Dear Hank & John - 417: You’ll Be Okay in the Medium Run
Episode Date: July 30, 2025How do I prove I didn’t use AI in my masters thesis? Why is it so hard to do the things I really want to do? Is there something different about men’s colons? How did people go about colle...cting relics? Why are short stories not more popular than novels? …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/dearhankandjohnSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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You're listening to a Complexly podcast.
Hello and welcome to Dear Hank and John.
Or is I prefer to think of it, Dear John, and Hank?
It's a podcast where two brothers answer your questions, give you debuts advice,
and making all the week's news from both Mars and AFC Wimbled and John.
I fell in love with a banker.
Oh.
But when she had low interest, I was so interested in her, but then when she had high interest,
I just...
You lost your interest?
I lost my interest.
It's interesting because I find with bankers that when they have high interest is when I am more
interested. Why? Oh. Because there's a deposit. I was thinking about a loan. Oh, I was thinking about
giving money to the bank. There's the money bags over here. Hey, listen, we're in the same place at
the same time. If we sound a little different, that's because we're recording on an iPhone,
unless you're on Patreon, in which case we're recording on a Hank's blogging camera. We're actually
going to use whichever audio sounds better, and I have no idea, which it will be. Great, but we're in
the same place at the same time. A rare treat, it has to be said. Hank has been visiting me in
Indianapolis. It's been lovely. It's been lovely. I would love to just come here for a month and make
podcasts. Well, and you know, we live in a forest. It's everything is great. I don't understand why you
don't come here for a month and make podcasts. In the summertime, you need a swimming pool or something.
It's so hot. It's a little hot here. But other than that, it's humid. It's a little humid.
I'd just be in the river, but it's dirty. The river is a little dirty. We recently had a canoe cap size,
however, and so I experienced the river up close and personally. It's not that bad. I didn't get you
already or anything yet. I mean, just don't give it up your nose. Yep. All right. Should we answer
questions from our listeners, or should we continue to banter? I don't know. How does it work?
Okay. This question comes from Elizabeth who writes, I'm a PhD student working on my master's thesis,
and during my master's thesis proposal, I was accused of using AI to write my thesis document by
someone on my committee. I did not use AI to write any part of my thesis document, and I stressed that to
my mentor. He told me that he did not believe that I used AI and that I wasn't in any trouble
because it couldn't be proven. But what do I do if they accuse me again during my defense?
Oh my God. Elizabeth, you must be so nervous right now. Hopefully we've gotten to you in time
because we're going to be able to solve this problem. We can solve the AI problem right now,
right here. Great, because I was feeling very much like, what are we going to do?
I have all my version histories and I use toggle to track how long I work. But God, I mean,
the fact that you have to do that to prove that you're not using AI in the year of our word,
Oh, my God. I use toggle. I don't even know what that is.
It sounds stressful, though.
I love the word, though.
How do I prove that I didn't use...
I guess they gave it a nice little word, toggle.
How do I prove that I didn't use AI when AI detectors are notoriously bad, not the Queen Elizabeth?
AI detectors are so bad.
Are they? I have never used one.
At the beginning, they were okay.
Right, but now...
Now it's so...
It's like you can do a bunch of stuff to make the AI create stuff that doesn't get detected by AI detectors.
Sure.
And then, like, what is it picking out when it...
is detecting that it's made by AI, that it's like a good bunch of logical words in a row.
There are some things when you're just like getting stock right out of the model,
that it can sound really like the same.
Yeah.
But honestly, I think that like human detection is better at this point than AI detection.
But it's all a game and it's all faulty.
And it's like at this point, I don't think that AI detection is fit for purpose.
I don't think that it works.
What do we do, Hank?
I don't know. You said you had a solution.
Oh yeah. No, my solution, Elizabeth, is to not stress out about this because your mentor is right.
Yeah. If your mentor believes you that you didn't use AI, if you've logged your work time.
This is so great. This is like an opposite Hank and John moment where you stayed in the problem.
Yeah. I zoomed way out. Usually I'm the one who zooms way out.
Yeah. And I was like, I don't know what we're going to do about anything. It's all too big.
And you're like, let's focus on our problem. The AI thing is very scary, very powerful.
that the people who are, have the most power around it are, are not the people we would want
to have the most power around it.
It's just whoever showed up that day.
What?
Like, I don't, like, that's how I feel.
Oh, no, I know.
It's very smart people are working on, working on AI, but like.
But who, but the people who ended up in charge?
The people with the most power.
Yeah.
Like, it worries me that Elon Musk, for instance, has a lot of power in the world of AI.
Yeah, I think that's a legitimate concern.
Yeah, I'm concerned about that.
but I'm not concerned about Elizabeth.
So, like, we're not going to solve the AI problem.
We're going to solve Elizabeth's problem.
Right.
So, first of all, you don't have that much of a problem
because your mentor is right and you are right
and you know the truth.
And second, what you need to do is interject some real humanity onto the page.
Is that really what's no?
Because it's a master's thesis.
But a lot of times you can't do that.
A lot of times you can't talk about, like, here's why I personally am a matrix.
Even if you did, that you could just totally have an AI do that.
Absolutely.
you could be like get real goofy here
yeah make it make this super personal
that was good but make it more personal
I think that maybe the future
is apps like toggle
where you prove how long you were inside the word
but even that isn't
the truth is we're going to live in a different world
and I don't know how it's going to shake out
but I do know how it's going to shake out
for Elizabeth which is that Elizabeth is going to be okay
I mean in the medium run in the long run
Elizabeth I have terrible news
not about your master's thesis but about
the ubiquity of death.
Yeah.
That did sound like you thought that the world was going to end?
No, no, no, just Elizabeth's rules.
And mine and yours and each of ours.
Yeah.
And all the trees and everything we love and the oceans will boil it, et cetera.
Right.
But, man.
Not yet.
My biology is telling me this all matters, and so I'm going to listen to it.
We've got another question from a master.
It's from Sarah, who writes, Dear John and Hank,
I'm about to graduate from my master's with my master's, and don't give me
wrong. I'm proud of myself, but I can't help but wonder if I completed a master's because it sounded
good to me to say that I have a master's degree or if I actually wanted to. Isn't wanting to be
somebody who has a master's degree like still like having a master's? I feel empty after this huge
milestone because I want to be doing other things like creative writing. I guess what I'm trying to
ask is, why is it so hard to do the things you really want to do that feed your soul? How much does
free will really guide us? Or are we just constantly predicting the path that brings us the most
happiness from a biased perspective, even if it might actually be true?
always existential and seeking sarah tonin sarah m sarah you did it you went from the narrow
problem to the big problem that's a classic move sarah that's a classic john green move i congratulate
you on john greening it yeah pro tip try not to do that yeah stay in the stay in the moment
and in the problem and if you want to be writing creatively write creatively being a having a
master's degree doesn't prevent you from writing creatively having a job doesn't prevent you from
writing creatively. You know, I wrote my first novel at night and on the weekends, and my second
novel at night and on the weekends while working at a job. And that is the story for most creative
writers. The vast majority of creative writers don't make creative writing the center of their professional
life, but still, it's very fulfilling. As for why you became a master, you became a master so that
you could say that you were a master of anthropology or whatever you studied. And if you did that,
because you thought it would sound cool, let me tell you something, Sarah. As somebody who isn't a master,
It does sound cool.
It sounds cool as heck.
Well, and this is also, for me, it's true of everything.
Where it's like, why did it, like, the main reason for many years I wanted to write a book
was to have written a book.
Oh, my God.
To, like, be a man who's, people always talk to me when they're like, I really want to write
a, like, just the dream of having, like, walking to a bookstore and seeing my name on the shelf.
Yeah.
They're not thinking about the contents of the book.
No.
Like, that's a big part of why I wanted to write.
I call this the yellow bus phenomenon. So when I was nine years old, I won a competition for writing in Central Florida, not to brag. I beat on all the other third graders. Now, I recently reread this book, Hank. It's called it just as unfair. It's about death, like all of my work. And it's not very good. It doesn't show any particular promise. It's very standard third grade work. Nothing exceptional about it at all. But they put me on a big yellow school bus and sent me all the way from Orlando.
to Tampa Florida to attend the Florida
Young Writers Conference. Wow. And that was
incredibly exciting. And what was
cool about it was not writing the
story. Yeah. What was
winning the award. What was cool about it
was the big yellow school bus. And
that is exactly what
you're describing is the feeling that
you want is like the feeling of being
a writer, not the feeling of like
writing and book or what the particular book
is or reaching readers or all that stuff.
And what I've had to do in my life
is shed the big yellow bus enthusiasm
and try to find meaning in wanting to reach readers,
wanting to tell a particular story,
just in the process,
like in the walk through the woods
of sitting in front of the blank page.
In the getting characters through a room
to open doors, et cetera, of writing.
That's what I've had to find joy in
because if you're only seeking the other stuff,
there will never be enough of it.
Like, I won the Prince Award and it wasn't enough,
I won an LA Times book primes and it wasn't enough.
There will never be enough of that stuff unless you can find joy and pleasure in the process.
Right.
And so much of what I find drove me is not what I enjoy about where I am.
I've always been very driven by like wanting to be like a hero.
But then when I become like a hero, I'm like, oh.
This is unpleasant.
This isn't particularly great.
Yeah, I don't like people looking up to me in this weird, weird, uncomfortable way.
Yeah, I mean, there's parts of it that are, like, lots of it that's nice.
But it's just like, what I thought would be nice is just being me.
Yeah.
But that's not nice.
It's all the, like, parts of the job that I like doing that are nice.
Right.
I think that to walk into a bookstore, I'm just going to tell you the truth.
Yeah.
And look at the bookstore and think, you know what this place needs?
Is a book by me?
Is itself, like, like, it requires a measure of hubris?
That's not what.
but that's not what I'm thinking about.
No, no, no. I'm not, like, I'm saying this of myself as much as I am with you.
Like, it requires a measure of hubris to think that.
But, like, at the same time, what's actually fulfilling in that work turns out not to be
the fulfillment of the hubris.
It turns out to be the work.
And this is, this is, and the, I mean, success is a big part of it.
Like, actually having people read the work.
Of course, yeah, but that, what's fulfilling about that is how, is reaching,
readers and hopefully, you know, having an impact on them in a deep and meaningful and ongoing
way. That's what's interesting about it. Not to quit your day job. And absolutely. The financial
part of it is huge. Yeah. But like the if you can quit your day job, which I think like 60
writers can. Yeah. But like the rest of it isn't that good. The like the prizes and the whatever and
a clan like all that stuff just he here is an interesting thing i just read a book about me oh wow i don't
think i've told you about this weird yeah so i read a book about me i suspect it will be published at
some point it's very good and it's not entirely about me but of course like i was very interested
in the parts that were about it yeah and it's kind of about that like 2010's tumbler era so i'm in there too
probably you are in there yeah it's also a book about you it's also a book about you it's
more a book about me, but it's partly a book about you. As far as you can tell. So true. So I'm reading
this book and this person unfortunately did a lot of very good research and found something I wrote
in like 2003 where I was like, I will do anything for fans. I will mortgage my mother's house for
fans. And I totally meant that I was completely sincere. I wanted to be famous so, so badly. And then I
got famous and it turns out that like almost no one on earth is less equipped to be famous than
I am. I have a book of the letters of Isaac Asimov. Yeah. And there's these two letters and it's
they're like organized by topic. Yeah. Not by time. Yeah. So there's these two letters that are just like
in the section about like having fans. Mm-hmm. And one letter is from early in his career where he
taught he just gushes about how lovely it is to sign an autograph or to sign a book. And then 20
years later, he's like, if one more person asks me to sign a book, I may very well move to the
moon. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's good to know that Isaac Asimov also wasn't particularly well
equipped for fame. But there is something about it that, like, the thing that I most wanted
turns out to be the least fulfilling part of the job that I have now. What's really fulfilling
is like getting to do a make a wish
like I get to do next week
or getting to hear from readers
hearing from Elizabeth about Elizabeth's
problems with AI and having to think about that
like thinking about stuff working on stuff
with other people in community
as a leader of that community
is really really fulfilling
and so as much as we can
do to be a part of each other's communities
to connect overwork
like if you can find people who are also
doing stuff connect with them and like and be waiting like have a per like be the person who's
waiting for that other person to finish that next chapter yeah because you're invested in it so like
having somebody who's invested in your work and being invested in the work of others yeah really can
drive you forward like finding that somewhere I think it's very important for communities to not
all be 200,000 people you know like yeah most of them should be like 5 to 20 yeah the number
one fulfillment from my work is working with you and working with my editor and working like and working
with rosiano like the greatest fulfillment I get from my work is working with a relatively small
group of people on projects that I really care about yeah and it's in that collaboration
and cooperation that I find the most joy that's where I really find and also consolation like
I feel less alone when I'm working with you could I hit you as something that I think
think that you'll disagree with me on or like we'll just have a different perspective like like we
will have a different way of working yeah i think that in the in this world of you know i just got my
master's degree and oh it's just such a terrible time in life by the way yeah being 20 like being in
your early 20s and like finishing school or finishing grad school or whenever you finish grad school
it's such a weird time of life yeah because you're like okay now i have to like do life i saw sarah go
through it yeah thankfully i never went to grad school because i dropped out on day one i had
And I just became a freelance web developer after having my biochemistry degree.
Yeah.
Anyway.
The thing that you're going to be programmed for a little bit is to create works of mastery.
Hmm.
And the thing that you should do is instead of a sniper rifle, just like a handheld machine gun, where you're just like blasting out ideas.
Just doing lots of stuff in lots of directions.
Just get it all out of there.
Yeah, instead of trying to be highly specialized just like...
The pots.
The pots?
The pots.
What about the pots?
There's this parable, and I don't know if it's real...
Tell me the parable.
That if you ask a person to make one perfect pot and give them a year, they will make a worse pot than if you ask a person to make a thousand pots in one year.
I completely agree with that.
Yeah.
As a potter.
Oh.
I completely agree with that.
If you ask me to make a thousand mugs, the thousandth mug will be better than if you ask me to make one great mug.
Not least because of the pressure of making the one great mug.
Yeah.
And that's what we do.
We do that to ourselves.
Yep.
We think we always think we're making the one perfect mug.
And then I go back and I like look at the videos I made or the stories I wrote or the, you know, the science communication I did when I thought I was working on the one perfect thing.
And I was like, oh, this was one of the shitty pots along the way.
Mm-hmm.
And, like, I thought I was, I worked so, and, like, there was value in all that work.
Yeah.
And by the way, as somebody who makes a Blog Brothers video every Tuesday, so I've made a lot of pots.
I've made 1,200 Blog Brothers pots over the last 18 years.
Yeah.
And many of them are not great.
Yeah.
But I still make one every Tuesday because sometimes I make a really good one.
And the most interesting thing to me is, like, what motivated us to make 1,200 of these?
Mm-hmm.
And it really is, like, in the beginning, it was each other.
It's still each other to some extent.
Well, yeah, yeah.
But in the beginning, it was just each other.
Just each other.
And then, like, the richness of the obligation has continued to increase.
Yeah, for sure.
But having someone you're responsible to is very helpful.
So this is a lot.
Yeah, I almost told you about my secret Patreon just now, but I decided not to.
Let's move on to this question from Amanda.
Dear John and Hank, I don't know if it's just me, but it feels like every man in my life takes forever to poop.
for me as a woman
I don't go in the first minute
or if I don't go in the first minute or so of sitting down
it's just not happening
now I may just be not noticing
how long women take in the bathroom
but it does seem like men disappear in the bathroom
all the time forever
is there something different about men's colons
that requires them to sit a long time to poop
or are they really just disappearing
to get away from everything
not a man duh Amanda
really great name specific sign off
wow so specific to the question
and specific to the name
yes really good sign off
Somebody asked us recently if the questions on the pod are real or if we fake them.
Because they all end in puns.
Because it seems like we must be faking that.
As if we are clever punsters.
Have you heard Hank's dad jokes?
No, that's all Amanda right there.
That's Amanda's work.
Hank, as somebody who takes a long time to poop, I thought you might be interested in this question.
I think that there's a variety of explanations for this phenomenon.
Yeah.
There are sometimes when it just takes a long time to poop.
I don't know what this is called, but my gastroenterologist refers to it as dry heaves of the butt.
Oh, wow, yeah.
I know what that is.
Yeah.
We're really covering all the major topics today.
You know, I don't have the healthiest colon, obviously.
Yeah.
No, you have ulcerative colitis just for context.
Yes.
There will be times when I think I'm done and I'll be, and I will have pooped.
And then I'll be like, I've got to go again.
Yeah.
A little more happens.
Yeah, I'm like ready to go.
So there's some of that.
Yeah.
I don't know if that's specific to men.
Yeah.
But there is also an element, I think, sometimes of wanting to escape things.
Right.
Wanting to take a break.
This is a good point.
That's definitely not specific to men.
Have quiet time.
That's not specific to men either.
No.
I don't think any of this is specific to men.
I think that there might be a bunch of, there might be a greater proportion of guys who are like, I don't feel the
need to leave this bathroom right now even though I am done oh I don't even though I'm done oh yeah I'm done
well when I'm done I'm done well okay I'm out what are you thinking like I think these people just want
like they're just like one a little more time for themselves they're like that's not good for your
colonic health no it's not so that's why I don't do that I'm a very I don't know if you know this
about me hang but I'm very nervous about disease and illness yeah and the idea of like
unnecessarily spending time
near fecal matter
just doesn't resonate with me.
Well, then you won't be able to answer this question
well. Well, that's why I was fascinated
by the question because it doesn't resonate with me at all.
No, I think that there's a fair amount, and I do
this, there's a fair amount of just like,
well, I'm here, I'm scrolling.
Yeah. You're just going to keep scrolled.
I'm just going to keep, yeah. I think if I go
out there, there's going to be stuff to do.
Now, I very rarely
will scroll or
bring my phone into this whole
endeavor precisely because I don't want to spend unnecessary time in the bathroom.
That's the thing to do.
All right.
We're moving on to this question from Ain, I think.
I might be mispronouncing this person's name and they didn't give me a name specific sign off
to be sure.
Dear John and Hank, I grew up Catholic and never really thought too much about the details
regarding relics.
I just accepted it as part of the whole shebang.
But looking back, I have a few questions.
How did people go about collecting relics or figuring out what had belonged to whom?
Was there a process for discerning the saintly teeth?
From the non-saintly, was it grave-robbing or just snatching a bone or belonging at the time of death?
I wonder if Hank even knows what relics are.
This feels somehow like something John would have read about, and I'm sure can connect it to percolosus somehow,
Adelytes and axial skeletons, Ayn.
Give me your knowledge of relics.
So sometimes you go to an old church in Europe, and there will be a thing.
Not just in Europe.
Well, sometimes I will go to an old church in Europe.
Yeah.
I did this.
Sure.
And there's a, there's a, there's a, there's a pillar in the middle of the church, and inside of the pillar is a box, and inside of the box, theoretically, is like the finger of John the Baptist.
Right.
John the Baptist, by the way, a many-fingered man.
Yeah.
Had at least 30 fingers.
One thing I know is that there's a lot of fingers.
Yeah.
And not a lot of John the Baptists.
Just the one.
This is a problem with relics, is that sometimes the number of relics, you know, like St. Apollonia, the Patriots.
insane of dentists and tooth pain because she had her teeth crushed by pincers as part of her
martyrdom. There's a lot of, there's a lot of dark stuff that people have suffered from religion.
Let's say, let's say it like it is. Anyway, point being, St. Apollonia has more teeth than she has
teeth. You know what I mean? Like, she's got, there's a lot of teeth out there. Well, because they got
crushed, so they're all in little pieces. Well, there's a lot of, like, like, crushed tooth
relics out there that aren't necessarily St. Apollonians. I think I would, I would wager
that none of them are.
No, some of them are.
Really?
Some of them are for sure.
Did St. Apollonia die in the last thousand years?
No.
Then I said none of them are.
Oh, maybe none of those, but there are relics that are legitimate.
Oh, okay.
That's what I'm saying.
Yeah, I bet there's some relics that are legitimate.
But, like, it's so easy to convince people of something.
Well.
Like convincing people, if you can benefit from having a finger
and convincing somebody that this finger is a finger is a single.
special thing. Sure. Then people will figure out how to do it. Of course. That is not just true
for religion and relics. Oh, no, yeah. Absolutely not. I'm just saying that like cons, con artists are a
thing. My position is that it doesn't matter if it's St. Apollonia's tooth. Literally,
if you go to that tooth and believe that it is St. Apollonias and you are in terrible dental
pain and you ask St. I'm not a Catholic, but if you ask St. Apollonia to intercede on
your behalf with the pain, that is a way of trying to take the pain outside of yourself
and share it, and pain is almost impossible to share, and there may be meaning and usefulness
in that.
Yeah.
The actual designation of the tooth matters less to me personally.
I think that that's fair.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think it's fair, especially if no one is currently trying to convince me to pay a bunch of money
for a tooth. Now, as is well known, while I don't enjoy being famous, I would love to be a saint.
Oh. Oh, I'd love to be one. But you don't get to be one. What do you mean you don't get to be?
You're not Catholic. Well, that's one of the issues. But there are other issues that I like that I don't
deserve it. I want you to be a saint too. I can auction off all these parts. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
that's the thing I was going to say. It's like a diamond encrusted tooth that contains your teeth.
I want a hint green. One for every 32 teeth. You might relic auction.
Oh, yeah. Because you are a salesperson.
Oh, yeah. You can talk a dog off a bone. And then you will make me donate all of the money.
I will. I'll make you donate all the money to Partners in Health.
I absolutely will. You're right, which reminds me that today's podcast is brought to you by John's teeth one day to be donated, to be used to raise money that will then be donated to Partners in Health.
This podcast is also brought to you by the concept of interest. It goes both ways.
Yeah, and today's podcast is additionally brought to you.
by dry heaving of the butt.
Dry heaving of the butt,
a phrase that I will not soon forget.
This podcast is brought to you by
a large mouth bass to size of a man.
That was actually not in this podcast.
That was in a video that we made before this.
But good job.
Good job.
Good job.
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dear hank all right we've got another question this one's from eleanor eleanor says why is it the short story
are less popular than novels.
Don't people have short attention spans?
Shouldn't we love short stories?
It's a great question.
Eleanor, they're too long.
That's the problem with short stories.
There's two things going on with short stories.
One is that they tend to be a little more literary.
And I think people are suspicious of literariness.
Like they're suspicious of highfalutin art.
And it makes them feel like this isn't the F1 movie.
This is something that I'm supposed to eat like broccoli.
Yeah.
And like the short stories that I can think of that have like caught
fire are often not very literary. No. No, they're fun. Yeah. Because here's the thing. This is a very
important thing to understand when it comes to art. Easy and fun are not opposites. The opposite of
easy is not fun. It's hard. And so you can have something that is that is fun while also being
like worthy of critical reading. Right. Complex. Complex. Complex.
multitudinous, you know, like, a lot of pop fiction is fun, but also interesting.
Like, whatever you think of my year of rest and relaxation, you can't argue that that book
isn't interesting, but like it's also, you know, like it also holds up to critical reading
and stuff.
Yeah.
And I always am surprised by this.
Oftentimes I'll, like, hit it.
I'll be like, fine, I'll read it and I'll think that it was going to be like.
You'll think it's going to be like broccoli.
Yeah.
Because everyone's been telling you how good it is.
And you're like, oh, great, good fiction is like hard work fiction.
Yeah, yeah.
Like, I felt I never read a Kurt Vonnegut book.
Oh, so fun.
And, like, first of my, I was like, Kurt Vonnegut.
He's a, you know, it's all literature.
Yeah.
And it's just, I mean, it's a good time.
Yeah, they're all points.
You don't win the Nobel Prize by being, by being merely hard.
Yeah.
Like, Tony Morrison is incredibly fun to read.
Now, like, not, like, fun in the sense of, like, going down a slip and slide, but, like, you know,
interesting.
compelling you want to keep reading the sentences are pleasurable to interact with like yeah they're not
work they're they're not merely work right like and when they're work they're they're they're so
rewarding that it doesn't feel like work right right like whether we're talking about tony morrison
or we're talking about gatsby or we're talking about the catcher in the rye or we're we're
talking about speak by lorry halts anderson like like all these books are are good like they're
like there's a like you don't become a classic because you're not
good. You become a classic because it's good. It's fun to read. Of mice and men is interesting to
read. Yeah. Yeah, all these books. The scarlet letter. I'm not sure. Yeah. Nathaniel Hawthor
never did it for me. You know who doesn't do it for me on a big level? Edith Wharton.
You're not going to catch me knowing who that is. Okay. Well, and I feel bad because I know
Edith Warden has a lot of big supporters in our community, but it's just not, it's not my thing.
That's the thing.
But, yeah, I am a little bit surprised that there isn't more of a short story culture in one way or another.
I listen to a podcast of short stories, the Clarks World podcast, and it's great.
You know, of course, it's hit and miss.
Sure.
They're not all bangers.
Yeah.
But it's such an interesting way to spend a half an hour walk, like listening to some new science fiction writers, like, take on first comment.
contact or pandemic fiction or climate fiction, you know.
Is it all science fiction?
Yeah.
Okay.
What's it called?
Clark's World.
Clark's World.
It's a sci-fi literary magazine, and they have a fiction podcast.
A fiction podcast.
Yeah.
And it's great.
But I think that it can often be a little unsatisfying to a person who's used to reading novels.
Right, because with a novel, you have much more time to get engaged in the world.
You get that, like...
Yeah.
And you're almost like, you hit the end, and you're like...
like, I liked this, though.
Yeah.
When it's a good one, you're like,
but what do they do next?
What are the rock eaters going to be up to?
Whereas with a novel,
you can have that feeling
of real overarching fulfillment
because you spent like 10 hours
with a story.
But I don't know.
I think there's a lot of value
to short stories.
I think we should read them more,
and it's a bummer to me
that we don't, and I include myself in that.
Hank, before we get to the news
from Mars and AFC Wimbledon,
we have an urgent complaint.
Oh.
From Lily and about 500 other people.
Oh, not about a lot.
That's great.
No, it is about us.
Oh.
We had a huge failure
in a previous episode of the pod
and we need to correct it.
About 500 other people.
I thought she was complaining
about 500 people.
No, no, no.
She's complaining about us.
Dear John and only John.
Oh, good.
So that's good.
That's my favorite kind of letter
that we get when people are complaining.
I did well.
I have paused the most recent episode
of the pod to write to you
because the original doctor
who said sneezing is never normal
was a woman.
You keep saying he.
And it is understandable
because the name Never Sneezer Scrooge is excellent and does suggest a man.
But the last thing we need in this day and age is to bury the historical contribution
of yet another woman in medicine, especially one so important.
Thank you, Lily.
And everybody else.
Lily and everybody else, I am extremely sorry for forgetting that Dr. Never Sneezer Scrooge
is in fact a woman and has made an important contribution to medicine by pointing out
that sneezing is not, has never been, and will never be normal.
And I apologize for failing on the bit.
Usually I commit to a bit.
This time I failed on a bit, and I am sorry.
We've been at this for too long, John.
Dr. Never Sneezer Scrooge was and always has been a woman.
And a fish.
And a fish like the rest of us.
Again, Hank is referencing a video that we made,
which is not part of this podcast,
and is very confusing to the many listeners of this podcast
who do not watch Bobbuthers' videos.
We've been sitting in the same place, though.
Hank, think about the person who said,
Can you describe your faces because I'll never see you?
Yeah.
Think about that person when you're thinking about this pond.
Remember when you first saw like a radio DJ who you'd listen to?
Oh, yeah.
Devastating.
Devastating.
We get to be that for some people.
We get to be that for some people.
And don't Google what we look like.
Just I think we look exactly how we sound.
Have us be sounds.
This is what I want to be most in the world is to be made of waves and particles to be like made of light and sound.
Peter Thiel's going to deliver that for you.
All right, Hank, it's time for the all-important news from Mars and AFC Wimbledon.
I'll go first since I had some pretty significant AFC Wimbledon news.
I don't even know if you know this, but along with 10 of my friends, I have acquired 3.7% of the UFC Wimbleddon.
That's pretty big deal.
Yeah.
Yeah. So my friends and I...
I didn't know that was possible because it's not owned.
It's a fan-owned club.
75% of the shares are owned by the Don's Trust, which is the fan ownership group.
that everybody gets the same votes on
and then 25% of the club
is purchasable
and has been purchased
by a bunch of people over the years
and by a lot of fans
and I've bought a little bit.
Now, this doesn't affect,
it doesn't mean that you can control
what happens with AFC Wimbledon.
It's a fan-owned club
that 75% controls everything.
Yeah.
But you can contribute to the club
by owning shares in the club
up to 25% at the moment.
There's some movement to move that
to 49 or something.
49%. But for now it's 25%. And there was still some shares left. And so a bunch of my friends, most of them in Indianapolis, but some around the country, have come together and we have bought 3.7% of the football club. This is incredibly exciting for me because I get to invest in a thing that I love. And I don't, you know, in the... You're the news. I'm the news. Also, our forward Osmond Foyo has just been charged with 238 counts of betting on football.
But that's not the news.
The news is me.
And, yeah, so 3.7% of the football club, and I'm excited.
And that's it.
That's bad.
It's not great.
But the news about me is good.
And we're investing in the football club.
So the money.
You just bought some chairs in a football club that is currently?
I mean, that's a handleable problem.
It's a handleable problem.
Charging is not the same thing as being convicted of,
and I have no idea what's going on.
and I don't want to know.
The point is, we own 3.7% of the football club.
We invested because AFC Wimbledon is a fan-owned club.
We don't want to change that, of course.
But we're excited, and the money is going to go toward improvements to the stadium
and paying down debt, because we incurred a lot of debt,
mostly to ourselves to finance the stadium.
And so we're going to help pay that down.
Sweet.
All right.
What's the news from Mars?
It's up there doing.
It's just chilling.
Mars is
stable
in a way that I wish
Earth were stable
but I don't wish Earth were stable
You don't want that
You don't want that
I do want that
on a superficial level
but if I think about it more deeply
I don't want that
I want Earth to be
an unstable,
unpredictable environment
with a film of life
which includes Peter Thiel
What you know
about any 4 billion year old
system of living chemistry
is that it is built on trillions
of corpses.
Wow.
So, well, you were just telling me
about the mass extinction that was caused
by trees, which was ultimately
caused by trees
decaying, forming what we now
know to be soil.
Yeah, and the nice soil. And breaking up rocks.
And breaking up rocks. And that soil
and rock matter, then getting
into oceans and lakes and causing these
massive algae blooms because of over
oxygenation, which killed 70
75% of species. We think of trees as being so friendly and innocuous, but once they killed 75% of species on Earth.
Yeah, no, they went hard. They were like, when lignan evolved, man, it was a whole different ballgame.
Meanwhile, we've killed what, like 8%? We got a long way to go if we want to be trees.
They had more time and we've got we've got more time. Hopefully. Well, I mean, hopefully not to cause mass extinctions. But yes, we are
We're smarter than trees, so we should be able to rein it in.
Should?
We could.
It's theoretically possible.
Trees couldn't.
And I believe that we will.
We are the first creature to do what we are doing and know that we are doing it.
And I believe that we are also the first creature that will be able to make the choice to do less of what we are doing that is harmful.
Or maybe we won't make the choice.
it'll just happen anyway.
Yeah.
Well, that is sort of the stark reality
that we face at the moment.
Anyway, we don't want to be Mars.
We also don't want to be this Earth.
We want to be a better Earth.
It'd be a better Earth.
But the fact that we know that
is new.
It's relatively new.
Well, geologically, it's extremely new.
Geologically, it's new.
Even in terms of human history, it's extremely new.
It's very new.
And we're getting used to it,
and we're not doing a very good job,
but we can do a better job.
Together. Thank you for coming to my second TED Talk.
This episode of Deer Hangedon was edited by Ben Sourdout,
mixed by Joseph Tudamettish Marketing Specialist, is Brooke Shotwell.
It's produced by Rosiana Halls, Ruhalas, and Hannah West.
Our executive producer is Seth Radley.
Our editorial assistant is to Booky Chuck and Vardi.
The music you're hearing now at the beginning of the podcast is by the Great Gunnarola.
And as they say in our hometown, don't forget to be awesome.