Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard - The Avett Brothers Return
Episode Date: July 4, 2024The Avett Brothers are a Grammy-nominated American folk rock band. They return to the Armchair Expert to discuss how they decide to make big purchases, whether people actually have new thoughts, and t...he influences for their new self-titled album. Seth and Scott talk about what it’s like to be an opening act at this stage of their careers, how the human voice might be the best instrument, and why people are drawn to the themes of the country genre. They explain how it feels for their music to be accepted by a broader audience, what kinds of stories their dad tells their children, and the experience of being involved with a musical theater production based on their music. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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Welcome, welcome, welcome to Armchair Expert,
Expert Sign Expert, I'm Dan Rather
and I'm joined by Modest Mouse.
Hello.
Hi, what are you reading over there?
The same intro?
Yeah.
Oh.
Today we have our friends on, the Ava brothers,
they're back, this is round two Ava brothers.
Yes.
But we get some good singing in this one.
It's so fun, they're so, so special.
They are, they combine to make something impossible.
Yeah, they do.
Yeah, sitting in the middle of it was transcendent.
Fuck.
That's what I didn't wanna say.
Oh, the word transcendent?
Yeah, it was me say it again.
Okay.
And it's like a whole thing.
Okay.
The Averitt Brothers are a Grammy nominated folk rock band.
Their albums include Closer Than Together,
True Sadness, Magpie and Dandelion,
The Carpenter, I, and Love and You.
And they have a new album out now called,
self-titled, The Avid Brothers.
Yeah, they did a little loop-de-loop.
They did.
And they went self-titled now.
Yeah, most people start self-titled.
They're one, two, three, four, five,
this is their sixth album. That's a cool move. It is, I likeled. They're one, two, three, four, five. This is sixth album.
That's a cool move.
It is.
I like it.
You're gonna love David Brothers.
What a special performance we get from both of them.
Please enjoy.
Make your nights unforgettable with American Express.
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Let's go seize the night.
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Oh here it's a concert I bet if you played it down there, we'd be able to hear it. Take them in Monica. I know
It's once in a lifetime. You guys been offered coffee and all. Yeah, I got a coffee like I know I should
You've been offered coffee and all this stuff? Yeah, I got a coffee like I know I shouldn't.
Scott, how is that gone?
For him not drinking coffee?
The notion that he's not drinking coffee,
I found it to be a betrayal.
An off-putting?
Yeah, who wants to hang with a guy who's not drinking coffee?
Well, he doesn't have coffee with you.
I'll tell you that much.
And if he ain't having coffee with you,
what is he doing with you?
What is he doing?
And he's judging you drinking coffee.
He sure is, he's feeling high and mighty.
I'm silently judging you.
How's the air up there, Seth?
On that moral high ground.
What about tea?
Are you a tea guy?
It's stifling.
No, I like tea.
I like decaf.
He likes coffee, actually.
Yeah, I love coffee.
When I smell it, I'm like, ooh.
All the more offensive.
How dare you?
Oh, that's true.
It's just that I have so much self-control.
I know!
He's like proclaiming to the world I'm a stoic.
You should have a shirt that says I'm a stoic
because it's so much worse that you love it, isn't it?
Yeah.
Someone who quit something every 10 days.
For sure, but I would argue the thing I quit
was driving the car into the ditch.
Seth was just getting more energetic and likable.
No, not more likable.
We talked about this last week.
I didn't have a plan.
This only happened out of solidarity because Jennifer was doing this cleanse, no meat like a ball. We talked about this last week. I didn't have a plan. This only happened out of solidarity
because Jennifer was doing this cleanse, no meat, no caffeine.
I was like, I'll just do it with you just for fun.
But I had such a headache for about seven or eight days.
I moved through it and then I was like, well, that's it.
I'm not going back.
That's a great motivation.
You don't like the headphones.
Do I have to have them?
Not at all.
You can do it over the fucking head.
That's a great motivation,
but similar solutions don't ever stop.
I understand not wanting to have the headaches ever again,
but just resume and don't stop.
Yeah, cause it's always readily available.
It's not like you can't get a hold of coffee.
We all have our little battles
with having to depend on things.
I just didn't like, I was like,
I don't want to depend on this.
I know, I get that way too.
I didn't mean to pick a fight with you
as soon as you got in.
I took it really hard as you can see,
I'm thinking about it two weeks later.
This just feels like good motivation
just to come back to it.
I've been missing out.
Well, what would be great is if I could get you
to do it now, because as we discussed,
Michael Pollan wrote about caffeine in one of the books,
and he said that after two months off of it,
he takes his first sip and he's like,
it's like doing cocaine.
See, that's the thing.
I do have it about once every few months and it's awesome.
Oh yeah.
Rocket fuel.
Maybe that's the way to do it.
How are you doing Scott?
I'm good.
You're good.
Real good.
Where's your energy level at?
It's solid.
We've both been up since about 2.30 this morning.
Yeah, but I'm peaking right now.
So this is midday for you.
This is good.
You're fucked for Kimmel.
Yeah, Kimmel's going to get the leftovers.
Sorry about that, Jimmy. Kimmel's down river. Why were you guys up since 2.30? We're on for Kimmel. Yeah, Kimmel's gonna get the leftovers. Sorry about that, Jimmy.
Kimmel's downriver.
Why were you guys up since 2.30?
We're on North Carolina time.
Okay, but you didn't fly here this morning.
We flew here yesterday.
Yesterday. Yeah.
And I mean, I wake up around 5.30.
And you boys over at that Hilton Universal?
No. No.
Should be.
I love the Hilton Universal.
It's a lot closer to here than where we are.
Yeah, Seth was explaining to me that you guys have to stay
there because of the tour bus parking, basically.
We have in the past and we fell in love with it.
Yes.
Like it turned into this little thing.
I have those too.
But you've told us the story about your relationship with it
and your perspective of the area
because you have a much more dynamic relationship
with the area and some people that you encountered there.
For people didn't hear that episode,
I think he's referring to the time that five gentlemen
almost jumped me in the lobby of the AMC 26
over there at Universal City Walk.
But I love that.
I have certain, you guys must.
We were just talking about it.
There's a hotel in Austin,
and it's where I stayed on my very second movie ever.
Four Seasons, we can shout it out.
Yeah, and it's the first time I ever stayed
at a Four Seasons, and it's on the river,
and I was doing a movie with Mike Judge,
and I walk into the lobby of that hotel,
and it's, I bet, as close as I'll feel
to church that people feel.
Oh, this is so special.
Where do you most look forward to going,
where it kind of delivers every time,
other than the Hilton Universal?
Well, we do have a couple of those spots
that we can't say on Mike,
because they are away from places, and they they're really random and they're usually rural. We have
found a couple of really sweet spots in rural areas for days off that you wouldn't expect
and they're not necessarily fancy. They're just really good for bus parking and for space
and for being able to walk to a place that has good juice. Just a nice usable spot. Here's
the rule. So some of you say, well, what's the prerequisite to know where you're going
to go and say, if you can leave the bus door unlocked, that's hard to find.
And are you finding that's possible at the Hilton universal city walk?
Not possible.
No, you do not.
You do not leave the doors unlocked.
In fact, it's very rare that you leave the doors unlocked.
And you leave the motor running there.
I'll tell you that much.
Yeah. Not the generator motor, the engine, the one that you leave the doors unlocked. You leave the motor running there, I'll tell you that much.
Not the generator motor, the engine.
The one that you can put into park and drive.
You gotta make a hasty exit.
Are these places so sacred that even off-air
you're not gonna let me in on them?
Cause you know I too contend with bus parking.
We'll tell you off-air.
Give me the cheat sheet.
Yeah, we'll give you the cheat sheet.
We'll send you a map.
Are you guys allergic to fancy?
Do you feel embarrassed if you're at a fancy place?
No, I like fancy. No. Okay. We're not allergic to fancy? Do you feel embarrassed if you're at a fancy place? No, I like fancy.
No, we're not allergic to fancy.
Yeah, if you broke up Scott's sections of his life,
he had a period, like if he were an artist
and he had a sunflower period,
Scott had a whole period that was G-Wagon.
Boy, I was obsessed with a G-Wagon.
That's nice.
Oh yeah, I saw you live a few times.
I mentioned it.
Couldn't keep it off your tongue.
I mentioned it during a song.
Yes, you did.
I can't believe at some point they didn't just give you one.
I mean, my man, you were out there promoting the product.
Not anymore.
And then you didn't get the product.
I still may, eventually.
This is a really good approach to life.
You have something you can get.
It's got a little stoicism.
You resist the urge,
because the fantasy's generally better than the acquisition.
Yeah, must be.
But I tried to talk you into,
and I wanna tell the story of this really lifetime fantasy
you guys granted me two summers ago.
I'll hit you with that first.
I had been begging you guys just let me ride on the bus
and act like I'm in a rock band for a minute.
Keep asking, keep asking.
Apparently logistics was always the issue.
That's what they say.
Locations couldn't be provided because of privacy.
But by God, Aaron Winkley and I were driving around
in my bus and we're like, where are we gonna go?
We have two weeks to fuck around.
And I thought, let's see where the Avid brothers
are playing.
So cool.
It's awesome.
We were in North Dakota when I Googled this
and I was like, by God, they're in Indianapolis
in three days.
So we high-tailed it down to Indianapolis
and we got to park our bus with y'all's buses.
Fuck me, that was great.
It was nice.
Thank you for that.
You know, I've talked with Jennifer,
we've talked about this a few times,
we always laugh about you and your bus
because it's like,
because there's a reason that bands lease them.
You know?
Because it's like a house, there's always something breaking.
They're not cheap to buy, they're not cheap to run,
and there's a million working parts,
and they're always breaking.
The brand new ones are breaking.
And we always talk about how impractical it is.
Our most recent conversation about it, she was like,
but why did he buy it instead of like borrowing it?
And I'm like, babe, Dax wants to drive the bus.
That's the difference.
Like we lease a bus, we lease a driver.
He helps us, you know, we've been with him for many years.
Sometimes you wake up and the guy's washing the inside of the windshield
while driving the vehicle fully up the seat.
That has happened.
That's why I want to drive the bus.
It's not just the bus.
It's not just that type of travel.
Dax, he needs to be behind the wheel of the giant engine.
I gotta spend 60% of the vacation
fixing the fucking contraption.
That's right.
Because when you say it breaks like a house,
that doesn't even begin to explain it.
And the guy who I bought it from, David Garza in Dallas,
he said, Dax, this is like owning a home
that's in a hurricane with 100 mile an hour winds
at all times.
The thought I just had was like two hands
like on the side of the house that you live in,
just shaking it.
That's what is happening to it.
So of course the hot water heater is gonna break sooner.
The seals are gonna come undone.
It's just how it is.
Everything's gonna break inside it.
It's a perfect thing to own if you love problem solving.
You got a busy mind, you wanna get out there
and figure out why you got no power, nothing's working.
And it provides the same thing that is provided
for people that love RV and camping.
You get to have your cozy little home anywhere else.
And the most embarrassing thing, I can bring all my weights.
How else am I gonna travel with a few hundred pounds
of weights?
You're not gonna be able to do it, Dex.
That's the bottom line.
So really, it was imperative that you buy them.
That's true.
I had no choice!
I would love to see the little mazes in your mind
that work out how to justify certain purchases.
Like, well, I gotta take the weights with me.
Sorry, Kristen.
Sorry, I guess I gotta buy this bus.
Hey, Kristen, I gotta buy this bus.
Gotta have Lincoln's dirt bike everywhere we go.
Everywhere we go.
What would she do if she didn't have her dirt bike
that she barely likes to ride?
I can't just drop this thing off at UPS
and have them ship it over there.
Okay, so Scott, on that lovely little,
what was fun about it is we were parked with you guys
and then we would wake up in the bus
and we'd come out and basically just live like the band did.
We'd meet you all for the meals before the show,
a lot of chit chat, it was so fun.
We were catching mice in the thing.
I don't know if you remember that part of the,
like a house, you can get mice in the bus.
Did those come with your bus?
They were an add on, yeah.
Upgrade.
I was trying to talk you into a Raptor R.
Yeah, that's right.
And I thought I had tickled your fancy a bit.
You had.
But did you get that?
So I didn't.
Scott made a purchase recently
that you'd be interested in though,
that he immediately regretted.
How do I say this?
You know how some people make one really big purchase
every now and again,
and then some people make a lot of piddly purchases
and break themselves doing that.
So I would back off of something like a Raptor R or a G-Wagon,
which I think are just blessings to this world.
Sure, sure.
Okay, good.
They're not just fancy, just like a fancy hotel room.
I think this is a gift.
Yeah.
And it's not just luxury.
An offering.
It's earthly, it's beauty.
I think the Hawaiians would call it mana, it's power.
Well, that too. So what I did endians would call it mana, it's power. Well that too.
So what I did end up doing was buying a 1986 Ford Crown Vic.
Yes!
With 22,000 original miles.
It's like a brand new car.
It's incredible. That's a great purchase.
I don't know.
It is.
I'm having some title issues with it
cause it came from Pennsylvania, no problem.
We're working it out.
But we're still trying to clear the paperwork.
I'm not sure, I think I bought it because,
well we were watching Men in Black, Me and the Boys,
we saw the black one that he's driving,
and they heard it, you know, it was,
whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo, whoo,
and I was like, oh man, Luke, that's an incredible car.
They didn't make them like they are,
and they don't fly like that.
They're not like Men in Black.
No.
But so we purchased this car.
Do you know, I was horny for the exact same car.
Really?
Oh my God, that's one of my favorite movie cars of all time because it's so goddamn plain and stupid and boxy. They have
blocks. And then the way they made it sound in the movie. And with 22,000 miles it is pristine. It's
like sitting in a brand new car. It's really weird because nobody saved those cars. They bought them
for their family and they wore them out. For us in our generation we see that as like oh I remember
my buddy's mom had this car and we rode into school or whatever.
But no, it's as close as I can get to time traveling. It is. So I bought the exact same thing, but the
GM model because Lincoln has a Lincoln to inherit and I was like Delta needs a Delta to inherit and the Oldsmobile made the
Delta 88 and it is as stupid and boxy and boring as that Crown Vic and so I bought an 85
Delta 88
that's currently getting an LS3 and a six speed.
So that's the trick.
We got to link up when we come down to Nashville,
you and I gotta do like a stupid hot rod car cruise.
So I need to do that to that car.
We have enough resources around Charlotte.
You could dumpster dive and find a NASCAR motor
where you guys live.
Oh yeah, that's actually true.
For like throwing away crazy parts.
It's ridiculous.
But I had started earlier, what is the venue
that never fails to rekindle the romance and the nostalgia?
There are several.
The New Hampshire venue, what is it called now?
El Pollo Loco, Pample Theater.
It's changed.
The Bank of New Hampshire.
You guys play at the bank when you go to New Hampshire?
Wells Fargo.
The Boring Game.
Financial Center Theater.
Oh God.
It's high interest APR loans to low credit score arena.
Tampa Theater.
It's like an old fairground, but there's several.
That one comes to mind just because the nostalgia
of being there.
Is Red Rock up there?
It is.
We have such a relationship.
I mean, it's been 30, what, six times we've played.
So we have a history with it in terms of always delivering.
Yeah, it's like that.
It's been so celebrated.
It's more exciting for us to think about other places,
but Red Rocks is an obvious answer.
It's a place that could never be built now.
You could never get permission to build that.
Cause what, they just blast it out.
Yeah, like in whatever, 1900 carved it out of like,
one of the most beautiful.
Put seats in it.
Yeah, we're gonna make this a theater.
Thank God they got that happening
before you couldn't in a way,
but there is quite a spiritual element
to seeing a show there or performing there.
We've developed a personal relationship with it
at this point, you know, it's one thing to pass through it
on the way as you hit stardom.
We've developed this long lasting
personal relationship with it.
Is it the same date every year?
It's a similar timeframe,
but it's for us kind of like our New Year show,
we've done 20 years in a row now
of a New Year show every year
it took a long time I think for Scott and I both to
Accept it as just something to enjoy rather than this occasion that we had to rise to which sort of took some of the joy
Out of it of course
And so red rocks have the same thing with so much renown and so much in the spirit of in the history of it that it
Took many times for me to be okay being there and just know that I can inhabit the place
I don't have to match the energy of 10 and just know that I can inhabit the place.
I don't have to match the energy of 10,000 people.
I can just have fun with them.
It's easier to do that in certain venues.
Red Rocks, it took longer to get there.
Could we say maybe that you belong there?
Yeah, that's a good, simple, true way of putting it.
Oh, good.
That brings me to a later question I had for you, but that kind of sums up
perhaps an interesting challenge for artists, which is, yeah, I think all of
us don't feel like we belong where we're at for some long period of time.
And there's a bunch of weird reactions that come out of that.
You see it with young artists.
And then you do reach that sweet spot where you're like, okay, no, no, enough times past.
It wasn't a fluke.
I belong here.
That's a nice zone to be in.
But is that potentially problematic for creativity?
And even further, as life carries on, you guys are getting older and I'm getting
older and your life gets more sorted.
It gets more stable.
There's less angst and ire.
Is it harder to keep the engine flying creatively when we just think of what
causes all these great outbursts of creativity, you're like hurting
cause you love someone.
You have your first baby, C-sections and railway trestles.
These things happen and then, you know, less stuff happens.
You like might build an 86 crown pick by choice.
It's not getting boring.
Maybe the key component is being involved, invested,
and interested in your own life
because it's not getting boring. I wouldn't think that performing would ever get boring.
Right, right, but in terms of the creation side, like the idea of like making a
thing, continuing to give yourself permission to do things that are scary
creatively, certainly doesn't have to be fueled by a conflict of like a negative
nature. I think that's something that had to be learned possibly for our generation
or certainly when I think about my own personal relationship with art. I did
connect early on to more tortured, the whole Cobain, Elliott Smith kind of world,
or going further back, just looking at all the different artists that have had troubles
mixed into their output.
But that's not the only art that I love.
I love Tom T. Hall and Beatles music about love.
It doesn't have to be a conflict necessarily.
That makes sense. But definitely I would imagine that music,
part of it is a salve or salve?
That's a tough word to say, salve.
I thought it was sav.
Sav?
Sav.
Sav, we don't need the.
I think it's the silent L.
Leave that behind.
Yeah.
Let's get rid of that L.
But don't you find when you're hardcore depressed,
hardcore heartbroken, the song becomes a bit of the remedy.
Yeah.
I certainly know that that's how we consume and use music in a way.
This is an unbearable feeling, but weirdly when I pair it with this cure
song, now this is okay.
I kind of can live in this funk.
We have company, which is nice.
You know, you feel a little less alone and it's just like any organizational tool, like talking to a therapist. A lot of times it's just talking. Let me get this funk. We have company, which is nice. You feel a little less alone. And it's just like any organizational tool,
like talking to a therapist a lot of times,
just talking, let me get this out.
It can be helpful to you, it can be helpful to others.
But yeah, I certainly don't think that it needs to go away
just because things in your life are getting sorted
or you're learning.
That should be cause to make even more
and have even more fun with it
and discover more angles that you haven't discovered yet.
Yeah, some of the artists you mentioned,
they were almost painting themselves in a corner
where they had to shovel more chaos into their life
regularly, another divorce, another divorce,
another this, you know, another OD.
But which is like a cop out.
I was thinking about this the other day.
Man, am I out of new thoughts?
I was thinking so much and coming up with all these thoughts
in my 20s and early 30s and now I'm like,
I haven't had a new thought in quite a long time,
which is scary, but then I was like,
I need to force myself.
I mean, we do this here all the time.
We repeat what we've already figured out
as opposed to what haven't I figured out,
what am I still curious about?
But when life's going pretty well,
you're not really forced to do that,
so you almost have to make yourself do that.
Well, life going really well,
it just sort of presents an illusion
that you have something figured out, really.
Right, exactly.
And believing it, that's the problem.
Yes, that's so true.
Because maybe it just means that you're not
either challenging yourself or opening yourself up
to enough of a new experience to be confronted with that.
Inevolving.
Do you have the same takeaways, Scott?
Well, I kinda doubt that you've ever had
a new thought in your life.
Oh, there we go.
This is provocative.
Oh, okay, yeah.
I doubt that I have either, really.
I think about three things there,
conflict, covenant, and practicality.
And so I don't think what caused Kurt Cobain conflict
is what made him creative.
At the end of the day, I think it probably was
a major distraction, and unfortunately,
it was probably the end of it.
I could be wrong, that's just a guess.
And I think about our covenant to our creativity,
so our commitment.
The objective demands to being a creator.
And so as we get older, we think about,
well, we're not athletes like we were.
We are athletic on stage, but that changes over time.
If you ride motorcycles or BMX, eventually,
it changes how you do it, you have to.
But what only gets better with age is our riding,
certainly just gets better and better.
Probably no new thoughts, but we keep returning
to these same things within that covenant
of commitment to it.
So in a way, there is not necessarily any need
for any new, it's our commitment.
Then there's this practicality to like, okay, wait a second. So when I was younger, I was thinking about these mystical
truths that I was shuffling through to find, which there's reality to that. There's certainly
mystical truths that we all reach for, but what are the practical things that I can do
to set myself up to create? So has the mechanics of how you guys create evolved at all? Massively. recent album that we're here to talk about the avid brothers side note most people do a self-titled album on the debut
There's got to be some rhyme or reason to that earmark that but when you're working on the avid brothers the newest album
How has that process changed the process changed majorly by?
Technology in tandem with art.
Technology's cutting through and doing all these things and arts responding to
it. It was happening to us as well because we all of a sudden realized
well we can make this record in Malibu, Concord, North Carolina and Nashville and
really other places as well because we're sitting there tagging ideas
constantly still. And so you would think that'd make you make the record faster
but maybe not. And for us we made it slower because I think there was more listening, there was more critical thinking in it.
That's a side thought. But one thing I've learned in the past five, six, seven years is feeling that
belonging, it's like feeling at home. This is your spot. You haven't changed it since the last time
we were in here. Whether you know it or I know it or anybody, it's for a reason. So for me,
what I learned was something Chris Cornell told us too was I work best when I'm comfortable and if I'm
sensitive to where I am when I'm leaving where I'm going who's there what am I
eating I'm not as comfortable do I belong here and so what I learned in it
was through technology I was very comfortable at home being able to record
we did that at Seth's studio but it was like right across the street so I sing
better when I'm like that because I've got nobody telling me let's go we got
ten hours here at the studio in Malibu, we're gonna
be over ten days, let's go. I like to work slowly and Seth and I can work slowly
together and we don't get each other's business and that's something that's
good for me. I learned that. The way Scott writes music so far as I can tell, I've
always been a little more of like a studious, get in my comfort place, get in
my kitchen when it's quiet and lay out the sketchbooks in front of me and the tape
recorder and the guitar and the pick and the tuner and everything and work on it
like a book and with Scott it's always more of lightning in a bottle so early on
I would expect him to work like me maybe we make this mistake a lot expecting
others to navigate things like we do but I would like give him an idea and I
would think that well he's gonna go and work on it and then he'll come back but
being in the room with Scott and playing him the idea he hears it for the first time and then responds I like to work like that well, he's gonna go and work on it and then he'll come back. But being in the room with Scott and playing him the idea,
he hears it for the first time and then responds.
I like to work like that too,
but he really excels in that way.
And sort of the franticness and the rapid fire
of love of a girl, it did make me think more
about Scott's energy and what he brings
to the table musically.
I gotta just tell you this.
So Seth and I hung out a couple weeks ago.
Lovely hang by my estimation.
Wonderful. I give it an A plus.
I really do.
It was a great opportunity to get up to that Hilton universal.
We rode in the Roadmaster.
Isaac and Jennifer sat in the back seat
that faces the back.
Oh, the rear.
They're all kinds of new rattles in the dash.
Yeah.
Seth was telling me that you guys have been playing
with a really huge act recently.
Who's the country guy?
Luke Holmes, but Noah Khan
was another one that we sang with. All this to say you guys have been playing some bonkers huge
venues right and you're playing SoFi? That's tomorrow but yeah I think I may mention with Luke
because Luke is just a giant I mean Noah's this huge dude Noah's like I guess more like on a songwriter
pop sort of world that's taken him in then Luke is just this massive country star at this point.
Yeah and you're like playing SoFi and I I was saying to Seth, what's it like,
that transition to the fucking full blown arena?
And you know the first thing he said,
and I'm kind of always waiting for him to dish on you,
because fuck, I have a brother, if you get me alone,
I'm like, this motherfucker won't shut up about politics.
He thinks he's got it all figured out.
He's never done it since I met him.
And in fact, I go, what's it like
playing in these enormous arenas? And he goes, you know, I just had a moment one time
because we go first and people are sometimes there
to see the main act and I'll be behind Scott,
watching him walk out into the middle
on the long catwalk and I'll be thinking,
hey guys, open your fucking eyes,
that's a star right there.
Oh my god.
And he said that in your absence.
And I was like, oh my God, what a sweet brother.
And I said, he is my God.
Look, it's an interesting thing being 23 years in
to this band, right?
And being the opening act, we're not kids.
We're older, I'm almost 44, Scott's almost 48.
I don't know what we look like to an audience
of like 60,000 people. There's a lot of young people out there. Like, I don't know what we look like to an audience of like 60,000 people.
There's a lot of young people out there.
Like, I don't know what we look like, but I'm sure that we don't look like what I think
that we look like.
We don't look 25.
We don't look 25.
You guys both look pretty good.
Well, that's very nice.
We're still excited to be there.
But girl, you're 36 as well.
Like, when you're 19, you don't know.
Like you all are both gorgeous, but it is possible that the is possible that the 19 years are like I think those guys are 60
They don't and they should
In that scenario, I just have to say we're getting on an age we're still excited to be there
We're still excited to share this music
But we find ourselves back in that very wonderful very precious place of of introduction. If a crowd's 50,000 people, 60,000 people,
it's almost like there's counties, like different regions.
Like these 4,000 over here might be digging it.
It's hard to tell, you know, it's just so giant.
But what I was seeing in front of me were a ton
of young people, teenagers, people in their early 20s,
that were processing.
They're just looking at you.
They don't know the songs.
There's no relationship whatsoever.
They are biding their time to see Luke,
which I appreciate, and going out on the thrust
on the catwalk type thing and throwing down
and dancing and singing and going for it
when you're 20 is one thing because you're showing off.
There's a lot of reasons to do it,
but it's different than doing it when you're in your 40s.
And we are in this place of settledness in who we are
that to me really shines, like to see it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
We're playing the song, we were doing Ain't No Man.
He just went out there, I was proud to be up there with him.
The thought did go through my mind,
like all you kids, pay attention.
Yeah.
This is it.
Yes.
Like look at him, he's the one.
He's the real deal.
There's a star right here.
Yeah.
It's not Show Off for the sake of Show Off,
he's throwing down because he belongs right there
and we're having fun together.
There is no threatening ego in it.
There's no dangerous ego in it.
There is no, I'm better than you in it.
There's just somebody that's just doing their thing
at a high level.
Yes.
Look at this.
What can I argue in your-
I feel like I can talk about this in third person too.
I feel like I can talk about him as well right now.
Just, okay, go ahead.
It was just awesome.
It was an awesome feeling.
Yeah, and I know what you're saying.
In your 20s, you're trying to establish and define,
but at 47, you're kind of mastered now.
You are the thing at this point.
Exactly, and it doesn't matter anymore.
There is no prize.
You transcend it.
We do it because it's gonna be a great show,
and I think Luke is awesome,
and it's an honor to be playing in front of him
and to be involved and to be invited.
All of that's awesome, but we don't have this thing anymore where we think, man, if we play
before this bigger act, we'll get more fans.
We don't talk like that.
We don't think like that.
It's a luxury not to think like that, but we're just on our journey.
It tickles me to think that some out there might see that and think that it's funny.
Sure, sure, sure.
You know, like look at this old dude like dancing or that some might connect and think
like, oh, it's badass.
Who knows what they think?
That's secondary.
It doesn't really matter.
It's just that we're doing our thing
and we're where we need to be.
And it's my big brother and he's killing it.
And it's just awesome.
Oh my God, you guys are cute.
I wish I had you as a little brother,
so what you doing now?
I know.
Oh, bullshit, you're like,
why this guy by a fucking bus?
Oh man, what a compliment, right?
It is nice.
I feel like compliments from your baby sibling,
there's nothing that beats that.
I painted this huge painting in 2020.
Soon as I finished it, it went to New York
to be shown in a show of paintings during COVID time.
And a lot of the paintings were of that time.
And this was a painting of just looking down at a creek.
That's all it was.
And so it wasn't exactly a COVID time painting,
but it was very much was for me.
And Seth and Jennifer bought the painting from me.
And when my gallery, we were on the phone
talking about the deal and how do you do it.
And he was like, Scott, just so you know,
nobody's family members, much less their brother.
They say sometimes it's a mom or a dad, you know?
But brothers and sisters don't buy major pieces of art
from their siblings.
It's just no, this doesn't happen.
I was like, okay.
Another thing, something I think about
and then put it away is nerve.
Sometimes when I feel old,
I'm hoping that somebody would look out there and go,
what nerve does this guy have
to step out here
on this catwalk at 47 and jump around like he's whatever.
What nerve?
And I'm like, I can hang on to that.
Eventually, maybe I'll be in a wheelchair.
So what nerve does this guy have to roll out?
Look at Willie.
At some point, Scott will be in a wheelchair going out there.
He'll be like 80 and I'll be back there 76.
At that point, I'll have no reserve whatsoever.
During the song, I'll be like, y'all look at that,
that's how it's done.
Right, or you'll have to mention, you'll be like,
you suck, who was that?
Unfortunately you will probably be wheeling him out
into the catwalk, but that's fine.
You have an obvious confidence, Scott,
but I do wonder, have you allowed yourself to evaluate
how much of that have you been able to build off
of Cess' pretty undying love for you in adoration?
Is it a big chunk of the foundation?
For sure.
Like you almost gotta live up to what he thinks you are?
No, I don't think that.
I wanna make sure that I can reflect
and reciprocate the sentiment.
That's the key.
Cause I'm a little harsher
and a little rougher around the edges.
I don't think in my heart, but in my behavior.
Right?
I will be willing to say more things that I'll regret,
I think a lot of times.
Is that why you're being a little quieter today?
No, no.
I am a little quieter today, but a lot of times
if I listen back to something, I'll hear how I try
to interject every opportunity I can,
and it's nice to listen.
Can I make an observation?
It comes from a place of I think I deeply relate, which is, I think it's really
healthy to be very self-aware and then I also think it can tip into a little bit
of getting in your way of just existing.
A hundred percent.
The first feeling of that was with children, your ego gets in the way and
then you go, oh, okay, I want to push on this and you think you're supposed to
kill your ego like early and that's not the deal.
No, no, I love my ego.
And really it's to foster and to love and really lift up.
No, I'm in, so I'm with you.
There's a lot of thinking about disappearing
and I can muse on that.
We've written some about that.
But to a point, the self-reflection is like, forget it.
Come on, let's do this, let's be people.
Yeah, let's shut this thing off.
Yeah, we don't even talk about it anymore.
Let's have some coffee.
Yeah, let's get some coffee.
Let's do it.
All right, I wanna hear, by the way,
thank you for offering,
cause I always feel very guilty
asking musicians to perform.
I don't know, we both do, right?
Well, cause it's an added pressure
and we want everyone to feel comfortable.
It's different here though, we're friends.
Well, I'm just so glad you offered,
cause I wouldn't have asked,
but it would always be my pick
that you guys would play a few songs anytime you're here.
So we know that I've gotta give the chewed up
discarded remains to Kimmel shortly.
So maybe we should get to jamming a little bit
and then I have some more questions.
Yeah, we can, we gotta figure out what we can do.
Are you open to playing a song chatting,
playing a song chatting?
Or would you wanna chat, chat, chat, chat,
play songs and get the fuck out of here?
Yeah, we can play and chat.
Okay.
Because now we've referenced some songs,
it would be good to hear.
Right. If we can.
If we can.
Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare.
I will say one thing, it's funny you're just now considering
what songs you can play here in the attic, because you had a few days to think about what might work.
I was kind of at self-reflection thinking, we didn't really think about it at all.
Didn't want to overthink it.
I didn't bring an instrument back.
I see that.
Do you need anything?
I have a guitar.
It depends on what we're playing.
Do you have a banjo?
Oh, fuck.
Why don't you have a banjo?
How do you not travel with the banjo? We just didn't have the bus. It depends on what we're playing. Do you have a banjo? Oh, fuck. Why don't you have a banjo? How do you not travel with the banjo?
We just didn't have the bus.
We are loved.
That's a no-brainer.
Yeah, okay.
I'm itching to talk about Country Kid
when we're done singing this one.
Oh, Seth and we also could just play Country Kid,
just strum the guitar and just sing.
We totally do.
We'll play what you're gonna play,
then maybe we'll do Country Kid after that.
Okay.
And then I wanna chat about some fun.
after that and then I wanna chat about some fun.
Oh damn.
You don't have headphones on but it just got real smooth in here.
And this song gets loud on the mic with the vocals
so just as long as you know.
As you can see, Rob's a one man everything.
Yeah.
When I see the guy putting the mic on the guitar
that made the coffee earlier, I know what kind of operation we're running. Let me know when we're good.
We're good to go. All right. We are loved. Whether we speak up or we are silent
If we are willing or we are done
If we're courageous
Oh, we are cowards
We may be burdened
But we are loved, whether we're forgotten, we may be lonely, but we are loved.
Every stitch and seam, every wish and dream, Even in tragedy, there lies divinity.
Even as hope seems lost, it may be found again I have felt alone
But I have never been If you are standing or cannot stop moving If you are haunted or cannot remember Or can not remember
Over the gravestone
Under the rainbow
Pain comes and pain goes
And we are loved
Every stitch and seam Every wish and dream even in tragedy their lives divinity even as hope seems lost it may be found again. I have felt alone, or harboring change?
If we deny it,
or if we face it,
may we embrace it.
We are loved.
Oh, fuck.
Oh my god, you guys. Fuck off.
Wow.
Oh my god, how can humans do this?
Wow. Oh my god.
You know what's nuts?
There are so many beautiful instruments in the world.
What are the chances that really the human voice
is the number one?
That's impossible.
It's gotta be.
Right?
Maybe not mine, but it's gotta be.
Seth, you beautiful boy.
I know it.
You are such a beautiful boy.
It drives me nuts.
Okay.
You are, that voice is so fucking sweet.
Keep it calm.
And you play it like a laser beam.
It's nuts that you have that kind of control over your voice.
You guys have such a way, apart from just being beautiful sounding,
there's something that happens when you two are together doing it.
It is transcendent.
Like that is the only way.
We've had a lot of people come play.
Everyone's amazing.
But there's a moment of real,
there can be harmony in the world.
It's so special.
That was perfectly said, Monica.
Transcendence, the operative word.
There's also an implicit, beautiful potential for family.
In blood, in siblings.
There's something that happens that's really big.
Scott and I are really lucky to play music together
and sing together,
because I think that we haphazardly present
like a thing that can't get presented by a solo artist,
which is basically just a lifting up of another,
or like a collaboration in real time
that's loving and trusting.
It's an example that we get to show
just kind of a happenstance.
That's what it is, it's hopeful.
Because we all have siblings and it's hard.
I love my little sister, I love my brother.
But this is somehow a display of the most hopeful union.
To me more than just siblings, it's any relationship.
It's such a visceral sort of embodiment of how two people individually are great, but
the mix can elevate to such an incredible level that you would never have on your own.
The kinship part is just sort of, that's how it happened.
The universality is the point that like we want to believe and know that we can work
together. And if we have examples, we can make something together
that I could never do alone.
That same truth goes for all of us.
You know, family, not family, yeah.
And that's the thing, sometimes you really don't
wanna believe that,
because you don't wanna count on somebody else.
But Scott and I, we have built a thing
where we have over time just announced to the world
or anyone that would pay attention,
we count on each other.
But we don't talk about it.
We don't, and it's just doing it.
Cause what it becomes, what you're saying is,
I like what that symbolizes.
Do you like Kendrick Lamar?
Sure.
He's got that line in King Kunta maybe,
I don't talk about it, I'ma be about it.
I had to play that for my daughter the other day.
Song is so underrated.
It couldn't be celebrated enough.
It's so good.
But yeah, there's a hopefulness,
honestly, my brother's coming Sunday.
We only get to see each other once or twice a year.
And we're going to do the only thing we can do, which is play grass volleyball
together when we're on a team together.
That's as close as we get.
That's incredible.
It is.
And then those moments, there's a bittersweet heartache where it's like, God,
if we could have figured out how to work together, we'd be unstoppable in a way.
There is some crazy strength.
That's also kind of like that dog you have that passes away and you lose this
pup and maybe you did all these wrong things with it.
You get the next dog in that dog's honor.
I hope this makes sense.
You raised this one just right.
Our brothers and sisters are out here on the street.
And if you miss that opportunity with your sibling in the honor of that, you go,
you know what, when this joker says this thing that I want to bark back or punch him or whatever, instead,
I'm going to love him.
In honor of the times that I have screwed this up, that's where you start really getting
at it.
Now that sounds like a pipe dream, but it's real.
But you're right.
I think it's better expressed in doing and not thinking or talking.
You almost got to lean into the belief that it's just there.
Can't be acknowledging that stuff.
It's so awesome to hear it.
This was the moment at the end of the doc
where you guys put down that impossible first take
of no hard feelings.
Oh yeah.
And Scott was like fucked up over it.
Or at least it appeared in the movie.
I don't know that I want to acknowledge that this happened.
It's embarrassing.
I think that's ultimately it.
Yeah, so weird.
And then Seth talks about in love of a girl in a way where he says, doesn't talk about the celebration, et cetera. That's embarrassing. I think that's ultimately it. Yeah, so weird. And then Seth talks about it in love of a girl in a way,
where he says, doesn't talk about the celebration, et cetera.
That's funny.
Psychoanalysis.
So my therapist, he has this interesting thought experiment
he makes me at least consider.
Is that that inherent Icarus flying too close to the sun?
Do we have this fear that to really own what we are
and acknowledge what we are, it would be taken from us because we flew too close to the sun, do we have this fear that to really own what we are and acknowledge what we are,
it would be taken from us
because we flew too close to the sun.
Earlier I was gonna say this,
Seth was talking about process
and I was envisioning what my process is,
Seth when he explained how he lays things out
and organizes things.
Ritual.
What I realized was I'm in constant,
and I don't know if this is your Gemini or whatever,
but this conflict that I put myself in
to deter the need to own up to the task.
Right, yeah.
So it comes out in this thing, well, I'm painting,
but this song's pulling on me.
And I'll say, well, I'll do it,
but I don't have to completely succeed at it
because I'm doing this.
And I do that in all these ways.
And in older age, you go, acknowledge this,
go and try to win this.
It's okay, instead of making it like you're terrified
to fly too close to the sun because you're afraid.
Instead, if I could go back to that,
if we were recording No Hard Feelings,
and everybody was congratulating each other over that,
what I felt or not, I would have said,
absolutely, y'all, good job.
I wouldn't mess with it now.
It was the growth from it.
And watching that was painful.
Oh, was it? Yeah, I didn't wanna see that.
It was a really interesting, wonderful moment
that was caught on camera.
Every now and then you see them.
We called you on a fact check.
Yeah, we did.
We interviewed Ruben and I wanted his perspective
on what happened.
Which is bound to be radically different.
And as close as we are to Rick,
that was something to him that was bizarre
that we would let it.
Because to him, he was seeing it as like, keep it rolling.
Now, you know, we understood that.
That felt great, let's get into another song, he was seeing it as like, keep it rolling. Now, you know, we understood that. Let's get into another song.
Where for us it was like watershed moment.
But Scott, I think I'm probably projecting a lot,
but I feel like I relate.
Is there this weird tension between,
I'm afraid to fail and not be great,
so I can almost not tackle this thing.
I've got to convince myself I'm doing something else.
And this other thing is ancillary,
so if it turns out good, great.
But if I commit to this and focus on it,
and it's not great, then I have failed. So I have this work around. And then on the other side
of it is when I'm great, I can't acknowledge I'm great because that's flying too close
to the sun and I'll be smited for this runaway ego.
Right, right, right.
So like you're never winning. Either you're going to suck and fail or you've succeeded
and you're not allowed to succeed. And it's like, what is this trap we've built for ourselves?
Yeah. But I'll tell you a lot.
I think just being Southern and growing up in the church,
my counselor's out here and we talk a lot about this.
Yeah, you need a West Coast therapist to straight up.
But in speaking to her, like she'll sort of lay that out.
Like, what's the guilt status here?
What's the humility aim?
I think it's easy to hear in our voices.
You just sort of assume that that's gonna be something
that is hard on us. but we grew up in really
a very confident, urged us to be cocky.
We were willing to say, yeah, I'm great.
We didn't have a problem with that.
We didn't feel real guilty about that.
And maybe we were a little secretive about it.
We weren't like Ric Flair.
In our hearts, we were Ric Flair.
But we might be acting like Billy Grant.
On the outside, we were Andy Griffin. We were Dusty Rhodes. Yeah, I wish we were Dusty Rhodes. But yeah might be acting like Billy Graham. But on the outside we were Andy Griffin.
We were Dusty Rhodes.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I wish we were Dusty Rhodes.
But yeah, I think there is truth to that.
I don't think it haunts us too hard.
You didn't ask and this is completely unsolicited,
but I'll just say the one word that my therapist gave me
that's been a breakthrough in all this is presidential,
which is you should act presidential.
And I'm like, ooh, that feels like the perfect middle ground
between egomaniac and denying who you are.
Like, okay, you're on a mission.
It's justified, presidential.
All right, so you just put the betweens
because I'm in the thick of this right now,
but there's the is and there's the ought.
And that tension between the is and the ought
is where we live. And what's the quality of that tension?
A bad quality would be one that's pulled far to the is.
It is what it is, screw it, I'm gonna do this.
This is who I am, deal with it.
And you never really look at that aught.
And when I go towards that aught,
I kinda land not as far down as just the is,
it just is what it is, whatever,
but you never at either one of them.
It's how the quality of that attention.
Oh, I love that framing.
It's really something.
Okay, before you play it, I wanna talk about Country Kid.
And I hope this comes as a compliment
because in my top five country songs of all time
is Country Boy by Hank Williams Jr.
It's so good.
The level of pride I would feel
when I would latch onto that song.
Same.
About being a kid from the dirt road.
Sing it a little bit.
Oh, I'll do the whole thing with you.
I live back in the woods you see.
A woman and the kids and the dogs and me.
I got a shotgun, a rifle and a four wheel drive.
And a country boy can survive
There it is, yeah I got it
A country boy can survive
Boom boom boom
What a fucking song
So good
Definitely male 1.0
Yeah, we grew up on that song though, I mean it was all over the place
We're gonna solve problems by spittin' beach nut in a guy's eye and then shootin' him with
the.45
Obviously not, but let boys be boys, okay
But look, we're not gonna miss an opportunity.
You gotta rhyme survive.
There's something on the front side.
So 45, maybe it wouldn't actually do it,
but we're gonna use that rhyme.
But there was a version of that pride we grew up with,
and it's a beautiful thing to explore.
We had Barbara King-Solveron who wrote
Demon Copperhead. Demon Copperhead.
No, Copperhead.
You guys read that book?
No.
Sooner name alone.
Oh, outrageously beautiful.
Poisonwood Bible, she's huge.
Okay.
And it's about a young boy growing up in Appalachia, mom's an addict, brought home to a trailer,
she ODs, he's in foster, he becomes an opiate addict.
It's beautiful.
And it is so kind and generous and thoughtful to what the people in Appalachia
Experience there's a scene in the book where the kid actually says you guys know
We're basically in the stall of the bathroom and we can hear you talking about us
We watch TV and we listen to songs and we watch comedy. We know you're all laughing at us
We're here. We hear you. And it's heartbreaking.
And it is cruel and terrible. Generally the city is so glamorized and people
want to chase either a dream in New York City or in LA. There's very little
offerings to go like, oh you're already at the place that's got it all. I mean I
guess it's what country is, but I think it's very beautiful to celebrate what it means to be a country kid.
Do you care about any of those things
as this song came to you guys?
100%.
Do you get that feeling when you're in North Carolina,
like, hey y'all, the whole world doesn't revolve
around New York and LA, believe it or not.
Yeah, Bonnie and I were just talking about that this morning.
The requisite for a song that I wanna pass along to Scott
or maybe wanna push through to like,
maybe this will become an Ava brother song is just that it has to be real.
Like it has to be honest.
There has to be sincerity.
The inspiration has to be there.
When that one came along, it was just like, oh, this is fun because it's honest and it's
real.
It's like a list like a lot of country songs are and not to throw shade at the genre, but
there is a lot in the genre, which is only demographic pointing towards like just mentioned
the boots and the dirt road
and the truck.
It feels a little pandering.
And the beer, and that's it.
And like, as long as you mention those things.
Well, have you heard, there's an AI song,
they deployed AI to do a country song.
Oh really?
And it did it perfect.
I mean, it's insane.
It gets the line wrong.
It's like something about their butt.
I don't know.
Oh wow.
If you've seen that one, it's hilarious.
Oh my God.
That's so good.
Country music can fall into that,
or there's a judgment against music that's country music
that it's going to be that, that it's just going to sort of fulfill that order so that
it was real and based in truth and our actual experience felt really good.
And I think it is a good thing to celebrate.
The genre itself doesn't matter.
It's sincerity that matters and substance.
We were talking about New York City recently about playing in New York and being accepted
there, kids from the Salchow and in New York and sort of sidestepping any pressure to present something that wasn't authentic, because that's what gets responded
to in New York or anywhere else.
Yeah, yeah.
I felt really good about just presenting our little story, because that's so often what
happens.
You dial in like even hyper specifically to something in your life, and then you can't
believe how many people have had the same experience or respond to it. That's been really interesting but like
mentioned like being on the bus and the Cussin and what a warzone school bus is.
Oh yeah. It's just incredible. 15 minute Lord of the Flies experiment both ways.
Right. Those poor bus drivers, holy shit. Yeah I really am drawn to like the
country boy can survive and like Tom T. Hall's country is the Charlie Daniel
song with the big speaking part in the beginning called Carolina.
I really love a heartfelt song that celebrates.
What gives you pride?
It's damn good to love where you're from.
And when a great portion of the entertainment industry sort of ridicules that area or that
background, you do feel the need at times to push back against that a little bit.
And you see it in entertainment, they don't really understand it.
The Southern accent is always wrong.
It's just not really fully understood.
There's a great elegance in the South
and an eloquence among the history there.
Very ironically, the greatest parallel genres
are rap and country.
That's right.
The elites hate both.
They don't understand what the fuck's going on.
They can't acknowledge that there's poetry and genius.
Right, and both of those live on their own.
They don't really need a lot of pop horsepower
and are sort of self-generating.
And they're very
Autobiographical more than any other genre those two right country kid by the way that song is a prime
Example of being at its best because of collaboration
I even called Scott to talk to him about this at some point in the midst of the process of this one because that's
One a trap for me is completion finishing a song like now I can move on
I'm bad about that sort of subconsciously assessing my value through finished pieces. We have a lot of
good boyisms and wanting it to be observable as a finished thing I did a
good job move on. I have been guilty of shortchanging an idea like a really good
idea because I got it 80% of the way but I was like now it's finished so when I
brought this on to Scott I thought it was a finished song. Here you go. You know
here's a good one this will be fun. I had kind of sketched it out and I'll do that too.
Like I'll sketch songs out fully with drums and bass
and everything and now you just play this.
But Scott, he could tell this better,
but I think there was something kind of nagging at him.
Like, yeah, it's good, but there were pieces.
Like the whole part that he sings, he wrote.
The part that it stops and there's that holler.
He took it and put the time into really understanding
the song, recorded the whole thing by himself.
It was incredibly informative.
The song is a great example of it being as good as it can be
because he went so far into a song
that I thought was already done.
Is it fair to say that one of the cool aspects
of you guys as a pair is you are quite different.
And so you're very meticulous, Seth,
and you're very structured,
and then Scott brings the chaos,
and we put these things together and
make them work and now it's very multi-dimensional. Right. It gets more so for sure because I don't
finish a lot of songs at all. I had a hunch. Yeah in the studio it's finish time for me.
Just is what it is. Well I'd love to hear Country Kid and I do urge everyone to go watch the video
while you're setting up because the video's so good.
I don't know if you know this,
but we have Delta's birthday party every year,
nine years strong at the roller rink.
Did you go as a kid?
Yes, lived there.
Middle school years, every Friday, Saturday.
Girls, girls, girls.
There were so few sports I was good at,
but I was a very good skater.
Speed skating.
Yeah, it was very fast.
I would win the speed skating thing.
In fact, they put fourth and fifth graders together
in the race and I won it.
And then the fifth grader who thought he was gonna win,
and you won a free Coke.
And I was on my skates about to drink my free Coke.
I was so excited I had won.
He skated by and smashed it in my face.
Oh, that's mean.
Really broke my heart.
That Coke was a trophy and he drove by and smashed it.
Well, I'm gonna pee pee.
Oh yeah, go ahead.
Are you sure?
Speaking of embarrassing.
Well, fuck it, Dane's in there?
Oh my God, this is gonna get real.
We spent a lot of time here.
You're about to shit in a phone booth.
I guess you're well trained on the bus life.
Yeah, yeah, it's not a big deal.
That's spacious.
Speaking of embarrassing moments in the skating rink,
during the filming of that video, I fell. Oh yeah. And I mean, a major, like, it's not a big deal. That's spacious. Speaking of embarrassing moments in the skating rink, during the filming of that video, I fell.
Oh yeah.
And I mean, a major, like, standing there,
all of Concord's behind us,
we're about to do a take right before the L action,
both skates out from under me, up in the air.
Oh!
I mean, it was a hard fall.
Tailbomb.
Everybody saw it.
Actually, the crazy thing is everything hit
at the exact same time.
Oh, okay.
And it didn't hurt at all.
Disciplated all the way.
It was unbelievable.
But boy, my pride.
The first year we had it, we had two different,
I don't want to call them broken wrists.
Me being one of them and my friend Nate
in wrist braces for three weeks after the first skating one,
someone blew out a knee in another one.
And we have over the nine years figured out like,
okay, we got to.
Everyone brings wrist.
Yeah, we wear gear now.
And the edict is start slow and slow down from there.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I had a similar thing as I reintroduced myself
to snowboarding this past season.
By the end, I had some really, really hard falls.
I'm like, I'm gonna go one more time.
I was really demoralized, but like,
I wore the butt pad, the wrist, things, all of it.
Yes, you have to.
Come on, like, let's be smart about this.
You look like a hockey goalie out there for a rip.
But everyone should really watch this video.
It's so wonderful and nostalgic and colorful
and bright and fun and you guys are in a bunch
of different outfits and you're rock stars
and you're monks and you're superheroes.
Real quick question, that double decker Gibson,
was that a rental or do you own that?
What's amazing about that guitar,
we're referencing Led Zeppelin.
I was like, man, I've got to get a guitar
that shows that I'm emulating Jimmy Page.
And I got on eBay and it was like $300.
No, is it a Gibson?
It's a mockup of like an Epiphone.
It's just the cheapest you can get, it's called Cozart.
Okay, great.
It came with a hard shell case.
I'm like, I don't know how you can possibly make it.
By the way, Jimmy Page just released a run of those
with Gibson and their 50,000 a piece.
Oh!
Scott, are you gonna buy one?
Maybe I'll talk about it tonight.
I'll talk about it with Kimmel.
Sit in the back of your G-Wagon,
just trade that Crown Vic and about $45,000.
All right.
What has this one started?
Just the vocals, yeah.
I was a country kid, through and through I got my bare feet bit by a wrecking crew
A fire ants on a mission for total domination of the front yard
Three years old on a ramshackle farm Went in the pool in the crook of my arm
Brother and sister not meanin' no harm pickin' on me
I was a country kid with a strong foundation Gettin' myself a whole second education
In the back of the bus, kids kissin' and cussin' all around me
One more pick up in the trailer park Hand to mouth livin' will break a young heart
Beautiful girl with a hard hard look in her eye
Then I grew up and hit the city But the skyscrapers never get me
I fly above them all the time straight through cloud nine flowing fast like the Mississippi
I was a country kid shooting hoops in the dirt
hide the smokes in the pocket of a homemade shirt
running laps in the yard until my little legs hurt
and then going again
Six feet of air off a plywood ramp dad's welding machine
part where I would land,
All I could taste was blood,
All I could feel were the rocks in the palm of my hands.
I was a country kid,
Throwing parties in the woods,
Dragging my friends out of their neighborhoods,
Jealous of their cable TV and their girls next door.
Slipping off into the dark of the night,
the shape of a body traced by moonlight,
interrupted by some other kid wanting to fight over her.
Then I grew up in Hentha City,
but the skyscraper never get me.
I fly above them all the time straight through cloud nine
flowing fast like the Mississippi flowing fast like the Mississippi
Woo! I was a country kid and now I'm grown with a job and a wife and a son of my own
Navigating time zones, inspecting the bones of the second half
And talking to God a little more often
Less requests and more saying thank you
For every single town and every single acre in between
Every single town and every single acre in between
Cause I grew up and hit the city
But that metropolis will never give me
I fly above it all the time straight through cloud nine Flowing fast like the Mississippi
Yeah, I grew up and hit the city
But the skyscraper never give me
I fly above them all the time straight through cloud nine
Going fast like the Mississippi
God damn!
Yeah!
God, you guys are good
What a party!
So fun, so fun
First song broke our hearts and then this one
Got us up
God made me nostalgia I don't think I noticed how much skateboarding stuff
was in that the first time I heard it.
God, do I relate to that?
Oh my gosh, right?
The launch ramp.
Come on.
The cinder blocks and the plywood.
It's just such a good idea.
Dax, you should see the half pipes we had.
Our dad built them.
No plans or anything, he just went for it.
Sure.
We had two different ones.
Country extreme sports are special.
Yeah. It's one thing when you're living in Aspen or LA,
but when you're in Cabarrus County, North Carolina,
trying to come up with what's the angle,
what's the radius of this thing, your eyeball on it.
Yes.
What was the trick?
Cause my brother and I, so we made a quarter pipe
and what you would do, right, no one wants to hear this,
but let's talk about it.
If you wanted a six foot transition,
you're going to make a six foot tall ramp you're gonna make a six foot tall ramp.
You would take a six foot piece of string,
and then you would tack it to one end of the plywood,
and then you would run it in the circle,
and then by the time you got to that,
that'd be a perfect six foot transition.
Then you'd cut that plywood out.
What did your old man do?
Literally the first one we built,
he free handed it, and it was eight feet.
So two pieces of plywood and never built a platform.
So if you made it up there, it jacked up
and then it went up at an angle of like, say this,
two feet of vert, four feet, then a foot of vert.
But then we built a mini ramp that actually
we had some specs on
and we're able to, but still, I mean, come on.
Again, people don't really understand pre-internet world.
Unless you were going to drive to some city and track down some skateboarders,
how the fuck were you going to figure this out?
You had Transworld and Thrasher.
You could order the plans or you'd go to the local shop, which we didn't really
have.
Or dad would go out there with a jade style to order some plans.
Good for him. I got to spend 30 bucks on some plans. I applaud that would go out there with a jet style. No, we were some plans. Good for him.
I got to spend 30 bucks on some plans.
I applaud that.
Well, he did a good job.
It helps with creativity.
He sure.
How was he?
Always great.
He tours and plays music.
He does.
He's a storyteller, but no, he's wonderful.
They're both doing great.
And the boys love him.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He's super generous and sweet, but he's of a time that he still can be sort of scary.
Grandpa's shit sometimes. Yeah. So they won't listen to us. He's super generous and sweet, but he's of a time that he still can be sort of scary. Grandpas should sometimes be.
Yeah, so they won't listen to us,
but when Papa's talking, they're like.
He'll sit down and tell a story
from World War II or something,
or of like a gator swallowing somebody whole.
When the kids were like five and six.
That was always the push and pull.
Rotting flesh, like he loves to talk about rotting flesh.
I mean, every time. Yeah, it's Tripp to McDonald's, you're gonna hear about rotting flesh, like he loves to talk about rotting flesh. Oh my God. I mean, every time.
Yeah, it's Trypto McDonald's,
you're gonna hear about rotting flesh.
You rotting flesh.
Maggots and rotting flesh, I mean he's big on that.
You go in there with your five year old,
it won't be 30 seconds before he's talking about a shark
eating somebody when the crab carrier went down.
He has tons of stories, he really does.
And I gotta say, our dad is the most generous man
and he gave us the right of way for this.
On that dynamic, it's very funny
because I always felt like going over to see mom and dad,
having Isaac with me when he was really, really young.
It's like, you're always kind of playing defense.
You know, what kind of concept
is he about to get introduced to?
Inevitably through war, World War II, likely.
I've thought a lot about, I'm like,
God, why is it there always something so gory,
something so death-filled?
But I did have a realization at some point,
what our dad is into is heroism.
And there's a lot of that in World War II.
He knew people that knew.
And he knew a lot of veterans.
Injustified heroism, that was our last great war
or we should have been there.
But it's a great thing though,
cause he does have that old school personality.
I don't have that.
If a young kid walked in there right now
and be like, come on over here,
let me tell you about this general,
that feels like an older school kind of social dynamic.
Well, that's a toughen these boys up for the life ahead of them.
Also when Isaac's five years old, Isaac at nine years old, me, we're riveted.
Later on, we'll be like, good God, that was a heck of a way to go.
That was stressful.
Yeah, it was stressful, but it's super interesting and it is part of the handing down of these
great stories.
That's Isaac's sweet voice I hear on cheap coffee, right?
No, that's Max.
And he doesn't have that voice anymore.
Oh, and you're telling him about infinity.
Yeah, and now he's 13, bulking up and testing me.
Yeah, he's about ready to shove you in the kitchen.
He's about ready to shove him into infinity.
Yeah, he's done.
And I just found out infinity does end right here, right now.
That is exactly it.
That is exactly it, I mean 100%. I found the Infinity does end right here, right now. That is exactly it.
That is exactly it.
I mean 100%.
I found the end of Infinity.
It's at the end of this knuckle.
It's so awesome.
It's all heartbreaking too.
It's the end of this conversation, Dad.
It's incredible.
Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare.
There.
Last thing before you guys go, tell me about this musical that you guys are involved with.
Swept Away, it is a musical that's going to Broadway.
This is like a 10 year journey for us.
So John Logan, who is this brilliant writer,
he wrote The Last Samurai and Rango and Gladiator.
He wrote a couple of the big Daniel Craig,
James Bond movies.
Wow.
He's just brilliant.
He's sort of a Broadway, Blue Blood, incredible writer.
He was introduced to our music by a fellow
named Matthew Massen, who's a producer and a friend now,
but he was a fan of our music.
He got into a record of ours called Minionette
that we put out in 2003, and that record was like
a concept record loosely based on an actual event,
a whaling ship that went down off the coast of France
in the late 1800s.
All of us were reading this book about it at the time.
Scott introduced the book to us.
I guess Dad passed it to us initially.
Sounds like a dad book from what you've described.
A lot of death.
Gore.
The Custom of the Sea is like a central theme, cannibalism.
Perfect.
And so the quick version of the story
is that we were seeing all of these parallels
between these survivors and this dinghy
and us in our little van trying to go out and do this thing.
So this record minion that sort of formed
a little bit around that,
and that became the art concept.
Anyway, so years later,
Matthew P introduces our music to John Logan
and John starts writing a story based in that world.
So for like a year, he just listened to our music only.
Made like this board on this wall,
like an FBI looking for a serial killer, all the red lines,
all of our songs with all these notes.
And he wrote a story where our songs tell the story.
Like they create the narrative.
And they're played within?
Yeah, within the musical.
There's dialogue as well, but it's basically a story
that's set in late 1800s, end of the whaling era,
these two brothers, a captain and the first mate.
Wow, what a great idea.
That's so cool.
It's incredible.
Oh, it goes deep.
It goes really deep.
It did a run in Berkeley and then a really great run
in DC at the arena stage.
And now it's the big moment.
It's going to Broadway.
Like this is where we always have it.
Do we have a date? November. November 18, somewhere around there.
This'll be the first time Kristen says,
do you wanna go to New York and see a musical?
I'll be like, yes, let's go.
You gotta go.
It's like 85 minutes, no intermission.
Yeah, fuck intermissions.
But it's fantastic.
This is a corny question, but I'm sincere when I ask it.
Did all of his research in consuming and analyzing
the music reveal anything to you guys?
Like, did he discover something about it that was news to you?
For me, some of the story with the brothers was like, we must have been
reading up or things about interviews or something that he knew about our
relationship. It turned out he didn't.
It's just so archetypal or so common.
It was so revealing how universal that is.
Also, listen to singers sing the songs
versus those of us who project the songs.
We conceive the songs, but we're not trained singers.
These singers are singing the songs.
Killing it.
Like, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
You know, like that's a different thing.
Right.
And we've stuck with it.
I think that's the real thing, like that,
whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
Yeah, I'm like, man, I'm over here like, gr that. Woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo woo I can't. Yeah, I wrote this. The weird thing for me about the first time really getting to see it was that the meanings
of the songs being one of the authors,
I didn't imagine that they could mean anything else
than the specific thing I was thinking about
when I wrote the line.
Well, you think you're telling a very personal story
and then it's revealed to you it's universal
and that's really weird.
But even in the universal telling,
there are elements of specificity
that are mind boggling to me,
how things got turned around and mean something new in this new narrative.
Ah, it's incredible.
I can't wait. Oh, I can't wait to see it.
Now you'll love it.
All right, awesome.
Well, you guys, I love you.
It's such a joy to have you in here singing.
Everybody listen to the new album, The Avett Brothers,
and then of course go to Broadway in November
and bump into us there.
Be well.
Thanks, Dex.
Thanks, Monica.
["Facts, Dax"]
My top is the facts, Dax.
I don't even care about facts.
I just wanna get in their pants.
What is the aphorism slash saying slash
Maxim?
Saw.
Ding ding ding connections.
What is the one that you use the most?
Cause I just twisted this and I remembered
righty tighty lefty loosey.
Oh uh huh, that's a good one.
I use that constantly.
That's the only way I know how to remember that.
Right, yeah.
Even I as a mechanic will say that occasionally.
But I'm more like, I've memorized the hand feeling
of spinning my hand to the right.
Yeah.
So I will kind of like, I'll look at something
and I'll move my hand, because I know which way is tight.
Okay, so it's not really righty tighty lefty loosey
for you actually.
No, but it's morphed into a physicality.
Sure. Okay.
But what one do you use a lot?
To remember stuff?
Yeah.
Fuck, that's a big question.
Like do you remember I before E except after C?
Yes, I use that a lot, but again, as you know,
that's one of the least probabilistic ones there are.
I mean, that's a rule, but I swear it's only,
it's about 50% of the time.
Is I before E except after C or?
All the time. And then there's some others. Yeah, except for almost of the time. Is I before E, except after C or? All the time.
And then there's some others.
Yeah, except for almost every time I'm using I
and E together, it seems to be an exception.
That's a good one though, that comes up a lot,
I before E, except for after C.
And then when you tie your shoes, do you do bunny ears?
What is that saying?
That's not a saying, well I think it is actually.
Well I think there is one like hop through the thing
and go under the, yeah.
I didn't, I'm grateful for it. My mom didn't is one like pop through the thing and go under the app.
I'm grateful for it. My mom didn't try to teach me that cute shit.
It was just like tie your fucking shoes,
here's how you do it, use your brain, you know?
And then like you're stupid if you don't know how to do this.
Yeah, that was the theme I think.
And I appreciate it.
I know it's not how I'm raising my kids
or people do it now, but there's some part of that
that kind of, there's something good about it as well.
What about Roy G. Biv?
See I have a lot.
That's good, yeah.
You remember, like I can't even think of any
and you have so many.
Holmes, do you know Holmes?
No.
The Great Lakes?
Oh.
Even with that acronym, can you tell us the Great Lakes?
Holmes.
Holmes, okay.
Ontario.
Gray, that's the O.
Yep.
Michigan. You know the M, yeah. Great, that's the O. Yep, Michigan.
You know the M, yeah.
Lake Erie.
Nice, you only need two more.
Lake H, don't tell me Rob if you know it.
Shut up, Rob.
Lake.
I would suspect you wouldn't get this one.
Not Hartswell, definitely not.
Yep, that's it, the Great Lake Hartswell.
We have a Lake Hartswell in Georgia.
That's a real lake, it's not a Great Lake.
I believe it.
Okay.
Why don't you get the S, the S you could get.
I can, okay.
It's the biggest of the Great Lakes.
Oh.
It's where the wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald happened.
Lake.
It's very cold, very clean, outrageously clean.
It's the best lakes.
We have the best lakes.
Trump says that?
No, but I was just thinking of it.
Oh, Lake Sequoia.
Superior.
Oh yeah, yeah duh.
It's in the name too, really.
It's the superior of all the lakes.
Okay, what's age?
Huron.
You wouldn't know that one, right?
Uh-uh, no.
Yeah.
You did great though, you knew Erie.
Do you know Erie more because of Pennsylvania
and Ohio?
I just know it from like reading books.
That is what Cedar Point is on.
It's on like, it overlooks Lake Erie.
Wow.
Mm-hmm.
Wow, wow.
Great place.
Okay, well you'll come back to me,
well Holmes I guess is yours.
Holmes is nice.
Holmes is.
And that's where I'm from, that's my Holmes.
Yeah, I think that's why you like it.
I don't think you actually use it to remember.
Ip mat, and I made that one up.
Okay, okay.
I am, Ip, that's for the five stages of mitosis.
Oh, okay, tell me.
I pretty much forget them now,
but it's like interphase, metaphase, protophase.
You forgot P.
Yep, interphase, protophase, metaphase.
Antiphase? Antiphase.
Telophase, I know the T is telophase.
All right, I'm not counting,
I'm not gonna count that one. But when I had to pass
that test, I made up IPMAD as an acronym
so I could remember it for the test.
This is not gonna count, but you'll come back to me.
I will, if one pops into my mind.
Don't use it, use it.
Click it. If you don't use it,
you lose it. You lose it, yeah.
Click it, tick it.
Click it, tick it.
Yeah, it's on the signs to put your seatbelt on.
Click it or tick it.
Okay, I don't think you use that.
I don't, no.
Every good boy deserves fudge.
Oh, that's a good one.
Yeah, for the music.
And then the other ones are Face.
That's just F-A-C-E?
Yeah, those are the notes in between.
Oh, in between.
Okay, I didn't know that part.
They're called something, oh God.
Oh, disposing, huh?
Wait, how did you say it, Rob?
Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge. Yeah, mine was Every Good Boy Does it, Rob? Every good boy deserves fudge.
Yeah, mine was every good boy does fine.
Mine deserves fudge.
Maybe it's a Midwestern fudge.
Midwestern fudge.
Midwesterns love chocolate.
We do, Mackinac Island fudge in Lake Huron.
I had a hell of a thirst just now.
Yeah, I'm cutting that.
No, keep it.
No, it hurts my ears.
It quenches.
No one likes that.
Oh, maybe people don't wanna quench their thirst
and they can go to Sprouts right now and get Ted Seger's
where today we went on sale at Every Sprouts.
Really?
Yes.
Oh, just in time for the 4th of July.
Exactly, July 1 is when it started.
You can go to Sprouts and get Theodore Seger's
premium Regal Brew. That's incredible.
Did you bring any?
Yeah, it's right there next to you.
This one's rancid.
It probably is rancid.
Yeah, so I can't drink that.
I'll put a new tap on for you.
Everything in this attic is rancid.
Mm-hmm, mm-hmm.
All the stuff in the frid, all the milks are rancid.
The Ted Seeger's is rancid.
The carpet's rancid.
No, the carpet looks great.
Relative to how it has looked. People should know the cleaning schedule for this carpet.
Once every two years, I take it outside
and clean it with a power washer and OxyClean.
And then it's like so sparkly for like a month
and we can't believe it's the same rug.
And then it just accumulates.
Like there's a terrible stain over there
on the way to the bathroom.
It's too close to the-
Someone didn't make it. Yeah, it's on the way to the bathroom. It's too close to the, yeah.
It's actually so close to the bathroom, it's unsettling.
But it's coffee, I'm sure.
And we're getting due for me to power wash it.
But my hands off to this rug,
because it withstands power washing as a cleaning method.
It's not like it gets pampered.
If people think that's gross,
I implore them to think about how often they wash their rugs.
I would say most people never do.
Like they vacuum them, but they don't wash them.
They don't power wash.
Or have them cleaned, because it's a big to do.
But they probably don't have white rugs like we do.
That's a mistake we made.
This is the rug from the child's bedroom.
The children's bedroom.
I do, yes.
It's kind of Charlie Brown.
Speaking of rugs and cleaning,
there was a leak in my apartment.
There was? Yeah, in the living room.
Your apartment specifically or from above you?
I don't know. Okay.
My apartment ceiling leaked from above.
Yeah, so probably a leak above you
in the apartment above you.
I think that, yeah, they were doing something really funky up there. They left their tub on or something? Yeah, so probably a leak above you in the apartment above you. I think that, yeah, they were doing something.
They left their tub on or something.
Yeah, and it leaked through,
and then it went out in the room,
and there's water everywhere,
and it smelled bad. Really?
Like it was gross water.
And was the ceiling yellow
where it was coming out? Yes.
And it's plaster, right?
You have plaster walls and ceiling, not drywall.
Right. Yeah, it's from the 30s.
No, actually, the ceiling, I don't know.
Okay, how are they gonna fix that?
They already fixed it?
No, but I've asked for it to be fixed.
When was this?
I mean, they cleaned the, I mean the leak stopped.
Oh, okay, that's good.
This was like a week ago.
Oh.
I forgot to mention it last time.
How much water was on the floor?
So you have wood floors.
Yeah, a lot.
And then the rug is a little stinky now.
Okay. And I'm gonna need to get rug is a little stinky now. Okay.
And I'm gonna need to get that cleaned.
Ding ding ding.
Okay.
Maybe you could power wash it for me.
What if I came in your apartment with the power washer
and just gave it a good spray down?
I would like that.
Well, if anyone was worried,
I got the bus home safely.
The last time we spoke, I was going to drive it home.
Mm-hmm.
I did.
I had a very fun stop in Mesquite, Nevada.
Very unique experience.
I rode my motorcycle to a casino to a steakhouse
and had a steak dinner.
And then when I left to come home,
it was dark out, pitch black, and 100 degrees.
Yep, we're in it.
It was a very surreal,
I don't know that I've ever been riding
in a hundred degree temperature while it's blackout.
Are you feeling like I'm feeling,
I feel very childlike about this summer.
Oh, fun.
Like I feel like it's summer mode.
Yeah.
As if I just got out of school, but I didn't.
So I don't know why.
That's great.
I don't know where it came from.
That's a great feeling.
I made a fruit salad.
Can I just add, this is a real transition
from how you felt like a month ago.
Like happiness?
Happiness, optimism, excitement,
enthusiasm about the future.
Yeah, it's true.
Yeah.
That's cause I went up on my medication.
We always notice when we're feeling low,
but sometimes we forget to notice when we're feeling good. That's true. And kind of miss because I went up on my medication. We always notice when we're feeling low, but sometimes we forget to notice when we're feeling
good.
That's true.
And kind of miss it.
Yeah, you're right.
Yeah.
And you're feeling like a little kid, a little child-like.
Yeah, it just feels like-
You're rascally.
Well-
You gonna get into trouble this summer?
No, I'm gonna be really good girl, but I just, I don't know if it, I do feel optimistic
and happy and excited and fruit salads, but I also feel like I don't have to it, I do feel optimistic and happy and excited and fruit salads,
but I also feel like I don't have to do anything.
Right, which isn't totally true.
It's not really true, but I feel it.
That's great, that's all that matters,
because sometimes you have nothing to do
and you don't even feel that way.
Right, the reality is just how you feel.
I'm gonna eat so much fruit this summer.
Wow.
I've decided. You're transitioning from a burrito only diet
to a fruitivore diet?
Yep.
Okay, like a bat.
Here's a question.
We just interviewed someone, a boy,
who was so kind and nice and optimistic
and clearly a good fucking boy.
Yeah.
Doing everything right.
He's going to church and he's dancing for recreation.
So here's my broad question.
Do you think it's easier for recreation. So here's my broad question.
Do you think it's easier for some people
to be good than others?
Because when I'm watching him, I'm scared for him.
Like I get this actual scared feeling,
like how does one maintain this level of goodness
and no mistakes and doing everything right?
And I get suspicious it's gonna break
and then it's gonna be really hard when it breaks
because I've been trying so hard to be such a good boy.
But then I wonder, are people just their baselines
more rascally than not?
And is it easy for some people to be super good
all the time?
My opinion is yes, it's a spectrum of personality.
Okay. So it's interesting you brought this up. I opinion is yes, it's a spectrum of personality. Okay.
So it's interesting you brought this up.
I've been thinking about it too on my vlogs.
Interesting.
Why is that in the air, I wonder?
I don't know why.
I just, cause I operate generally with the thought
that everyone is capable of anything
depending on their circumstances. Everyone is capable of anything
depending on their circumstances. And I really believe that.
And I still do, but I'm starting to wonder
if actually that's not true.
If some people are not, they're not capable of,
I mean, bad things.
I'm not talking about good things.
I mean, bad things.
Like I think everyone's capable, probably a murderer, depending on the circumstance
that they're in, slash the circumstances they came from.
But I think I'm just sort of might be saying that
to protect myself or to make myself feel better.
Yeah, I was so locked into my perspective that I actually.
Because I did murder just for people.
I think they knew that.
Yeah, I think that was pretty,
the subtext was pretty obvious.
It's like old news.
Yeah, yeah.
I think I'm so locked into how I experience life
that I'm watching the good boy that we just interviewed
thinking it must just be a battle, right?
Like to stay that like swing dancing and ice skating
and like really nice G stuff, right?
And I'm like, I feel like I'm battling all day long
like go eat that thing and drink that stuff and do this.
Like I just, I don't know.
I know.
I don't know if I was born that way
or my childhood made me that way.
All of it.
Yeah, probably all of it.
It's the mix, but it has led to this person,
their disposition and the way they go through life
would be very hard for you.
Yes, and it's funny, I'm like,
I actually am having compassion for the person.
I'm thinking, it must be so hard to maintain
this level of goodness.
Right, but I really don't think goodness. And then they're gonna snap.
Like they're gonna snap.
And so I have assessed certain people over the years
as like they're gonna snap, and then they did.
But certainly a lot didn't.
Yeah, I think a lot of people are in circumstances
that lead them to just things being easy.
Also, that person's not perfect.
We don't know, we talked to this person for 10 minutes.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, but just assume,
let's just assume they really are,
like they're saying their prayers
and they thank their nurses
and they do all the right stuff.
Yeah.
It just seems like so much pressure to be perfect.
But again, this is what I'm kind of confronting.
It would be a lot of pressure for me.
Yeah. I would be there going of pressure for me. Yeah.
I would be there going like, whoa, man, we got to,
oh, you know, whatever.
Yeah, perfect is different than good.
Very different, because no one is perfect.
And this person we spoke to is imperfect.
I think you might have been, but.
No, God.
And this is like another sort of flaw in your thinking.
I think you think like, weirdly,
you think it's sort of binary.
And it's not.
No, it's a big gradient,
but maybe some people are really up there.
I think trying to be good,
trying to like who you are is a good effort.
It doesn't always mean you'd get there,
but that's what these people are doing.
They're trying to live a life
where they like who they are.
Yeah, be the best version of themselves.
Even though I just said all this,
last night I experienced an event,
emotional event that I won't get into,
but I did think,
I think everyone in the whole world is bad.
Oh, okay.
That's.
Different types of bad and different things are going on,
but I think we're all bad.
See, now you're joining kinda my point of view
and me saying I'm a piece of shit.
So I think we're all bad and we're all good.
But we're all selfish little creatures
trying to figure out how we can get
the best situation for ourselves.
There's a gradient there though.
Like, okay, I guess I've just been back and forth
on all this a lot.
Yeah, it's hard to nail you down on this.
You just said everyone's bad and then I said,
well, everyone's trying to make the best scenario
for themselves possible.
And you go, no.
Listen, if we were just like, we know,
then we'd be very arrogant.
We don't know.
It is all very gray and confusing.
And I do think people land all over the place on this map,
but it's like, the map isn't just vertical.
It's like horizontal and diagonal. it's a rorschach.
It's a mess and people are a mess,
but they're also good, I guess.
Yeah, we're all complicated.
We're all good and we're all bad.
But do I think like some things that I've done
that were for me bad, like, but that I did,
other people would have no problem not doing?
Yeah, I do.
Even though like for me, it was like, no, I had to do that.
Right.
I do think though, life, I think this is universal.
And again, maybe I'm overestimating my similarities
with other people, but I do think your nature
is to be entirely selfish.
And then that's the friction of life.
It's like, well, I want to grab all
that pizza, but I'm not going to do that because I'd be a bad family member and a bad community
member. Right? You have to like, first year desire is like more for me, the most for me.
Some people struggle with that for more intensely and for longer in life. And I think parts
of that fade out quickly for people, because you learn, depending on your environment
and how you've had to grow up,
you can learn pretty quickly.
That actually doesn't get me what I want.
Well, right, but in a weird roundabout way,
you're still getting to where you want to get
for yourself, right?
You go, that's actually, the shortcut's the fastest way
to the back of the line.
Like, I could steal all that pizza for myself right now,
and then I'd never get invited to do another thing again,
and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
So it wouldn't serve me in the end.
So you do make a decision that is,
that remains selfish, but it's like evolved selfish.
But some people have to do that train of thought
that you just said, they have to do it.
You don't think some people have to do it at all?
No.
Really?
There are elements of my life where I have to do it. You don't think some people have to do it at all? No. Really? There are elements of my life
where I have to talk it through,
and then there are elements that I definitely don't,
but I see other people having to do it.
Right.
Yeah, I feel like I have to talk myself into being
the version of myself I wanna be.
You have to talk yourself through most things.
Yeah, I don't think it comes naturally to me.
I think I'm more like, go steal everything I can
and make sure I have everything I need.
Well, as long as you know that that's your nature,
but that it's important for you
to then have the second step of it.
This is why having a family
is a really wonderful immersion therapy
because it happened a few times just in the last few days
where it's like within rapid succession,
three different people yelled at me for stuff
that I really had nothing to do with.
I mean, really let me have it.
It was like one, two, three, I got it from my wife
and then I got one from Lincoln
and then Delta was the last one to light me up.
It was in the theater.
I just said, yeah, I was trying to solve something for her
and she's like, stay out, I don't want to hear it from you.
She really let me have it.
And I simply, I didn't respond at all.
And I just sat there,
because we were about to watch Iron Man,
the first one I convinced them to let's give that a shot.
I just didn't say anything, right?
Again, that's not me.
I like defend myself.
Stop trying to hurt me, stop trying, right.
I just took it and then,
so then Delta turns back towards the screen
and Lincoln puts her arm out and like pets my arm.
I was like, oh, that was lovely.
Like if I would have defended myself aggressively,
I wouldn't have gotten this beautiful moment of compassion from Lincoln. So that's a win I would have defended myself aggressively, I wouldn't have gotten this beautiful moment
of compassion from Lincoln.
So that's a win I would have never seen coming
and wouldn't have evaluated.
And then about 30 seconds after she let me have it,
mom came in and said something to me
and Delta goes, guys, we have to be nicer to dad.
And I just did it the worst.
He just kind of taking it and getting beat up. Guys, we have to be nicer to dad. And I just did it the worst.
He just kind of taking it and getting beat up.
And so mom, don't ask him about that right now.
And what was so great is like,
this was an outcome that was unforeseeable to me
for most of my life.
And it was so much better than me defending myself
in any one of these given moments.
But like I got my own reward,
which is they ended up being really nice to me.
And they took a moment to actually see me.
And I was like, I couldn't have figured that out in life.
Without these three people that I,
I have to adjust how I am, you know?
Yeah, that's why I always feel guilty on my parents,
because they just eat, take it all.
They just take it all.
They just take it.
I mean, I know you don't like this,
but I do think that's part of being a parent.
It's like.
Oh, of course.
Yeah, well it is, and that's why I do it.
It's not, as my therapist says,
there's no what about me's.
Yeah, exactly.
There's no what about me's.
And that's like a rule I have for myself.
And it's hard because I like to say what about me's hard, cause I like to say, what about me?
And I've had to practice not saying what about me
because I love them all so much.
You practice, practice makes perfect.
Well, no, the reward is there.
It wasn't the one I was expecting, but it was there.
And I wouldn't have ever discovered it.
Do you ever say practice makes perfect?
That's an aphorism, saw, saying.
I am tempted to say it to my kids a lot
because they wanna do something,
they wanna be great at it,
but they don't really wanna practice.
That's, again, back to human nature.
You just wanna be great at stuff.
You don't really wanna put in the time.
You just wanna shine.
Depends on the thing.
I actually think if you really do want something.
It doesn't feel like practice.
No. Right. Because it's all towards the wind.
But like an instrument in particular is all practice.
Yeah, fuck that, I know.
Yeah, and you don't get any of the rewards
for a long, long time.
That's why acting is a hack
because it's fun the whole time you're practicing.
Yeah, but I think people who are truly musically inclined
like it.
They like it.
Yeah.
I guess we have coming up learned how to make beats
at age 11.
Like most people are not enjoying figuring it all out.
Yeah, that's how you know you're doing the thing you love.
Speaking of cool stuff,
I talked about the Hermes podcast already,
but now I'm on many other episodes of that show.
Acquired. Yes, and I'm obsessed with other episodes of that show. Acquired.
Yes, and I'm obsessed with it.
I gotta start listening because Eric was talking about,
I hung out with Eric yesterday.
Yeah.
And of course we were talking about
your mutual obsession with Hermes.
Yeah, now we've moved on.
We listened to LVMH, we listened to,
I listened, there's an episode on Taylor Swift that at first, when I first started it,
I thought, ah, because I've already listened
to so much on her.
And there's a very, very good podcast
called Every Single Album Shoutout
on her and each album and whatever.
So when it started, I was like, I already know this stuff.
I don't even think I'm gonna get much out of it.
But then it transitions into the business element.
And it was so fascinating.
And then I listened to amazon.com
and then I listened to Walmart.
And I'm becoming such a business lady.
I'm learning so much.
I have not felt, well, again,
it's like summer mode feels fun and old and new, and this feels new.
This feeling of, oh, I'm learning.
I'm learning about something fun and interesting
that I know so little about, but I want to know more about.
It's fun.
I wanna listen really bad,
because I like business.
It interests me.
It's fascinating.
Celine Dion, doc.
Okay.
You have not watched it.
I have not watched it yet.
Are you gonna watch it, do you think?
I might, I might.
Okay, it's pretty fascinating.
Yeah.
And I wanna not sound judgmental,
and I hope it sounds like just a great curiosity
that came about while I was watching it.
First of all, I've never bought a Celine Dion CD,
the music wasn't for me.
So I don't really even know how to evaluate her.
Through watching the documentary, it's pretty clear
she's probably the best singer to ever live on planet Earth.
She is as close to perfection
as I think a human voice can get.
She can play her voice like a synthesizer.
She can go through every single note,
through every single scale.
There's no pause.
Like they really show all the different things
she could do with her voice, which were crazy.
And I did not know this and what the doc is about
is she has a disease, stiff person syndrome.
Never heard of it.
It only afflicts one in three million people,
which means there's only 100 people in America
with this disease.
Knock on wood.
Not even gonna knock on wood for 100.
I'd rather you knock on wood.
Okay, okay.
Thank you.
Okay, wow.
We don't know.
Well, she has this disease.
She's one of 100 people in America.
And the symptom is she can't sing.
It doesn't make her blind,
doesn't make it so she can't walk. It makes it so she can't sing. It doesn't make her blind, doesn't make it so she can't walk.
It makes it so she can't sing.
That's beyond an odds fascination.
It's more than one in three million.
It's also the person who's got a one in a billion voice.
It's very fascinating.
I think you need to say more.
It sounds like you're saying don't believe it.
She definitely has it.
She's definitely experiencing it.
I was shocked in the doc, no one asked the question
psychologically what might be going on.
You wonder how much of this is in the mind.
That the body has protected the mind.
That the identity is, to me, this doc is almost
frame for frame the same doc as the Ronnie Coleman doc I'm obsessed with.
Which is the identity is so, so cemented in this voice.
And she says that.
That the notion of should I retire, should I quit,
could I quit, could I retire,
who am I without doing this thing.
Also there's no downside to it.
She loves being Celine Dion.
The only heartbreak is she can't perform.
And that's curious to me,
because we've interviewed a lot of people
who have achieved a lot of great things,
and most people, it's a mixed bag.
I've never met anyone that it's just all gravy
to be Adele or Celine Dion or these people.
A lot of it's hard.
And so, I just, I can't help but be fascinated
with just the odds of this happening
and how curious it is that the symptom is she can't sing.
Is everyone with stiff person syndrome have different
symptoms? Well, there's only 100 people with it.
So there's cramping.
Okay.
There's foot cramping.
She has to be on a lot of Valium, which is interesting,
because Valium's an anti-anxiety drug,
so we're acknowledging there's a psychological component,
but we're not really acknowledging
there's a psychological component.
We go through the whole doc and we don't ever point out
that it's pretty wild and just-
But is the voice all, I mean, I know it's really rare,
but in all the cases, is the voice always affected?
Or is it per-per, but in all the cases, is the voice always affected or is it per person,
kind of like Lyme's disease has different iterations
in each person, is that how this is?
They don't really say that, but in her,
she's moving about and walking and doing everything.
I think her feet hurt, she gets massages in the film.
But what has taken an enormous hit is her voice.
She's so brave.
She sings for us and it's gone.
And she goes there and she, well,
that's a fascinating part of the doc.
I don't wanna kind of, for people who are gonna watch it,
I don't wanna ruin the ending.
But there's also an interesting overlap
with her trying her hardest to record again
and then a very strong episode.
I don't know.
But there is a new song
because Liz was like, Song of the Summer.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Oh, okay.
I don't know about that part.
Huh, well.
It's such a uniquely cruel, weird thing
to happen to someone that is so specific
that has only happened to 100 people.
And it has forced happened to 100 people.
And it has forced her to maybe retire.
And I just think it's really fascinating.
Yeah, it is fascinating.
It is fascinating.
It's like if Picasso got a disease
that only affected his right hand,
you'd go like, well, that's really interesting.
Right, because it's not even like if Picasso had ALS.
Correct.
It's like very specific.
Or he went blind in the eye, he, you know,
it's just like, it's just very.
But I mean, look, I am not saying I don't believe it.
You're not saying you don't believe it.
I'm not saying that, she has it.
I know.
There's no question, she's experiencing all that.
I am not at all, at all suggesting that she's faking this.
Right.
She's not. She has something. Yeah. She has something.
Yeah. But at what point
do you have something and you go,
wow, I'm one of a hundred people that has this
and it's forced me to make a decision
I would have never been able to make myself.
Am I curious about that?
Well. That sounds like I'm blaming her
in a weird way, right? I know,
which I just wanna be careful.
Yeah, yeah. But it doesn't.
If people really hear what we're saying,
I hope they can hear it.
But you know, it's funny is like when you have a lot
of symptoms of something or something's going on,
often, you know, you go to the doctor and they're like,
well, it's probably just stress.
And that's so annoying to hear.
And everyone like really hates that.
And everyone says like the medical system's bad
because they just say, you probably have stress.
But the truth is stress does cause so many problems.
And people's brain can push on long past
what their body can take.
I would kind of all run the exact same risk,
saying like Kristen just got really, really sick.
Mm-hmm.
And we all live in the same house
and kissing and doing all this stuff.
And it hits her uniquely hard.
And I will just say that Kristin's not the type of person
who will say, no, I need a break.
She will push really, really, really hard.
And I do think your, I think your body can say,
no, we're taking a break whether you want to or not.
Yes, I do think that's true.
Like this happens a lot when you have like a crazy
three weeks of work or something and you have to,
there's just no other option,
you have to show up, you have to do it,
and then immediately you get sick.
The day you go on vacation.
Yeah, people really relate, they go on vacation
and they're just dawned, they're like cooked on the vacation.
Yeah, exactly.
I don't know, I just think it's,
I think there's a lot yet to be discovered
about that process where the body takes over.
I just think it's really fascinating and interesting.
It is.
Okay, a couple things.
This is for Ava brothers, wonderful.
What a joy to hear them sing.
Yes.
Couple other good boys.
Great boys, yeah. I mean, fucking, Sess and I even drink coffee. Yeah. Yes. Couple other good boys. Great boys, yeah.
I mean, fucking, Suss not even drinking coffee.
Yeah. My God.
He's not.
Yeah, he's not.
Weirdly, we spent the beginning of this whole conversation
talking about the bus and then like,
why do you have it?
And to own it is to be fixing it
and blah, blah, this whole thing.
And then you had your-
You think I jinxed it. I your- You think I jinxed it.
I don't actually think you jinxed it.
I think it's just the reality.
It is, it is, it is.
Like that bus means always you're just gonna,
something's wrong with it.
That's right.
It's like-
It's almost like you can't be surprised.
Nor was I, to be honest.
And inconvenienced and annoyed,
but not my expectations were completely different.
But yeah, it's like owning an old car.
If you like old cars and old motorcycles,
quite often when you go to the fucking donut shop
to show it off, it doesn't start
when you wanna leave and go home.
That's just how it is.
Yeah, everything's got a little, everything's proportional.
Okay, now you said that you thought it was
King Kunta, the lyric.
I just be about it, I don't talk about it.
Yeah, yes.
I think it's Money Without Me,
it's definitely not King Kunta.
Then it's, because I only have two on my playlist by him,
then it's, cause I only have two on my playlist by him. Then it's-
The lyric in Money Without Me is,
you can talk about it, I'm a B about it.
But I will say this song is confusing
because I can't find it on Spotify.
So I don't know if it's like a, I don't know.
Then I think it's gotta be All Right.
Some of his songs have samples
that can't be cleared for Spotify, it looks like, too.
Right here. Right here.
Oh, I don't talk about it, be about it. Every day I see you, if I gotta be.
Oh, I don't talk about it. I don't talk about it,
be about it. Be about it.
Okay, that's not what I looked up.
But it's probably in the song you referenced too.
Maybe he's using that often. Yeah, it's in,
you can talk about it, I'm a be about it.
Oh, he's got a whole song dedicated to it.
Yeah, but I'm confused about this song.
Okay, it's a confusing song.
I just can't find it.
Even though the premise is pretty clear.
I'm not gonna talk about it, I'm just gonna be about it.
Right.
Well, that's kind of weird that you said the lyric wrong,
but that it is a lyric.
What did I say?
You said what I just read.
I don't talk about it, be about it.
Yeah, and what did I say?
You said I'm a be about it.
I don't talk about it.
Yeah, okay.
Well, I fucked it up.
But it was a little wrong,
but it seems closer to this other lyric
that I guess is real.
Anyway, okay.
Anyhow, Kendrick Lamar, if you're listening,
we'd love to talk to you.
We'd love for you to clear this up for us.
Yeah, come in here and explain what the fuck's going on,
why that song's not on Spotify.
Love for him to come on.
Me too.
But he's in all kinds of dust-ups right now.
Yeah, you said with Drake.
Yeah, he's in a big Drake dust-up. We might get you said with Drake. Yeah, he's a big Drake dust up.
We might get like Firebomb by Drake Lovers.
Well, we can have- I think it's a heated-
We'll have Drake on as well.
Counterpoint.
Okay, I looked up asking AI,
I mean, there's a lot of these,
asking AI to make a hit country song.
Mm-hmm. There's a lot.
So it's like-
Asking AI to create a hit country song about beer for breakfast
When I woke up in the morning
I cracked myself a beer
Then went down to the kitchen to grab myself a beer
Made myself some breakfast
Another beer of course
That's when my baby said to me
I wanna get a divorce Oh, that's good.
That's a good song.
It's not a bad song.
No. I need just one, one, two, or three. That's a good song.
It's not, it's not a bad song.
No.
I like when AI gets confused.
Those are my favorite ones.
The one I had heard, it started out really good and normal
and then somehow it became about pooping your pants.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
You know, what's interesting is,
I was following this architecture feed on Instagram
that I had no idea was all AI generated.
And they were the most gorgeous houses.
I was like, who could afford these houses?
And they're so beautiful.
And then one of the houses had a boat parked in front.
And I'm looking at the boat and now I know about boats.
I don't know about the limits of architecture.
Right.
And I'm like, where's the steering wheel on that boat?
And where is the engine located?
Where's the motor and where's the steering wheel?
And I realized, oh, AI generated this boat
and forgot some pieces.
Oh, wow.
And that's what led me to then read more
about the Instagram page and come to find out
it's all AI generated.
And they're not even hiding it.
I just didn't know.
I just saw it suggested.
I'm like, oh, I love looking at these beautiful houses.
But it took something in my sphere of expertise.
That's funny.
Oh, they fuck up fingers, right?
A lot, that's a good clue.
Count the fingers.
Yeah.
That's really it.
That's everything for the Ava brothers?
Yeah, it was fun.
I like them, they're sweet.
Very sweet.
I get to see them at Red Rocks in a couple days.
You are?
Yeah, we're driving and just happen to be going
through Denver the night that they play.
No, that's like one of my big bucket list goals
to see them at Red Rock, I'm so jealous.
Yes, that's their cathedral.
Well, they said. First of all, Red Rock is supposed to be the best place to see them at Red Rock, I'm so jealous. Oh really? Yes, that's their cathedral. Well, they said.
Well, first of all, Red Rock is supposed to be
the best place to see a show.
Yes, they're incredible, yeah.
And then I love them so much,
and the spirit of Red Rock that I think
is the spirit of Red Rock feels like such a synergistic,
symbiotic pairing.
Yeah, I just think anywhere it's outside in a little,
I think them at the Greek was great.
Very enchanted.
Oh yeah, and look, I saw them in a parking lot
in Indianapolis in this very weird fairground.
That was awesome.
They're awesome everywhere.
I mean, honestly, this is a weird thing to say,
but even if you're only a six on them,
their music as you hear it, trust me, the live show,
even if you were lukewarm about their music,
you gotta go see them play.
They're all so talented and there's so many musicians
on stage and they fucking rip.
They're so fun to watch.
They are, yeah.
That was Lincoln's first concert.
She sat on my shoulders.
Cute. Yeah.
All right, anything else?
We covered it all.
I think we did it.
Okay.
Love you.
Love you.