81: The American Meme 
   
 
 
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     Have you ever noticed the face on the iPhone? 
     
     
  
 
 
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     Do you mean like the cameras? 
     
     
  
 
 
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     While we were getting ready today, I was looking at my iPhone. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     And then I noticed that the iPhone was looking right back at me. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     Oh, no, I never noticed those ones! 
     
     
  
 
 
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     Oh yeah, look at that. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     Well, I have to get a new phone now. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     I just wanted to point it out, for anyone who has an iPhone 
     
     
  
 
 
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     that does not have the home button, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     that has the new line across the bottom. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     On the lock screen, it makes a little face. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     The line is the mouth, the camera button, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     and the flashlight button are the two eyes that look at you. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     And now I cannot unsee this forever. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     - Well, here's the thing that makes it kind of worse. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     If you just leave the iPhone on, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     the mouth starts to move, right? 
     
     
  
 
 
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     So it's going like, hm, at me, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     if I sit there for long enough. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     - It goes a little hmf, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     And what I think is extra funny is the effect on my phone 
     
     
  
 
 
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     when I swipe up from the lock screen. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     For but a brief moment, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     there is a face at the very top of the iPhone. 
     
     
  
 
 
 
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     cannot unsee. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     -That's really good. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     He's just, like, judging, like, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     "What are you doing with this home screen?" 
     
     
  
 
 
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     -Maybe I'll make this my new background. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     I'll just screenshot that face at the top of my phone 
     
     
  
 
 
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     and leave it like that. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     -God, that would be brilliant. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     and also be so confusing. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     iPhone, always judging. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     How you doing, Myke? 
     
     
  
 
 
 
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     I, um, we're going to talk about the American meme today. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     American meme. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     We're going to talk about that later on in the show. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     But I watched it today, and it is actually 
     
     
  
 
 
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     a pretty depressing documentary. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     Well, I found it pretty depressing. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     Wow, spoilers, Myke. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     Well, I wished I would have been able to warn people beforehand, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     but I didn't really know much about it. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     But yeah, I found it fascinating and we'll get into why. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     But I don't know if it was the right pre-show 
     
     
  
 
 
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     entertainment for me today, but. 
     
     
  
 
 
 
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     - Probably not. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     Probably not the thing to put you in a real cheery mood 
     
     
  
 
 
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     right before starting a podcast. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     - Question everything I know and just judge my own existence 
     
     
  
 
 
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     and my own career. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     This is so good, feeling good. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     - Good, I'm glad you're feeling great. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     - Yep, feeling real good. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     I wanted to ask you actually, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     I feel like there is a thread that we never got back to, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     which was something that you, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     I think you mentioned you would update us on 
     
     
  
 
 
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     towards the end of the year, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     which was one of your mysterious projects. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     - I don't have any mysterious projects. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     - Project Golem. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     Yes, Project Golem. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     Yes, that was a thread we had not finished sewing. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     - I couldn't think of the way to finish that metaphor either 
     
     
  
 
 
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     so I just like, oh, didn't come back to it. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     Like tying it, do you tie a knot in it? 
     
     
  
 
 
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     Is that what you do? 
     
     
  
 
 
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     - I think maybe, I was enjoying, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     I don't know if Myke's going to edit it down 
     
     
  
 
 
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     for the final version of the podcast, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     but I enjoyed the good 30 seconds of silence 
     
     
  
 
 
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     as you tried in your head to figure out the way to close. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     - Now, now, come on, now come on. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     That's not, I'm gonna leave it in its entirety now 
     
     
  
 
 
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     so people will know it wasn't 30 seconds of silence. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     And I just sit there just like a robot, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     like I was just like waiting. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     - Will they know, will they trust it, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     that it's the actual amount of silence? 
     
     
  
 
 
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     That's very easy to fix in post. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     - The sensorial hand of Myke comes down again, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     even on his own silences. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     - But yes, I feel like this was, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     we've been talking in the past couple episodes 
     
     
  
 
 
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     about the yearly themes that we have going on. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     And this is the one note that I had made in my private Cortex 
     
     
  
 
 
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     show notes to myself a year ago was 
     
     
  
 
 
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     to update people in the future about Project Golem. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     And we never quite got around to it 
     
     
  
 
 
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     in either of the discussions. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     Am I right in remembering that this was a project for you 
     
     
  
 
 
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     that was like, if you didn't do it, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     then you probably weren't going to do it? 
     
     
  
 
 
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     Am I remembering that rightly? 
     
     
  
 
 
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     So this is why I feel that I'm going to mention it here, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     because I did specifically say that I should have 
     
     
  
 
 
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     some kind of update for this one way or the other. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     Whereas sometimes, not that I have mysterious projects, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     but if I did have mysterious projects, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     they might also just mysteriously disappear. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     -If you were one to be known as such a person. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     -Right, which is not what I am, so I just want to -- 
     
     
  
 
 
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     -It's not your character. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     It would be out of character, really, for you if you did do that. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     -You know, I don't appreciate that part. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     It's definitionally untrue every time. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     But, so here's the thing, it was, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     the way I pitched it as it was a big thing 
     
     
  
 
 
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     that I sort of wanted to do for myself 
     
     
  
 
 
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     as a different and interesting project for me to work on. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     And when you were in the last episode 
     
     
  
 
 
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     talking about officially putting into the freezer 
     
     
  
 
 
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     your fiction project, I'm basically at the same position 
     
     
  
 
 
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     with what was Project Golem. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     It was a thing over the past year that I should have put maybe a thousand hours into, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     and I probably put a lot closer to something like a hundred hours into that project. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     The thing that I've done, which may be a useful way for some people to think about how they decide on projects 
     
     
  
 
 
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     that are part of their life or not, is I have a couple of triggers that I've set for 
     
     
  
 
 
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     or I can revisit this in the future if I want to, but only if two things are true. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     And one of those things I've decided on is a certain amount of video production on the 
     
     
  
 
 
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     YouTube side. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     That if, say for example, over the last n years I haven't produced x number of videos, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     like on average, that this is not even a project that I'm going to consider reviving until 
     
     
  
 
 
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     that statement is true. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     It can be very easy to spread yourself too far 
     
     
  
 
 
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     over too many things because you want to do a bunch of stuff. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     And sometimes it's hard to come up with hard and fast rules 
     
     
  
 
 
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     for what you are or aren't doing. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     So for Project Golem for me, like I said, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     I've said it kind of like, unless there's X videos 
     
     
  
 
 
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     in N number of years on average, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     this is not a thing that I'm even allowed to reconsider 
     
     
  
 
 
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     as a project going forward. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     It's away, it's been shelved. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     I just wanted to officially get that on the record 
     
     
  
 
 
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     since I did promise an update a long time ago. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     - But we're not gonna get any details. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     I was hoping we'd get a detail. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     - Okay, so-- - Some description. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     - No, okay, like, I kind of want to give details, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     but the problem is, here's the problem, Myke. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     I know that if I do, what's going to happen 
     
     
  
 
 
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     is I'm going to get a million people sending me emails 
     
     
  
 
 
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     saying, "Oh, I'd love to help you with that thing." 
     
     
  
 
 
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     And I don't want to be on the receiving end of that. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     and setting these little triggers for when it can revive is actually my way of being able to put it to bed quietly and never think about it for a long time. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     So goodbye Project Golem. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     We literally hardly knew you. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     Moving right along. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:07:38
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     I was really thinking like, "Oh, we're gonna get some details." 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 00:07:44
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     Myke, do you even know who you podcast with? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:07:46
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     I don't know if you do. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:07:47
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     I was surprised to see it in the document. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     I was like, oh, wow, OK. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     Look, I just wanted to close the door. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     That's all it was. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     While we're here, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:07:55
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     it's February. 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 00:07:58
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     You have not returned to the internet in full capacity. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     I'm just wondering that it's another project that has now kind of passed its review deadline. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     you're just staying away? Like what's happening? Do you have like what's going on? 
     
     
  
 
 
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     I'm fine thank you. Not coming back anytime soon. That actually, to relate to Project Golem a little 
     
     
  
 
 
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     bit, I do have two things that I definitely want to do and finish before I even consider returning. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     So there's two projects that I want to finish before I do come back but 
     
     
  
 
 
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     I don't know. I'm kind of liking it out here. It's nice. Floating in the void, sort of separate 
     
     
  
 
 
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     from whatever is occurring in the maelstrom of the internet. So I feel like I'm doing pretty well. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     - Do you miss anything? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:08:52
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     - Yes. Yes. There are things that I miss, and I think there's two clear downsides. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     Downside number one is I'm clearly more disconnected from a lot of people I would classify as professional 
     
     
  
 
 
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     colleagues or conference friends or other Internet personalities that I'm acquaintances 
     
     
  
 
 
 
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     And that to me has always been one of the primary use cases of Twitter in particular. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     the internet in general is, having an awareness of what a bunch of people are up to. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     And there are people who I wouldn't necessarily, like we're not necessarily going to have an 
     
     
  
 
 
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     instant message conversation, but it's nice to have this level of acquaintance. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     And I think by far and away that's the thing that I'm missing out on the most and is also 
     
     
  
 
 
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     a very useful thing. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     Our friend Casey talks about the pyramid of communication. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     If you imagine right at the very top is like a phone call. 
     
     
  
 
 
 
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     - And then right at the very bottom 
     
     
  
 
 
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     is like an email newsletter or something. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     You've lopped off a bunch of them. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     So like ways that you might communicate with people 
     
     
  
 
 
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     through an app reply or seeing a post 
     
     
  
 
 
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     on some social network or like having this 
     
     
  
 
 
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     like asynchronous communication of like 
     
     
  
 
 
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     you just know what they're doing, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     they know what you're doing. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     you've kind of cut off those avenues, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     therefore cutting off those relationships. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     Like if you don't have a legitimate form 
     
     
  
 
 
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     of regular one-on-one communication with that person, 
     
     
  
 
 
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     whether it be through text messages 
     
     
  
 
 
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     or through some kind of closed social network 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:10:46
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     or closed platform like Slack, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:10:48
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     then you just don't communicate with them anymore. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:10:51
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Yeah, it's the asynchronicity and the low level of it 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:10:54
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that's actually valuable. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:10:55
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Because there's a funny thing I've thought many times, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:10:59
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I almost wish there was a way in iMessage 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:11:02
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     to specify a less interruptive text message 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:11:06
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that you want to send. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:11:08
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So to be able to say, like this text message, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:11:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     it's perfectly fine for the person to only see 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:11:15
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     the new bubble when they open up the messages app. 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 00:11:19
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Like, I want to be able to say a thing and-- 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:11:22
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Or even that's just like a low priority toggle. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:11:25
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Yeah, or something like a low priority toggle. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:11:28
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that. I mean, this is, of course, you immediately run into this email problem, right, where 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:11:32
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     an email some clients will show, where people can specify like an urgent email, or I forget 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:11:38
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     exactly what this little system is, but I remember when I was in school sometimes you 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:11:41
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     would see that emails would have like three exclamation marks next to it. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:11:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah, that's a priority system that was in like Lotus Notes and Outlook and stuff. But 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:11:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     there were like three levels of it, so they were always all of them three exclamation 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:11:57
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     marks because why would you have like a one exclamation mark urgency of an email? It's 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 00:12:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah and you'd have some people in a business setting who would only send like it was just 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:12:09
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     set as default or whatever on their outgoing messages that all of their messages were three 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:12:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     exclamation marks. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:12:15
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Every email that I send demands a reply so they are all urgent by nature. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:12:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So the listeners don't worry I understand the great dangers and inherent problems of 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:12:26
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     letting a sender specify urgency of any kind in a message 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:12:31
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     because it's just begging for abuse. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:12:33
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But I've caught myself thinking many times, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:12:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I wish there was a, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:12:36
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     'cause like iMessage is a pretty standard platform 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:12:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     for a huge number of people that it almost feels like 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:12:44
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     it's too much of a jump up from email. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:12:46
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like I want something that's higher than email 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:12:48
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but lower than a text message 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:12:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     which appears on their phone immediately. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:12:52
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So that's why I've thought many times, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:12:54
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     like I kind of wish I could send an iMessage 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:12:56
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     to this person that would just silently be on their phone 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:13:00
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     for the next time they opened the app. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:13:02
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And in a way, Twitter was sort of that kind of thing. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:13:07
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     You wouldn't necessarily assume that a person 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:13:09
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     was getting an alert for your @ message 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:13:11
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     or anything like that. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:13:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Or you figure like Twitter direct messages 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:13:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     were a whole other tier of communication 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:13:16
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that the other person was allowed to sort out 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:13:18
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     however they want. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:13:19
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It's like iMessages are too, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:13:22
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     because of the way they work on the phone, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:13:24
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     they're too intrinsically high level. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:13:27
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So that's why for some people I would put in the acquaintance 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:13:31
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     or conference friend category, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:13:33
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I find myself sometimes hesitating 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:13:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     about sending an iMessage 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:13:36
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     'cause it feels like it's too interruptive 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:13:39
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and too demanding of their attention 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:13:42
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     for what might just be like a, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:13:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     just a little remark that I wanna pass their way, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:13:47
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     which is like a keeping in touch kind of remark, so. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:13:49
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Yeah, I've noticed the value 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:13:51
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     in the kind of the asynchronicity of not even the one-on-one stuff, but just people just 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:13:58
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     talking about what they're up to and sharing what they're up to is then when you bump into 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:14:01
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that person again, two things happen. One, you have something to talk to them about because 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:14:06
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     you're tangentially aware of what's going on in their life. And two, you don't have to have that 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:14:11
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     awkward thing where they reference something, but you don't know what they're talking about because 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:14:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     you don't follow their Instagram anymore. Yeah, yeah. So I think that that's definitely a thing 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:14:20
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that I feel like is a useful tool of the internet 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:14:25
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that I do feel like I'm missing out on 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:14:27
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is that passive awareness of what other people are up to 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:14:32
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and the occasional little touch points 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:14:36
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     where you have some small interaction on Twitter, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:14:39
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     for example, and it's like, oh yes, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:14:41
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     we have maintained this acquaintance relationship 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:14:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and then it makes things easier 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:14:46
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     when you see them again in person. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:14:48
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But I guess the problem is those tools, those platforms, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:14:53
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     they also hold with it the worst 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:14:55
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     of what you're trying to avoid, I guess. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:14:57
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Exactly, and it's one of the reasons why Twitter 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:15:00
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     in particular is the really useful one. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:15:01
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It's the where everybody is chatting platform, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:15:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but then it's also the platform of, oh, right, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:15:09
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     there's also a huge number of followers here 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:15:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and people trying to get your attention for very, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:15:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     like the disadvantage is also the advantage 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:15:17
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that it is a great advantage to not be exposed to people always trying to pull your attention 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:15:27
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     in one way or another for their own ends sometimes, or... 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:15:30
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - I think it's also that there are just an endless amount of things to distract you on 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:15:36
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Twitter. There's always more stuff. Like it's not even just people talking to you, you can 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:15:41
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     just go and find more things, always, constantly. - Yeah, that's true. I mean, I think for 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:15:46
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I mean, Twitter on the "how much was I distracted by it" spectrum was always relatively low. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:15:52
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Something like Reddit and Hacker News were vastly higher on the "how distractible does 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:15:56
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     my brain find it" spectrum. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:15:59
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But I guess what I'm trying to articulate here is the thing that is the advantage and 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:16:04
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     the disadvantage is a kind of silence. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:16:07
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     The silence is really useful, and it's a thing that as time has gone on I feel like I'm appreciating 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:16:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     more is the lack of input from the world, but that silence also means, "Oh, I don't 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:16:20
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     have the updates from like the further reaches of my social circle as to what people are 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:16:27
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     up to." And there is no way to get the one without the other really, or in any kind of 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:16:37
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     effective method. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:16:38
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Well there is. 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 00:16:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     You could have a private account. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:16:44
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I don't know. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:16:46
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I mean you could. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:16:47
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I don't think that I would recommend it. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:16:49
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I think that it has a lot of trade-offs, right? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:16:53
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     How would that work? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:16:54
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I'll come back to the internet and set my Twitter to private and what? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:16:57
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Boot a hundred thousand people off of it? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:17:00
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Well no, no, no. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:17:01
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But you could set up a second account. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:17:03
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     You could just set up a secret account. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:17:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Oh a second account! 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 00:17:07
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Oh, that's a lot of hassle. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:17:08
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Yeah, it's not as much hassle as you would think 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:17:11
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     it would be, but it's an option that I don't think. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:17:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - But then you've gotta like, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:17:15
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     then you gotta re-follow it and it's-- 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:17:17
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - You follow like seven people. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:17:18
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It's hard, it would be hardly difficult for you, but yes. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:17:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Okay, but, like here's the other thing, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:17:24
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and this will, you know, this may tie a little bit 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:17:27
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     into the movie we'll discuss eventually, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:17:29
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but it's also the thing that having one account, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:17:32
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     which is the CGP Grey account, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:17:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     means that there are people who are following me 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:17:37
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that it's like it's useful to know that and to be able to sometimes reach out to 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:17:41
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     people through which there's no other real communication channel. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:17:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So what you're saying is verified or get the f*** out. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:17:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     No, it's not just verified, but it's the like, I always think of Twitter as a useful 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:17:58
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     way to have a door that's open to some people. And by having a bunch of people following 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:18:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     my Twitter account, it makes that Twitter account a real resource in some ways that 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:18:11
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I've been able to take advantage of sometimes. So that's why the private account is like, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:18:16
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     "Oh, this is no good because I'm not going to get other people following my private account," 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:18:20
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     which then defeats this other useful value of it. So that's why that's not going to happen. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:18:25
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So I'm not going to set my account to private. Although there is a part of me which thinks 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:18:31
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that would be kind of hilarious if I did that coming back from the internet. I'm back. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:18:38
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Tweet number one, this account is now going private. Goodbye. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:18:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It would be kind of terrible really. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:18:44
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah, I don't think that would win me a lot of friends to do that sort of thing. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:18:49
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
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     Our thanks to arrow for their continued support of this show and relay FM. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So that is thing number one that I miss. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:21:10
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And that's the thing that is useful. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:21:11
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     The other the other thing is is so hard to articulate. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:21:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I feel like I feel like listener if you know what I mean. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:21:17
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     You'll know what I mean. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:21:18
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I can't explain it in words. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:21:20
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I miss a certain kind of meme-y internet humor that you find nowhere else but the internet. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:21:29
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I always have this feeling like the internet is this terrifying wild west that's also just hilarious in a way that no other place is. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:21:42
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     where you have like, meme mutation across this, you know, hundreds of thousands of users, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:21:49
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and humor can be really quick and really obscure sometimes, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:21:54
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and so there's a certain kind of humor that I feel like 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:21:57
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     there's no ability to replace this with any other medium. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:22:01
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It's so intrinsic to what the medium is that it's not replicable. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:22:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Because I think part of what makes it satisfying 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:22:07
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is if you get it, you feel like you're a part of something. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:22:11
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah, that's a good way to articulate it. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:22:13
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And you know that other people won't get it. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:22:16
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like if you weren't there to see that meme mutate, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:22:18
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     or if you don't know what it means, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:22:20
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     or you're not part of the community making the joke 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:22:22
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and something just flies by, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:22:24
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     you can just think, I don't understand that. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:22:26
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But other people find it hilarious because they get it. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:22:29
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah, I feel like it's the thing that to me 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:22:33
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is like internet artwork, internet genius, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:22:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is when a meme has been used 100,000 times 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:22:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     in one particular way, and then someone finds the way 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:22:43
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     to turn it in an absurd new direction, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:22:47
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and that humor only works because the other way 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:22:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is so ingrained into your brain. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:22:52
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And that's a kind of unexpected humor 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:22:55
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that's born of an intense repetition 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:23:00
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that you're just not going to get anywhere else. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:23:02
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - The most perfect example of this, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:23:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     which you were probably thinking of, is a meme called loss. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:23:09
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I'm not sure. I don't think this is what I'm thinking of. I'm not thinking of anything 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:23:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     in particular, but... 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:23:13
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     This is a perfect example of this. It's this weird cartoon, this upsetting cartoon that 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:23:19
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     results in somebody dying, and it's been mutated into a million ways to the point that... 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:23:25
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Oh, oh, this is the... I know this one. Yeah. Right. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:23:29
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     There's like four intersecting lines, or a bunch of other lines can symbolize loss. I'll 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:23:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     put some links in the show notes that try and explain loss. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:23:38
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It's control-alt-delete. I recommend a link for you to include. I don't know if you've 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:23:43
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     seen it, but there's a YouTube channel called Hbomberguy. And he did a 45-minute, I think, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:23:49
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     YouTube episode just about loss. Yeah, so this is a good example. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:23:54
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Loss is a meme that I don't really know other than knowing that it exists in this format. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:24:00
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And so I've found out kind of what it means later on. But this is like a perfect example, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:24:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     think of meme internet humor it's like it tricks you because sometimes you're 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:24:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     you're looking at a lost meme and you don't realize it until you realize it 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:24:16
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     you're only gonna get it if you know about it and if you don't know about it 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:24:22
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     it's just gonna go by you like same as the kind of maybe on a more kind of 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:24:27
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     general level like Rick Rowling it's like a similar thing like if somebody 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:24:33
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Somebody sends you a link and you get to the Rick Astley song. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:24:37
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     If you don't know what Rickrolling is, it doesn't mean anything to you. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:24:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It's just like someone sent me a dumb song. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:24:42
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But if you know what Rickrolling is, you get the meta joke. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:24:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Right, or then the thing that I love is someone does a mutation on that where the joke is 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:24:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     almost you're expecting to get Rickrolled and something adjacent to it happens and it's 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:24:54
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     like, "Ah, that's great! 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:24:55
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     That's really good what you've done there." 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:24:59
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But I've been thinking about that a bunch because it's just a really good example of 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:25:03
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     how a change in medium allows a different kind of expression. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:25:10
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And yeah, memes are sort of dumb and jokey, but I also love it. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:25:16
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like I've always loved this stuff. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:25:18
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like I've always deeply loved the like the crazy Wild Westness of the internet, like 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:25:24
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     the, you know, the intrinsic coyote spirit tricksterness of it. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:25:28
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And there's something about a certain kind of meanie humor that feels like it expresses 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:25:32
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     this really well, or when, you know, people are just making terrible mutations of a joke 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:25:39
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and you can twist it around where it's so bad but it gets repeated so often it becomes 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:25:43
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     its own thing. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:25:44
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I feel like nothing really quite scratches that itch in my brain. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:25:52
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     The closest thing is something like Easter eggs in YouTube videos, you know, where people 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:25:56
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     hide something. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:25:58
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It's not remotely internet-y humor, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:26:00
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but I feel like that's the closest kind of thing 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:26:04
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that you can do. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:26:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I think it is no coincidence that my most recent video, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:26:10
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     the airplane boarding video, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:26:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is I think maybe the most packed with Easter eggs 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:26:16
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     in any video that I have done. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:26:19
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I'm kind of dying to know 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:26:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     if people have caught all of them, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:26:22
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but there are so many. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:26:23
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - You could do a video about the history of Easter 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:26:27
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and have less Easter eggs in that video than you do in the one you've currently got. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:26:34
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah, but I think that was happening partly because of a kind of frustration in my brain. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:26:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like, this is the closest thing I can do, but it's like, how many things can I hide in this video? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:26:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Why are these numbers those numbers? What can I stuff in the captions somewhere? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:26:49
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like, so many things are shoved into that, and I honestly think it's a kind of expression 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:26:56
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     of feeling like I'm missing this kind of humor, is putting all of those things in there. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:27:02
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So what we're saying is people should go and watch the airplane boarding video like six 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:27:07
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     times to make sure that they catch it all. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:27:10
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Well, I mean, obviously, they clearly totally should. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:27:13
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Well, that video is doing really well. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:27:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Oh, yeah, it's doing well. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:27:16
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Maybe it's because everyone is rewatching it trying to catch all the Easter eggs. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:27:18
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yep, probably. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:27:19
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Which I will leave as an exercise to the viewers, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:27:24
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but there's a lot in there. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:27:25
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But yeah, so those are my feelings. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:27:27
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I miss those two things. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:27:28
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I miss them quite a lot, but I don't feel any real sense 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:27:36
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     of urgency to come back. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:27:39
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I really do think that a lot of the advantages 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:27:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     outweigh the disadvantages. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:27:47
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And primarily, one of the main things I was talking about 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:27:51
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     at the very beginning of this project 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:27:53
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     was simply just the amount of reading that I do. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:27:55
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And this has gone very well hand in hand 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:27:59
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     with what I've talked about on the show, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:28:00
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     about trying to change some of the ways 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:28:02
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that I work on videos and what the research 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:28:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and production cycle looks like. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:28:07
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     This has been a huge success in terms of 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:28:09
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     the amount of reading that I do, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:28:10
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     the number of books that I read has dramatically increased. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:28:15
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And there has been like a totally unavoidable, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:28:20
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     very obvious increase in my ability to focus 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:28:25
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and pay attention to the thing that I'm reading, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:28:28
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     which was the thing that concerned me the most. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:28:30
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And so that's also partly why there is a hesitation 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:28:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     to go back because the effect there has been so strong 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:28:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that it feels like confirmation. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:28:41
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Oh, I wasn't wrong that I'm having 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:28:44
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     a harder time reading things 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:28:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I think it's partly because of the nature of this medium. I think I was very clearly 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:28:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     right. So that's something else on the other side of the scales. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:28:55
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Are you working more? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:28:57
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I would say I'm working better. I don't know because I haven't really been time-tracking. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:29:01
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     That's been an intentional thing off to the side. So I don't have data to support that. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:29:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     You doing it to me again? 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 00:29:07
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     You doing this thing? You're doing something to me again where you're like, "Oh, I have 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:29:11
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     this great idea come along with me on this ride. By the way, I've abandoned it. You're 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:29:16
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     on your own." 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 00:29:18
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     No, no, I'm not. We talked about this on the first episode of the new year, that I've temporarily 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:29:23
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     paused time tracking. I'm slowly, just within the last week, I'm doing some slow exploratory 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:29:31
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     "how do I want to return to this?" But I mention it because I haven't done time tracking for 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:29:39
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     a while so I don't really have hard numbers to back it up. But I can say something like 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:29:44
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     almost certainly the number of pages of printed material that I'm reading in a week is proportional 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:29:51
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     to the number of quality writing hours in a week. And so both of those things have gone 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:29:58
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     way up since I left the internet. But yeah, it's, I don't feel confident in making a statement 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:30:03
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     like yes, but this is also partly because of the fuzzy nature of my work. Like how much 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:30:08
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     How much does reading count as doing some kind of work? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:30:11
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Do I really want to include that? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:30:13
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Not really, even though I think it's an important part of it. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:30:16
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So I don't feel like I have a clear answer to that question. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:30:19
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But Myke, don't worry. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:30:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I haven't abandoned you in time tracking land. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:30:23
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I'm coming back. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:30:24
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I just, for part of the project of reorder, I specifically wanted to... 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:30:29
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     There's a few things I'm doing with this, but I specifically wanted to remove as much 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:30:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     of the structure of life that past me had imposed on things, and that even drilled right 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:30:41
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     down into the concept of what categories of his life does he track. Again, like, I'm 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:30:46
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     not interested in what that guy thought about anything, so on as many areas as I've been 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:30:52
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     able to, from big and small, I've tried to remove as much influence from that past 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:30:58
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     me had as possible. So that is just one of those areas, an intentional stepping back. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:31:02
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But don't worry, I'm coming back, Myke. I won't leave you in time tracking land. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:31:06
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
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     The American Meme, a Netflix original documentary, follows around a selection of influencers, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:33:39
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     some social media influencers, and also has a lot of interviews with other individuals, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:33:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     people who are famous on the internet, people who were famous on the internet, that kind 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:33:49
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     of thing, to kind of reinforce what's going on. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:33:52
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It's a very well-made documentary. 
     
     
  
 
 
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     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I liked the presentation style. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:33:58
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I liked that it had something to say, like it clearly had a point that it was trying 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 00:34:03
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I really like it. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:34:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     You recommended this to me and I want to know how you came across it and then kind of to 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:34:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     set this conversation up, why you thought it would be worthwhile for us to talk about 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 00:34:17
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Well, I'm feeling a little bit guilty about recommending it to you because of your emotional 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:34:23
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     reaction to it this morning and the mood that it's put you in. I just came across it because 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:34:30
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Netflix seemed to think this was the thing that I absolutely had to watch. And so at 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:34:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     the end of everything I was watching at Netflix, it was like, "Hey, I don't know if you know, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:34:39
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but we've made this documentary called American Meme that we think is a 99% match for you. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:34:44
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So we're going to recommend it every time on everything." And at some point I just watched 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:34:48
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And so yeah, I recommended it just because I thought, like, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:34:52
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     there is a way in which this movie strikes me as a strange kind of work documentary. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:35:00
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I'm not sure if listeners have watched it if they would perceive it that way, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:35:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but I think it is. I think it's a documentary about how a new kind of famous person works. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:35:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     works. It is a new kind of job. There is a line in the documentary which I think was misguided. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:35:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Somebody's, I don't remember who it is, but somebody's giving an interview and they're 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:35:26
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     talking about like, oh... So the reason it's called the American meme is because it's a pun 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:35:31
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     on the American dream and they, I think they clearly came up with the name because one of the 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:35:36
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     parents of one of the people that they're following starts talking about the American 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:35:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Dream" and like a light bulb probably went off in somebody's head of like "oh we have 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:35:44
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     a name for the documentary, it's the American meme" because she said that the American Dream 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:35:49
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     has changed because they came from Russia, they emigrated to America and the American 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:35:56
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Dream when they were a kid was a specific thing right like two car in every garage, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:36:01
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     you know opportunity that kind of thing. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:36:03
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah this is for people who are this is Krillix's parents, Krillix is an interesting sort of 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:36:08
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     person we'll talk about later but... 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:36:10
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     heard of this person before this documentary, honestly, never at all. Everybody else I knew 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:36:15
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     of a little bit, but this guy, I think for reasons that are clear, I had never come across 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:36:20
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     him, because like... 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:36:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah, this is what we describe as like... 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:36:23
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     The world he operates in is a very different world to me. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:36:27
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I think of the, um, people do those infographics of like the podcast universe and like what 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:36:32
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     places overlap with others, and if we're talking about just the internet universe, it's like 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:36:37
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Krillics is in some kind of galaxy light years away 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:36:41
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     from any of our circles. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:36:42
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So it's like, I'd never come across this person before, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:36:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but it's his parents talking about that idea, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:36:48
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     the American dream, but it was not only for them, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:36:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     it's also like, the dream is obviously 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:36:52
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that they want it for their kids. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:36:55
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like this, the dream that they have these, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:36:57
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     this physical and product security in life, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:37:00
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that they have all the nice things. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:37:02
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - I think that guy's name is Kirill, Kirill. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:37:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Krillex was a handle that he went with for a while. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:37:08
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Okay, yeah, he went through a bunch of handles. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:37:10
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - I will not say his handle on the show, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:37:13
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but his name is Kril, K-I-R-I-L-L. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:37:17
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Right, Kril. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:37:19
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And yeah, and then they end up with this son who has this, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:37:22
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I mean, is in his world very successful, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:37:27
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but it's just a totally unexpected kind of thing 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:37:29
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     for them as parents. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:37:31
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It was not what they were dreaming for their son, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:37:33
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and he went in sort of a different way. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:37:36
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Yeah, he has a job I think most parents 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:37:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     would be embarrassed about. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:37:42
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Oh, don't worry, Myke, we'll get to him. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:37:43
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Okay, great, okay, okay, well, maybe great. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:37:46
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But yeah, so yeah, that's where the line 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:37:49
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that I was getting to is it comes off 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:37:51
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     of kind of talking about that to be like, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:37:52
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     oh, the kids today, they wanna just be famous as a job. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:37:56
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like, they wanna ask them what they wanna do 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:37:59
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     when they grow up, they say they wanna be famous. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:38:01
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I have a couple of problems at this point. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:38:04
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I think that's always been the case. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:38:06
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I don't think that there's anything inherently different 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:38:09
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     about people's desire for fame, right? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:38:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But now there's just more pause to it. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:38:15
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And the biggest thing, which they touch on, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:38:17
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     like a bunch of influences touch on during this documentary, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:38:20
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is that there is now nobody that can get in your way 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:38:24
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     in the same way that there was in the past. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:38:27
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Usually there would be layers of people 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:38:29
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     you had to go through to say what you wanted to say or to get a platform for 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:38:34
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     yourself. But now people can just sign up for an account and they can do whatever 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:38:38
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     they want and they can say whatever they want. So it kind of frustrated me to hear 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:38:43
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that because it's kind of just it's like perpetuating this stereotype of lazy 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:38:46
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Millennials which I don't enjoy. I just think the difference for the millennial 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:38:51
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     generation of which I'm a part of is we were born into a world 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:38:56
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     where the internet was a thing and the internet has brought with it new types of jobs and 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:39:02
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     we both do them and people like those types of jobs because the internet gave brought 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:39:08
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     with it and for the millennial generation brought with it the idea that you can do whatever 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:39:13
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     you want and the internet can give you the tools to do that in a way that maybe wasn't 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:39:20
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     the case before. So that was like the one thing that frustrated me about the documentary 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:39:25
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is that they made this documentary about all these people and then kind of just pooh-poohed 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:39:28
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     the idea of anybody wanting to be this way. And I think that that was purely to enforce 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:39:33
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     the narrative of sadness through the people that they picked, which is a genuine thing. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:39:39
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Totally get it. It's real. But that was definitely, every documentary has a through line. And 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:39:46
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     the through line of this documentary is that this life ultimately leads to just abject 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 00:39:52
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah, well, I do agree with that. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:39:55
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     The one little asterisk that I put on that statement about being famous is, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:39:59
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     well, I do think it is true that humans seem to be creatures that have always 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:40:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     craved social approval and the more, the better. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:40:10
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Uh, and so like the, you know, I think you can go back to medieval ages and there 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:40:16
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     were children who wanted to be kings. 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 00:40:19
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I don't think that's really any different. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:40:22
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     My asterisk though is I do think that there is something about the modern world which 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:40:30
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     allows the encouragement of a kind of non-specific fame. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:40:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yes, it's just famousness. Not "I want to be a singer, I want to be an actor, I want to be famous." 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:40:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But I think a lot of people have in their mind what they want that to look like, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:40:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but they just use the word to explain what they're trying to get across. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:40:49
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     because the idea of famous people now, they're less pigeonholed into a certain profession 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:40:58
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     because people have more opportunities available to them. So like Paris Hilton is the whole 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:41:06
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     documentary kind of pivots around Paris Hilton, which is brilliant. Like this, I have a completely 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:41:13
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     different thought about kind of everything we do now because they like they basically say that she 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:41:22
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is like the kernel of all of this social media stuff and I agree like having seen all of this 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:41:27
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     like yes of course she was doing all this stuff a long time ago and you know a lot of the idea of 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:41:33
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     like fame coming from nowhere came from her obviously she had a an upbringing that allowed 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:41:39
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     for it but like she just kind of exploded onto the scene and then became a massive superstar 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:41:44
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     without really doing much of anything but she now does so many things she has so many different 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:41:54
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     businesses and there are so many celebrities that are like that now that they are less known for one 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:42:00
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     thing because they can do many more things more doors are available that's a that's a good point 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:42:08
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     That's a good point, that she did start as a non-specific famous person. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:42:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     A socialite. She just was a socialite, which is a term that actually doesn't really exist anymore, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:42:20
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     because influencers replaced what socialites were. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:42:24
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Oh wow, okay. I was just trying to mull over what you mean by socialite doesn't exist as a 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:42:29
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     thing anymore. You've totally sold me. When we were younger, that was the term for like, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:42:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     this person's photographed going to a bar and it's like important where they're going. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:42:38
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But now nobody could give a crap what the paparazzi are doing. They see all this stuff 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:42:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     from the perspective of the people that are already there or the person themselves. So like 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:42:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     socialite and influencer are just the same thing, but now that role of influencer is more powerful 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:42:58
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     than the socialite role used to be. Yeah, that's a good point. I do want to pause you here because 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:43:04
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     because there's a thing which I think is important to mention at the start of this movie, which is... 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:43:10
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So I watched it the first time and I thought, oh, let's, you know, I wanted to recommend it, I thought it was kind of an interesting thing. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:43:15
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I watched it again last night to refresh my memory about it. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:43:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And there is a thing that when you know it also really changes your perspective on this movie, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:43:28
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     which dovetails into exactly what you're saying. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:43:32
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Paris Hilton is the executive producer of this documentary. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:43:36
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Huh. - Right? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:43:37
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah, huh, right? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:43:38
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It makes a lot of things make much more sense 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:43:43
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     once you know this. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:43:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It's because it makes you realize, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:43:46
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     how did this documentary come into existence 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:43:48
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     in the first place? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:43:49
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It's obviously her creative project. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:43:52
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And then the second time I'm watching this documentary, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:43:56
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I just kept thinking the first time I saw it, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:43:59
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I was impressed by Paris Hilton does so much more stuff 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:44:02
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     than I really had any idea, simply because I had no reason 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:44:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     really to pay attention to Paris Hilton. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:44:06
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Again, she's off in another orbit, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:44:09
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     totally unconnected to my own orbit. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:44:11
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But then the next time through, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:44:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I kept being much more impressed with how crafty she is, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:44:17
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and I was paying much more attention to what parts 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:44:24
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     of her story is she telling in this documentary? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:44:27
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And what are other people saying about her 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:44:30
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     in this documentary upon which she is also 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:44:33
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     an executive producer? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:44:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I think that the documentary itself 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:44:39
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is like an example of its own thing, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:44:43
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that Paris Hilton, a famous person who does a bunch of stuff 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:44:48
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and that aggregate up into her own fame, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:44:51
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is adding to that portfolio this artifact, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:44:55
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     which is another thing that increases her fame in the world 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:44:59
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that is her project. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:45:02
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like the movie, I don't know, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:45:03
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I found really on the second viewing, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:45:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     the movie like twists in on itself in this interesting way 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:45:10
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     in that in almost any other circumstance, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:45:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     if you found out that a documentary 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:45:17
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     of which there was one primary subject, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:45:19
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     That person was also the executive producer of that documentary. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:45:23
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     You would feel a bit like, oh, I've been deceived. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:45:26
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It's totally thrown, thrown everything into question about what is here. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:45:31
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But this is actually a perfect case where no, this is, this is an example of the 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:45:37
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     very things you're talking about in the documentary proves the point. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:45:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah, it proves the point. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:45:42
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It's like, this is another Paris Hilton project brought to you by Paris Hilton to 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:45:46
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     increase the overall fame of Paris Hilton. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:45:49
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     which is also incredibly successful because I, before this came along, I probably haven't thought about her in 10 years. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:45:58
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like, I remember her exploding onto the scene when I was younger in the early stage of her career, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:46:03
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     seeming to come out of nowhere, and then being absolutely everywhere, and I haven't thought about her in a long time. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:46:08
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And then through this documentary, she is reinforcing her fame through a group of people who 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:46:17
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     either haven't come across her or just haven't thought about her in a long time 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:46:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and made a really interesting thing to further this point. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:46:24
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So I just wanted to mention it because I think it makes the documentary more interesting watching, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:46:32
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but it's almost a spoiler to mention it ahead of time. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:46:36
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But I found it fascinating when I was watching the credits being like, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:46:39
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     "Wait a minute, executive produced by Paris Hilton. Oh, fantastic. This is great." 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:46:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     That is really amazing. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:46:47
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Again, I kind of found myself astounded going through it, listening to her talk about the 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:46:54
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     things that have happened in her life. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:46:57
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     She references a commercial that she made for Carl's Jr., which is a fast food chain 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:47:02
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     in America, that was too hot for TV. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:47:07
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And she made this commercial and then realized, "Oh, this is interesting. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:47:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I can leverage this idea again." 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:47:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And like just the way that she talks about some stuff that she did in her past and like 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:47:19
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     some decisions that she made from it was just, it was just really clever. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:47:23
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I also just feel really sorry for her too at certain points. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:47:27
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like there's this one moment she's talking about paparazzi and she's standing in front 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:47:31
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     of this artwork that she has in her home, which is a picture of cameras and it flashes 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:47:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and she can also turn sound on and it can make the noise of camera bulbs and stuff. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:47:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And she said that sometimes she hears flash bulbs even when they're not happening. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:47:52
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I was just like, I feel bad for her at that moment, like that made me feel sad for 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 00:47:57
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like, that's a crazy thing to happen to you. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:47:59
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     That people take your picture so much that you hear it when it's not even happening. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:48:06
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah, it's like Phantom Phone Syndrome, but for paparazzi. 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 00:48:11
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Which sounds like a nightmare. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:48:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah, it sounds terrible, really. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:48:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like I also think, the other thing watching this, like the documentary, she sort of spans 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:48:19
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     her career over the course of this thing while being interspersed with other influencers. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:48:27
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And it's very well produced, really interesting, I genuinely recommend it. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:48:31
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But the other thing that I can't help but perceive as a meta-purpose of this project 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:48:37
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is that it's-- she's reinforcing her fame, but by the end of the documentary, she's using 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:48:44
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     the documentary to-- I could be reading too much into this, but I feel like she's really 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:48:51
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     walking you to the conclusion of why she may be withdrawing from public life to some level. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:49:00
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that she does not want to be this socialite, outgoing, at-parties kind of person, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:49:08
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and that she's working on—like the documentary ends with her creating this virtual reality version 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:49:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     of herself, that she's thinking about how can she use this in future projects, and what can she do 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:49:22
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     with this where she doesn't have to go places, and she doesn't have to go out, and she's really 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:49:28
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     like, taking you step by step, and I think with scenes like showing all the paparazzi 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:49:33
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     of trying to show the viewer why after, you know, as she said, after 20 years of being 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:49:41
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     in the public eye and having to be this brand of like a crazy 20-something party girl, that 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:49:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     she wants to pull back. And so, like, I don't know, I was just looking at this and again 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:49:56
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     God damn it. It's really clever. Like this is also a clever way to 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:50:01
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     With your fans maybe start to delicately suggest 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:50:06
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that you're not going to be around as much or you're not going to be visible as much and 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:50:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And this is like a document that you can point to 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:50:15
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     That is very sympathetic towards that case 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:50:19
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah, because at the beginning I feel like she's going a little too heavy on 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:50:25
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     on the way that she interacts with her audience. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:50:30
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But by the end of it, I kind of believe it. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:50:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like at first I'm like, there's no way this is true. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:50:37
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like she's talking about how much she loves her audience 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:50:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and that she FaceTimes with her audience. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:50:42
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like sometimes she would exchange phone numbers with people 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:50:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and they'll have text messages. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:50:46
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And she says like she otherwise feels lonely 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:50:49
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and that her audience kind of gives her a sense of family. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:50:54
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So then by the end of it, when she's then talking about the fact that she wishes she 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:50:57
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     had a family, and everyone that she is friends with has kind of moved on in their lives except 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:51:04
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     for her, I'm kind of more inclined to believe what she's saying in the beginning. 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 00:51:11
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     That it's kind of what she has, like that's all that's left for her now. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:51:17
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah, she does go very hard in the beginning, which is also part of like, one of the things 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:51:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I think is interesting to talk about with regard to this documentary is the ways that 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:51:28
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     a bunch of these influencers cultivate relationships with their fans. But her, this opening where 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:51:36
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     she where she does go through, like you say, all these details of how close she is and 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:51:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     talking about feeling, you know, traveling everywhere, it feels very lonely. It's, it's 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:51:46
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     almost so intense it's a little hard to take seriously. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:51:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And there's another great pair of YouTube videos 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:51:53
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     called "Selling Stupid" by a YouTuber 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:51:55
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     called George Rockwell Smith, or Smit. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:51:59
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And he does that, but he does that as like a joke 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:52:02
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     about how people do this. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:52:04
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So he has this whole thing about like, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:52:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     "Oh, I felt really lonely before I started YouTube, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:52:08
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     "and every one of you has helped make me feel less lonely." 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:52:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But he's doing it in this cynical way to demonstrate, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:52:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like, this is what people who are influencers say to make you feel closer to them. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:52:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like, it's a tactic. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:52:24
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And it's like an exploitative tactic. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:52:26
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Right, because this is why I was kind of rolling my eyes at the beginning of the documentary. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:52:31
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Because it's like, well, it starts off with her just saying all this stuff that I've heard people say that, like, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:52:36
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I try my very, very best to talk about things the way that I actually feel them. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:52:43
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Um, you know, and like that, that's not something that I could ever imagine myself saying, you know, stuff like that. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:52:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like, I have a great appreciation for what people are able to give me in my life. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:52:56
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     You know, the fact that we have people that listen to our shows means a lot to me because it means I can live the life that I want to live and can do the stuff that I want to do. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:53:03
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But like words like "I love every single one of you" is like, it's a really heavy thing to say. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:53:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah, her exact quote is, "I love my fans as much as they love me." 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:53:17
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Which is, which I find an uncomfortable sentence on both ends of it. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:53:22
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah, that's the sort of thing where I'm like, "I don't know." 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:53:26
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah, yeah, and so I agree, like it starts out a little eye-rolly, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:53:30
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and all I can think of is the cynical joke version of this that I've heard on YouTube, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:53:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     to make fun of this kind of thing. And again, I came away very much feeling 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:53:42
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     like Paris Hilton is a really clever person and like there are many things that she says 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:53:48
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     in the documentary where I don't think that she's lying but as a as a public person sometimes 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:53:58
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     you can decide like which side of a thing do you want to emphasize and there are there 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:54:03
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     are quite a few sentences where I feel like if Paris and I were going to get coffee and 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:54:07
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and we're chatting and we're actually friends. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:54:10
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I could hear a different side of that same thing, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:54:13
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     like a different side of it emphasized. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:54:16
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But nonetheless, I agree with you that by the end of it, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:54:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     a much more sold on some of the sincerity 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:54:24
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     of what she means at the beginning of it. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:54:28
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And yes, the documentary, the reason why Myke is feeling 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:54:33
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     the way he's feeling probably is because 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:54:36
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     The documentary really is a bit of a tour of sadness 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:54:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     through a bunch of influencers' lives. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:54:43
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Without being really heavy-handed about it, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:54:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     it's just, I think it's just sort of showing you 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:54:47
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     a bunch of stuff, and for some of these people at the end, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:54:52
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I think you feel really quite badly for them. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:54:55
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And Paris Hilton in particular, it does come back around to, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:54:59
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     at the end when she's talking about her other peers 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:55:03
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     who stay at home and have families, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:55:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and that means a lot to them and she doesn't have this, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:55:08
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that it makes the beginning part much more believable. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:55:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But nonetheless, one of the things 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:55:15
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that this documentary does touch on 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:55:17
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that I do feel so uncomfortable with 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:55:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and I see a lot of influencer people do 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:55:25
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is this kind of family talk about their fans. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:55:32
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I really, like this kind of stuff 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:55:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     just always makes me feel so uncomfortable. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:55:37
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I think it often makes me think of 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:55:41
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     what we've discussed before, the corporate thing 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:55:46
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     where a company tells you 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:55:48
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that we're all family members here. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:55:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like when I worked at a school and they're like, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:55:52
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     we're all just one big family taking care of these children. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:55:55
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It's like, well, no, not really. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:55:58
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - By the way, that's super weird to say, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:56:01
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     especially when there's children involved. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:56:03
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like it makes it super, it makes it so much worse 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:56:06
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     as like a thing. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:56:08
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Yeah, I heard that and I was never able to be like, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:56:10
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     how do you want me to parse this sentence? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:56:13
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like the way I think you want me to parse it 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:56:17
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is as a kind of, you want the loyalty 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:56:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that I would give a family to exploit, right? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:56:24
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But like we're not a family in any meaningful way. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:56:27
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And this is another person in the documentary, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:56:30
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     DJ Khaled, who I will say comes across to me 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:56:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     as being vastly more either disingenuous or just, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:56:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     well, I'll leave it as disingenuous with his, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:56:43
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is like, all of my fans are family. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:56:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And when someone shouts out my name on the street, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:56:48
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I'm like, boom, stop what I'm doing. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:56:49
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     That's family over there. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:56:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like I gotta say hi to this person. 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 00:56:53
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Yeah, and it's, that kind of stuff 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:56:55
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     makes me really uncomfortable. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:56:57
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I don't know if it's too far to say it, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:57:01
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but there is something when I see people do that 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:57:03
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that feels, it feels a little exploitative. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:57:07
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I'm not perfect about it, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:57:10
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but it is why I try even to avoid the word fan. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:57:15
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like my preferred phrasing is to talk about the audience. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:57:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like that's the level that I'm comfortable with. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:57:24
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But like I said, I'm not perfect. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:57:25
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Sometimes I will use the word fan 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:57:27
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     just because a sentence is clearer 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:57:29
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and less awkward than that. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:57:30
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But I feel like that's the appropriate level 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:57:33
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     of relationship here. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:57:34
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Yeah, 'cause language is so difficult. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:57:36
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I know I have and will use the word love, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:57:39
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but it's not what I mean, right? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:57:42
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It's like it's a different thing. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:57:44
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It's like a great appreciation 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:57:47
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     or a feeling of some level of indebtedness 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:57:51
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     or whatever it ends up being. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:57:53
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But it's so, there aren't really words to describe 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:57:58
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     a lot of the things that we're trying to say 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:58:00
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     a lot of the time. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:58:02
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Yeah, and you have the double problem 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:58:03
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that a word like love is a word that does a lot 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:58:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     of heavy lifting on many fronts in the English language. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:58:08
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And so it's a word that intrinsically blurs boundaries, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:58:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is used in many different contexts. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:58:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But the one with Paris Hilton where, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:58:19
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It inevitably happens that influencers and creators 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:58:24
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     end up having communities, and then those communities 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:58:27
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     end up using words to describe themselves 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:58:29
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     or their relationship to the creator. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:58:32
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And Paris Hilton's one was at the most apex of this 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:58:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that I've ever come across this, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:58:36
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     where her community of fans calls themselves 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:58:41
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     the Little Hiltons, which is fine, no problem with that. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:58:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But then they often refer to her as Mom, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:58:48
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I felt like, man, that is the most top-tier level 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:58:53
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     of fan-to-person communication I've come across. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:58:58
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - And all of their usernames is something Dot Hilton. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:59:01
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like, people take on the name as if it's their name. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:59:06
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Yeah, that this is a family thing and she is the mom. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:59:11
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I don't know, I had such mixed feelings about that. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:59:16
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And one of the things I thought when I came across 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:59:18
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that the first time is, I felt really sorry for what must be some non-zero number of mothers 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:59:28
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     of children who are super fans of Paris Hilton, who refer to Paris Hilton as "mom". And 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:59:36
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     then as the parent you're in some kind of weird sort of but not really competition for 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:59:43
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     attention with Paris Hilton as like a mother figure? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:59:47
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     There is a worse example of this that comes next though. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:59:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     What? What's worse? I missed it. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:59:52
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Where she says that like some people refer to her as Jesus, as like Jesus. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:59:57
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And she thinks that that's really nice. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 00:59:59
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Oh yeah, I took that. No, but here's the thing. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:00:02
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     That goes so far over the top that to then, then to me, that was almost an example of Mimi humor, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:00:07
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     where people are photoshopping her as Jesus in all of these situations. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:00:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Right, but like the idea where she's like, "Oh, they call me this and I think it's really nice." 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:00:15
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like that's way too much. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:00:17
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - I mean, yes, saying that you are the son of God 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:00:20
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is quite high on the apex, but like to me, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:00:23
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     it is, it was, when I watched it, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:00:26
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I took that as just so hilariously high, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:00:28
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I can't take this seriously. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:00:30
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And whether or not she means it, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:00:31
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     my brain interprets her as doing a little bit 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:00:34
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     of like a smile and a wink 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:00:36
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     when she says she thinks that's great. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:00:37
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I don't know if that's true or not, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:00:39
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but that's why the mom one resonates much more for me, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:00:41
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     because it feels, it feels too real 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:00:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and impossible not to take in a somewhat serious way. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:00:48
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Whereas the Jesus one is like, okay, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:00:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but now when you're showing me photoshops of you 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:00:52
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     at like the Last Supper, it's, I can't take this seriously. 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 01:00:58
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I don't know, am I like, do you think I'm too sensitive 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:01:01
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     about that sort of stuff? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:01:01
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But it's just something that always strikes me, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:01:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     this cultivation of a relationship. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:01:11
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I would say you put a lot of emphasis into the meanings behind words, which on the face 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:01:19
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     of it is a silly sentence to say. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:01:22
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I don't think it's as silly as you think it sounds to me. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:01:24
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     No, but like, I mean, like just on the face of it, that that's just a silly sentence. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:01:28
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     You care about what words mean. But it is something that that is true about you. And 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:01:33
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     it's something that's rubbed off on me a little bit over time. Like, for example, one, I never 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:01:39
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     tried to use the word lucky like I'm so lucky I try not to use that word very 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:01:46
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     much I like to you say fortunate instead because for me personally like I feel I 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:01:52
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     work really hard and have worked really hard for what I've got and lucky would 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:01:57
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     implies to me in my mind that I did it had nothing to do with me right that I 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:02:04
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     was just right place right time and I obviously believe there is an element of 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:02:09
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that. Of course there is. There's an element of luck and there's an element of right place, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:02:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     right time. But I also had to work really hard as well, so I consider it more fortunate. It is 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:02:17
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     good fortune for me to have the job that I have. I have been fortunate. I've been lucky/worked hard 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:02:24
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     for it. So that's the kind of thing that I focus on. And so yeah, I totally understand where you're 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:02:32
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     coming from and I know why this stuff means like it really grates on you or really like has an 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:02:38
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     impact on you because of the way that you think about these things like I know your problem your 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:02:43
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     long problem with the word community right but at the same time I've heard you say it. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:02:49
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Oh yeah that's what I mean like I haven't been perfect about it. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:02:52
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah it's impossible to be because if you hear people say a thing all the time it just becomes 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:03:01
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     part of what you say. It's like in the same way that my accent has changed over time because of 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:03:08
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     the people that I talk to. Like it's not even just my American friends who I talk to for my shows. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:03:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I can tell that my Romanian wife is changing my accent and is changing even the words that I use. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:03:23
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like talking to Adina, like there's just some some ways that words are structured and sentences are 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:03:28
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     structured if you are Romanian so if you speak English and you're Romanian there's certain 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:03:33
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     words that you use in orders that sound weird to a native English speaker and I find myself 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:03:39
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     doing that a lot now. So yeah this is just a thing that happens so hearing people say 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:03:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I love all my fans and we have such a strong community you're gonna say it at some point 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:03:52
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     because you keep hearing people say it all the time. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:03:54
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And because I think the-- 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:03:57
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I'm trying to think of the most technically correct way 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:04:00
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     to phrase a thing would be something like, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:04:02
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     "I am glad that the audience keeps showing up." 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:04:07
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Is it like a terrible sentence 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:04:11
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     to try to convey multiple times in many ways? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:04:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And then you compound this as well with something like, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:04:17
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and again, partly why I thought American meme 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:04:20
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     might be interesting to discuss, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:04:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     because while we've mentioned these people 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:04:24
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     are in different galaxies than us. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:04:26
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     This is also a work documentary that is adjacent 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:04:30
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     to what we do. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:04:31
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And so I will have conversations with industry people 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:04:36
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     in which I will just completely use the word community 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:04:39
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     because it's the conveyance of an idea. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:04:43
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And to try to be more precise about it 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:04:47
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is runs against the purpose of language, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:04:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     which is to communicate with someone else 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:04:53
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     in a professional context. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:04:55
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And so yeah, that's also why. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:04:58
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It just seeps out and it becomes the word. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:05:00
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And it's also possible to imagine that in 10 years, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:05:03
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that the newer sense of a word-like community 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:05:07
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     just completely has washed over the old one so much 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:05:11
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that this becomes an objection which goes away as well. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:05:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Right, because words change and they're flexible over time. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:05:16
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But I just, I don't know, I just, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:05:18
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I still think at the very top, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:05:22
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     seeing Paris Hilton as mom slash Jesus and DJ Khaled's fam love for his family of millions 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:05:29
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     of followers. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:05:32
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I just wonder how much of that is engineered to intentionally create a kind of intensity 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:05:42
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     from the audience because I know that that is a thing that people do, like intentionally 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:05:46
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     try to engineer an intensity. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:05:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I feel like family level intensity is too far. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:05:54
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like it's too much. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:05:57
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I mean, to go back to the thing we were talking about before, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:06:02
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     why do I like to put Easter eggs in my videos? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:06:04
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     One of the reasons is because like, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:06:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that's the kind of thing I always like in videos. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:06:08
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I think it's rewarding to a certain kind of viewer 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:06:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     who likes those sorts of things to go back 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:06:15
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and then try to hunt down, like what are the little in-jokes? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:06:18
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And to me, that feels like an appropriate level of reward 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:06:22
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and intensifying of fandom, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:06:26
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but the family level, it just makes me uncomfortable. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:06:29
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But that may be why I don't have 100 million followers 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:06:33
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     on Instagram, because I'm not. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:06:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - That's 'cause you just don't use it. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:06:36
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But I don't know if Instagram is the right platform 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:06:39
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     for you personally, considering your life. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:06:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - I think Instagram is the best platform for me, Myke. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:06:43
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I can't imagine a platform on which I would have 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:06:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     more success than Instagram. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:06:46
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I did want to note that actually that this documentary almost entirely focuses on Instagram 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:06:55
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     as social media. For a lot of this documentary, the phrase social media and Instagram are 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:07:03
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     one and the same. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:07:04
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah, that is very true. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:07:06
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I found that to be kind of fascinating, but makes complete sense. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:07:11
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Why do you think it makes sense? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:07:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     for most people, Instagram is the most mainstream social media platform now of 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:07:18
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     which people share themselves right so Facebook exists yes but Facebook isn't 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:07:23
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     really an influencer driven platform it is a people you know platform and that's 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:07:29
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     an end of the other ones of the other big platforms you have Twitter and you 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:07:32
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     have Instagram but Instagram is a much more successful platform for influencers 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:07:38
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     because they get to influence you with influential things that you can see 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:07:42
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     That's the point, right? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:07:44
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Because there's like a lot of talk about ads 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:07:47
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and like the amount of money people can make from ads. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:07:49
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     You know, numbers are thrown from $50,000 per post 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:07:52
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     to a million dollars per post. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:07:55
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I really like, there is somebody, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:07:58
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     they used to be on Vine. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:08:00
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I don't really know much more than the person's name, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:08:02
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Amanda Cerny, and she says, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:08:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     "People walk away from ads on TV." 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:08:08
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I just love that. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:08:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It's true. People don't want to see ads on TV, but they will consume ads that sponsor content on Instagram. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:08:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Because it's people that they believe in telling them a thing. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:08:26
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     You know, like it is, there is an implied relationship going on, which says, "I trust this person, so I'll pay attention to what they have to say." 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:08:36
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah, and it's also reflected on the industry side in ways that I find quite breathtaking, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:08:44
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     because in the documentary, like you said, they go through the price for single photo 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:08:51
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     ads that are on Instagram of like the celebrity using a particular product, you know, from 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:08:55
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     50,000 to a million. But the thing that is much more, I mean, those are big numbers, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:09:02
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But what's also much more striking to me even than that is, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:09:07
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is the audience size for those things. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:09:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So like the industry slang for this is like CPM, right? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:09:16
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     How much does it cost to get a thousand people 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:09:19
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     to see your ad? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:09:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And different industries have different rates. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:09:25
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And we've sort of discussed like podcasts 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:09:27
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     have a pretty good rate compared to other mediums. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:09:30
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I think it's partly because people are hearing the podcaster talk for so long, and 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:09:34
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     then the podcaster does those ads. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:09:36
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It's actually a similar thing. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:09:38
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So the influencer is an endorsement led advertising, which for a lot of podcast advertising is 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:09:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     the same, because you trust us, which I would just say is like a line, which is why I sell 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 01:09:53
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Because I know how important that relationship is, and I don't want to take advantage of 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:09:58
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So we decide the advertisers that we work with for that very reason, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:10:03
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     because I don't want to advertise a product that's bad, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:10:06
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that makes people trust me less, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:10:09
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     because then that undermines what we're trying to do here in the first place. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:10:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah, and there's a synergy here, right? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:10:15
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like if you are a trustworthy person and you're not just doing any ad, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:10:20
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but you're selecting the ads, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:10:22
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     then that will probably increase your CPMs over time 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:10:26
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     because you get a higher response from the audience. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:10:28
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It's a feedback loop. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:10:30
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And so like podcasts generally have much better CPMs 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:10:33
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     than YouTube videos. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:10:34
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Just like, not always, but on average. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:10:37
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But then the thing that I find astounding is like, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:10:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but if you're looking at charts, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:10:42
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and this is why I was joking about like, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:10:43
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     oh, I should be on Instagram more, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:10:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is Instagram CPMs, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:10:49
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     like the cost for an advertiser to reach a thousand viewers, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:10:53
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     those rates are crazy high. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:10:56
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And it is just astounding to me how much more valuable to advertisers a photo on Instagram is worth than anywhere else. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:11:09
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And that's also why it totally makes sense that if you are trying to play this game of being an influencer, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:11:18
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Instagram, that platform is worth 100 times more to you 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:11:22
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     than something like YouTube, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:11:23
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     just straight up from an advertising perspective 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:11:26
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     of the effort that goes into producing a photo for an ad 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:11:30
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and the rates that you're going to get 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:11:31
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and the frequency that you can do it. 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 01:11:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But that is also why the documentary 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:11:37
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is so heavily focused on Instagram, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:11:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     because people who are playing the influencer game, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:11:44
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     they're not dummies. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:11:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     They know that's where all of the money and the attention is. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:11:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And that's where you can really integrate yourself 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:11:53
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and someone else's life from the audience perspective 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:11:57
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     of what are people looking for. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:11:59
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So again, it's not my platform of choice, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:12:03
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but I find it just to, from my perspective, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:12:06
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     it seems like a very surprising outlier 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:12:10
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     in terms of rates and response and audience. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:12:15
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But it also makes sense. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:12:17
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     People like looking at pictures of people. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:12:19
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And that's what Instagram gives you. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:12:23
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - This episode of Cortex is brought to you by Squarespace. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:12:26
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	 01:12:27
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     So you can put a wonderful name to your website and people will know exactly where to go and when they get there 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:12:58
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     It's gonna be beautiful because all of Squarespace's templates are professionally designed. They're all beautiful and very customizable 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:13:04
     ◼ 
      
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     I love that Squarespace is full of different functionality 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:13:07
     ◼ 
      
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     If you want to add an online store or a blog you can do that, if you want to add a portfolio 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:13:11
     ◼ 
      
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     you can do that, if you want to add maps or music players, Squarespace has all of this 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:13:15
     ◼ 
      
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     stuff built right in and it's drag and drop to easily customise. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:13:19
     ◼ 
      
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     When we were getting everything set for our wedding we set a Squarespace website up, it's 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:13:23
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     super easy to do it, they have templates that are specifically built for it and we were 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:13:26
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     able to integrate all of the tools that we needed to make sure that everything was taken 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 01:13:31
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Squarespace is great for any type of web project that you have but don't just take my word 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:13:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     for it go try it out for yourself. Go to squarespace.com/cortex today and you can sign up for a trial with no 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:13:42
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     credit card required. Their plans start at just $12 a month but you can get 10% off your 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:13:47
     ◼ 
      
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     first purchase of a website or domain and show your support for this show if you use 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:13:51
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     the offer code 'CORTEX' at checkout. Once again that's squarespace.com/cortex and the 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:13:56
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     offer code 'CORTEX' to get 10% off your first purchase. Our thanks to Squarespace for 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:14:00
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     the continued support of this show. Squarespace, make your next move, make your next website. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:14:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     There's a quote at the beginning of the documentary from Carril. He says "My real life isn't that 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:14:11
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     interesting so I feel like I have to put on an exaggerated truth" and this is a 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:14:16
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     thing that I hear a lot and when I see people say that like Instagram makes 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:14:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     them sad or they don't like it is because they feel like all they're 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:14:25
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     seeing is this exaggerated truth and it gives them the fear of missing out like 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:14:29
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     FOMO right? And I find it really interesting and I don't know if I come 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:14:34
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     at this differently because I am a person who shares to an audience on Instagram or 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:14:42
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     if I'm just wired a little bit differently but I come at it at a perspective of the stuff 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:14:48
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that I share on Instagram are just the most interesting things that I'm doing or the things 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:14:55
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that I find the most interesting. I'm not personally going out of my way to manufacture 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:15:02
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     or anything in my life to share on social media. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:15:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like, there are just, these are things that I'm doing 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:15:09
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and I'm choosing to share what I think 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:15:11
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is the most interesting. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:15:13
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So when I see other people doing stuff, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:15:15
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I'm like, oh, that's just the most interesting thing 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:15:18
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that they're doing right now. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:15:19
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like, if I see someone who's doing a bunch of stuff, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:15:22
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I think, oh, it looks really cool, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:15:24
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     my first thought isn't this person 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:15:26
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     does cool stuff all the time. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:15:28
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like, my thought is just this person 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:15:30
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     just shows the cool stuff that they're doing. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:15:33
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And that is like a big difference for me 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:15:34
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     because I don't feel like, "Aw, man, I'm so boring 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:15:39
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     "because I watch Netflix documentaries at home 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:15:43
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     "when I could be out climbing a mountain 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:15:46
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     "or going to a nightclub." 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:15:48
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like my thinking is just like, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:15:49
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     the way I come in is those people 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:15:51
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     also watch Netflix documentaries at home, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:15:53
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but they just don't show you that. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:15:55
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And so it's just an interesting thing to me 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:15:59
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that people do feel that way and it's interesting that there are people that feel like that they can 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:16:03
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     only just create false things, like they have to just create things out of nothing 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:16:11
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     so that they have something to share. It's just such an interesting thing to me. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:16:15
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah, I mean there's a lot in that. You know, again, when I talked about having 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:16:20
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     used Instagram for a while, you know, we talked about it on the show and also in private, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:16:27
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I could not articulate why Instagram made me sad very well. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:16:31
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like it just, it did, but it wasn't anything specific as FOMO or anything. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:16:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like it was just something about it made me sad and I couldn't pin it down in a very precise way. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:16:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But I do think you may be wired a little bit differently here because... 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:16:46
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I do think I am. 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 01:16:47
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I do think I am. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:16:48
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     You are more cognizant of people just showing the highlight reel of their life. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:16:54
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But nonetheless, I think there are many cases 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:16:59
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     where people can know a thing intellectually, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:17:03
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but say the emotional part of their brain, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:17:07
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     it just does not register and it does not land. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:17:09
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I think this is a case where maybe 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:17:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     the knowing part of your brain 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:17:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and the emotional part of your brain 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:17:15
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     are more lined up in what is happening on Instagram. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:17:18
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And so I think almost anybody who follows lots of people 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:17:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     on Instagram could articulate the idea 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:17:24
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that, oh, of course they're showing the most interesting parts of their life, or of course 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:17:29
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     these photos are staged. But nonetheless, I suspect most people have the experience, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:17:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     have the emotional experience of not being able to internalize the time compression effect 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:17:43
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that occurs, where you just don't see so much of what's going on. It's even a thing like 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:17:51
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I feel it's like the absence of one thing does not like prove its existence or non-existence. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:17:58
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like I think people see if all I ever see is this person doing something fun, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:18:04
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     they must only do fun things. 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 01:18:10
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like and like that people aren't stringing together or people's brains 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:18:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and don't do a good job of stringing together. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:18:17
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     The in-between time. 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 01:18:20
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Well, I even think to a much lesser extent than something like Instagram, but us doing the podcasts even has the same time compression effect. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:18:30
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     The things that we talk about relate to what we're doing or things that are going on in the world or stuff that we're checking out. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:18:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But like, as the listener is listening to shows, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:18:43
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     especially if they're say, catching up on the back catalog, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:18:46
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     like they're flying through life at a much accelerated rate. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:18:51
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And then also when you hear a new show, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:18:54
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     you're just thinking about maybe what happened 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:18:55
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     in the previous show. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:18:57
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I think there's a way in which most people's minds 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:18:59
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     kind of erase the information that these things happened 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:19:04
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     two or three weeks apart, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:19:06
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that they didn't happen side by side. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:19:09
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I mean, like just think about how many episodes 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:19:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     are in between every time we go to WWDC. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:19:15
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Right, like there's a tremendous 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:19:17
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     time compression effect there, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:19:19
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and that can make it feel like, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:19:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     oh, we're doing much more than we actually are. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:19:25
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But I think that's also part of the business 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:19:30
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     of being this influential person on social media 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:19:33
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is to be aware of that, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:19:37
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and to create these things. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:19:41
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I don't know, it was acrylics or krill? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:19:43
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     How should I say it? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:19:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I'm not gonna, like I cannot remember. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:19:47
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - It is krill. - Kurill. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:19:49
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It's not krull? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:19:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I think krull is also what's in my head here. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:19:52
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - No, it's krill. - Kurill. 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 01:19:54
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So let's talk about krill for a minute because-- 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 01:20:00
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Especially on the second viewing, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:20:03
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I think Paris Hilton and him 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:20:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     are the two most interesting people in the documentary. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:20:08
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - They're actually focused around him. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:20:10
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So like the other two people, it's Josh Otrovsky, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:20:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     who goes by The Fat Jewish, and Brittany Furlan, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:20:17
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     who was very, very popular on Vine, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:20:20
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and has since kind of moved to other platforms, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:20:23
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but has, I think, like her big thing, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:20:25
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     which she was for a time the number one person on Vine. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:20:30
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Yeah, which is, we can touch, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:20:33
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I feel like is a curse to wish upon any person. And the Josh guy is, from my perspective, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:20:41
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     kind of almost certainly thinking about Paris Hilton as the executive producer, he is her 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:20:46
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     friend and the two of them probably realised they were enough to get this thing off the 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:20:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     ground and brought on other people to be in the documentary. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:20:52
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     He's had an interesting life and there's like all this plagiarism stuff around him 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:20:56
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and then he started a successful business. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:20:58
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like, he is an interesting figure to tell a story around too, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:21:03
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but he doesn't have what the other three have, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:21:07
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     where Paris and Caril and Brittany all seem to have a much greater undercurrent of sadness than him. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:21:17
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Or at least he doesn't show it. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:21:19
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah, and I think he's the least interesting person. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:21:23
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And he also strikes me as a particular personality type that I find incredibly repulsive, which 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:21:28
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is the person who will do absolutely anything for attention. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:21:32
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And it's like, "Oh, I want nothing to do with you." 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:21:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - He doesn't care what he does, he'll just do it. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:21:42
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - To me, it's like, "Oh, you're in this documentary because you were Paris's friend, and you can 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:21:47
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     see the strings knowing that she's the executive producer." 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:21:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But going back to Krull and talking about his life. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:21:54
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Karel, great, how are we gonna do this? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:21:56
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Do we need a different name? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:21:59
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - No, no, it's fine. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:21:59
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Well, we can't use his actual Instagram handle. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:22:01
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - No, we cannot use that. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:22:02
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Sorry, his hand of mic would be too much. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:22:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Even, yeah, but. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:22:07
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So there's this thing with people who have public personas, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:22:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     which I find annoying is where someone will say something 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:22:20
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     like, "Oh, I have a public persona, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:22:23
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and that public persona is not me. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:22:26
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It's nothing like me." 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:22:28
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And then if you're in the position 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:22:29
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     to actually meet these people, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:22:31
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     very often it's like, "Oh, your public persona is you." 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:22:36
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like, you don't seem any different. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:22:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     You know, like, you're not Andy Kaufman 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:22:42
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     playing a character here, right? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:22:44
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like, this is totally you. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:22:47
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And Josh in the documentary strikes me as that way. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:22:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like, I have a-- it's impossible for me to conceive 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:22:52
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that he's any different in real life 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:22:54
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     than he is the way he portrays himself in the video, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:22:58
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     which is part of the reason why I find him less interesting. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:23:00
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But Kirill has this real arc of sadness 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:23:07
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     across the documentary. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:23:08
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So when you're introduced to him, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:23:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     he is introduced and comes off as basically 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:23:15
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     like a total bro asshole party guy. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:23:19
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And his, like I don't even know quite how to describe this job, but his job is to be the party at bars and events. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:23:32
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     He is effectively the hype person at a party. 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 01:23:37
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     He is creating games. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:23:39
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     What weird and wonderful and wild things are occurring around him all the time. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:23:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and he is effectively making it a night to remember for the people that attend the place that has hired him. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:23:51
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     He's like... 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:23:53
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I was gonna say he's like a magician, but I don't think that's the right way to put it. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:23:58
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I don't really know how to describe him. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:24:00
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     He's also an example of a thing that I think is interesting to keep an eye out for, which is... 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:24:06
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     You sort of look at this guy online and you think... 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:24:10
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     "Oh, this guy is just this party bro." 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:24:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And it's very easy, I think, for someone to look at him 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:24:18
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and think of him as this idea of like, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:24:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     "Oh, he just got lucky doing this thing, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:24:24
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     "but anyone could do this thing." 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:24:25
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But his backstory is this like, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:24:28
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     "Oh, he actually was trying to be an animator." 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:24:30
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And they share some of his artwork. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:24:32
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It's like, "Oh, he was actually skilled enough 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:24:34
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     "to be an animator." 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:24:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like that's a thing he could have done. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:24:36
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Not just an animator. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:24:37
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     specifically he wanted to work for Disney. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:24:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Which is so wild when you then see 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:24:43
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     what he does for a living now. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:24:44
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Yeah, but I think it's a good example 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:24:46
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     of here is a person with talent 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:24:48
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and he's trying to figure out a way to expend this. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:24:51
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And so he initially wants to be an animator 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:24:53
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and he's good at it, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:24:54
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but he decides this isn't the path for him. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:24:56
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And then from there, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:25:00
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     they sort of brushed past it really quickly, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:25:02
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but he's doing a little bit of standup comedy, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:25:04
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     like he's working at comedy clubs. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:25:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And he must have been good enough to get access to pretty serious people, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:25:10
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     because he then translates this into being the photographer. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:25:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I think it's such a smart thing that he says that he wanted to be around the important people backstage, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:25:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and so he had to figure out how to make himself indispensable to those people. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:25:26
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And it's like, man, what a, like, it's such a clear way to think about something that many people don't, where they're like, I want to be famous, I want to be in the green room, right? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:25:38
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But he's like, how can I be useful to those people? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:25:41
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And so then he's taking photographs, and he's a very skilled photographer, and so skilled, like he's flipping through these pictures that he took, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:25:52
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     took and real professional musicians are then hiring him to do photo shoots with them like 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:25:58
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     oh we only want this guy to do our photos while he's on tour. It's Nas. He still has 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:26:03
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     like the official iTunes photograph for now. Like it's crazy how good he was at this. And 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:26:08
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     then at some point, this is less clear to me, but he starts to transition on his Instagram 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:26:15
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     to taking photographs of parties and like taking photographs of crazy debauchery but 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:26:26
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     also kind of making it look beautiful. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:26:31
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And where he gets his fame is he did a series of photographs of party girls getting champagne 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:26:38
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     poured on their faces. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:26:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     you think about what's happening at the party, the photos are striking, the photos are attention 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 01:26:47
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And that seems to be what launched him. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:26:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Because he notices that this starts becoming a thing that when he is the photographer at 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:26:55
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     events, people are requesting that he does like pour champagne on me and photograph it. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:27:01
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And this somehow becomes his transition into being this professional party dude/photographer. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:27:11
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I find it interesting because I think it's a good example of someone trying to 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:27:22
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     like navigate by compass, what are they good at? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:27:27
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     What's useful? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:27:28
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     What are people requesting? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:27:30
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And he even has a really quick line in the documentary about how it's so sweet. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:27:36
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     He has like the sweetest Russian mom in the world who's like, she's just so cute. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:27:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And she's talking about, "Oh, he was always such a good boy and he never got in trouble 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:27:44
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and he always went to school on time," and all this stuff, right? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:27:47
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And how like he was a good kid, but he himself always recognized that he had this ability 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:27:54
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     to be like a total asshole that people still kind of liked. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:27:59
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And he takes that personality quality that he can generate and turns it into being this 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:28:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     party person. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:28:07
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And more than many people, by the end of the documentary, I am really on board that this 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:28:15
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     persona of him is a thing that he has created. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:28:20
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It's not him. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:28:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     That like, if I were to meet him in person in private, he wouldn't be the thing that 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:28:27
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     he seems on Instagram. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:28:29
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Because he also, like, he says, he purposefully tries to say things that he knows will upset 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 01:28:37
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     You know, and I don't agree with that as like a way necessarily to live your life, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:28:42
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but I think that there's still something about you, if you come to that idea, but this 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:28:48
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is not a discussion we need to get into now, but I do think I understand what you're 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:28:53
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     getting at, where like he seems to have a little bit more depth to him than his Instagram 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:28:58
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     feed would seem to indicate. And there was something that his mum said that I did find 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:29:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     interesting, which I'd never thought of before, which is like, if an actor plays a criminal 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:29:10
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     in a movie, you don't think the actor's a criminal. And I was like, that's interesting. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:29:16
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     The viewing experience for me was, especially on the second time round, I felt I was much 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:29:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     more aware of him on the second viewing, that I feel like you go for these real emotional 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:29:28
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     switch of kind of assuming he's this jerk that he is seeming at the beginning, and like, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:29:36
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     "Oh yeah, yeah, everybody says they're not their persona." 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:29:38
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But by the end of it, I really think that he isn't. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:29:44
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And there are a few things that he says where I feel like this man, his path to fame led 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:29:55
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     him straight into a kind of Dante's Inferno that's also a rave. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:30:00
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah, I think he has the hardest life and the hardest job out of everybody here. Because 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:30:07
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     his job is to go to a different nightclub every night, get drunk, and party. I couldn't do that. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:30:16
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I couldn't possibly do it. And the other thing about like that I just kept thinking about 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:30:22
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     afterwards is it's so clearly a job that's destroying him and it's destroying him physically. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:30:30
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It's destroying him through just the tremendous amount of alcohol consumption that he basically 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:30:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     has to do to be part of it. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:30:38
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And it's also destroying his ability to relate to people. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:30:42
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like he has a quick little line, but he talks about how, have you ever tried to talk to 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 01:30:51
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     They're awful and I hate them all." 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:30:53
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I was like, "Whoa!" 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:30:54
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And it strikes me as a really genuine line, but I think it's also— 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:30:58
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Also he's saying, like, "Have you ever tried talking to a drunk person when you're sober?" 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 01:31:04
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Well, so this is the thing. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:31:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     He says, you know, that's even worse than just talking to someone and that he has to 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:31:08
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     get down on his level. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:31:10
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But the thing I kept thinking of was like, "Of course this is going to happen because 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:31:16
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Every night he's entertaining the Morlocks. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:31:19
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And he's gotta go into these places. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:31:23
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I think it's fair to say that these kind of mega-parties also attract a certain kind 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 01:31:31
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And then he's interacting with, essentially exclusively, these people and is also in a 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:31:36
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     customer service role, in a way. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:31:39
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And it's like, I cannot imagine a more perfect storm 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:31:44
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     to create out of what was possibly a Disney animator, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:31:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     the world's most intense misanthrope. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:31:54
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     That seems to be his arc, and I feel the worst for him 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:31:59
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     at the end, even though he seems like the biggest jerk 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:32:03
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     at the beginning. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:32:06
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     There is a thread that sums up towards the end of the movie of like, how are you supposed 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:32:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     to get out of this? And it really focuses on Kirill as well here. So what's he supposed 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:32:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     to do next now? Like he's in this life. What is the next part of his life? What do you 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:32:27
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     do and it shows some people who have moved on right so you know like it shows 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:32:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Josh the fat Jewish he's created a wine company and so he's like well I've got 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:32:42
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     my out now I'm I've created a thing which can he says like what do I got 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:32:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     like three years doing this character this this person who's influencing but 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:32:54
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     now I have a business. And there's a guy whose name escapes me, which is kind of funny considering 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:33:02
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     his point in the documentary, there's a guy who was in a Britney Spears video since he 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:33:08
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     erased himself from social media. And he's kind of talking about like, these people are 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:33:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     stuck, because what do you do? Where do you go? Like, you can't just reinvent yourself. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:33:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     what if nobody wants what you want to do now and they don't care about what you do next? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:33:27
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And like that is a real fear for people in any kind of entertainment but I think even 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:33:34
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     in a way it is way harsher on people who live for likes. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:33:41
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah and the and Britney the Queen of Vine is just like the really harsh example of this. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:33:48
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     because her platform was stolen from her. It was taken away. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:33:53
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Yeah, that it disappeared. She was the number one person on Vine. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:33:56
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And in particular, that case, I feel really bad for her because she was also the number one person 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:34:05
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     on Vine right at the beginning. And she also has to then deal with the statistical inevitability 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:34:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that as a platform deck topples in size, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:34:16
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     the person who's the number one person at the start 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:34:19
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is probably not going to be the number one person 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:34:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     at the end of an incredible increase in size. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:34:24
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like that's just the way platforms work 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:34:26
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     as you bring on viewers. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:34:28
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Especially it's funny because the first person 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:34:30
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     to knock her off is a friend of hers 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:34:31
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     who she introduced to the platform. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:34:33
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     - Right, and then there's the next person to go above her 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:34:37
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is another friend that she brought to the platform. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:34:39
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And I can't help but notice the little remark 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:34:41
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     mark where she says something like "he did it right," implying that the first person 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:34:45
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     to knock her off, like maybe there's some animosity there. But still, no matter how 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:34:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     much you tell yourself about what matters and what doesn't matter, it has got to be 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:34:55
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     psychologically crushing to be like, "I'm the number one person on this thing," and 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:35:00
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     then to boom boom boom get ratcheted down to be the number—but the number ten person 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:35:06
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     on the thing. Like that has to be really hard. And then it all goes away. Vine gets destroyed, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:35:14
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     which leads to what YouTubes will always and forever call the Vine refugee invasion, where 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:35:20
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     they all tried to transition to the platform, but it's like her moment was over. And this 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:35:29
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     is also the thing of like her style of humor was very good for Vine and just didn't translate 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:35:35
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     as well for YouTube. And it's so crushing as she's trying to get into acting and real 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:35:43
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     roles and the very fact that she was such a well-known person on Vine is now nothing 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:35:48
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but a detriment to her. That people don't want to consider her for an acting role because 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:35:54
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     she was this Vine girl and she's too well branded as this thing. It's just awful. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:36:00
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Like it's so, it's so, it's so trying and you know her way out of this seems to be a 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:36:09
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     relationship like that's that she's like I'm basically a normal person now mostly and 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:36:13
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     I'm in a relationship and that's that's her path out and you know Paris Hilton is Paris 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:36:18
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Hilton is checking out of public life entirely possibly but Kirill is he doesn't he doesn't 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:36:26
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     seem to have a clear path like the other main focuses of the documentary do. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:36:31
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So there's a reason why this documentary maybe like you know made me a little sad or 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:36:38
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     was this an interesting thing to come to is that I feel like I am trying to make some 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:36:45
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     changes in the way that I use social media but I don't know how to make them or what 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:36:49
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     they are. But there's just something that I've noticed recently like the main thing 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:36:56
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     Sometimes I feel like when I am going to Twitter, which has been my home on the internet for 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:37:02
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     like 12 years now, I feel like I'm going into battle every time I open the app. And the 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:37:14
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     reason I feel this way, I think, is that there's just been a change in the kind of style of 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:37:20
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     general discourse over the last few years where everyone feels just more angry. Everyone's 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:37:26
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     more angry now about everything. And so like it does one of a couple of things. One, people 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:37:35
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     are more angry at me and everyone, right? So like you will say a thing and people will 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:37:40
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     want to more vehemently tell you why you're wrong or tell you why you're stupid. And the 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:37:45
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     other is I know I perceive more people as being angry at me than they probably are. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:37:52
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     And this is not a thing that I feel on Instagram because people aren't really talking to each other 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:38:04
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     very much. So like I have increased my usage of Instagram but have not decreased my usage 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:38:12
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     to Twitter for a variety of reasons. Like I have a note in my Apple Notes which is titled 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:38:18
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     rules of engagement and I've been trying to like plan out on there like where do I want 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:38:28
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     things to go and what do I want them to be. One of my biggest problems is my hot takes. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:38:38
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     takes get everyone in trouble. So like something will happen and I'll have 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:38:42
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     something to say and then sometimes I will then spend the next 48 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:38:46
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     hours either debating with people or just being told why I'm stupid. Right, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:38:53
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     this is just a thing, you know, this is a thing that happens to a lot of people 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:38:57
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     and I know it's not necessarily exactly as it that seems but that's how it 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:39:02
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     feels, you know, because as is normal, the thing where I think we've spoken about, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:39:06
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     about, we've touched on it's not an original thought of the idea of like the bad stuff 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:39:10
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     stays with you more than the good stuff does. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:39:13
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     It's just a thing that happens, it's just a human nature thing. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:39:17
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     So yeah, I just think this has hit me at a time where I'm like feeling like I want to 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:39:21
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     change some stuff. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:39:22
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     I don't want to leave Twitter, that's because I get so much out of it personally for many 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 01:39:29
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     You know, like it is a great tool for me to tell people what I'm up to. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:39:32
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     It's a great tool for me to understand what's going on in people's lives, which is exactly 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:39:38
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     what you were talking about, the thing that you're missing. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:39:41
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     It's great for that. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:39:43
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     And it's also my most valuable feedback mechanism. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:39:48
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     Like it really is, most of the time, it's great. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:39:53
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     The feedback that I get in reference to the shows that I'm doing is just proportionately 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:39:58
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     better than the feedback I get from the tweets that I post. So if I say something on a show 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:40:05
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     and people are reacting to that thing, by and large it's helpful stuff. Or they're telling 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:40:10
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     me some thoughts about it. But if they're reacting to a tweet that I've sent, it tends 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:40:14
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     to be more angry. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:40:17
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     You mean like a tweet hot take? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:40:21
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     So, you know, I think it's probably because my hot takes on podcasts, I can explain them. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:40:28
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     I have more than 280 characters to get my opinion out. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:40:33
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     And or there's such a barrier to entry that typically by the time that people have opened 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:40:37
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     the Twitter app, they probably, they don't care about telling me why I'm wrong anymore. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:40:41
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     So you know, I just figured like, I don't want to leave any platform, but I want to 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:40:46
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     change what I put into them all because I have such a valuable mechanism to share 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:40:53
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     my opinions which is this that I don't really feel like I need to give my best 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:41:00
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     opinion for what for likes and retweets like that's why I'm doing it right like 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:41:05
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     I'm sharing a hot take in the hope that it gets retweeted a thousand times 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:41:09
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     that's why I'm doing it why everyone does it you wouldn't do it otherwise so 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:41:14
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     So maybe I need to stop doing that? 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:41:17
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     But at the same time, there is a line at the beginning which calls all of this stuff a 
     
     
  
 
 
 
	 01:41:24
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     I was opening my Instagram whilst watching this documentary. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:41:31
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     Because we've had some big life events happen over the last weekend, and people were very 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:41:36
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     engaged with the things that I've been posting. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:41:39
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     ►  
     So it's just this self-fulfilling thing. I don't know. I'm at a point where I'm looking 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:41:47
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     ►  
     to try and think more and be a little bit more considered about the places I share things, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:41:54
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     not necessarily about how much I'm sharing and that maybe my hot takes are best served 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:42:00
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     lukewarm multiple days later on a podcast than they are in 280 characters on Twitter. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:42:07
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     and that I just continue to get feedback and share stuff 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:42:10
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     that I'm working on, things I'm excited about on Twitter 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:42:12
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     and more things about my life on Instagram. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:42:15
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     Like that's where I think I'm kind of settling. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:42:17
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     The problem I have is sometimes I really can't help myself. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:42:22
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     - Sometimes that hot take, it feels so hot. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:42:24
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     You gotta get it out of your hands right now. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:42:26
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     - Yeah, and the only people that can really deal with it 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:42:29
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     ►  
     are the people that are following my Twitter profile. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:42:32
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     I don't know, it's just like I feel like this has come 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:42:35
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     ►  
     at a time when I'm already thinking a lot about this stuff. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:42:38
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     And I don't really have a lot of parallels 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:42:40
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     ►  
     to the things that these people are talking about. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:42:43
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     I do think that there is an image portrayed 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:42:47
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     ►  
     in this documentary that everybody that lives a life 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:42:52
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     like this is sad, which I don't think is the case. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:42:54
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     I think everybody in the world has periods of sadness. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:42:58
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     But this documentary seems to claim 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:43:02
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     ►  
     that if you live your life on the internet in public 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:43:04
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     ►  
     that you will ultimately be sad and that's the only path, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:43:07
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     ►  
     which I don't think is true completely. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:43:10
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     And I know that's not how I am, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:43:12
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     ►  
     but it is just like I have noticed some stuff 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:43:16
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     ►  
     that I would prefer to be different, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:43:19
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     ►  
     but I can't change them. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:43:21
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     ►  
     Like I would prefer if Twitter would go back 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:43:24
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     ►  
     to how it was six or seven years ago. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:43:26
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     ►  
     But the genie's out the bottle now. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:43:29
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     ►  
     Nothing can be done about that. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:43:30
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     ►  
     - Yeah, it's the same thing. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:43:33
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     ►  
     It's like if I could freeze the internet 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:43:36
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     ►  
     as it was 10 years ago, that would be great. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:43:39
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     ►  
     That'd be my preferred fun internetting. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:43:43
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     ►  
     I do think, I agree that the documentary, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:43:45
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     ►  
     "Everybody is Sad in American Meme," 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:43:48
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     ►  
     but I think there is a true thing here, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:43:53
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     ►  
     which is that especially now that there is this concept 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:43:58
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     ►  
     of I can be famous on Instagram, being an Instagram model 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:44:03
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     ►  
     or whatever it is that you're doing, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:44:04
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     ►  
     like not even the non-specific fame, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:44:06
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     ►  
     but I do think that is much more likely 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:44:11
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     ►  
     to attract the sort of person who is then also going 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:44:16
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     ►  
     to be more vulnerable to the vicissitudes 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:44:21
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     of those platforms. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:44:22
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     ►  
     So I wouldn't be surprised if you could say 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:44:27
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     ►  
     that there was like a higher proportion of something like depression among people who 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:44:34
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     are professional influencers than the general population. Again, I'm not saying they're 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:44:40
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     ►  
     all depressed, but I wouldn't be the least bit surprised if you did a longitudinal study 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:44:46
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     and said like, "Oh, right, it's 20% more incidences of depression." 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:44:49
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     ►  
     - Yeah, my point is, which I know you're agreeing with, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:44:52
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     ►  
     is just it's not a cause and effect relationship. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:44:55
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     ►  
     - Yeah, I don't think it's a cause and effect relationship, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:44:57
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but I do think, you know, it's a bit like 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:45:01
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     Britney Vine Girl at some point. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:45:04
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     She tells the audience that she was really into drama 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:45:08
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     ►  
     as a kid, and it's like, well, no one's surprised. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:45:11
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     ►  
     Like, you don't need to tell anyone this. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:45:13
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     ►  
     You're obviously this kind of person 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:45:15
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     ►  
     who really wants to be on a stage 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:45:18
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     ►  
     and is really looking for that feedback. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:45:21
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     And it's not surprising then that platforms 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:45:26
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     are going to disproportionately attract 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:45:28
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     those kinds of people who are then also more vulnerable 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:45:33
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     to the changing weather of the platform, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:45:38
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     or I think are going to be more vulnerable 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:45:40
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     than the average population to negative feedback 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:45:44
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     or criticism or all of these kinds of things. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:45:46
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     So I do think there's a feedback effect here, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:45:50
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     which isn't good, but I completely agree. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:45:52
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     ►  
     It's not a cause and effect situation, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:45:56
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but it is something that makes me a little worried 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:46:01
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     that there's nothing to do about it, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:46:04
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but like intrinsically these platforms attract people 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:46:08
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     for whom which maybe it would be better 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:46:10
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     for them not to be on, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:46:12
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     like from large scale down to the small scale. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:46:16
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     But I don't know. 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:46:17
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     It's, again, not cause and effect, 
     
     
  
 
 
	 01:46:18
     ◼ 
      
     ►  
     but I think there's some correlation there.