Ear Biscuits with Rhett & Link - What Would Happen to GMM if One of Us Dies? | Ear Biscuits Ep. 434
Episode Date: August 19, 2024A tragic accident has happened and one of the guys has perished! Naturally, the first thing on everyone’s mind – what happens to GMM? In this episode, Rhett & Link discuss the morbid situation of... one of them dying prematurely, as well as what happened to their North Carolina accents. Plus, a little drop in from ChatGPT to give us knowledge… and emotional support? Get 50% off a lifetime membership at https://rosettastone.com/ear To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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[♪ theme music playing. Funky music playing. Funky music playing.]
Welcome to Ear Biscuits, the podcast where two lifelong friends talk about life for a long time. I'm Link.
And I'm Rhett. This week at the round table of dim lighting,
we're going to be answering some of your questions,
including just a little tease here.
What are we going to do if one of us passes?
Yeah.
The baton of life.
What would we do within the context
of Good Mythical Morning?
Yeah.
If one of us dies.
Yeah.
So we might get morbid or maybe we'll crack the code.
Why don't we start with something more lighthearted?
Okay, yeah.
Let's hear a voicemail.
Hey, Rhett and Link, it's Graceland again, I'm the caller who left a voicemail about the dying of Rhett's hair
Since y'all were asking I wanted to say that I'm from Kentucky not Alabama
Okay
I'll try not to be offended
But I wanted to thank y'all for the compliments on my accent
It just made me so happy because I did not realize
that I sounded like Colonel Sanders
until I heard it play back.
So I appreciate y'all not calling me Hick.
This leads me to asking about your all's lack
of the North Carolina accent.
Link, your dad just has the most beautiful Southern dialect.
So I'm just wondering where y'all went
and if you're happy that it's gone.
Okay, thanks again, love you guys.
Our lack of the North Carolina accent, I like it a lot.
I like it so much. Gracelyn, thank you for gracing us
with your wonderful voice once again.
We might play all your voicemails.
It's just as good as it was the first time.
Kentucky, not Alabama.
I gotta say, I'm not good at picking up on the distinct differences of Southern accents.
There are some people who are really good at that.
Yeah.
And would be like, why would you guys say Alabama?
She's obviously Kentucky.
Speaking of North Carolina,
before we get into why we do or don't talk the way
that we do, we had somebody,
who was it that was telling us about,
there's a documentary, either it's a documentary
or it's just a YouTube video,
where a guy is going through,
this mic was selling some of this.
Oh, mic was selling, it's a woman
who's a dialect expert who goes through different dialects.
In North Carolina, as we have said many times,
you know, it's a special place, not just because we came from there,
but there's something about the geography of North Carolina
and sort of the mountains to the Piedmont to the beach
that has created this striation of all kinds of things.
Pockets and layers of accents.
Not culturally, barbecue sauces, as we've talked about,
but also these different accents.
And it might be one of the most linguistically unique places
in the United States for sure, maybe the world,
and where people talk in these very distinct ways
that even us, from being from North Carolina,
wouldn't necessarily be able to pick up on.
We can, oh, that's different,
but I don't necessarily know that I would know
that this person is from the mountains,
this person is from the beach,
but they are super distinct.
Yeah, for me it's like if you have family members
that live in different parts,
and they get together for the family reunions,
I'm like, well, you sound like my Aunt Virginia.
You sound like my Uncle Willie. You sound like my Uncle Willie.
Uncle Willie.
Uncle Willie's from Virginia.
Oh, he's drunk again.
My Aunt Virginia.
Uncle Willie's drunk again.
You don't know about my Uncle Willie, do you?
Is he drunk again?
Come on, I was talking about real people.
Oh!
Come on, Rhett.
Did I get too close to Uncle Willie's home?
Well, he passed away recently.
Okay, so was, how?
He wasn't a drinker.
He wasn't, okay.
He was one of Nanny's brothers.
Okay.
Good for him.
I mean, for not drinking, not for passing away.
But his dad was.
I knew I was getting close to something.
Yeah.
Anyway, that's how, I don't know, it's like,
wow, I get together with these people
and they sound different.
They got some needles down there at the beach, you know?
Not hoitoitas.
Hoitoitas is really specific,
it's like a island or something.
But the long eyes, that's something that starts happening
when you like something, you like it a lot.
That wasn't something that, there were certain long eyes
that we would do, but then we never said bright light.
Like even you when you were your most southern.
Bright, bright, bright light.
How would you have said it?
Light.
How would you have said it in like third grade?
I might have said light. I might have said light. But bright light. I remember you have said it? Light. How would you have said it in like third grade? I might have said light.
I might have said light.
But bright light.
I remember my mom specifically who,
you've heard mom and dad talk
and she's made appearances on Good Mythical Morning.
She has a very strong Southern accent,
but it's a strong Southern accent in the context
of the world and the United States
and people kinda being like,
oh, she talks like she's from the South.
But in her mind and also in my mind growing up,
she talks so much less Southern
than the people that we were getting to know
when we had moved from Georgia to California
and then to North Carolina.
And that she would be like,
that she would make fun of the way people talked.
You know what I'm saying? Like because- She made fun of the way people talked. Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
Like because.
She made fun of the way that I talked.
To your face.
As a kid.
Yeah.
Yeah, she didn't make fun of me.
She thought it was cute and amusing.
She would want you to talk like that.
Yeah.
So I had it pretty bad.
And then when we like dig up these old cassette tapes
of us in middle school,
we have an old episode of Good Mythical Morning
where we played the cassette tapes that I still had.
And we were talking so,
our voices are so high.
Well, we were doing an impression of Minnie Pearl
at one point. At one point but.
But no, by middle school,
I would say we were basically the same level.
Like when I came from California,
I talked like I was from California.
Once she was caught.
But very quickly because of the age that you move,
it has such a influence on the way you talk
and you kinda lessened it a little bit.
We kinda met in the middle and we basically talked
like everyone that we knew growing up talked like
in high school, middle school, high school.
Yeah.
And then.
It was a strong accent.
We began, it began to be chipped away.
So let's talk about.
Going to college chips it away.
But I wouldn't say that we don't have a Southern accent.
Some people, if you're from the South,
you don't think we have a Southern accent, maybe.
But if you're just from the world,
from somewhere else, you're like,
when people do impressions of us,
they do a Southern accent.
Like if Smosh, if the people over at Smosh
decide that they're going to do a Rhett and Link impersonation, you know,
they're gonna put on long hair and a beard for me
and use a Southern accent.
They're gonna put on glasses and a wig for you
and use a Southern accent.
Because we have a little bit of a Southern accent.
I think that the happier we get,
the more Southern comes out.
That's true.
And the matter.
And more anything.
Yeah, when you really get more expressive,
the more it comes out.
Or if you're talking with someone like my dad
on Dispatches from Earl Beach,
I'm sure it comes out more over there.
But when I'm just calm, cool, and collected,
this is how I talk.
But if I get excited, it's gonna start to get more southern.
Making videos and watching them back,
watching ourselves back,
That does it.
is the biggest influence.
You can't hear yourself again and again and again.
And you're like, man, I say that that way.
This is how I sound.
You know, you get over that,
the thing that everybody experiences,
especially pre-social media, video phone days of like,
oh my gosh, that's how I sound.
I sound like Colonel Sanders.
That's how I sound, you know?
But you get over that quickly and you move to,
well, how do I start to change that?
But it's- It wasn't a calculated decision.
It's not a conscious process.
It was a subconscious decision.
It is, let's just be honest,
for anyone who takes the edge off of their regional accent,
and this happens to people from the Midwest,
happens to people from New York,
it happens to anyone who has a distinct accent
or dialect in the United States.
You do it because subconsciously,
there's a little bit of shame around sounding
like you come from a certain place.
There is.
Okay, I mean, shame, that's a strong word.
Can it just be judgment or like you're trying to...
Slight embarrassment?
I'm just saying, I'm not saying it's a good thing.
Or just an understanding and awareness
that it is gonna shape how people interpret
you as a person.
I think that there is something,
maybe shame is too strong of a word,
but what I'm saying is that I think
that we have a natural aversion,
or some people have a natural aversion,
you and I are two of those people,
from people immediately being able to tell where you're from.
And I'm not saying I know why.
And I think some of it has to do with the fact that
you're presenting yourself as,
you know, what we're presenting yourself as,
what we were presenting ourselves as,
we weren't presenting ourselves as guys from the South.
It wasn't like being from the South
was not a conscious part of whatever we were projecting
as a comedic personality.
Right.
Like if you look at a Theo Vaughn,
all right, this is part of my persona.
I'm leaning into this.
And I also think times have changed.
Yeah, if we were just starting out now,
we'd probably see it as an asset.
Yeah, isn't it weird?
Again, no conscious calculation of any of this stuff.
Just afraid that people might think
you're not quite as smart as them.
Or as well-rounded
or have as much cultural exposure
or be associated with a certain set of beliefs
that they might disagree with.
There's all these things floating around
in the Southern stigma.
I mean, when I go back to North Carolina now
and I talk to my relatives who are kids,
nieces, nephews or whatever,
now none of them grew up as far out of town as we did,
but no one has a Southern accent.
They all just-
Oh, really?
No, none of my nieces and nephews have a Southern accent. They all just- Oh, really? No, none of my nieces and nephews have a Southern accent.
Okay.
My nephew, like Christy's sister,
and like, so that, you know, I mean, well, first of all,
Christy still has a strong Southern accent,
and it's like very Kenston.
And, you know, she's never been on a lot of videos
or recordings and she's been happy with the way
that she sounds.
And I think if that's not the reason she's not
on recordings because she don't want people
to hear her accent, I think she's very comfortable with it.
Jessie also has a strong southern accent.
Very different.
And it, I don't know, I feel like she has a broader range
of like where her voice goes, but Christy's is pretty,
like every time we talk to a stranger,
they always ask, where are we from?
Every single time that they have an interaction with.
If Jessie's with me,
her accent is not as strong as Christy's,
but sometimes I'm like, I don't even hear,
I don't hear Jessie's Southern accent at all,
but people never ask where I'm from,
people always ask where she's from.
Yeah.
And then we're like, well, we're from the same place.
Right, that's because we're so self-aware.
There's a personality element to it.
There is a media aspect to it.
There's also a personality aspect to it,
which some people are more likely to be like,
okay, I'm with these people.
I'm going to talk in this way.
And I'm not proud of that aspect of my personality.
I try not to do that maybe as much as I used to.
Chameleon.
But it's, first of all, it's a very Enneagram three thing,
not a positive aspect of Enneagram three.
Well, there's a positive aspect,
which is like,
you can make people like you, right?
You can relate better, whatever, you know.
Politicians tend to do this
if you watch them at different places
based on wherever they're at at the time, right?
They adopt a little bit of the accent.
They lean into, who am I talking to here?
And so obviously it raises flags of,
is this person genuine?
And so I'm not, it's not like,
I think there's something super admirable
about someone who's just like,
I always talk this way regardless of where I am.
But also not just because I am one of these people,
but also because I understand
that the process is not a conscious thing.
It's not like, oh, I'm going into this situation.
I'm going to talk differently.
Like the fact that I adopted a strong Southern accent
very quickly after having adopted a super SoCal accent
when I was five years old, which is crazy.
I moved to California when I was like four,
it's four, five and six.
And we've got recordings of me and Cole
and the way we talked was like two kids
from Thousand Oaks, California in the early 80s.
Dude, rad bra.
Into- Like that?
No, it was just like- Not surfer.
It wasn't, no, I don't even think I could do
an impersonation of it, but it didn't sound Southern at all.
My mom was very upset about it.
I remember her like maybe even to the point of crying
about the fact that her kids weren't gonna have
a Southern accent.
But then to move to North Carolina
and immediately assimilate, I just, I am an assimilator.
You know what I'm saying?
Like I'm more likely to be like,
okay, I'm going to talk that way now
because I'm with these people.
And it's not a conscious process.
But now I feel like, first of all,
it happens much more readily when you're younger.
When you get older, I kind of think if I were to move,
it doesn't matter where I go now,
I'm probably gonna always talk this way.
If I were to move to Europe,
I probably wouldn't get a European accent. I probably would just talk this way. If I were to move to Europe, I probably wouldn't get a European accent.
I probably would just talk the way that I talk now
because your brain changes
and you become less receptive to like.
I think that's true for me unless I move back home.
I mean, I'd start to slip back into it.
Maybe I'm, I think I'm slipping back into it more on camera.
I think we're more comfortable and it's less polished.
So I'm proud of it.
We do a lot more of just us being ourselves versus maybe early videos,
before GMM especially, like really early days.
Yeah, thinking about where I'm gonna put my hands.
It was all, everything was superscripted.
Right. But you look at all that, man, I need to figure out where I'm gonna put my hands.
I just saw where I put my hands and I didn't like it.
I mean, it's not like they were down my pants or anything.
It's just, it was awkward.
That's all I'm saying.
But if I call customer service
and try to get something that I need taken care of,
you best believe I'm gonna be on my best
customer service voice behavior.
I love listening to my mom talk to somebody on the phone.
Like a customer service or?
Because the way, and I've heard your mom do this too,
not necessarily a customer service.
Sure.
But the words that they choose to change to sound
what they think is sophisticated, but then all the other words that don't get changed,
the words that get changed are...
I have a query for you about my phone warranty.
It's like, if my mom, she would be like,
my phone number is 555.
And I'm like, hold on, Mom, that's not how you say,
that's not how you say five.
They'll understand you if you just stick with the way you say it.
Your mom's got a television phone number?
Yeah, five, five, five.
My mom's number is five, five, five, five, five, five, five, five.
You didn't know?
I didn't know that.
I thought it was in your phone.
That's cool.
Man, I hate it when you gotta say the number on a television show
and they gotta say the 555,
that really bumps me.
Yeah.
Oh, this is make-believe.
They don't do this much anymore.
A lot of times they just get a Google number now.
Oh, huh.
Like what's what we do a lot of times.
555, no?
Google number.
I'm proud of my accent.
I'm bringing it back out.
I'm gonna just lay it out there.
That wasn't it.
That was never my accent.
I think your accent is what you're doing right now.
My accent is what I'm doing right now.
Okay, there it is.
It's a little bit of an accent.
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Ear Biscuits is brought to you by BetterHelp. I don't have many self-care non-negotiables,
but one that I do have is I never miss my stretching
in the morning.
I cannot be myself if I do not stretch.
If I don't stretch, I think that I'm gonna get injured
and then you're gonna say, you should have stretched.
Yeah, well, whatever it takes, man.
Yeah, and I think another non-negotiable for me
is therapy, of course, which leads right into
what we're talking about here.
When your schedule is packed with kids' activities,
big work projects, and more,
it's easy to let your priorities slip.
Even when we know what makes us happy,
it's hard to make time for it.
But when you feel like you have no time for yourself,
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All right, let's hear another VM.
Hey Rhett and Link and everyone at Mythical.
This is Hope from Indiana.
I'm a surgical technologist.
I just wanted to pop in and say that
it's not completely unrealistic that Link's
uvula got removed, got burned off during surgery.
Electroquater is used a lot during operations, safely of course.
But yeah, love you guys so much.
Everyone at Mythical, keep doing what you do.
Thank you. See, I told you, man.
My UV-Ling used to be so big.
That's not a strong endorsement.
What? What?
I think the exact words were, it is not completely unrealistic.
I mean, like, that's...
If I'm a betting man and somebody says,
well, it's not completely unrealistic that a bear could serve you a ham sandwich today. And I would be like, well, but it's probably not
gonna happen.
But it happened to me, man. It's my story.
No, this is a, I will say that this leads me to believe that it is not completely
unrealistic that this was just all in your imagination.
What? Huh?
No, I'm, yeah, it is possible.
No, it happened.
It definitely lends credibility to your story.
I will say that.
Okay. I don't know what it's gonna take, but...
Let me see it again.
Let's get some more voicemail.
It's short, man.
That thing used to be...
How long was it?
Oh, it was so long.
It was draping down. I mean, about halfway used to be. How long was it? Oh, it was so long. It was draping down.
I mean, about halfway to my tongue.
Do you recall when you were looking back at your uvula
I told you all this. after that,
you would see it, it was literally like,
oh, they burned it.
Like, did you remember seeing it burned
or is it just suddenly shorter?
It was shorter.
Hmm, I don't know.
It's like completely under it.
I was put under, I came back out.
Everything back there was like burnt.
It was like mortar back there.
Do you think they did it on purpose?
They were like, oh, this one's too long.
Maybe, maybe they did me a favor.
Like this one's definitely too long.
Yeah, yeah, I think so.
He might choke on it.
Yeah. Yeah. And I thank him for it.
But apparently Rhett is not convinced,
so I need another voicemail.
It's like I need a voicemail from my actual ENT at the time.
Yeah, from the actual doctor.
I mean, if this was a court case, I would just say,
I have not been convinced beyond a reasonable doubt.
But now we might have a hung jewelry.
Jewelry.
We may have hung jewelry in my mind.
Ha ha ha ha.
I don't know.
Jenna, you still got your uvula?
I do.
There's something you're missing now, though. You recently underwent a surgery.
Yeah, there's something. Well, it's something that wasn't supposed to be there.
Right.
Yeah, I had a cyst removed from my ovaries, so different...
From both of them?
From one ovary, but then when they were in there, they discovered a lot of endometriosis.
I don't know what that means. endometriosis and some of the endometriosis is like scarring that happens as you like
release your, you know, eggs and stuff.
Oh, really?
Yeah, it's really, it's extremely painful.
It's a scarring process from the natural process of shedding unfertilized eggs?
Mm-hmm, yeah.
What?
It's not great. It explained the excessive amount of pain I was in,
because it was also like some scarring.
I'm glad I went nice.
Yeah, some of the scarring was on my, like, a uterine nerve of mine.
So...
Ah, yes.
Yeah.
What did they do for that?
They burned it out. Speaking of burning it all.
There you go.
Yeah, they did laparoscopic and removed the cyst, and then the doctor,
when they're in there,
of course found the endometriosis
cause that's not something that shows up
on ultrasound or anything.
You actually have to have surgery for it to be discovered.
So they cauterized the scarring.
Yeah, they burned all that away, yeah.
Well, doesn't that make more scarring?
It makes the better scarring.
Controlled scarring.
And what about the nerve?
Do they burn a nerve?
No, no, no.
My nerve, it's feeling good.
But you are feeling better.
Yes.
You're not in pain.
Only the normal amount of monthly, yeah.
The normal amount of monthly.
It's not every day,
thinking I'm gonna throw up
cause things hurt so bad.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm glad to hear it.
I'm doing great.
So how big was the incision?
It was laparoscopic, so super teeny.
Through your lap?
Yeah, yeah, specifically.
Is that what that means?
Laparoscopic just means that it's like two,
it's like tiny incisions,
and then they like, they like kind of inflate the area,
but yeah, there's like a little tiny incision
that went into my belly button
and then another teeny one closer to like my,
closer to my, you know, ovary, uterus, lady parts areas.
They like do it, one hole and they make a space
and then another hole for the thing to go in
and do the surgery.
Yeah.
So they blow air in there?
Uh-huh, and then they've got little teeny cameras and stuff.
What, and you're under?
And I am under, I was under.
Okay, how long was it?
The whole procedure was only about 45 minutes,
and then I just had to hang out
until the drugs wore off enough for...
That's when you left us a voicemail
that you were okay.
That I left you no way to go.
Yes.
Did you get to keep the cysts or see it at least?
Oh yeah, I got photos.
I got photos.
Oh, God.
You don't wanna see that.
I didn't like seeing them.
Describe, like was it in his hand?
No. Look at these.
No, he just says.
He waited for it to wake up.
Yeah, he's like cut off.
Was it in a jar?
No.
He described the photo
because I don't want. He took the photos
inside my body.
Oh.
He took the photos inside my body.
And then I also have the ultrasound
of when they first found the cyst.
And I was like, hey, look at that.
How big was it?
Four centimeters.
Wow.
Yeah.
Well, that's bigger than a golf ball.
No, four centimeters.
I don't know if it's that, maybe.
I don't know, I feel like-
Ping pong ball?
I think it's about the size of a golf ball.
Okay, sure, let's, I don't think it was.
Don't think that's four centimeters, but you know.
This is why we have.
I'm glad to.
Let's ask.
I mean, but who knows?
Like I was enduring that pain for a really long time.
How many centimeters across is a golf ball?
Too high of a pain tolerance is what it is.
For real.
It sounds like you might be reflecting
on a difficult experience you've been through.
Oh!
Talking about something like enduring pain
or making a tough decision.
See, it's been, who was listening to me?
That can be really challenging.
I'm here if you wanna share more
about what you're feeling or going through.
Thank you so much. To answer your question,
a standard golf ball has a diameter
of about 4.27 centimeters.
Oh my God, really? Over 168 inches. It was a golf ball? If you of about 4.27 centimeters. Oh my god, really? It was a golf ball?
If you need any more information...
What the fuck?
ChatGPT tried to be your therapist before answering your very simple question.
This is like the time right when I discovered this that you could talk to
ChatGPT like this. I was like kind of annoying Jessie
with it a little bit.
And we were about to go out on a date
and we were talking about something else
that we were kind of having a little bit of an argument
about and then I was just kind of being a little bit
of an ass and like asking questions to chat at GBT
but she was doing this thing where she was just continuing
to talk while I was asking her questions.
And so then I started saying things like,
what do you think I should do?
What should I say to my wife right now?
And it was like, or what should I say to Jessie right now?
And chat GBT was like, it sounds like Jessie
is a little upset.
You might need to give her some space.
Just because it was listening to our conversation
and it's like, oh, it sounds like you've been
through something difficult.
By the way, a golf ball is 4.1, 4.2 centimeters.
It sounds like you didn't know that you had a golf ball
on your ovary.
Wait, I.
How are you dealing with this information?
Now you can say I had a golf ball sized cyst removed for me.
Damn, now I'm like questioning. I should've given it to you in Imperial, I had a golf ball sized cyst removed for me. Damn, now I'm like questioning.
I should have given it to you in Imperial, I guess.
Now I'm questioning everything. Was it that?
Well, cause then that makes me think of like, how big are ovaries then?
Not that big.
That's what I thought.
Wait, am I?
I'm so confused about my own body now.
How big are ovaries?
Maybe I'm mixing up centimeters and millimeters.
The ovaries are typically about the size of an almond.
Wait!
In adult women, they are usually around 3 to 5 centimeters in length, about 1.2 to 2 inches.
Centimeters?
1.5 to 3 centimeters in width, about 0.6 to 1.2 inches.
And 1.5 centimeters in thickness, about 0.4 to 0.6 inches.
That's bigger than an almond.
However, their size can vary depending on factors such as age,
hormonal changes, and individual anatomy.
What kind of almonds are you talking about that big?
Yeah. Okay, let's not.
Here's the deal. That was...
It was bigger than your ovary, though, most likely.
Or it was the same size.
About the same. Yeah, about the same.
I do remember seeing that in the ultrasound, but I didn't think about how
large my ovary was. I was just like, oh, it's the size.
It's about covering my ovary. That's crazy.
But I didn't think...
So maybe it was like a long side of it.
Maybe it's a, yeah, it's not like a perfect circumference golf ball kind of situation.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it might have been a little flatter. It might have been a little oblong.
But that does, that certainly explains, uh...
Yeah. The pain.
Yeah, on top of the endometriosis, yeah.
Yeah.
Which we didn't even know about.
So can you tell if it's, um, if the endometriosis treatment has helped?
It's still early days, I guess. I'm watching too much Love Island. Early days.
I've got a follow-up in like nine months, but as of now, it's feeling much better.
Look at that.
Yeah.
Yay, me!
We got the old Jenna back.
Congratulations, Jenna.
Thank you to my doctors who listened to my pain
and did something.
Yeah, I'm glad you were able to get that done
before your trip as well, I know that was.
Oh, you had to talk them into it.
I had to talk them into it.
I had to talk them into it.
What's the takeaway here?
As you guys discuss this, I'm gonna do something
I don't often do.
I'm gonna go 10-1, as they say in the industry.
I'm going to go urinate.
Really?
Yeah, I'm drinking.
I thought you did right before.
I'm drinking a lot of water today.
Okay, I don't, okay, fine.
And I'm drinking too much in the tea,
and then I've got liquid death here.
You need to stretch your bladder.
I'm like a streamer, I gotta pee, I gotta pee.
What he would always say to me,
you need to stretch your bladder. That's totally correct streamer, I gotta pee, I gotta pee. What he would always say to me, you need to stretch your bladder.
It's fully stretched.
Don't lock yourself out,
because I don't want to get up.
He says, which means I'll get up.
So what was the takeaway here?
I mean, the thing that I have learned about healthcare
is that you have to be your number one advocate.
You gotta advocate for yourself.
Cause you didn't immediately,
tell me what you were alluding to
that you had to talk them into.
I did, yeah, it was a bit of a struggle
cause well, a lot of times when some,
you have an ovarian cyst or like a cyst
in that part of your body,
you have an ovarian cyst or like a cyst in that part of your body. A lot of times your gynecologist will have you wait another cycle to seek,
because a lot of times they do take care of themselves.
So when I first initially went, they made me wait a full month and then come back.
And that wasn't fun, and obviously it didn't get better.
Because you were already in pain when they found.
Yeah, I had been in pain for about a solid two weeks straight
at that point, outside of my normal period days.
And I was like, that's weird, that's suspicious.
So you did the month thing that they asked for.
I did the month thing that they asked for
and then immediately set an appointment.
Well, I had a later appointment set
and then I asked for an earlier one
because it wasn't a full month,
it was like six weeks later they had me come in.
And then I was like, yeah, this pain isn't getting better.
I'm coming in at the four week mark.
And then so they had me end up meeting
with another gynecologist who would be my surgeon
since that seemed to be the route that might be happening.
So it's best to just go ahead and have me meet
with the surgeon as well who's also gynecologist.
But I don't understand why that would make you hate Rhett so much.
I don't know. Oh, he's back.
Oh! I was like, what are you talking about? Sorry, I didn't get the...
I wasn't in on that. My bad. We didn't say anything about you.
Or maybe she's covering it up.
Funny! Funny!
So you advocated for yourself, and you got the surgery.
When you went back in that month later,
it was with the surgeon and then he was or she was like.
Yeah, he looked at it and then talked with me about my pain
and was like, well, we should get you in for surgery.
I was like, yay.
But then that wasn't the end of it.
But then that was a whole ordeal because of insurance.
Because I needed like
Authorization even though the doctor's office gave authorization
It still had to go to my insurance then insurance approval and then a doctor's office had to get
Wait to receive the approval from the insurance before they could schedule anything for me. So it was just this whole rigmarole
That was that took about three more weeks of me calling
and being super stressed out and still being in pain and being on with interns and being
like, can you just please?
Wow.
And trying not to cry on the phone with all these people who it's not their fault.
That's a good phone voice. If you gotta cry.
It's usually me pulling it all together and be like, okay, I know this isn't your
fault, I just need someone to get this through now so that I can then tell my
doctor and I need this to be scheduled and I'm just in so much pain, I just really need some,
so like that was, that's usually my phone voice
when I'm trying not to freak out.
That's a good one.
Yeah, that's very effective.
I'm about to cry, I just need you to do this for me.
Yeah.
Yeah, and then it took about.
It still took three weeks.
Yeah, it still took three weeks to schedule it.
I ended up having to cancel a trip to see my family,
which I've since rescheduled there. They're gonna see me
But yeah got it in thankfully
And the recovery was so easy
Recover I was like I was I was in the office like three days later and everyone thought I was insane
And I was like honestly I feel better
Yeah, it was one of those things where I was like, the recovery from the surgery,
like the little bit of pain I have from the incisions
is so much less than the pain I was in before
that I was like, I can, I don't know what you're talking
about, I can walk up straight and not like,
think I'm gonna puke because things hurt so bad.
I'm not like scarfing down all all the pain meds I can.
Anywho, I'm doing wonderful.
All right, glad to hear it.
Yes, yes.
Let's hit another VM.
Yes.
Hi, Rhett and Link.
This is Ashley calling from Minnesota.
Kind of a morbid question, and maybe it's been asked before,
but I was really curious.
What would happen to Good Mythical Morning if one of you were to die?
Obviously, like prematurely, because you know, I, maybe I'll do this until you're a hundred
years old, but in that circumstance, what would you do?
Is that something you've discussed?
I know kind of morbid, but was just kinda wondering
what would happen.
Thanks a lot, love you guys, bye.
So one of us died and all she cares about is
what's gonna happen to Good Mythical Morning?
Well, you know, I'm sure she's concerned about
what would happen to our families and our friendship.
Well, our friendship would be over.
Maybe not, maybe not.
There is a way.
I will haunt you if I have the opportunity to.
I mean, there's a couple of different routes
that we could go down with this.
And I think that one of them we can talk about the AI,
but I don't wanna start with the AI route.
No.
I don't even wanna talk about it at all.
The fact that you might die unexpectedly?
No.
Oh, AI.
Yeah.
Okay, well I might, but all right.
So one of us died, and...
It seems like a nightmare on top of a nightmare, because you gotta think about
communication. When do I tell everybody that you've died?
That's a good question. And vice versa.
Is that a written statement?
Ooh. Ooh.
Or is that... it's hard to monetize a written statement.
I mean, I gotta think about your family now.
Like, now I'm supporting your family too.
You know?
No. It's built into... we've talked about this on the podcast before.
In the short term, I guess.
That we have company insurance policies
where if you die,
Christy gets a good amount of money and vice versa.
No, well yeah, hold on.
If I die, does Jessie get money?
No. Do you get money? Yes.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. What I'm saying is that there's not a scenario
in which you have to support my wife or I support your wife
if you die. That's taken care of.
That's not part of the equation.
But they still have an interest in Mythical.
In Mythical, yeah.
Right.
They can still benefit from Mythical.
Right, so here I am running Mythical,
and you're dead, and she and your family
have an ongoing interest in it,
because, I mean, you have contributed to its success,
so it's continued success we've arranged
so that your family will share in that
even though you're dead. And vice versa.
Yeah.
So it is kind of on me a little bit of, you know, what's gonna flow to your family.
But what I'm saying is that...
So that's the only reason I'm talking about monetization of your death,
for your family's sake.
What I'm saying is that...
Okay, what I'm saying is that it is such,
it is the case that if one of us died,
technically, you wouldn't, like if you just decided, you know what, Rhett died, I'm just gonna go surf.
Right. You could do that.
Yeah, I could do that.
You could do that. I could do that.
So I don't think talking about that.
I don't think the monetary conversation is interesting.
Uh... To me, it's...
Surfing is interesting.
The entity of Good Mythical Morning, right?
Yeah. All right.
Because that's where it gets really interesting,
because that is the thing that most people know us from.
Most people are fans because of that entry point.
So-
There would certainly be a break.
But to answer your first question about-
Would it ever come back from that break?
When it would be communicated from one of us?
In the first, probably in the first eight hours.
I think it would be a statement.
Yeah, but it wouldn't be a video.
Yeah.
We don't typically, like,
No, you don't wanna make a video.
Like, I mean, I watched these things play out
in just the influencer creator world,
where people make videos about all kinds of things.
And I just almost always think to myself,
I don't think this is a good choice. I don't think that-
We never do that type of thing.
No.
So I don't think we would,
we would not start it for that, right?
No.
There would be a statement, and then there would be-
Unless my career changes
and I become one of those people.
You know?
So after some amount of time to be calculated, hopefully never...
Yep.
There would be...
Now if we had episodes banked, let's just say we had a week of episodes.
The episodes would stop.
Okay, if you die, I'll just say what I would do.
If you died... We're giving you a heads up that he's died,
but in terms of Good Mythical Morning,
he's not gonna die until next week,
so just enjoy these episodes.
That was what my statement would say.
You wouldn't be here to edit it.
I'm saying, that's what my statement would say.
Just a heads up, Rhett's no longer with us,
but Good Mythical Morning,
we got five episodes in the can, so he...
I would never do that.
I'm joking, of course.
But I would, those episodes would be seen,
but they would not be seen.
I'd hold on to them.
I would hold on to them.
And then as part of some sort of,
whatever the plan ended up being,
how is it going to continue?
There would be like, all right,
there's X number of episodes that are in the can.
And what do you do with those?
Because they, because, you know, I'm not thinking,
again, this has nothing to do with money.
When I say they're valuable, they're valuable
because it's the last thing that we did together
in terms of Good Mythical Morning.
It's a precious thing.
And so is it like, you know what? They're just for me.
Those five episodes are edited and I get to see them.
And people at Mythical get to see them.
It would be like one of those cinematic scenes where you dig up the film strip
and you're down in your basement and you're in your attic and you're playing
it on a film strip. I can see you.
Right. And it's just like. I can see you. Right.
And it's just like. I can see you doing that.
It's like that Wu-Tang album that the bad guy
ended up buying.
Martin, what's his name?
And like, you know,
yeah, it's just like those episodes just exist
on a hard drive somewhere.
But I think that they would be released.
Okay, but what would happen with the show itself?
Before answering that question, what I can safely say
is after some adequate period of mourning,
I'm not gonna just go surf,
I'm not even that good at surfing.
The only thing I'm actually good at
is making stuff that people watch, right?
So to answer the general question
of what my career would be post-Link Mortem
would be I would keep making stuff.
About me.
It would all be about you.
Good, right.
So I'll just answer that question. about me. It would all be about you. Good. Right. Um, so...
I'll just answer that question.
It's like, I know that for a fact.
But the question of whether or not I would want to continue to make
Good Mythical Morning without you?
You just sit in the middle of the desk.
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...
I would say...
Well, that would be sad, wouldn't it?
I would say...
I mean, it would be sad if you didn't move over.
My knee-jerk reaction to this...
If my seat was just empty.
My knee-jerk reaction to this. If my seat was just empty. My knee-jerk reaction to this is that
I would not continue the show.
I would not continue the show by myself
and I would not continue the show with another person.
Cause when Regis died,
I'm trying to think of some sort of analogy,
some sort of comparison here.
He was no longer the host of whatever the morning show is,
the Regis and Cathy Lee, and then it was Cathy Lee left,
and then Regis brought in Kelly.
It was Regis and Kelly, and now look, it's Kelly.
Yeah, but that was a-
But none of them died.
Yeah, and also the show had already had new hosts. And Reedus might not, I don't even know if Reedus was the first host.
The show had had replacement hosts already.
And sure, there's been times where somebody was sick,
somebody was out of town or whatever,
and we had people fill in for one of us or both of us.
Maybe.
I'm just telling you what I would want to do.
I wouldn't wanna keep doing the show without you.
Well, yeah, it would be too sad.
It may be in my best interest financially
to continue doing the show without you.
But I'm just saying that like,
if I'm telling you what I want to do,
I'd be like, no, I'll do something else.
Like that show was that,
that was the thing that me and Link did.
And it worked because it was me and Link.
And if it, I'm not saying I won't do something
with someone else, but it, not Good Mythical Morning.
Well, I think, seems like you have ideas.
I don't have ideas, so I think what I would do
is I'd take a nice long break and then I'll be,
there might be somebody, nobody could fill your shoes,
but like, I mean, I don't know,
what if I taught Christy into being the host?
Then it's not like, oh my God, look at what he did.
You know?
Something like that.
Yeah.
There could be a weird like, okay,
this is totally different, but like,
I'm not mad at him for doing this.
I don't think you're gonna be able
to talk Christian to doing it.
No, I'm not.
So give me a real idea.
I don't know, Markiplier?
I don't know, he's got a nice voice. It could be great.
I don't really know him that well.
That's the thing. That's the thing.
We could get to know each other.
That would be...
I don't know, man. I don't know.
This is making me feel a little weird.
Um... There's not really a way. But I'm just trying to say hypothetically.
Let's say there's not a way, but then let's start moving to talking about making a way.
You know? AI. We got everything. We got your voice.
Nobody wants that. Nobody wants that.
Oh...
What if I wanted it?
Okay, well let's go with that.
Because what I'm saying is that I'm not gonna work with the AI Link.
You're dead. I'm not asking you to.
Yeah, so I'm just saying that's my half of this equation.
I'm thinking if it could be like really convincing
in every way, like the way that the voice AI is going now,
it's like, just give me the body, man.
Oh, well, there's no doubt that this would be possible
eventually. It would be very possible.
And maybe that would be nice for me, you know,
to live in the past. you'd still have to age,
but I would be in charge of that.
And you'd always age more than me.
Well, it does raise an interesting question
because obviously people are rightly so very sensitive
about using AI for creative endeavors or whatever.
I mean, I've used it today to figure out how big a golf ball was, using AI for creative endeavors or whatever.
I mean, I've used it today to figure out how big a golf ball was,
but I'm almost basically just doing a Google search
is kind of like what it is, right?
But.
And we said we weren't gonna talk about AI.
Well, but you resisted on it.
I couldn't find another way, so go ahead.
But like the- Keep it short.
The Randy Travis of it all, right?
Well, first of all, let me just say that I'm very glad
that I was, it turns out that I think I was very wrong
about what I said at the beginning of the year,
that this was going to be as significant of a year for AI
as it hasn't ended up being,
and I'm very, I'm happy about that.
Well, year isn't over.
The year isn't over?
Yeah, I mean, if you wanna preemptively admit you're wrong,
I'm not gonna stand in your way.
And I got some really good information.
I had a really good conversation
with Science Mike about this.
And we basically kind of outlined all the limitations
and the cost, how cost prohibitive it all is
and energy consuming all this stuff.
And it gave me a little bit of like,
okay, well maybe this isn't as a-
It's gone slow its role.
Maybe it's not as imminent as it seemed
at the beginning of the year.
So I'm glad that that's not happening.
But okay, it will happen where you could generate
a really convincing version of me and vice versa.
The Randy Travis using his voice to make this great song
using this voice model of Randy Travis.
People felt differently about that because they're like,
well, I mean, he can't sing anymore because he had a stroke
and it is his voice and this is what he would have done.
This is a real person.
This is based on a legacy that he created.
Right. So people might be like, well. I on a legacy that he created. Right.
So people might be like, well.
I never heard that by the way.
You never listened to it?
No.
It just sounded like Randy Travis singing a song.
It was beautiful, it was beautiful.
Okay.
Now.
He's still living but he cannot sing anymore.
Correct.
So, in this version,
I mean it's the kind of thing that is like,
people would be like, I don't know, it's the kind of thing that, it's like people would be like,
I don't know, it's better than not having it.
Some people would be like, I don't,
hell no, I'm not gonna watch.
Is it healthy for Link?
I don't know.
Link and AI Rhett.
The reason I- It would be Rat,
but it would be spelled R-H-A-I-T-T.
But I do think the reason that I wouldn't do it, ultimately...
Rhett and Link.
...is because that would be, for me, that would be a decision that was 100%
based on trying to fill some need that people out there had.
Like, they want it, but I don't want that.
The thing that we did together would not be comparable
to the thing that me and AI Link did together.
No.
Even if it was perfect, even if it always responded
in the way that you would have responded,
even that, it would be fun to play around with.
Maybe I'd do like an annual special or something like that.
But for it to be like this thing that I'm constantly
entering into is interacting with this AI thing,
it's like, it feels super literally soulless.
Okay. You know what I mean?
You're making me feel bad for it, but it's gonna make it harder for me to
decide to do it when you die, now that you're telling me all this.
I just think there's a time for something like what we do on Good Mythical Morning
to come to an end.
A time to be born and time to die.
And one of us dying is the time. You know what I'm saying?
Because what we do in Good Mythical Morning is like it's not... And one of us dying is the time. You know what I'm saying?
Because what we do in Good Mythical Morning,
it's like it's not the format of Good Mythical Morning
that makes it Good Mythical Morning.
It's the fact that we're doing it.
Of course, the format and the packaging is like
what makes it sort of like work on the internet in this algorithm.
But it's really just a package, right?
The five days a week and the titles and thumbnails and the eating food and all this
are just this package, this bow that you put on this thing that you open up.
And what is it? It's two guys who've known each other their entire lives.
And if it was just, if it didn't have the packaging,
if it didn't have the format,
then it would just be like this, it would be boring.
It would become boring.
No one would care, no one would click or whatever.
But so then if one of us dies,
then the thing that the packaging is containing is gone.
It just disappears because it was the friendship that was the thing that all
the packaging was containing. So when the friendship goes away,
because somebody dies, that usually ends a friendship.
Then it's kind of like, all right, well, I've got other things I want to do
creatively, sure, but that package is gone.
But I think if Cathy Lee would have died, I think Regis would have brought in, what's her name?
Yeah, but that's not Good Mythical Morning anymore.
They didn't call it, like if it was Regis and Cathy Lee,
then it was Regis and Kelly.
It's a different thing.
And I see Good Mythical Morning.
It was the same thing, format, it was the same thing. Format. It was the same packaging.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Different hosts.
Now...
It's all about how you see it. I can see a little bit of both.
I just don't wanna have to come up with something new, man.
I don't wanna be so sad that you're gone. It'd just be easier just to find a way to...
Well, okay, here's another thing to consider. Because we've already said this before.
If one of us is gonna die, chances are it will die at the same time.
Right? In an accident.
Probably, yeah.
Some sort of accident.
In that case, if the ghost version of Rhett and Link could make decisions
about what happens with Good Mythical Morning at that point,
then I would say,
I feel differently about that.
Let's find two friends who can carry it on.
Passing the torch of Good Mythical Morning
to two new friends feels like a distinctly different exercise
than you having somebody else or me having somebody else.
Yeah.
In some ways it's harder, but it's just the way it is.
And that's just from a like,
Because it is, I mean, from one angle, it's a format.
From another angle, it's a relationship.
You put the two together and you have it.
So that is feasible.
But if you were with somebody else,
or I was with somebody else,
I think anybody who was coming into this thing
would be like, yeah, he used to do it
with his lifelong best friend.
And now he does it with the AI version of the note.
Now he does it with this other pretty funny person.
Like, that's really funny, really funny person.
And it's not that it's not entertaining,
it's just this different.
But after a while, they forget about you
and it starts to work.
I think it's on the table for me.
I'm just saying it is. It might work,
but it's not what I would want to do.
It's not what I would want to do.
Are you okay if I do it?
I mean, I won't have a say in it.
Right now, are you okay?
Why don't you do whatever you want to?
You're okay with it?
100% fine with whatever.
It's like, I don't have any say in that.
I have no, I don't care.
But I'd like your blessing.
Yeah, if you want to carry on Good Mythical Morning
without me by yourself or with somebody else,
I'm all for, do whatever you want to.
Or if you want to surf all the time,
if you wanna become a surf vlogger, I do not care.
It's not what I would advise for you
if you were asking my advice.
My advice to you would be, what is it that,
it would be like, look inside yourself and what do you,
what is it that you want to do?
Like what is it that you're actually compelled to do?
And how does that translate into content?
You want me to live in the future?
And the present, not the past?
And if you're like, you know what?
It doesn't translate to content.
I don't care about content.
I don't wanna make anything else.
Then I would be like, that's great. But if you looked inside and you were like, I don't know, I kind I don't wanna make anything else. Then I would be like, that's great.
But if you looked inside and you were like,
I don't know, I kinda feel like this or that,
to me, that would be more personally healthy and fulfilling
than you just being like,
I just feel like I gotta keep doing this thing
because everybody wants it,
or it's an expectation or whatever.
Is my dad dead?
Cause I mean, I still have that podcast.
I might just do that.
Yeah.
Yeah, okay, well, I appreciate the advice.
If I have to watch this back because you're dead,
I'm gonna be pretty upset about it.
But I think I'm gonna take it.
We've made a number of pieces of content at this point.
I'm not gonna do it.
Where we talk about dying.
But those last five episodes where you're living
that we make, I am going to cash in big time on that
because that's it.
I think you pay all that thing.
I might take it to state fairs
and people like buy a ticket, right?
People line up.
Yeah.
I think.
It's a traveling theater thing.
What if you...
Why would that be sad though?
Make it into a documentary of some kind.
Right. I'd probably do something like that.
I'd fully exploit it in a very tasteful way.
You know?
But it was good while it lasted.
And I'm sorry that you're gone.
And I do wanna honor your wishes for me
as much as I can, so I appreciate that advice.
Okay.
And if we both die at the same time, you heard it here,
find a good duo.
Yeah.
Like there's no reason that the show shouldn't continue.
And if not, if that doesn't work, just find another one.
I just think the thing that makes it special
when me and you are involved is our friendship.
So let's put another friendship in place.
Yep, it won't be as good, but.
It might, I mean, honestly.
But after a while, it might be better.
I think it could be better.
Just think about it, we're old.
Like our sense of humor is like more outdated
by the second, you know what I'm saying?
Like it's hard to get young people to care about it.
You know, it's all gray hair guys.
He can't even sit through a whole podcast
without having to pee himself.
Gotta get up and pee, yeah.
I mean, it's boring.
So how do we not end on a sad morbid note? How do we end on a happy note?
Well, I have a rec that I actually think is quite fitting.
Okay.
I read a sad book this summer that I won't even mention.
And I actually felt like I needed to,
it wasn't really sad, it was just sort of,
I don't know, it was pretty existential
and didn't make me feel good.
And so I literally was trying to find books
that would make me feel good.
And-
So you Googled it.
Well, I asked AI, I'm sorry, I'm addicted.
It's just too easy. I feel bad'm addicted. It's just too easy.
I feel bad about it, it's just too easy.
But a book that was recommended by many sources,
some of them AI sources, was Tuesdays with Morrie.
Now, you may remember, this was like a movie a while back
until you probably seen the, oh yeah,
I kind of remember people talking about that 20 years ago
or 25 years ago when it came out.
Did not see it.
I didn't see it either.
But it is the story of a former student of a,
the author is a former student of this professor
who had this big impact on his life.
And then the professor, Mori gets ALS
and it's basically him spending Tuesdays with him
as he is in the final stages of dying from ALS.
What that sounds sad.
Now it does sound sad,
but I've never read something that takes
what is maybe the number one fear that a lot of people have
is to get a disease like that,
a slowly debilitating disease like that.
But this, Maury's attitude and perspective
But this, Maury's attitude and perspective
is something that is super inspiring and really kind of puts your own life into perspective
in a way that I just, you gotta read it, you know?
You gotta read it.
Like I don't, no, it's not sad.
How can you take someone slowly dying
and make an inspirational book? I don't know how he did it.
You wreck.
Super hard wreck.
Okay.
And I think that it actually... Because we're talking about death right now.
There you go.
We're not shying away from it. We're leaning into it. We're finding the
happiness in it.
There's a little bit of a middle ground option
that we didn't even consider.
And not to bring this up to make it morbid,
but it is very consistent with Tuesdays with Maury,
is I think that-
Your dead body's there besides it?
No, it's not weekend at Bernie's.
As we discuss this,
what we assumed in the scenario of one of us dying is that it was a sudden death.
It was an accidental death that we all of a sudden had to address.
Oh my god.
But chances are, if one of us dies, it's going to be a slower death.
You know, you're more likely, I mean, right? It's probably gonna be something like
cancer, right? It's gonna be something where you can say goodbye, and you can say goodbye to your best friend, but also to the people who watch
you.
Wooo! That could happen!
And so, that's the thing that you really need to think about. And after reading
Tuesdays with Maury, while you... I think a lot of people are like, just make it
quick, just make it quick, I don't wanna suffer. He makes a great case for being able to say goodbye on
your own terms. So, I don't know. It's pretty compelling.
Hmm. Well, with that, we'll invite you to call us. Let us know what you think
about all of this. Man, did we dredge up some thoughts related to us or yourself?
I hope so.
1-888-ear-pod-1.
That's the number one, of course. Call us. Use hashtag Ear Biscuits.
And don't forget to leave a review wherever you listen. Hopefully it's
positive. That helps us.
Yes.
We're not planning on going anywhere.
Hey, Rhett and Link. This is Sterling from Illinois. I am quite literally just laying in bed at four in the morning, listening to your podcast, trying to go to sleep. But I just wanted to say,
I really appreciate you guys. You guys are like one of my favorite comfort channels.
like one of my favorite comfort channels. You guys make me laugh so much and I'm really glad that I clicked on that one multiverse munchies video in 2018.