want to say I've gone full circle, but they've gone something very very near to full circle circle
02:00:21
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And the short version is I think it depends a lot on what kind of show it is
02:00:26
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You know think about it this I mean think about like if you listen to like I've just started listening to this show on slate
02:00:31
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I think it's called a cultural gab fest and it's something like about a half hour long
02:00:35
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And I it's just perfect perfect in length because it's a you know, it's almost like a radio show
02:00:39
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It's like professional journalists talking in an organized way and it makes a lot of sense and you wouldn't want it to go on for
02:00:43
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Four hours if it's an if it's an you know part of the thing when you're listening to like well
02:00:49
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I'll be you know brave enough to toss myself in here
02:00:51
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But like a show like this a show like definitely ATP and I'll even say a show like Roderick on the line
02:00:57
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You're there because you want to see how this unfolds. You're not gonna skip any of this
02:01:01
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Like you want to see here's where it started what happens next. Where's it gonna go from now?
02:01:05
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You know what I mean? And I think that's really different from the topic obsessed
02:01:10
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►
Outline driven show that a lot of people have come up with it. It can be very tight
02:01:16
◼
►
So here's how my feelings evolved
02:01:17
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I mean the joke I used to make when I first started doing a podcast for 43 folders in something like 2005
02:01:21
◼
►
So it's a pretty long time ago. That's a long. Yeah. Yeah, so 2005 2000 then I started doing you know
02:01:27
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►
MacBreak Weekly not too long after that. But anyhow back then the joke I always made was like
02:01:33
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nobody wants to listen to like three guys talk about Unix for three hours because that's what podcasts used to seem like. They were totally
02:01:39
◼
►
unedited. They were, I mean, I'm being very general here, but they were they weren't edited.
02:01:43
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►
They weren't well recorded and a lot of times it was people who were not used to having
02:01:48
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►
heard what their voice sounds like for a long time and they would just drone on and on. And so for me at
02:01:53
◼
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First it was like the 43 floors podcast like it was rarely more than like seven or eight minutes
02:01:57
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►
Because I had internalized that like that's how long this should be people are gonna put this on their iPod
02:02:03
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►
I guess that's a big file keep these small. I changed a little bit over time like you look nice today
02:02:07
◼
►
I don't know if there's any look nice today's that are longer than an hour. They're usually like 35 minutes
02:02:13
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►
Yeah, that was it was very
02:02:15
◼
►
Sitcom like I want to listen to one for the first time in a long time went listen to one the other day
02:02:19
◼
►
For election day was that who voted went back and listen to that one
02:02:23
◼
►
And I cannot believe how fast it went by I was like that was it
02:02:26
◼
►
Like I'm just settling in for the first sponsor break on talk show by this point, you know
02:02:30
◼
►
But now today I have to say a show like yours like I don't find myself check on my watch or you know a show like
02:02:37
◼
►
What's the prompt called now connected shows like that shows like ATP ATP could be two hours long and I'm totally fine with it
02:02:44
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►
I'm just there to listen for however long it is at normal speed
02:02:47
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►
I do the overcast thing where I do the automatically, you know clip out pauses part
02:02:52
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►
But I never listen it artificially high speeds. Oh, you don't pump it up a little bit
02:02:57
◼
►
I pump it up a little bit like a 1.1 and 1.5
02:03:00
◼
►
Yeah, like a 1.2 or so let's podcast end up being about 1.1 or so. I think with
02:03:06
◼
►
Overcast but yeah, you know if you get used to it, it's no problem, but certain shows where there's lots of music
02:03:12
◼
►
I turn that off because that drives me crazy. I'm not I'm not gonna audio file. But anyway, all I'm saying is bottom line
02:03:17
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►
Yes, it has changed a lot. I think for almost everybody
02:03:20
◼
►
If people like your show and they I mean we used to use on Mac break weekly and frankly at that time it drove me
02:03:25
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►
Nuts because they would be like, oh because it once it got to like an hour hour and 15 minutes
02:03:30
◼
►
I'd be like, I've really got a pee and this show is getting way too long
02:03:33
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►
But people would be like well good
02:03:35
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►
Please record everything from every second that you're ever on the air and put it out
02:03:38
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►
I was like you've got to be kidding me like after you've worked without a Melissa Gore that is that is a state of mind
02:03:43
◼
►
It's kind of hard to grok
02:03:44
◼
►
But you know, I honestly I mean you you're not a huge podcast listener
02:03:48
◼
►
Are you know because I think the there's so many that I I like but I just don't have the time in my week
02:03:56
◼
►
Yeah, and that's because I don't I don't commute you go to Vegas a lot. That's
02:03:59
◼
►
Yeah, but how would that help me with podcast point?
02:04:02
◼
►
But but they are you can be very time consuming and if you want to jump in something like the flophouse
02:04:08
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►
You know to fully appreciate the flophouse
02:04:10
◼
►
You've got to really go back and listen for Roderick on the line
02:04:12
◼
►
If I could say it pays to go back and listen from a ways back
02:04:15
◼
►
But even with a new show you get two shows that are two hours a week
02:04:18
◼
►
I mean that's half a workday
02:04:20
◼
►
No people you did this idea
02:04:22
◼
►
I have no hesitation letting you
02:04:24
◼
►
Put Roderick on the line out there as an example of that this type of show that people the people who love that like that
02:04:30
◼
►
Show love that. Yeah, like I always see people say like it's a common thing on Twitter
02:04:36
◼
►
Where if there's somebody who's on this show, you know my show that they really like they'll say I
02:04:41
◼
►
Would love a Roderick on the line style show between you and insert that person every week
02:04:47
◼
►
Wow, that's such a huge compliment like the people who most like I have somebody said it was Syracuse it with the last episode
02:04:53
◼
►
But I see you know, there's other people like it when you know, Joanna Stern is on with me
02:04:58
◼
►
Our show man, she's so good
02:05:02
◼
►
But we and we do I do I always think when I record with her
02:05:05
◼
►
I think man, we have a pretty good chemistry on the show together
02:05:07
◼
►
but people will say like I would just love like a Roderick on the line style show like it's a
02:05:13
◼
►
Style, you know, it is a thing. Well, that's really cool. I had noticed it
02:05:17
◼
►
I have gotten that with you look nice today in the past
02:05:19
◼
►
Because I think we really were one genre defining three white guys talking about nothing shows
02:05:24
◼
►
alright, but
02:05:26
◼
►
But no, it was funny though because well the the editing aesthetic of you look nice day and that show was super tightly edited
02:05:32
◼
►
Oh ridiculously ridiculously edited. Yeah, right like behind the scenes it
02:05:38
◼
►
It was like like you're going into like the dark room and it's there's thousands of strips of film
02:05:44
◼
►
floor and you know, you know, I guess Adam used to do a lot of the editing original Adam was an editor
02:05:51
◼
►
I mean until he got super busy at the end. He always edited it
02:05:54
◼
►
It wasn't right and I came back that Claude was doing it, but it was always Adam
02:05:58
◼
►
He would write us would touch it. All right, but the thing that Adam would come out with was this
02:06:04
◼
►
35 minute thing that sounded as though it was scripted a
02:06:08
◼
►
Lot of people thought a lot of people were like how do you guys would you guys write together to use Google Docs?
02:06:13
◼
►
Are you kidding me?
02:06:15
◼
►
Estelle Getty playing playing testicles. I mean like we wrote that
02:06:20
◼
►
It but it also it did feel
02:06:24
◼
►
Yeah, it felt written. But yeah also felt so easy, you know
02:06:30
◼
►
There was an easiness to it felt like you guys could just sit down and in 40 minutes come up with a 35 minute
02:06:37
◼
►
You look nice today just right off the cuff. Yeah
02:06:40
◼
►
That's this I appreciate you saying that and it's you know, so much of it was Adams work and you know
02:06:44
◼
►
I would go back and I
02:06:46
◼
►
Didn't do this. I
02:06:48
◼
►
Guess most of the time I would listen to the raw version and then listen to the edited version
02:06:52
◼
►
Especially later on and it's amazing because he would take stuff and change the order of it
02:06:55
◼
►
He would duck stuff so that we weren't talking over each other
02:06:57
◼
►
I mean, I guess everybody, all the Jason Snells of the world.
02:07:00
◼
►
I mean, can you believe Jason Snell,
02:07:01
◼
►
like can you believe how many things,
02:07:02
◼
►
or Dave for that matter,
02:07:03
◼
►
like can you imagine sitting there
02:07:04
◼
►
and having to listen to this bullshit
02:07:06
◼
►
and then have to figure out where to duck?
02:07:08
◼
►
- Yeah, I can't, I'd be terrible.
02:07:09
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►
- I would never do that in a million years.
02:07:10
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►
That would drive me completely crazy.
02:07:12
◼
►
But I don't wanna do that.
02:07:12
◼
►
And then you go, well, here's a place
02:07:13
◼
►
where we could drop in some music
02:07:14
◼
►
or a sound cue or something.
02:07:16
◼
►
And you know, it really,
02:07:19
◼
►
you know, I think there's, especially as the show went on,
02:07:21
◼
►
not to reminisce, but it got,
02:07:24
◼
►
once we had heard our own show edited,
02:07:27
◼
►
It became clear what show to do while we were recording it, which sounds silly
02:07:30
◼
►
But like I think they probably needed strictly speaking less editing as we went but that just gave out a more fuel to like
02:07:36
◼
►
You know make something interesting out of it. All right, but I yeah, I
02:07:40
◼
►
one of my theories on why the launch shows longer shows are getting more palatable is that
02:07:47
◼
►
People are better able to listen wherever whenever
02:07:53
◼
►
Right like we didn't have you know when you you say you know what was the show you started in 2005?
02:07:58
◼
►
There's 43 folders and then Mac break weekly right so there were you didn't even have a phone that could play
02:08:04
◼
►
No, no no right let alone an 8 gigabyte phone that you could easily fill up
02:08:10
◼
►
It's like it was like filling a grocery bag that you then had to carry around all day
02:08:13
◼
►
It was it was an effort even with the iPod pet iPod
02:08:17
◼
►
there was still a fair amount of effort to keeping that up to date and
02:08:20
◼
►
You know now and you would you could run out of like who puts
02:08:24
◼
►
Like I when I go in and I have to clear out space
02:08:26
◼
►
I always go in and start with something like instacast or overcast because I have four gigs of audio files in there
02:08:31
◼
►
I mean think about that think about how crazy that is and like back then that was you know
02:08:36
◼
►
Substantial part of your your iPod could be filled up in no time. So yeah, you're right and
02:08:41
◼
►
You know, it's it's commuting
02:08:44
◼
►
It's people who take trains and use headphones and people with cars that have some sort of Bluetooth, you know connectivity
02:08:50
◼
►
so, you know you load up your overcast with a bunch of shows and
02:08:54
◼
►
They're always there. You don't have to do the stupid thing where you have to download it to your computer first and then
02:09:00
◼
►
I gotta say that untethering from iTunes is huge. It's absolutely huge
02:09:05
◼
►
It's actually one of the most fundamental things when I that changed iOS was when you did not have to be hooked up to a Mac
02:09:12
◼
►
It seems like like a feature, you know improvement in retrospect
02:09:16
◼
►
But like to me in retrospect, like that's when everything changed is when you can do
02:09:20
◼
►
everything over the air.
02:09:21
◼
►
I think it's largely responsible for the fact that podcasts are like a real part of my career
02:09:29
◼
►
I mean, there's like a significant portion of what I make at Daring Fireball comes from
02:09:36
◼
►
And it's I think it's entirely directly corresponds to when iPhones got untethered from the computer
02:09:44
◼
►
when they became full peers.
02:09:45
◼
►
>> The Venn diagram of that, podcast growing, interesting doing Fireball.
02:09:49
◼
►
Yeah, it's interesting that your timing is good for that.
02:09:53
◼
►
>> Yeah, and I think that's also why the longer shows are seemingly palatable.
02:09:57
◼
►
Maybe the people who hate them have given up and stopped listening, I don't know.
02:10:00
◼
►
But I think it's because you always have it with you.
02:10:02
◼
►
And even if you don't have a two hour chunk to listen to this all at once,
02:10:05
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►
you just listen to the hour, first hour.
02:10:08
◼
►
It's like one time when Marco was on a couple months ago,
02:10:11
◼
►
it went real crazy long like this over two hours.
02:10:14
◼
►
And so I literally broke it up into two episodes.
02:10:16
◼
►
- Oh God, I remember that.
02:10:17
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►
That was with Overcast.
02:10:18
◼
►
That was when he put out Overcast.
02:10:20
◼
►
- Yeah. - That's right.
02:10:21
◼
►
You had like four hours.
02:10:24
◼
►
I think it was like four hours.
02:10:26
◼
►
I think it had to be broken up.
02:10:27
◼
►
But it helped because I was behind on the sponsor things
02:10:32
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►
and more on that in a second.
02:10:36
◼
►
But I'd fallen behind the schedule.
02:10:39
◼
►
And it just, I don't know, just something--
02:10:41
◼
►
- You were behind in the sponsor count?
02:10:42
◼
►
Yeah, well it's because, you know, I don't have a regular, that's the other thing too.
02:10:47
◼
►
I mean it probably would help if I got more regular. I used to try to record every Thursday
02:10:51
◼
►
which is what we're doing this week. But no matter what I do, it seems like I don't, I
02:10:56
◼
►
never record more than 40 episodes a year. Like in theory I would do 52, but it's pretty
02:11:03
◼
►
consistent that it comes out to 40. Because sometimes I just, for a show that I don't
02:11:10
◼
►
really prepare for I just come and do it I find it mentally exhausting like by
02:11:14
◼
►
the time I'm done talking to you here I'm going to be that's the thing we're
02:11:17
◼
►
not allowed to say I feel the same way I can't believe I feel tired after after
02:11:22
◼
►
recording a podcast sometimes all right and I I've told you this before my
02:11:26
◼
►
mother's father was a coal miner he is a coal miner and he worked in a black and
02:11:35
◼
►
He died he died of a disease called black lung
02:11:38
◼
►
Like at the age of 70 he died of black. I'm talking about computers for two hours
02:11:43
◼
►
Right, but I remember you know what though, but I remember him
02:11:49
◼
►
He was a very kind man and you know, I was only in first grade when he died
02:11:53
◼
►
But he was he was everything you'd ever want in a pop-up, you know
02:11:58
◼
►
He he always had like a secret stash of cookies that you know
02:12:01
◼
►
He he let on that only I knew you know that my mom and dad didn't have to know that I knew where he kept
02:12:08
◼
►
Yeah, peppered farm sugar cookies, which is what it would a great name for cookies sugar cookies
02:12:17
◼
►
Let's sugar. No, actually, let's go ahead and sugarcoat this. This is literally sugar cookies, right?
02:12:22
◼
►
But this is me complaining about the exhaust how exhausting is to talk to one of my best best and dearest friends for two hours
02:12:30
◼
►
And you know, I'm two generations removed from a man who went into a dangerous dark black hole
02:12:40
◼
►
Breathing black dust that would eventually kill him
02:12:44
◼
►
I don't even edit the show Dave Whiskas does and I'm
02:12:51
◼
►
Complaining here for everybody about how hard it is, but I do I find it, you know
02:12:56
◼
►
and somebody it does it gives me an enormous amount of respect for
02:13:00
◼
►
Professional broadcasters like a Howard Stern who do it every freaking day. Oh and my every four hours six hours a day
02:13:06
◼
►
Can you believe that? Yeah, I cannot believe it
02:13:09
◼
►
I see I feel that way with morning edition where you know morning edition
02:13:13
◼
►
Starts you guys get it starting at 6 in the morning. It starts running here at 3 in the morning
02:13:18
◼
►
So to get into the studio, I mean those guys are getting what 2 3 in the morning to record that show
02:13:23
◼
►
You made you do that every day for like years
02:13:27
◼
►
For a career it's ridiculous. Well, you know, I've been trying to figure out the chicken and egg of this
02:13:31
◼
►
Am I interrupting here where you can do it? No
02:13:34
◼
►
Because I was sitting here waiting for your cable to get fixed and thinking
02:13:40
◼
►
About you know, how how strange it is the way the if you like ecosystem has changed where you know
02:13:47
◼
►
I used to feel like I really understood like what was going on in the world of consumer technology
02:13:52
◼
►
Especially as it related to media right up until like, you know, I used to feel like I was really on top of that stuff
02:13:57
◼
►
I've done some work with companies like even like small record labels and stuff talking about hey, here's how to really
02:14:02
◼
►
Guys, you're you're facing up against myspace here. You're facing up against kazah here
02:14:07
◼
►
Here's the things to think about, you know in terms of you know
02:14:10
◼
►
having a strategy that works for for moving beyond being in a Sam goody because that was a conversation that really needed to be had and
02:14:16
◼
►
A lot of people didn't want to have that conversation. What's funny is though like for me I was that guy
02:14:21
◼
►
I was the internet guy for years going oh, you're gonna have to put out
02:14:24
◼
►
You got to put out high quality mp3s of your stuff and no DRM and that didn't happen for a really long time
02:14:29
◼
►
And then suddenly Apple was selling no DRM
02:14:33
◼
►
mp3s and I was like, haha
02:14:35
◼
►
See I was right all along and how long ago was that was that like maybe four years ago three
02:14:41
◼
►
No had to be longer than that. What did they start selling like just pure mp3s with no DRM. When was that?
02:14:47
◼
►
Let's even say six years ago. Whatever it was
02:14:51
◼
►
And then I guess I went into a long winter's nap because then I woke up and I started seeing the numbers like so
02:14:57
◼
►
Okay, so first of all, so then they start doing that then they become what the largest retailer music retailer in America for a while
02:15:04
◼
►
Wasn't that the case didn't in the IT store? Yeah. No, and I'm at a store but but you've have you watched this trend lines
02:15:11
◼
►
It's crazy. Like I was here I was being mr
02:15:15
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Futurist guy where all you got a good do is go sell your stuff on the internet
02:15:18
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But like I can't believe how long it took to go from that juggernaut to now
02:15:23
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►
watching that that line go down and now as you wake up and suddenly everybody wants streaming and
02:15:28
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►
I've just I don't know. I've been kind of running over my mind going like where was I was
02:15:33
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I just did that happen when my daughter was young and I just missed it
02:15:35
◼
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But it really seems like it so quickly went from it was this long
02:15:39
◼
►
Tortured slide from like the late 90s, you know, Napster-Kazakhal
02:15:43
◼
►
What have you up to the point of selling stuff online that seemed like it took forever
02:15:47
◼
►
But in my head it feels like it's been in the blink of an eye that's really started to go away quickly
02:15:52
◼
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Yeah, you know what? I mean?
02:15:54
◼
►
And the only reason I mentioned that I'm trying to think about my own consumption of stuff
02:15:57
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We're like, you know again how long was it ago that we got the iTunes match what a couple three years ago
02:16:02
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►
by a couple years ago
02:16:05
◼
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Yeah, because Steve Jobs was still a little recently as the last two years
02:16:10
◼
►
I've still been sitting there
02:16:11
◼
►
With music brains like making sure I get the right mp3 data in there to get everything synced up
02:16:16
◼
►
I can get the high quality version and but like at some point I stopped sweating that as much I was buying less
02:16:23
◼
►
I was downloading less and I was listening to a lot more podcasts
02:16:27
◼
►
And so I've been trying to I almost feel like I've had this lost weekend
02:16:30
◼
►
Or I'm trying to figure out where it went that I spend most of my time listening to podcasts
02:16:35
◼
►
Because I was absolutely not the case even like five years ago
02:16:38
◼
►
I would listen to music all day long or even listen to radio all day long. I don't know
02:16:42
◼
►
I'm not saying and the reason I say chicken and egg
02:16:44
◼
►
I'm not saying that podcast listening is what's causing that to change
02:16:47
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►
But I wonder how much of a factor that is at least amongst people like us because the less we buy music the less we talk
02:16:53
◼
►
About music maybe it's because we're getting older, but I don't know. I really feel like there's still it
02:16:58
◼
►
There's just a huge change underway right now. I
02:17:00
◼
►
was thinking about it with this the way that that streaming is clearly the future and say
02:17:07
◼
►
You know just by buying music is over the last feels kind of over
02:17:11
◼
►
Yeah, the last platform for buying we I got caught up in it too where I thought that the way the music industry worked was
02:17:18
◼
►
Every decade or so a new format comes along and instead of buying vinyl now you buy cassette tapes
02:17:25
◼
►
Like when not my teenage years was where it was the 80s and that's that was the cassette era
02:17:30
◼
►
I had all of my all of my money was tied up in cassette tapes and
02:17:34
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►
Then the 90s came with CDs and it kind of sucked because I had I actually did I did the thing that the music industry
02:17:40
◼
►
you know loves is I
02:17:42
◼
►
Reebot music on CD because I wanted it on CD because it was more convenient
02:17:47
◼
►
You can you could you could sort of blind yourself to the ridiculous cost of that back then
02:17:52
◼
►
It was what 12 13 bucks for a CD
02:17:55
◼
►
You get to the you could blind yourself to that by saying well
02:17:58
◼
►
on the one hand the quality of this right straight out of the box is gonna be like
02:18:03
◼
►
twice or three times as good however
02:18:05
◼
►
You perceive it like other qualities can be so much better and I now I'm never gonna have to do this again
02:18:10
◼
►
Because this yeah, this will be a you know, perfect sound forever this this and it will last in exactly the sound exactly the same
02:18:16
◼
►
For the next hundred years, right? It's never gonna wear out etc, etc
02:18:20
◼
►
And then you know digital came and it was clear that you know, oh even better
02:18:25
◼
►
It's you just download and you don't have to worry about keeping track of all these discs
02:18:28
◼
►
Nobody can never sit nobody's you're never gonna lose the disc again
02:18:31
◼
►
Remember when you'd really be in the mood to listen to something about this, you know
02:18:34
◼
►
It's like I really you know what I really say you read about Tom Petty
02:18:38
◼
►
I've rebought Weezer because I didn't want to go in the other room. I
02:18:41
◼
►
Would go and get like I'm in the mood for Led Zeppelin for like so when you want Led Zeppelin for you got to have
02:18:48
◼
►
And I'd go get the the disc and or the box
02:18:51
◼
►
I have the box set open it up and the disc isn't in the sleeve. It's like ah, where is it?
02:18:56
◼
►
Well, guess what? I'll go buy it again
02:18:58
◼
►
You know, it's clear I and I just figured that this would be the way it would be whereas clearly
02:19:05
◼
►
It's just going to streaming but then I think back to my teenage years too. I spent a ton of time
02:19:09
◼
►
Tons of time listening to FM radio
02:19:11
◼
►
You know, it's like such anything beyond public radio or occasionally baseball but like
02:19:19
◼
►
Boy, just you remember send a regular radio feels really foreign to me. It feels like a parody of radio listening to it today
02:19:26
◼
►
Yeah, yeah, it doesn't feel like the real radio anymore
02:19:28
◼
►
It's just all it's like this
02:19:29
◼
►
It's sort of like if you don't watch TV in the afternoon for a while and then you watch TV in the afternoon
02:19:35
◼
►
You're like, who are these poor people? Oh my god, you know, I do it's all human tragedy. I did that yesterday
02:19:40
◼
►
I don't know why I don't even know what it's all like lawsuits and
02:19:45
◼
►
Like medical devices and you can buy needles have needles delivered to your house. Have you ever seen the TMZ show? I
02:19:53
◼
►
Swear to God this is your homework everybody listening
02:19:59
◼
►
everybody listening out there all of you Merlin man you included that I swear to
02:20:04
◼
►
God go to your TiVo and have it set don't don't don't subscribe just have it
02:20:09
◼
►
record one episode like tomorrow like the Friday afternoon episode of TMZ
02:20:13
◼
►
here's the show that's a half an hour I think it's half an hour I don't know
02:20:17
◼
►
maybe it's even more it's it's just a couple of guys in the camera shot with
02:20:22
◼
►
cameras in the TMZ newsroom I they've got to be in LA I don't know but if
02:20:28
◼
►
If they're not in LA I'd be shocked.
02:20:30
◼
►
So they're in LA, they have a newsroom and they have maybe 40 or 50 employees and they're
02:20:36
◼
►
just talking about the stuff that's going to be on TMZ today.
02:20:40
◼
►
On the website?
02:20:42
◼
►
It's just celebrity gossip and then they just make…
02:20:47
◼
►
But it's mostly scandalous.
02:20:50
◼
►
It's not like red carpet stuff you see on ET.
02:20:52
◼
►
This is more like scandalous stuff.
02:20:54
◼
►
Yeah and they just sit there and make fun of people for...
02:21:00
◼
►
Let me see a car ad with that creepy little general guy.
02:21:04
◼
►
Oh and the commercials are half the reason.
02:21:08
◼
►
That's what I'm saying.
02:21:09
◼
►
So the content sure.
02:21:10
◼
►
I mean the judge shows but the commercials are the worst and that's what I get when I
02:21:13
◼
►
listen to the most radio.
02:21:15
◼
►
It's so gross.
02:21:19
◼
►
What was the point of all that?
02:21:21
◼
►
just describing though like yeah it seems like every decade everything would
02:21:24
◼
►
change and then you know and then by the 90s it seemed like it was really
02:21:27
◼
►
settling down into the early 2000s you know what's amazing for me was ironically
02:21:32
◼
►
enough of course it was on one of my wackadoodle devices like probably the
02:21:36
◼
►
Amazon Fire TV which is easily my runaway favorite entertainment device
02:21:42
◼
►
right now I went in and looked at like you know Amazon at some point did that
02:21:45
◼
►
thing where any seed most of the CDs you bought they kind of grandfathered you
02:21:50
◼
►
into an electronic copy. You know about this? Yeah. You don't have to buy the MP3 version.
02:21:55
◼
►
If you bought the CD, they had some kind of deal where basically if you'd bought the CD
02:21:59
◼
►
in your locker or whatever, you would have all of your old files. And I still think that
02:22:04
◼
►
that's what they should do with eBooks. Oh God, I wish. That would change everything
02:22:09
◼
►
for me if they did that. I would, it's either too costly or acrobatic to do eBooks right
02:22:15
◼
►
now. I can do it and spend a lot of money or I can do it and run a lot of Python, but
02:22:19
◼
►
It's it's just it's such a pain for the experience of justified text
02:22:23
◼
►
But I want the paper book. Oh, I hear you. I hear you. I wish they would do that
02:22:28
◼
►
Well, but anyway, the thing is like going to open that up. I'm like, oh my god
02:22:31
◼
►
I don't remember buying like half of these albums and so many of the albums are from the
02:22:37
◼
►
Early mid-2000s. So like 2002 2005 and you could even see at that point so many of the songs that are in my locker represent
02:22:46
◼
►
CDs that I bought as a quarter of last resort
02:22:48
◼
►
We're like every one of these artists I can see the eye rolling that went through my mind where I was like, okay
02:22:53
◼
►
They're not gonna have this at a store
02:22:54
◼
►
Yeah, I'm gonna I'm gonna I'm not gonna be able to download this from somewhere if I want this, you know
02:22:59
◼
►
Fairport convention album. I'm gonna have to buy this CD and I got it. I took it out
02:23:03
◼
►
I ripped it and then the CD went into a pile and now all those ghosts are coming back to me and it's
02:23:08
◼
►
So strange to see that transition. I can't tell you the last time I bought a CD
02:23:11
◼
►
I mean, do you remember the last time you bought a CD?
02:23:15
◼
►
No, it's I don't even know where to go to get a CD at this point apart from Amazon
02:23:20
◼
►
I saw Amy bought one Amy bought one
02:23:23
◼
►
Might have been the new Tom Petty album. That's a
02:23:26
◼
►
Maybe she didn't even buy it though. Maybe she's in like this like a fan club so she can get like
02:23:32
◼
►
Stuff like that and maybe they just sent it to her
02:23:36
◼
►
Maybe they did I think that maybe maybe because she's pays an annual fee to be in the fan club
02:23:41
◼
►
They sent her the CD. I don't know. It's strange though
02:23:43
◼
►
You talk about you know I even remember in like really stirring especially in the mid to late 90s
02:23:47
◼
►
I guess the box sets right you're gonna really appeal to the collectors so the dinglings like you and me
02:23:52
◼
►
We're not only gonna have all these albums now
02:23:54
◼
►
We're gonna rebuy them because they're remastered and come with a booklet and they and they come to the booklet
02:24:00
◼
►
Yeah, sure a special special version of tracks isolated vocals
02:24:04
◼
►
You know and some of those had the Beach Boys will let Zeppelin. Oh that one's pretty good, huh?
02:24:10
◼
►
Led Zeppelin is excellent. The police one was pretty good. I remember the police sounded like homemade shit when they when the CDs first came out
02:24:17
◼
►
I remember in particular
02:24:19
◼
►
They really what very first hearing like out landos de moor it sounded like somebody was running some kind of air pressure gun in the background
02:24:32
◼
►
But but now I mean it's suddenly I feel like revamp winkle
02:24:35
◼
►
I woke up and even even I am different now.
02:24:38
◼
►
Like you, my only point being that like, there was a time when like,
02:24:41
◼
►
you could fancy yourself a collector, you're a CD collector and you collected them.
02:24:45
◼
►
And you put them on the shelves in a certain order and you, you know,
02:24:48
◼
►
make them look pretty. And for me, the last gasp of that has been like,
02:24:52
◼
►
like I said, this is app I use.
02:24:53
◼
►
So music brains with the z.org is a really good site for finding metadata.
02:24:58
◼
►
They've got metadata on pretty much any audio you could ever want.
02:25:01
◼
►
It's like the basic, you know, there's,
02:25:02
◼
►
you've got these for different kinds of media.
02:25:04
◼
►
That's the one to go to for music stuff and they have an app called Picard
02:25:07
◼
►
This kind of janky but cool app where you can drop a bunch of mp3s on and you pick which album version that is
02:25:13
◼
►
And it's super smart about getting your metadata, right?
02:25:15
◼
►
And I feel like in my head that right there me
02:25:18
◼
►
Getting a record that I got somewhere and dropping it into Picard is the last gasp of me as a music owning collector
02:25:25
◼
►
Me sweating the metadata on that because at this point I'm sitting there and I'm going okay matched uploaded
02:25:30
◼
►
You know rejected like I don't care anymore
02:25:33
◼
►
Like I signed up for beats music and now most of it is there and all of a sudden all of these files are like
02:25:38
◼
►
Virtually meaningless and I haven't missed it. It's totally as somebody who has been obsessed with music for 40 years
02:25:44
◼
►
I can't believe how much I think I could live without almost all of that stuff and it's really weird
02:25:49
◼
►
Yeah, it's I'm exactly there with you where I used to have it
02:25:54
◼
►
You know, I didn't I didn't buy a little compared to most of my friends probably probably bought fewer CDs than many of them
02:26:00
◼
►
But I certainly had a lot I remember, you know in college thinking and it was absolutely positively
02:26:06
◼
►
No hyperbole that most of my liquid net worth was tied up in CDs season because I mean first thing I
02:26:13
◼
►
When I meet somebody go to their dorm room or later apartment
02:26:17
◼
►
very first thing I do was look at their books and look at their CDs and
02:26:21
◼
►
See like how much I could learn about them from looking at like how they organize their CDs did they organize their CDs?
02:26:26
◼
►
What books did they have did they have which ones were obviously much read and which ones were untouched?
02:26:31
◼
►
books didn't have the resale value though that CDs did because you could what you could do for CDs when you were strapped for cash is
02:26:38
◼
►
Sell a couple, you know, you'd find a couple that you haven't listened to for a while and you'd get you know
02:26:43
◼
►
Six seven bucks for them, you know, and then they you could buy the used ones for like $9.99
02:26:48
◼
►
You know, there was you know a little bit of arbitrage in there
02:26:50
◼
►
But you could you could take four or five CDs into the CD store and then come out with yeah
02:26:56
◼
►
Absolutely, but but you know
02:26:58
◼
►
It wasn't more than a few years ago that I remember hearing like it seemed revolutionary even in maybe my child's lifetime
02:27:05
◼
►
It seemed revolutionary to me that there was a service where you could
02:27:09
◼
►
mail or drop off all of your CDs and now get ready for this because what they're gonna do is they're gonna rip all of
02:27:16
◼
►
those at high quality get the right metadata on them and then send them back to you on a hard
02:27:22
◼
►
drive like i swear to christ it seems like about five years ago that still seemed amazingly
02:27:27
◼
►
innovative and now that seems like the craziest rube goldberg machine i've ever heard in my life
02:27:32
◼
►
it would be like alphabetizing my recycling like why would i do that today
02:27:36
◼
►
i don't know speaking about podcasts in the length of podquest i have one more sponsor to thank our
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believe it's the first time they've sponsored a podcast.
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It's a company called Squarespace.
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- Is that a startup, Jon?
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- That is a startup.
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- Where are they based?
02:27:59
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- Are they in Silicon Valley, Jon?
02:28:01
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- I think that they're on the internet.
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Squarespace is an all in one way
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Now you guys know they're not new, they're old,
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they've been here for a while,
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they're probably preeminent podcast sponsor out there.
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But the fact is, I've spoken to them,
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people keep signing up, people keep needing,
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it's like a funny thing because people,
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you make a website, I have Daring Fireball,
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it keeps, it's just the same thing,
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but people keep coming up with new ideas for websites.
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And more and more and more,
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a lot of people are going to Squarespace first
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Because it really is an incredibly adaptive platform for creating very, very different
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Blogs, podcasts, awful lot of podcasts are hosted from Squarespace.
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It's a great…
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You just go, you create a post, you attach a piece of media and now you've officially
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become a podcaster.
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It's that simple.
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And all the crazy stuff like getting an RSS feed that iTunes is going to be satisfied
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with it all just pops out the other end.
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But if you're a photographer and you want to set up a gallery site, or a huge thing,
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Just go there.
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If you haven't done it, just go there and just look at their like gallery of example
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sites of things built with Squarespace.
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And you almost can't believe that they're all built using the same platform because
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each one is so unique and different and original and fitting for what the purpose is.
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But just really, really cool company, really great.
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And it's just, if you have an idea for a website
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of any kind, your own podcast, selling stuff,
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starting a blog, can't recommend highly enough
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that you go there, 'cause you're gonna save so much time
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setting it up, and it's really, really great.
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And they have award-winning technical support
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that's probably fundamental, even better,
02:30:37
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more than the design of their platform itself.
02:30:39
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It's the tech support that I think probably keeps them
02:30:41
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as successful as they are
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because it's the hardest thing to get right.
02:30:44
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They've got people in New York,
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I think it's Dublin, somewhere in Europe,
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and now Portland, Oregon,
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so that more or less covers the globe.
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Maybe, maybe if you're Ben Thompson and you live in Taipei,
02:30:59
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maybe, you know, it's--
02:31:01
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- He lives in Taipei? - Somebody's gonna--
02:31:03
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Yeah, yeah, he's over in Taipei.
02:31:06
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I think like a type-a personality. Oh, no. No, he's in Taiwan
02:31:10
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It's funny it's always it's always funny trying to schedule the time to record a show with him because that's again talking
02:31:17
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Timezones when you'd record with Ben Thompson. He's he's like in tomorrow
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Where do you go to find out more for Squarespace so that they know you came from here, here's what you do
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They've got two things
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My thanks to Squarespace seriously if you have an idea for a website go there and check it out
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You're gonna get a better looking site and save tons and tons of time
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At a great can I say one thing John?
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Here's the thing about Squarespace Squarespace is probably for you and you don't realize it yet
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But I can almost promise you if it's not for you. I
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Pretty much could promise it's for somebody, you know
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So even if you are like a total code-slinging daring fireball nut job
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Just remember there's somebody in your life who's not that great at that and does not want to have to go restart my sequel or something
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And like that's that might be who Squarespace is for in your life
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And if you've ever had to sit there and babysit a site that you've set up for somebody
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Like this is gonna be the answer to your prayers. It is so great. Yeah, and so fast to set people up
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So even if it's not exactly for you the listener, please keep in mind
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It could be perfect for somebody that you know, do you hear the testimonial that?
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Marco had a couple weeks ago on ATP where he was talking about it. He's you know somehow involved with the
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preschool for their son, you know like a
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equivalent of PTA and that the school was gonna have a fundraiser and I wanted to set up a new website like
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For this thing with the kids school and they had like a budget of like four or five thousand dollars or something
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Which is a lot of money for like a you know
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Donation run Pete and and Marco of course being Marco I've me eyes were rolled my eyes Marco stood up
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It was like you guys are nuts
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You guys should just here give me a day and he like went and set up a square space for the PTA
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and you know
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It was like ten bucks a month and set it up and came back and like the next week's meeting
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It was like here here's the thing and it's everything that you guys were budgeting five thousand dollars for and now it's ten dollars a month
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And it just runs.
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It's totally true, yeah.
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And like what he said is that he did it, he did invest a little bit of time to get it
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up and running and pick a template and get the thing set up and configure it.
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But now it just runs.
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And you don't have to write documentation.
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You don't have to write five pages.
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We went through this with my kids preschool where like I've always been like, "Look, you
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don't need to know what I do for a living.
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You don't need to know I'm on Twitter.
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You need to know, go put me over here to pull weeds and pick up cat poop with headphones
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on and I will be happy.
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Please do not put me on the IT committee."
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Somehow I ended up getting involved with the website.
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And they had so much sunk cost in this really, really stupid website that nobody ever used
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and nobody knew how to update.
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So basically my job became like track down the person who knows the password, find the
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person who knows the password, get enough privileges that we can SSH in.
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And you're like, look, here's the thing.
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Have somebody spend one hour literally copying and pasting text from the pages that are up,
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send that to me, then I will have a website for you by tonight.
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then we'll never speak of it again. And it's like it's a game changer. Right. I
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honestly I think you're exactly right that that's the key that's the thing to
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take away with Squarespace is even if you don't have a need right now file
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them away in your back pocket for when you need to set up a website for someone
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and then you don't want to you don't want it like you said you don't want to
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that's the back channel secret of Squarespace. It's for people who maybe in
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some cases could make a site not that well not stand up that well but they
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certainly do not want to have to be maintaining their churches website in
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perpetuity right well we did it we went over do one over two and a half bucks
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here 235 buddy people like it I don't if I guess I mean it sincerely go to you
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know right right to me at the daring firewall email thing you know there's a
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link on the website and let me know if you really hate these long episodes let
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me know because nobody else is saying that people are saying they really dig
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it you know I think of it as you know I'd like I said I do it seems like I do
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about 40 episodes a year but they've gotten longer so I am podcasting more if you measure
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It's probably because of the time change.
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Some of them probably went 24 hours wrapped around the international date line.
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There's probably some of your episodes that are still playing somewhere like all the time.
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To me the funniest moment on this whole recording was that sad sound you made when I said that
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when you talk to Ben Thompson he's in tomorrow.
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You were so grossed out.
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You know I've spent a lot of years trying to figure out a lot of things, Jon.
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And there are some little bits of crud that still just get stuck in the machine.
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And when I try to imagine people who are living on a different day, it just makes me fucking
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I don't understand it.
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I don't understand it.
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I've been, oh, I mean.
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It's like when you find out that the dinner is going to be like, you know, like when the
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whole, the actual pig's head.
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It's a delicacy.
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And you're just not prepared for that level.
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It's like somebody hands you, they always think I have a sprite.
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You say like can I have a coke and they hand you a diet Dr. Pepper.
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You're like what the fuck is this?
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That's not what I signed up for.
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I think we helped a lot of people today.
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We always help people.
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I do think that that's when you and I get together it's a public service.
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Just can we get a final update on the internet?
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How are things going?
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Did they fix the cones?
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Everything good?
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They I still didn't get a text from them but my other machine here is on the Wi-Fi and
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it seems to be running.
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We waited him out.
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I don't know if the dog…
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I don't know if the dog…
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I forgot the cat.
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I forgot the cat.
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Well, thanks for having me.
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Oh, it's always a pleasure.
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It's been too long.
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It has been too long.
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It's always a lot of fun to do.
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I really enjoy your show and it's always great to be here.
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Do you think there's a branding angle on the dogs and cats?
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Maybe they've got like a, maybe they have like a commercial that involves a dog chase, you know
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It's too random. I got one thought
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They needed something to be in motion. It was so clearly composited from stock art
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So let's just clip when people get I want you guys really take some time to go look at this and I want you to realize
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That he's on a ladder behind an orange cone to nowhere. He's going to nowhere. They needed some dynamism in it
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So what you have a horse galloping you could have a dog chase a cat
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Maybe you could have something falling from a roof like a satellite dish ooh burn like I don't know
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I think the dog and the cat are there for dynamism. I
02:37:52
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Guess so that's part of the Xfinity experience. I
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Really? Hope I hope that whoever made that graphic that somebody, you know worked probably right here in Philadelphia
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Working in the Comcast Tower, you know with the graphic design job and then are you know?
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an art degree and dreams of a good job listens to our show and knows just how much joy they brought into our life making a
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Graphic that maybe while they were making it was a bit of a drudgery
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Because I got to tell you it really made my day - man
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I just said the drop shadow by the cone was really really absorbing for me
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If I can get over the idea of where that guy lives in China, I might be think about that when I'm sleeping tonight
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Merlin man, let's tell people where they can find out where can they get more?
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I just you know tomorrow man calm
02:38:40
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Google me I'm on Twitter, but you shouldn't follow me
02:38:43
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Go listen to Roderick on the line. It's a really good show Roderick on the line calm, but that's that's I'm out there
02:38:49
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Yeah, people who need more
02:38:52
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More podcasts that would be the one to start the productivity tips and tricks life hacks
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Life hey, you want to learn how to hack your life help you with your life hex. Oh
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Thank you, Marlin. Thank you, buddy. Anytime. All right, I'm gonna hit stop. Okay, and then we upload