22: Statistics Aren't Everything
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I don't think that... I maybe have like just a very small handful of shows if that...
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um which have smaller audiences then... wait I don't know what I'm saying.
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That sentence was not working you gotta start over abort abort abort.
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Where am I? Who am I again?
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You don't sound so great Myke.
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Yeah I've been uh... I've had like the worst...
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potentially the worst illness I could have bar one.
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What is... now I need to know what is the bar one?
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The worst illness I could have is laryngitis.
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But what do you have now?
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I have a throat infection.
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You have a throat infection.
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That is really damaging to my business.
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That is a professional hazard in your line of work, sir.
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I'm surprised it's taken this long.
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You've not had any throat infections or throat related illnesses in the entire time you've gone
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full-time with podcasting? That hasn't happened yet?
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This is the first actual real illness I've had since I started Relay.
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Like, this is the first thing that stopped me working.
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I noticed that you were sick enough that you were pulling back from some podcasts
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and not doing as much work as you normally would.
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I haven't done any, which is, you know, that's...
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I've really, like, I've been sick for maybe four or five days,
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and I've done, like, some work one half day.
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But I've dragged you out of bed to record Cortex here.
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You make it sound, I mean I need to tell the listeners how nice you've been to me the last few days.
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I know it's breaking your character, you know? That you're not just a robot.
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You have actually been very nice to me. You've been very accommodating.
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It's actually in character because it's much less about you getting better and much more about like,
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"Oh, I don't have to record an episode this week."
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week. I feel like you're, this is the thing, I feel like you're trying to give that impression,
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but I like to believe that you genuinely care. I'm happy to let you believe that.
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I tell you what though, it's been strange to actually be kind of in bed sick not working.
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Because this is the first time that I've done this and it reminds me a little bit more of what
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what it was like to work a job, you know?
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- Because when you work for yourself,
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you kind of, you do things you wouldn't otherwise do,
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like you work on your holidays, you know?
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If you've got a sore throat
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or you've got a stomach ache or something,
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then maybe you're still more likely to just put up with it
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than where previous you might be like,
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ah, I don't feel that great today,
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I'm not gonna go to work.
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- But now it's like, no, I can't work.
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and that has been kind of a real peculiar thing for me.
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Like I've had stuff coming in, I've had emails coming in
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and I see what they are and I'm like, I just can't do this.
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Like there's been some things that I've needed to do with
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and I've been sending emails to people and I'm like,
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I'm gonna have to get back to you in a few days
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because I'm not really with it right now.
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And I've been genuinely worried that I would agree
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to something or say something that would be bad.
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Like I had to send a few emails to some sponsors and stuff
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to let them know that some of the shows were gonna be late.
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And I read the emails back, and it
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was like they were written by a nine-year-old.
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I don't know why, but they were just written so badly.
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And I was like, OK, I'm very pleased
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I decided to take a few days to just rest.
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Yeah, so this wasn't the time to be renegotiating quarterly
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Although, I'm sorry to tell you that our sponsors now
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pay us $25 an episode.
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I'm sorry to sound great.
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Looks like I need to update some spreadsheets in mind then. This might change some things.
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Yeah, I've plummeted to the bottom of the list. I'm not just merely sitting at it anymore.
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We have to start a whole brand new list.
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I can't remember the first time that I was really sick after getting self-employed.
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But, I mean, one of the things is since I used to be a teacher, I used to get sick way more.
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Because you're exposed to kids all the time, which are super germy.
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So it's just like getting throat infections or just getting sick was a much more frequent occurrence.
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And you're talking all day, you know, you're putting stress on those parts of your body as well.
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Yeah, yeah, you're busy all day, you're interacting with people, you know, it's unavoidable.
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So it seems like since I became self-employed, I am sick much, much less frequently.
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But I am aware of the same thing as you, which is it just...
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Like in some ways when you're sick and you have a regular job, it's like a snow day, right?
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It's like a grown-up snow day. It's like, you know what? I don't feel very well today. Maybe I can't leave the house
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And you know because I'm just I'm not doing well
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But in comparison to having to go into work, this is a holiday
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there has been a weird part of me like once I
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once I kind of
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Settled into my illness where I was like
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Whilst I feel terrible. It is kind of nice to just lay in bed and watch making a murderer
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Mm-hmm, right which I watched over two days
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Good, that's the only way to watch it. It's the only way to do it. See relaxing is the wrong word because I felt horrible
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I actually haven't felt this ill years. Like I can't remember the last time I felt this bad like not in my adult life anyway
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So I've I felt atrocious but there's still been this part where it's like this is slightly different to regular
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But I have I want to come back to this in a minute
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But there was one thing like you're saying about getting sick as a as a teacher which makes sense
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I was sitting in the doctors and I was like, how are doctors, how are they alive?
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Like all day they are seeing sick people, right? I don't understand how doctors stay healthy.
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I mean, I'd be curious to know but my presumption is that they don't. My presumption is that doctors
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are in an even worse position than teachers are. I bet doctors take an enormous amount of sick time,
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Like they get sick much more than the general population.
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They just have to.
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They can't not.
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But then I wonder, is this some kind of like special medication?
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Doctor's Day.
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They keep the good stuff to themselves.
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The cure-alls.
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That's one of the things that you get with your doctor's license
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is also initiation into the brotherhood of good medicine.
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Swink, wink.
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That you can't tell anybody else about.
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Like they give you a little nudge-nudge,
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and they just give you a brown envelope.
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Just take one of these one time and you're set.
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But I think the general population feels like, oh doctors don't seem like they're sick but
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it's a selection bias because you're only able to make an appointment with the doctor
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when they're there.
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So you always see the doctor when the doctor is healthy and you feel like, boy doctors
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are always healthy, how are they not sick all the time?
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I bet they actually are, they have to be.
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It has to be, right?
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You can't not.
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They see sick people, like that is all they do.
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They just talk to sick people, they touch sick people.
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(both laughing)
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They don't touch people most of the time.
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They're alone and sick.
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- Let's move on, this is getting too much.
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This is getting too much.
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- So go ahead, thanks for staying in bed.
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One of the things that I think I've realized this time
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more than ever is kind of how I am
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in the kind of situation that I'm in
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from a self-employed perspective.
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Like I kind of work in a small company, right?
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Like there's me and Steven and then there's a bunch of
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like other people who do multiple different things,
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you know, like hosts and we have people
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that help out with other things, kind of like hosts
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take on some like additional responsibilities
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depending on the shows that they do.
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But it hasn't been an issue for me.
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People have filled in for me, that kind of stuff.
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And it's been nice to know that like I have this system
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around me that I didn't really know before
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'cause I've never needed it or felt like I needed to use it.
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Yeah, like we're all everybody's always kind of helping each other out.
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Like if I'm busy with something or Steven's busy with something or whatever,
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we might step in for each other.
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But this has been like a week of me just not doing anything.
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And at last I checked the business hadn't crumbled to pieces,
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This is your first test of a bit of a support system with the tiny company that
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you have built.
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And it's really nice to know that it's worked,
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Which made me think of you, all up there in your little ivory tower of one.
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What do you do when you get sick?
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I mean the answer is I don't work.
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And everything comes to an absolute grinding halt.
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Like there's no way around that.
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It was actually just...
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I was pretty sick for a couple days a few weeks ago.
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And it was a similar thing, like, okay, well, nothing's going to happen now.
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And there's nothing I can do about that.
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And it's totally fine.
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Yeah, I think it's maybe less of an issue because of the way that like our businesses
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are made up.
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The way that our business works and like with this show, this has to continue to be made
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for money to be made.
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Because of the way that our advertising comes in.
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But it's different with YouTube, right?
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The videos that are there, not that obviously don't make as much money as if you're putting
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out new ones, but they still generate money.
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Yeah, that is definitely one thing that I like about having the YouTube videos up on
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YouTube is it provides a certain amount of semi-passive income.
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I haven't tested it too long.
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I mean, there has to be some kind of half-life for if I don't upload videos in a year, the
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average daily views have to be going down.
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I think the worst thing you could do is think about trying to test that.
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You would push that too far.
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Like a year.
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If I'm sick, it's not really a huge deal
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because I intentionally try to remove as many deadlines
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from my business as possible,
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which is one of the reasons why Cortex is always slightly annoying to me
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because you and your schedules and your deadlines, it's like,
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What is this thing in my life?
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I have to be here at a time.
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It's got to be like, oh, Myke, you know,
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you're just so insistent about this.
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Because everything else is like,
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you know, hello internet.
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We'll get it out when it comes out.
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When's the video available?
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When it's done.
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You know, like that's how I try to arrange things.
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- I feel like you must have known
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that this was gonna be the case though,
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when we started this.
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Or at least you feebly thought you could change me.
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- Yeah, I don't know what I was thinking back then.
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I was probably sick when we first started
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talking about doing this.
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and that's how you got me to agree.
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There's something I think about is like,
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I'm just really aware that deadlines in me,
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we don't get along.
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I know there's a whole very large group of people
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who always talk about how they can't possibly
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get anything done unless they have deadlines
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to motivate them.
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And I find that I am just the absolute reverse
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that the more deadlines there are in my life,
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the less I end up tending to work.
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Like deadlines are anti-motivators for me.
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- Oh, I hate deadlines,
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but I don't think of the schedules as deadlines.
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It doesn't-- - Still deadlines.
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You got sponsors, you got people waiting for you,
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they're deadlines, the deadline's built into that.
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- Yeah, I mean, I can see why you would see them like that,
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but to me it's just the knowing that if I didn't have
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these things on a calendar,
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there would never be anything done.
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- That's a bit of a different thing, but anyway,
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I guess the point that I was just trying to get is like,
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this sort of goes along with being sick,
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And one of the best changes I made for my own psychological life in the history of my own self-employment here
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was when Patreon bought out Subbable, which was the platform that I was previously using to do crowdfunding.
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When that transition happened, I had an opportunity to change from automatic monthly billing of the people who are supporting my YouTube channel
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to changing that to only manually billing them
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when I actually upload what I consider to be a quote,
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real video, whatever that means in my head.
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- Yeah, I can see how much that will have helped you.
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- And I mean, here's the thing, like,
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there is no doubt that I made more money
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under the old system, right?
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When it was like month by month
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and like you're automatically billing someone,
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but holy God, did that just add an enormous amount
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of stress and anxiety to my life that I really,
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I really did not want.
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And so like, man, that was,
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I debated it for a little while,
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whether or not to make that change,
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and I am so happy I made that change,
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because it just, it felt like it eliminated
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this constant deadline for my life.
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It made every summer feel really guilty
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if I was traveling with family
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instead of working on other stuff,
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because you just know like, man, when the 30th rolls around,
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people are gonna get billed,
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whether you made something or not,
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like if you got it up in time and it's just, I hated that.
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So I am so happy to have it this way now.
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- Did you feel kind of guilty?
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- I mean, people knew what they,
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like there was no guarantee
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that there was a video being made.
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- Yeah, yeah, like guilt is not the correct feeling.
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It was just a constant source of anxiety.
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- And we've talked about this before, right?
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Which is that when you are working for yourself,
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it is very hard to separate when you're working
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from when you're not working, personal time
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from business time.
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It's very hard to do anyway,
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which is almost certainly why when you were laying in bed,
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partly on death's door, part of you was also thinking,
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this is kind of nice because I'm forced to not work.
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- Yeah. - Right, like something else
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is forcing you to let it go.
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- There was nothing I could do.
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So it was like, you can just not worry about this
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for a few days because you have no option.
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Like if you get up and try and go to that computer,
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you will fall down before you get there.
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- Right, you're gonna make a mess.
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It's gonna be awful.
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And so when the billing was just monthly,
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any time, like as soon as the first of the month rolled around,
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I just always had this anxious feeling of like,
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I have to try to get something up now,
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and until I have something up in this month,
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it made it just impossible to not be thinking about work.
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And not in a productive way, like,
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oh, I'm this amazing machine doing all this work
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all this work because I have this gun to my head every month.
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It was just horrific unwelcome stress inducing anxiety.
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And then in situations like when we're talking about now, if there was a time when I just
00:14:40
◼
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couldn't work or like family needed me or wanted me to be available or I was sick or
00:14:44
◼
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something, it was just awful.
00:14:45
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Like I really hated it.
00:14:46
◼
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So this is a case where I was very happy to switch to a system that was like, I will make
00:14:50
◼
►
less money under this new system and I will be so much happier.
00:14:54
◼
►
Let me tell you the real benefit for this illness though.
00:14:59
◼
►
Because I'm on a diet right now, right?
00:15:02
◼
►
I can try to eat better.
00:15:04
◼
►
I've lost six pounds this week.
00:15:06
◼
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Illness is great for weight loss, I have also found.
00:15:09
◼
►
Yep, I am sitting proud on the scales right now.
00:15:14
◼
►
I weighed myself yesterday and I was like, "Yes, illness!
00:15:19
◼
►
This is amazing!
00:15:20
◼
►
I should get infected more often!
00:15:21
◼
►
I'm so proud of you!
00:15:23
◼
►
Well done, Myke.
00:15:25
◼
►
Yeah, it brought me many weeks ahead.
00:15:28
◼
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So I'm very happy about that.
00:15:30
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And I hope that I can keep this weight as it is.
00:15:33
◼
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Thank you, illness.
00:15:36
◼
►
It'll come right back.
00:15:37
◼
►
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Squarespace, you should.
00:18:02
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So you hit a milestone, I think it was last week sometime, and you crossed two million
00:18:08
◼
►
YouTube subscribers.
00:18:10
◼
►
Is this a cause of congratulations?
00:18:12
◼
►
Like I have and will congratulate you, but do you see it as something like that?
00:18:17
◼
►
Is it a badge of honor, two million?
00:18:20
◼
►
Uh, I'm glad the number's going up.
00:18:22
◼
►
Once you hit one million, hooray!
00:18:24
◼
►
But then is it like the next one, is it five?
00:18:27
◼
►
Like is every million as exciting as the first million?
00:18:31
◼
►
If I could start over again, I would celebrate every doubling from one subscriber.
00:18:37
◼
►
that I would do. Man that would be a lot of celebrating. Just at the beginning though.
00:18:44
◼
►
Yeah it starts to get sad quite quickly. That to me feels like the much more natural celebration
00:18:50
◼
►
point is a doubling. Because a doubling is not based on any number system. It's just
00:18:54
◼
►
it's okay you have twice as many as you had last time that you had the celebration. That
00:18:58
◼
►
seems like the way it should be. But like this is not to belittle two million right
00:19:02
◼
►
Because that is like a it's one of those numbers, you know that you can't even comprehend
00:19:08
◼
►
Yeah, it just means nothing. Yeah, it's just so big. It's like okay. It's a population, right?
00:19:13
◼
►
It's not even a number at this point. Like you can't group that amount of people together like it's it's an incredible number
00:19:20
◼
►
but it's like, you know, it's the whole thing you end up getting and I
00:19:24
◼
►
Had this a lot when working in finance like you get numb to numbers after you're around big numbers for a while
00:19:30
◼
►
like they don't you see these huge numbers and it doesn't really mean anything anymore
00:19:34
◼
►
yeah and you worked in a bank so you must have just seen numbers with crazy zeros on the end
00:19:40
◼
►
of them just like yeah okay billion here a billion there it starts adding up to be real money after a
00:19:46
◼
►
while like i just wondered that because obviously i imagine that when you hit one million that was
00:19:50
◼
►
a real cause for celebration i've got to imagine that must have felt like you really achieved
00:19:56
◼
►
Ok, so yes and no.
00:20:00
◼
►
But this starts to get into some of the particulars
00:20:04
◼
►
about the way YouTube does this.
00:20:08
◼
►
And so, yes, I was super glad to hit a million
00:20:12
◼
►
subscribers, but it's been very
00:20:16
◼
►
clear over the time that I've been doing this
00:20:20
◼
►
that YouTube algorithms
00:20:24
◼
►
or like the way the system works has changed and so it's very hard to have a real idea of
00:20:31
◼
►
This thing that I have a million of now is the same as when I had
00:20:36
◼
►
200,000 of it just times five. Yeah, I don't know how much you can explain this
00:20:41
◼
►
But the the longer that me and you've been working together the more attention I paid to YouTube
00:20:47
◼
►
I watch more YouTube videos and I just pay more attention to what's kind of going on there
00:20:51
◼
►
And I look at people's numbers more, and your numbers seem very atypical to what I see with
00:21:00
◼
►
other people.
00:21:01
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►
So now I don't watch very much YouTube, so you need to explain to me what you mean by
00:21:05
◼
►
So like you have 2 million YouTube subscribers, and your videos very frequently top 1 million
00:21:14
◼
►
So you put out a video and it's like a million or 2 million views, depending on how popular
00:21:20
◼
►
the video gets and you have some that are way more than that but on average it seems
00:21:25
◼
►
like you get at least 50% that number.
00:21:28
◼
►
Yeah I'd say like a million feels like an average video now.
00:21:33
◼
►
If I got lower than 800,000 I'd be sad and if I get more than 1.5 million I'd be pleasantly
00:21:40
◼
►
So like a million is like your average right?
00:21:44
◼
►
Looking at that.
00:21:45
◼
►
people now and I see like 2 million subscribers, 100,000 views or like 200,000 views or half
00:21:52
◼
►
a million. Or I see like someone with 16 million subscribers and their videos get 3 million
00:21:58
◼
►
views. Or people that have the same subscribers as you and their videos are like in the tens
00:22:04
◼
►
of thousands. And I don't feel like I fully understand how YouTube works. Because I know
00:22:11
◼
►
as a person coming to YouTube, if I click that subscribe button, I want to watch the
00:22:17
◼
►
majority of videos that are going to come in.
00:22:20
◼
►
Like I don't subscribe to a lot of channels.
00:22:22
◼
►
There are some where I subscribe to them and I pick and choose.
00:22:26
◼
►
But it just seems that there is a real kind of disparity amongst the accounts that I look
00:22:32
◼
►
at between what those two numbers mean in a way that doesn't really seem to make sense
00:22:39
◼
►
in my brain.
00:22:40
◼
►
Because I'm coming at it from podcasts. It's even harder to tell subscribers and downloads in podcasting.
00:22:46
◼
►
But our numbers stay pretty stable and that really doesn't seem to be the way that YouTube works at all.
00:22:52
◼
►
When I started with YouTube, it was very clear what a subscriber meant.
00:22:57
◼
►
It meant someone had pressed that button and the way YouTube was set up, when that person went back to YouTube,
00:23:04
◼
►
they would see a list of all of the channels that they had subscribed to and the newest video from those channels.
00:23:10
◼
►
So it was very obvious and very easy to see new stuff as it was coming in.
00:23:16
◼
►
But over time, and to the annoyance of a great many people, YouTube, like every other company that does this kind of thing,
00:23:23
◼
►
has Facebook-ized the experience. Meaning that you might, like on Facebook, you might follow people
00:23:33
◼
►
people, but Facebook is in the business of deciding for you what you want to see.
00:23:39
◼
►
And so they use algorithms to determine "Oh you seem to interact with this
00:23:44
◼
►
person a lot so we're going to show you more of their stuff and you and you
00:23:47
◼
►
don't see you don't interact with this person as much so we're going to show
00:23:51
◼
►
you less." Like Facebook does that, YouTube does that, I'm getting the
00:23:56
◼
►
impression from some angry people on Twitter that Twitter has made some
00:23:59
◼
►
and motions in the past few days towards this.
00:24:01
◼
►
This is like an inevitable law of large media companies.
00:24:06
◼
►
That they want to switch from systems
00:24:09
◼
►
where you are telling them how you want to see things
00:24:12
◼
►
to systems where they are algorithmically determining
00:24:15
◼
►
for you what you're going to see.
00:24:19
◼
►
And so now when people log onto YouTube,
00:24:21
◼
►
there's the, they have a, I think it's called
00:24:23
◼
►
like what to watch.
00:24:24
◼
►
And that is YouTube's suggestions
00:24:27
◼
►
about what you want to see.
00:24:28
◼
►
I've got to say that what to watch.
00:24:30
◼
►
I do watch a lot of videos that come from there.
00:24:32
◼
►
The algorithm does work.
00:24:35
◼
►
Like I find lots of videos that I want to see
00:24:39
◼
►
from that suggestion.
00:24:41
◼
►
- Oh yeah, don't get me wrong.
00:24:43
◼
►
YouTube has some incredibly smart people
00:24:48
◼
►
working on that algorithm.
00:24:51
◼
►
- Have you heard of Google?
00:24:53
◼
►
- Yeah, it's like, I'm not saying that it's bad
00:24:56
◼
►
at what it does.
00:24:57
◼
►
I'm just saying it's a different system.
00:25:00
◼
►
And I genuinely think that for something like YouTube,
00:25:03
◼
►
you can argue that it's a better system.
00:25:05
◼
►
Do I like it better as a creator?
00:25:07
◼
►
No, but does your average viewer probably watch more YouTube
00:25:12
◼
►
because of their algorithmic system?
00:25:14
◼
►
They have to.
00:25:15
◼
►
I'd be shocked if they don't.
00:25:18
◼
►
YouTube is obsessed with this notion of watch time,
00:25:21
◼
►
like how much time do people spend on the site?
00:25:24
◼
►
And they dedicate enormous computing resources and A/B testing and all kinds of stuff to figure out like what videos keep people on the site longer.
00:25:34
◼
►
So I do not doubt in the slightest that it is effective.
00:25:37
◼
►
But because of that, the way I view the subscriber button now is not, "Oh, this person has subscribed to my channel and they will see every one of my videos."
00:25:49
◼
►
The subscriber button now is you sending a signal to the algorithm.
00:25:56
◼
►
And the algorithm is going to decide how important it considers that signal to be.
00:26:00
◼
►
And so, I mean, my guess is that when you see some really weird subscriber numbers,
00:26:06
◼
►
like you say, you do sometimes come across people who seem to have subscribers in the millions
00:26:11
◼
►
and view counts in like the tens or 20 of thousands, and it's like, what is that? Like, what's going on there?
00:26:18
◼
►
And I think that's a case of the algorithm has decided that the people who have subscribed to this channel are not actually interested in seeing this channel's videos.
00:26:29
◼
►
That's what's happening there.
00:26:31
◼
►
That's why I put just very little mental emphasis now on those subscriber numbers.
00:26:38
◼
►
Like, it's interesting. I'm glad when it goes up.
00:26:41
◼
►
It's notable when I cross a big barrier.
00:26:44
◼
►
But I used to be super obsessed with the subscriber numbers because it used to mean like when I press that publish button
00:26:51
◼
►
X number of people are going to see this as a new thing
00:26:55
◼
►
And now I know that when I press that button what really happens is almost certainly YouTube
00:27:01
◼
►
Just like Facebook does is like testing with a random subsection of the number of people who subscribe to me to see how many people click on it
00:27:10
◼
►
And then based on that it might recommend the video to a larger subsection of the number
00:27:14
◼
►
of people who subscribe to me.
00:27:15
◼
►
That's kind of what I presume is going on behind the background.
00:27:19
◼
►
And that's just a totally different feeling than like, "Man, when I press this button,
00:27:23
◼
►
two million people are going to see a thing."
00:27:25
◼
►
That's not what happens, and so it makes that two million number feel very different.
00:27:30
◼
►
Now it's almost like that number is a theoretical upper threshold of market exposure.
00:27:37
◼
►
That's what the subscriber number is in some ways.
00:27:39
◼
►
But if the number's going up, it's an indication to you that there are more people to see it.
00:27:45
◼
►
Potentially to see it, yeah.
00:27:46
◼
►
But it's, these things do not move in correlation to each other.
00:27:50
◼
►
They don't necessarily move in correlation to each other, no.
00:27:53
◼
►
I can very easily imagine that some channels would have a situation where people love to
00:27:58
◼
►
subscribe to that channel, but the algorithm consistently learns like, "Oh, okay, but
00:28:02
◼
►
they don't actually interact with the videos in the way that I expect, and so I just won't
00:28:06
◼
►
ever show them very many videos from this channel like other stuff will always take
00:28:11
◼
►
Because what it's seeming to be coming clear to me is that doesn't really seem to be like
00:28:16
◼
►
a pointable threshold that you have to hit to hit a certain level like if you cross a
00:28:23
◼
►
million then your views will always be X. It doesn't feel like that that makes any sense
00:28:30
◼
►
it's just so confusing to me because it must I mean is it worse you do you know where the
00:28:35
◼
►
people are coming from? Like I don't know what YouTube statistics are like. Do you know
00:28:39
◼
►
that like a lot of these people aren't subscribers and you're actually getting a lot of like
00:28:45
◼
►
embed watches from whatever Daily Mail website or something?
00:28:50
◼
►
The YouTube analytics are pretty good. They give you some sense of if people are coming
00:28:54
◼
►
from external sites. There's always the issue of anyone who runs analytics programs knows
00:29:01
◼
►
that you have this big catch-all category of like direct referrals where you have no
00:29:05
◼
►
idea like really where the person came from, you just know that they hit a URL that sent
00:29:11
◼
►
YouTube does the best that it can, but I always, whenever I have a chance to talk to anybody
00:29:17
◼
►
who works at YouTube, what I want to know is how many of my subscribers saw this on
00:29:24
◼
►
their screen when they went to the "What to Watch" section on YouTube.
00:29:30
◼
►
I want to know what percent of people were even exposed to this or what percent of my
00:29:36
◼
►
subscribers have asked for email alerts.
00:29:39
◼
►
That's the one number they don't want to give you and I can totally understand from YouTube's
00:29:43
◼
►
perspective why they don't want to do that.
00:29:45
◼
►
They don't want channels I imagine being quite irritated to know like what do you mean you
00:29:48
◼
►
only tested this with one percent of my audience and then sent it out to five percent of my
00:29:52
◼
►
audience because it didn't do very well.
00:29:54
◼
►
I think people would get quite angry about that if you know if that's what's going on.
00:29:59
◼
►
I hear that stuff and it makes my skin crawl.
00:30:04
◼
►
- Well, it makes your skin crawl
00:30:05
◼
►
because Facebook's whole business model
00:30:07
◼
►
is putting those numbers right in your face.
00:30:09
◼
►
When I upload something on the CGP Grey Facebook page,
00:30:15
◼
►
Facebook is always really happy to let you know,
00:30:18
◼
►
oh, you have 20,000 fans on Facebook,
00:30:20
◼
►
we sent this to 100 of them.
00:30:22
◼
►
Would you like to pay us more money
00:30:25
◼
►
to send it to more of the people who are fans of your page?
00:30:29
◼
►
- It's just 'cause I don't work in that world.
00:30:31
◼
►
'Cause I assume that maybe YouTube is doing something
00:30:33
◼
►
like that as well, right?
00:30:34
◼
►
Which is maybe, right?
00:30:36
◼
►
Which is why you don't get all of the two million
00:30:39
◼
►
every time, right?
00:30:41
◼
►
- And it's just the difference for me.
00:30:43
◼
►
And with you with the podcast as well is that people
00:30:46
◼
►
that click the button to subscribe to our shows,
00:30:49
◼
►
they get every episode.
00:30:51
◼
►
They choose whether they listen to it,
00:30:52
◼
►
but it comes to them?
00:30:54
◼
►
But then that's the crazy thing to me.
00:30:57
◼
►
It's like, of course it does.
00:30:58
◼
►
You've shown the intention.
00:31:01
◼
►
You've pressed the button and then it comes to you.
00:31:05
◼
►
Like there are just all these weird things
00:31:06
◼
►
that YouTube seem to do.
00:31:08
◼
►
Like sometimes I get push notifications for people.
00:31:11
◼
►
Like I have a couple of channels
00:31:14
◼
►
that I like to get notified about when a new video posts.
00:31:17
◼
►
Sometimes I don't get those notifications.
00:31:20
◼
►
- It's like, and at that point, it's like,
00:31:21
◼
►
what are you doing?
00:31:22
◼
►
Like I've gone an extra step now
00:31:25
◼
►
in trying to ensure that I see these videos,
00:31:29
◼
►
but you're still not telling me about them.
00:31:31
◼
►
That one, like I can't wrap my head around.
00:31:33
◼
►
Or there was this one time,
00:31:35
◼
►
I was looking through some pictures the other day
00:31:37
◼
►
and I came across it the other day.
00:31:38
◼
►
I got this weird, do you remember this?
00:31:39
◼
►
I got this like really weird push notification
00:31:42
◼
►
where it was like, "See the latest from CGP Grey,"
00:31:44
◼
►
and you hadn't uploaded it in like six weeks.
00:31:46
◼
►
Do you remember that?
00:31:47
◼
►
- Oh yeah, that's right, that's right.
00:31:48
◼
►
You just out of the blue got a push notification
00:31:51
◼
►
about check out CGP Grey's latest video.
00:31:54
◼
►
some kind of tests right yeah that's my assumption here right like you you have just fallen into
00:32:00
◼
►
the random five percent that they're doing a test on and that's why you got a push notification
00:32:06
◼
►
that is like just the ongoing like weirdness of living inside of somebody else's system
00:32:12
◼
►
yeah all of this is and and this is part of like a broader statistics see kind of discussion
00:32:19
◼
►
I want to talk to you about because there are some significant differences in the way
00:32:23
◼
►
the way that analytics and statistics work between the two businesses that you operate
00:32:29
◼
►
The YouTube and podcasting.
00:32:31
◼
►
And one of the biggest ones is like how public and private numbers are.
00:32:37
◼
►
So like with YouTube, you can't hide them.
00:32:41
◼
►
Like they are there.
00:32:42
◼
►
They're on the page.
00:32:43
◼
►
They're under the video.
00:32:45
◼
►
But in the podcasting world, they're not.
00:32:48
◼
►
And by and large, podcasters tend to keep their numbers private. They just don't talk
00:32:54
◼
►
about them. We don't share them. And I don't really know why that is, but because people
00:32:59
◼
►
tend not to, nobody does.
00:33:01
◼
►
Yeah, it's weird. It's like every podcast feels like it's in some kind of poker game
00:33:05
◼
►
with all other podcasts.
00:33:07
◼
►
Like you've said your numbers on Hello Internet before, and I nearly spat my tea out. Because
00:33:12
◼
►
not only they are massive, but also it was the fact that you said them on the show. I
00:33:18
◼
►
I was like, "Whoa, great, you've broken the secret code."
00:33:21
◼
►
- Yeah, people don't like to talk about numbers
00:33:22
◼
►
in the podcast world in a way that I find strange
00:33:27
◼
►
because yes, I feel like I'm coming from this YouTube world
00:33:30
◼
►
and you actually, I have to double check,
00:33:32
◼
►
but I'm pretty sure that in the options somewhere
00:33:35
◼
►
you can turn off the view numbers if you want to.
00:33:39
◼
►
But nobody does.
00:33:41
◼
►
- It's the opposite of the private agreement.
00:33:43
◼
►
Everybody is just agrees that they'll just show
00:33:47
◼
►
numbers to everybody. Even more so, it's a bit like when people turn off comments on their videos.
00:33:54
◼
►
The problem is like, "Oh, you're one of those, right?"
00:33:58
◼
►
"You think you're better than us, huh?" "Oh, you're such a delicate little flower,
00:34:04
◼
►
like nobody else's thoughts can approach you. You're separate from the rest of us."
00:34:10
◼
►
Taking away comments on YouTube, I almost always think is a worse thing to do than,
00:34:15
◼
►
and just leave it open, right? Just leave it open because people hate it when you close the comments.
00:34:20
◼
►
People just hate it. They're gonna find you and because you closed those comments,
00:34:26
◼
►
they're gonna spend way more energy in trying to find you. So just leave it open.
00:34:30
◼
►
It's just a funny cultural thing.
00:34:34
◼
►
I have only once seen someone do the no-comments thing well, which was this YouTube horror series
00:34:43
◼
►
called Marble Hornets, which is a Slenderman fanfiction horror series thing.
00:34:48
◼
►
This is really an obscure corner of the internet here.
00:34:51
◼
►
I don't understand any of the words, but carry on.
00:34:54
◼
►
I'm gonna carry on. Slenderman is like this internet monster,
00:34:58
◼
►
and these bunch of guys were making a little video that had Slenderman
00:35:02
◼
►
hunting them down in every video, basically. And they were uploading them to YouTube,
00:35:06
◼
►
and they disabled comments for sure, and I think they disabled the ratings
00:35:12
◼
►
And it was one of those things where it's like, oh, okay, you have made this experience feel different
00:35:20
◼
►
because I can't leave any feedback on this video. This video is just like this thing that exists here.
00:35:26
◼
►
And so then if I want to discuss this, I have to go somewhere else.
00:35:30
◼
►
And then it kind of fosters like all of these communities around those videos discussing what's going on.
00:35:35
◼
►
I just Google image search Slenderman and I don't feel very comfortable anymore.
00:35:39
◼
►
Yeah, it's super creepy. I think it's one of those things where it's just like it's just all the wrong proportions to make you feel like
00:35:45
◼
►
Oh god, get this thing away from ya
00:35:47
◼
►
Anyway that I will list marble Hornets as the only effective use I have ever seen of someone turning off the comments and it was
00:35:54
◼
►
For a particular effect, but if I ever saw someone who would like hidden the their view stats on YouTube
00:35:59
◼
►
I feel like I'd never stop laughing at them
00:36:01
◼
►
Okay, that's the way you're gonna do this
00:36:07
◼
►
I don't really know why it started like in the podcasting world and I think because it wasn't public people just didn't
00:36:14
◼
►
Why would you talk about it? Yeah, so everybody now just doesn't talk about it, but
00:36:19
◼
►
You don't obviously you don't care to share
00:36:23
◼
►
Yeah, I don't I don't really care. It's not especially you and Brady because you're both in the world of YouTube
00:36:31
◼
►
It seems very natural just to talk about the numbers. Although again from my perspective
00:36:37
◼
►
I feel like the YouTube analytics are crystal clear.
00:36:40
◼
►
It's very obvious exactly how many people have watched your videos
00:36:44
◼
►
and precisely when they have stopped watching and all kinds of crazy information.
00:36:49
◼
►
There's plenty of stuff to complain about YouTube, but their analytics are beat by no one.
00:36:55
◼
►
Whereas from my perspective, the podcast analytics always seem like, "Oh, come on!"
00:37:00
◼
►
These crazy numbers that are hard to interpret.
00:37:03
◼
►
And it feels like there's much more guesswork in the podcast world about how many people
00:37:07
◼
►
even listen.
00:37:09
◼
►
Because it's a bit of the reverse problem where sometimes if someone subscribes to your
00:37:14
◼
►
podcast, there can be a podcast player on their iPhone which is downloading the episode
00:37:18
◼
►
diligently every week, but the person never listens.
00:37:21
◼
►
They could be dead.
00:37:22
◼
►
Right, they could be dead.
00:37:23
◼
►
With their iPhone still downloading shows.
00:37:27
◼
►
And then there's also just some weird stuff where I am convinced that podcast analytics
00:37:31
◼
►
don't capture people listening from the web in an accurate fashion.
00:37:35
◼
►
So I always feel like the podcast stuff is just it's just crazy.
00:37:38
◼
►
It's just all over the place.
00:37:40
◼
►
When people ask me about Hello Internet Now, I know I say it's like, OK,
00:37:43
◼
►
my 99 percent confidence interval is like, OK,
00:37:48
◼
►
we have 200,000 listeners plus or minus 50,000 listeners.
00:37:52
◼
►
That that plus or minus number makes me shudder.
00:37:56
◼
►
I can't imagine that margin of error.
00:38:00
◼
►
I don't understand why it is the way it is.
00:38:03
◼
►
I think it's partly because we seem to have a huge number of people who listen on the
00:38:07
◼
►
web as best analytics can tell.
00:38:10
◼
►
Like our show, it's not as big as Hello Internet.
00:38:13
◼
►
It's sizable.
00:38:14
◼
►
I'm not going to tell you what the numbers are.
00:38:15
◼
►
I was going to say, you're not going to discuss the numbers, Myke?
00:38:17
◼
►
No, I'm not going to talk about them.
00:38:19
◼
►
I can't do it.
00:38:22
◼
►
I just can't do it.
00:38:23
◼
►
You know why?
00:38:25
◼
►
You can't do it because you are from the podcast world.
00:38:28
◼
►
Yeah, exactly.
00:38:29
◼
►
I can't talk about it.
00:38:31
◼
►
I'll be breaking the secret code.
00:38:33
◼
►
But our numbers are sizable, they're very large.
00:38:38
◼
►
And they're relatively stable,
00:38:43
◼
►
like they're going up, which is great,
00:38:45
◼
►
so thank you everybody.
00:38:46
◼
►
But they don't differ by like 20 or 30,000 a week,
00:38:52
◼
►
like that doesn't happen.
00:38:54
◼
►
I mean, there have been times that have happened
00:38:56
◼
►
and I'm continuing to try and build my case
00:38:59
◼
►
for the scheduling as the reason for this.
00:39:03
◼
►
One day I really hope that you just test
00:39:06
◼
►
Hello Internet on a schedule and then the variant stops
00:39:09
◼
►
and then I win.
00:39:10
◼
►
But until that day, I'm gonna carry on fighting
00:39:13
◼
►
the good fight.
00:39:14
◼
►
But yeah, that 50,000 swing, man,
00:39:18
◼
►
yeah, that freaks me out.
00:39:19
◼
►
That would keep me up at night.
00:39:21
◼
►
You're lucky you do YouTube videos.
00:39:23
◼
►
- Yeah, but you see, the reason why I think
00:39:25
◼
►
I'm also very happy talking about these numbers
00:39:27
◼
►
is because a plus or minus 50,000, so a spread of 100,000,
00:39:32
◼
►
to me, a spread of 100,000 doesn't even register
00:39:37
◼
►
on YouTube scales. - Exactly.
00:39:38
◼
►
- Right, like, that's, like, you know,
00:39:40
◼
►
YouTube scales is spreads of plus or minus 5 million.
00:39:45
◼
►
- Yeah, if I had a comparative spread on a show,
00:39:51
◼
►
I would honestly lose sleep at night about it.
00:39:56
◼
►
- I talk about these numbers
00:39:57
◼
►
when we talk about the subscribers on YouTube because
00:40:00
◼
►
this is one of those cases where I think you need to figure out what statistics really matter
00:40:07
◼
►
and what statistics don't.
00:40:09
◼
►
And I used to place a huge amount of importance on YouTube subscribers as a statistic that I followed.
00:40:17
◼
►
And now I don't. I hardly think about it.
00:40:20
◼
►
And quite frankly, the 2 million thing really snuck up on me.
00:40:24
◼
►
I made that video soliciting for
00:40:25
◼
►
questions entirely because
00:40:27
◼
►
I was like, oh, crap, if I don't do
00:40:28
◼
►
this right now, I'm going to miss
00:40:30
◼
►
the mark and then I'm going to look
00:40:31
◼
►
like an idiot asking for questions
00:40:34
◼
►
It was just it just snuck up on me
00:40:35
◼
►
too fast. And
00:40:36
◼
►
then I had the same thing with the
00:40:39
◼
►
podcast, which is like there as
00:40:42
◼
►
Listens feels like a number
00:40:44
◼
►
that I should be obsessed with, but
00:40:46
◼
►
I just really don't think about
00:40:48
◼
►
it very much.
00:40:49
◼
►
I don't think those are
00:40:50
◼
►
necessarily.
00:40:52
◼
►
I don't care to follow it on like a week to week basis.
00:40:55
◼
►
It's not something that I focus on.
00:40:58
◼
►
And I think it's very easy to get lost with following metrics that don't really directly impact anything.
00:41:07
◼
►
Like it's very easy for, and I see people do this sometimes,
00:41:11
◼
►
where people are super obsessed with how many followers they have on Instagram or Snapchat
00:41:16
◼
►
or like whatever the newest social media thing is.
00:41:20
◼
►
And I always feel like, "Okay, but does that number translate to anything with your business?"
00:41:29
◼
►
Like I can't imagine that it does.
00:41:34
◼
►
And I even have data to back this up.
00:41:36
◼
►
Like I'm approaching 100,000 followers on Twitter.
00:41:41
◼
►
Oh, are you?
00:41:42
◼
►
Yeah, it's like 93 something now, I think.
00:41:45
◼
►
Do you know what I just did?
00:41:48
◼
►
you that I'm not really in the right mental state. I just opened Tweetbot to search for
00:41:54
◼
►
you to look at that. And in the search field I typed the word "Twitter". So I'm looking
00:42:01
◼
►
for @Twitter to see how many followers they have instead of CGP Grey. There you go. Back
00:42:06
◼
►
to full health. Myke's not fully back yet. He's 60% of the way here folks. Treat him
00:42:12
◼
►
gentle today in the comments. So I want to mention this as a thing which is like people
00:42:18
◼
►
People talk about, "Oh, it's really important to promote your business on social media."
00:42:22
◼
►
I now find myself in the position that I have more followers on Twitter than most people
00:42:27
◼
►
who are trying to promote a business are going to have.
00:42:31
◼
►
But I like to do tests on Twitter with sometimes like track through URLs to see how many people
00:42:36
◼
►
click on a thing, how many people retweet this or whatever.
00:42:41
◼
►
I can tell you, even with a huge amount of followers, the number of people who click
00:42:45
◼
►
on a URL is very small.
00:42:47
◼
►
I think people end up thinking a lot about visible statistics because they're visible
00:42:54
◼
►
and they're easy to track.
00:42:56
◼
►
I see people think, "Ooh, how can I increase the number of people who follow me on Twitter
00:42:59
◼
►
or whatever?"
00:43:00
◼
►
And I'm like, "Okay, it's an easy thing to conceptualize, but I don't think it really
00:43:05
◼
►
matters in terms of promotion as much as you think it does."
00:43:10
◼
►
With something like social media, the relevant question is, "Do you enjoy this?
00:43:14
◼
►
Are you having fun doing this?"
00:43:17
◼
►
And if the answer is no, well then this is not a super effective tool.
00:43:23
◼
►
And with a minimum amount of tracking you can see very fast that obsessing over these
00:43:29
◼
►
statistics is not going to help you at all.
00:43:32
◼
►
It just doesn't matter.
00:43:34
◼
►
Because trust me, a dude with ten times as many followers on Twitter, if he tweets out
00:43:38
◼
►
your link, it's not actually that big of a deal almost all the time.
00:43:43
◼
►
Like it just doesn't matter.
00:43:44
◼
►
I've definitely learned this over time.
00:43:45
◼
►
If we have something, like if we're selling a t-shirt or whatever, if you tweet about
00:43:49
◼
►
it you'll get some people, but you gotta talk about it on the show.
00:43:53
◼
►
That's how people find out about it.
00:43:55
◼
►
When they find out about it from the show.
00:43:56
◼
►
That's where the actual audience is.
00:43:59
◼
►
And it's like comparing the amount of Twitter followers I have to listeners that we have,
00:44:03
◼
►
it very rarely even nearly matches up.
00:44:07
◼
►
Either up or down.
00:44:08
◼
►
It just doesn't make any sense.
00:44:10
◼
►
a lot of this stuff is like they're just a bunch of different numbers and I look
00:44:15
◼
►
at a lot of different numbers and just see how they move,
00:44:18
◼
►
but there's no way to correlate a lot of these things together.
00:44:23
◼
►
And I think that's the one of the key things that you learn after doing
00:44:27
◼
►
something like this for a while is that you just want to see the numbers moving
00:44:32
◼
►
in one direction and that will help you know something.
00:44:38
◼
►
But there's no way that you can say, and it goes all the way back to what we were talking
00:44:41
◼
►
about right at the start of this conversation, that those subscriber numbers mean you're
00:44:45
◼
►
going to get that amount of video views.
00:44:47
◼
►
Because it just doesn't mean that.
00:44:49
◼
►
I am a firm, firm believer in trends over absolute value.
00:44:58
◼
►
That when you realize that, and you have to kind of go through a period of time of obsessing
00:45:07
◼
►
about statistics before you realized that the value is in trends.
00:45:12
◼
►
I used to put a lot more emotion, I think, into statistics than I do now.
00:45:18
◼
►
If you ever really felt that way, like if you ever looked at the numbers
00:45:22
◼
►
and and like really obsessed about them and thought like, this means it's good.
00:45:26
◼
►
This means it's bad.
00:45:27
◼
►
No, not in terms of video views or anything like that, because
00:45:35
◼
►
I just feel like I have grown up so stewed in internet culture that I am very aware that
00:45:42
◼
►
effort and quality are not necessarily related in terms of success in the way that people might want them to be.
00:45:49
◼
►
That is so nicely put.
00:45:50
◼
►
I have never had that feeling.
00:45:53
◼
►
I've been in a few situations where I feel like I'm talking someone down from a cliff
00:45:57
◼
►
when they have a thing that is very high quality but just isn't catching on for some reason.
00:46:03
◼
►
But that's not how this works. It's like, yes, you might have put a hundred hours into this thing, but
00:46:09
◼
►
that doesn't mean that it's going to be super viral on the internet. Like, that's just not how it works.
00:46:17
◼
►
It's never worked like that. It will never work like that.
00:46:21
◼
►
But people want it to as soon as they get into the game of making stuff.
00:46:27
◼
►
However, the only time I was super obsessed with statistics, as I mentioned before, is when I was trying to switch to YouTube full-time.
00:46:35
◼
►
And then I had a spreadsheet that was tracking progress to 200,000 subscribers that I filled out and looked at every day
00:46:43
◼
►
and was looking at the numbers and the projections for how long is it going to take to hit this number.
00:46:47
◼
►
Like, then I was super obsessed, but it's because I had a goal and I had a day by which I had to hit that goal,
00:46:55
◼
►
otherwise I was going to be teaching for another year.
00:46:58
◼
►
So then I was super obsessed.
00:47:00
◼
►
But after that, like I have a whole lot of spreadsheets
00:47:04
◼
►
that track a whole lot of things.
00:47:07
◼
►
- Which might be a surprise to some listeners.
00:47:09
◼
►
- You would never have guessed.
00:47:11
◼
►
- And I do track things,
00:47:13
◼
►
but now it's almost entirely on a monthly basis.
00:47:17
◼
►
That when a new month rolls around,
00:47:18
◼
►
there's a bunch of things that I do.
00:47:19
◼
►
And one of those things is I update some of the spreadsheets.
00:47:22
◼
►
And I like to look at a lot of the stuff in my business on a 12 or 24 month average rolling timeframe.
00:47:33
◼
►
That's a big timeframe.
00:47:35
◼
►
It's a big timeframe, but it's the only way to smooth out something as irregular as the YouTube channel.
00:47:41
◼
►
Right, because since some months I upload, other months I don't upload, sometimes a summer goes by and there's nothing.
00:47:47
◼
►
Like there's I have to average out something like the revenue on that business over a 24-month
00:47:53
◼
►
Timeframe because otherwise the the numbers are just crazy
00:47:56
◼
►
It's just because the the differences between a month where I do something in them and a month where I don't are enormous
00:48:02
◼
►
I feel like I check our statistics on a on a kind of a less
00:48:07
◼
►
Regimented basis. So I check every show once a month to just plot them into a spreadsheet
00:48:14
◼
►
And there are some shows where I check them more frequently.
00:48:17
◼
►
And it's not... I don't feel like I obsess on them.
00:48:20
◼
►
I just look at them and go, "Okay, like, we're tracking."
00:48:24
◼
►
But I used to like really fret over them.
00:48:28
◼
►
Why did you fret?
00:48:28
◼
►
This was a lot earlier in me doing this.
00:48:32
◼
►
This was before Relay.
00:48:33
◼
►
I used to check the numbers like multiple times a day of my shows.
00:48:39
◼
►
See that? Yeah, that is fretting.
00:48:41
◼
►
That is definitely fretting.
00:48:42
◼
►
And it was really because I used to kind of equate a lot more to like, this isn't the desperation phase
00:48:49
◼
►
for me, right? The same as how you were in that phase leading up to leaving teaching.
00:48:54
◼
►
I really equated like when the numbers hit x, I will be able to finally leave my job.
00:49:02
◼
►
Although for me, I had no way of controlling it. It was like a purely mental thing.
00:49:09
◼
►
I hadn't done the work to actually know what numbers they needed.
00:49:12
◼
►
And it really wasn't until I could have my own business before I could ever do it anyway.
00:49:17
◼
►
Like the numbers were never going to make sense because I could never control it, right?
00:49:21
◼
►
But yeah, I used to check it a lot more obsessively.
00:49:25
◼
►
And I was able to get myself out of it by thinking about it slightly differently.
00:49:30
◼
►
And there's this talk that I listen to maybe once every year or two, and it's by
00:49:36
◼
►
My man and John Gruber and that they gave this talk at self by self West in like 2004
00:49:41
◼
►
And they talk a lot about this type of stuff like who are you making for and what I eventually was able to transition
00:49:49
◼
►
Myself into is when I make these things and create these things
00:49:52
◼
►
I try to make them good for people that I imagine in my mind
00:49:55
◼
►
like specific people like is this person gonna like this and and when I was able to kind of
00:50:02
◼
►
Work to that it helped me stop thinking about the numbers so much. I wasn't thinking about the masses of people
00:50:09
◼
►
I was trying to think of specific people that might enjoy it my
00:50:13
◼
►
Probably top favorite writing book is on writing by Stephen King
00:50:19
◼
►
Which is a little bit difficult to recommend because you need to have already read a lot of Stephen King books to get the most
00:50:25
◼
►
Out of that they talk a lot about that book in that talk
00:50:28
◼
►
Okay. Yeah, it was like is that matches up with his
00:50:32
◼
►
notion of the ideal reader. He talks about in that writing books for his wife as opposed to
00:50:39
◼
►
writing books for millions of readers. That that's a much easier thing to think about
00:50:44
◼
►
and also changes the way that you create things. I think there's definitely value in that notion
00:50:53
◼
►
because, you know, if you're trying to think about the audience as a whole as like, okay, well,
00:50:59
◼
►
guess what? The audience as a whole has no personality and the audience as a whole,
00:51:04
◼
►
some people are always going to love the thing that you just made and some people
00:51:07
◼
►
are always going to hate it. Like there's no direction to be derived from this thing.
00:51:12
◼
►
People are always going to sit at the polar ends.
00:51:15
◼
►
Well at least they're the ones you can hear from.
00:51:16
◼
►
All of this comes down to, I think, trying to figure out like what is it that actually
00:51:20
◼
►
matters for tracking in your business. And the lessons here are there's tons of stuff
00:51:28
◼
►
that's easy to track that is totally pointless in tracking.
00:51:32
◼
►
Yeah, all the stuff that's really easy to get numbers on is mainly the stuff you don't
00:51:39
◼
►
Yeah, I think there actually might be a direct relationship with that, right? Like the easier
00:51:43
◼
►
it is to track, the less useful it is. If you run a business, almost certainly one of
00:51:49
◼
►
the most important things to track is revenue. And so lots of my spreadsheets are various
00:51:55
◼
►
things related to income and money flow and income diversity, which is a thing we should
00:52:00
◼
►
talk about at another time, not now.
00:52:04
◼
►
But like, that's what I track, and I track it over a long time and I want to just see
00:52:09
◼
►
Like, I don't really care about the absolute value, but I just want to see, like, are these
00:52:12
◼
►
numbers going up?
00:52:13
◼
►
Okay, that's great, things are fine.
00:52:15
◼
►
If the numbers start going down, then I need to start thinking about changing stuff around.
00:52:19
◼
►
But going to this notion of sometimes the most important things are the hardest things
00:52:24
◼
►
to track is I'm really aware, like with Hello Internet, that we have a big audience, but
00:52:30
◼
►
there's also some kind of crazy variance in the individual shows that I just cannot figure
00:52:36
◼
►
With Hello Internet, I think one of the most important things to me to be aware of is impossible
00:52:40
◼
►
to track directly.
00:52:43
◼
►
And it's how interested are the advertisers in buying more spots?
00:52:48
◼
►
That's not a number that I can put on a spreadsheet, but it's a thing that I am aware of, which
00:52:53
◼
►
which is like, okay, we have this audience,
00:52:55
◼
►
it's wildly variant, but I know that advertisers
00:52:59
◼
►
want to buy more ads than we want to sell them right away.
00:53:04
◼
►
- 'Cause there's a funny thing
00:53:06
◼
►
in that the numbers don't actually dictate that.
00:53:09
◼
►
- I have some particular theories about like why I think
00:53:11
◼
►
it seems like advertisers get a good response from that show.
00:53:16
◼
►
- Yeah, I feel like I know it,
00:53:18
◼
►
but we'll save that for another time.
00:53:19
◼
►
- We'll save that for another time.
00:53:20
◼
►
I have my own theories, but that is a perfect example.
00:53:23
◼
►
There's nothing I can put on a spreadsheet to directly track this advertiser response.
00:53:30
◼
►
But I just know that when advertisers go on that show, they are very happy.
00:53:35
◼
►
And then advertisers want to block out a whole year and we find ourselves in these conversations.
00:53:38
◼
►
We're like, "No, we will not sell you a whole year's worth of advertising in advance."
00:53:42
◼
►
in advance. Like that's a great thing.
00:53:45
◼
►
That's super important.
00:53:46
◼
►
But that is impossible to track
00:53:48
◼
►
in a in a statistically significant
00:53:50
◼
►
way. But it is probably one of the
00:53:52
◼
►
most important things that I'm just
00:53:53
◼
►
aware of. Like this is a good thing.
00:53:55
◼
►
One of the hardest things about
00:53:56
◼
►
tracking that as well is there are
00:53:58
◼
►
factors that have nothing to do with
00:54:00
◼
►
you that you don't know.
00:54:01
◼
►
Yeah. Yeah. There's so much that's
00:54:02
◼
►
just out of your control.
00:54:03
◼
►
Like budgets.
00:54:04
◼
►
You have no idea what's happening in
00:54:06
◼
►
those companies budgets.
00:54:07
◼
►
Like you might have a company that
00:54:09
◼
►
has bought your show every episode
00:54:12
◼
►
for four years, then they stop.
00:54:14
◼
►
You think it's you, but they just went out of business.
00:54:17
◼
►
Nothing to do with you, man.
00:54:19
◼
►
- This is something that as I have been more and more
00:54:23
◼
►
in the business of the podcasting world,
00:54:26
◼
►
I have discovered the seasonality of corporate budgets
00:54:29
◼
►
and the importance of quarters.
00:54:31
◼
►
When a new year rolls around.
00:54:33
◼
►
It's to me, it's just like, again,
00:54:35
◼
►
coming from the YouTube world where none of this stuff
00:54:37
◼
►
matters that like YouTube just handles all of it for you.
00:54:40
◼
►
I'm just so aware of like the annual cycle
00:54:45
◼
►
and corporate budgets for advertising for podcasts.
00:54:48
◼
►
It's so strange. - Yeah, I kind of got my head
00:54:49
◼
►
around quarters.
00:54:50
◼
►
I'm getting now starting to understand annual
00:54:53
◼
►
a little bit more as well.
00:54:54
◼
►
- Yeah, but it's funny to find myself having conversations
00:54:58
◼
►
where I feel like the douchiest business person
00:55:00
◼
►
in the world where I'm like,
00:55:01
◼
►
yeah, we can revisit that in Q3.
00:55:03
◼
►
- Let's touch base in the next quarter, Greg.
00:55:05
◼
►
- I cannot believe I say things like that.
00:55:08
◼
►
We can circle back in Q4.
00:55:10
◼
►
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Alright, so talking about millions of views. There was this whole hubbub in the YouTube
00:57:35
◼
►
world, which is so funny that I kind of sit on the very sidelines now, so like I see these
00:57:40
◼
►
things start to pop into my life a little bit more.
00:57:44
◼
►
YouTube drama!
00:57:45
◼
►
Yeah, yeah. And a lot of my friends found out about this because of you. I don't think
00:57:52
◼
►
I would have found out about it if it wasn't for you. And it's this whole thing about react
00:57:56
◼
►
videos and I don't want to get into the whole business of it. I am assuming you
00:58:00
◼
►
and Brady will probably talk about this at some point maybe, but I'll put some
00:58:05
◼
►
links in the show notes to people if they want to find out exactly what is
00:58:09
◼
►
going on or had gone on with this. Here's the thumbnail sketch for anyone who's
00:58:14
◼
►
just listening now, has no idea what Myke is talking about. Basically two very
00:58:20
◼
►
popular YouTubers put out two videos that were hilariously tone-deaf and
00:58:29
◼
►
super corporate and the YouTube world reacted very very poorly to these and
00:58:38
◼
►
lots of people were putting out videos complaining about what they had done or
00:58:43
◼
►
the way they had done it. It was kind of a big pile-on and I came to this very
00:58:48
◼
►
late but as soon as I saw those two videos I was like I cannot not make my own videos
00:58:55
◼
►
about this. And so I did.
00:58:58
◼
►
Yes. In an evening that will go down in history, I think, for CGP Grey, it's one of the most
00:59:07
◼
►
like out of character days I've seen from you.
00:59:12
◼
►
You always say this about things being out of character.
00:59:14
◼
►
Yes, but they're in your... if they're you, they're in your character.
00:59:17
◼
►
I get it, but...
00:59:20
◼
►
Okay, you adapted your character that day.
00:59:23
◼
►
No, this was just waiting to happen.
00:59:25
◼
►
Yes, okay, it was only a matter of time.
00:59:28
◼
►
But the reason I wanted to bring this up is that...
00:59:31
◼
►
How long did it take you to create these two videos?
00:59:35
◼
►
Okay, so I went back and took a look at the files,
00:59:40
◼
►
like when did the file creation time happen?
00:59:42
◼
►
happen because I was curious to know myself and essentially these two videos together
00:59:50
◼
►
to make both of them took me less than 40 minutes to make from start to finish.
00:59:56
◼
►
Alright, as we sit here today, they're about a week old and I've accumulated together
01:00:03
◼
►
close to 2 million views, right?
01:00:07
◼
►
this the single most profitable 40 minutes of your entire life right?
01:00:13
◼
►
Yeah I think it is quite probable that that is the most money I will ever make per hour
01:00:20
◼
►
of anything that I've ever done now or in the future.
01:00:24
◼
►
Because it's just so little time.
01:00:26
◼
►
As a man of tracking statistics, a man of tracking all of this kind of stuff, you've
01:00:34
◼
►
got to have some kind of opinion about this.
01:00:36
◼
►
Like what does this say?
01:00:40
◼
►
What does this say to you?
01:00:42
◼
►
Well there's not always going to be things that you do this stuff with, right?
01:00:48
◼
►
And it is kind of funny that you made some reaction videos and they were really popular.
01:00:53
◼
►
It's quite ironic in the whole scheme of things.
01:00:57
◼
►
Yeah I think this is part of the statistics conversation because I think it's really important
01:01:06
◼
►
for people to be aware that statistics are just not everything.
01:01:13
◼
►
And so if I was just an absolute cold-blooded businessman who only cared about the money,
01:01:23
◼
►
obviously I should get into the snarky reaction video business.
01:01:30
◼
►
And this is not an exaggeration.
01:01:33
◼
►
I could probably 10x revenue if I did so.
01:01:38
◼
►
At least 10x per hour.
01:01:43
◼
►
Because these videos took no effort to do.
01:01:48
◼
►
Everybody loves a good bit of drama and a good bit of an internet fight.
01:01:53
◼
►
Like "internet fight!"
01:01:54
◼
►
Everybody comes along and they want to see what everybody has to say about what's going
01:02:00
◼
►
Like these are very popular things.
01:02:01
◼
►
There are always enough internet fights to get involved in to sustain a business.
01:02:04
◼
►
Yeah, I mean the thing is, there's this whole bizarre, funny subsection of YouTube
01:02:11
◼
►
that I mostly stay away from that is entirely devoted to YouTube drama.
01:02:15
◼
►
And then of course, everybody knows like a pack of drama llamas, like they just draw
01:02:19
◼
►
more drama llamas, like and it brings its own energy and audience and like these things
01:02:25
◼
►
feed on themselves.
01:02:26
◼
►
whole economy built around this kind of stuff. And it's hugely popular. It's just crazy.
01:02:33
◼
►
And that's partly what these videos stumbled upon a little bit. It's like, "Oh, CGP Grey
01:02:38
◼
►
got in on the action too and everybody watches the video." So yeah, from a business perspective,
01:02:43
◼
►
it's stupid not to make more of these. But this is where, as I always say, I am trying
01:02:50
◼
►
to build a life that I want to live, I'm not trying to make a company that maximises revenue
01:02:57
◼
►
under all circumstances all the time.
01:02:59
◼
►
Yeah, that's a really good way of putting it.
01:03:02
◼
►
I don't want to make reaction videos all the time.
01:03:06
◼
►
I don't want to follow YouTube drama.
01:03:07
◼
►
Like, I just don't care.
01:03:09
◼
►
I don't care almost all of the time.
01:03:12
◼
►
And yeah, this stuff would be really easy to make.
01:03:16
◼
►
Yeah, it would probably be pretty popular, but it's not something that I want to do.
01:03:21
◼
►
And this is...
01:03:23
◼
►
This is again those moments where there's a kind of conflict between the CEO of Grey Incorporated and the employee of Grey Incorporated, but
01:03:31
◼
►
since I'm the same person, I can and do make decisions that are terrible business-wise,
01:03:38
◼
►
but that are great personal life-wise.
01:03:42
◼
►
And I think it's incredibly important to be conscious of that kind of thing.
01:03:49
◼
►
Like to be aware of don't make business decisions that you won't be happy with.
01:03:56
◼
►
Like I would just, I would hate doing nothing but this.
01:03:59
◼
►
Now might I make one again in the future?
01:04:02
◼
►
I don't know.
01:04:03
◼
►
Maybe if another perfect storm like this that is just irresistible comes along.
01:04:10
◼
►
But I'm not starting, you know, CGP Reacts.
01:04:13
◼
►
It's just not a thing that I'm going to do.
01:04:15
◼
►
It's not a thing that I have any interest in doing.
01:04:18
◼
►
Like I like making the kinds of videos that I make.
01:04:22
◼
►
I like making videos on topics that are of interest to me.
01:04:25
◼
►
And I am just such a lucky bastard that there is a large enough audience of people who are
01:04:33
◼
►
interested in the kinds of things that I make that I can do this for a living.
01:04:37
◼
►
There's no reason that that should be, but it happens to be, and I am the lucky benefactor
01:04:45
◼
►
But you know, you can and people do strategically go after big, popular audiences of stuff.
01:04:57
◼
►
Well, people have different goals.
01:04:59
◼
►
Like, it's the same thing for me.
01:05:01
◼
►
There is a style of podcasting that seems to be extremely popular, which basically sounds
01:05:08
◼
►
like it's made by public radio.
01:05:10
◼
►
>> DARREN Alright, yeah, the NPR podcasts.
01:05:13
◼
►
>> ANDREW Yeah.
01:05:14
◼
►
>> DARREN And the Gimlet podcasts, which all sound the
01:05:17
◼
►
>> ANDREW Yeah, and I've dabbled in some stuff which
01:05:19
◼
►
is stylistically close to it, but I could try and go further in that direction.
01:05:26
◼
►
I could try more and more projects, but it doesn't interest me as much as the stuff
01:05:30
◼
►
that I do. The people talking thing. That's the stuff that I like. It's the stuff that
01:05:37
◼
►
we make. It's the stuff that we commission. Like this is my thing that I enjoy. Like this
01:05:44
◼
►
is what I like to do. I'm again consider myself a very very lucky person that I get to make
01:05:51
◼
►
what I like to make and people like to listen to it and I get paid to do it. And that's
01:05:57
◼
►
awesome that's how I feel. There are people that feel differently but they're just motivated
01:06:01
◼
►
by different things right it's not wrong it's just motivated differently like me and you
01:06:06
◼
►
are motivated to do the type of thing that we like because it makes us happy but for
01:06:11
◼
►
some people they just want to make the most money they can make and what that means is
01:06:16
◼
►
creating videos talking about people fighting but the thing is the reason they make money
01:06:22
◼
►
is some people like to watch those things they enjoy them.
01:06:25
◼
►
Oh yeah, an internet fight done right is fun.
01:06:28
◼
►
There's no way around it, like it just plugs into something that humans like.
01:06:34
◼
►
I always want to be clear, I'm never quite poo-pooing people enjoying other kinds of content
01:06:40
◼
►
because I think that's the kind of thing that you can't really control.
01:06:44
◼
►
It's just whether your brain reacts to it or it doesn't.
01:06:46
◼
►
Like, whatever.
01:06:47
◼
►
I don't know, I sometimes get into arguments with people when they say things like,
01:06:50
◼
►
"Oh, there's so much garbage on YouTube."
01:06:51
◼
►
And it's like, but is it popular? Like then tons of people like it, you know, like who and who were
01:06:57
◼
►
you to say like, "Oh, everybody should be watching Masterpiece Theatre," right? Like, well, should
01:07:02
◼
►
they? Should they always like, "I don't watch Masterpiece Theatre all day long."
01:07:06
◼
►
- Yeah, I like gossip and fighting as much as the next person.
01:07:09
◼
►
- Yeah, who doesn't?
01:07:11
◼
►
- And it's nice that there's a place for it. I just don't feel like I need to be the person
01:07:16
◼
►
Another YouTube version of this is, from my perspective, just low effort list videos.
01:07:24
◼
►
Just like lists do really well on websites, lists do really well in video format.
01:07:30
◼
►
And it's not like I'd never do a list, it's not that I don't think lists can't be done well.
01:07:35
◼
►
But I know, I know that I almost certainly could have videos that were way more popular,
01:07:43
◼
►
that are way easier to make if I just said,
01:07:47
◼
►
"Ah, f*** it, I'm making lists.
01:07:48
◼
►
I'm making lists from now on.
01:07:50
◼
►
Here we go, right?
01:07:51
◼
►
10 amazing places you've never heard of.
01:07:54
◼
►
Seven things your body does you won't believe."
01:07:57
◼
►
Right? And it's like, it stuff's really easy to do.
01:08:00
◼
►
It's like, it's not hard.
01:08:05
◼
►
And the siren song of it is, "It's not hard
01:08:09
◼
►
and it almost certainly would be very popular."
01:08:12
◼
►
Way more popular than what I'm doing now.
01:08:15
◼
►
But I also know, like, I just don't want to make those.
01:08:18
◼
►
That's not a thing that I want to do.
01:08:20
◼
►
And, yeah, the business would love it, but I would not.
01:08:25
◼
►
I would not love that.
01:08:27
◼
►
So you just have to be careful.
01:08:29
◼
►
Like I said before, I keep track of these graphs of business revenue over time.
01:08:35
◼
►
And at some point, these graphs are going to level off.
01:08:40
◼
►
It's just like at some point YouTube subscriber numbers will level off because there are only
01:08:46
◼
►
so many people in the world.
01:08:49
◼
►
There's only so much value that I can create in a day, in an hour.
01:08:55
◼
►
But when I come to those points, I know and I'm very comfortable with the idea of like,
01:08:59
◼
►
"Okay, revenue's leveled off, viewers have leveled off.
01:09:02
◼
►
I'm going to be totally fine continuing to do what I do and I'm not going to feel like,
01:09:07
◼
►
"Oh, I need to start going after list videos
01:09:09
◼
►
"and reaction videos and all this other stuff
01:09:11
◼
►
"to keep this graph going up."
01:09:13
◼
►
Because this is the huge benefit of working for yourself.
01:09:17
◼
►
I am not a public company.
01:09:18
◼
►
I do not need to keep growing forever.
01:09:21
◼
►
This is not one of my goals.
01:09:23
◼
►
And it is very, very important
01:09:26
◼
►
to keep that in front of mind.
01:09:27
◼
►
Like yes, I have all of these spreadsheets,
01:09:30
◼
►
but these spreadsheets are not the measure of success.
01:09:34
◼
►
Like I view the measure of success
01:09:36
◼
►
as having control over my life and being able to work on the things that interest me.
01:09:41
◼
►
And I know for a fact that the opportunity cost of that decision is enormous.
01:09:50
◼
►
I can put ballpark figures on just how enormous that opportunity cost is.
01:09:56
◼
►
And it is breathtaking because...
01:09:59
◼
►
I don't know, it's just like... I see these comments sometimes, right, where...
01:10:03
◼
►
It's like I have advertisements at the end of some of my YouTube videos now.
01:10:06
◼
►
Like I've done Audible ads, I've done Squarespace ads.
01:10:08
◼
►
Maybe someday we can talk about why that's the case.
01:10:11
◼
►
Actually it might be good for the diversity episode.
01:10:13
◼
►
But sometimes I'll see comments from people who are like,
01:10:16
◼
►
"Oh, what a sellout! I can't believe it. Look at that.
01:10:18
◼
►
This guy put an Audible ad for Guns, Germs, and Steel at the end of his America Pox video.
01:10:22
◼
►
What a total sellout!"
01:10:24
◼
►
I always kind of laugh at those because it's like,
01:10:26
◼
►
"Dude, when I sell out, you will know."
01:10:34
◼
►
Like, I don't think you have any idea the kind of offers that come across the table
01:10:39
◼
►
of someone who consistently gets millions of views on YouTube.
01:10:47
◼
►
I say no to tons of things that would make me a lot of money for very little effort because
01:10:56
◼
►
I don't think that they're good decisions in the long term and because I think that
01:11:01
◼
►
would make me unhappy to do. I've said no to a lot of stuff and it was a little
01:11:06
◼
►
bit harder in the beginning because you feel like, "Am I an idiot?"
01:11:11
◼
►
Trust me, sometimes there are offers that come along where it's like, "Hi, we're a
01:11:15
◼
►
gigantic car company. We will pay you an enormous amount of money to make a video
01:11:20
◼
►
about our car." And I was like, "Oh god, I'm gonna say no to this. Like, that is a huge
01:11:25
◼
►
check, but I'm going to say no, but I am gonna wonder for a day or so, like,
01:11:30
◼
►
"Am I an idiot? Why just a moron?"
01:11:33
◼
►
Hi, I'm CGP Grey and I'm here to tell you about why this new Ford car is amazing.
01:11:38
◼
►
Yeah, I mean that's basically what you get pitched sometimes.
01:11:41
◼
►
Yeah, I mean when people see that video, that's when they'll know that you're done.
01:11:45
◼
►
Yeah, that's when it won't be like "Oh, he's sold out!"
01:11:48
◼
►
Like, you'll know. It's fine.
01:11:51
◼
►
And you know, everybody does have their price, right?
01:11:53
◼
►
But like my price at this stage is like,
01:11:55
◼
►
"Can you pay me enough so that I never have to work again and can live a life of luxury?"
01:11:59
◼
►
then I will do your car company commercial.
01:12:01
◼
►
Like then that's fine.
01:12:02
◼
►
Then we can have a discussion maybe.
01:12:05
◼
►
But it's just, it's so important,
01:12:10
◼
►
especially if you are the only person in your business
01:12:12
◼
►
that you have to balance all this stuff
01:12:14
◼
►
of like not only what will make me money
01:12:17
◼
►
but like what will I also feel okay doing?
01:12:22
◼
►
I don't think I've told this story before
01:12:24
◼
►
but the hardest decision like this that I ever had
01:12:28
◼
►
actually came literally the week after I had quit teaching.
01:12:33
◼
►
So I was brand new, just on my own,
01:12:38
◼
►
self-employed for the first time.
01:12:40
◼
►
And as you are in that situation,
01:12:43
◼
►
terrified that you might have made
01:12:45
◼
►
the worst decision of your life.
01:12:47
◼
►
- A little desperate too, right?
01:12:50
◼
►
- You feel like you're really...
01:12:51
◼
►
- You're suddenly living on the edge.
01:12:54
◼
►
- Right, you don't know where money's coming from
01:12:57
◼
►
And it's this moment of like, oh God, my own life is in my own hands.
01:13:01
◼
►
Like I might have just totally messed this up.
01:13:04
◼
►
Uh, and in particular for reasons I've alluded to in the past, like I also in
01:13:09
◼
►
the process of leaving teaching, like might've totally screwed myself out of
01:13:12
◼
►
being able to get another teaching job, but that's a, that's on the side there.
01:13:16
◼
►
But so, uh, the week after I quit my teaching job, I had a phone call with
01:13:26
◼
►
someone from a large publishing company.
01:13:30
◼
►
And they had this offer for me, which
01:13:36
◼
►
basically went like this.
01:13:38
◼
►
We will write you a check that is more money than you have made
01:13:46
◼
►
in the last four years right now if we can use your name
01:13:54
◼
►
on a book about fun history facts that you won't write,
01:13:59
◼
►
but that we will sell,
01:14:02
◼
►
and you just mention it on your YouTube channel
01:14:05
◼
►
that there's like CGP Grey's fun history facts book
01:14:09
◼
►
that this exists.
01:14:12
◼
►
Feels like a golden goose, right?
01:14:15
◼
►
At that stage, like where you are,
01:14:19
◼
►
like that's your security for the next four years.
01:14:22
◼
►
- That's exactly what it was, right?
01:14:23
◼
►
It's like someone is going to hand you peace of mind,
01:14:27
◼
►
just the biggest safety net for the next several years.
01:14:32
◼
►
The only thing you have to do is sell your name.
01:14:37
◼
►
And it was one of these things like,
01:14:41
◼
►
"Man, did I get in some arguments
01:14:43
◼
►
"with some people about this?"
01:14:44
◼
►
Because I didn't like that deal.
01:14:52
◼
►
I didn't like the deal because I didn't...
01:14:55
◼
►
I thought, man, I don't want to have my name on some ghost written thing forever.
01:15:01
◼
►
This is one of these things with business, like how much of an incentive do they have
01:15:06
◼
►
to make this amazing?
01:15:09
◼
►
I imagine not a huge incentive because what they're banking on...
01:15:12
◼
►
So you would have gotten no say in the book at all.
01:15:16
◼
►
is like, "Oh, here is a guy who has a big audience
01:15:20
◼
►
of enthusiastic followers
01:15:24
◼
►
and we're going to make more money off of all of these
01:15:28
◼
►
people buying the first thing that he has made than the size
01:15:32
◼
►
of this check that we're going to write. And we're just going to hire some ghost writers
01:15:36
◼
►
to just churn this thing out in a weekend." I don't remember the details now, but they had some
01:15:40
◼
►
hilariously fast timeframe, which is just, again,
01:15:44
◼
►
indicates like, okay, well, you're not gonna make a great book here.
01:15:47
◼
►
It may have been written already.
01:15:50
◼
►
Like, they just needed to make a cover.
01:15:53
◼
►
It very well may have been the case that this was something from some other aborted project
01:15:57
◼
►
that they were just trying to figure out.
01:15:59
◼
►
It was written and they were just waiting until some person said yeah.
01:16:03
◼
►
Yeah, exactly.
01:16:04
◼
►
You may have been the third person, right?
01:16:06
◼
►
Yeah, you never know.
01:16:07
◼
►
You never know with this stuff.
01:16:09
◼
►
That was the hardest business decision I think I have ever made because I was in the absolute
01:16:17
◼
►
worst negotiating position.
01:16:20
◼
►
It was the thing that I needed most at that time, a shocking amount of financial security.
01:16:28
◼
►
But I did say no.
01:16:30
◼
►
And like I was saying, I got into arguments with people and the universal wall of consensus
01:16:36
◼
►
was "you're a moron for not taking this." Like, what are you even debating? But sitting
01:16:44
◼
►
here now, I am so glad that I didn't do that. That I don't have some kind of albatross around
01:16:51
◼
►
my neck. You would never get over it. The way that I know you, that would always bother
01:16:58
◼
►
you. Always. And I feel that same way about some of the things that come to me as business
01:17:02
◼
►
deals for the YouTube channel. It's like, I don't want to make a video that somebody
01:17:07
◼
►
else is just paying me to make that I have no interest in because the check was really
01:17:14
◼
►
big. Again, it's like, sometimes you feel really dumb turning down these things, but
01:17:20
◼
►
it doesn't change the fact that, again, as a one-person business, I have to live with
01:17:26
◼
►
the thing that I am doing.
01:17:28
◼
►
And if there's a really terrible book with my name on it,
01:17:33
◼
►
I want to have written that terrible book, right?
01:17:36
◼
►
I want to be able to look at that and go, wow,
01:17:39
◼
►
that was my fault, I did a terrible job on that.
01:17:43
◼
►
- At least I tried.
01:17:44
◼
►
- Right, but it was me doing it.
01:17:47
◼
►
What I don't want is something where like,
01:17:50
◼
►
I have sold my name to be used on a thing and it's terrible.
01:17:54
◼
►
I was like, "Oh, okay, that's awful.
01:17:57
◼
►
"That's absolutely awful now."
01:17:58
◼
►
And then in addition, the feeling of like
01:18:01
◼
►
kind of having tricked my audience into making a purchase
01:18:05
◼
►
that I had nothing to do with.
01:18:06
◼
►
Like, man, none of this do I like.
01:18:08
◼
►
I like none of it, but that's why, you know,
01:18:11
◼
►
just like these surprisingly popular React videos,
01:18:16
◼
►
it's like you can't use just the metrics
01:18:19
◼
►
to make all of the decisions.
01:18:21
◼
►
It's like those React videos were fun to make.
01:18:23
◼
►
Maybe I'll do something like that again in the future,
01:18:25
◼
►
but I'm not gonna chase that career.
01:18:28
◼
►
And yeah, sometimes I get offers from companies
01:18:33
◼
►
that on a pure return on investment basis
01:18:36
◼
►
are like great deals,
01:18:38
◼
►
but you can't evaluate everything in that way,
01:18:42
◼
►
even if that's what you're using
01:18:43
◼
►
to track some of the data in your life.
01:18:47
◼
►
This episode of Cortex is brought to you by Igloo,
01:18:50
◼
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the intranet you will actually like, not the internet.
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But your intranet, you probably hate it.
01:18:58
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You're at some company and the internal intranet
01:19:02
◼
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is just a nightmare to work with.
01:19:03
◼
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I know all the intranets that I've ever had to work with.
01:19:06
◼
►
They were horrible.
01:19:07
◼
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I hated them.
01:19:08
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They were old, they were clunky,
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they were conflicts all the time.
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It's surprisingly configurable and you can completely rebrand it to give it the look
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and feel of your team or company.
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editors, you can make the whole internet work exactly the way your team needs it to.
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you can use read receipts to see who's seen what for tracking important information.
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just way simpler and way more powerful than the internet at the company that
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you are probably using right now. So it's time to break away from that internet
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these internets, check out igloo. If you're an employee, have a little chat
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with the IT guy. Tell him Cortex sent you. So go and sign up for igloo right now at
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igloosoftware.com/cortex. You can try it for free and for any team with up to
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Once again, that's igloosoftware.com/cortex. Thank you so much to igloo for supporting
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Cortex and all of Relay FM.
01:20:31
◼
►
Alright, Myke. There's a thing I want to talk to you about. And there's a thing that I wanted
01:20:39
◼
►
to talk to you about so much that, contrary to my normal character, I was trying to convince
01:20:48
◼
►
you a while back to record an emergency episode of Cortex. That's how much I wanted to talk
01:20:55
◼
►
I have an iMessage from you which I feel like I need to frame and send back to you, where
01:21:02
◼
►
you were basically asking me to do more work and I was telling you no.
01:21:08
◼
►
This might be the only time in the history of our working collaboration together or ever
01:21:13
◼
►
in the future. But yes, I was like, okay, we need to record an emergency episode because
01:21:19
◼
►
I feel incredibly strongly about a thing and I need to get this out there. But obviously
01:21:26
◼
►
here we are now, dear listener. Myke wouldn't do an emergency cortex and so now this is
01:21:31
◼
►
in the regular show. Where do we begin this story of woe, Myke?
01:21:37
◼
►
- It has been well documented that myself and Gray
01:21:41
◼
►
love our iPad Pros.
01:21:44
◼
►
- It is further documented that we love to use
01:21:46
◼
►
our Apple Pencils with them.
01:21:48
◼
►
From drawing with them, but also to use them
01:21:51
◼
►
like pen tablets to interact with them,
01:21:52
◼
►
to tap things, to scroll things, because it's nice.
01:21:56
◼
►
If it's already in your hand, great.
01:21:57
◼
►
You can just use it like your finger.
01:22:00
◼
►
Currently, Apple have in both developer and public beta,
01:22:06
◼
►
iOS 9.3. I'm getting too old to install betas.
01:22:10
◼
►
Like I'm an old man now, I ain't got time for this kind of young man's game of installing
01:22:14
◼
►
betas on your main machines. However
01:22:18
◼
►
the night shift feature in 9.3
01:22:22
◼
►
was one of those things that I was intensely interested in. I wanted to see how
01:22:26
◼
►
it worked. No one else can show you screenshots or pictures, you have to see
01:22:30
◼
►
it in person. And so I thought, okay,
01:22:34
◼
►
Let me come out of retirement and install a beta on my main machine.
01:22:40
◼
►
Every time I get out they pull me right back in.
01:22:43
◼
►
Exactly, exactly.
01:22:44
◼
►
It's always going to be something like this, but you know, this time it's this one.
01:22:49
◼
►
And I really do mean that my iPad Pro is without doubt my main machine by miles.
01:22:55
◼
►
It's got to be the thing that I am doing 90% of all of my computing on including my iPhone.
01:23:03
◼
►
So I installed this and I was like, "Oh, wow, Night Shift, this is great."
01:23:06
◼
►
And I was using the iPad to just read some stuff
01:23:09
◼
►
and I was like, "Oh, what I really want to see is how this works with iBooks at night."
01:23:13
◼
►
I open up iBooks and I have the pencil in my hand, as I always do,
01:23:17
◼
►
and I go to turn the page in iBooks and I'm like, "Huh, that's weird.
01:23:20
◼
►
The page doesn't turn with the pencil anymore."
01:23:23
◼
►
Like, "Oh, as well, of course. This is why it's a beta. It's a bug."
01:23:27
◼
►
And I keep using the iPad and I'm in Safari and I'm like, "Huh.
01:23:31
◼
►
The web page isn't scrolling when I go to use this pencil to scroll in Safari.
01:23:37
◼
►
That's weird. And then I opened a share sheet in GoodNotes, which is my handwriting application of choice,
01:23:42
◼
►
and I wanted to scroll horizontally there to get to a different icon to send a PDF to.
01:23:47
◼
►
I was like, "That's weird. It doesn't work here either."
01:23:49
◼
►
So, of course, a diligent little person, I too, filed one of the little feedback things.
01:23:54
◼
►
They have that little application that you can use.
01:23:56
◼
►
I opened it up and I was like, "Oh, hey, just thought you guys would like to know."
01:23:58
◼
►
Now, like there's a weird bug that I can imagine you might miss where it's like in iBooks and in share sheets
01:24:03
◼
►
it doesn't scroll properly when you use the pencil.
01:24:06
◼
►
I didn't really think anything about it until the second developer beta comes out and nothing has changed
01:24:13
◼
►
and then the second public beta came out and nothing had changed.
01:24:19
◼
►
And that's when I started to worry.
01:24:21
◼
►
Because that's when it feels like this isn't a bug.
01:24:26
◼
►
This is a decision.
01:24:27
◼
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My concern currently is that we have made this bed for ourselves.
01:24:34
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What do you mean?
01:24:35
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I think that when Apple introduced the pencil, it worked the way it did because
01:24:42
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they didn't really think about it.
01:24:43
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They created a device that allows you to manipulate iOS like a finger would just
01:24:49
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because it recognizes touch.
01:24:52
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So it's just, it is what it is.
01:24:54
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and inside of applications stuff it scrolls UI just because it does, like they didn't
01:24:58
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really think about it.
01:25:00
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I think when they saw, my feeling is when they saw people like me and you, and not necessarily
01:25:07
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me and you, but you know, using the iPad like a pen tablet and using the pencil like a stylus,
01:25:16
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they decided that that wasn't right for our iPad and have removed the function.
01:25:21
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That's what I think's happened here.
01:25:22
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Yeah, this is what I am deeply, deeply worried about.
01:25:27
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►
Because there are these certain things that Apple does which just feel super Apple-y.
01:25:33
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And something about deciding that thou shan't use the pencil as you would use a Wacom tablet.
01:25:43
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Like this is an Apple decision.
01:25:45
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►
This is not how we want people using our amazing pencil that is for artists only to be
01:25:52
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►
sketching in a museum in a way that we can film for an Apple commercial. Like this is the only thing we want you doing with this and
01:26:01
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we don't want you using it any other way. It just it feels like the kind of thing that Apple
01:26:08
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might decide and
01:26:14
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►
never ever been more upset about any decision Apple has made than this one.
01:26:23
◼
►
Again, assuming that it is a decision.
01:26:27
◼
►
I mean look, we've talked about it before on this podcast, right?
01:26:32
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►
I am a person who has had repetitive strain injuries in my hands for...
01:26:37
◼
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I mean since college going on 15 years now.
01:26:40
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►
This is a thing that I can live with because it's a thing that I manage and in the course of those 15 years
01:26:47
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Without a doubt the number one most effective tool for reducing
01:26:54
◼
►
RSI has been using a pen tablet for the vast majority of my computer interactions
01:27:00
◼
►
We just discussed it last time like the very excellent Wacom Intuos tablet, right?
01:27:04
◼
►
Which is now sitting on my desk
01:27:06
◼
►
which is an amazing piece of hardware that I can use to manipulate all parts of the computer.
01:27:12
◼
►
Wacom doesn't say, "Oh, you can only use our pen tablet for drawing."
01:27:16
◼
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Wacom says, "No, you can use scroll bars. You can scroll up and down a web page."
01:27:20
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Because it would be crazy to make you, say, on a desktop computer, pick up a mouse.
01:27:26
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►
Like, "Oh no, you can only interact with web pages if you're using a mouse."
01:27:30
◼
►
I mean, when we talked about it on the episode of Cortex, which I believe was "Brick of Obligation,"
01:27:36
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is where I first talked about having the iPad Pro and having this Star Trek vision of the future for how people work,
01:27:47
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►
with multiple screens on a flat table.
01:27:50
◼
►
And it is really interesting to me that since getting the Pro, since getting the Pencil, my life has become so close to this.
01:27:57
◼
►
We may discuss it next time, but I happen to have been traveling for the past two weeks.
01:28:02
◼
►
Almost exclusively, I've been using my iPad Pro flat on a table with my iPhone.
01:28:08
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►
This is how I do almost all of my work.
01:28:10
◼
►
I saw my wife. She actually borrowed before I left my iPad Pro to do some research for traveling.
01:28:17
◼
►
And she was sitting at a table with my iPad Pro, with her mini and with her phone, arranging a whole bunch of stuff.
01:28:24
◼
►
Like this multiple screen thing is obviously
01:28:28
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►
the future of computing, I think, for almost everybody.
01:28:31
◼
►
Right, like just, you have pieces of paper on a desk,
01:28:33
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you're gonna have a bunch of screens on a desk.
01:28:35
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Like that's just the way it's gonna go.
01:28:36
◼
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- Because eventually they're gonna be that thin as well.
01:28:40
◼
►
- Yeah, they're gonna be that thin,
01:28:41
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►
they're gonna be that cheap.
01:28:42
◼
►
And when I have conversations with people about this now,
01:28:45
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►
they laugh at me and they go like,
01:28:46
◼
►
"What are you crazy working on multiple iPads
01:28:48
◼
►
like that, Tom?"
01:28:49
◼
►
It's like, but look at how many business people
01:28:51
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►
have multiple pieces of paper on a desk.
01:28:52
◼
►
Like it's just gonna happen.
01:28:54
◼
►
But my one big concern about this prior to the Pro is that manipulating these screens with your hands in what I always think of as finger painting position,
01:29:09
◼
►
right, like you are doing finger paints, which is extending your fingers out, holding your hand in this horizontal position,
01:29:15
◼
►
it's not comfortable to do all day long.
01:29:19
◼
►
And as someone who has been very aware of RSI issues,
01:29:24
◼
►
I'm very conscious of listening to my hands
01:29:28
◼
►
and see if I'm getting any kind of feedback about
01:29:30
◼
►
"Is this a potential for repetitive strain?"
01:29:33
◼
►
And I am totally aware that if you want to use iPads all day long,
01:29:37
◼
►
I can get repetitive strain injury from that.
01:29:40
◼
►
I have gotten repetitive strain injury from using iPads in this position.
01:29:43
◼
►
Now, some people go, "I use iPads all day and I never have a problem!"
01:29:47
◼
►
Like, that's great, I'm happy for you, but not everybody falls into this category.
01:29:52
◼
►
And so, when the pencil came, it was just amazing to me because I thought, "Wow,
01:29:59
◼
►
I am looking at the next 10 years of my computing life.
01:30:04
◼
►
I can use a precision-pointing tool to interact with a flat screen on a desk in a maximally comfortable way,
01:30:12
◼
►
way in a way that I can do for 12 hours in a row without any problems.
01:30:19
◼
►
And I know because I have been doing that.
01:30:23
◼
►
Because I was so upset by what is happening with the betas, like I went through all the
01:30:26
◼
►
trouble of rolling back my iPad because I thought, man, I can't use the iPad in this
01:30:33
◼
►
hybrid way of like trying to switch back and forth between using the pen and then putting
01:30:37
◼
►
it down or trying to awkwardly, like with my ring finger, scroll things on the screen
01:30:41
◼
►
while still holding the pen.
01:30:43
◼
►
Like, it's just an awful, awful experience.
01:30:46
◼
►
And I am really worried
01:30:49
◼
►
that if this is the decision that Apple has made,
01:30:51
◼
►
what I am looking at is the future
01:30:55
◼
►
of my computing experience
01:30:58
◼
►
and the future of the computing experience
01:30:59
◼
►
for anybody who has RSI problems
01:31:02
◼
►
or just hand manipulation problems
01:31:04
◼
►
being artificially crippled
01:31:07
◼
►
because someone at Apple
01:31:10
◼
►
doesn't want people to use iPads in this way.
01:31:13
◼
►
That's what I am just so worried about.
01:31:16
◼
►
The thing that annoys me the most about all of this is
01:31:19
◼
►
if you didn't want it to do this,
01:31:21
◼
►
you could have just done this from the start.
01:31:24
◼
►
Yeah, you should have done this from the start.
01:31:27
◼
►
Yeah. Because--
01:31:28
◼
►
You've given it and now you are taking it away, right?
01:31:30
◼
►
Yeah, I'm sitting here like almost trembling
01:31:34
◼
►
with like fury and upsetness over this
01:31:37
◼
►
Because like you gave me a taste of the computing future that I always want that I need
01:31:44
◼
►
and now you are taking it away just because.
01:31:48
◼
►
And this wouldn't be the first time that Apple's done something like this.
01:31:52
◼
►
What this kind of reminds me of is the whole kerfuffle that happened over with the Today View on iPhones when they first came out.
01:32:00
◼
►
And that was a case of like, okay, Apple allowed people to put things into this notification center
01:32:06
◼
►
And everybody was calling them widgets and like, "Oh, let me build all these neat things for the widgets."
01:32:11
◼
►
But Apple clearly had some idea of like, "No, this is the today view.
01:32:15
◼
►
We only want you to use it to quickly access information about today.
01:32:19
◼
►
You should look at your calendar and you should check the weather here.
01:32:22
◼
►
But if you want to put a calculator in here, no, no, no. That's not how we envision you doing this thing."
01:32:29
◼
►
And like they've eventually like seeded the ground on that, but it was a weird time where Apple was just...
01:32:36
◼
►
They had some idea about how they want you to do things.
01:32:39
◼
►
And it's like, "Okay, Apple, that's great, but if you give people tools,
01:32:42
◼
►
they're going to come up with better ways to use them than you can think of every possible way to use the thing."
01:32:49
◼
►
And I feel like this is the same case with the pencil.
01:32:51
◼
►
Like, someone has an idea of how they want people to use the pencil,
01:32:55
◼
►
but people like me—and I've been speaking to other people who use the pencil—
01:33:00
◼
►
they want to use it like it's a Wacom tablet.
01:33:05
◼
►
And I think being able to use it like it's a Wacom tablet is way more powerful than what Apple had envisioned for the pencil.
01:33:14
◼
►
And they should roll with it. Like, go with this Apple. This is good for you. This is good for the users.
01:33:22
◼
►
Don't artificially limit this because it's not how you envision people using your pretty tablet.
01:33:29
◼
►
Why the f*ck do I have to use my finger?
01:33:32
◼
►
Why does it have to be my finger?
01:33:34
◼
►
- I don't understand.
01:33:37
◼
►
My thinking about this, so try and rationalize it,
01:33:42
◼
►
I'm assuming that they have something else
01:33:44
◼
►
that they wanna do with it, right?
01:33:46
◼
►
That this doesn't allow.
01:33:48
◼
►
And if that's the case, I can understand it if they tell me.
01:33:53
◼
►
'Cause all I know right now is this is how it is.
01:33:57
◼
►
Now, there is a, as we stand right now,
01:34:00
◼
►
there is a strong potential that 9.3 will be released
01:34:03
◼
►
with the iPad Air 3, which will also support the pencil.
01:34:07
◼
►
So there might be more functionality coming
01:34:11
◼
►
to the Apple Pencil, which could explain
01:34:14
◼
►
why this is the case.
01:34:15
◼
►
If that is the case, whilst I won't be happy with it,
01:34:19
◼
►
I'll be more willing to accept it.
01:34:21
◼
►
But if the reasoning is purely what me and you feel
01:34:24
◼
►
right now, I consider it unacceptable.
01:34:29
◼
►
I mean look, I cannot imagine a use case
01:34:34
◼
►
that would justify this decision.
01:34:36
◼
►
- No, neither can I.
01:34:37
◼
►
But it's like if they have a reason,
01:34:40
◼
►
something they wanna do,
01:34:41
◼
►
I can at least see their thinking.
01:34:43
◼
►
Right now, it just looks like they're just being petty.
01:34:46
◼
►
- Yeah, I mean we discussed on one of the previous episodes
01:34:50
◼
►
how the Pencil doesn't allow you to operate
01:34:52
◼
►
what I think of as the meta user interface,
01:34:55
◼
►
which is opening up split view,
01:34:57
◼
►
pulling down notification center,
01:34:58
◼
►
And we discussed on that episode, oh, that's kind of weird at first, but you can immediately see why.
01:35:04
◼
►
That if you want to do edge swipe gestures with the pencil, you can't also have it activating that meta interface.
01:35:12
◼
►
It just won't work. So it's like, OK, I can understand that if you have a drawing program, you want to be able to draw in from the edge.
01:35:19
◼
►
from the edge. But if I'm on a web page and I want to use the Apple Pencil to scroll that
01:35:27
◼
►
web page, what the f*** else would I be doing with that pencil on that web page?
01:35:34
◼
►
Yeah, I don't know.
01:35:35
◼
►
Right? Like, why do you just say, "No, you're not allowed to do that"? Like, here's the
01:35:39
◼
►
feeling that I have from that is when I was running the beta, every time I tried to scroll
01:35:43
◼
►
something I thought, "The iPad might as well just make an angry buzzing noise." Right?
01:35:48
◼
►
that little sound that the Mac does when it does something you don't like it goes
01:35:50
◼
►
"Brrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr
01:35:50
◼
►
"Brrrr!" "Brrrr!"
01:35:52
◼
►
And I feel like, "You know what? Why don't you just make the pro go, 'Brrrr!' every time I try to scroll with a webpage?"
01:35:57
◼
►
Because that's the feeling that you're giving me.
01:35:59
◼
►
"Oh, I opened a share sheet. I want to scroll horizontally in it." "Brrrr!"
01:36:02
◼
►
"Oh, I'm reading a book. I want to scroll the page with the pencil because it's more comfortable for me to hold this pencil in my hand than to always do this with my fingers."
01:36:09
◼
►
"Nope." "Brrrr!" "We're not going to let you do that."
01:36:12
◼
►
It's infuriating and it feels almost aggressive towards the user because there's just no reason for it.
01:36:20
◼
►
Now again, I do want to stress that we don't know if this is a decision within Apple,
01:36:26
◼
►
but man, when it's been two betas later, it certainly feels like it's a decision.
01:36:31
◼
►
We're preparing for the worst based on the fact that we know this company and I want to just
01:36:35
◼
►
want to get this out there now. We use Apple products, we love Apple products,
01:36:41
◼
►
we know this stuff happens, yeah it's really annoying, we're not going to switch to the
01:36:45
◼
►
Windows surface, it's extremely unlikely because there are many reasons other than just this
01:36:51
◼
►
that we use our devices.
01:36:53
◼
►
Yeah, but that is precisely why this is so upsetting is because I look around and there
01:36:58
◼
►
are no other options for all the things that I want to do including transition costs that
01:37:03
◼
►
can do what I want to do.
01:37:05
◼
►
Because it's like people are like "oh why'd you use a Windows tablet?"
01:37:07
◼
►
It's like okay listen you don't understand.
01:37:08
◼
►
I don't use one markdown text editor, I use five for different things.
01:37:13
◼
►
Like, I have a lot of specific needs here that are only met by this ecosystem.
01:37:17
◼
►
And so that is precisely why this is so upsetting.
01:37:20
◼
►
It's like I don't have an alternative.
01:37:23
◼
►
And I view in this moment, if Apple makes this decision the way that I'm afraid they're going to,
01:37:29
◼
►
I am facing who knows how many years of having to use this thing in a limited way.
01:37:36
◼
►
And like going back to one of our earlier discussions about jailbreaking,
01:37:41
◼
►
I have never been so close to be tempted by jailbreaking
01:37:48
◼
►
than I am with this vision of Apple releasing the software
01:37:52
◼
►
and not allowing you to use the pencil to interact with all of the interface.
01:37:56
◼
►
And I feel like Apple, what justification could you possibly have
01:38:03
◼
►
to put me in a situation where I am making a decision
01:38:06
◼
►
between, "Do I want to protect my digital security?"
01:38:12
◼
►
or "Do I want to protect the health of my hands?"
01:38:17
◼
►
That is the rock and the hard place that I find myself between.
01:38:22
◼
►
Like, okay, am I going to jailbreak an iPad Pro in the future?
01:38:25
◼
►
Because I can tell how much benefit I get from being able to use it like this.
01:38:31
◼
►
and just going to accept that I'm going to have problems with my hands,
01:38:35
◼
►
that I'm going to have to limit the amount of time that I spend on iPads,
01:38:38
◼
►
as I have done in the past when I try to use them,
01:38:41
◼
►
in the way that I have been gloriously using
01:38:44
◼
►
perhaps my favorite product that Apple has released in the past five years.
01:38:48
◼
►
That's why it is so upsetting.
01:38:52
◼
►
And listen, listeners.
01:38:54
◼
►
I want right now to try to call on the power of six degrees of separation.
01:39:00
◼
►
Someone listening to this podcast knows someone at Apple who knows the team that is in charge of this decision.
01:39:11
◼
►
I am deadly serious about what I am about to say.
01:39:15
◼
►
I will fly to Cupertino at any time at my own expense for the opportunity to have five
01:39:29
◼
►
minutes with that team to try and convince them to change this decision.
01:39:36
◼
►
I am deadly serious about this.
01:39:39
◼
►
This is how important this is to me because I am thinking about the health of my hands.
01:39:48
◼
►
I am willing to go to great cost and vastly greater opportunity cost to try and influence
01:39:55
◼
►
this in what I view as the only sane direction.
01:40:01
◼
►
My ideal result here is the result that I think makes the most sense considering the
01:40:08
◼
►
use case that we both desire is that this becomes a preference in accessibility.
01:40:14
◼
►
Please, please let this become a preference in accessibility if nothing else.
01:40:20
◼
►
Yeah. Like if that's the only thing I can get, Apple, if you have some kind of magic
01:40:25
◼
►
that you think you're going to be able to do with the pencil by not letting me scroll in Safari.
01:40:30
◼
►
I don't want it. I don't care.
01:40:33
◼
►
I don't care what it is. You could offer me nothing that I would take in exchange for this.
01:40:40
◼
►
It's just like if Apple came to my house and took away all my Wacom tablets and then disabled Wacom
01:40:47
◼
►
tablets from ever working on my computer and they handed me a million dollars, I would say,
01:40:52
◼
►
"Please give me the Wacom tablet back because I can't buy new hands with a million dollars."
01:40:57
◼
►
That's the situation that I'm in here.
01:41:02
◼
►
I'm just, I'm very nervous about this, Myke.
01:41:05
◼
►
I am very nervous about this.