Dear Hank & John - 401: Goodreads Therapy
Episode Date: November 20, 2024Why are people on Goodreads so angry? Can you gift a subscription on good.store? Can I read Everything is Tuberculosis if I’m squeamish? Are there different levels of oxygen in the atmosphere duri...ng different seasons? Is it true that ponderosa pines can’t reproduce without wildfires? …Hank and John Green have answers! If you're in need of dubious advice, email us at hankandjohn@gmail.com.Join us for monthly livestreams at patreon.com/dearhankandjohn.Follow us on Twitter! twitter.com/dearhankandjohn
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You're listening to a Complexly Podcast.
Hello and welcome to Dear Hank and John.
Or as I prefer to think of it, Dear John in Darkness.
It's a podcast where two brothers answer your questions, give you dubious advice,
and bring you all the week's news from both Mars and AFC Wimbledon.
John, did you know that they also had an election in Sweden and the CEO of IKEA won?
Did he?
Yeah, he's still assembling his cabinet though.
Oh, takes a while. Famously takes a while.
Yeah.
If he wants to have a real good argument, I suggest that he try it out with his spouse.
For a second, I was like, is Ikea from? Is Sweden right?
Sweden's right, I think. It's got Swedish vibes anyway. They've got the meatballs there.
They got the meatballs. That's the confirmation.
That's the giveaway. They don't have meatballs in Norway. Norway hasn't even heard about meatballs yet.
Nordish meatballs? No, that's not a thing.
Wait, you call people from Norway Nordish?
What are they called?
Norwegian?
I guess.
I mean, you can call them Nordish or you want they are from the great Nord.
Well, that's right. It's called Nord, the North.
And also it's Swedish meatballs.
They're not Swede-ians.
What's a Swede-ian?
It would be what they were called if it was like Norwegians. Oh, okay. I got it. I got it. I got it. Wouldn't they also then have to include the other one,
Finland?
Fin-weegians.
Fin-weegians. Fin-weeg-ish meatballs sound delicious. I'm glad that we're talking about
something stupid. Are Swedish Swiss? No, Switzland is Swiss. Finlijus meatballs sound delicious. I'm glad that we're talking about something
Stupid are Swedish Swiss. No, Swiss Switzerland is Swiss. Okay, of course Swedish people are Swedes That's a very that's a typical
American problem there. So just to clarify people from Denmark are Danish people from Switzerland are Swiss people from Finland are Finnish
And people from Norway are Norwegian. Do you know what Finnish meatballs are?
What already done? Do you know what Swiss meatballs are?
What they got holes in them? Okay, let's do the
It's the little things that bring me joy right now like the idea of Swiss meatballs I
Bet they have meatballs in Switzerland. There's a 100% chance. Oh, for sure.
There's no way that the idea of circular meat hasn't reached Switzerland.
Yeah, you just ball it up. It's like, oh, this is like a sausage for way easier.
I feel like it was a hell of a ploy by the Swedish people to try to take
ownership over the concept of meatballs. All right, Hank. Our first question speaks to
contemporary culture in a deep and profound
way without addressing politics specifically.
And it's from Ali who writes, Dear John and Hank, why are people on Goodreads so angry?
Potentially an ally, but always an Ali.
I'm very curious to hear your thoughts on this.
I didn't, first of all, didn't realize people on Goodreads are particularly angry.
I've read my Goodreads reviews of my books.
Some of them are certainly angrier than I would expect them to be in normal discourse.
You're more likely to get upvoted for a low star review than a high star review a lot
of times, especially if it's a really good low star review, for lack of a better term.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Like, entertaining.
The number one on an absolutely remarkable thing for a long time, it may still be,
is one that was just like, another YouTuber book. And it was just, it was like, it really like,
it was bad. I found it to be intolerable. I was like, this is a terrible take.
But if you hadn't read the book, I could see how
it would land well. Well, it is another YouTuber book.
It is. Yeah.
You're right. Most of the people doing the upvoting haven't read the book, so I think that's
another factor. They're looking to see if they should read the book. In many cases,
they do want to know that they should read the book.
When I'm looking at Goodreads reviews, I'm partly looking for reasons not to read the book because
I already have plenty of books. Yeah.
Goodreads reviews, I'm partly looking for reasons not to read the book because I already have plenty of books.
Yeah.
And so if somebody offers me an easy way, like another YouTuber book, I'll be like,
all right, I got it.
Oh man, it's still there.
It's still on top, John.
Well, you know.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
Let's read our top Goodreads reviews.
What a good idea for today.
I just want to, it's so snarky.
All right, here's the top review for the Anthropocene Reviewed.
It's going to be way better than mine, but okay.
It is way better.
It's actually very, very, very flattering.
Ah, good for you.
If I'll read you my first one-star review if you want,
those are always bangers.
Those are the only ones I'm interested in.
The solid 1% of people who really hated it.
Yeah.
So they can take up all the space in your head.
It's from Deborah who writes, this is a collection of personal essays by John Green,
in which he basically just ponders humanity and rambles endlessly about arbitrary topics
like scratch and sniff stickers, air conditioning, and the Nathan's hot dog eating contest.
What's to give one star to, Deborah? That book sounds awesome.
It's pretentious with a sparse sprinkling of insight here and there.
Again, you've described my favorite book.
I found myself thinking, who cares multiple times throughout the book?
You're welcome, Deborah.
You're welcome.
Well, here's the number one review and it is a one-star review and I'm sure it's resulted
in a solid 2% decrease in the overall sales of the book.
This one guy, Tucker, who says,
a conversation between me and my publisher.
Publisher, so Hank, you want to write a book?
Hank, yes, my brother wrote a bunch,
which means that I can too.
Publisher, what do you want it to be about?
Hank, I want it to be about aliens.
Publisher, so like the fifth wave?
Hank, kind of, but let's remove all the violent parts.
It's nothing like the fifth wave.
It could not be more different from the fifth wave.
I mean, that is the most ludicrous.
That's a person who's only ever read two books, I'm sorry.
I'm sorry, but they've only ever read your book
in the fifth wave and they compared those two books.
I've read the fifth wave, I reviewed the fifth wave.
You, Hank, did not write the fifth wave.
Oh.
Publish, it goes on for a long time.
I think we got the picture. I bet there's some solid one-star reviews
of The Fault in Our Stars. Oh yeah. The very first review is a one-star review.
Of The Fault in Our Stars? Yeah.
Wild. This is good. This is therapy. Writing,
cheesy, emotionless, terrible. Want to hear some
favorite quotes of mine? Why compare your thoughts to stars and constellations? It doesn't make any
sense. Wow. Some infinities are bigger than other infinities. How uninteresting. That's the thing
about pain. It demands to be felt. Yeah. That's the thing about chocolate. It demands to be eaten.
What? That's no, no, no. In a very different way, does chocolate demand to be eaten than
pain demands to be felt?
Yeah, actually, you can not eat chocolate. That's one of the defining characteristics
of chocolate.
That's a great example of why pain demands to be felt is a great sentence because chocolate
doesn't actually demand to be eaten. It asks. It asks, but it can just sit there.
It wants to be eaten.
Whereas pain, you can't not feel.
Well, to be fair, the person who wrote this was probably angry and didn't like the book.
And that's okay.
But no, what about all the people who upvoted?
I don't care about the people who wrote the bad reviews.
I care about the people who upvoted it.
What are they thinking?
It's the people who upvoted.
That's true.
It's true.
Here's the thing.
Here's the truth of why Goodreads is angry is the same reason why Twitter is angry, is
the same reason why Reddit is angry, is the same reason why Facebook is angry.
It's not unique to Goodreads and like we're having a good laugh here slash a therapy session,
but there is a structural problem with the social internet that rewards anger and outrage
and horror and disgust over nuance. And that is reflected on
Goodreads as it is everywhere on the internet. What if it's not? So, I don't think it's just
the internet. I think it's any media and it has it always been thus. But I think that right now,
we have very few defense mechanisms when it comes to seeing the parts of our brain being manipulated
by the internet because it's so new and we don't have
social structures for it. But it has always been thus. I do think that it is like it's-
It has always been thus and that's a great point.
But I think that it is now like that at the speed of light.
And- So it's always been thus in the sense that
like when I reviewed books for Booklist, I reviewed hundreds and hundreds of books for Booklist. When I reviewed books for them, the books that I didn't like always got
flattering letters. People would be like, what a great review, and it would just be me kind of
snarking on a book. Because there's something enjoyable about a takedown. There's something
lovely about it, especially the more something is revered, the more the takedown. There's something lovely about it, especially the more something
is revered, the more the takedown of it is pleasant to us. That's another factor here.
I think you're right that it's always been us and that's always been a thing. But you haven't read
me the first one-star review of A Beautifully Foolish Endeavor. By the way, these are two of
my favorite books. You can't do it. I'll do it for you if you don't watch out. This one is too, it feels too true.
Oh no.
Yeah.
What?
First off, that book has a 4.7 overall rating on Amazon.
I know, I know.
People love it.
I know, and it's the top reviews are all five stars.
Oh yes.
Five, four, three, four, three, four. Somebody criticizing the cover, which fair
enough, although I like the cover for the record.
I talked to a marketer recently and he was like, I loved your book so much and you named
them so poorly. I was like, oh, okay, thanks.
Oh, it's somebody who loved the first book and didn't like the second book. It's boring. This book took me about a month to read, nice sleigh books,
but this one I could barely get through 15 pages at a time. Fair enough. I mean,
the voice is very similar to the voice of the first novel.
Yeah, no, I know. I don't agree with that. I respectfully disagree.
I know. I don't agree with that.
I respectfully disagree.
But that's at least a thoughtful take.
That's a thoughtful one-star take.
It is the experience they had, unlike Tucker, who appears to have not tried hard.
Yeah, well, or went into it ungenerously, because here is the truth of any book and
any media.
We need the reader or the viewer or the listener or whatever
to be generous, to bring their whole self to it. That's asking a ton. A lot of times,
you can't bring your whole self to a book because you're feeling snarky and angry and
you're disgusted with the world. That seeps into your reading experience.
I bet also that maybe you get a reputation for doing the snarky Goodreads reviews for
a little while, you know, And you're good at it. You if you're if you're good at writing snarky goodreads reviews, you're good at it. Yeah
so I I do think that there is a
human nature thing
To to like looking at the take down and being like I got to up for that
Especially when it's of like like, and I get it,
like I also, I knew going in that I was, you know, I was going to be seen as a YouTuber writing a
book. I wasn't like John, you wrote books before you were a YouTuber. Right. Right. But even so,
I'm often seen as a YouTuber who writes books because people don't know that I wrote books
before I was a YouTuber. That's funny. Which is fair. I mean, I'm fine with it.
At this point, you are a YouTuber who writes books.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Like writing, nothing slows me down quite like YouTubing.
So I want to be known as a YouTuber who writes books. Otherwise, I'm wasting a bunch of my time
on YouTube.
If I'm an author who YouTubes, then I'm real slow.
I'm going, I'm definitely doing everything backwards.
I do love making a YouTube video though, John.
I do too, I do too.
But I don't know, it just like, it does,
I don't know, I've been thinking a lot
and this video hopefully will be out
by the time this podcast comes out,
but I've just been thinking a lot about how the current,
like how any big change in media
and like the, and how human communication works
has an inevitable backlash against kind of everything,
you know, just like any,
anything that is perceived to have power
or anything that is perceived to be a threat.
Yeah. Whenever technology democratizes, there is a anti-intellectual, anti-institution response
to it that we've seen going back to the invention of the printing press that we are experiencing now.
And I'm not enjoying it very much. Fine. As a member of the intellectual class,
I don't like it. As an defeat liberal, this is annoying to me.
I'm not a college professor. I'm not a member of the intellectual elite.
I'm a dad in Indianapolis.
As a soft-handed man in his basement
with his art collection.
Well, I mean, I guess guilty.
Do you want me to talk about the en-milais piece behind me?
I got some new art recently, but it's not in this room. It's the viral hippo, the pygmy hippo,
but being piloted as a submarine by other viral baby hippos.
It's just very good.
That sounds great, man. You and I have different tastes in art, it sounds like,
but I'm glad that we both find stuff that meets our needs.
Yeah, it's the same person who did Beanie Sand Ferb's.
I love Beanie Sand Ferb's. Yeah, that's great. I love that you're buying art. It makes me so
happy to hear. I always say this, but art does not have to be expensive. It does not have
to be fancy. It only has to bring you joy. Yeah. No. Sophie's work brings me great joy. It's not
very expensive. I think it's in the hundreds. Yeah. Which is expensive, just to be clear.
Yeah. I think that there's much more sense of art. It's not like buying a Warhol or something. Yeah, but so much joy. So much joy.
Yeah. I guess art doesn't have to only bring you joy. It can also bring you curiosity or
interest or intrigue, but if it brings you something, whatever it brings you that allows
you to keep coming back to it and experience richness from it, living with it for years,
then that is good art. That's the definition of good art. Good art doesn't have to be valuable
to the market. Also, if you love art, you should let the artists know that you love it because
their top goods review probably is mean. Probably so. Anyway, thanks, Ali, for giving
us that opportunity to work through some of our
Goodreads related trauma. All authors have some. I apologize to the people who gave my books one
star reviews on a couple levels. First off, that I disagreed with your review so vehemently.
Secondly, I apologize because I'm sorry that you had to buy a book you didn't like. I feel guilty.
I hope you like my new book, Everything is Tuberculosis. More signed copies available wherever books are sold.
Nice.
I'm not afraid to get in some promo.
Don't ever be afraid. He's signing like mad, everyone. Like mad.
I am looking right now at 29,300 signed sheets of paper.
That's good. You're doing 100?
Yeah. I'm doing 100.
You're almost at 30%. Long way to go. That's good. You're doing 100? Yeah, I'm doing 100. You're almost at 30%.
Long way to go.
What's your next question?
This next question comes from Jess,
who asks, dear Hank and John, I just
emailed the good people at good.store about this,
but I figured I'd ask you as well.
My partner, Peter, and I are hoping
to add a coffee subscription from the delicious Keats & Co
Coffee and Tea Company, available at good.store.
You know how to get your question read.
To our wedding registry so that we may enjoy delicious coffee,
congratulations, Jess, every morning
while supporting efforts to fight tuberculosis and Lesotho.
I was wondering if you are planning to add a way
for people to gift a subscription
for a set period of time.
Thank you for all that you do.
Coffee and Quandary's Jess.
We don't have a way right now,
and we probably won't for this Christmas,
but I think that we've got some ideas
about how this is gonna work in the future,
and I'm pretty sure that there will be options
like that soon.
But this holiday season, while we're in self promo mode,
Good.store has everything that you need for the holidays,
for gift giving, whether it's for your wedding registry
or anything else.
We've got sock bundles, we've got coffee bundles, we've got tea bundles, we've got bundles that
involve tea and socks. You've got to check it out at good.store. We've also got amazing soap,
like artisanal, really wonderful skin nourishing soap. Good.store.
And there's a coupon code. If you use save 10, you can save 10% off any order under $50,
There's a coupon code. If you use save 10, you can save 10% off any order under $50 or over $50.
And with save 20, you can get 20% off any order over $100. And we got like lots of ways to get up to $100 to do a lot of your Christmas shopping all in one place and all the profit goes to make
the world a better place. Or shopping for other holidays.
It's true. I do tend to say Christmas.
Yeah, no, I'm part of the war on Christmas, Hank.
You're an atheist, so you're allowed to say Christmas,
but as a Christian, I think I have to say
that there's lots of other winter holidays.
All right.
This next question comes from Sarah,
who writes, dear John and Hank,
and Rosiana notes there have been several questions
about this.
I'm excited to read,
everything is tuberculosis available for pre-order now. Y'all really do all the promo for us. However, I don't do well with
descriptions of blood, guts, and or medical procedures. I was wondering if you would recommend
this book to somebody who's interested in the history of social justice and public health spaces,
but it's a little squeamish. Pumpkins and Penguins, Sarah. Sarah, you have nothing to worry about.
I am also very squeamish. If there was a squeamish paragraph in the book,
but I cut it and I replaced it with the sentence,
surgery was generally fatal.
Now you know what that's like.
Why get into it when I can just say
surgery was generally fatal back in the day?
I had a moment like that while I've been writing
my book about cancer where I got feedback from like that when I was writing, while I've been writing my book about cancer,
where I got feedback from Katherine that was like, you can't put that in. That's too bad.
Yeah. It's a little more squeamish than everything is tuberculosis, but it's still not that squeamish,
your cancer book.
Yeah.
Anyway, that's not available for pre-order, so why are we even talking about it?
There's some squishy bits, but there's not like the thing that, yeah, I took out a thing
that was just like, I wanted to make it clear how
bad cancer has always been and it used to be worse.
It is still real, real, real bad if you don't get treatment.
Yes, it's extremely bad if there is no treatment available.
Yeah. It is also bad no matter what.
I was just talking with a friend about you having cancer.
Me too.
He was like, it's so weird that Hank had cancer.
I was like, I know.
That's what everyone says to me is that it's weird.
I'm like, yeah.
No, it is.
It was weird.
That's one word for it.
I don't know if he experienced it as weird, but it was weird from the outside.
No, there were definitely moments where I was like, this is happening?
This, I, that seems wrong.
And now, even now I have that where I'll have a moment where I'll be like, God, last year
felt like just like, feels like it was hard for some reason.
It didn't get as much done as I would have liked to.
Why do I have this sense of last year just being really hard?
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's weird how the mind works.
It is weird, especially how we remember pain and trauma and how we call it to mind, but
also can't.
It's very strange.
Yeah, and also that our bodies continue to carry around the history because I now have
a bunch of problems I didn't have before.
I know.
And also I have problems that I used to have
that I don't have, which is wild.
I know.
It's a whole new body.
Not a whole new body, but it's definitely different.
I ship a thesis to the whole thing.
I replaced every molecule during chemo.
It's just a whole new body.
It's a whole new you, except to me
it's a very recognizable version of you.
Yeah, no.
But to get to the point.
What am I?
Can we do it?
What am I?
Can we?
What am I?
Is that a question for the pod?
Well, one of the things that I noticed during cancer was when sort of looking more directly
at my mortality is that a lot of the me's that have
existed in the past are already dead. Yeah, that's true and there's no bringing them back.
No, they're gone, gone. I can't, there's so much of my life I do not remember. The majority of it.
Not just that, but even if you, whatever you do remember, you can't return to that self,
right? Like you can't, it's the old problem of like you go back to your high school
But the problem is that the high school is still there, but you aren't yeah
I don't even know if my high school is still there John. I
Suspect it is my middle school isn't they knock that don't take this the wrong way
But Florida isn't exactly like carving up with new school buildings right? It is there. I did check recently
I went there. I went there on my book tour.
Oh, yeah. Oh, that was weird.
It was weird.
I was with you.
Everything had changed.
All the doors were in different places.
It was very disorienting.
I just remember I got within
500 yards of that place and my armpits started sweating like crazy,
and I never even went to school there.
Oh, man. The last time I went back to my old high school,
I ran into a friend of mine from high school who was walking her dog on campus because it's this
like big sprawling boarding school campus. She said the most profound thing to me. She said,
this place saved my life. Then she paused and said, and also it did a lot of other things. I was like, yes, that's it. I've been waiting for somebody to
explain my relationship with high school and it's just been explained.
Oh, a lot of other things.
A lot of other things as well.
Which reminds me that this podcast is actually brought to you by a lot of other things.
Yeah. Additionally, today's podcast is brought to you by One Star Goodreads
Reviews. One Star Goodreads Reviews, they will be read by the author. Especially the top ranked one.
Oh, I've read all of them. I sort by one star so that I can read all the one star ones. I'm
not interested in the five star ones. They're not true. They're just being polite. They're just being polite. They're not telling
me the secret truth that I'm worthless. Anyway, the funny thing about One Star Goodreads Reviews
is that they're not trying to tell you that you are worthless as an author. They're just
trying to say that they didn't like your work, but I'm conflating that, which is unfair of me.
Yeah. What else is this podcast brought to you by?
This podcast is also brought to you by Good.Store. It's actually brought to you by Good.Store.
The coupon code SAVE10. SAVE10 to get 10% off any order over $50 and SAVE20 for 20% off any
order over $100. Good.Store. And finally, this podcast is brought to you by the new book,
Everything is Tuberculosis. If you can do it, I can do it too. All right, Hank. We got another question from Zinnia who writes,
Hi, John and Hank. I'm eight years old and I'm sending this from my mom's account with her
permission. In school, we've been learning about photosynthesis and my teacher said that trees suck
the chlorophyll from the leaves into their trunks during the autumn so they can survive the winter.
This is why the leaves turn colors and fall off. I think leaves are responsible for releasing oxygen too. Does this mean there's
less oxygen in the air during fall and winter? How do we breathe without leaves? Not a tree,
but named for a plant, zinnia. Yeah. The way that it works,
and I'm going to give you secret insight that you will not get until you go to college, Zinnia.
Wow.
Which is that the amount of oxygen in the air
is actually really well balanced
and does not tend to go up or down that much
in any given moment, because what happens is
the trees suck carbon out of the air
and they build themselves out of it.
So trees are largely made of carbon molecules,
and they build themselves out of that carbon,
and then the carbon in the air is connected to oxygen.
So they keep the carbon, and they let the oxygen go.
But when the trees fall down and they rot or burn,
that carbon gets re-released, and the oxygen
from the atmosphere either rots or burns that
wood, recombines with that carbon and gets released as carbon dioxide.
So there's this constant cycle going on.
And the actual sort of like stable amount of oxygen in the atmosphere is because of
the very rare circumstances where the carbon doesn't get re-released.
And that happens either when stuff gets buried so deep that the oxygen can't get to it, like the
carbon and the oxygen can't meet up again, or if it ends up at the bottom of the ocean
and there the oxygen also can't reach it.
So those rare circumstances are the only reason why we have an excess amount of oxygen in
the atmosphere and that allows all animals to exist.
Wow. That's pretty mind blowing. and that allows all animals to exist.
Wow, that's pretty mind blowing. Now, is there anything that we could do to mess
with this incredibly complicated, sweet, sweet balance
that nature has managed to achieve,
resulting in there being too much, for instance,
carbon dioxide in the atmosphere?
Yeah, but that actually doesn't result
in there being not enough oxygen in the atmosphere, interestingly.
Oh.
So what does happen is that in the past, old carbon got buried and didn't get access to oxygen,
and so it stayed there and it turned into coal mostly, but also another thing that we burn.
We burn them combining oxygen and then that creates more CO2 than we have previously had.
And CO2 is opaque to infrared light.
So certain wavelengths of light get blocked by it.
It gets absorbed like a black t-shirt on a summer day, and that increases the temperature
of the atmosphere and of the planet.
But that doesn't actually-
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
Yes.
So the amount of oxygen is pretty steady right now?
The thing is that the amount of carbon dioxide is extremely low, so adding a little bit has
basically doubled the amount, whereas the amount of oxygen is extremely high, so taking
a little bit out hasn't really had any effect on-
Got it.
Yeah.
Okay.
That's helpful to understand.
I have one last question related to this.
None of this has addressed Zinnia's question. What was the question?
Oh, there is a little bit less oxygen
at some times of the year and a lot more carbon dioxide.
Is it because the leaves turn colors and fall off?
It is because the plant isn't doing photosynthesis.
Oh. And also as they-
Because the leaves turn color and fell off.
As their leaves rot, as they get broken down by funguses and microbes and stuff, that results
in oxygen combining and creating CO2.
There's two things that blow my mind about this.
First that trees are made mostly out of air.
They're mostly made of processed air.
Absolutely bizarre.
That implies of course that air is a thing and not just a thing. Air is made of stuff.
Air is a soup. It's just a very thin soup.
It's a pretty thin soup and thicker than you realize when you're driving at 70 miles an
hour down the road. The weirdest thing about air being a thing
is that we didn't figure it out
until like after America existed.
Yeah, well, why would we?
It doesn't make any sense that air would be a thing.
It makes sense that air would be the opposite of a thing
because you can't smell it.
I guess, but if you stop breathing, you die immediately.
So that makes me think that air is definitely something,
because if I don't put it into me,
I die faster than any other way.
Also, now that I think about it, you do smell it.
A little bit, sometimes.
Yeah, no, I mean, that's what smell is,
is scent that traveled through the air.
Yeah.
Into your nose or wherever.
I don't know how they thought about scent back in the day. I don't know what the natural historians,
the original scientists were aware of.
Yes, it's fascinating they didn't know that air was made out of stuff. But then on a day-to-day,
minute-to-minute basis, I don't think about the fact that air is made out of stuff. I assume air
to be kind of the opposite of a thing. When I do think about the fact that air is made out of stuff, you know what I mostly
think about? I think about the fact that air is alive. It is alive with bacteria, but especially
alive with viruses. I know what you're talking about.
And I am inhaling thousands of them with every breath and they just don't happen to be viruses
that make me sick. Yeah. That doesn't tend to enter the brain for me.
Oh, really? Yeah, no, I do.
Well, I recommend thinking about it as often as you can.
I wonder how many viruses get lifted high enough
in the atmosphere that they could,
they're pretty heavy compared to most molecules.
So I doubt they could get like pushed out of the earth,
but it makes me wonder.
How many viruses do I inhale a day?
Well, I mean, that's going to be a...
You're not going to have...
Every day you breathe in over 100 million viruses.
Yeah, you're not going to have a good scale for how many that is though.
That sounds like a lot.
That's a lot, Hank.
It sounds like a lot.
I don't need to know.
It's 100 million.
The fact that I don't get sick out of any of those 100 million viruses most days is miraculous
to me.
Well, most viruses aren't human pathogens.
You're telling me if they were, I would have a hundred million of them in my body every
day.
You also, I mean-
But it is still-
The majority of human pathogen viruses-
It is weird that you inhale a hundred million viruses a day.
That is objectively weird.
If you told that to somebody from the 18th century, they would be like, what now?
They'd be like, what is a virus, first of all?
Yeah.
And then they would be like, are viruses alive?
And you would be like, well, that's complicated. And they would be like, are viruses alive? And you would be like, well, that's
complicated. And they would be like, the idea of being alive is complicated? And you'd be
like, yeah. Yeah.
Turns out, turns out once you get low, everything turns into a fuzzy line. That's what that
song Get Low by Flowrider is about.
I believe that is correct. Yeah. What is the, what is the chorus that song? Shorty, the mapple-bottom jeans and the boots with the fur. And that's about,
the boots with the fur are about the fuzziness of the lines between things. Is it boot or is it
air at that point? Let's answer this question from Ben
before we get to the all-important news from Mars and AFC Wimbledon. Ben writes,
I really like hearing Hank talk about trees a lot. I figured this was on topic. Wow. We have the episode for you.
I just read in a textbook that ponderosa pines can't reproduce without wildfires,
which seems a little far-fetched to me. Is it true? Can you explain the process that makes
these fires necessary for their reproduction? Never currently am, Ben. That's good, Ben.
Yeah. That's good. so when there is a fire, it's a good time to be a seed.
So that's why this happened.
So there is, there is an evolutionary pressure towards only releasing your seed
from a, from a pine cone when there is a fire, because otherwise most of the seeds
will not be able to get any sunlight.
So if they only pop out right when there's a fire in an area where there are frequent
wildfires, which a lot of the Mountain West is like this, then the seed will only release
when there's a fire, and that means, bloop, suddenly all the seeds all at once get to
try it out at the moment when there's actually space in the canopy for sunlight to reach them.
Hmm.
Because if you're getting, if you're just doing it all the time, then you're wasting
those seeds because there's no way any sunlight is going to get down there because it's a crowded
little business in a forest and it takes hard work to become a big old tree.
Wow.
So yes, that is interesting.
I don't know if there's like never been a ponderosa pine tree that grew without a fire.
Like that that's that does
See maybe a little bit far-fetched to me, but like the cones are designed to release their seeds when there is a fire
Wow
fascinating designed evolved to
well
Two schools of thought and you're apparently part of the part of one of them that surprises me
Alright Hank. It's time to get to the all- important news from Mars and AFC Wimbledon,
beginning with the news from AFC Wimbledon.
Wait, wait, wait.
I have to add a correction.
Okay.
I actually look deeper into this and it looks like ponderosa pines aren't actually particularly
like this.
There's lots of pine trees that are like lodgepole pines, but ponderosa pines tend to release
their seeds with other environmental triggers besides fire. So, correction.
Oh, so that was just – you corrected yourself mid-podcast.
I did. Well, I was like, I got to check that. And I did.
Oh, okay.
While you were talking about something.
I was talking about AFC Wimbledon, which is when you usually do your fact checking.
And fair enough. America's favorite fourth tier English soccer
team lost 1-0 to Grimsby Town over the weekend. But before that, we played of all teams, Milton
Keans in the first round of the FA Cup. The FA Cup being, of course, a win or go home knockout
competition that involves all the teams in England and is separate from the league campaign. In that game,
we won 2-0. Not only did we win, but also Milton Keynes got a red card. Who should get that red
card? Our former player, Connor Lemon High Evans, who left our team for their team, thereby becoming
a villain of the highest order. It's a heel turn for the ages and he got a red card and we were delighted
to see him sulk off the field in appropriate misery. It's our first win at the Stadium MK,
the quietest place on earth, some would say, in a number of years and I am very excited about it.
So yes, we lost 1-0 to Grimsby,
we lost 3-2 to Portvale, we're only 13th in the league.
We don't look likely to make the playoffs,
but we've already beaten Milton Keynes twice this season
and it's only November.
All right.
You're just gonna keep doing that.
It feels like a success, Hank.
Every time we beat the franchise.
Was it very sort of red card centric that win? It was very yellow card centric. I would say there was a fair amount of tackling going on.
Okay. We don't like them. It's not a joke. Our players are told to not like them.
They go harder than they would normally? Yeah. Yeah. a lot. Yeah. The way they celebrated the first goal was epic trolling.
I think it was Mattie Stevens and he just held his arms out in front of the smattering of Milton
Keen's fans who filled that three-quarters empty stadium And he just like held his hands out and just like listened to the abuse
being flooded his way and just smiled.
Well, John, a news from Mars.
I don't know if you know this, but one of the chief proponents
for getting to Mars very fast is now basically going to be
president of the United States.
So that's great for everybody. Right.
Can we double the bet?
Is there some way that I can get more money by people not making it to Mars by 2028?
Other Mars news.
So we know that the Ingenuity helicopter did a ton of missions.
It did over 70 missions.
It was all over that that planet.
And one of the things that it did because it could is it flew over
to the place where the the thing that lowered the
actual
Rover onto the planet
Went and crashed after successfully lowering the rover and it went over there
I took pictures of it and those pictures we got some of them
But now they have like time to send more.
And we so like there's just really great pictures of the crash site with the parachute stretched
out behind it and the just gorgeous, I mean, it's very weird to see like wreckage on an
alien planet and that wreckage because Mars is geologically stable and not at all
geologically active, it will be there and also further away from the sun than us. It will be
there for a very long time, just being proof that we were here.
Yeah. It's nice to think that 2 million years from now sentient raccoons might make their way to Mars and be like, oh my God, guys. Have we got some news?
We haven't found life on Mars, but we have found humans.
Yeah. They went to Mars. Maybe they know a little bit about us,
but they didn't realize that we were that good. Yeah, yeah, yeah. They'll be super impressed.
They'll be like, it's incredible that this species that went all the way to Mars then collectively ended itself so spectacularly. Then they'll learn from our mistakes and they
will become the great civilization that takes over the galaxy. Yeah. From your lips to God's ears,
buddy. We got to hope, Hank. One way that we hope now is
in other species becoming the dominant species.
John's been having a not great night.
I had a rough couple of weeks, guys, if I'm being honest with you.
I don't think that either of us have been doing super great.
Doing that good, but I feel like I've been winning the suffering Olympics for the last
10 days or so.
Yeah, that's for sure.
Not to brag.
Not to brag. But here we are and I'm glad to be with you. Thanks for potting with us.
I'm only winning the suffering Olympics in comparison to Hank, just to be clear.
I'm not winning them overall. Good, John.
It's a two-person Olympics. I either have gold or silver and right now I have gold,
but next week I'm sure Hank will get gold again.
Yeah.
I've had the We're Here newsletter last week, I wrote about-
You wrote so beautifully in the We're Here newsletter.
It was one of my favorite pieces of writing that you've ever done.
Oh, thanks.
Well, the one after that, I wrote about how I constantly, because of the structure of
the internet, I'm on the lookout for a way I could make someone mad.
Oh, interesting.
Like I can't talk about raking the leaves
without making an excuse for why I'm raking the leaves
because some people think you shouldn't rake leaves.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, I understand what you mean.
And so when I said that I'm winning the Suffering Olympics,
I immediately corrected myself
because somebody's gonna write in and be like,
in fact, you are not winning the Suffering Olympics,
which to be fair is true
It's it's I feel like it's a we have been so trained by the top reviews on good
That we are incapable of ever just freaking talking without also being scared
I can't even fully criticize the the reviews
I don't like on Goodreads because I feel bad for the people who wrote them who are probably nice people who didn't expect to be in the situation that they ended up in.
Yeah, for sure. I did a video where I analyzed a bunch of bad takes on Twitter and at the end of it I was like, I really should have blocked out those people's names.
You should have.
Alright, Hank, thanks for potting with me. Thanks to everybody for listening and more importantly, thanks to everybody for listening
generously.
Thank you.
We do really appreciate it and we recognize that it makes a big difference in the experience
of the podcast, not just for its listeners, but also for its creators.
Yes, which then has loops back around.
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This podcast is edited by Linus Obenhaus, it's mixed by Joseph Tunamettish.
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