Hello Internet - H.I. #99: The Necessary Lies of Civilization
Episode Date: March 22, 2018Grey and Brady discuss: Brady feels Audrey is getting sidelined, maybe a crack opens for the dark arts, Brady buys a new phone, destroying the value of stocks with your opinions, vacationing in Antarc...tica, politicians blocking people on Twitter, social media impersonations and anti-verification, the safest year of flying?, and the death of Stephen Hawking. Sponsors: Hover: The best way to buy and manage domain names - get 10% off your first order Fracture: Photos printed in vivid color directly on glass - get 15% off your first order with offer code HELLO15 Plus: Brady's Photos for Fracture! Squarespace: start building your website today with a free fourteen day trial and 10% off first purchase using offer code HELLO Listeners like YOU on Patreon Show Notes: Discuss this episode on the reddit Friend of the show, Marco Arment Brady's view while recording Brady's new phone Gold Bullion Vault - Periodic Table of Videos Unmade Podcast Testing suitability to go to Antarctica Who owns Antarctica? Tierra del Fuego flag Brady flying the Nail & Gear flag Brady in Antarctica Award-winning iceberg Stephen Hawking An Illustrated Brief History of Time Star Wars: The Last Jedi Hello Internet Christmas Special Solo Trailer Solo Trailer -- Beastie Boys Ready Player One Trailer
Transcript
Discussion (0)
A man can't be humble if he has a certificate in his hand.
That's right.
A certificate intended for a 10-year-old boy.
I'll be sending you lots of links to amazing time-lapse videos
because I had a camera on the front of the ship for almost the whole time.
I've got the most amazing time-lapses.
And hopefully the YouTube video to accompany this episode
will include some of my lovely Antarctica scenery.
So if you're enjoying this episode on YouTube,
you are currently seeing some gorgeous Antarcticness filmed.
That's great.
Now I don't need to find Antarctica stock footage.
Great.
Never in your life will you have to get Antarctica stock footage.
Just pick up the phone.
I'm talking to you right now, Brady,
but I'm slightly terrified that this episode is not going to work out because I have this whole new recording set up, recommended to me by
friend of the show, Marco Arment, that I have set up following his instructions, but I have
no idea how any of it works, and I have no ability to debug it in the slightest.
And so I'm absolutely terrified that we're not actually recording now,
but we'll have to see if that works out. Are you the first person in the history of the show to say friend of the show? Or did we used to do that early on? I don't know if I've said that before.
It's like a real podcast language thing, isn't it? Yeah, it is. I feel like suddenly that is
really podcasty. You know what? I'll rerecord that. I'll just say Marco Arment, right? I won't
say friend of the show because look if i
ever go all in on this kind of thing and i say pod right if i say like oh hey brady we discussed on
the last pod this thing you have to reach through the internet and just strangle me to death
immediately because i find that so obnoxious that is an abbreviation i cannot stand by and it
bothers me every single time but i can hear it spreading through the podcast world it bothers me but I do use it off the show oh yeah like I will say oh
I'm gonna be late for dinner tonight because I'm podding with grey oh no you don't say podding
no Brady you don't say podding do you please say you don't I think like in a in a fun way yeah but
that's how it starts though right like that's that's how everything starts. You're like, okay, we're going to take podcasting. We're going to abbreviate it to pod, to noun it.
And then I'm going to verb it by potting. And I'm saying it in this funny way,
but that's how we lose the language, right? That's how these things go on.
But if you're going to take this hardline stance, I'm going to veto you editing out
friend of the show.
It has to be in here on record now.
Yeah.
Like I can't believe I said that.
You gave ground.
You verbally cornered me into having to leave it into the show
instead of saying, no, we're going to wipe this recording clean and start over.
Hello Internet is a constant chess game of me trying to say things
so that I can keep things in the show that you can't edit out.
It's to listeners.
This is totally true.
And I can hear Brady doing it.
Brady will often say something or do a little segment that he knows, like he can probably feel it across the internet that
I'm already putting down a mental marker in my head to get rid of that whole thing.
And then later in the recording, he makes everything else we talk about like this big
bowl of spaghetti mess that connects constantly back to the thing that he wants to make sure
that I can't connect. And I feel like we do sometimes have this little passive aggressive war between you
trying to verbally box me in and me with like a surgeon's knife later on feeling like, no,
I am going to extract this thing, right? Like, I don't care how much I have to cut.
Sometimes I win. Sometimes you win. But I'm very aware that you do it.
Remember earlier in the show when you said friend of the show?
Yeah. I do remember that, Brady. Yeah, I know. I know. You're going to mention it a hundred times now in this episode. Now, speaking of like your power over the show compared to mine,
I have to say, you've been getting a lot of Mr. Chompers into the show lately.
Everybody loves Mr. Chompers, don't they, Brady? I feel like Audrey's getting pushed to the side a bit. So I just want to send
you a picture of what I am looking at right now as I record. Oh, it's so cute how she sleeps on
top of Lulu. She's curled up there on her rump. It's adorable. And I noticed you keep sneaking
Chompers snuffles onto the end of
the show. No, I have. I've never done that. I don't know what you're talking about. So I have,
I have recorded a couple of Audrey snuffles and I'm going to send them to you. And I'm just saying,
if you choose to put them on the end of the show, that's completely up to you.
But I think you should do what you think is fair. You think I should do that? Okay. All right.
I understand what's going on here.
Someone can go back through the show and see how many minutes we've spent discussing
Audrey versus Mr. Chompers. I think Audrey is going to come out pretty well in that comparison,
but you know.
But how cute is Audrey looking at that picture? Just looking up those big loving eyes.
She's very cute, Brady. I know that you feel like you're trying to write some
doggy imbalance here in the show.
I'll just remind you that I have never put a single photograph of Mr. Chompers into the
show notes or anything.
And there are many, many photos of Audrey in the show notes.
She's all over the show notes.
So you shouldn't feel like it's uneven.
But you don't own Mr. Chompers.
You haven't got his image rights.
Mr. Chompers is a very private dog and it's not my place to make him internet famous.
I understand what the burden of that could be.
I don't want to put that on him.
I think that boat has sailed, Greg.
No, he's internet famous in the abstract, right?
But not in the particulars.
Okay.
But yeah, okay.
I will receive your Audrey Snuffle sounds and we'll see whether or not they make it
to the end of the podcast.
All right.
Just follow your heart.
So Greg, I bought a phone.
Is that the same phone that you're failing to send me photographs on?
Is that what's going on there?
No, actually, I'm not using my new phone yet.
Okay.
What phone did you buy?
I bought a phone that should be familiar to you and listeners of Hello Internet.
I bought the Sony CM-R111.
An Android phone, I'm guessing? No, this is the phone that was the subject of my
first ever byline in Brady's Bylines last episode. Oh, God. Remember my story about the world's
smallest phone back in the 90s? I went on eBay and found one and bid and bought it. And as a special treat, I have not yet unboxed it.
I've not taken it out of the box.
After like the success of my previous unboxings here on the show,
I thought you would want to hear the moment that I saw it and held it for the first time.
Oh God.
Okay.
Here I'm gearing myself up for some kind of Brady's moving to Android discussion.
But I feel like, of course, I should have known better.
I should have known better.
It's not a new phone.
Brady only buys antique phones.
Antique phones that presumably can't be used
because they were made obsolete
in but five years
with the replacement of the old analog system,
if I remember correctly.
Here it is in the box.
Okay, open it up.
It's a scuffed up old box
with a yellowing labels on it.
Details of who you can
fax if you have any problems with it oh good good i'm gonna open it up second hand i don't know for
sure the phone's in it this could be a terrible moment for me yeah if there's just a rock inside
that box i will i will love that forever here we go let me you can hear coming out of there we go
oh still got the instructions and like a little leather pouch for
it. A yellowing manual charger. And here's the phone itself in my hand. Well, what do you think
of it, Brady? It's cute. I wish I could use it. Is it small and light? It is small and light. I
mean, let me put it next to my iPhone. Right. Because it's really just like a walkie talkie.
It's the cup on a string for Australia's phone network.
It's about half the size of my iPhone. I bought it in England. I haven't bought an Australian
one.
Oh, okay. You bought the UK edition.
It's really lovely. Like whenever I watch like TV things about criminals, I'm always
jealous that they have flip phones and it's sort of a bit like that. It's got that nice
vintage look to it. Of course, I have no use for it.
Obviously, Brady, I am, as always, charmed and surprised by these things that you do.
But why exactly did you go on eBay to buy this?
Sentimentality.
You want this as an object to have pride of place in your home as a reminder of the first byline that set you off on your career? Is that the idea?
It's part of my heritage.
Hey, when you wrote that story, had you ever seen one of those at the time,
or were you just writing about it?
No, I hadn't. It was a total puff piece.
Okay, now I like this a lot better, right? Because of course,
the news reporter has not
seen the thing that they're writing about. It may not have even existed. I should have
asked for them to send me a photo of it with a copy of that day's paper.
Yeah, because I was thinking for a second, like, oh, wait, yeah, there was a photograph
in that article we were discussing. And it flickered across my mind for just the briefest
of moments. Oh, was that Brady's hand in the photograph?
That didn't come up last time.
No, but of course, it's just like some press photo.
And you're writing an article you've never even seen.
Look at this, Greg.
Now, 20 years later, I have verified its existence.
I sent you a picture of me holding it.
I see the picture.
I guess better late than never for verifying a 35-year-old news article.
Don't say that I don't follow things up.
Don't check my sources. I'm glad you checked your sources. I'm sure all of the Adelaide news readers
from 1985 will be really happy to know that the phone really does exist and presumably really was
on sale in Adelaide later that year. Well, now that you've verified that it's real and you have
a photograph of it,
where's it going to go? What are you going to do with this?
I don't know yet. It was maybe a little bit of an impulsive purchase.
Really? Really? I mean, you say that, Brady, it's an impulsive purchase. You say that as though
you were walking out of the supermarket and there was a box. There's the Mars bars and there's the
M&Ms and there's the Snickers. Ooh, and then there's the Sony MRX Mark I, 1985 edition.
And you're like, oh, I just get to pick that up.
So I don't think you can use the phrase impulsive purchase when you had to go searching it out.
I don't think that counts as an impulsive purchase.
I think the internet makes impulsive purchases even easier because there's more stuff in
front of me that I'm like, I have to have it. Like at the shop, all I can do is buy Tic Tacs or Mars bars. Like I haven't got
all those other options, but on the internet, I'm like, there's everything in the world I can have.
Anything that pops into my head, including the Sony CM-111, like, oh yeah, wouldn't it be cool
to own one? And within 10 seconds, it was in front of me on eBay. All I had to do was press a button.
That would never have happened 10 years ago. Okay. Yes. I know what you're saying,
but I feel like an impulsive purchase on the internet is when you're on Amazon and you click
to buy a thing. And then there's the row of stuff on the bottom where they're like, hey,
do you want to buy this stuff too? And you go, yeah, okay. And you click to add these other
things to the cart. As soon as you're typing in to a search box, it's like a criminal law, right?
It's premeditated at that point.
You had to think it through and then go and look up and remember what the model number
is and then type it into eBay.
You had to go to eBay in the first place.
I feel like it's a premeditated purchase.
It's not an impulse purchase.
I hear what you're saying, right?
But it was still within that bubble of impulsiveness.
It was within that five minute window of impulsiveness where I was thinking back to the podcast we just recorded.
And I thought, I wonder if you could buy that. I think that's the moment the impulsiveness started.
And before I had time to think, this is ridiculous. What am I going to do with this thing?
I'd already made the purchase.
Yeah. I really wonder now in criminal law, how in advance of the murder do you have to
think about the murder before it counts as premeditated? Yeah. That really wonder now in criminal law, how in advance of the murder do you have to think about the murder before it counts as premeditated?
Yeah, that's interesting.
I'm going to kill this hat. And I have definitely
bought way more stuff because it's just flickered across my brain. And I thought, oh, let me buy
this thing. And you sort of forget about it the second after you've purchased it online. And then
it just shows up as a big surprise. So yeah, I'm still saying it's premeditated though, Brady,
you're typing in the model number. It's premeditated. That did happen to me me because i i ordered this and then i went away on holiday which we'll talk about soon
and i came back and i had this big heavy box with my name on it and i had no idea what it was i was
like i didn't buy anything what's this about and then i opened it i was like oh yeah i forgot about
that that was a bit silly wasn't it i do have that same thing all the time where a box shows up and I think,
what the heck is in that box? But rarely is it a nostalgia item. Almost always it's a vastly more
practical item. Like right now, as we're recording the podcast, I'm waiting for a delivery. So at any
moment, I'm sure the delivery person is going to knock on my door, ring the doorbell because I'm
home and we'll have to abruptly stop the podcast and I will go
get my delivery because there's no way they're going to keep on driving. But at least it's not
going to be a box full of phones. It's going to be more podcasting equipment.
Well, you can joke all you want about my Sony CM-111. I've just got three words for you.
Hello Internet Museum.
You can't justify all your crazy purchases with Hello Internet Museum, Brady.
If it's Hello Internet related, I can. I'm constantly noticing that there's space available
in the Black Stump for rent. If Adelaide has a bit of a depression in its sort of office market,
I think we could get a bargain and start that museum.
Yeah, you think we could rent some long-term space in the Black Stump?
Just a one-off corner. And like those little boutique museums, it could just be staffed by
Tim volunteers. Like just, you know, a couple of days a week, you can come in on Tuesdays between
two and four, come and have a look at a few items. Here's a box full of impulse purchases from
Brady. It will mainly be that. Yeah. All of which, like the ambiguity about when you run your own
business about like, what is a business expense, right? It's a little
bit like, I don't know exactly. Sometimes it's hard to know. I feel like your idea of like,
oh, this is a hello internet museum item, right? Almost anything can suddenly become that if you
talk about it on the podcast. I'm still waiting for the conversation with my accountant when he
says 100 medals. Was it the last episode or it was definitely a recent episode where we discussed interrogation
and you were kind of making the case that you think when police are interrogating suspects,
they can't use like dark arts, they can't pretend to be your mate or say one thing that's
not true to trick you into saying something.
And your position was pretty clear on that and I understood it.
It occurred to me the other day, though, a question I should have asked, and I don't know what your position
is on this. What do you think about undercover police and undercover investigations? Do you
think they're wrong? That's a question that depends a lot on the, like the devil's in the
details on that one. It is an interesting question, but I think this is why we have laws about
entrapment. At least I know the US does. I don't know if the UK has entrapment laws, but
this idea that if like a police officer can't incentivize a person to commit a crime,
if they're in an undercover role, they can only sort of observe what's going on.
I can definitely imagine situations where I'm totally fine with it. Right.
Like undercover police at a big public event, right? Where they're more or less just acting
like a kind of security. That seems to me on one end of the spectrum, it's totally clear.
On the other end of the spectrum, things that would count as entrapment, I feel like,
no, no, I'm not okay with that.
So what about these ones, you know, the Donnie Brasco type things where they just deeply,
deeply infiltrate criminal gangs and you end up being almost part of the mafia, you know, the Donnie Brasco type things where they just deeply, deeply infiltrate criminal gangs and you end up being almost part of the mafia, you know, you're deeply embedded.
Those are the ones where you think you may not be comfortable with it or?
That's a really good question.
Perhaps a longer conversation for another day, but I felt bad that I hadn't asked and I didn't
know where you stood on it. And it sounds like you don't entirely know where you stand on it.
I guess maybe it's the difference between something like
being an undercover police officer is a different situation than an interrogation.
It's obviously, it's the part of the police work that's done before interrogations and trials and
all the rest of it. And you're in like the evidence collecting phase. I genuinely don't
know. It's a really interesting question. And I feel like it does open the door to a certain amount of dark arts in an interesting
way that I hadn't thought about.
That's a good question, Brady.
Well, let's talk about it again another day.
Or tweet Gray your opinions on police operations.
Don't tell the people to tweet Gray.
Don't tweet Gray.
I won't look.
I'll just not go on Twitter for a month if everybody starts tweeting me. Snapchat.
Snapchat.
Snapchat, the baffling interface and weird world that I still do not entirely understand.
So I don't know if you saw, but not that long ago, Snapchat redesigned the way it all works
and its interface. It had taken me one or two years to finally think
I maybe slightly understood how it worked. And then they went and changed everything again and
made it even more confusing. As you say, they didn't clarify it for you, Brady? They didn't
make it smoother? They certainly did not. I think half the fun is trying to figure out how it works.
Anyway, I took to Twitter, which is a social media platform I do understand, and said,
I'm not happy about said, I'm not
happy about Snapchat. I'm not happy with the new interface. I made my opinion known to my
70,000 followers or however many people on Twitter, the 10 of them who actually read my tweets.
You're saber rattling here about Snapchat's interface. Okay, got it.
And hours later, the Snapchat's share price was hit for six and $1.3 billion was wiped
off its share price because of people's backlash to the redesign.
Now, I don't know if it was my tweet that caused it or it more likely was the tweet
by reality TV star Kylie Jenner, who pretty much said the same thing about an hour or
two after me.
She said, so does anyone else not open Snapchat anymore anymore or is it just me this is so sad and kylie jenna who i don't know
but i know snapchat is propped up by people's interest in her from what i can see was absolutely
devastated by her condemnation of the platform and a billion pounds or 1.3 billion dollars
came off its stock market value.
Isn't that amazing that one person's opinion, not mine, of course, can wipe that much money off a share price.
Every time I go on Snapchat, there's like this news section and there's 400,000 news
stories about this Kylie Jenner person because she's bought a new pair of earrings or she's
said that she's sad today.
I wouldn't know who she was if she walked in the house,
except I'd find it really strange that some model had walked in my house.
Right.
And was busy Snapchatting at the same time.
Well, apparently not.
Apparently she's over Snapchat.
Oh, okay.
Because she doesn't like the redesign as well.
So the two things that has made me think about is a...
Audrey, that was a big snuffle. Audrey's making her opinion on Snapchat known down there.
I'll be sure to leave that in.
I want to make sure Audrey gets all the airtime she can get, Brady.
That's right.
How susceptible these platforms are to the whims of their big stars
and also how much people hate these things being redesigned.
Yeah. The stock market is one of those things that the more you think about it,
the less it makes any sense. Even sentences like you'll hear people on the news say things like
the stock market lost $2 trillion in value today, right? When the FTSE 500 dropped by 50%.
That's a sentence where if you try to follow it through to like, what does
this really mean? I often feel like I think this sentence doesn't even mean anything. Because this
rapidly gets you drilling down to the idea of like, what's happening with the stocks, it's all
of these trades. And the stock price represents like a kind of theoretical selling price. Like
if you were to sell all of your Snapchat stock,
how much money would you get?
And they're like, oh, look at all that money that was lost.
It's like, but was it lost?
It was only ever really potential money.
The stock market is one of those things I feel like
the more you think about it, the less it makes any sense.
But nonetheless, obviously because it's potential money,
people super duper care about keeping the stock prices up. And if I was a social media company, and apparently your biggest
star did not like your redesign, I think that's a real problem. And apparently the whole rest of
the trading market agrees that it is a big problem that Kylie Jenner doesn't like the way Snapchat
is done. And Brady Haran. I'm sorry, I can rerecord it. And I could say it's a really big
problem for Snapchat that at Brady Haran is the influencer of Kylie Jenner, which then destroys
all of the value that they have. I'm putting the 1.3 billion down to Kylie Jenner and another
five bucks down to me. Would you want that power though, Brady? I mean, no, no, absolutely not. I don't know. Wouldn't you? Obviously Snapchat,
we don't care. We're not really that interested, but Brady, if your thoughts, if your comments,
if your complaints say about a different company on a particular podcast, let's say YouTube on
hello internet, right? If the mere utterance of your displeasure could cause
YouTube stock to go a-tumbling, wouldn't you kind of want that power?
No, because I'm just, you know, I'm a human and some days I wake up upset. Sometimes there are
things going on in my life that make me not think straight. And sometimes I say something when I'm
in a bad mood that I don't think later. And I don't want the whims of my humanity to have that much effect on other people.
I don't think that's right.
See, I just feel like it would be such a tool to help try to shape the world to the way
you want it to be, right?
If YouTube does a thing that you don't like and you start complaining about and their
stock price goes down and be like, ooh, I don't know if I could resist that.
I'd love more power to make people watch objectivity videos.
It's not quite the same thing. I feel like, you know if I could resist that. I'd love more power to make people watch objectivity videos. It's not quite the same thing.
I feel like, you know what I'm just feeling?
It's like social media, it has power in one direction, and that direction is to destroy,
right?
Like social media, it has this arrow of entropy, which is, can we destroy things?
Oh, social media is really good at that.
Building things up, social media, way worse.
Much harder to build the things.
But to be a wrecking ball through stock prices or people's lives, that's what social media is
great at. I saw a comedian the other day. The guy's name is Adam Hess, and he tweeted some
joke about the letters of the alphabet. I think he said the letters in the second half of the
alphabet seem untrustworthy or something like that. Everyone thought it was really funny.
And his next tweet was encouraging people to come to one of his live shows that he
was selling tickets to because he's a really funny tweeter. Like he puts a lot of free jokes out
there, but he also said, come to my show. And apparently he got a bit of backlash when he said,
come to my show for, you know, trying to sell his show. So he wrote, me does a free tweet about how
letters in the second half of the alphabet seem untrustworthy and people are, ha ha, great stuff.
What a guy.
Retweet.
Me, please come to one of my live shows that took actual effort to write.
People, please leave us alone.
That's what it is.
We'll take your free stuff and we'll take things that require no effort, but things
that require effort from people.
It's like, hey, get out of my face, man.
It's like that with us.
You know, yeah, we'll all join in
while you kick some company
that's given you a bad customer service,
but try and get us to go and watch something
you've actually made.
It's like, chill out, man.
I don't know.
I feel like if I was running a school,
one of the lessons of life that is important to learn
that is encapsulated by that tweet is the universe does not reward effort.
Effort can be a vital component of reward.
But people, I think, always feel like, oh, this thing that I've done that takes a whole bunch of effort, I should get rewarded for it.
It's like, of course, you make a funny joke on Twitter.
Everybody loves that and shares that. It's not relevant that like you spent a year
building up a comedy routine. That is the actual effort. Like nobody cares. This is just the way
the universe works. And anybody who's made anything for the internet has that experience of
the thing that you spend forever on being less popular than the thing you put together in an
afternoon. That is one of the like, you know, the hard realities of life. Do you think that is a good thing to instill in
young people? Would you really want to teach kids that? Do you think that will set them
on a path that will help them in life or a path that could be quite negative for them in life?
Oh, Brady, I wish you hadn't asked this question.
I think there are certain things young people shouldn't be told.
Yeah. Okay. So there's this idea that has been kicking around in my head for maybe about a year.
I don't even know if I should say it out loud right now, but there are a bunch of things
that in my brain have now fallen under this category.
And I think of this category as, here's like the sign over the door, the necessary lies of civilization.
There's like a lot of stuff that I feel like I've come to realize that as a kid or even as a younger
adult, or even just like me five years ago was thinking about how like, oh, these things that
we tell people, this is all just a bunch of bullshits**t, right? Or this is just a lie,
right? And now there's some part of me which has begun to think of some of these things as like
the necessary lies of society. And right at the core of this is this terrible necessary lie of
society, which is like, we have to tell people to work really hard. Because if we don't all together
as a society kind of agree to lie
about this, the game is up, right? You can't have everybody going along with the idea of hard work
is not always going to be rewarded. It's like the propaganda that we need to keep a civilization
together. I mean, Gray, that lie, I think is built on an even more fundamental lie.
Yeah. And that is that life is fair. The thing with life is fair
is I'm not quite sure
that I feel like institutions
teach people this idea.
Yeah.
Right. Whereas the kid says like,
oh, it was unfair.
And then the parent will very quickly say like,
life isn't fair, kid.
Right.
Whereas I think the lie of hard work is rewarded
is much more consistently, explicitly or implicitly
taught.
The whole system of schooling is kind of set up to this idea of like, you're going to work
really hard on a thing and then you get a good grade.
And the good grades lets you go to college, which lets you continue to do really hard
work in a structured environment for other people that is not under your control.
And it's like, well, we need to do this so that society sticks together.
Because I feel actually a little bit like
maybe even just talking about stuff on this podcast
has slowly opened up this idea in my head.
But it is the acknowledgement that
if everybody thought about society
and human interactions the way I do,
the whole world would burn to the ground.
It just, like, it wouldn't work.
I've had this phrase
knocking around in my head, like necessary lies of civilization. And I can't quite get this idea
to go away. And I feel like I'm seeing it more and more everywhere. This is one of those things.
Like when I say I would teach it in a school, I feel like I would try to identify the select
subgroup of kids for whom this would be a good
lesson and maybe just pull them aside and be like, hey, listen, we're putting you on a different
track. Those are the ones that become criminals. We've got this sociopath track over here. And
you're either going to be really successful or really terrible people. I just think it's
brilliant that we've taken a conversation about Kylie Jenner and taken it to
a place where we're talking about the fundamental truths and lies that hold civilization together.
I feel like that was your fault. You pushed me into it, Brady.
I'm sorry.
I haven't even wanted to talk about this thing. I feel like it's an idea. You can't say out loud,
but it's there.
There's definitely a few of them.
Voting matters.
There must be some that involve like, you know, love and relationships and stuff.
Oh, wow. That's dark.
That is darker. But you know, there's someone out there for everyone. And I think there's some of
that, but it's quite comforting to people when they're feeling lonely or something's gone wrong
for them. We got to keep that society together, Brady. Yeah. Like if we started teaching people
that, look, maybe you will be unhappy forever and there isn't someone out there for you. And
you're just not made to be in a relationship and find love and happiness. Like, I don't think
that's a good thing to be telling certain people.
And given what we know about you so far, probably your whole life will be unsuccessful and miserable.
Like, oh, okay.
All right.
Let's move right along from this dangerous topic, shall we?
Let's continue onward.
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How was your vacation, Brady?
Amazing. I went to Antarctica.
I want to know all about this. I haven't followed you on social media lately,
because I have honestly had this feeling like I don't want spoilers for Brady's amazing vacation.
And I did have one spoiler come through, which is you sent me a
pretty awesome image. I did have this funny feeling like Brady is on such an epic trip.
I don't want any spoilers for this trip. So you have been to Antarctica. Tell me about it.
Do you know, before I went, I was talking to a friend of mine because not many people have been
there. So when you say I'm going to Antarctica or you talk about Antarctica, you know, normally when
you talk about anywhere else in the world, people talk about the time they went there or their friend who went there.
Which is the worst.
Yeah.
People feel the need to one up you in vacation stories.
Or even if they one down you, they'd rather talk about their down thing.
Like you'll say, oh, I'm going to Antarctica.
And they say, oh, that's interesting.
Speaking of cold, you know, I went to Skigness last week and I'll spend the next two hours talking about that. And you're like, okay. I was in Dead Horse, Alaska three years ago.
Like it's not Antarctica. Anyway, that's by the by, it's not a competition.
But you're going to win every vacation competition for forever.
Well, I was telling my friend I was going there and he said, a colleague of mine just came back
from there a few weeks ago. He works in like an architecture firm.
He said, tomorrow at work, we're all taking a lunch break and he's going to show us photos
and videos from his trip.
And I couldn't believe that.
I thought that sounded like hell on earth.
It's like someone showing you like a slideshow in the 80s and like, why do you want to sit
around and listen to this guy talk about his holiday?
I was baffled by it. Anyway, having now been to Antarctica, I completely understand it
because it's so ridiculously amazing and it's like this faraway place
hidden there on the bottom of the world that no one sees
or knows much about.
When you come back, you just want everyone to know about it.
It's like, oh, my goodness, you have to see this thing.
It's frustrating that people don't realise. You know how people could come back from there and say oh it's this
unspoiled wilderness and we must protect it and it's so special and you're kind of like yeah
whatever that's a bit of a cliche and then when you go and see it it's like oh my god this is like
an amazing unspoiled wilderness from another planet that has to be protected. Like it was so extraordinary and no photo or
anything I say or word conveys it. And it's like, you just feel this like,
it reminds me of one thing. I may have said this in other places, but it reminded me of something.
And that was many years ago, I went into the Bank of England gold bullion vault,
which is under the streets of London,
right in the center where it's really busy. Which is such a cool video that you did. I'll
put that in the show notes. People need to go watch that.
Thank you. It was this amazing place. And then when I came back upstairs and left the Bank of
England and just walked out onto the street and everyone was walking past me going to their
Starbucks and on their phones and going about their business, I felt like grabbing them by
the collar and saying, everyone, stop.
There's this incredible thing under your feet
that you don't know about and you have to know.
It's incredible.
It's amazing.
You have to see it.
You have no idea.
And that's how I now feel about Antarctica.
It's ridiculous and it's on the same planet as us
and we just don't think about it.
It was crazy.
That's my summary i was very
impressed by it you're very impressed by it when you say you've had an experience that's impossible
to explain i always just think of the comparison of people who have done hallucinogens where they
just like i can't explain this to you right it's the thing that you just have to experience
firsthand and so that's what it sounds like antarctica is like oh you you've been to cold
beautiful places before but you can't understand antarctica unless you go after you've been there
the first couple of days you'd sit in the restaurant on the ship that took us down there
and you'd be saying to like your fellow passengers so what do you think and everyone was almost
having the identical reaction you just kind of sigh and raise your eyebrows and just go
you're all like we should have brought a poet.
Yeah. So if you ever have a chance to go to Antarctica, I would recommend it.
It actually is the case that, I mean, Brady, you recommend me to go to lots of places. I'm
never going to go. You're like, oh, go here, go here. It's never going to happen. You do have a
tiny bit of pull with Antarctica simply because I really love going
to cold places. Like on vacations, I love cold. And being on a ship in a cold environment is
doubly attractive. So you do have extra pull there. But you have sold it so much that I almost
worry it would ruin all other cold trips in the future. I'd be going to Norway
and all I could think is, yeah, it's fine, but it's no Antarctica. I would be a little bit worried
about it, like too much of a peak experience. That's an interesting reason to not do something.
I understand it. The Maldives are like that for beach holidays. The Maldives has ruined beach
holidays, but I still wouldn't take that going to the Maldives. Is that really true though? Do you feel like beach holidays, they all just fall epically
short of the Maldives? Yeah. Anyone who goes to like a nice beach with like a blue sky and
white sand and goes, isn't this heaven? I'm like, yeah, no idea. Now maybe that would increase my
likelihood to go to the Maldives because I don't really like going to tropical places at all
anyway. So I might as well experience the best one on the face of the earth.
But my understanding is that didn't you have to do some kind of physical?
You don't just let anybody go to Antarctica, isn't that right?
Like anything before you go to a country that you've not been to before
or a place you've not been to before,
you think there's going to be like really strict rules.
And so you did have to fill out a medical form to say that you were fit.
But it turns out it was just
a formality trust me i would have been among the fittest most capable people on the ship i thought
there was some kind of like minimum number of push-ups you need to be able to do to get on to
the inside like no in my head i guess what i'm really imagining is the training sequence in
armageddon where it's like oh we got to get you nice and fit before we can bring you okay so it's
not like that at all all right never mind never mind. There were some quite old, not very mobile people who were doing the full shebang.
I mean, twice a day you got in and out of zodiacs
and sometimes you would land on the continent,
have to get out of a zodiac into the sort of ankle deep water
and walk up the rocky beach and then walk along the ice and stuff.
But not a problem.
You could do it tomorrow.
I won't be doing it tomorrow, but okay.
I will continue to recommend this one too.
Also, I don't want to really go into all the details of like you know the hospitality
and stuff but the ship i went on i think you would like as well it'd be a real selling point so i'll
i'll continue to hammer away about it too because i think this is the one for you all right i'll
keep that in my mind in my back pocket i actually recorded a podcast down there i made an audio log
each day while I was down
there. And that obviously doesn't belong on Hello Internet because it's not really that kind of show.
I will put that on Unmade podcast sometime soon after this episode. So people can hear me talk
about it for more time than they would care to. It's like a vlog, but in podcasting format,
that's what you were doing. Yeah, kind of, kind of kind of yeah but i did make a few notes of
things about the trip that i thought were hello internetty to talk about i don't know whether i
should go into my hissy fit about plane seating in british airways oh my god brady brady i know
you're talking about antarctica right i know this is like a wondrous experience for you but i you've
just mentioned british airways and i have to interrupt you i can't not interrupt you right
now because i found out a terrible thing what so i was recently flying on british airways and I have to interrupt you. I can't not interrupt you right now because I found out a terrible thing. So I was recently flying on British Airways and for various reasons when we
landed, we're sort of stuck on the plane for a little while, but everybody had gotten up and I
was at the front of the line. So I ended up having to make small talk with the flight attendants.
And during the course of that conversation, I was like, oh, that safety
video, right? It's the worst, right? Because I'd seen them all rolling their eyes at it. And they're
like, oh yeah, yeah, it's totally the worst. And so I said, when does comic relief season end?
And they looked at me and they said, it doesn't end. This is just the new safety video forever. And my heart sank to the center of the world upon hearing that.
Because even though on the last show I said, I'm not going to pay attention to these videos,
I find I can't look away somehow.
I can't do it.
And the little bit of hope that I was holding out that was like, oh, surely this is a temporary
fundraising situation.
No, it's permanent.
It's going to be here for five years until they redo their video.
And I'm so upset about that.
So anyway, sorry.
I just, I had to, I had to mention it.
No, fair enough.
I had to encounter it a few times on this trip.
I don't want to go into it.
And people want to go back through my Twitter and see my unhappiness with British Airways.
I'm so interested though,
what happened with the city? But I will say that I think they are deliberately splitting apart
people who travel together to make them pay more for seats. Why do you think that? Why do you think
that? We booked to go, I went with my wife, we booked to go together. And I will point out,
because this was like a one-off holiday of a lifetime, we had decided to fly business thinking,
let's make it special. And I imagine it's not a quick trip down to Antarctica. No, it was like a one-off like holiday of a lifetime we had decided to fly business thinking let's make
it special and i imagine it's not a quick trip down to antarctica no it was like it was like a
14 hour flight oh jesus christ yeah special you know once in a lifetime holiday and everything
about it to be good so we've we forked out for that yeah and i'm pretty sure if you fly for 14
hours in economy there's a non-trivial risk of death of being in economy for that long so i don't
know about that but yeah i'm very certain about that.
So when we checked in, we didn't pay like the extra money for seats here and there because
we thought, well, all the business seats are okay and we're going to be together.
And we hadn't thought about it.
We booked it so long ago, nearly a year ago.
We hadn't thought about it.
Checked in, can't sit together.
Opposite ends of the cabin.
Ridiculous.
There was a time when if you booked together, you would be put together.
Right, yeah.
Especially when you've paid extra already for the nice experience of the flight.
Right.
So anyway, the reason I've got a conspiracy theory about it is then when we got on the plane and we were like miles apart, there were other couples who were split apart as well.
And my wife was sitting next to
one of these estranged people. So she said, do you want to do a swap so you can at least sit
next to your husband? And she was like, oh, thank you so much. So she then moved to another part of
the plane. And then the guy who I was sitting next to got on board. And I was like, do you care about
where you sit? Because my wife now had a better seat than his seat. And he said, no, I don't care
where I sit. So I said, do you want to swap with my wife? So my wife could come and sit. So in the end, I did end up sitting next to her, but it took these like
multiple leapfrogging exchanges for all the people who were unhappy with their seats.
I'm thinking of that little puzzle with the cars where you need to get a car out of like a block
of cars. You need to move each one at a time to get it through. Like that's what it sounds like
you're doing here is everybody can sit together. We just have to do the right number of couple swaps one at a time in order to make this
arrangement work.
It's like some stable marriage problem or something.
I have to say that is very suspicious, right?
If it's not just, oh, it's an accident and you two were separated.
If there are several couples and everybody's separated, I would feel suspicious about that.
I would feel very suspicious.
I tell you what, it bloody works too, because I jumped straight online and paid extra to
get a sitting together on the return flight. So it totally works.
Oh, see, I thought you were going to say that you jumped straight online onto social media,
made an angry tweet, and British Airways lost a billion pounds in terms of their net worth in
the stock market. I was going to be like, yeah, you go, Brady.
I have to say, the people on British Airways, like the staff, I always find very nice and
charming and I've no issue with them.
But I constantly have problems with that airline.
They're not on my good list.
But anyway, we got there and we did end up sitting together on both flights.
And before we left, the part of Argentina you leave from right down the bottom,
Tierra del Fuego, like down in Patagonia at the very bottom of South America.
I saw their flag flying a few times, the Tierra del Fuego flag. And I've put a link there in the
show notes for you to have a look at because I wonder what you think of their flag. I thought
of you when I saw it. Oh, okay. I thought this was going to be something else because I thought
I'm misremembering now, as is often the case, my own videos on topics because I forget as soon as
they're uploaded, all the information flies out of my head. But I thought like there's some flag
in Argentina or in some country where it's required that they put this little wedge of
Antarctica on the flag, like the whole messed up situation with the territorial claims.
But I feel like it's Argentina is fussy about their claims in Antarctica.
That they are. There's even signs on the dock when you leave where they lay out what they
think the situation is with Antarctica. But that's got nothing to do with the Tierra del Fuego flag.
Which is also dumb. It's also dumb and theoretical. We all own these wedges of Antarctica. It's like, no, nobody does. And eventually someone with guns is going to tell you who really owns those little wedges of Antarctica.
Argentina even sent a pregnant lady to Antarctica to have a baby on Antarctica because they thought it helped their claim.
Yeah, it helped your claim with who?
Who do you think you're fooling by sending a pregnant lady down to Antarctica?
And imagine that had gone wrongly.
They'd really lose their claim.
So this flag, I don't know.
It looks a little amateur.
I will say this.
It looks better in real life.
It looks nice fluttering in the wind and a bit beaten up.
I quite liked it because there's so many birds and albatrosses around tierra del fuego and oh is
that supposed to be an albatross in the center yeah it is yeah stylized albatross and you see
so many of them there so okay yeah just to paint a quick word picture for the listeners if you think
of those flags that have divisions into three so So there's the bottom left-hand triangle is yellow.
The top right-hand triangle of the flag is blue. So it's sort of diagonally separated.
Yeah, diagonally. And then there's a diagonal white section in the center,
which is a stylized albatross. And then the Southern Cross on the blue side.
I think I like it better without the Southern Cross.
It's not the worst flag I've ever seen, obviously.
It looked nice in real life.
I just thought that flag works for me.
Seeing it on a computer screen out flat, not so much,
but when it's fluttering and I just liked it.
And I can believe that, right?
Some flags, the colors, they don't translate well onto the computer.
Yellow famously never really looks great on a computer screen.
So I can see that that might be better in person. So on the voyage, I had one of those
social moments where I wonder what you would have done if you were me. Humble hug. That's what you
do. It wasn't quite as confronting as the humble hug. I still haven't done a humble hug since that
episode. I've still been really awkward with everybody. There was like a newsletter every
day on the ship telling you what was happening that day. And on one day, as we're getting closer to Antarctica, as you cross the notorious Drake
Passage, they said iceberg competition. First person who spots an iceberg bigger than the ship
wins surprise. Now, most people were below deck because a lot of them get seasickness on the
Drake Passage and it's cold and there's nothing to see because it's just the sea.
But I'm not that person.
I'm like always on the deck setting up cameras.
I'm really into it.
I don't get seasick.
So a lot of the time I was just up on the top of the deck myself and taking a thousand photos with my long lens.
And I looked out to the right, the starboard side.
Oh, look at you.
So fancy. And way, way, way, way in the distance,
I saw a huge white iceberg, like miles away. But even without the lens, you could see it. It was
gleaming white. It was clearly an iceberg on the horizon. And it was so far away, I had to have
been bigger than the ship. It must have been massive. I don't know how long I'd have been there.
I went down below to the cabin and said to my wife,
I've seen an iceberg.
It's bigger than the ship, definitely.
Should I report it?
Basically, I was worried I was going to ring up
and they were going to say, yeah, it's been there for four hours
and everyone's already reported it.
So I didn't know whether I should ring up and like say,
I've seen an iceberg or I should just not do anything.
Well, you're afraid of the social embarrassment of them telling you that other people have seen the iceberg.
Yeah.
Hmm.
You don't want to look foolish in front of the captain.
Is that what this is?
Well, I wasn't going to like storm onto the bridge and tell the captain.
I think that's the best way to do it though, right?
Iceberg, right ahead.
Iceberg, starboard side, right?
And then you show off, you give the captain a little wink, right?
So he understands that you know all the nautical lingo, right?
You're on the inside of that.
So I didn't know what to do.
And my wife was like, just call, just call the reception.
So I picked up the phone and said, oh, hi, I think I've seen an iceberg.
I was also worried that it wasn't an iceberg.
Right. And they'd say, you know, you idiot, that's a cloud. Right. That's a whale.
That's Argentina. You don't know what you're doing.
So I called up and said, I think I've seen an iceberg. And they said, okay. And I said,
it's out to the right. She said, all right. And I said, has anyone else called up? And she said, no, no one's called. You're the first person. So she said, I'll call said has anyone else called up and she said no no one's called you're
the first person so she said i'll call the bridge and find out if you're right and then she called
back a couple of minutes later and said i've spoken to the bridge you're right they've checked
the radar and everything and that is a massive iceberg you've won a prize and like about 15
minutes later i was gone by then i'd gone back above deck to take photos but about 15 minutes later, I was gone by then. I'd gone back above deck to take photos.
But about 15 minutes later to the room was delivered a bottle of champagne,
which we never drank because we weren't drinking on the trip.
And a little certificate saying you are the winner of the iceberg competition.
And I'm not ashamed to say I am a lot more proud of that certificate than I should admit to.
That really makes me smile because I know you a little bit, Brady, and I
feel like I understand immediately how much you would enjoy that certificate. In fact, I can hardly
imagine that there would be anybody else on that ship who would enjoy that official certificate
more than you would. Official? Like official iceberg spotter certificate
that is 100% right up your alley.
It did make me feel like, you know, a man of the ocean.
Like me and the crew had like, we're comrades.
They're like that guy.
See that guy there?
Right.
He knows his stuff.
And actually I was walking down one of the corridors
about the next day.
And this guy who was a member of the crew stopped me and said,
you won the iceberg competition, didn't you?
And I was like, what?
Well, yes, I did.
And I just imagined they were like all talking about me on the bridge saying,
there's this guy, Harren.
He's like, he can smell ice.
He's amazing.
Can you believe how far away he spotted that iceberg?
And I said to the guy, I did.
And then I said to him, how do you know that, by the way?
Because I was wanting to, you know,
I wanted to hear what they were all saying about me.
Exactly.
You wanted to feel out the situation about how much are they talking about you?
Yeah. So I said, how do you know? How do you know that I'm the one who won the iceberg
competition? And he said, because I'm the guy that had to bring the champagne to your room.
Oh, I'm sorry, Brady. Because I know that the answer that you wanted is,
oh, because we're all working on a ballad in your honor that will be sung for many years on the ship. Yeah. Because you're the, you're the staff of legend. We're thinking of offering you a job.
Right. Right. That's what you want. We want you to give a speech tonight about how you did it.
Yeah. See, I feel like if I was in that situation and they say you would win a prize and they don't
specify what it is. And I see an iceberg off in the distance. There's no way I'm dialing that
phone. Right. It's like, whatever you're offering,
the chance that you're going to give it to me on a stage
is too high.
Or they're going to say your name
over the announcement system.
Yeah.
Nope, nope.
I'm going to let that go.
And you know what?
Someone who's excited to get a certificate,
they will get it.
Everything will be much more right in the universe.
Gray, you're taking the shine off it now.
You're making me think that some other introvert
split it up before me, but didn't call it in.
Yeah, there's like a whole team of Anorak style guys
who'd seen it three hours ago
and none of them called it in.
Yeah, or maybe everyone up on the deck was laughing
and said in the last 20 voyages,
he's the first person to actually call one in.
No one actually calls it in.
It's like a joke. Right. Or they said, oh no, that's for the kids. Yeah. They got to your cabin and were surprised
to realize it was not a 10 year old boy. Where's little Brady? We've got a prize for him.
Little toy boat. Fisher price. I'm Brady.
Well, I'm sure that certificate is framed in your house right now
somewhere is it not it is not framed i do have it somewhere i did bring it back but uh i haven't got
it here i expect to see a picture on your snapstagram of it mounted on the wall at some
point brady i think the people will like that so speaking of flags i did have a special moment and i did fly the nail and gear
on the antarctic continent yeah i gotta say brady you sent me that photo yeah it's quite a remarkable
moment to get the flag in antarctica but you know would have been better if you had a flagpole
i mean i see what you're doing there and I appreciate the joke.
And you're not the first to make it.
Yeah.
But.
I'm totally stealing that joke from everybody else who made it.
And I was like, yeah, you know what?
That's the kind of comment Brady does deserve.
After the last time when a guy put up an awesome pirate flag in the ocean, you were like.
No, a little piece of paper one.
It was great that that was done.
And all you can think is, oh, I'm going to tell him how he could have done it better.
At least I took a proper cloth flag.
But I know they put like a stick on the moon for the flag.
And sometimes you might put one in the soil.
But the traditional explorer thing, like if you look at people on top of Mount Everest,
they don't put poles there.
They just hold it above their head like I was doing. Like I did at the Explorer. I was in the right genre.
Actually, you know, you're right. If I'm thinking about photos I've seen of people on top of
mountains holding flags, you're right. It's like the team of people are holding the flag out. You're
right. That is the way I've seen it. Yeah. And you're like, you're in far too hazardous an
environment to be faffing around with poles. And this like life and death just like when you were holding up the
nail and gear it was life and death at that moment there were three or four people around when my
wife was taking that picture of me with the flag so it did create the what's that flag i don't
recognize that flag and that's how did you how did you explain this territorial claim of yours
i just mumbled something about podcasts and it's a joke and you wouldn't understand.
Oh, right.
Okay.
So you're telling all the people they're on the outside of the inside joke.
That's what you're doing.
We're inside.
I'm bursting with pride.
In all seriousness, it's super awesome that you did that.
It was very cool to see.
And it was very cool to know that you were in antarctica and had unfurled the mighty
nail and gear that was pretty great brady that was pretty i may even award myself a medal no i
don't think i don't think you can do that no no brady i don't i don't think we get medals of honor
i don't think that's how that works no you're right the queen couldn't give herself a victoria
cross yeah even if you and i were to land on mars as the first humans ever to step
foot on mars and plop down a nail and gear flag i don't think we could award ourselves hello
internet medal of honors i don't think that's how that works no you're right i agree but maybe i can
print you up a nice certificate would you like that add it to my collection yeah so if there's
one thing i find it a little bit crazy just in the world in general
and among tourists and that when you're walking around London and stuff,
it's people taking photos with iPads.
That was taken to the next level a couple of times in Antarctica.
Two in particular I can remember.
One was a guy standing on the front of the ship as we crossed the Drake Passage,
nearly being blown off the ship, spray everywhere going around him and holding up an iPad to take a photo. And the other one was a
guy standing up on a zodiac, balancing on the edge, trying not to fall in, taking a photo of
a minke whale as it emerged from the water. Magnificent moment. And he's holding up an iPad
to take a photo of it. It's so incongruous and I can't
get used to it. I can get used to people taking pictures with their phones.
I'm glad you can because that's a thing you're going to see. I'm glad you're letting that one
slide, Brady.
Yeah. But there is something, you know, when you're in Antarctica, taking pictures of like
wildlife in the distance with your iPhone is strange enough. But an iPad just looks so naff.
When you're in the magnificence of nature in any form
that is when you can most keenly feel the limitations of your phone's camera like if you
go out to the national parks and this is this feeling of wow this is so stunningly beautiful
and take a picture you go it looks nothing like the way it looks to me as i'm standing here i
don't know why i even bothered with this photograph. And yeah, the iPad camera is an additional step down on that one.
It's not just because of the quality of the camera. It's something about holding an iPad up
that looks wrong.
It does look odd. It's not a step too far from holding up your laptop and using the
FaceTime camera to take a picture of whatever you're looking at.
It's the fact that the tool is so big, it's not built for purpose.
A phone is small and sort of, you know, it's supposed to be everywhere and a utility. An iPad is not being used as it's built for purpose. You can't just then slip it into your back pocket.
No. Like you're carrying around this giant rectangle everywhere.
You're not going to grab your laptop and just say, oh, I'm going to take a quick picture
of this thing. I mean, I'm sure people have done it. I'm sure we'll hear from those people.
But yeah, it's sort of ridiculous.
And I understand why it happens.
And if it's the only thing that you have on you, sure, whatever.
But especially standing at the bow of a vessel in Antarctica with your iPad.
I don't know.
I feel like that's a particular image of civilization in a way, right?
There's something about that that's like, huh, okay.
This is where we are in the world another thing on this trip i realized is how incredibly little i know about krill krill like shrimp the things that whales eat yeah is that what it is is it
just a shrimp because they look like shrimps they look like prawns but like they're this famous
thing they're famously you know the most important thing in the world because so many things eat are they okay they're super important yeah like all
these sea life things you know you know whales and all the penguins and everything eat so much krill
and i always hear about how important it is but i know so little about them i mean the world is an
infinite place brady you can't know everything about everything but like krill that's the thing
that the blue whales eat, right?
They're just filtering it through the gigantic mouths, which is always funny that the world's
largest animal, I think if I'm remembering correctly, the blue whales are the largest
animals ever, eats nothing but like the tiniest animal ever. There's 379 million tons of krill
making it among the species with the largest total biomass,
according to Wiki. Over half of this is eaten by whale, seals, penguins, squid, and fish each year.
I mean, what do you want to know about krill, Brady?
I just feel bad that this is like, biomass-wise, this is like amongst the most
important and abundant animal on the planet. And I don't know much about them i mean how much do
you know about algae not much yeah i bet there's more biomass of algae than krill there has to be
right you reckon biomass maybe i'm going to reckon that it's an order of magnitude more biomass in
terms of algae versus krill okay it's got to be i have no idea you maybe you're right and i feel like my
knowledge of both is about the same and that knowledge is they exist and i have a word
in my head that is the label for the thing one of which is green and slimy and the other one is pink
and tiny that's the the sum total of my knowledge I feel like I want to know more about Krill.
Okay. I'll see if I can get you a book or maybe people in the Reddit can have good recommendations.
Someone must have written a gripping audio book on the history of Krill that you can dive into.
I mean, that has to exist. I read a whole audio book on COD a while back. Like there has to be one on Krill without a doubt. Actually, I have a lot of doubts about that. I don't think
it really does exist, but I don't know why I'm saying it so
confidently. I feel like there's books on everything, but now maybe not the krill.
Maybe there's just not that much to know about them, Brady.
You have been sailing and been on voyages yourself. I actually have done very few of them.
Well, let's back up because you're overselling it with the words there. I have been on
cruises. I have not done any sailing. That sounds far too active.
I like a nice cruise with a lot of people who are retired. That is about my speed in the ocean.
Do you think cruising or sailing gives you a better feeling for the vastness of our planet
than say flying over it, which we often do.
I feel it's more of a more visceral experience of the endlessness of these oceans.
I think you're right in no small part because there's something unreal about the plane journeys.
When I look out the airplane window, there's something about it that just doesn't register as very real. Once you get past it, like, oh, I'm taking off from New York and I know New York very well. And now it looks like a tiny model of New York. But then when you're
flying over the middle of America, there's no sense for the absolute scale of it. There's just
a feeling of, God, this flight takes longer than I think it does. The only time I didn't have that was a little
while ago. I had the experience of I was traveling across America and then I happened to take a
flight which reconstructed a whole bunch of the path that I had taken. And it was very weird to
see that from the airplane to be like, oh, okay, I know where all of this is. Like I've gone through
this on the ground and now I'm doing it over the air. And then it did feel like I had a much more visceral experience.
But no, in general, I think you're right.
I think taking a cruise in Alaska gives you a sense that Alaska is enormous, that it's
huge and you're only seeing a tiny part of it.
That is partly because the speed is a much more humanly understandable scale.
You can see the trees going by and kind of mentally clock how fast you're going.
So yeah, I think that does give you a better scale of things.
When you're in Antarctica, though, did it give you a sense of the scale of how big it is?
I guess because what I'm wondering here is the scenery must have been pretty similar, right?
Like, how different does it look as you're traveling along or does it just seem like it's just a giant wall of ice the whole
time? No, there are different parts. It was so different to what I expected. I thought you just
would go through the sea for a few days and then you would reach like, you know, a whitish cliff
and this huge expanse of whiteness. But it wasn't like that at all. It was like so
jagged and dramatic and mountainous straight away. I was only on the Antarctic Peninsula,
by the way. And the scenery was so extreme. The scale of it was so much more than I could
have expected. And the icebergs were so big and massive and different. And it was different in
different places. And it did take a while to sail from place to place.
It was like you're in the small part of it.
And that in itself was massive.
The scale and the beauty and the dramaticness of it all is what surprised me.
It felt massive.
And it made you feel small.
And you were only seeing a small part of it.
Did it make you feel humble, Brady?
No, because I had that certificate from spotting the iceberg.
I felt like I'd conquered the continent.
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This news story has caught my eye. I don't know a lot of the details about
it. And I know that you and I don't really go in too much for talking about politics in detail,
but there is a bigger picture here. And this is the story going around where someone's,
I think, got some court case where they're trying to stop the president blocking them on Twitter.
And the judge hasn't made a ruling at the time of recording it
about whether or not this is legal or there's some first amendment issues or something like that.
And the judge has suggested in passing that maybe the president of the United States would have been
better advised just to mute the person rather than block them. And muting them wouldn't infringe on
rights the way that blocking may or may not. So take it away from that and just talk in generalities. What do you think about like public officials and people
in important positions blocking citizens? Like you're thinking maybe the president
shouldn't be blocking people on Twitter? Yeah, that is the debate.
I don't think it's entirely because you can't see his tweets because there are a million other ways
you could see his tweets, I guess. I think it's more, I think if you're entirely because you can't see his tweets because there are a million other ways you could see his tweets i guess i think it's more i think if you're blocked you can't then comment
so you can't enter the debate that happens underneath whereas if you're muted i think
you can enter the debate just the tweeter doesn't see it so they don't have to be annoyed by you
that's interesting i was kind of forgetting what the difference is between blocking and muting because my policy is only ever to mute. I don't block
for a couple of reasons. One, I think it's just pointlessly aggressive. The person,
I believe that they're notified that you're blocked as opposed to muting, which is just silent.
Then like you said, if they try to log in and see what your tweets are, the blocked person is unable to see that.
And I kind of forgot about that.
They can't even see what you're saying on Twitter, which, of course, is silly because
you just log out and you can see the tweets.
But that almost is part of what makes it feel like it's pointlessly aggressive to me.
It's like, oh, I've blocked you.
You can't see that.
And then the other reason I don't block people on mute instead is because
maybe I'm wrong about this, but for people on mute, sometimes I get the feeling that they
would take great satisfaction out of getting blocked. And I would like to deny them the
satisfaction. That's exactly how I feel. There's a very warm glow knowing that they're like still screaming into the void and they
don't know that you can't hear them.
It's like, oh, we've black mirrored them.
You just don't exist and you don't even know.
So yeah, I mean, maybe I'm wrong about that, but I definitely get the impression that there
are some people who seem like they're asking to be blocked.
That's the badge of honor.
Yeah.
It could become a righteous crusade of,
I was so right and C.G.P. Gray was so wrong and he was such a baby and couldn't stand it that he
blocked me. They're holding up the block as proof. Whereas in reality, it's like, I just never care
to hear anything you say ever again. Like goodbye. You just don't exist in my world. I will never
think about you again until the end of time. So that's my policy for not blocking. There is something to that idea that a politician, even if it's only in theory,
right? If I woke up and I was president of the United States tomorrow, and for some reason,
I couldn't resign immediately like I would want to. And I was using Twitter because I think,
oh God, this job sucks so much. Let me just goof around on Twitter all day.
I certainly wouldn't be reading reading all of the feedback,
and it would just be impossible to do anyway.
There's like a very theoretical aspect about this.
But I do feel like the judge would be right to say,
you can't block, but you can mute.
That there's some kind of democratic idealism that we're preserving here,
that you're not barred from the conversation,
the pointless screaming into the void of political internetting that happens, but like you're not
banned from it. You can still participate in this total waste of your time and mental energy if you
want to. That seems deeply important to lots of people in ways that I think is bizarre and
self-harming, but you know, whatever.
So yeah, I think I'm going to be on that side that politicians shouldn't be able to block.
I think it's especially true now that politicians, particularly the current president of the United States, is using Twitter as such a way to implement policy and announce things.
I think if it was just a private Twitter where it was, oh, here's my bacon and eggs I had
for breakfast this morning, I'd feel less that way. But now that it's become such a part of politics that
I think I'm probably on the same side as you. I still love the idea of you being president,
though. I like the idea of you running under the slogan, make America gray again.
It doesn't even make any sense, Brady. It doesn't make any sense at all.
Still sounds cool, though, doesn't it?
I have one policy aim, which is that we're going to desaturate the flag.
It's just going to be gray.
We're going to take all the color out.
And then resign.
Right.
And then resign.
I have no other goals.
I just want to do this one thing. Get it done in the first hundred days while you have all your political capital and then
get out of there.
Desaturate the flag.
All the political capital that I would have, right?
All of the political allies I would have because I've been so involved in that system.
I was elected on this mandate. Oh, I don't know if he's going to get that
desaturation through the Senate. I need 60 votes for a desaturation.
Do I need less votes if we're only going to 25% desaturated? I don't know. How does that work?
Right? Like each vote is an additional percent of desaturation.
It's a sliding scale.
Do you think the same thing? Like, what do you think about this? Or do you feel like
if the president wants to block someone, the president can block someone? I mean, because
look, in real life, you can block people through physical security. You don't have a right in real
life to say something to the president. That's not going to happen. That's true. Is this actually
different? I don't know. I don't know. That is a fair argument. And that's hard to argue against.
I think if everyone else is allowed to comment
and you've been picked out to not comment, there is something that seems a little unfair and
arbitrary about it. But then again, you know, the president can say, Joe Smith, you can come and
meet me in the Oval Office and Sandy Jones, you can't. So, I don't know, just mute them. Just
make it not a problem. Listen, we have a really easy solution to this that
accomplishes what you want unless of course your whole point is to block someone in an aggressive
manner right if what you want yeah is to send them that little message of like you're blocked
buddy or your whole point is to stop them entering the debate with others and then i do see a free
speech debate creeping in a little bit mute don't block Don't block people. Saves you a lot of effort. And it's far
more sneaky and fun. Yeah, it's far more sneaky. And you deny your opponents any satisfaction.
Dare I say it's a slightly naughty feeling when you meet someone.
Which is the greatest satisfaction there can be.
Speaking of the world of social media, I've been getting messages from a bunch of my friends, including you. Yes.
Asking if I'm on Instagram. And Instagram is the one social media platform that it feels like
everybody tries to bully me into being on, right? Where they're like, oh, you don't have an
Instagram. You need an Instagram. And the thing that did push me over the idea of like, oh,
I want to get an Instagram was everybody in the park wanting me to sign up to their dog's Instagrams, which in a
weird way, I was so much more interested in than like my actual friend's Instagrams. I was like,
yeah, I would like to know what this dog is up to all day. Sure. I'll sign up on the Instagram,
but I didn't have one. And I thought, okay, fine. I will try this. I will sign up to the Instagram. But when I went to go
and do it, somebody was already there who had taken my Instagram name. So there was already
a CGP Grey on Instagram.
Using your logo. So it's not like they just happened to have your name.
Well, okay. So the problem is there's several CGP greys on Instagram.
And I feel like I don't understand why people are doing this.
Attention, attention.
Do you think so?
Okay.
So there is someone else who has been trying to follow all of my friends' Instagrams and is using my logo and is reposting photos that I put on Twitter onto that Instagram to make it look like it's me.
And this is one of those things where I don't quite know how to react to this.
And I'm also really aware that this has dramatically dispirited me from actually trying to use Instagram
because it's like, oh, if I can't get my username, then what's the point?
And I thought I was being really clever because I had made an Instagram
account, which was called Not CGP Grey, which somehow I thought I was going to be able to use
to sign up to dog Instagram accounts in the park. But I realized immediately that I hadn't really
thought that through because then I'd have to explain this name and then explain what my actual
job is. And then it was all over. And so I was like, oh God, secret Instagram account. And the whole thing just became too complicated. And I just gave it up. And
I feel like the Instagram is not for me, but I want my original name if I'm going to use it,
but somebody has it and is just keeping it. I don't know if it's like a terrorist negotiation.
And for the record, I don't negotiate with terrorists. And then there's somebody else
who's just pretending to be me. I feel like I have to just give up this whole platform and let it go.
I think that's such an insidious practice too.
Like of all the things people do, taking people's names and doing that
is one of the things I think lowest of.
I think that's really like unfair.
But maybe there's some motive or something going on.
I don't understand.
But I cannot conceive of any explanation this person could give that would
make me think, oh, okay, fair enough then. Yeah. This is one of these things in the modern world
that's just weird. It's not a thing that could ever happen in real life, right? Where someone
goes around and they just start using your name and pretending to be you. But on the internet,
it's like anybody can do this stuff. And i feel like society has to figure out how to
handle this identity problem yeah like twitter tries to do the thing with blue check marks
and it sort of works you have that on instagram by the way and i just got one last week oh okay
so they have some kind of verified yeah program they use it a lot less than twitter though yeah
but see i think like it still doesn't really help because it only lets you know in the scenario
where oh you're interacting with the person and now that person is verified still doesn't really help because it only lets you know in the scenario where,
oh, you're interacting with the person and now that person is verified.
It doesn't work in the negative case.
Like what I would love to be able to do is I'd love to be able to call up Instagram and say,
hey, can you give an anti-verified badge to this person?
Right.
And they could put like a little skull and crossbones. Yeah.
Or some kind of anti-symbol on the logo.
Right.
Because I did try to go through Instagram
and get my actual name back
and that process was totally unsuccessful.
And so I feel like I wish there was a way
to be able to say this person is anti-verified.
I want the thing on the other side of this.
I don't just want the positive thing.
And I feel like that's something
all social networks could have. I agree. Is to say like, well, why don't you want the positive thing. And I feel like that's something all social networks could have.
I agree.
Well, why don't you specify if users are anti-verified versus verified?
But just so people know, if you see a CGP Grey on Instagram at the moment, it's not the real deal.
Yeah.
And it's inhibiting my use of Instagram. I can't become a very popular Instagram star who can affect stock prices
with my photographs of displeasure of things. I don't know. I'm still not convinced Instagram is
for me, but now I will never really know if Instagram is for me.
Do you know what though? Someone impersonating you or one of my other friends who work in this
area is one of the few people I would block because I
don't want that person putting a comment under my picture, other people seeing a comment saying,
great photo, Brady, and your logo next to it and thinking that must be great. I'm going to follow
that person. So I would be inclined to block someone who was impersonating one of my friends,
just because I don't want them to be leeching off the capital that that person has built.
It's such a weird thing.
Again, like I can't quite understand the reasoning for wanting to do that thing.
But yeah, anti-verified.
Let's make it a thing.
I don't think a skull and crossbones is the right logo.
That's too cool.
Yeah, it is too cool.
Thumbs down, maybe.
Or a red cross instead of a green tick, maybe.
I think a red cross.
Yeah, skull and crossbones, too good.
Or like a really ugly, maybe there's that color that's famous for being like the most ugly color.
It's this kind of like greenish brown awfulness.
That they use on cigarette.
Yeah, yeah.
You use that color.
This is anti-verified, an X.
Is anti-verified a word?
Like, is that the right word?
I don't know.
It's new speak, Brady.
You just put anti in front of the thing and it's fine.
Or gate on the end.
Verify gate.
Quick plane crash corner.
Plane crash corner.
Something has to be marked.
Because I've been getting a lot of contact lately from listeners.
And so I want them to know I'm hearing them.
I don't know if we mentioned, but 2017 was quite a special year
because by some metrics, and I'm not entirely sure about this, and it also depends on definitions,
there was no fatality on a scheduled commercial airline.
Oh yeah. I saw this somewhere. Yeah.
I saw it and I've been reading through the crashes that did happen in 2017. And a lot of the ones that people may know about from last year were either cargo flights or
they were charter flights. And so if you use the right definition, you can get zero fatalities.
Although I do see one that happened in December, a small plane in Canada with 25 passengers. That
seems to me to have been a commercial flight,
although maybe it wasn't a jet engine. Maybe there's some other thing there. But one person
died from injuries after that crash happened. If it's after, that doesn't count. The hospital
could have been at fault there. Now you have to die when the plane hits the ground.
All right. I'm sure that was much consolation to the family.
Yeah. They got a staph infection in the hospital. It was entirely different. Anyway, it was this notable year. But 2018 is off to a bad start. And we have had numerous crashes,
including one in Iran that was quite bad. There was one in Russia that was very bad. But notably,
most recently, and this is the one that most people contacted me about,
another huge blow to my
attempts to get you to ever go to Mount Everest with me was we had another plane crash at the
Nepal airport. I feel like that one has a lot of crashes per 100,000 landings.
Nepali airlines are infamous for not being massively attentive to air safety, it seems.
And we've discussed this before. And this was another one.
This was a US Bangla Airlines flight. So that may not have even been a Nepali airline. I'm not sure.
Anyway, it was one that crashed at Nepal airport. And obviously my Twitter timeline lit up because
people, whenever there's a Nepal plane crash, this happens.
It's at the center of the bullseye for you, everyone's going to tell you all about it it's like anytime there's any news about automation anywhere in the world
people send it to me on twitter this is like oh yep okay here we go and now yeah for you anything
with nepal that's what you're gonna get yeah so even though i'm not doing my own cause any good
i thought i'd raise it with you and also just let people know you know thanks for letting me know
i spoke to duke from the vatican yesterday and he the first thing he said let people know, you know, thanks for letting me know. I spoke to
Duke from the Vatican yesterday and the first thing he said to me was, do you know that this
Nepal plane crash? I bet everyone's been telling you about it. And like, well, yeah, now you're
telling me about it as well. But yeah, so I've even got my mates helping me out with those ones.
You know what? I'm glad you're happy to receive this information. Whereas I feel like every time
you bring a plane crash corner,
I tense up a little bit and I think,
oh God, what is Brady going to tell me now?
And I've been just living in happy bliss,
you know, watching the BA safety videos,
trying not to think about being on a plane
and keeping the one piece of news that I did hear,
which is, oh, there was no fatalities last year.
Great.
I'm just going to imagine this trend line continues forever.
And now I talk to Brady and Brady ruins this. He breaks this idea in my mind. Hello, Internet. Have you ever tried
to make a website? Let me tell you from personal experience, it's a real pain in the butt. It's not
a thing that you want to do. You have to set up a computer remotely to host HTML files and PHP and basically learn the whole job of being a systems administrator.
It's not fun.
And it's the kind of thing that will fill your life with stress.
At least it was before Squ the time to Squarespace.
Putting both Hello Internet on Squarespace and CGPGrey.com on Squarespace, I basically have never had to think about maintaining a website since then.
The websites are what I want.
They're up and they work.
If you want to make a website, you should start with Squarespace.
They really make it just completely simple.
You go to Squarespace, you sign up, you pick a template that looks sort of close to how you want to start, and then you can use their drag and drop interface to customize it to get it exactly the way that you want. And it is
super customizable. There are lots of websites that are running on Squarespace that you would
never have any idea are Squarespace websites. So after a little customization, you have a site
looking the way you want, and then they just have so many integrations and plugins.
So you can make that website do whatever you want. Like I have an email list. It's very easy to put
a little block on your website that says, click here to sign up for my email list. If you're
running a podcast, it's very easy to drag in little audio blocks. If you want to sell something, they have e-commerce tools that make it dead simple.
They have analytics so you can see how your results are working.
And there's lots of stuff that you would never even think about that's done automatically,
like built-in search engine optimization.
Is that a thing that you want to do?
No, of course not.
And optimizing for different size screens.
Do you know how many different size screens there are?
An infinity of different size screens.
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That's squarespace.com, offer code hello. Thank you to Squarespace for supporting the show. And
thank you to Squarespace for running my websites for years now. Hey, speaking of news in the news bubble, did you hear that Stephen Hawking died?
I did hear that Stephen Hawking died.
I think that that was absolutely impossible to avoid in my universe.
I woke up the morning that it had happened and my Reddit client, I think, has 25 slots
and eight of those slots, the top four were all stephen
hawking has died yeah that is also how i found out was my entire front page of reddit was i think it
was the same thing it was like 10 of the 25 slots was about that story i mean the man had a good run
right i mean i forget what the original diagnosis was, but it was like five years, 10 years, something like that.
Not even that, I don't think.
I don't understand how he lived as long as he did.
It's just astounding.
Because of like the saturation I'd woken up to, my first instinct, obviously I was sad that it
happened, but my first instinct was not to make a video about it or do any sort of tribute video
on 60 Symbols, which is my physics channel but a few people said to me including like you know people close to me said
no this probably should be a video you know it's about as important a physicist as you could get
yeah that has died i was in bristol's but i did activate sean who helps me with filming to do
some interviews with the nottingham crew and then i we put it together into a video and i'm really
pleased i did it in the end and we made a sort of a tribute video but that video i think does encapsulate why at least some of the
physicists who i know who knew him thinks he lived so long and it was just like he was like a really
really determined stubborn guy by the sounds of it there's a few stories in the video that kind
of encapsulate that i mean maybe but i don't think you can really just out-determine degenerative disease.
I think maybe there is an element of that. I'm not talking about, you know, mind over matter.
You're not talking about magic when we're discussing the death of Stephen Hawking.
No.
Yeah, no, I understand what you mean.
Good. But I do think there are degrees to which a determination to do certain things
that result in prolonging
your life you can do i don't know about the case of stephen hawking but certainly there are people
who kind of when their will goes they stop doing things that are physically keeping them alive
people sometimes give up don't they at certain points or not in a bad way but just your ability
to do the things you need to physically do to keep living. You can just say no. Yeah. No, I mean, it's a loss for the world. I think I can pretty directly point
to my own career in physics, having been started by Stephen Hawking and reading A Brief History
of Time, as I always want to specify, the illustrated edition, which is much easier to read.
And I think much better. I hear a lot of people saying that since he died,
and you're in that category too. That was a big deal to you.
That was really my first introduction
to the idea of physics
because the way my high school worked
was each year you just did one science all year.
So you started with earth science,
which was really just kind of like a baby science.
And then you did biology
and then the next year it was chemistry.
And the final year was physics. And physics was also optional. You only had to do up to chemistry,
you were not required to do physics. And I was much more of a computery kid in terms of the
things that I had found on my own. But my best friend in high school at the time was showing off to everybody that he was
reading this like big hard book called A Brief History of Time. I remember in a totally petty
high school way thinking like, I'm smarter than him. I can read that book. He's bragging to
everybody that he's reading this book and like I can read it too. And so I picked it up out of
like some kind of best friend competition. And I was like,
oh, this book is amazing. Like this is really great. It was actually because of that, that I
had ended up signing up for some university classes in physics to do over the summer,
to just familiarize myself with it and thinking about it as a possible major in university later on. I don't know,
I can imagine a very different course of my life where I decided not to take physics in my senior
year because it would have been a subject I would have been much less familiar with. And instead,
doubling down on computer science stuff and then, you know, going on to do computer science stuff, and then, you know, going on to do computer science stuff in college. So
yeah, I think I can very strongly point to that book as navigating a large direction that my life
took afterwards. That's great. And also, it also means there would be no Hello Internet if it wasn't
for Stephen Hawking. Without many things, there would be no Hello Internet. No, and I'm not
suggesting they should be listing Hello Internet among stephen hawking's numerous accomplishments thanks stephen hawking i had a very interesting experience
in college and in the rest of my life because of the book that you wrote
gray i know you don't like spoilers i know you don't like watching trailers right but you have
also said that your attitude to future star wars films has become a little bit more, meh, they're going to be out every year. They're not like these seminal events anymore.
So I'm wondering if I can persuade you to watch a recently released teaser trailer for the new
solo film, the Han Solo special film. I'd like you to watch it. I have a motive.
A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away, you bullied me into watching a Star Wars trailer.
Bullied you.
Persuaded.
Bullied.
I'll stick with my original usage.
Into watching a Star Wars trailer.
Yeah.
And I always regretted it.
But I let you push me into that.
Well, you're never going to make that mistake again, eh?
I'm never going to make that mistake again.
But lucky for you, you're never going to make that mistake again, eh? I'm never going to make that mistake again. But lucky for you, you are correct.
I totally feel, and it has been even more so the case as more time has gone on,
that The Last Jedi just totally broke something with me in Star Wars.
And I am filled with, I just don't care.
I will now watch all the Star Wars trailers because I view them as like Marvel movies.
Actually, a little bit less than Marvel movies because there's plenty of Marvel movies that I
would avoid the trailers for. So yeah, I'm cool. Whatever you want me to watch, I'll watch it,
Brady. We'll have a watch of this solo trailer and after you've watched it, we'll discuss it. So
spoilers, I guess, if you don't want to know anything about this trailer. So watch the first
link there. Okay. Trailer watched, Brady. I have ingested it.
First reaction?
Jack Black doesn't seem like a good casting choice for Han Solo, I think is my reaction
to that trailer. That guy's very Jack Black, isn't he? Especially at the end.
That hadn't occurred to me, but fair enough. I think having Woody Harrelson in it might be a
mistake because it completely yanked me out of the moment when like someone so famous who's done so many other things appears.
But I think Star Wars films are better served by people who are not quite so prominent.
But anyway.
Yeah, I'm going to agree with that.
Solo is too few letters for the title of the film, too.
It looks silly in the Star Wars box having S-O-L-O at the end there when they show the logo.
It's like,
that doesn't look right.
Are they missing some letters?
Oh yeah, you're right.
It does.
It does have too few letters.
But anyway.
I don't know.
I got to say,
the casting of that movie
doesn't strike me as great.
Like I said,
the main guy strikes me
as not Han Solo at all.
He seems like Jack Black,
especially at the end
when he's making the joke
about everything's fine.
And I don't know the actress's name. I'll just of her as sarah connor from terminator genesis and it's a few other movies they've seen her in in which i would describe her as
thoroughly mediocre every time that's the calise from game of thrones i don't watch the game of
thrones i don't know it is she good in that she? She's the Khaleesi, man. Okay. It means nothing to me, but thank you.
You can say it louder, right? But it's just like, it's not like we're trying to speak a foreign language here.
And you just speak louder right until they understand.
I'm sure it's very important in the Game of Thrones.
Good.
Anyway, everything I've seen her in, I think she's kind of mediocre but it's like i just feel like whatever i was very mad about it i watched that and went you know that looks
entirely missable and you love you love han solo han solo i feel like is your favorite oh who
doesn't love han solo but yeah but i feel like brady you really love han solo soon after that
came out there was a fan recap came out using a different song.
They used some music by the Beastie Boys, Sabotage by the Beastie Boys.
Now, I want you to watch the second recut trailer with a new piece of music.
It's always embarrassing when your multi-billion dollar media company is outdone in coolness by some kid in his bedroom who recuts
your trailer. That trailer is so cool. That makes me excited about the film. The first one, I was
like, I don't want to watch the film. I watched that second one and I'm like, oh, that's awesome.
I mean, with any kind of media, music always does so much heavy lifting, right? So much more so than
people think. Music is absolutely vital.
A thing that I think is great about the Beastie Boys recut of the solo trailer is it does what I
feel like these alternate Star Wars movies should do is take stuff in a bit of a different direction
and having a Beastie Boys song in a trailer makes it feel like, oh,
this is a movie that's like Star Wars adjacent, but it's going to have a very different feel.
Whereas the music in the first one is very boring, generic, important movie music.
They still tried to make it a bit more rocky and grungy but in a generic film score way i was watching
this video about how in movie making there's this really common thing about using temp music to score
movies and that now studios are also doing the thing where when they're making a movie they will
just take the music from the movie that they want this to be the most like and do a temp cut with that music and then just slightly change it.
So they're trying to go for the theme.
And the solo music feels like,
I've heard this a thousand times,
as just like important music in a movie.
But I was watching a trailer
for the new Harry Potter spinoff,
which is like the Fantastic Beasts.
And it ends with music
that sounds so much incredibly
like the Avengers.
It's just startling. It's like, oh God, all of these movies, like I can just feel this pressure
of Hollywood wanting to have these things that are these big universes that's all built around
Marvel, that all kind of sounds the same. That's like, we're going to force a universe
and all of these universes are going to be dealing with big important things
and we're going to make a bazillion dollars
off of all of these movies
because we're just trying to angle them
at something that's the same that we know that works.
And I think that is exactly why
the recut trailer with the Beastie Boys music,
it's like a breath of fresh air.
It's extra funny because that Beastie Boys song
was used in the new Star Trek reboots.
I think it's Star Trek 3. they use beastie boys a bunch of times and in the third movie they use
it in a pivotal scene they use that song and it's like it works it kind of works it's a fun song but
it also makes stuff feel different so yeah a plus work to that second trailer and you know a thoroughly
mediocre score to the first one.
Do you think you could use that type of music in the actual Star Wars film? Do you think the
times come where you could have song lyrics and, or contemporary songs in a Star Wars film? That
would be a massive step, wouldn't it? Because, you know, galaxy far, far away and all that sort
of stuff. Could you do it?
Like, I think in the right alternate story, you could. In one of the main movies, right?
When the next main Star Wars movie comes out,
if they're just using Britney Spears music as the backing.
I'd find that quite jarring.
But I feel like you could get away with it in an alternate movie.
Because if you just feel like, oh, we're just playing around with the style.
I don't know.
The recut trailer is awesome.
It makes it feel much more exciting.
But it still
feels like god this looks just very boring and very formulaic it's like oh here's Han Solo
he's breaking the rules kicked out of the academy for having a mind of his own
it's just like I just I feel bored by it before I've even seen it I'll tell you a trailer not
to watch if you don't want to be scared about what the film's going to be like and that is
Ready Player One which I enjoyed the book and I've to be scared about what the film's going to be like and that is ready
player one which i enjoyed the book and i've been quite looking forward to the film and the trailer
has made me think the film's going to be terrible the film may be great and i hope it is but the
trailer really worries me ready player one is one of those books that has been so universally
recommended to me that i feel my wall of resistance has gone up over it right it's like oh it's been
too recommended
and I feel like I don't want to read it
because everyone recommends it.
So I haven't seen the trailer to Ready Player One.
I haven't read the book Ready Player One.
And no, internet, you don't need to tell me
to read the book Ready Player One
because everybody in the world has already told me
to read the book Ready Player One.
Did you watch the TV show Peaky Blinders?
No.
It's a British BBC show.
That's a show set in sort of crime underworld
of the UK just after World War I. But all the scoring to it is modern rock music,
like really contemporary, grungy, cool stuff. And that works really well. That works really well.
I'm watching it at the moment. The music, the music choices are intriguing and somehow nine times out of 10 work really well.
If, you know, throw that into the recommendation pot for people, if they want to watch a show
using music in an interesting way.
And it's a cool show.
Well, are you going to see Solo Brady?
Is that going to be on your list?
Memorial Day, apparently it's coming out.
Are you going to be there?
I probably won't see it the day it comes out, but I'll probably see it in the first week
or two.
Yeah.
You're going to buy some hot dogs and go watch the movie?
Well, hot dogs will be consumed that will probably be my main reason to go and see it my hot dog excuse i can go and get my
five guys hot dogs next door it was just mentally thinking like i don't really want to see solo
uh i'd watch the trailer already anyway and then you thought popcorn yeah even before you'd be like
oh you should watch the trailer it's like i'd seen this right it's like i'd watched it and already totally forgotten about it but now i'm thinking
oh yeah when the movie comes out this is my excuse to eat popcorn i can just tell my wife
i gotta go watch a movie it's it's a business expense it's for work it's for hello internet
and go and consume all of the popcorn in a horrible self-destructive orgy of popcorn. Thank you.