Endless Thread - Eggs Tyrone and The United States Chemical Safety Board's YouTube Channel

Episode Date: July 22, 2022

Ben is joined by producer Quincy Walters in this Snacktime episode about little-known government agency with a cult YouTube following and the music mish-mash account that brought Ben back to Instagram... after a 3-year hiatus. ****** Credits: This episode was produced by Quincy Walters. Mixing and sound design by Paul Vaitkus. Ben Brock Johnson and Quincy Walters are the co-hosts.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Support for Endless Thread comes from MathWorks, creator of MATLAB and Simulink Software, to design and develop engineered systems, accelerating the pace of discovery in engineering and science. Learn more at Mathworks.com. Support for WBUR comes from Is Business Broken, a podcast from the Mayrotra Institute at Boston University that explores questions like, why is innovation in healthcare so hard? Is ESG just greenwashing? of course, is business broken? Listen, wherever you get your podcasts. WBUR Podcasts, Boston. So, Quincy? Yes, Ben. As I understand it, we both have stories this week that are about surprising social media presences. That's all I can, I feel like that's the most general thing I can say. Yes, that's the common thread I can. of this endless thread episode. That's right.
Starting point is 00:01:10 And am I accurate in describing your story, not really knowing anything about it? Does that fit under this theme, shall we say? Yes, it fits under that umbrella to where even the folks who I talk to are surprised themselves. So, yeah. Quincy, I'm going to tell you about the account
Starting point is 00:01:30 that got me back onto Instagram. Okay. Well, how long were you all? off of Instagram. I've been off of Instagram, I want to say, for like maybe three years. Oh, okay. I'm intrigued. So the reason I got off, and I was on Instagram a fair bit, and I think it was like, you know, it makes sense that Instagram is owned by, I guess we call it meta now.
Starting point is 00:01:57 Because like my sort of entrance to Instagram was very similar to my entrance to Facebook, which was like, oh, like, I have friends here. I will follow my friends on this platform. And as we are all geographically separated, I will understand and know what they are doing. And that will give me great joy to watch what they are doing and what's happening in their lives and stay connected, right? It's sort of a normal, maybe slightly old-fashioned, but normal social media instinct, right?
Starting point is 00:02:29 And I'll say that, like, so when I had my kids, Instagram all of a sudden got somehow very sad for me. In what way? So I decided not to put my kids on social media. That was a decision I made because I want them to have control over their own data. But what I did, you know, when you have kids, you go into this kind of baby bunker sometimes, which is kind of what I felt like I was in. You know, I was really focused.
Starting point is 00:03:01 It was a really small, you know, I stopped seeing. a lot of my friends as often. I stopped traveling as often. And as I was sort of focusing on my young family, I started to find that Instagram was like not that fun for me to look at because what kept happening to me is I kept feeling kind of bad about myself because I was watching all of these amazing things that my friends were doing. Right.
Starting point is 00:03:31 And I feel like, you know, we've, over time, we've kind of learned, obviously, about how Instagram and, you know, visual social media can do this kind of thing or have an impact in this way. Validation and self-worth, those kinds of things. Yeah. And for me, it was like this, like, effect of like, oh, my life sucks because look at these beautiful lives. So I got off Instagram. But plot twist. of some kind. The way that I stay in contact with a lot of my friends now is through group chats.
Starting point is 00:04:09 And one of my group chats is, like, of all my close friends who I used to follow on Instagram, right? And one of those friends, who I should give credit to, his name is Rory Panagatopoulos. He's from Massachusetts. He has been posting in our group chat these Instagram, posts from a user named eggs Tyrone. Does eggs Tyrone ring a bell to you at all? No, but it does remind me of like eggs Benedict, or is that a thing?
Starting point is 00:04:44 I don't know. I'm not a fan of eggs, but are there eggs involved? And is there a person named Tyrone involved? If not, um, well, Quincy, you're a smart man. Um, because I think the answer is yes and yes. but I actually did. I actually only discovered this today. Okay.
Starting point is 00:05:06 Because I never questioned who Eggs Tyrone was, why he was named Eggs Tyrone. I never questioned any of that because what I immediately saw was Egg's Tyrone's content, which is, I'm going to suggest you pull Eggs Tyrone up on Instagram if you have your phone handy. Okay. I see a lot of like, like, it looks like a lot of. people dancing in various regions of the planet. Yes. So like, will you look at the, look at the, look at the, what I would describe as the first one.
Starting point is 00:05:47 Okay. It looks like there is some kind of Jewish gathering. Yeah. What do you, what are you seeing? What are you seeing? Okay. It looks like a band. I don't, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:05:59 Should I play it? Yes. So if you look at this video, you might assume, I mean, these are, I think they're Hasidic Jews, perhaps. And one is in front of a keyboard and the other one is holding a microphone. Yeah, but this is the music.
Starting point is 00:06:25 Oh, is it like hip hop? Yeah. So these are like super hyped, super hype It looks like You know, has seats At a banquet Yeah And they, to me it looks like
Starting point is 00:06:46 What's actually happening is they're performing music That is traditional But the music has been swapped out For very energetic rap music That's what we're seeing in this first one So now if you look at the second Sort of pinned post there Do you see what that is?
Starting point is 00:07:04 Yeah, you should describe it. I'm watching this video of this man in a blue shirt and jeans. He's doing like this thing with his feet. Middle America. Where he's like, it's like a shuffle kind of. I'm not, you know, dancifically inclined, but he's moving really, really smoothly. And it almost looks like Western maybe? Yeah, all the men are dressed the same kind of.
Starting point is 00:07:34 The women in the video have like very like traditional looking dresses. But the song is Trick Daddy I'm a Thub. So Eggs Tyrone basically creates these videos in which people are joyfully, happily dancing. But Eggs Tyrone is making them dance, shall we say, to music. that was not in the original video. Interesting. In these like perfect juxtapositions. Unbeat and everything.
Starting point is 00:08:13 Unbeat and everything that sort of like flip the script on your assumptions about what people would dance to. Right. And what specific kinds of people would dance to what? Mm-hmm. Does that make sense? Yeah. There's this other one that looks like it's from a country maybe in the Middle East, maybe Iran. and the music is Boosy Webby.
Starting point is 00:08:35 Webby Boosy. I actually don't know this artist, and it's called Watch My Shoes. Okay. But it's these guys who are all sort of dressed up in semi-formal wear, and they're all dancing together joyfully, but again, to like a song that, like,
Starting point is 00:08:56 is not the original song we're dancing to. And for some reason, I just, like, I love this account. And I will, I will, actually tweet out some examples from my Twitter account. Okay. Listeners want to check this out. I don't know anything about Eggs Tyrone except what I learned today, which is the origin of
Starting point is 00:09:21 eggs Tyrone is a television show called Workaholics. Ah, yes, it's the comedian Lavelle Crawford. I don't know. Okay. I don't know this man. but I did discover that he was on the show workaholics and he slept over the house of these kind of like these like you know early young 20s guys in the show who are kind of like worthless and always getting into trouble um they work in an office and he this guy stays over at their house and his name is tyrone maybe in real life and
Starting point is 00:10:01 in the show and they wake up after this crazy party and Tyrone is making eggs, and so he's making eggs Tyrone. Interesting. Hey, what's up, fellas? Now, I know your belly's ready for some of these eggs, Tyrone. It's off the chain, baby. So right now, this account has 615,000 followers, I think, at this point. And I really don't know who's behind it.
Starting point is 00:10:27 The bio on the account says, Welcome to Gumpaville, and has a link tree where you can buy a T-shirt that says Gumpville. No idea what that is about. But it also links to an organization that supports unhoused kids called Stand Up for Kids, which is cool, obviously, and some playlists of all the Eggs Tyrone songs. No contact info, though. That's it. Eggs Tyrone is a mysterious, hilarious, joy-creating Instagrammer. That's all I can really say. And I think that for me, the moral of the story is it's like, you know, no dig on my friends, but like it's all about who you follow, right? You know, it's, it's who you follow, why you follow them, and what they mean to you.
Starting point is 00:11:12 And my friend Rory Panicatopoulos has taught me that. Like if I just go out and find some users like Eggs Tyrone, I can be on Instagram and be happy. I don't need to be jealous of the lives of others. I can just enjoy some incredibly funny music and dance juxtaposition videos and just enjoy them. Yeah. Interesting. Wow. That's a very profound sentiment.
Starting point is 00:11:39 Thanks, Quincy. All right, Quincy, I know you got a story for me. Yeah. So we'll come right back to that. At Radio Lab, we love nothing more than nerding out about science, neuroscience, chemistry. But we do also like to get into other kinds of stories, stories about policing. politics, country music, hockey, sex, of bugs. Regardless of whether we're looking at science or not science,
Starting point is 00:12:19 we bring a rigorous curiosity to get you the answers. And hopefully make you see the world anew. Radio Lab, adventures on the edge of what we think we know. Wherever you get your podcast. There is something powerful about the sound of the human voice. Beautifully produced audio has the unique power to connect and inspire. Tell your organization's story with a custom, podcast from City Space Productions, the Creative Studio from WBUR's business partnerships team.
Starting point is 00:12:47 Become a thought leader. Recruit new talent. Reach new audiences. Whatever your goal, we can help. Discover how the magic is made at WBUR.org slash creative studio. All right. Quincy, I know you got a story for me. So, Ben, when I say the United States Chemical Safety Board,
Starting point is 00:13:13 What comes to mind? Do you know what it is? What comes to mind for me is my sixth grade dare class and things like just say no, don't do drugs. Okay. It's not that. It's a federal agency that, well, I think I'll just let somebody who works there explain it. We're an independent, non-regulatory federal agency that investigates root causes of major chemical incidents. And our mission is to drive chemical safety change to protect people and the environment. I spoke to Shana Lawhorn. And I write, produce, and edit our safety videos. Essentially, these videos look at catastrophic events.
Starting point is 00:14:03 Shauna calls them a low-frequency, high-impact events. So think explosions, think the deep water horizon spill. So they will take these events, these catastrophic events, and they work with investigators in the department. This is a very, very small government agency. At only one time between like 30 and 40 employees and our budget is $13 million. So we're considered a micro agency of the federal government. We're tiny. Small but important, it sounds like.
Starting point is 00:14:37 Exactly. And so starting in 2015, though, they noticed sort of them garnering a cult following to their YouTube channel. And their YouTube channel has over 200-something thousand subscribers when Shauna got on board. I think she said they had maybe about 100. But they have more subscribers than the Department of Defense, which I don't know is saying much. I don't know how popular they are. Wow. They certainly have enough funding to get some marketing. That's true. That's true.
Starting point is 00:15:16 That's for sure. The Department of Defense. That's true. And they have more subscribers on YouTube than the Department of Education. Homeland Security doesn't have these subscribers, you know. Commerce, education, where this tiny agency that's making this huge, impact, NASA, we're coming for you. But we're really far from there.
Starting point is 00:15:38 So I came across them probably years ago because, as you know, and maybe listeners might remember that sort of my YouTube algorithm kind of curates things of, you know, where things go wrong, sort of like accidents. And so I've seen these videos, but you ever, you know, consume media online, but you don't know, I guess the source of, I guess this is kind of. I guess this is kind of like, you know, your story with Eggs Tyrone, where you kind of consume the content, but, you know, don't think about where it comes from. And so the other day I was on Reddit because Reddit, I'm not subscribed to it, but the subreddit catastrophic failure often gives me alerts on my phone. And I guess a few days ago there was an explosion at a factory or plant in a place called Medford, Oklahoma.
Starting point is 00:16:28 An update. She was in Medford shortly after flame sparked. That's right, Adri. We still do not know what caused this fire, but we do know it has been burning since about two this afternoon. There are currently no injuries at this time, and there are crews out on scene containing the fire. Video of the smoke was on Reddit, and somebody said, I look forward to seeing the CSB video of this. And someone commented the question I had, which was, what is CSB? And so, you know, I went to the YouTube page and realized that I have been here before. And so it kind of does animations of catastrophic events. And it's been sort of like, you know, contentious within this very small government entity,
Starting point is 00:17:18 whether or not to include sound effects or whether that was sensationalizing it. And at the end of the day, I mean, these arguments for a long time, to go. But at the end of the day, we realize if there's anything we can do to pull people in, to make them realize that those animated figures that you're seeing on the screen are real people that were making decisions on probably the most stressful day of their lives. But they came to the conclusion that they've found this formula of, you know, what works that will garner attention to their videos. And the folks who make these videos, like Shauna didn't realize it was popular on the internet
Starting point is 00:18:01 until, you know, somebody, I think an investigator told her, hey, you know, you got a shout out, or, you know, the team got a shout out on Reddit. It's like the PSA company blowing up. Exactly. And she said that, you know, she, they found out recently that MIT uses their safety videos. What's the most popular one? The most popular one, should I send it to you?
Starting point is 00:18:26 It's an animation from 2015, so this is the video that sort of launched them in popularity, of an Exxon Mobil Refinery in California. The heavy liquid hydrocarbons are converted into lighter hydrocarbon vapors as they travel up the reactor. And all of a sudden you can see inside some of the tanks at this oil refinery. Wow. And you can like see what's happening inside the plant. Wow. This is very professional.
Starting point is 00:19:01 Their titles are like both funny but also like kind of like eye catching. Yeah. Like one is one is incompatible chemicals explosion at A, B, specialty silo or something like that. And the other one is it just says simultaneous tragedy, fire at evergreen packaging. I would click on that.
Starting point is 00:19:26 What about this one, Quincy? Silent Killer. Hydrogen sulfide releases in Odessa, Texas. I actually might have watched that one. But there's also sort of like a balance to strike, right, where you want to have people watch the videos, but also having sort of respect for, for the people who were involved in the incident that the video is about.
Starting point is 00:19:59 But, but yeah, it's very sort of little engine that could. All right. I like it. Well, I feel like Quincy, this has inspired me at the very least to rethink and, you know, repopulate my follows on social media. Yeah, you got eggs Tyrone and the chemical safety board. It's a start. It's a start. It is.
Starting point is 00:20:30 It is. Not only will, you know, you feel good with eggs, Tyrone, but, you know, maybe you'll be even more vigilant in your workplace. Even though you work from home. But still, there are hazards there, too. If I start refining any oil. Exactly. Our podcasting refinery, which almost never. has explosions for today's episode was myself Quincy walters Kristen Torres and it was sound
Starting point is 00:21:06 designed by ball bikis WBUR podcasts also includes amory severson grace tatter dean russell norrisaxe emily jankowski megan kattel and matt reed we'll be back with a full-on episode next week stay cool forever especially right now it's hot

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