Dear Hank & John - 150: Spicy Limes

Episode Date: August 14, 2018

What should I do with this tooth? How do I keep a secret? How do I get out of the shadow of my parents’ triumphs? And more! Email us: hankandjohn@gmail.com patreon.com/dearhankandjohn PodCon 2 is... happening!

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello and welcome to Dear Hank and John. Doors I first think of a Dear John and Hank. It's a podcast where two brothers answer your questions, give you to be a advice and bring you all the week's news from both Mars and A.F.C. Wimbledon John. What do you call 2,000 mockingbirds? What do you call 2,000 mockingbirds Hank? Two kilomockingbirds. God. It's terrible. What do you call 2000 mockingbirds Hank two kilomocking birds?
Starting point is 00:00:27 God Terrible. Thank you to Shawna for suggesting that opening bit Shawna wrote good morning brothers green one of my favorite bits that Hank used to do on vlog brothers Was tell terrible jokes since you're both fathers might have suggested you open with some dad jokes My brother's name is Ryan for real Shawna open with some dead jokes. My brother's name is Ryan for real. Shana. Shana, that was a great opening bit suggestion. We got so many wonderful emails thanks to all of you. I also wanted to highlight Corey's.
Starting point is 00:00:52 We might try this one as well. Dear Jon and Hank, perhaps this isn't funny enough to be the opening bit for a comedy podcast, but I thought it would be awesome if you guys opened the pod by simply sharing something good with us. It could be a joke, a bit of good news, a fun fact. Anything that might lighten up the inevitably miserable, unawesome week that it is going to be. Well, Cory, that's a little bit unnecessarily negative. A little bit maybe.
Starting point is 00:01:16 So what, what should we call that? What should we call that, Bitt, John? What, what is that? Maybe we could call that Bitt one good story. So some weeks you're gonna get dead joke, some weeks you're gonna get one good story some weeks you're gonna get one good story. Hank, I actually have one good story this week. It's not really uplifting, but it's weird.
Starting point is 00:01:32 Okay. Okay, so there was this couple named Jerry and Rita Alter who lived in a tiny town in New Mexico called Cliff. And they had a secret. No. Rita Alter just died. Her husband died five years earlier. And their secret was Hank that 31 years ago, they stole a Willem DeCooning painting worth
Starting point is 00:01:53 an estimated $160 million and then hung it in their bedroom for the last 30 years. So that... How did they not show anybody? It was just for them. Did they steal it with the intent? I guess nobody knows because they're dead now and no one will ever know. How did nobody know that this was there? But they lived in a three bedroom ranch house worth like $110,000 and they had a $160
Starting point is 00:02:21 million dollar painting hanging in their bedroom. You guys! Okay, I've pulled up the store myself. They look like a lovely couple. They do. They look like your average American couple from the 1970s or 80s in these photos. They look like they could be our parents, John.
Starting point is 00:02:38 And they seem quite happy. And they've got wine in both of the pictures. So they like wine. But also they like stealing $160 million paintings. I love it. I mean, obviously don't steal $160 million painting people listening to this podcast. If I can give you one piece of good advice, it's that.
Starting point is 00:03:01 Well, but if you do, if you do, then definitely just die without having sold it. Yeah, absolutely. Let it go back into the universe. Don't try to sell it and then have the money do it. Just wait and then you'll be dead and then nobody will know. She must have known, she's just like, please, no one go into my house until I die. She must have known, she was just like, please, no one go into my house until I die. I don't want to go to jail for the last two months. Jerry Alta was also a writer-hank,
Starting point is 00:03:33 and he wrote a story called The Eye of the Jaguar, in which two people steal, wait for it, an emerald. That's how, that's how they never find you. They steal an emerald, they take it out of a museum and bring it to their house and the story concludes and two pairs of eyes exclusively are there to see it. Oh, oh damn. Wow. Okay, what I need to know is if they also had an Emerald. Right. I mean, they better be searching out. You know how, maybe they have an emerald too. So I've read part of this article now, and they, so the person who figured that this
Starting point is 00:04:13 out saw it at like an antique shop and it's like, or they own the antique shop where it ended up. And, and they were like, actually, I think this is real. So they called the museum and they were like, they basically told the receptionist, I think this is real. So they called the museum and they were like, they basically told the receptionist, I think I have a piece of art that was stolen from you and then the receptionist asked what piece and he said the decooning and she said,
Starting point is 00:04:34 hold please. Hahaha. Hahaha. Hahaha. Hahaha. Hahaha. Hahaha. Hahaha.
Starting point is 00:04:42 Oh my god. Alright. So the painting has now been delivered back to its rightful place. And it was definitely them that stole the painting and they just held on to it for 30 years so that they could have their two pairs of eyes enjoying their emerald. What a weird world, John. Yeah, I'm not sure that that technically qualifies as good news, but it's the news that you got got my friends
Starting point is 00:05:05 Let's move on to some questions from our listeners. This first one comes from Audrey who asks dear Hank and John My oldest friend just told me that her favorite painters are the pre-Raphaelites. Should I still be friends with her? I don't know how to get past this paintings and pain Audrey John you're gonna have to handle this one because I don't like as far as I can tell the pre-Raphaelites I have no idea. No idea. That's the Renaissance? No, it was a movement that wanted to go back
Starting point is 00:05:31 to a world pre-Raphael. That is before. Oh, so they weren't before Raphael. They were like, everything was good back then. Raphael ruined everything. Exactly. So they were 19th century artists trying to harken back to a, you know, a better time, which there's a long history of, of course,
Starting point is 00:05:55 nothing seems better than the past due to its being fixed. Yeah, it's much less scary at least. There's no way that the world is going to end in 1854. It's just not going to happen. Right, exactly. Everything seems survivable on account of it having been survived. Look, I think that there are times when you can judge your friends for their taste and there are times when you can't. And to me, this is one of those times when you don't need to. Like, it's not the same thing as liking, I don't know, what's something
Starting point is 00:06:34 that's really reprehensible, Hank? Info Wars? Great example. It's not like your best friend said that their favorite artist is, I can't even remember the name of the host of Info Wars. Well, that's lovely for you. I wish I lived in that world, but I'm not going to say his name, John. I have no interest in that. Thank you. Thanks. I'm looking forward to not learning it.
Starting point is 00:06:57 So I think you've just got to, you got to roll with the punches on this one, Audrey. It's going to be okay. All right, Hank, this next question comes from April and it's one of immediate concern. Deer John and Hank, how does the Eiffel Tower's bathroom work? I was up there a few days ago and I cannot stop thinking about how on the second floor they were bathrooms, but nothing underneath them. Where does it go? In Paris, April. Well, I've never been there. I've never been, do you, have you ever used the toilet in the Eiffel Tower, John? It is factually inaccurate for you to say
Starting point is 00:07:30 that you have never been to the Eiffel Tower. I've never been up to the top of the Eiffel Tower. And indeed, you don't need to. As April points out, the bathrooms are on the second floor where we have definitely been together. To the second floor of the Eiffel Tower? Yes. Or all the way to the top.
Starting point is 00:07:47 Did I go to the top of the Eiffel Tower and forget about it, John? I don't know if you went to the top of the Eiffel Tower. I know I sure as hell didn't. Okay, in fact, then we probably didn't. Boy, if I have, then I really shouldn't put anything on my bucket list because I will just forget about it. But I guess everything's leading, John.
Starting point is 00:08:06 I guess someday I will forget everything because I will have died. I mean, it seems like we've switched bodies for this episode of the podcast, so I guess I'll answer the science question. The way it works is that while there is nothing directly underneath the bathrooms in the Eiffel Tower, there are pipes that go from beneath the bathroom and then kind of like
Starting point is 00:08:33 go along the sides of the tower and then go down into the ground. That is the way it works. That's why there is a bathroom there, but at least as I can recall, there's not a bathroom like on top of the Eiffel Tower because that would have been more of an aesthetic challenge. Maybe. I mean, the nice thing about being up high is that gravity takes it all down, and that's really what you're relying on, with pipes, is the water pressure in the sucking,
Starting point is 00:09:01 and the rolling in the gravity. So, yes, otherwise, like there are so many people who go to the Eiffel Tower, they must be making lots of waste. And you don't want to see how high up the Eiffel Tower would be if it just like kept being raised upon the pile of human, human leavings that, that were not piped away. That's really, that's great. Thanks for, thanks for that image. I'm glad that I get to go forward in life having to imagine that I don't remember very much
Starting point is 00:09:39 about being at the Eiffel Tower, but I'll never forget that. Well, and I'm really curious how, how many visitors to the Eiffel Tower would just have to poop when they arrive for the Eiffel Tower to be completely buried in poop. Like how long would it take? Oh, I don't know. I'd like to see some stats on that. I think that's an interesting question and an important one to answer. We should probably put aside everything else that we do with our lives and focus full time on that.
Starting point is 00:10:07 Hank, do you know that there's a picture of me taken just outside the Eiffel Tower? I didn't actually get to visit it, but while we were doing press stuff for paper towns, we went outside the Eiffel Tower to take a picture. And the picture features Cara DeLavine taking a rose and touching it against my cheek. And she looks extremely put together and high-fashiony.
Starting point is 00:10:33 And I look like my Shlubby Self. And it's Sarah's favorite picture of me. And she insists on putting it up like it amid the rest of our family pictures, like in the family picture hallway. So it's totally normal. You're a children, you're a wife and this fashion model. Exactly, except for one picture of Cara with her arm around me, touching my face with a flower, with the Eiffel Tower in the background.
Starting point is 00:10:59 I found it, I found it, I'm looking at it right now. That is very weird. I've found it. I'm looking at it right now. That is very weird. It's so weird. It's a very weird photo. Oh man, it's on Pinterest. Like, when Kar was taking the picture, she was like, this is so weird. But she's so good. Like, she's such a pro. She was like, sure, whatever. I'll go to the Eiffel Tower and touch you with this weird flower.
Starting point is 00:11:24 Oh man. That's a weird this weird flower. Oh, man. That's a weird photograph, John. You look lovely. You look very nice. Thank you. That's my, I was wearing my best suit by a wide margin. And that's better than any suit I own by a wide margin. That's for sure. Am I gonna have to get a suit? Um, I mean, yeah. I have, I've told you this before, I think a lot of times, but I'll tell you again,
Starting point is 00:11:44 you need to buy a suit. It is a good investment for a person who has your job. But I feel like that's not the, oh, man, I just found the picture of her touching me with the rose and it's so funny. We'll put it on the Patreon. It's funny. Yeah. Oh, man.
Starting point is 00:12:00 It's, we'll put it on the Patreon. You can go to patreon.com slash deerhankinjohn. You don't have to pay or anything to get access to this sweet sweet picture. Very, very, very lovely and very weird. There's also a cute picture of Sarah and me with Cara and Nat in the background making funny faces. I'll put that on the Patreon too. These are adorable. It really was a super fun time in my life, even though that particular day I had to spend 14 hours in a hotel basement answering questions from people who only spoke French. It was still a great trip.
Starting point is 00:12:33 This next question, it comes from Beth who asks, dear Hank and John, a few weeks ago I obtained a vintage school desk from my in-laws garage sale. While picking it up, they mentioned that there was a freebie item inside the desk. That's exciting. That's always exciting. That item turned out to be a random tooth. Oh, in-cased and gold. Hey!
Starting point is 00:12:58 Nobody knows who the tooth originally belonged to, only that they must have had poor dental hygiene, due to the state of the tooth. My question is, what should I do with this tooth? I don hygiene due to the state of the tooth? My question is, what should I do with this tooth? I don't want to put it in the box where I have all of my baby teeth. Okay. You of course you don't. Who on earth would suggest that? But I don't want to just have it lying around either. Any thoughts or dubious advice would be helpful Beth. John, what do you think about having your baby teeth still? Do you? Do you? Do you have in a box your own baby teeth? I have a couple of my own baby teeth and I did
Starting point is 00:13:34 recently take them out to show them to Henry who's losing his teeth now, you know, losing his baby teeth now. And I was like, you know, this happened to your dad do. And Henry was like, I'm this is gross. Why dad too. And Andrew was like, I'm, this is gross. Why, why did you keep these? And then that made me think, this is gross. Why did I keep them? But Beth, Beth, we're not talking about you keeping your teeth, which is a different question altogether.
Starting point is 00:13:58 We're talking about you keeping a strangers tooth that you inherited from your in-laws via purchasing a school desk at their garage sale. You didn't inherit this from your in-laws, you inherited it from a desk. You inherited a tooth from a desk. It's just you found some trash. No, no, you found some trash covered in gold. You need to sell the gold and throw away the tooth. However that works, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:14:32 I assume you just go to one of the 10,000 places that say we buy gold in all capital letters. Yeah, and you're like, look, this one's wrapped around some trash. Can you tell us do you want it? I actually think the best thing that you can do in the situation, Hank, is when you have a garage sale, is just put it inside of something random, like put it inside of your Teddy Ruckspin.
Starting point is 00:14:56 Yeah. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, you just glue it, you just glue it in, like a muller, so they don't notice it when they first get the Teddy Rucks' pen, but then like when Teddy Rucks' pen starts to talk, it opens his mouth. Oh no. It's just one tooth in the back. No, that's it. There's no batteries in the Teddy Rucks' pen.
Starting point is 00:15:18 You say, oh, you need to get batteries for it. And then when they open the battery compartment, it's just teeth. Just teeth, like 80 teeth. Ah, that's what you do with your baby teeth. You glue them into your teddy rucks bin. And then you sell the teddy rucks bin for like five bucks at a garage sale and you scare a child for a life. Okay. Well, the great news is that you've got some gold,
Starting point is 00:15:45 you've got some gold wrapped trash, and that's way better than just trash. So that's not nothing. Hey, Hank, do you think that the people who is into this podcast even know what Teddy Rucksman is? It occurs to me that Teddy Rucksman might not be a going concern. Oh sure, let's do a quick Twitter poll, John,
Starting point is 00:16:03 and I'll let you know at the end of the podcast, how many people know what Teddy Rucks pin is. I mean, Teddy Rucks pin is old enough that he ran on cassettes. That's all I'm saying. He is a tape-based toy. John, I am old enough that I ran on cassettes, so let's not be too mean.
Starting point is 00:16:19 Okay, fair enough, fair enough. Just doing the Twitter poll, I'll let you know what I'm done. All right, hey, we got another question. This one comes from Rachel who writes, dear John and Hank, my close friend just told me he was planning on asking out one of our other friends to put it lightly. Our entire friend group has been waiting for this day
Starting point is 00:16:35 for a year and a half, so I'm nothing short of ecstatic. Oh, okay. There's one small problem. I can't tell anyone, and I'm awful at keeping secrets. I'm so bad at keeping secrets that I can't keep my own. I've known about this for an hour and I've only told two people. That's not good, Rachel. Well, is it us? Is it
Starting point is 00:16:55 are we the two people? No. Oh, we are the two people. Okay, great. Rachel, Rachel, you're doing great. You're doing great. We are the two people. Oh, okay, good. Sorry, Rachel. Rachel, you're doing great. You're doing great. We are the two people. Now I get your joke. How do I not ruin this surprise? I can't contain myself, not from friends, Rachel. Rachel, I think what if there was a thing where there was like, it was a website that was like secret keepers.
Starting point is 00:17:20 And then you go to secretkeepers.com. Don't go there because we don't own this domain. I don't know what's there. And there's somebody there who can listen to secretkeepers.com, don't go there, because we don't own this domain. I don't know what's there. And there's somebody there who can listen to your secret and be like, oh, tell me more of that sounds exciting. And then you can just get it all out and tell the, but this isn't my problem when it comes to keeping secrets. My problem is I forget that it should be a secret
Starting point is 00:17:40 and I say it. Well, that's obviously not Rachel's problem. Rachel desperately needs someone that she can talk to. Talk to about this secret. Well, that's obviously not Rachel's problem. Rachel desperately needs someone that she can talk to about this secret. Well, she's found us. So that's good. We're providing that service, not in a really sort of rapid back and forth, but at least there's some
Starting point is 00:17:55 communication going on. But yeah, maybe there's got to be somebody out there, some stranger who will listen to your secret and have you listen to theirs. Yeah, maybe just go to the mall and walk up to a stranger and say, hey, can I tell you a secret? That's a bad idea. That's bad advice. I take it back, Rachel. Don't do that. You're just like, you're getting chicken McNuggets. You're getting your chicken McNuggets at McDonald's. And you're like, you're like, can I pay with credit?
Starting point is 00:18:25 And they take the credit card and you're like, hey, can I tell you a secret? Drive through, and they're like, man, take your order. And you're like, yes, but first, may I tell you a secret, Jim is about to ask out Pam. Here's my order. I order you to listen to me right now. I have to tell you about Pam and Jim.
Starting point is 00:18:42 I have to tell you about Pam and Jim. I have to tell you about Pam and Jim. I have to tell you about Pam and Jim. I have to tell you about Pam and Jim. I have to tell you about Pam and Jim. I have to tell you about Pam and Jim. I have to tell you about Tammage. Cheeseburgers and five minutes of your time, because I need to tell you about this Pamm and Jim situation. Do not waste the time of service employees telling secrets. What if there's a horse? Because a horse can't say your secret to anybody else. So what if there's a horse somewhere nearby that you can talk to?
Starting point is 00:19:02 Is there any nearby horses? Rachel, I'm gonna expand Hank's answer just a little bit and say, are there any nearby mammals that are non-human? So if you don't have a horse, which there's a pretty good chance you don't, maybe you have a cat or a dog, and you can go to your cat and you can be like, hey, manhole, can I tell you a secret?
Starting point is 00:19:24 Pam's about to ask out Jim. I wanna tell everybody, but I'm just gonna tell you, manhole. Can I tell you a secret? Pam's about to ask out Jim. I want to tell everybody, but I'm just going to tell you, manhole, because everybody knows you name your cat manhole. I think we got it, John. I think we nailed it. Hank, good names for cats. Go. Pants. Good name. more. Fidget. Keep going. Lighthouse. Yup. Polar Bear.
Starting point is 00:19:48 Yes. Straw. Dang it. Dang it. Dang it. Polar Bear. How can you straw probably isn't a good one? How can you know so many good names for cats,
Starting point is 00:20:01 like pants and polar bear, and then also be the person responsible for straw and manhole as cats name John. I mean let okay fine. You try Names for cats go mr. Wiggles great lady Mcbeth. That was great the tutor monarchy That's not good Good. God. God. God. God.
Starting point is 00:20:25 God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God.
Starting point is 00:20:33 God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God.
Starting point is 00:20:41 God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God. God name is Rosiana. I was born rich, like 1% of Americans rich. I don't mean to sound gross or boastful because it's actually something I struggle with, so here's my question. I hear friends, colleagues, families, sometimes joke that my accomplishments were only available to me in the first place because of my parents, my education, my career, my relationships, etc. I'm afraid maybe they're right. Part of me just wants to accept my lot in life and move on
Starting point is 00:21:06 But I also feel like this is deeply unsatisfying So what's the best way to get out under the shadow of my parents triumphs? Anun a mouse. Here's the thing they are right in the sense that you do benefit tremendously from having privileges and from growing up rich. And you have to accept that. Yeah, I mean, it's such a, it's, we do want to believe in our agency and that we are responsible for the outcome of our lives.
Starting point is 00:21:40 And that is in many cases true. That is the, that is the case. That is fact. Like we make decisions and we make good ones and we work hard, but it is not the only part of the picture. It's not the only piece. But understanding that that's not the only piece, I think is important that you have advantages that you didn't necessarily earn or that you don't deserve and getting away from the idea of my responsibility, how much am I responsible for what I have,
Starting point is 00:22:09 how much agency have I had in that, and how much do I deserve what I have. Getting away from that I think is really important, and focusing more on what can I do, what have I done, how can I make myself healthier and happier, and also how can I make the people around me and my society healthier and happier with the resources that I have.
Starting point is 00:22:30 And seeing it as not this like weight around you that says like, oh no, I have to have this thing that differentiates me and that also to some extent people might judge me because of into like, this is not a weight, it is a resource, and I should be using it to do the best thing that I can do. Does that make sense?
Starting point is 00:22:52 I mean, to be frank, Hank, this is something that both our kids are going to grow up with. They're not gonna grow up tremendously wealthy, but they're gonna grow up much wealthier than most people. And so it's something I've thought a lot about. And it's also that we grew up in a very privileged situation, relatively speaking. And I think that deserving is the wrong way to think about it,
Starting point is 00:23:14 because you don't deserve the good things that you get in life. You also don't deserve the terrible things that you get in life. Like the fact that Hank grew up with a tremendous set of privileges does not mean that he deserves to have ulcerative colitis. I think deserving is just the wrong way to think about it. And instead, as Hank said, thinking about it as resources and what you can do for your social order, for the people around you, that's the way to think about it. So anonymous, all we can say is wherever you are in life, try to use your resources thoughtfully and carefully.
Starting point is 00:23:48 Yeah, and it sounds like you are already thinking about that stuff critically, which is, you know, good. And better than not a people do. Hank, I've got another question from anonymous. They send in so many emails. Dear John and Hank, I'm not 18 yet, but I have recently been thinking about the electoral college. If you don't know about the electoral college.
Starting point is 00:24:05 If you don't know what the electoral college is because you don't live in the United States, don't worry about it. If I am a Democrat that lives in Colorado or Wyoming, does my vote even matter, or if I'm a Republican living in California? Since these contrasting, since these states never reflect a significant amount of people from the opposite side of elections, does my vote go away as it is in the minority? Should I move to Ohio just to have more of an influence, Georgian Democrat anonymous? First off anonymous, there's a pretty good chance that being a Democrat in Georgia is going to be super relevant in presidential
Starting point is 00:24:35 elections. If not in the next cycle, then like maybe two cycles from now. So don't move, please. Secondly, I think that what gets lost in a lot of these conversations is that while the person who is president is very important in United States politics, it is not the only important thing. It is not the only important elected office. Local offices, Congress, the Senate, these are so important. And if we had a
Starting point is 00:25:07 different Congress, we would have a different country. And so that's what I would say. Wherever you are, it makes sense to vote. Even if you know the candidates you're going to vote for are going to lose, it still makes sense to vote. Because it still sends a statement to the people in power that their power is less secure than they believe it to be. And if you don't vote, all that says is, I don't exist in this district. According to myself, I am willing to be anonymous in this district. I am willing to be anonymous in my community. I am willing to be anonymous in this district. I am willing to be anonymous in my community. I am willing for my political voice not to be heard and I don't think that is a good strategy.
Starting point is 00:25:50 Any elected representative knows and they might not because of a lot of division right now, they might not be able to represent this accurately or do a good job of it, but they have to know that their job is to not represent just the people who voted for them. Their job is to represent all of the people who live in the place where they are. And it is much easier to do that if you see that there is a diversity of people in your place. And that's true nationally, it's true locally
Starting point is 00:26:23 and it's true on the state level. And so having a diversity of voices at the polls And that's true nationally, it's true locally, and it's true on the state level. And so having a diversity of voices at the polls is extremely valuable. And that feeling that it won't matter for me to go out and do this, that can be, that can suppress that instinct for it can suppress people from going to the polls if they think that their candidate is just going to lose. But that results in even further polarization of the system. Yeah, exactly. So please, I know that you're not 18 yet, Georgia.
Starting point is 00:26:52 Well, you're not named Georgia. You just lived there. We don't know. In my opinion. Yeah, whatever, my opinion. They are named Georgia. I'm sticking with it. I know that you're not 18 yet, Georgia, but when you are, I hope that you will register to vote I'm not a D-N-Y-D-J-J-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N-A-N- Now, make sure that you're registered. Make sure your registration is up to date. And if you're not registered, get registered now, because there are big, extremely important elections in November. It's true that there is no presidential election. But nonetheless, the elections in November are tremendously important. Indeed.
Starting point is 00:27:38 And I also want to say to everybody out there who's named the same name as the place where they live, that must be weird. Like, George, like all the people named Georgia and Georgia, all the people named Orlando and Orlando, that's just gotta be weird. That's all. All the Washington's and Washington. Yeah. There's gotta be tons of them.
Starting point is 00:27:56 Yeah. The Oregon's and Oregon. I don't know how many Oregon's there are in Oregon, but you know, I bet there are a ton of decotas in the decotas. Oh, yeah. Virginia's in Virginia. What is the state hank where there are the fewest people named the name of the state in the state? I'm gonna guess it's Wyoming. Yeah, just because there aren't a lot of people in Wyoming.
Starting point is 00:28:24 And that's also not a very normal name. Yeah, yeah, like I bet there's a lot of shions in Wyoming, but I don't think there's a lot of Wyoming's in Wyoming. I bet you're right. I was gonna go with Alaska, but Alaska is actually a pretty common name, especially because you made it a name in a book and now more people maybe are more likely to name people that. a name in a book and now more people maybe are more likely to name people that. It is a much more popular name certainly than it was in 2005. I don't know that I made it happen, but it is a weird coincidence. I'm not sure that we want to conflate correlation and causation, but I did recently look at like a baby naming website and there are more people named Alaska after the publication of that book than before it it which is a weird thing to think about.
Starting point is 00:29:08 I think it's I think you did it. I think you did that. I mean I used to I remember when I when we were trying to name our kids I spent so much time on baby name websites. Yeah. And then the, it's, I mean, it is a big deal. It is a big deal. You don't wanna, you wanna name your kid the right name. That's for sure. Okay, so, okay, okay, all right, Hank, I've got some actual stats here for you. In 2004, three babies per million were named Alaska
Starting point is 00:29:42 in the United States. In 2017, 49 babies per million were named Alaska in the United States. So again, I don't know the extent to which looking for Alaska is responsible for that, but it is, it has gone up by a factor of 15 or so. And after this hulu show, John, everybody's gonna be named Alaska. Well, we'll see about that. I mean, some people say it's gonna be the new Emily or Claire. I don't even, what even is the most popular name? John, can you tell me, because apparently you know
Starting point is 00:30:18 about a website, I don't know about how many kids in America are named Wyoming. Oh, yeah, absolutely. Wyoming is not in the top 10,000 names for either boys or girls. Hmm. I found a website saying that Wyoming is the 17,433rd most popular name for a girl, which how many babies are born in America every year? Because I feel like that's probably like last.
Starting point is 00:30:41 That's just like there's one. Everything is tied for 17,000. There's always one every year there's one Wyoming. I think that's a like last. That's just like there's one. Everything is tied for 17,000. There's always one, every year there's one Wyoming. I think that's a beautiful thought. I think it's not, by the way, it's not a bad name. I know that I was seven a few times. Why don't you put your name for a boy or a girl? Like I feel like if I met somebody and they walked up to me
Starting point is 00:30:57 and they were like, hello, my name is Wyoming Johnson, I would be like, I mean, that person's probably up to something interesting. Orcat. This next question comes from Pia, who asks, dear Hank and John, what would happen if we put the earth into a big box and blocked all the sunlight from it for just one second? My friend says it would damage the earth considerably and we'd be really in trouble. But I feel like that's a bit dramatic. Like surely the Earth would survive without one second of light.
Starting point is 00:31:29 Love the podcast, by the way. I always listen to it while I'm doing my morning workouts. So feel free to encourage me because I probably feel like I'm dying right now. DFTBAPA. Move it! Pia up, down! Oh, that's right! Up, down, left, right!
Starting point is 00:31:43 Forward, backward. Those are all the directions. Obviously Hank is trying to encourage you to remember how to do the Contra video game code, not how to work out. You've got it, Pia, keep going, up, down, down, left, right, left, right, B-A, B-A, start, great job, Pia, keep it going, keep it going, up, up, down, down, left, right, left, right. Good. I know how to work out.
Starting point is 00:32:15 John, what was the question? Oh, I think we'd be fine. Yeah, we would be totally fine. One second, one second of no light, we would be okay. Yeah, I mean, I think that, uh, I think that that level of variate, like I think it might be somewhat of a big deal. You might, you might see a little, like, I'd, maybe a measurable drop in global temperature that day. But yeah, no. By far, the biggest issue with this
Starting point is 00:32:40 idea is, uh, is the construction of this big box, which would consume all of the Earth's resources. And also, it would only be around for one second. And then what are we going to do with it? Just gonna crash back down to the Earth. It's gonna fall down. It's raining particles of giant cardboard. I don't know what we made it down. We can't figure out what to do with gold covered teeth. How are we going to possibly figure out what to do with an earth-sized box? What's it made of? Also, we didn't need to build a whole box. We could have just blocked the sun. That's not that big. Yeah, you know who this would be a big issue for would be me because if all light on earth
Starting point is 00:33:29 for one second went away, I would be really freaked out for that one second because when there's even like a brief dimming of lights in a room that I'm in, I'm always like Sarah, did the lights just dim or the lights? Did you feel like the light just flickered? Did the lights, can somebody confirm for me that the lights flickered because I'm scared that I'm having a stroke? I was really, you know, the solar eclipse happened fairly recently. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:33:57 And I remember. I went over Montana and I didn't experience the full eclipse though I really wish I could have and I really need to make it happen someday. But just going outside and watching it through my eclipse glasses, I was shocked by how cold it got during the eclipse. And I guess like, of course, this makes sense. The sun isn't radiating on me anymore,
Starting point is 00:34:21 but the temperature dropped like 10 degrees. And the eclipse was never full. So it still looked like there was a sun in the sky, but it temperature dropped like 10 degrees, and the eclipse was never full. So it still looked like there was a sun in the sky, but it just like got chilly. It was really cool. No, it's wild, man. It's weird. It's such a weird thing.
Starting point is 00:34:33 We are so different. We're in this weird on that death laser up in the sky. I know, thank God for that death laser. Which reminds me, John, that this podcast is brought to you by the Deadly Laser Sun. The Deadly Laser Sun, it's making you look old. Today's podcast is also brought to you by the Deadly Laser Sun. The Deadly Laser Sun, it's making you look old. Today's podcast is also brought to you by Teddy Rucksman. Teddy Rucksman, now featuring old human teeth. Dude's podcast is also brought to you by, I don't know if you've heard about our new sponsor,
Starting point is 00:34:58 The Giant Pile of Poop Under the Eiffel Tower. The Giant Pile of Poop Under the Eiffel Tower, the more tourist's visit, the bigger it gets. Then last, Lee Today's podcast is brought to you by Katz, named Tutor Monarchy. Katz named Tutor Monarchy, even rarer than humans named Wyoming. It's true. I looked it up on the baby, the baby cat name list that the census puts out. It's so far nobody. But John, also this podcast is brought to you by the last two weeks But also John this podcast is brought to you by the last week of the podcon Indiegogo
Starting point is 00:35:32 So if you want to come and see us do a live dear Hank and John and alive delete this and alive Anthropocene reviewed You can go to podcon.com and there's a link there to our crowdfunding campaign where you can get discounted tickets It also things that are only available during the campaign. We very much appreciate people who are able to buy tickets early. That's why we make them cheaper and also encourage you to do it because it makes it a lot easier to plan a conference and less terrifying.
Starting point is 00:35:57 So podcon.com, it's gonna be lots of fun. Also, we have a project for awesome message to read from Stuart Baker. Thank you, Stuart for donating to the project for awesome this year to get us to read this on the podcast. Dear Hank and John, I discovered the vlog by the through Crash Course World history. I enjoy the weekly vlog because of the respect and humility that you bring to this editorial format. You discuss important issues facing our shared world with suggestions on how we might collectively help to end world suck.
Starting point is 00:36:25 Thank you for creating the Project For Awesome and the peace of mind that it brings with knowing our contributions make an impactful difference. Well, that is very nice if you steward. Thank you. I would be happy to read that any time, not just for money. Absolutely. Just come back to it, read it tomorrow, but after that, after that. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:36:43 How extraordinarily generous. I have to say thank you to everybody who donated the project for awesome to get Dear Hank and John related perks this year. I think they've at last all gone out. Our tradition of sending out perks seven months late continues and will continue into next year. So look for this year's project for awesome toward the end of the year so that you can get perks seven months later. This last, I've got another question, John. It's from Rachel, who asks, Dear Hank and John, I recently went to book con and received a temporary tattoo of the sculptures from an absolutely remarkable thing, which comes up September 25th
Starting point is 00:37:19 and is available for pre-order now. My question is, where and when do I apply this tattoo? Do I wait for the release of the book or a special day like Labor Day or I do it just where a face tattoo one day to work? Is there some specific part of my body where I should be applying this tattoo? Thanks. So no one told you life was going to be this Rachel. Wow, that's our second friends related Rachel. It is. It is. John, I have no idea. I just wanted to say that because I wanted to plug my book because I feel like I'm I must.
Starting point is 00:37:51 I think it's important to plug your book. We should also plug the tour. If you live in, say, New York or Boston or California or Indianapolis or Chicago or many other places, you should come see us on tour, HankGreen.com. You can go and get tickets and they come with a free book and a great show. It'll be super fun. I'm only on the first part of the tour,
Starting point is 00:38:12 so that's the ones that you should get tickets for. Sorry, West Coast. It'll just be Hank. Yeah, it'll just be Hank. So my rule of thumb is to apply a temporary tattoo as quickly as possible and in a place where you would conceivably want to get a real tattoo, but not like one of the places where you would get a real tattoo that only you and people who know you intimately would see. So like a bicep, the forearm, maybe your ankle, that kind of thing. Nack.
Starting point is 00:38:48 Yeah. One time when Sarah worked at an art gallery in Chicago, like when we first started dating, they had a show where the artist made temporary tattoos out of all of the artworks that were in the show. And we got all of these temporary tattoos, and Sarah had to, like, as part of her, you know, like, employment managing the gallery,
Starting point is 00:39:12 like, have one of the temporary tattoos all the time, you know? There's a little, there's a little weird. And one of them was, you know, the song got 99, the balloons. What is it? It's called 99 Loved Balloons. 99 Loved Balloons.
Starting point is 00:39:30 One of them was, of that, it was like an illustration of that or like an artwork based on that song, that German song. And anyway, this story is super important, Hank, and I'm getting to its point. The point is, the point is that one time we were like, she was on her upper arm, and we were counting the frickin' 99 lift balloons, and there was a 100th lift balloon. It wasn't even an accurate artwork about the song that it was supposed to be about. Did you destroy it?
Starting point is 00:40:08 Like there's ways to destroy temporary tattoos, John. No, I mean, it's just, I don't really recall what happened to the temporary tattoo, but that whole, it was like an eight week period where she had to have one of the artworks, you know, on her body. Oh, okay. It's weird.
Starting point is 00:40:25 Art is weird. Maybe we should all be pre-Raphaelites. Let's not being so weird. Let's just go back to before the Renaissance, when everything was normal. Yeah, exactly. The Dark Ages. When people died of smallpox at 10,
Starting point is 00:40:43 just a normal life. But when you didn't, when you survived, you made art sometimes, I guess. All right, Hank, we got another question. This one comes from Devon, and it's a very good question. Dear John and Hank, my work often stocks the Trader Joe's key lime tea cookies,
Starting point is 00:40:58 which is all fine and well, they're delicious. I have one problem though. My boss has commented multiple times upon finishing one that they are quote Spicy now it keeps me up at night because I don't know if it's my place or my responsibility to tell a 40-year-old man that Limes are in fact Sour not trying to sour a work relationship Devon relationship, Devon. This is not a...
Starting point is 00:41:26 This is like I know that this might sound weird, but there's a... There's words have meanings, and we can't just go around calling a line spicy. Can't do it. I'm not gonna stand for it. I love this question. I'm going to hear for Alice calls every food that is not extremely bland spicy, so to Alice, if something is physically hot, you know, like if it is very warm, she'll take a bite of it and she'll, oh, spicy. And then that's cute. But this is not a child. This is a 40 year old man. Also, if something is excessively salted, she'll take a bite of it and she'll be like,
Starting point is 00:42:06 spicy. Yeah, and contain spices, I guess? Yeah, the best one, no. My favorite one is when she eats a sweet tart, and I guess maybe this does get to Devon's point, she'll eat a sweet tart and she'll say, hmm, it's sugary, but spicy. Well, apparently that's what this boss person is saying, yeah.
Starting point is 00:42:30 But this is a sugary, this is sugar spicy. Yeah, it's possible, Devon, that nobody, like what if I never correct Alice and one day she's in a work environment at the age of 40 and she's like, God, these are great spicy lime cookies. I don't think, in general, it's very hard, it's very hard to correct people when they're doing it, when they're doing something wrong
Starting point is 00:42:49 that seems very obvious. It's hard when, it's hard even when you're peers, but especially when it's a person, you know, in a position of authority, it just feels very wrong to be like, look, sir, that's not, that's not what spicy is. I don't know what to say. Right, no, it's the R unicorns endangered problem.
Starting point is 00:43:08 The moment somebody says to you, R unicorns endangered, you're in a heck of a pickle. It's like, hi, don't know where to start with this. Maybe he thinks they're spicy. Maybe there's like some ginger in there and it's giving them a little tingle. Here's what you do, Devon. You get your boss some sour patch kids
Starting point is 00:43:29 for, I don't know, their birthday or something. And then they eat the sour patch kids and they're like, woo, spicy, but they look at the packaging and it doesn't say spicy patch kids. It says sour patch kids. And that's gonna be the moment of revelation and You don't have to do anything. Right. Right, right. And you also, you also get like some, some like red hot Cheetos too. And you're like, here's your
Starting point is 00:43:54 birthday. See the difference between these two stack votes. Do you get it? And then you just keep repeat this process every year forever until finally they get it. Yeah. Also, Devon, I love that you work somewhere that has these very good sounding cookies. I'm very jealous. That's all. That's mostly it. But also, John, can we now from now on just call sour things spicy around our employees so
Starting point is 00:44:22 that they think that they have to figure out how to handle this problem. Because is it possible that this boss knows full well that they are not spicy and is just playing a fun little dad joke here? It's all for a gag. It's possible. It could be a bit, but I suspect that it's just a little bit of misinformation that Sour Patch Kids can correct.
Starting point is 00:44:45 Nobody thinks that Sour Patch Kids are an educational tool until they are, you know? Until they are. No, it really is about how these items are used in our lives. John, we're gonna do one more question before we get to the news from Mars. And AFC Wimbledon, this one is from SunnyD,
Starting point is 00:45:02 like the juice, I guess, the very, very spicy juice. Dear Hank and John, I was watching some old vlog brothers videos when you were on tour, and you mentioned a question Tuesday video about how every day you both will be abandoning one opinion until you have to come to some true core opinions. Well, I was wondering, did you ever figure out what those core opinions are?
Starting point is 00:45:24 Did you strategy work? It's been a while since I really thought about it, and I wanted to reaffirm my values and opinions. Well, I was wondering, did you ever figure out what those core opinions are? Did you strategy work? It's been a while since I really thought about it and I wanted to reaffirm my values and opinions. I'm just not sure how to go about it. Like the orange juice, sunny deep. I do feel like I have a couple core opinions that have been revealed partly through the process of trying to give up more of my opinions,
Starting point is 00:45:38 although I haven't been giving up nearly enough of them to be fair. The biggest core opinion I have is that hope is the correct response to human consciousness, that hope is not a delusion or a lie. We tell ourselves in order to find a way to go on. It's actually correct. Ah, human lives have value and that compassion
Starting point is 00:46:01 should always be a component of how you approach the world and other people. Another of my core opinions is that AFC Wimbledon is the greatest achievement in the history of the human species. Well I guess then that we should go into the news from Mars and AFC Wimbledon John. I hear that AFC Wimbledon played a game? Did they play a game? We played a game, we're back the long, long summer has finally come to an end, although you wouldn't know it based on the weather in London these days.
Starting point is 00:46:29 But yes, yes, Wimbledon are back, and not only are they backhank, we won our first game in League 1. The first time we have won an opening day match in six years. Wraaah, wwaaah, wwaaah, wwaaah, wwaaah, wwaaah, wwaaah, wwaaah, wwaaah, wwaaah, wwaaah, wwaaah, not only that, we were away from home, not only that, we were playing Fleetwood, who were a playoff team last year, and the one, one, nil. And not only that, there has been a huge, huge upgrade in the quality of the AFC Wimbledon watching experience for the non-English fan. You can get the I follow AFC Wimbledon app. It is not cheap to get the TV coverage, but the TV coverage lets you watch the games
Starting point is 00:47:18 on your phone or your tablet with commentary. So last year, there was no commentary and there was no scoreboard, so you just had to kind of remember what was happening, but now it's like a regular TV experience, except with the radio, WDON commentators who are hilarious and so charming. And so like watching it is now also a pleasure, but I watched the entire game and it was joyful. Wimbledon looked better, in my opinion, than they looked all of last season. The goal itself was hideous. Joe Pigget, the made Stoney and Messy, or as I guess we're going to be calling him
Starting point is 00:47:59 Joey pigs. Joey pigs scored in the 60th minute. And it was a really ugly finish. He just barely got a foot on the ball and it kind of dribbled into the goal, but they all count the same. And we've even really dominated the game. Fleetwood did hit the inside of the post from like 30 yards out with a beautiful shot late in the game, but I thought Wimbledon deserved to win and we did win, which great. So off to a roaring start, thanks to a goal from Joe Pigget.
Starting point is 00:48:31 I a lot of the new players looked good. Mitchy Pins, Mitch Pinnick looked good. A very encouraging, very, very encouraging first game for AFC Wimbledon. You don't want to get ahead of yourself. Of course, it's a long season 45 games to go. We're going to win the league. Yeah, those points, John. Well, the news from Mars, John, is, you know, not super great.
Starting point is 00:48:55 There's what was this hope that people have talked about that maybe there's enough carbon dioxide on the surface of Mars in Mars is like sort of like inside of the regolith, inside of the ice caps frozen in little pieces that if you could warm it up a little bit, that CO2 would release into the atmosphere and then that would create sort of a heat trapping layer that would then warm it up more and more carbon dioxide would be released. And then you would get more and more CO2 until suddenly just a little bit of warming resulted in a lot of warming and it was warm enough maybe and and enough with enough atmospheric pressure even that you could walk outside. You couldn't walk outside without an oxygen mask on so that you could breathe the atmosphere,
Starting point is 00:49:41 but you could walk outside without like, you know, suffering from decompression or being extremely, extremely, extremely cold. So that would be really cool. But we've got two new sets of data in that are signaling that there probably isn't enough carbon dioxide trapped on the surface in dry ice or even trapped in the rocks and soil of Mars, that if we released all of it, all of it, this is what the study says, it would create 15 millibars of atmospheric pressure. Is that a lot? Right now, you're probably, no,
Starting point is 00:50:17 you're probably sitting at a thousand millibars right now where you are. I'm feeling it. And that would not. I can tell you, I feel like a thousand millibars. I feel a lot of atmosphere around me. It's holding all your parts in. It's holding the, it's pushing all that good oxygen
Starting point is 00:50:35 into your lungs. It's great. It's good for you. But 15 millibars would be bad for you. So that's not going to be the only thing we need to terraform Mars. I'm not saying that there is maybe like a no way to do it. You just have to find other ways to turn the the rocks on Mars into gases because it's not just going
Starting point is 00:50:55 to be the CO2 that's sitting around on the surface of Mars that will do it. Unless we're super wrong about something which hey, we might be look, Mars is far away and we can only study it in very specific locations where we have landers or by, like, sort of shooting the science beams. Hey, you know, I don't think that that's a terrible, terrible way to put it. You don't want me to get into the details of how all of these things work right now. We do that another episode, but I just wanted to talk about the likeness of that particular terraforming scheme,
Starting point is 00:51:39 not being super simple. We'll have to find some other places to get those gases from. All right, good to know. Well, I still believe that we will terraform Mars, but only after we destroy Earth. Right. Right. Yeah. I mean, the problem with Mars is like, I just feel like if we're living on Mars, it's going to be so hard for me to get like the really good food that I like from Earth. Like, is there, is, is, do they, do they have postmates on Mars? Like, I guess once there's people there,
Starting point is 00:52:13 there'll be Mars postmates for emergency deliveries of Indian food. One of the people who wrote in this week, Hank, suggested that the new AFC Wimbledon goalkeeper Tom King should be known as the keeper of the castle. And I like that a lot. Oh yeah. Because he's the king.
Starting point is 00:52:32 And the keeper of the castle. It's great, it's perfect. So I just wanted to get that out there. The keeper of the castle, Tom King. I wanna... That's it. That's all I wanted to say. I was listening to you talk about Mars,
Starting point is 00:52:47 but I was looking at AFC with a starting lineup. You know, we all have to indulge in the things that we love, John. It's also, this was episode 150 of Dear Hank and John. So thank you to everybody for listening to 150 episodes of Dear Hank and John. If you've done that, if you haven't, they're still on the iTunes,
Starting point is 00:53:05 on our RSS servers, if you want to listen to them, or it doesn't hurt our feelings if you don't. Yeah, now start today. Make this the first one you ever listened to, so you have no idea about the manhole joke earlier. Yeah, or to fact that we got another question from Pia, and I'm wondering if it's the same Pia. Pia and the long con of the violinists.
Starting point is 00:53:25 Oh my God, is it the same Pia? Is it the same Pia? Look it up, look it up. It's a different Pia, John. Okay, good to know, I'm glad that we established that. Hey Hank, did you use your phrase of the week this week? I did use my phrase of the week this week, John. Did you use yours?
Starting point is 00:53:42 I used mine, yes. Do you want to guess what mine was? I got to, I got to tell you to guess what mine was? I got it... I got to tell you I have no idea. I wasn't paying attention at all. It was the 100th lift balloon. And it was not easy. But I did it.
Starting point is 00:53:54 Oh my. So that's why you made us keep that in. Yes. That's why you made us keep that story. Yes. Because it is the only way that I could figure out to put in the 100th luft blue You just you're just a liar you just lie about things. Yeah, I just make up stories
Starting point is 00:54:12 Sarah did once have an art gallery show at her gallery in which there were temporary tattoos involved But nothing of that level of complexity. What was your phrase the week? I also have no idea what it was. It was emergency takeout. Got it at the end there. Oh wow, I mean, that makes sense because why else would you be talking about postmates on Mars? But I was already looking at AMC where the starly starting lineup for their next game.
Starting point is 00:54:36 I got saved, I got saved by John's distractibility, John. What did they learn? I was like, I can't believe we're gonna, I was like, I'm so excited that we're gonna be starting Ben Purrington out on the left. What, I'm sorry, what's going on? What did we learn today?
Starting point is 00:54:54 Oh man, we learned that Ben Purrington's the likely starting left back for next week's game. If we learned that if you wanna get something over John's head, just wait until he is looking at football stuff. We've learned that if you wanna keep a secret, just drive through. I forgot about that. Oh my God. And we also learned that Jon, the difference between spicy and sour, it's very important.
Starting point is 00:55:18 Yeah, it's a significant difference. There's no doubt about that. We learned that there are at least two people in the world named Rachel who are concerned about their relationship with the show friends. And according to the Twitter poll that I just looked at, we learned that more than half of people who responded do not know who or what Teddy Ruckspin is. Well, and also you didn't get any explanation for who or what Teddy Ruckspin is in this episode. So, sorry. Sorry about that. It's a creepy animatronic bear, the Tox-Dee. Great.
Starting point is 00:55:52 That's, yeah, no, that about covers it. We're off to record our Patreon Only podcast this week in Ryan's, the worst 10 minutes of your week. You can find out about it at patreon.com slash deerhankinjohn. Thank you again to everyone for listening. This podcast is edited by Nicholas Jenkins. It's produced by Rosiana Hossero, Hassan Sheridan Gibson, our director of community and communications as Victoria Bonjorno. The music that you're listening to right now and at the beginning of the podcast is by the great Gunnarola. I'm Hank Green on Twitter. Nope. I'm John Green on Twitter. Hank is Hank Green on Twitter. You can also email us at hank and john at gmail.com. Thanks again for listening and as they say in our
Starting point is 00:56:29 hometown. Don't forget to be awesome.

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