Dear Hank & John - 422: We Got Another Brother (w/ Travis McElroy!)
Episode Date: September 3, 2025Do you think the current pope has eaten more hot dogs than the previous popes combined? Does the atmosphere distort our view of the stars? How do I ask people to talk to me about my book? Wha...t does the space represent in the molecule diagrams? How do I manage to be reminded of my old work without wanting to burn it all down? …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.See 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 devious advice, and bring you all the week's news from both Mars and ASC Wimbled and John.
Yeah.
You know why you never play cards with Travis?
Why?
Because he's always dealing with something.
I don't know.
Oh, I guess.
it. All right. That's pretty good. I'll allow it. It's the fastest Travis joke I could think of.
There's something really weird going on here, which is that we got another brother.
Yeah.
We acquired a new brother. His name is Travis McElroy. We got him in a trade. We traded a
couple second round draft picks for Travis McElroy. I wasn't super pleased with what my brother's
asked for in the trade, but I'm happy to be here. So I'm going to be
wrong. Um, my new hometown. Um, happy to be here. Uh, I thought I was worth a little bit more,
but it's fine, you know, it's fine. Um, I'm going to play my heart out for, uh, this city.
And I look forward to a lot of new brand deals. Yeah, we have some great relationships.
You get way more brand deals than we do. We had a stitch fix ad like once, like eight years ago and
they were like never again. And you guys are still fixing the stitches.
My assumption is, is that all of the partners that still sponsor our episodes
flipped a switch somewhere, and the guy that has the key to get into that room to turn it off
got fired and they don't know where the key is.
And they're like, oh, I guess they have to keep doing these ads.
So if you're not familiar with Travis' podcasting Empire, just real quick, I'll give you a little bit of a history.
Travis with his brother's host, my brother, my brother and me, or I should say used to host
my brother, my brother, and he was traded to the brother's green and also has various other
podcasts. But for our purposes, today, he is a green brother. What would you guys think about
changing it to Dear Travis featuring John and Hank? I'm in. Yeah, we'd have to have a bet that
would result in that that ideally involves another planet besides Earth. Yeah. So just so you know,
the podcast is going to get renamed Dear John and Hank on January 1st, 2028.
if humans don't get to Mars in 2027, which is looking very unlikely.
Yeah.
Okay, cool.
This is a real wild bet that I made that's really not, it's not so much the worry that
the podcast is going to get renamed, but that we keep having to talk about what an idiot
former me was.
You weren't even close, man.
Not even close.
Hank believed in this young upstart named Elon Musk.
He thought he was going to get us to Mars.
Well, maybe a little true.
Now you just believe in him for a lot of different things.
I definitely have a firmer understanding of the man.
Yeah, off mic, Hank is a huge Elon Musk fan.
So true.
He would never admit it here, but man, Hank won't shut up about that guy.
No, he thinks he's a genius.
I'll make a bet with you that by 2030, they will reclassify Pluto back as a planet.
Ooh.
And if that happens, we'll call the show the Travis show with special guests.
Hank and John.
All right.
The problem with that is that it might happen in the next like four days the way this country is going.
Anything that was away in 1990 is going to be that way again shortly, is how it feels.
Currently, it seems like anything that will distract a news cycle from actual news for even 10 minutes, they're willing to throw at the wall and see if it sticks.
Absolutely.
Not my favorite.
it's really a bit of a source of another source of shame for me that we started a brother advice
podcast without knowing about your previously existing more successful brother advice podcast well to be
fair hank a lot of people who've started a lot of things without being aware of us so don't you
worry about i would say more people are unaware of us than are aware of us it's true unless you ask
my kids at which point i'm the most famous person in the world but they don't know who a lot of people are
So what do they know?
Right, right.
I am like the biggest deal guy in, certainly, that my son is aware of, just by virtue of being around all the time.
I mean, my biggest claim to fame is occasionally my kids will be watching something and I can say, I know the person who's doing that voice or I know the person who made this thing.
Yeah.
And they're like, ah, dad's famous, which I think is a wonderful kind of transitive property.
Yeah.
So do you know what we do here?
Travis, we give dubious advice.
I mean, Travis is well-experienced in the field.
He sure is.
Yeah, I would say I'm very good at not being an expert.
So we're going to start out with this question from Nemo, and I hate to start it difficult, Travis, but I think this is an important one for us to get to.
Nemo writes, hi, John and Hank.
I was wondering if you think the current Pope has eaten more hot dogs than the previous 266 popes combined, what would be from Chicago and everything?
If so, what are your thoughts?
Not like the fish, Nemo.
I mean, has any Pope
except the current Pope had a hot dog?
For sure, for sure.
Pope Francis was a man of the people.
He had a hot dog in his life.
All right.
When were hot dogs invented?
Great question.
So you Google that while Travis and I riff.
If we're talking about like not counting like German, like, you know,
beer style.
Yeah, not just a sausage.
We're not talking like a hot dog.
So we're talking like a hot dog.
Well, it has to have been called a hot dog.
That's the thing.
Even if it was a hot dog before the word hot dog was invented, then that doesn't count because
it wasn't a hot dog.
No one had to call it.
I'm just going to guess post-World War II?
No.
In fact, the word hot dog arrived for us in 1901.
Wow.
Oh, yeah, because there were all those Nathan's famous hot dogs.
I read two books about the history of Nathan's famous, which is really one book too many.
in order to write an essay about it for the Anthropocene Review.
And one of the things I learned is that the hot dog was really pioneered by Nathan, Nathan and I had a handworker on Coney Island in the early 1900.
So I should have known that, Hank.
But anyway, point being, I think it's 263 or two, I think it's 265 to one.
I think it is, right?
Like, it's got to be 265 to one because the current, I, I'd,
I bet Pope Francis had a few hot dogs.
I bet Cardinal Ratzinger, what was that guy's name?
What did he go by?
No idea what you're talking.
You were the one.
I think he was a John.
Was he a John Paul?
Was he a John Paul? Was he a John P.
Pope Benedict the 16th?
Okay.
Pope Benedict's the 16th probably had some hot dogs.
In almost 30 years of being Pope, Pope John Paul the second, I bet had a hot dog or two.
Now, here's that, no, this is an important clarifying note.
Are we talking about them as Pope eating hot dogs?
Oh, no.
In their lives.
Pope grew up.
If he even, I think he didn't live in America for a long time.
He was born in Chicago.
Yeah.
But if he even spent six years here, as a child, the amount of hot dogs an American child consumes.
Uh-huh.
It's true.
Is off of the chart.
I could not even begin to guess to me.
Europeans, what?
They're having, like, baguettes with Nutella for breakfast.
I mean, my kids eat that, too.
Your kids haven't had bread with Nutella on it.
My son thinks that you can only get Nutella when you're in London
because that's the only place he's ever had it.
What a great con you're running.
He doesn't listen to this podcast?
No, he does not listen to this podcast.
Hank, you got to get him to listen to the podcast.
We've got to get our numbers up for the advertisers so we can get that Stitch Fix ad.
We've got to get that Stitch Fix out.
I need my stitches fixed.
See, now I have to look at how long did he live in America?
He lived in Chicago for a long time until he was a priest.
So I think that it's very likely that he's eaten more hot dogs than all the other
popes combined.
I'm just concerned because I just think of Pope Francis as being such a man of the people.
I could see him eating a lot of hot dogs.
But even if you had a hot dog a year, I don't think that's as much as a six-year-old child
has accumulated in America in their entire life.
That's a great point.
I would guess my children have one hot dog a week on average, right?
So if they start eating hot dogs when they're like two years old,
like by the time they're six, they've had over 200 hot dogs.
Yeah.
Every sports game you go to, you have to have one.
It's a requirement.
I don't know.
This is a wonderful, what a wonderful thought.
And absolutely, I'm willing to call it.
Okay.
The Pope has had more hot dogs.
than all the previous popes combined,
which is the final straw of weight
in American dominance on the world.
And now it all breaks.
Here's what I want.
I think Vatican City and all them have the money to make this happen.
I'm going to see Pope Leo versus Joey Chestnut.
Yes.
Hot dog eating competition, winner take all.
Yeah.
Yeah. Winner take all being like the presidency, the emperor of Europe, the whole thing.
Winner take all.
I'm just saying.
I think it would be a battle for the ages.
I mean, it would humanize the Pope a little bit, right?
Like, one of the problems the Pope has is that he feels very distant from us because he's God's messenger on earth and everything.
I feel like that's the point.
If you had the Pope eating like eight hot dogs in 12 minutes, I'd be like, man, you know, that's about what I could do.
That's a Pope you could have a beer with.
exactly i would love it if joe if joey chas not won if the stakes were like if he wins he gets canonized
as the patron saint of pot dogs yeah the patron saint of eating competitions or something i think
it would be worth it for him hank this may not be for the pod but have you seen the uh viral
video that a catholic priest made criticizing my theology yeah it's it's got a lot of views and um i think
the main conclusion from it is that I'm not Catholic.
Not even not Catholic enough, just like, I don't think he's Catholic.
Well, I'm not Catholic, so it's hard, it's hard for me to feel deeply hurt.
But it is true that my theology is fairly worldly, and that was his big criticism.
Anyway, we can want.
I did a crash course philosophy, and I got raked over the coals for having a simplistic
view of Thomas Aquinas' view or explanation.
of the necessity of the existence of God.
And I'm like, man, I had 12 minutes to do, does God exist?
I don't know.
We did.
We did a job.
Listen, now that I'm here, let me tell you guys, one of your mistakes is that you are
intelligent people who make, like, make people aware that you're intelligent, and then
they start holding you to a higher standard.
You just got to be dummies all the time, like me and my brothers.
And then if you even say something the least.
witty or intelligent. They're like, oh my God, good job, buddy. Here's a lollipop. And that is
great. All right. We'll take that on board. I think that's important criticism. Or advice, I think,
is what it is. John, do you have another question for us? I do. It's from Raquel, who writes,
Dear John and Hank, when you look at the sky and see the stars, are they actually right there in
the direction straight shooting? Or does the atmosphere in such distort our view of the stars like
looking at water in a glass so that the stars at the edge of the sky are sort of off from the
angle they should be at star from afar, Raquel.
What do you think, John, or do you just want me to tell you the true answer?
I have a pretty strong theory about this, which is that if I point at the big dipper,
I am pointing at the big dipper in space.
The big dipper is up there in that, quote, unquote, direction insofar as directions exist
when there is no up or down.
Do you want to take the alternate case, Travis?
I'm going to say that having something to do with the fact that it takes so long for the
light of the star to actually reach us, there.
There's no possible way the stars are there.
Like, maybe the light from the star is there, but, like, the star isn't in the direction, I would be pointing.
Yeah.
Oh, that's a great point.
I hadn't thought of that.
But that is separate from Raquel's question.
And that is, I mean, stars, I don't know.
What are even are stars?
That's what I meant to say.
That's probably a little bit true.
They're moving around.
They're not moving around that fast, though.
As you can tell, by them having been in the same place for quite a long time.
Well, they're moving around pretty fast.
It's just they're moving around and we're also moving.
Now I'm getting my head hurt tank because we're moving around.
We are moving around, but they move around both with us and separately from us.
So like, we're all sort of going around the center of the galaxy, but like there's some drifting up and down and around.
So all the stars I see in the sky are from the Milky Way.
They are from our galaxy, and we're all rotating around the center of the Milky Way galaxy.
So we're all sort of rotating together, but then we're also rotating a little bit separately
because we're rotating at different speeds based on whether or not they're closer to the center or something.
Like a record.
Not really, based on how close they are to the center, more like if you could imagine, like if you've got milk you just put in the coffee cup,
but also the water is going around in a circle.
so like some of the milk's going up, some of the milk's going down,
but it's all going in a circle together.
Got it.
Just say you don't know, Hank.
It's okay.
You don't have to make all this stuff up to say, I don't know.
More important to Raquel's question,
it actually depends on where the star is in the sky.
So if the big dipper is straight above you,
if you point at the big dipper, you're pointing at the big dipper.
But if it's down at the horizon,
then if you point at the big dipper,
you're off by a little bit.
To the extent that when the sun goes down,
for you, it has already actually gone down
if light was going in a straight line
because the atmosphere does bend the light.
Wait, what?
When the sun goes down,
when I see the sun disappear over the horizon line,
the sun has in fact already gone down.
Has already passed the horizon line.
We're seeing the light get curved,
curved up and back toward us.
This is assuming that the planet is round,
which the science is out on.
And that the atmosphere exists and that space is,
exists and there isn't just like a shell around us that has like a LCD screen on it.
Yeah.
Yes.
Thank you.
I like that you guys respect all viewpoints.
I appreciate that.
Yeah, we try to make space.
We try to make space on this podcast.
That's the liquid crystals up there.
Yeah.
So it's pretty cool.
And we know that.
And there's actually a guy that wants to make a telescope using that.
So our atmosphere bends light.
If you can get a telescope far enough away, you could use it to collect light.
that's coming from a very distant spot.
And it would be like the Earth's atmosphere
is a giant telescope lens.
So you could see around the planet?
Yeah, you could see something
that would actually be blocked by the planet
by looking through the atmosphere
and having it bent the light
to focus on something that is behind the planet.
That would be the ultimate, like, beating hide-and-go-see
to be like, I know you're back there.
You're hiding on the other side of the planet.
Got you.
And I can see you now.
Thanks to my giant Earth telescope.
All right.
I'm going to ask you another question, Hank.
Okay.
It's very important.
Okay.
It's from Ian who writes, Dear John and Hank,
my first book is about to be published with a real press and everything.
Now, Ian, I want to stop you right there and just say that since you're a first time author,
you need to learn something important, which is that every time you say my first book
is about to be published with a real press and everything, you then say the name of the book
and the date on which it comes out.
It doesn't matter.
This took me forever to learn.
You have to say the name of the book and when it comes out.
My first book, Pirates of the Caribbean, coming out March 27th, 2026.
Ian, you're going to have a lot of legal issues.
Good luck.
A pirate of the Caribbean.
It's something I've worked really hard on and would love to hear what my family, friends, and colleagues think of it.
But it's nonfiction, and I know that not everyone will be interested in reading it.
Or if they try, they might not have the patience to finish it.
How do I ask people who actually read my book?
book to talk to me about it without making it seem like I assume everyone has will or even should read
it, mostly vowels Ian.
Well, this is a problem for me as well, Hank, because all the time someone will come over to my house
and I'll, I'll, I mean, I never know whether to reference my own books or, like, reference
the fact that I'm an author.
I don't know if they know.
I don't know what they know about my work.
And so, Ian, in this respect, you are not alone and you are entering into an exciting new
world of not knowing what people do or do don't know about you.
my recommendation is just to wear a t-shirt all the time that says the name of your book
and the date it comes out yeah just get a tattoo of it across your forehead um i i have found
this is something i struggle with a lot because i i listen i come across is so cool and confident i get
you do but uh when i'm excited about something it takes very little to knock me off of that
excitement where I'm like if I have an idea for a thing and I tell somebody and their
response is even a little bit like lukewarm or like oh that's not something I'd be interested in but
I'll tell you who would love that I'm like oh okay this is a bad idea never mind but this is why I
suggest especially since you know that this book subject might not be for everybody that you talk
to the people who you know share that interest with you right that those are the people who would be
interested in it so those are the people that you want to get the feedback from and in general i have
found that if you're looking for feedback on a thing having like specific questions instead of yes
or no questions is the best way to approach it because like what did you think isn't as good as
you know the subject matter like tell me what you got from it about that thing or like it was
what of what of interest or something new you
you learned about this subject, that kind of thing.
Instead of like, was it clear, did you like it?
Because then they can just be like, yeah, it was great.
And that doesn't really help you.
I'm curious what Ian's book is about.
Yeah.
That not everybody would be interested in.
Yeah, is it like molecular biology or something?
This, my experience is I never bring it up.
And then the moment someone brings it up, I'm like, tell me everything you thought.
Because I don't want to assume.
But once it has been confirmed, I'm like,
I'm like, I crave, I crave your thoughts.
Do you really?
I do not.
I crave, I crave, I mean, I crave positive thoughts is what I crave.
I mean, last night I was reading reviews from my comedy special a year and a half after it came out.
Oh, wow.
That is, uh, still looking, still looking.
And people's opinions vary.
Sure.
I'll tell you, the thing that I have tried to teach myself as, as I make things that I,
subject the public to
is to think of getting feedback
like aggregating information
that you're looking at it like someone
instead of think of it like the stock market
instead of following a specific stock
you're looking at the economy overall
by trying to aggregate the information
of how all these things are going
because it's very easy
like one person says they like it
and you feel really good about it
And the next person says it wasn't for them and you feel really bad about it.
And you let your kind of reactions to it ride that roller coaster and it is exhausting.
But if like 20 people read your book and 16 of them are like,
I found the information so clear, it was so interestingly written, right?
And four people are like, I just didn't get it.
Then overall, right, the aggregate of that information is it's clear and well written, right?
like aggregating kind of the response to it will give a better overall picture than trying to
read individual comments on everything. I agree with you in the abstract, Travis, but when somebody
says something negative about my work, especially when it's like, or about me as a person,
especially when it's super piercing, it sticks with me and it becomes my favorite thing to say about
myself. Oh, yeah. Um, so like, uh, recently somebody commented on a YouTube video that we made,
when did John Green eat John Green? Not kind. It's not kind, but it's stuck. Yeah. It's stuck.
Oh. And, and I will say not that recently. No. No, John Green ate John Green in like 2013.
No. No, I mean, that, the comment wasn't that reason. You say it was recently.
Oh, yeah, it wasn't that recent. It wasn't that recent. I thought you were, I thought you were referring to,
to something else, but Sarah's favorite is,
when did millennials get so old?
Yeah.
Oh, wow.
I mean, that's true.
It's 100% true.
No one's ever said anything mean about me ever.
Yeah, so you can't relate.
Yeah, I just don't understand what that's like.
Yeah, it's hard.
Well, some of us get to be golden children and some of us have to live with the reality.
We didn't have to stick our noses out, but we did.
and now people have thoughts on our noses.
If I ever write a biography, an autobiography,
I'm going to title it, Travis McRoy, easy to love, hard to like.
Yeah, apparently.
That's my deal.
Hey, do you have a favorite criticism?
Of me?
Yeah.
Oh, great.
I don't know.
I don't think about them.
Of course you don't.
If I do, it's just like, it's like, oh, yeah, sure.
Okay, I can see how you might think that.
My favorite that I get a lot, it's a pattern where someone will, especially as we post more and more like clips of like the podcast and so, and someone go like, I don't usually like Travis's jokes, but that one was funny.
And a lot of people will post that or people will post it on multiple things, which one I want to be like, maybe you do like my jokes.
Is it possible if every time you're like, I don't like them, but that one is good.
but you say that about like 30 different jokes.
Maybe you do like them.
Maybe you just don't like me, but you really like the jokes that I make.
That's okay.
That's fine.
I get that.
Easy to love, hard to like.
That's what I'm saying.
Can I ask you an inside baseball question, Travis?
Since you have three podcast hosts, is it ever the case that one of you just like steps away
to go pee or take care of a child or something and you just don't even mention it and they just don't talk for a while?
there are times
mostly ad reads
when we get to the ad reads
there are times where somebody's like
I really need to go to the bathroom
and it's like okay great
we'll just do the ad read
and you go to the bathroom
right right not all the time
but it's usually
if that happens it's like
we have a hard out
out of time
and if we don't keep going
we won't have time for it
we do have a hard out
and I do really have to pee
can I go and you guys can banter
sure yeah we'll do the
we'll do the we'll do
We'll do the sponsorships while you're gone.
Okay.
We'll do our version of the adweights.
I'll explain it.
Okay.
I'll explain it.
All right.
So we do like, I'll do the first one and then that'll give you a feeling for it.
Okay.
Which reminds me that today's podcast is actually brought to you by Hank peeing.
Hank peeing a surprisingly common phenomenon during the recording of the podcast.
Also sponsored by turning 40.
I'm 41 now and I'm not as young as I used to be, you know?
and maybe you're not as young as you used to be.
But the good news is, once you turn 40,
you kind of could always pee, you know?
Like, if you really thought about it.
If you need to.
If you need to.
You just be like, I could go pee right now.
Yeah.
And I find this a lot watching movies.
Where I'll go to a movie theater.
I'll have just peed.
And the thought will cross my mind.
Oh, man.
I hope something boring happens in the movie so I can go pee now.
So thank you turning 40 and always needing to pee.
not always needing, but you could if you needed to.
Yeah, I peed three times during the most recent Mission Impossible movie.
Now, admittedly, it is 17 hours long, but I got up three times to pee.
My wife was like, are you all right?
And I was like, I'm fine, I'm just kind of bored.
And I sort of need to pee.
I could pee.
That's like when I was a child and I used to tell my parents I was hungry, and they're like,
are you really hungry?
Are you just bored?
And the answer most of the time was bored.
And now I do, now that you said it, it does kind of, now that I'm 41, it's like,
no, I didn't need to pee, but I was bored.
to get up and do something and Pee felt like
accomplishing something. Also,
speaking of the latest mission impossible movie,
there's a point,
spoiler alert, where he gives into a fight
in the submarine with a dude
while he's like super air rating it.
And it has no impact on the plot
whatsoever. It's a completely
unnecessary fight. And that
movie, as you said, is like three hours
long, maybe more.
And there's so much in that movie you could cut.
Oh, I was cutting it as
I went. I was like,
Tom Cruise must have had final cut on this
and he must have said every shot that has my face in it
must be kept no matter what
because yeah there was the
the whole submarine scene
so this is for those who aren't familiar
this is an action adventure series
that's now like 17 movies old
and 61 year old Tom Cruise
plays a secret agent
and it's a great movie series
I have nothing against it
the people who made it I'm sure
are lovely people who work hard at their jobs
and everything but this particular one
had this 45-minute scene that took place in a submarine.
And I am married to somebody who talks in movie theaters.
I'm sorry to say.
But the only thing she ever says in a movie theater is,
oh, come on!
And there were about three times in that scene
where she audibly said, oh, come on.
There's also my other favorite thing
about the Last Mission Impossible movie
was they had just a metric ton of Chekhov's guns.
but if it was like, if Chekhov's gun was like, ah, my gun, let's use it now.
And there was a moment near the end where he said like, then I'll take, I'll take the plane that
I have. And just in case, I brought two. And it's like, oh, okay. Cool, man. Yeah, just in case
something happens in that first one, I did bring a second one. And it's like, okay, cool. And then five
minutes later, that guy takes off in the first plane. And Tom Cruise is in that second plane. I'm like,
oh, okay, thank you. Thank you for establishing that there were two planes, because if you hadn't,
I'd be so confused right now. Yeah, it's an interesting movie, but anyway, we didn't finish the
sponsorship. Today's podcast is also brought to you by the hot dog pope, the hot dog pope,
the current one. The hottest dog pope. And this podcast is also brought to you by a pirate of the
Caribbean, a pirate of the Caribbean, or impossibly Caribbean. Just whatever gets us
free of the copyright.
Hank's back, by the way.
I'm back, by the way.
Also, my new book movie franchise,
Impossible Mission.
All right, Hank, I have a science question for you.
This is from Derek who writes,
Dear John and Hank, at school last year,
we looked at molecule models
where molecules are represented as balls,
and I don't know why this is bothering me so much,
but what's between those molecules?
Like, what does the space represent, Derek?
This is something I've always wondered, Hank.
So are you picturing like a ball and stick model?
I'm not picturing a ball and stick model because I know that I'm not supposed to,
but I also can't help but picture a ball and stick model because it's what I was taught.
That's just my question.
Yeah, so you're picturing a ball and a stick model.
I'm like, what does the stick represent?
If it's all stuck together, right, then you have the empty space inside of it, the center of the ball.
The center of the ball?
That's where they keep the toys.
You get the toys in one half and the candy in the other.
And it's a little snack for you in every molecule.
No, that's a candor egg.
Sorry, that's a candor egg.
I got confused.
Yeah, sorry, sorry, sorry.
It was candor egg.
You could only get those in London.
So we could, I'm not sure what the question asked her, if it's the stick, in which case,
the stick is just the, that is entirely for your mind to be like, these are two molecules
that are now joined together.
And the stick is an easy way to do that.
And if it's like the ones where like the molecules actually overlap and there's just like,
space being represented by the ball itself, that's just sort of like a vibe about the electron cloud.
Wait, so is it more like magnetiles where it's like you put it together and they just like
are just touching and there's nothing in the middle?
They overlap. The molecule is actually in an actual molecule overlap with each other.
So, Hank, correct me if I'm wrong, but like a proton and a neutron and a,
They're all ball-shaped, right?
Yeah, we could say they're balls.
They're not cubes.
So, like, there's space in between them.
Even if they're touching, there's still space.
Sure.
What is the space?
The space between a proton and a neutron?
Or the space between a hydrogen atom and an oxygen atom that are connected.
It's space.
What do you mean?
It's just space.
It's space time.
It's the fabric of the universe.
So it's not air, obviously, because, like, that's what air is made out of.
No, it's made out of molecules.
Yeah.
It's just space.
It's like the same space that's in space.
It's a vacuum.
Well, that's all, yeah, it's all the same space.
It's not a vacuum.
I mean, it's not a vacuum.
Vacuum is a separate, a separate symptom of spaciness or a quality of space.
If I was Ant-Man and I could slip down small enough, I could pass between in that space,
there would be nothing there
that's just empty.
Yeah, well, so as far as like the electron cloud goes,
which I think is not like the space between a proton and a neutron,
but the space of the atom,
the vast majority, 99.9.9, blank, blanks percent of an atom
is the empty space.
That's like places where electron could be,
but probably isn't.
Okay, so here's, I have two pieces of leather here
and making a bracer, right?
They come together like this, right?
They overlap.
This right here, right, where they're not touching, that's just nothing.
Yeah, it's space, which is not nothing exactly.
But you just said it was space time, the fabric of the universe, which implies that in addition to it being space, it is also time.
Well, space and time, and I don't ask me to explain this because I don't understand it,
but people who do are quite certain that space and time are just the same thing.
You can say, I don't know.
Just say, I don't know what it is.
I don't know what it is.
I believe that they're the same thing because I don't know any different.
Yeah.
You say it with enough confidence?
Because people work, people who work very hard to know what they're talking about, assure me,
that space time is what the universe is now.
Just to confirm real quick, because this is going to change my.
life. Oh, really? I can't believe that we haven't talked about this before. Yeah. I still,
I, but she didn't, she didn't get into this in particular because she was talking about like
the whole history of the universe or whatever. But like, you're telling me that space and time
are, to quote you directly, the same thing. Yes. Great. That changes my life forever. Thank you for
that. It doesn't change my life for the better, but it changes my life. Yeah, well, I'm sure that
that there's uh there's there's some youtube video you could watch that would help help you wrap
your mind around a little bit but like it's the kind of thing that i'm like oh i get it and then
immediately afterward i'm like and it's gone have you guys ever read einstein's dreams no a great
book i think i have yeah okay now i'm what i'm reading here hank is that space and time are not
the same thing but parts of a whole yeah right obviously that yes they are yes that makes me feel
better because if space and time are the exact same thing that like, I understand that I can't move
through space without moving through time. Well, you wouldn't exist. Duration is like the dimension in
which we all exist, right? So without time, there would be no space. Without space, there would be no time.
But you can also warp time with really heavy objects. I get that in the abstract. But like,
understanding them as parts of the same whole rather than as the same thing is more is
easier for me i will take that under advisement uh Einstein's dreams is a really great
kind of philosophical it's like taking uh Einstein's theories on like time and relativity and stuff
and expanding them out to if a world worked in this way so for example there's one about
that people have learned you know that the farther you are away from the surface of the planet the
slower time moves for you, right, because you're rotating slower.
So the rich have built up huge, like, scaffolding stilted houses, right, in a constant
desire to build higher and higher and age slower.
And then meanwhile, you have the people just living on the surface of the earth who are
just living their lives and enjoying themselves, even though they will age at the normal
rate, right, but they aren't concerned with it as much.
And so it's a bunch of different, like, ways to think about the movement and existence of time based on these theories.
It's really great.
I like, I love learning about, like, different perceptions of time and ways to express time and, like, what time travel would look like in different forms and formats and everything.
Einstein's Dreams, it's a great book.
I enjoy it.
Hank, before we get to the all-important news from Mars and AFC Wimbledon, which, of course, Travis is going to participate.
in a meaningful way. I have to ask you one more question. It's from Grace who writes,
Hello, Brothers Green. As another person whose online footprint has spanned literal decades,
places like meta and Google think that I want to look back on things that I posted as a
youngster using social media, but I don't. No, thank you. However, I do recognize that this is still
my footprint. And as a history nerd, I do want to preserve that footprint as stupid as it looks
for human posterity or something. I know I feel more cringe about it because it's public,
but I don't feel that way about old diary entries. How do you manage to be reminded of your old work
without burning it all down.
DFTBA and Best Wishes, Grace.
Grace, I think I and the Brothers Green might disagree with me here,
but I think that that is a flawed supposition.
I don't think that stuff you posted online is the same as writing in a diary.
No.
Because one is inherently outward facing toward,
like that you're,
that's the you that you're trying to be to be cool or be seen.
or like express something about yourself to others,
whereas a diary you've written is more true to yourself,
even if it's not 100% accurate,
that's looking back to see the you that you really were
versus the you that you were projecting.
Yeah, the you that you thought people would like.
And yeah, the you that was trying to be good at being you
rather than just like you that's trying to work through
what it's like to be you.
Yeah.
But I also think that, like, you don't have to keep that stuff public if you don't want to.
You can just archive it and then have a copy of it on a hard drive somewhere or in the cloud somehow.
Like, you doesn't – I took all of my tweets offline, but I didn't, like, disappear all of my tweets forever.
I kept them – I have them in a little file called tweets.
Oh, good for you.
I just forgot all my passwords for everything over time, so I can't access hardly anything anymore.
That works, too.
I have a third way, which is that everything I've ever made is really great.
And I'm like, cool.
Okay.
Oh, to have that Hank Green confidence.
No, I mean, I look back at, there's a lot of stuff, particularly music that I can look back on and be like,
ah, I thought that was good enough to put on the Internet.
See, this is why I have, and this is now, I reference it so much that my wife now also references it,
a concept of past Travis, present Travis, and future Travis.
where it'll be like, man, past Travis stayed up really late last night
and now I feel terrible or like, ah, yeah, I finish packing this
so future Travis doesn't have to worry about it.
And it's almost three separate entities that at my best,
they're operating in conjunction with each other.
But most of the time, they are at odds.
And that's a real problem.
So when I look back at something stupid I did like 10 years ago,
I'm like, yeah, past Travis.
was an idiot. And that's fine. I can celebrate that because in many ways, I don't like that guy.
I don't relate to him anymore. Right. He's not present, Travis. You don't want to be him, right?
Yeah. It would be a tragedy if past Travis and present Travis were the same person because that would
mean there was no growth in those interim years. There we go. The fact that you look at it and cringe
is good, right? I think that people who look back at their like high school lives and they're like,
that was the best time of my life.
You're like, oh, no.
No, was it?
You haven't gotten better since then?
Oh, no.
Yeah, there's that great line in the great Gatsby about Tom Buchanan that he achieved
the kind of limited excellence at the age of 19 that smacked of anti-climax.
That was a good one of the ultimate burns in all of literature.
I think that you should be able to look back on your past self with a measure of cringe.
But I think in order to do that, it actually helps to kind of delete your digital footprint as you go.
Because otherwise you find yourself having, like, somebody will retweet something you said 10 years ago and be like, I can't believe that John Green thinks this.
And then I'll be like, but I don't.
That was past John.
Past John was an idiot.
We all know that.
The word that gives me strength with stuff like that is curate.
Yeah.
Curate.
Curate your digital footprint.
And then it feels so responsible.
and like, oh, so mature, so sophisticated to curate, and not, like, go through and, like, oh, that, I can't believe I said that shit.
Okay, delete, delete.
I just wouldn't want to, like, get obsessed with it because that in itself is also a form of, like, self-projection.
And that's your current version of this is like, okay, so me today thinks that this is the version of me I want to put out there.
But, like, I don't know, what pieces of that are going to be cringe in the future as well.
I definitely.
Just save it and then delete it.
Save it and delete it and then give it to the right before you die,
write a will that gives it all to your local historical society.
So we've got save and delete.
We've got curate and we've got to just believe that everything you've ever done
is not cringe and great.
I just tell you how wonderful it would be to reach a point in society
where like a great grandmother pulls their kids in and she's like,
these are all the tweets.
I've saved out, I printed them out.
And she just has a big, like, scrapbook full of printed out tweets.
Oh, here's one I said, Lord, wouldn't say that now.
You know what I mean, kids?
We were real mad.
Yeah, we didn't know any better.
It was a different time.
In 2012, as you can see in this screenshot, Taylor Swift liked one of my tweets about Taylor Swift.
It was the best day of my life.
I don't know why I kept this one up
about how Elon Musk was smart.
That's pretty cringe.
A lot about crypto.
Oh, that's the monkey I bought.
He was not a cheap monkey.
That's why you couldn't go to college.
If I had just bought me, an S&P 500 index fund, it all would have been okay.
Anyways, back to the cybermines.
That's what I assume is happening at that point.
They're working in cyber minds for the real odds.
Yes, yes, yes, right.
Our old tweet scrapbooks are all we have.
Now we must burn them for fuel.
The future is going to be great, guys.
Yeah, it's going to be terrific.
All right, it's time for the all-important news from Mars and AFC Wimbledon.
I'll go first.
AFC Wimbledon played a game yesterday in the Carabout Cup, Hank.
The Carabow Cup is one of the...
winner go home competitions. The great thing about this particular cup is that if you win
in the second round, you could potentially play the likes of Chelsea or Arsenal or Tottenham
and make like a million dollars just by playing the game. This is football. This is football
football. So for a team like us. And I and me, I was thinking about tennis. A lot of people
do. But in fact, it is a football team. Or is they called in Europe big ping pong. Big ping pong.
The biggest of the ping pongs. Yeah. And instead of having a pass.
all you have is your feet in your head.
I love that.
So, AFC Wimbledon played Gillingham or possibly Gillingham.
We're not in the same league as them anymore, but we still got to play them, which always
makes me happy because I don't know how to pronounce their team name.
And we tied 1-1, but then we won on penalties thanks to two heroic saves by our goalkeeper
Joe McDonnell.
Are they in the league below you or above you?
They're in the lead below us.
Well, that's not a great side.
It's not great that we had to go to penalties to beat them.
But the important thing is that we beat them, which means that we're now in the second round draw,
which means it's probably going to be someone boring like Bromley, you know?
But it could be somebody thrilling like Chelsea.
And again, we don't want Chelsea at home.
That doesn't do us any good.
Then we just lose that game.
We want away so we can play at their stadium in front of 50,000 people and get half that money.
That's the news from AFC Wimbledon.
What's the news from Mars?
In news from Mars, back in 2023, a rich person unidentified.
rich person, purchased a 54-pound stone that was found in the Sahara Desert.
And is it Niger, John?
Is that how I pronounced this word?
Yeah, or Niger.
Yeah.
Well, I'm American.
Okay.
It was found in the Sahara Desert in Niger, and it turned out to be the largest
Martian meteorite ever found.
Wow.
Oh, wait, hold on.
Yes.
Without knowing it was a meteorite, a rich person paid a bunch of money for a big,
Rock?
Sorry.
I said that sentence incorrectly, and thank you for calling me out on it.
It was found in 2023, and then it was recently auctioned off separately.
I thought that it was, listen, I've seen those home tours of rich people when they're like,
this is an old barn door.
I don't know why.
That would have been cooler.
That would have been cooler.
If it was just like, there was a big rock, and I thought, that's a big rock.
And ever since I've been a kid, I wanted a big rock, so I bought the big rock.
And it turned out, it was a meteor.
It's a Martian meteor rate.
A Martian meteorite means a piece of Mars that flew off Mars and hit Earth.
Yeah.
You should put it back.
Well, that's actually not.
Who knows what it let out?
Yeah.
That's Mars is rock.
Something escaped.
So somehow this ended up at a private gallery in Italy.
Sciences from the University of Florence had a chance to look at it.
And then it was sold to Sotheby's oxygen for $5.3 million.
Whoa.
Both the buyer and the seller remain.
unnamed. So two anonymous
Richie Richies. It was
both me. I should have made this now.
I found a big rock and then I
sold it to myself and here's the thing that
they don't tell you about winning an auction that you're selling.
You don't got to pay yourself back.
The next highest bid was
20 bucks.
And I thought I was
going to drive the price up
and I jumped way too hot.
Yeah. I recognize that now.
Do we have $30?
$5.3 million. 5.3 million.
And when I'm looking at the other guy, and he's like, no.
You got it? You were still in?
Definitely not.
That's why I never revealed it was me.
I was so embarrassed.
The question, though, it turns out is how did this rock get from Niger to Italy and was that
above board?
And now the government of Niger is looking into this.
I'm going to take the under on whether it was above board.
How did a thing that ended up in a European country, was it legal, huh?
Yeah.
Well, Sotheby says that everything was done by the book.
Of course they do.
What book?
And not for their book, Travis.
Their book.
Their book.
Our book.
The Obedevich says, it's cool.
Don't worry about it.
It's a lot.
It's many pages, but it's only two words.
Yeah.
So there is a murky world of who gets to own meteorites.
In the U.S., rocks that fall in private land belong to the property owner.
Niger has laws that could establish rare mineral.
minerals as a cultural artifact that the government of the country owns or all the people
together of the country owned.
But they'll have to prove that that applies to this rock to get the meteorite back.
Wow.
What a world.
What a world.
We got a big piece of Mars.
And we can't do any science on it because it's sitting in some rich guy's house.
Yeah.
I said I was sorry.
All right.
Well, Travis, Hank, thank you so much for ponding with me.
Travis, it's been great to have you as our secret third brother.
It's been an absolute delight.
I appreciate you making the time and committing to the bit.
Oh, thank you.
If there's one thing I know how to do, is commit to the bet.
That's what I love.
If you want to send us questions, it's Hank and John at gmail.com.
We don't have a podcast without him.
This podcast is edited by Chris Angico.
It's mixed by Joseph Tunamettish.
Our marketing specialist is Brooke Shotwell.
It's produced by Rosiana Hals, Rojas, and Hannah West.
Our executive producer is Seth Radley.
Our editorial assistant is Deboki Truck Rivardi.
The music you're hearing now, and at the beginning of the podcast, is by the Great Gunnarola.
And as they say in our hometown, don't forget to be awesome.