Lex Fridman Podcast - #469 – Oliver Anthony: Country Music, Blue-Collar America, Fame, Money, and Pain
Episode Date: May 20, 2025Oliver Anthony is singer-songwriter who first gained worldwide fame with his viral hit Rich Men North of Richmond. He became a voice for many who are voiceless, with many of his songs speaking to the ...struggle of the working class in modern American life. Thank you for listening ❤ Check out our sponsors: https://lexfridman.com/sponsors/ep469-sc See below for timestamps, transcript, and to give feedback, submit questions, contact Lex, etc. Transcript: https://lexfridman.com/oliver-anthony-transcript CONTACT LEX: Feedback - give feedback to Lex: https://lexfridman.com/survey AMA - submit questions, videos or call-in: https://lexfridman.com/ama Hiring - join our team: https://lexfridman.com/hiring Other - other ways to get in touch: https://lexfridman.com/contact EPISODE LINKS: Oliver's X: https://x.com/AintGottaDollar Oliver's Instagram: https://instagram.com/oliver_anthony_music_ Oliver's YouTube: https://youtube.com/@oliveranthonymusic Oliver's TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@oliveranthonymusic Oliver's Website: https://oliveranthonymusic.com/ Oliver's FaceBook: https://facebook.com/OliverAnthonyMusicOfficial/ Oliver's Linktree: https://linktr.ee/oliveranthonymusic SPONSORS: To support this podcast, check out our sponsors & get discounts: MasterClass: Online classes from world-class experts. Go to https://masterclass.com/lexpod Shopify: Sell stuff online. Go to https://shopify.com/lex Oracle: Cloud infrastructure. Go to https://oracle.com/lex Tax Network USA: Full-service tax firm. Go to https://tnusa.com/lex LMNT: Zero-sugar electrolyte drink mix. Go to https://drinkLMNT.com/lex OUTLINE: (00:00) - Introduction (09:00) - Open mics (13:03) - Mainstream country music (22:10) - Fame (28:06) - Music vs politics (36:56) - Rich Men North of Richmond (47:06) - Popularity, money, and integrity (1:01:54) - Blue-collar people (1:13:57) - Depression (1:38:50) - Nature (2:01:26) - Three-legged cat (2:09:57) - I Want to Go Home (live performance) (2:13:36) - Guitar backstory (2:17:58) - Playing live this year PODCAST LINKS: - Podcast Website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast - Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr - Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 - RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ - Podcast Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLrAXtmErZgOdP_8GztsuKi9nrraNbKKp4 - Clips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/lexclips
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The following is a conversation with Oliver Anthony, singer-songwriter from
Virginia, who first gained worldwide fame with his viral hit,
Rich Men North of Richmond.
He became a voice for many who are voiceless, with his songs speaking to
the struggle of the working class in modern American life.
His legal name is Christopher Anthony Lunsford. Oliver Anthony was his grandfather's
name. And so Chris used this name as a dedication to his grandfather and to 1930s Appalachia,
where his grandfather was born and raised. Dirt floors, seven kids, hard times, as Chris says.
He's happy to be called either one, by the way. I haven't gotten to know Chris more since the recording of this conversation.
He truly is as he appears online and in his songs.
Down to earth, humble, and a good man who deeply feels the pain of the downtrodden.
And now, a quick few second mention of each sponsor.
Check them out in the description or at lexfreedman.com slash sponsors.
It's the best way to support this podcast. We've got Masterclass for learning, sharing, and learning. second mention of each sponsor. Check them out in the description or at lexfreedman.com.
It's the best way to support this podcast. We've got Masterclass for learning, Shopify for selling stuff, Oracle for computing, Tax Network USA for taxes, and Element for electrolytes. Choose
wisely, my friends. And now onto the full ad reads. I do them differently than most podcasts do.
Usually, I barely talk about the sponsor and instead just take this quiet moment to talk
about things I'm reading or thinking about.
I let a Bob Ross like heart to heart between you and me.
Also unlike most podcasts, I don't do ads in the middle.
So they're all bunched up here in one place.
You can skip if you like, but if you do, please still check out the sponsors.
I enjoy their stuff, maybe you will too.
If you want to get in touch with me for whatever reason, go to lexfreedman.com slash contact.
All right, on to the ethereal realm of sponsor land.
Let's go.
This episode is brought to you by Masterclass, where you can watch over 200 classes from the best people in the world in their respective disciplines.
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This episode is also brought to you by Shopify,
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I got a chance to talk to DHH, the creator of Ruby on Rails for many, many, many hours.
What a wonderful human being.
Genius, but also fun and aggressive in his opinions.
And holding those opinions, not in a personal kind of
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interaction from the tension between the ideas from the debate. Such a fun person
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That conversation, by the way,
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I was just talking to a friend yesterday about the weather.
In a way that's the most generic of topics, but talked about in the
least generic of ways. And the discussion centered around how much computational power would be
required to simulate the weather sufficiently to be able to predict it. And I've gotten a chance
to talk to a few people who chase storms. They're storm chasers and they actually have to do this kind of
weather prediction. Obviously with simulation you have to always choose a
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simulation or if you do you're gonna need a large computer probably as large
or larger than the size of the universe if you want to perfectly simulate a
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This episode is also brought to you by Tax Network USA, a full-service tax firm focused
on solving tax problems for individuals and small businesses.
I think this is the right place to mention Oliver Anthony's, Chris's song, Rich Men
North of Richmond.
Boy, does the tax law really fuck over the blue-collar worker.
Everyday man.
The more complexity there is, the more loopholes there are for people with
many lawyers and accountants and expert explorers of the loopholes,
finders of the loopholes.
It's nuanced, of course, pros and cons.
But really, at the end of the day, I think It's nuanced of course, pros and cons, but really at the end of
the day I think a simpler tax law is better. I don't know. That song hit me
hard, hit a lot of people hard, and a lot of Chris's songs do. Sometimes it feels
hopeless, but I would say more than probably any country on earth,
the United States really puts a lot of power
in the hands of individuals.
But we live in the system we live in, so here we are.
That's why you need these guys.
Talk with one of their strategists for free today.
Call 1-800-958-1000 or go to tnusa.com slash Lex.
or go to tnusa.com slash Lex.
This episode is also brought to you by Element, my daily zero sugar delicious electrolyte mix.
Whenever I think about thirst,
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And now, dear friends, here's Christopher Lonsford or as many of you know him as Oliver
Anthony.
So I was texting you last night sitting at at an open mic, listening to a guy perform Great Balls of Fire.
Like I told you, he was giving everything he got
for like five people in the audience, plus me.
Well, you were there.
I'd have been doing it too if you were out there.
Like, oh, that's like screaming.
No, man, he was this big dude on a keyboard,
just everything, sweaty, long hair.
You could tell, like he was there in his own little world.
I love the courage of that, of just giving it everything.
I don't think he wants to be famous.
I don't think he wants anything in life,
except to be there to play, like, his heart out.
That's why I love open mics.
Like, some people still aspire to be famous
when they play open mics,
but some people, maybe they've given up,
or maybe they never wanted to be famous.
They're just there for the pure artistry of it.
And you said you started out playing open mics.
It's Shady Bars.
What was that like?
Well, yeah, real quick before I forget too,
a great example of a guy who had that same mindset
and was able to maintain it really well
is this mandolin player named Johnny Stats in West Virginia.
To me, he's one of the best, and he's won all these awards and stuff.
And he still works for UPS full time.
And like, he could go out and tour with it, play mandolin for anybody.
He wanted to, but he, but man, when you meet Johnny, like you can
tell he's just got this, um, this joy in him that I don't think he would have.
If he, but as far as me with the open mics,
yeah, it was just, it was a lot of them were really, a lot of them were embarrassing. There
was a couple, I remember there was times where I'd go up and try to do, I do like one song,
I get like halfway through the next song and I'd be so nervous by that point. I didn't,
I couldn't remember any of the words. And there's a couple of times I've, I remember
there was one time in particular
that I just walked off halfway through the song,
put my guitar in the case and just left.
I couldn't even stay in there, just total freak out.
Just embarrassment.
And I never drank in bars either.
I wasn't really a social drinker,
so I was just there to try to do the mic.
So I was a little out of place anyway. I feel kind of out of place in a bar to start with. So yeah, it's back
when you can smoke in bars. There's a whole vibe to it. People smoking, drinking, and yeah, definitely
bombing in a place like that when the audience is like, there's like five people and they're bored.
Yeah, there was one like that. It was in Matoka, it wasn't that far from where I lived.
The place is gone now, but it was about as big
as the room we're in here, if that, you know?
Like the ceiling tiles were yellow
from where everybody had smoked in it
since the beginning of time.
But like, yeah, that was my little spot,
those little type of spots.
You did covers, what'd you play?
What was your go-to?
Back then it was like, I don't know,
Fishing in the Dark, Nitty Gritty Band, or like any
of those old Hank, like Hank Jr. songs, like any of those bar type, David Allen Coe, like
You Never Call Me By My Name, any of that kind of stuff.
And I haven't even played any of those in forever now, but that was, any of those ones
where you get people singing along and stuff, that's what I'd always try to do, you know?
Yeah, that song you performed,
Take Me Home Country Road,
and how's that go?
West Virginia.
Yeah.
It's a good song.
John Denver was just one of those guys that,
it's who knows where he would have went long term if he wouldn't have passed.
But you know, it's a fun song that I love.
I shouldn't, but I love is,
what is it? Like, thank God I'm a country boy.
I think that's what I liked about John Denver was he was a little bit like, he
let himself be a little bit corny in the spirit of like having fun with it.
Like, um, great example, there's this old older guy that not a lot of people
have heard of named Roy Clark, but, um, my farm's like a mile down the road
from Roy Clark's old farm, but he used to be on Hee Haw.
I don't know if you ever heard of that old show from like the sixties or whatever, but
crazy dude.
He could pick any instrument up.
Like there's videos on YouTube of him, but he would just sit there and just pick anything
up and just rip it to death.
But he would always just be real silly about it.
He never had, he never took it too, never took himself too seriously.
You know, some people go to the fun place.
Some people go to the dark place. some people go to the dark place.
Yeah.
Country can do both.
You more often go to the dark place, to the pain.
Yeah, well especially some of the new songs
that are coming out, they'll be probably not,
I mean, I don't know what they'll be.
I don't know, what is country anymore anyway?
I don't know that many people who listen to the type of music
that I grew up listening to
and probably listen to country radio anymore anyway.
Like I think there's quite a lot of people
who don't, who've sort of disowned that space, you know?
In commercialized country, you only really get what sells,
which in a lot of what sells
isn't necessarily what matters.
Well, you had that whole experience
where they take what you recorded
and polish it, quote unquote, try to make it perfect,
and then so doing destroy the soul of the thing.
And so probably that happens with these big artists.
They're so famous, it's like a machine.
And so what the machine does is it over polishes things.
And so the raw power of the person,
the uniqueness of the person,
the soul of the person is gone if you do that.
Yeah, well, I think professionalism and like
applying the tactics of corporate America
to anything that is baseline artistic
is not gonna end well.
They're all individually brilliant,
but together this corporate speak comes out.
Just the soul of the people dissipates, it disappears.
Why are you all pretending that life is not terrible
and beautiful and you're both scared shitless and excited and
this guy's going through a divorce this person just fell in love like you're
forgetting the intensity of life with this corporate like nine to five like
hi John it's great to see you today oh you too you as well you as well. You as well.
But when I look at it, I'm like, why am I whining?
I feel like a Bukowski type character because like, they're all really nice.
They're all good people, but like something is gone when you have this corporate machine.
Well, they're there to fill a role contractually.
And if they, I think if they bring too many of their human elements into that,
then they jeopardize losing their sense of security.
And it's all just out of fear.
It's out of fear of losing your job.
I mean, it's the reason why all the songs say Oliver Anthony and not
Christopher Lunsford on them, you know, like it's fear of it's so difficult to,
especially now it seems, I mean, who knows?
I didn't, I was never around in the forties or fifties to work a job.
I'm sure they were probably pretty miserable back then, but you know, they
talk about now like how difficult it is.
Like the, the impossibility of having a single family household or anything else.
But like, when you find a decent paying job that you can do without it, just
torturing you every day, that's a, that's a pretty important thing now, you know?
Like, and so it, it's pretty easy to just,
it's pretty easy to kind of turn yourself into a robot for eight or 10 hours a day out
of fear of it's like, you don't want to be yourself too much because maybe party yourself
isn't something that's accepted in this like dystopian nightmare that you go to work out
every day.
And so you just got to do your best to just not step on any toes or do anything that
makes you stand out too much. You know and now it's like now like when you scroll through some of these videos of people like the big even when I was still like when I was still working my lame
job it was like there was this whole big thing of people talking about quiet quitting or something
like that where they were just going to go to work, but not really do anything. But that hurts me so much.
That hurts me when you just stop when you're there, but you're not really there.
That makes me so sad.
Yeah.
So then they wonder what these companies just slowly kind of fall apart and disintegrate
because they're so worried about structure and you know, like, I mean, God, man, even
in, even in America today, our culture has become, because so many big corporations own
and manage everything that we live under, like food, agriculture, healthcare, like social media,
it's all in corporate structures that it's almost like a lot of the problems we find ourselves in
now with society, I think are like, it's just because of, it's almost like corporate HR has
been implemented into our whole thought process of everything.
I think that's kind of what you're touching on though. It's hard to be a human and be a good little corporate employee at the same time. And as our whole society moves more into becoming
basically one big corporation, it's like you don't want to piss the HR lady off.
So it's a lot easier for me to just beep boop.
We're all sort of just turning,
we're all turning into robots.
And that's what I've talked to great engineers about this.
Jim Keller is a legendary engineer.
Elon Musk is another example that you need that.
I don't know what's a nice term for it,
but you need the asshole because you want to get to the ground truth of things.
To the first principle of things. Like how do we simplify? How do we make it more efficient?
How do we move faster? How do we get shit done? And that has no place for this kind of polite speak.
And then, you know, other great team members swoop in and like Repair the damage that the tornado has done. Do you think that's cuz I'm not I'm not super well versed about all this
I'm probably dumb to even mention it but
This guy who's been helping me with doing a documentary
He's been following me around since the very first show at the August of 23
He his background was doing
promotional videos for Boeing like for on their new spacecraft to
pitch it to whoever. And so he was, we touched, we touched base a little bit on Boeing and of
course they're having a lot of problems now it sounds like. And he was comparing that with SpaceX
or with, you know, like that, that I think it's that exactly what we touched on with that thought
process of that sort of dehumanization within companies. I think that's that exactly what we touched on with that thought process of that sort
of dehumanization within companies.
I think that's what ultimately causes maybe, I don't know if there's a connection there
or not, but it seems like Boeing is a very, would be more of that.
They don't have that tornado.
They're very like, like he was telling me even just with his protocols and some of the
people he worked with, like everything's just very, you know, lightly touch everything.
No one, don't touch anything too hard.
So it's not just HR, it's also,
it's just this managerial class where it's like,
Bob from this department has to schedule a meeting
with John from this department and Debbie,
like they have to have a meeting two and a half weeks
from now and then there's paperwork
and that bureaucracy that's created in the managerial class just slows everything down.
And one of the things that's slowing everything down does is it really demotivates the people that are actually doing the shit.
Like the people on the ground, the engineers that are building stuff, it's again soul drenching to like be excited, show up.
And now you hit this wall of paperwork.
Like you can't, you have to wait for John and Debbie,
and I forgot the third guy's name,
that I imagined in my head, to have a meeting.
It just, and then you kind of slow down
and you disappear in terms of that fire, that passion that's required to
create big things.
Yeah, because they don't believe there's a lack of leadership.
And if they don't believe in that leadership, then why the hell would they be motivated?
I mean, I remember a while back watching Jocko Willnick talk about that when he was in leadership,
when he was leading his guys.
I think he mentions it in his book is probably where I remember seeing it.
Um, one of his books and he talks about like how important it was for the people
under him in rank to believe in what he was, the actions he was giving them.
Even if he necessarily didn't agree with him himself, it was like there, it's
really hard to take orders and go and like to,
to have human spirit and especially in something that's innovative and not, if
you, if you work in a company where you just think everybody's dumb, I mean, I
can certainly relate with that.
I mean, God, that's all at my old job.
That's all we did was we spent half our day just talking about how, how dumb we
thought everybody was that was above, you know, it's like, it's easy to fall into that and the corporate world.
And so yeah, the morale gets terrible and, and, and everyone suffers as a
result of it, you know, like the, the people at the top who are implementing
all that dysfunction suffer and the people at the bottom, it's like, it's
not good for anybody.
I had thought now that I'm doing this, that I could escape away from that. But that exact same mentality and that dysfunction and that, um, that
inefficiency, like I still battle it every day.
That's why it takes, it takes unique characters to lead the way.
Such unique characters are very much needed in the music industry
to revolutionize everything.
Cut through the bureaucracy, the bullshit that ultimately is just a
machine that steals money and doesn't get any anything done
Really we'll talk about it by the way all the love in the world to Jaco. He's great
I've been going through lots of ups and downs in life lots of low points for myself over the past
shit
three years really but
Recently especially and he always texts in this,
in this very high testosterone way of like, of like you good bro, just checking
in and he's a good man.
This is a good man.
This is obviously an inspiration to millions of people, but also just, um,
as a good human being himself.
So maybe one, one thing that we felt similarly, I'm just, I would imagine you way more than
me is just feeling like, like, wow, I have the ability to influence or the ability to,
to, to either bring truth or to improve people's lives or, or, you know, every word that you
say sometimes matters so much. and you're just like,
man, I'm an idiot.
Like I don't know.
Like I would have never guessed.
I mean, we were kind of talking about that before
about like, I would have never guessed
that this would have turned into all this,
but it is a weight that you bear,
whether you really even acknowledge it or not.
Yeah, I think it's like, you know, the, the songs you've created, they, uh, speak
to the human condition, to the struggle of, uh, everyday working people in a
society that has the elites that try to take advantage of those working people.
And you're just speaking through your music,
those truths of how life is.
And then that has a huge impact on a lot of people
that's really positive,
but then you also get attacked and misrepresented
and lied about from different angles.
And just the turmoil, the intense chaos of that,
it disorients me to be attacked by very large number
of people, to be lied about, to be,
just because I love people, I have a general optimism
about humanity, it just disorients me.
It gives me this feeling like, optimism about humanity, it just disorients me.
Like it gives me this feeling like, I generally, just like you said,
think of myself as kind of an idiot,
not really knowing what I'm doing.
And when a lot of people tell you that you're correct,
you don't know what you're doing,
you start to like wanna hide.
You wanna hide from the world, hide from yourself. And then there's also just the chemistry of the brain. It's like you shake up
the brain a little bit. It starts getting, it starts getting weird. And it's so it can get how
many fronts it can get real lonely when getting attacked, when you're kind of fucking things up
when you're kind of fucking things up in many ways and get lonely. Yeah, so it's been, so you get a text from Jocko, like you good?
Yeah.
And then I may have good friends, like Andrew Huberman's been great, Rogan's been great.
Well, you know, you, Lex, however many years ago was in a different place in society than
Lex is now.
And so it's like every conversation you have or every relationship you have is
inherently different, even if you aren't any different friends that you had from
before, maybe, or even just new people you meet, your interactions with them are
going to be a lot different than if this wasn't a thing.
And so it's like that, that can be tricky too.
When you've spent your whole life, you know, from the time you're three years old and you're starting to play with other kids and like developmentally learning
like how to share and how to interact and you're on the, you're playing, you know, you're
playing the playground with kids and learning how to like set rules and boundaries and how
to like basically fit in a society.
And like, so you have this whole learning pattern up until whatever point in time when when success happens and then
It's like all that shifts pretty dramatically all you know in a relatively short period of time in there
So like how do you how do you think like managing your previous?
Like previous friendships or your life like, you know, how has that been tricky for you or like? Yeah, it's been tough
I you know, I value close, long-term friendships.
Yeah, but I mean, I have amazing friends,
but they certainly do treat me a little different.
They bust my balls noticeably less.
Yeah, and you need that sometimes.
Not sometimes, all the time.
First of all, it's how dudes show love, is making fun of each other, at
least my friends. When you watch, man, I'm going to get in trouble, but when you watch
like women interact, they're often like really positive towards each other. Like, oh, you
look great. When you watch dudes interact like close friends. They're just like, I mean, busting each other's balls.
I'll stop making fun of each other.
So yes, that has been a little bit harder.
I try, I try to break those walls,
but that's why with the famous friends,
it's a little bit easier
because they can still like Rogan roast me nonstop.
And it just feels good. I just sit there and get made fun of and it's a little bit easier because they can still, like, Rogan roasts me nonstop. So it's, and it just feels good. I just sit there and get made fun of and it's great.
It's great.
And I still do it all the time.
I just, it's just a different experience now,
but I, I'm like a Goodwill junkie.
Like, most of, like most of even my clothes
were from Goodwill, but like I have this,
I have this like addiction with buying paintings
from Goodwill. like the $8 paintings
where it looks like somebody was following along
with like a Bob Ross video,
and it didn't work out quite right.
Like I love, like I buy every one of those.
I'll go in there and buy like 10 of them.
And so just even, you know,
anytime you got into public now,
it's just like, you know,
it's gonna be a little different than it was, you know,
I don't know if that makes sense or not, but.
Yeah, yeah, for sure.
I mean, I, you know, I'm trying to deal with it,
but all of it, when you talk to
world leaders, when you step into politics a little bit and you apparently
stepped into politics, even though you never meant to, you're not a political
person that that world is like, what the fuck?
It's very intense, especially at an intense moment in history and in an
extremely divided country.
So yeah, like saying that I'm not in politics, people like, well, of course you're in politics.
And I don't know whether I am or not, but just, um, I do think a lot of people in politics, like as far as the people who sit on the internet all day and argue about stuff on X or on whatever, you know
Facebook and all like I do think their heart is in it for the right reasons
They observe that there's a lot of things wrong in the world that they'd like to see different. It's just
How do you get those people out of a how do you get those people out of this four-by-four square and
like really like they're they're entrapped in a in a same kind of box that the people at Boeing might be with that struck, you know, it's too, it's the tornado metaphor.
I mean, so, but it applies in politics too.
Like there needs to just be a tornado through politics and we need to figure, we need to just like lay all this other stuff aside and just figure out what's really pissing everybody off.
What's really affecting our quality of life.
A lot of times we're arguing over the symptoms of problems
instead of identifying the problems,
if that makes any sense.
I mean, if Jordan Peterson would hear,
he would tell us about fire and how important that is
and burning, but it is all the same.
Water and fire and ice, metaphor,
and there would definitely be a connection to the Bible
and then we would receive a three hour lecture
and it would be profound.
But it's true, but it's all three hour lecture and it's all true.
Like it's all true.
It is all, it's all a hundred percent accurate.
Yeah.
That's the crazy thing, but it all ties into that same thing.
Like, um, yeah, in politics now it's almost like there's a
rule book that you have to follow.
And if you, you can't agree with this unless you also agree with that, you
know, it's like, and maybe it's like the places, the way that we receive information
about what's going on in the political landscape is always so biased.
And it's like the, well, it's, it's contingent upon this algorithm, this
like out of the algorithmic system that we live under where we're fed.
It's like, we're almost fed certain subcategories and it's, and it's easy
to fall into that because you don't like hearing things you disagree with.
And so it's a lot easier to just turn the TV on or go on Facebook and look at whatever page posts things that you know you're
going to consistently agree with every day and that's not going to challenge the way you think
in any little way you know or like expand your thinking at all it's it's easy to just
it's kind of like a it's a cult like type of thing it's like like, you know, here's, this is what we all agree with. And if you don't then go on get, you know, like,
but it doesn't, we're far too complicated
for it to really work that way.
Well, this actually relates to one of my favorite things
in your conversation with Jordan,
where you're just, where you're just shooting the shit
about like playing live music and he goes to Kierkegaard.
Yes.
She's like Soren Kierkegaard, the philosopher.
I love Jordan so much.
I do too.
He just goes to Carl Jung and Nietzsche.
And there this idea from Kierkegaard
that the crowd is untruth.
So when you, there's elements to the crowd
that loses the
humanity and the honesty of an
Individual that makes up the crowd because the default incentive of the crowd is to conform
to some kind of narrative. It's like a
It's like a distributed system that arrives at a narrative and the narrative holds control over that crowd
as opposed to the individual humans
who are thinking for themselves
and being honest with their own thoughts
and realities and so on.
And so he was saying that as a reason
from a communication perspective
to speak to individuals in the crowd, not to the crowd.
So from the performer perspective,
the moment you speak to the crowd, you're speaking to the lie that in the crowd, not to the crowd. So from the performer perspective, the moment you speak to the crowd,
you're speaking to the lie that is the crowd, according to
Soren Kierkegaard.
It's pretty hardcore.
Kierkegaard is pretty hardcore.
Jordan is pretty hardcore.
But that is true.
I mean, but specifically in my case, I mean, really it applies more than it
probably does in a lot of cases with crowds and music.
Talking about Richmond,
I wasn't necessarily even excited
that Richmond did as well as it did.
It was like, in a way,
it was almost like alarming that it did so well.
And so those crowds that show up,
maybe they do like my music,
but I also think they're there for something,
there is something bigger about it.
I mean, I I wish I would have done a better job of having people
there at shows to capture some of those crowds I had in 24 man.
You mean the size, the intensity, the intensity, like it was revolutionary
almost song of revolution.
Yeah, I think Redemption song from Bob Marley, like that song, it just connected with people.
There's something there.
Well, and so many people identified different elements.
Like I said, it goes back to when we were kind of talking when we first got here, but
it was crazy how it was almost like at the beginning with along with the scrutiny and
some of the other things, it was a lot of different people like almost fighting over
me or fighting over it. Like, cause it resonated with different, it resonated with people who voted
differently than each other, which is, which is probably a pretty terrifying
thing if you're, if you're in the business of keeping people divided and angry at
each other.
So it was, you know, it was a, it was one of the first, one of the only times that I can think where there was that, that
much of a sense of unity among people who otherwise wouldn't.
I mean, like, I mean, I think about 9 11 when I was a kid, I was in fourth grade, but God,
man, people were just like, people just put everything aside there for a little while.
And it was kind of, it was kind of like, there's bigger problems that just aren't in our face.
And if, man, if they're in your face for just for a second or two, you realize like it's,
it's hard to, it's hard in your mind to create a graph that's got like all these, but you
know, we argue about a lot of these problems, but if you were to really look at them, like
if you really just stand back and look at all the problems we spend time focusing about
on the internet versus all the things that are affecting us, like that really, and probably at our core even piss us off.
It's, it's got to be very disproportionate.
And like the reason it got the reaction it did is because we all like no matter what it is that we're upset about or what we think needs to be different in the world or our opinions of things or how we're raised or what our parents taught us. It's like, I think we all feel a little bit out of control in this new society.
We all feel like we're probably, we probably all feel like we're falling into
this kind of like corporate power structure where none of us were.
We all, we all are just robots.
We're all just, we're not allowed to be ourselves and be human almost, you know.
And there was enough people feeling that I mean people on the left feeling
Like the people in power fucking over the working class people on the right feeling the exact same
With different words assigned to it the deep state
You know fucking over middle America. Yeah, whatever the narratives are and're just, when enough of that is happening, again, with the
corporate polite speak, there's something about politeness.
That's really dangerous.
I feel like there was a lot of politeness in the Soviet Union.
Yeah.
A great example.
Underneath that it's like Chernobyl, uh, which is this nuclear power plant that melted down.
I feel like the bureaucracy needs politeness and civility
and paperwork to function. And then atrocities can happen underneath that.
So everybody people in power with a smile on their face
can just do horrific things.
And then give propaganda that look,
it's rainbows and sunshine and unicorns.
Yeah, so people that are rude,
I mean, I'm starting to awaken to this a little bit.
You need a little, like Tom Way says,
I like my town with a little drop of poison.
You need some poison, some swearing,
some meanness, some bullshit, some like intensity
to shake up a system because when it sort of converges
towards this polite bureaucracy,
the atrocities can happen and hidden away.
And what's probably the most terrifying to me
is that that politeness is just theatrical,
whereas it emulates the respect
that we would normally give each other in society
if we were healthy and functional.
What was the process of writing that song?
I mean, it really spoke to the pain of
and the anger of millions of people.
So there's magic there.
Was a, well, how many, how many edits, how many like lines did you write?
Were there any lines that you were like tormented by haunted by come back? Should I do it this way or this way or that?
Do you have a, I don't know.
Do you, can you pull tick tock up on this?
So if you go to my page, so if you go to chickens, go, yeah, go down pre Richmond.
You can see the original version of Richmond where I put it up.
This is so cool to see the evolution.
There it is.
Okay.
So that's, that's if you play that that's.
I have too many unfinished songs.
Yeah.
Play that click that and play it.
7 24. Oh, wow. play that click that and play it. I've been selling my soul for the whole day
double time years
for bullshit plays
so I can sit out here
waste my life away
drag back home
drink my troubles away
what the world's gotten to
people like me
people like you I got the boil up. But that's,
that's all I had. So I had,
I had just that.
You should probably finish this one.
Might be real popular.
That's supposed to be a few days later.
That was in,
that was in July.
That's so inspiring.
So that's what I had.
That's so inspiring. That's what like a couple of weeks before, uh, you posted the final.
Well, that's all I had.
Yeah.
That's all I had written at that point.
Like that in my mind, that's what that's the inspiration for the
song was that little bit.
And I wrote that just cause I was on job sites all day and, um, you
know, going into like all these just terrible places to work, like
dealing with different contractors and stuff.
You were talking about wanting to go and talk to blue collar people and all.
It's like, that's what I did for work basically for eight years was build long
term relationships with people in blue collar.
I was in the industrial space.
So I would talk sometimes I'd talk to 20 different people a day, you know, when
you sit in a jobsite trailer and talk to, and talk to a group of dudes, and you're not there
with some news camera, you're just there as a random dude.
You hear so much about what really goes on behind the scenes of the structure of what
builds this country and keeps it going.
I think that's probably what it was.
It was how I felt, but also how I guess a lot of other, you know, it was just, I don't know, it just seemed
like the truth. So,
so you jotted down even to the details, like in a notebook, like those words.
No, it's always just on my phone. I would just keep recording the, I would just
keep, you know, like, so if you were to go back to Tik TOK, like and look at any
of those original
videos, um, so like the songs that ended up charting, let's say, like the ones
that were on there that charted with Richmond, like this, I've got to get sober.
So literally, so literally what I did was this video I took at my property.
This is my carport where my camper was.
what I did was this video I took at my property. This is my carport where my camper was.
And I took this video.
I went to some sketchy virus written MP3 to wave file
or MP4 to wave file transfer thing.
I would rip the audio off of this video,
put this on TikTok and then put that on DistroKid.
And that was the song.
But basically like this would have been the first time
I played I've got to Sober all the way through.
I would just keep writing it and working on it,
writing it and record myself.
And maybe I would record myself 30 times over the period
of like two months, you know what I mean?
Oh, but it's, when you say writing, you mean in your head,
not actually typed out or written it.
Right, it was just video.
It was mostly just video.
Over and over, just videos.
I'm just trying to figure out how to make it,, but that's what all these all these are like the audio file from all these videos is what is what ended up on?
Spotify and all that you know I mean, but this is it's cool to see these videos before you blew up
So this is a good song you're playing I've got so what is this at the end?
Yeah
Yeah, these were all
Don't sell your soul brother. This is the best music I've heard in a long time
That's a comment before you blow up yeah, yeah, I think I had about 10,000 followers or something
What a fucking song that's a good one and. And you gotta think, like this was, like that was my, that was when I quit drinking, you
know what I mean?
Like so that...
But the troubles and the sin of the world that we're in knock me back off my feet.
That's coming from your heart right there.
Just imagine the thousands of people you help with that.
Yeah. strong till I drown and if I wake up tomorrow when that sun comes back around I'll be wishing
I was sober.
It's so crazy how those cicadas and stuff come in like I
Just felt like it was a god I don't know how yeah
Like that's just off my phone all that stuff's just there, you know
They've been saving my soul from the pain that the world's put on me
Lord I know that upstairs there's an old man who cares. And one day he'll set me free.
I'll go on.
We'll start hiding the hell.
That's a genius of saw genius brother.
It's just genius.
It's just crazy to think about
And what's this one right before what is this? Oh
Yeah, so that's like the private
And this is a nice recording got it. Yeah, so
This video got uploaded and then Draven from radio WV would have gotten the hold of me in between this and that.
He watched this and was like, dude, you got, he said, we gotta record that one. And that like, so I didn't have it all, I just had whatever was in that
video is all I had written.
It was, I think it was just the chorus in the first verse.
Draven saw that video and said, we gotta do this one.
Reach out to me to record.
And he's like, yeah, he's like, no, we got to do that one.
And I was like, dude, that's all I got.
Tell me about that guy, Draven.
He probably is like, you know, he's probably like my best
friend now.
We hit it off with this and we're like, we're like brothers
now, I guess.
But he's.
Can you talk about like what he's doing for country, for
music in general, for country music, for discovering talent,
for like.
Yeah.
I mean, he's clearly
See something in people. Yeah, he's just this he's a little bit younger than I am and he's
He wrote music and played and he's got some of his if you look up Draven rife He's gonna kill me for even saying this but he's got some pretty dude
He can't if he was like a pop singer. He would be like he can write the most catchy stuff ever
Go. Yes, let's go.
Yeah. So click on like, I don't know, like, bye bye.
Yeah.
All right.
That's him.
Yeah.
Where's this from?
Five years ago? How it's feeling on the way I was 10 years old walking underneath the blanket of West Virginia snow
They don't walk right by no trespass sign here to grass look green across property line. Bye bye
Bye bye
You know he could probably do if he does
He could probably be real famous.
Well, he's got a certain look.
That dude will sit there and he'll just like, we'll just be sitting there at like two in the morning and he'll just all of a sudden do this little thing.
And he's got like the most amazing first part of this like song or we just started
to co-write together like in the last few months, so I'm really excited for that.
But if you go to his, this is really funny too.
I'm sorry, Draven.
I love you, man.
So go to videos and go to oldest first.
This is what's so awesome about Draven.
He was originally working for this lady who was trying to develop different types of haircare
products, but he thought the market was too saturated.
So he was going to get into beard oil.
So he created Radio WV as like a fake plug page for his burly boy beard brand.
He was working with, so like, like if you look at, um, yeah, like that very first video.
Yeah.
It's like, it's got all his beard products.
If you look, there's, there's multiple ones like that.
So he started it just to do this beard thing with, and then like, I don't know, he just kind of felt called to like keep going with it and it and it
just sort of naturally progressed. Yeah that too is inspiring like you start out
one way and then you discover something real special. I mean he's got a he's got
an eye for how to bring out I don't know what it is like the both the audio side
and the video side how to bring out the best in person.
He says he just wants it to sound
like the way he likes hearing it,
which kind of makes sense, you know?
Like it's kind of in the same way talking about,
when we were talking about setting the cameras up
and a professional would tell you, you needed three lights.
You're like, well, I think it would work with the,
he's just kind of like, well, it'll just work like this.
And do it in a way where he likes it.
Yeah, just do it for yourself.
He does it because he loves it, and it shows, you know? Yeah, you can see it in there. where he likes it. Yeah, just do it for yourself. He does it because he loves it and that and you can see it shows, you know?
Yeah, you can see it in there. And there's some good talent.
Like you were showing me this new lady, Gabriel.
Yeah, she's got it. But not a lot of people would record her doing that song.
But he's like, I don't know. It just was different. I just thought people ought to hear it.
But he's man, it was a blessing that he came along when he did. It was like,
it really changed both of our lives.
We got to talk about that.
So you posted the song, Richmond, North of Richmond on August 8th, 2023.
I remember I was at work that day when it went up.
Yeah.
So it blew the fuck up straight to number one on the charts.
Tens of millions of views and listens.
And a few days later on August 17th, you made a post
that I thought was pretty gangster.
It was beautiful and gangster.
So one of the things you said is,
it's been difficult as I browse through the 50,000 plus
messages and emails I've received in the last week.
The stories that have been shared paint a brutally honest picture
suicide addiction unemployment anxiety depression hopelessness and the list goes on and
Then you went on to write
People in the music industry give me blank stares when I brush off eight million dollar offers. I
Don't want six tour buses 15 tractor trailers and a jet. I don't want six tour buses, 15 tractor trailers, and a jet.
I don't want to play stadium shows.
I don't want to be in the spotlight.
I wrote the music I wrote because I was suffering with mental health and depression.
These songs have connected with millions of people on such a deep level because they've
been sung by someone feeling the words in the very moment they were being sung.
No editing, no agent, no bullshit.
Just some idiot and his guitar.
The style of music that we should have never gotten away from
in the first place.
So, huge props for that.
For walking away from lucrative multi-million dollar
record deals and I'm sure the money
that was just coming your way, huge
props, you know, moments happen where, you know, the world tests you and
integrity is what you do in those moments. So huge props for that. What was
your philosophy? What was your thinking behind that?
It was all those messages I got. I mean, you can see it in the comments sections
of a lot of the videos after everything happened,
but people just like felt this spark, like, wow,
like maybe we actually have a chance to,
like maybe we actually do have some kind of power, you know?
Like those people put that song there, nobody else,
and like gave me the opportunity to make,
even without signing anything,
I was still able to make millions of dollars
and have financial freedom. And like I just, I just felt like, I felt like if I was going to do
anything like that, that I'd be, I'd be betraying, like I would be taking those people and, and
almost betraying them somehow, you know, like, like they, I hate the big machine just like
everybody else and I, the last thing I'd want to do is be, is ever supported or be
a part of it.
Like I want to watch it crash and burn, you know, like,
see, this is the really important thing is whether it was betrayal or not, we'll
never know, but you felt that it was and to have the integrity to walk away
from the bag of money when you felt that way,
that's fucking epic.
It was also, you gotta think a couple of months before this,
like, of course I had a wife and kids that I loved
and I had a lot of really important things to live for,
but I didn't have a whole lot to lose.
Like none of this was even really real. Like I didn't
care about that. Like I didn't care to lose this just as quick as I got it. Like this
didn't, this was, this didn't mean anything to me. It just meant something to me that
like that I could do something for like, you know, you it's like, even if I'm not smart
enough to figure out how to fix some of my own problems in my life, the fact that I felt like I could help fix somebody
else is like that meant a hell of a lot more to me than any, that's what I didn't
want to lose.
I didn't want to lose those people's trust or like feel, you know what I mean?
Like, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
And so I've just tried to make every decision around like as best as I can,
like what I think the right thing is to do and who knows what the hell the right thing is to do but I just try to follow you know
we all have that little voice in us like that we all have some what and and I
think sometimes we mask it's hard for us to listen to that little voice speak
whether whether it's like you know whether it's our gluttony or our lust or our, you know, we numb ourselves with medications
or with alcohol or we scroll on YouTube for four hours a night and instead of, because
we don't want to listen to our conscience, but there is this like very intelligent discerning
thing inside of us that's able to tell us what's right and wrong.
And it's a spiritual thing, I guess.
And I just try to listen to that when I can.
I don't know.
I just still feel like I haven't done enough.
I think you did a lot.
I think you did a lot.
I think you're an inspiration.
You've helped a huge number of people
and you're also an inspiration to the other side of it,
which is the artists and just the humans to have integrity.
I don't think people realize how much of a test of integrity, fame, money, you know
power also is. You know Rogan and I talk about this quite a bit. We get to see, I
mean Joe especially, but I haven't I've had a bit of the same. You get to see, I mean Joe especially, but I've had a bit of the same, you get to
see people become famous and you get to see how they deal with that.
And it's not easy.
A lot of people will sell themselves a bit, sell the soul a bit, give away a bit of their
integrity of the spirit that made them who they are.
You get caught up in the wave of it, you know, and so to keep on holding on to that. That's a powerful thing
That's a really that's all I got though, you know
Yeah, when you lose that what the hell are you like and you see it like you see these celebrity people
They just like fall off the they fall off this, you know, they go off the deep end
It's like is it you got to have you have to have something in your life to, and to keep you
centered and to keep you, um, you know, your whole perception of reality and like your
just existence in reality is all contention upon this sort of like the center that you
exist in.
And you have to, if you don't have that, then you're just flying through space, through
space.
I mean, we're all just riding on this rock
that's going who knows how fast.
You said something, I think to Jaco that I really liked,
everything that has purpose behind it comes with risk.
So there in that moment, I mean,
you're taking a hell of a risk.
I was terrified.
I talked about this a little bit with him too,
but I was terrified to even put the song out.
Like, I knew I was gonna be the subject
of scrutiny and judgment, and I knew people were gonna,
like, you know, I kind of knew all that was gonna happen.
I was like, going back to that, talking about crowds,
like, to stand in front of thousands of people
and everybody be in some sense of unity.
Like, a lot of times when I end the shows, I'll always,
I'll always end with this statement that just says, you know, no matter what,
like no matter how you feel when you go online, you know,
everyone feels so small and insignificant and, and powerless.
But I just say,
no matter how they make you feel online or when you turn on the TV or when
you look at polling numbers or whatever, like when you just look at all this trash that we digest
every day, like you're, there's always, there will always be more of us than them and all that.
And, but like to see the, like just to see the light in people's eyes when you say that,
but the truth is like, and it's like, who is us and who is them? And it's like, us just represents humanity and like, and, and all the things we talked about so far, like just.
You know, the fire and the chaos, but also the, like the love and just, just life, life is just such a crazy, complicated, beautiful, disastrous thing.
And then them is like, it is, it's the power structure. It's that same terrible side of us
that created things like the Soviet Union and is ultimately what's created this monster that we all
live under today, which now doesn't just exist within the confines of the Soviet union, but seems to almost be a global epidemic.
And then that song became the rebel call against that, against the
power structures that creates that.
Yeah.
It's like, how much fire am I willing to play with?
Cause I know it's someone I am going to get burned from it.
I just pray a lot that God, I don't have a lot of self-worth in myself
anyway, so I don't really care what they say or do to me, or don't care. I don't even care if I die, whatever. Just don't
want to just protect the people I love is all. That's all I ask of God. I have this dream of
just creating this parallel system that sits beside all these stupid systems that we live under
that are all sort of engulfed in this thing that we talked about at the beginning, this, this type of structure, you know, we're
none of us where we're all just robots.
And it's like, if we hate, you know, if we hate the way music is and all these
artists are complaining about the way the venues are monopolized and the ticket
sales are monopolized and let's just go find other places to play music.
Cause there's so many people hungry for music in places that don't ever get it.
And if you look at it, there's so many passionate people that are fighting all
these different causes, like, like just in food, it's the word they use for.
For more or less starvation.
It's a more polite, it's called food insecurity.
But if you look up just in Virginia, just where I live in Virginia, in the rural
areas, how much food insecurity there is,
and how many empty vacant farms there are.
It's like, this is an obvious problem
that we should be on Twitter talking about nonstop.
Like this is like everyone has to eat, you know?
It don't matter what you vote for,
like what you look like or any of that crap.
You can, you know, like,
so like, let's just like,
why are we living in a country where
we have, why are we living in a country where half of us are obese and eating shit food
and don't know any better?
And then the other half of us don't have like, how does it just, it's lack of leadership
that's caused dysfunction.
And so if we're tired of that, then, then let's just fix it.
Like we don't need anybody's permission.
Like that's the whole beauty.
Like that's the whole beauty of what America is, is like, we don. Like we don't need anybody's permission. Like that's the whole beauty. Like that's the whole beauty of what America is, is like we don't, we don't
need some greasy haired corporate schmuck to give us permission to go fix
all these things that are wrong.
Let's just go do it.
And if they don't like it, fuck them, you know,
in all domains of life, from, from food to the music industry, honestly, to
education, also to government itself, all of it.
And that, you know, your music is also just the soundtrack
to that spirit that makes America great
of just constantly trying to revitalize itself.
When the bullshit piles up a little too high
There's that revolutionary spirit that says like we need to fix this shit
And and that inspiration that created this country was from years of people living under tyranny
Like we forget the story of the people who really created this country like it's funny. I
One of the statements I made at the very beginning they got taken way out of context
But I wasn't in a position to like even begin to have a conversation about is I made at the very beginning, they got taken way out of context, but I wasn't in a position to even
begin to have a conversation about it.
As I made this comment early on in one of the shows
about how our diversity is a strength,
but that term has been hijacked now to mean something
a lot different than what it really means.
But it's like, think about how many different people
came together just at the founding of this country.
People who spoke different languages, different cultures, religions, ways of thinking, so many different people came together just at the founding of this country. People who spoke different languages, different cultures, religions, ways of thinking, so
many different people came together to even create this place now.
We've just forgotten about all that.
They didn't all come here because they wanted to ride on some miserable boat ride and risk
their whole lives to go to live in some crazy jungle, essentially.
They had no infrastructure, no medicine.
They didn't come here for some glorified camping trip.
It's because they were tired of generations of being persecuted
and living under tyranny and not being allowed to practice there.
It's not like they wanted freedom of religion and they didn't want
separation of church and state because they were a bunch of goody two shoes
and they love going to church every Sunday.
It's because they weren't allowed to believe in what they believed in
because some asshole king or some hierarchy told them they
couldn't and they were just tired of it.
That's what we're losing now is like, we've forgotten that we're those people.
Like the same structures that have plagued this country are their
multinational corporations and their, and it's just the ideology behind them.
And their, and their structure is what the problem is.
Yeah.
I mean, it's a multinational corporations.
structure is what the problem is.
Yeah. I mean, it's a multinational corporations.
It's nation states that, uh, are deeply corrupt and are authoritarian and
ultimately abuse power and yes, create, uh, elements of tyranny.
And from that, the human spirit rises.
Uh, like I said, with, with, with songs like the ones you write,
or at the founding in this country.
That's why all this diverse outcasts come together
and write something as crazy as all men are created equal.
What a gangster line.
I guess not an easy thing to take a lot of that stuff
for granted now, but that's not an easy thing to take a lot of that stuff for granted now. That's not an easy thing to come up with.
That's a really gutsy thing to see the value
in all people equally.
And of course they also were suffering from delusion.
They didn't see black people as equal.
They didn't see women as equal.
But even that first leap of like all men are created equal.
That's like a gigantic fuck you to the past.
Taking that leap forward really took a lot in an age
and a time when it probably sounded,
and it's not like they just made a statement
and put it on Twitter.
Like they, like think about how much, just think about the insanity.
Like I can't even conceptualize the insanity of what took place from the time
that like even from the revolutionary war until now to try to preserve that idea.
You know, so like so much has happened and so much sacrifice has been made
in just so many hours of labor and thought and intensity.
Even in the 20th century is good.
Two world wars.
And, uh, you know, especially in the second world war, the United States
played a very crucial role.
And there was a lot of ideological, like battle of ideas going on at that time.
Yeah.
Of the role of war and peace of the role of the United States as the as the center place for the
ideal of human freedom and human rights.
Yeah, we continue to innovate.
So I'd love to get back to talking to blue collar people you mentioned.
Those are some of my favorite people.
So it was actually really cool to find out that for many years of your life,
basically the way you made a living is talking to blue collar people and getting their story.
So I'm traveling across the world for a bit.
But of course the world that I love the most and I'm most curious about is the different subcultures and towns of the United States. So I took a road trip across the US in my early 20s for several months.
And that was like a transformative experience for me.
And that's something, one of the luxuries I have is to have the freedom to do whatever the hell I want now.
And so I want to take a road trip across the United States for several months.
And one of the things I wanted to do is to just to, to talk to,
to people in small towns and middle America.
I don't know what words to put on it,
but to talk to the very people that you talked about that, that,
uh, you know, construction workers, plumbers,
waitresses, oil rig workers, just people that do something real.
People that are real, that don't make much money that struggle, but have a, as
you talked about, have like a richness to
them that's not often revealed.
That's not often talked about.
So maybe can you speak to that, to your, to your time with blue collar folk?
When I got all those messages at the, we were talking about early on, earlier in
this, like so many of them, and even now it's even since I've even like in the
last couple of days, I've gotten some where they start with, Hey, I'm a nobody.
But like, that's how a lot of the start, you know, like the nobodies of the world, if you want to call them like that's it's, it's frustrating that the people who literally have, have, have built and preserve and maintain the structure of society that we all comfortably live in.
Those people have the least amount of representation. They're ignored just because of the way the social
hierarchy exists, but some of the most dimwitted, irrelevant, terrible people are put here and are idolized and spotlighted and they're all over
television and they're all over the internet and we act like they're like they're kings and queens
and like that they're royalty and then all these people who do jobs that most of us will be too
tariff either either wouldn't have the even the ability to do we'd be like, like how many
people are going to go underwater and weld.
But if we didn't have underwater welders, like one of my best friends whose name is
also Jaco funny enough, the dude worked 70, 80 hours every week.
He's on the Chesapeake Bay tunnel job now, but the dude's gotten up on gotten on heights
that I couldn't get on.
He's went, he's went underground places.
I wouldn't go and nobody will ever know.
Like nobody even knows those people's stories or what they went through or
like the kind of lives they lived in.
And they're the, they're like the, the people who create the fabric of society
and even the waitresses and the waiters and like all these factory jobs that I
worked in all those people, like talk about the craziest place I ever worked and the craziest people I ever
met was this little place called Perfect Air in Marion, North Carolina.
And it was this commercial air condition and factory, which is I think closed now,
but they didn't pay very well.
And so everyone they hired was either people that had criminal backgrounds
who couldn't get jobs elsewhere or idiots who dropped out of high school
and couldn't work elsewhere like me.
And so I was 18 years old working in this place with people who are
mostly in their fifties and sixties, but you want to talk about being exposed
to just a whole nother world of people like, and just the stories and the just.
Those people are far more interesting than, than many of the people that
we consider to be celebrities.
Like most people who are celebrities are just pretty boring and airheaded
and don't really even know what real life is about.
They're pretty unrelatable to the rest of the world.
And so it would be really cool.
I mean, that's the whole reason that I want to go out and do these shows in
places that haven't had music in them in 10 years, because those people, like
that is America to me, you know, how many people in Pittsburgh have been an hour
outside of Pittsburgh and even in Virginia, if you lived in Northern Virginia and
you drive two and a half hours Southwest,
you're in a whole nother planet.
Like the people, the accents, the culture.
And so I feel driven in the same way.
Like I would love to find a way to try to bridge
that cultural gap, to make those people relevant
and to make, because they are like some of the most,
and like, and it's funny because we emulate
a lot of those people. Like, you know, modern country music is a bunch of people
emulating those people, you know?
And there's also like, I love people that have a skill
and become masters of that skill also.
So that element is also there,
even if it's like insanely difficult work,
like being a minor, like there's a skill to that.
There's stories there.
There's like what it takes to do that.
So, I mean, some of my favorite humans are engineers and all they do is solve
really hard problems that they develop.
I mean, it's a pain in the ass job.
Anything in the factories is extremely difficult, but you learn so much about what it takes
to solve intricate, nuanced problems in the physical world.
Coal mining, oil rigs, like you mentioned, welding, that's a fascinating way to work.
And those are trades that are in many cases dying because they aren't popular in culture
anymore.
Everything from agricultural to plumbing
and electrical, it's like, those are all areas, I think,
if you were to go out and talk to some of those people
and shed light on it, it would,
like, you could change the entire landscape in America
of how it's perceived and like, and make it cool, you know?
Yeah, so thank you for what you're doing on that front.
I wanna say, I wrote it down,
please, if you know people that will be willing to talk,
reach out to me.
A good way to do that is lexfreedman.com slash contact.
This was another one of the things early on
that I had an idea about,
and I thought was getting done and it wasn't,
that I've got to go back and try to figure out
is doing prison shows and
uh, doing rehab shows and all that.
But I am really intrigued with like going into those places and trying to
immerse myself and just the, the mental state of those people are in and like,
it's not talked about a whole lot, but also people who get out Excomics, I mean that
That's a hard life. That's just a hard life to try to reintegrate back into society
Yeah, and a lot of those people at perfect air that I worked with they almost all were in some
form of legal trouble like there was a lady that worked on the assembly line beside me named Denise and
Her and her husband had been manufacturing
methamphetamine and he took the fall for most of it.
She only had to go on probation, he was still in prison.
But man, Denise was a very sweet lady.
Aside from the meth manufacturing, she was great.
And just such a character in such a good way.
And so it's like, yeah, just-
Denise, lexfreeman.com.
Flash content. Let's talk. character like in such a good way. And so it's like, yeah, just Denise, Lex Freeman.com.
Let's talk.
I mean, yeah, you know, like both, both sort of the plumbers and the coal miners
and, uh, Denise with the, the old meth habits.
I mean, they're walking the line of like, you know, surviving is hard.
Yeah.
So you have to do a real hard job.
And then you also have to live life, which is in general, hard, you know, divorce kids, people die, you lose like the medical issues and that, that
can destroy you completely.
All of a sudden something happens.
You can't afford it.
Then the, the insurance system destroys people, all of that. that can destroy you completely. All of a sudden something happens, you can't afford it.
The insurance system destroys people, all of that.
So you have to somehow navigate life
while working your ass off in a real hard job.
And those people, they have stories.
That's a real pain.
And from that pain, from that anger,
that's where Richmond, north of Richmond,
that was that, that you could
just feel their pain come through with that song and with your other work.
So that, like there is a landscape of suffering.
Yeah.
It doesn't have to be that we don't all have to be that decentralized either.
Like if all, if there is that much commonality among people, which I do believe there is like just innately and suffering and, and, and yeah, like
there's a guy, there's a guy in West Virginia that I talked to that he's got
a piece of property beside of mine that he was interested in selling, but the
reason he's, he's got this dream of opening a, um, like putting some cabins
there and renting them out for people to come Airbnb.
He works at Lowe's full time, but his son's got this, his son's like 19 and he's got this
heart surgery he's got to have.
And so he's trying to sell the place for that.
And just like, just that guy and all, and all you'd ever see him as is the guy that
works at Lowe's like pulling lumber or whatever, but he's got this very insanely complex life
he's trying to manage.
He doesn't want to lose his son.
He's just going to sell everything.
And at one point in time, maybe the church served that role of when people really fell
off track and they didn't have a support system and they were on this tiny boat out in the
ocean, they figured out some kind of way to rally.
In my mind, that's the dream of all this.
If I die and there's any legacy left or anything done, it's like finding a way to take all the people
that fill that role and organizing them
and empowering them and protecting them.
It's rebuilding the community, but in a real way,
not in like this fairy tale bullshit,
everybody's gonna love each other
and we're all just gonna be one big happy family.
Everybody's still gonna get mad
and hate each other in certain ways.
And that's good.
We need those tornadoes, like you said.
We need people pissed off and angry, and we need people to feel
like they can be angry and open about things that are wrong.
Like people should be able to speak their mind and we shouldn't all just kiss each
other's ass and we shouldn't all just pretend to be overly polite and say, Hey,
Debbie, you have a good weekend.
Like you said, like we need all this controversy and this turmoil and like we
need the hell of what that side that, that the internet brings out in people, but it just needs to be in real life. And it needs to
be in a way where we're all like, we all are at least chasing the same common goal, which is
probably that we don't want to starve and we want to have decent health and, and we want to be able
to like provide a decent life for our kids, or at least we just don't, you know, we just want to live a decent life.
I think somehow that fixes what you describe, like the people who fall into despair and
are isolated.
It's a terrifying world to live in.
It's that principle, again, I need to phone a friend thing where we can just keep calling
Jordan for all these things.
There's this principle in the Bible about, about those
who about the more you have, the more you'll receive and the less
you have, the less you'll, the less you'll receive kind of a
thing. And it's a, it's just a universal law in society where
it seems like the lower you get to the bottom, it's almost like
the more like the less resources you have available and the less,
the less friends you have. And it's like you just, the further
you go snowballs into where it's like, you just, the further you go, snowballs into where it, it's like,
people just hit rock bottom.
And then, and then what?
It's like, when you get out of prison,
what are you supposed to do?
Or when you're a veteran with mental health,
like, what are you supposed to do?
Like, in my mind, that's what the church
is supposed to be there for is like,
but obviously it doesn't fill that role anymore.
To some people, at least religion does a little bit.
It gives, it's at least a foundation of community,
a foundation of hope for people
and when they're really struggling.
Yeah.
You got thousands of messages
like you talked about from people,
you gotten to talk to thousands of people about their pain.
Through your work, through your music,
you've been an inspiration to those people
to find a way out of the pain.
Can you tell the full story of your own lowest point?
Before all of this, before the music, before you blew up,
can you take me through the story of the music, before you blew up, can you take me through the story of the depression, the drinking, and just the roughest times in your life?
Sometimes it's not even, you know, it's funny, but it's almost not even where you're at in
life.
It's where you perceive yourself at in life and what your goals are moving forward. And I think like, you know, I dropped out of high school at 17, basically ran away from
home.
I just, I couldn't, I have always had this authority problem.
And so I just didn't want to listen to my parents.
I didn't want to go to college.
I just wanted to go moving to the mountains.
I was running away from responsibility, I guess, is what I was doing, you know? And so got this girl pregnant, had my first kid when I was 18 or
just about to turn 19. And like I said, I'm working in an air conditioning factory with
a bunch of convicted felons. And so from there, everything was just reactionary. I never really
had a plan. I would jump from job to job, just like most everybody else. I don't know.
I just, I just got to a point
where I guess I just quit believing in myself
and I knew that I wasn't doing,
I just knew I wasn't doing,
I wasn't filling my purpose
and I wasn't being the best version of myself I could be.
And so the alternative to like facing yourself in the mirror
and accepting that I'm not a shitty person,
I've just let myself fall,
it's like, it's so hard to accept
when you've had that fall that it's just easier to just,
just to get drunk and, you know,
just do the bare minimum you can to keep everything
sort of kind of moving along,
but you don't really care if you live or die.
You don't really care about much anything like your whole,
you know, I don't know, life is just so beautiful
when you're a child, it's so imaginative and exploratory and you're learning all these things and you just,
you just can't wait to be an adult because you're just going to go out and do all these
incredible, you know, and then you face the reality of it.
Yeah.
And the pressure and the fear of failure, like I think maybe even my own fear of failure
is what is what drove me.
And uh, but yeah, you just, and you, you think negatively about yourself for so
many days and weeks and months and you like, you don't even have a real self
awareness of like what you're doing or how destructive you've become, but you
always have that, that discernment in you, that like, that conscious, you know,
that little voice in your, and your spirit that is letting you know you're messing up, you know, I was almost like, and I was wrestling with myself, you know, that little voice in your, and your spirit that is letting
you know, you're messing up, you know, I was almost like, and I was wrestling
with myself, you know, and so I don't know, I just got to a point where it's
just like, I, yeah, just, just a very, just a very overwhelming sense of
numbness.
Like nothing that mattered before really matters anymore.
I guess that's probably to me the definition of depression is when all the things you love and care about are just meaningless.
And you really can't find meaning or purpose or excitement in anything. You know, like.
Like, I think especially with men that commit suicide, it's a it's a prolonged period of that.
It's not like they just wake up one day and they have a bad day and they kill themselves.
It's like.
You self-reflect negatively about yourself and your life,
and you don't do the things that you're supposed to do every day
for a long enough period of time and it's like
pretty soon you've built this whole mountain of of of of mismanaged
neglected stuff for lack of a better word like this mountain that you have to
climb back up in order to fix all these things that you should have been doing
all along and then though and then on the other side of it, it's like, well, I could just
die. Like that seems a lot like it's almost like for, I think from a man's perspective, maybe
the friends that I've had that I've lost, it seems like a lot of times you think, you know,
you'd never see it coming, you know, like, I don't know, maybe that's a general thing with,
it seems like a lot of times men masks that better and you don't pick up on it as much.
But, um, I think it's like you just dig yourself into a point to where it's like
you have a mountain of responsibility in front of you that you haven't faced that
you don't know how to face and you haven't been able to do so for a long time.
But there's this really easy detour and it's just, you know, putting your big toe on the trigger.
And it's like, which one of those are, I don't know, like they're both seen.
But at that point, your, your perception of reality is so distorted that like you don't, all the things that can, that would normally compel you to, to move along, like your, like love and joy and like your, your draw, you
know, your drive to, to be that none of that really, it's not there for you to
even contemplate if that makes sense.
It's like that part is almost like at least for a little while invisible.
And all you see is fear and responsibility and just this, like I said,
I just, I just envision it like a mountain
that you don't, you don't really know if you're even able to climb.
And then the other option is just, so I, I think that's probably where, that's probably
where a lot of people go.
And that's probably where I was, was just like, you know.
Yeah.
I mean, there is the, it's not just responsibilities, the immensity of it, the mountain.
And I think you're accurately describing how it happens,
which is gradually.
Yeah.
Seeing yourself in a negative light over time
slowly suffocates you.
And then the burden of the responsibility that piles up.
And unfortunately, of course, one of the ways out
is to pull the trigger.
And the other way out is the Jordan Peterson,
back to Jordan, sort of one gradual step at a time,
like make your bed.
It's like start climbing out,
like the responsibility is before you one at a time, every single day, start climbing out, like the responsibilities before you one at a time every single day,
just climbing out and have faith that it will work out.
That was what was so powerful for me about just beginning to open my mind back up to
reading just a little bit of stuff, like a little bit of stuff from the New Testament
that Jesus said and some different perspectives and teachings.
But like, you know, an apostle would be in prison, like basically being tortured and
facing death, but like just overjoyed and writing about talking about, it's all about
your perspective of things.
Like I said, like that's why I never could understand why, you know, like celebrities
are professional.
I mean, giving one example of many, like a Kurt Cobain type scenario, where you have a guy that's just immensely talented, just will always be loved by
plenty of people.
Like I never could understand why that guy.
There's a ocean of quiet suffering in a lot of, and I think it is disproportionately
in men and a lot of men and they hide it well.
That's why blue collar workers have such a lot of men and they hide it well.
That's why blue collar workers have such a high suicide rate and all too and why it is so important to talk to those people and.
Yeah, it's you could see it in the eyes and there is a lot of pain there.
Without like trying to open up too many doors, I think that's probably the best way I would describe it is just a series of
really, there's a series of negligent decisions and also just misperceptions.
You know, like I think this was an Andrew Huberman thing where he talks about
medications and how it's a lot more likely for somebody to keep their dog on
their medication schedule, but not themselves.
You know, you love your dog and your dog like, it's just this great little thing.
And you just, you don't see the flaws and the faults and the sin and the
disgust in your dog that you do yourself.
So it's much more likely for people to make sure their dog has their medication
every day, but like there's this alarming statistic with just the amount of people
that don't even fill their prescriptions they need filled
or take care of themselves the way they do.
And then that also like over time,
like if you quit taking care of yourself
and you're not in good health
and you're not in a good routine,
you're not like a long series
of doing enough of those things,
like it's easy for you to just think that your self-worth is zero. You're not like a long series of doing enough of those things.
Like you do, it's easy for you to just think that your self worth is zero.
Cause if you're not even willing to like, if you're not even willing to like have basic hygiene and, and eat decent food and try to take care of yourself.
It's like, why, how, like how on earth are you going to go face all these things that you need to face to get your life better?
If you can't, you don't even face all these things that you need to face to get your life better if you can't you don't even care
Enough to do that. It's just like it but it is it's a it's a it's a long tragic road to get to that point
I think at least in my case the idea that there was something bigger than me that loved me even
Despite I had all these flaws and problems and just that I was just such a wretched person
That's what at least in my situation. That's what I think helped put, you know,
more than anything. Like I said, that's certainly where the motivation to quit the,
once I quit the drinking, it helped a lot because I was able to, even though it was a pain, it was
difficult. I was able to actually be able to be honest with myself and reflect on a lot of things
that were, and you know, you got to think, like I said, we watched the, I mean, it was like with,
of course, in my case, it was a little unfair of an example because within a month, all
this stuff had happened like after I quit.
But you know, I see it in my friends that have quit and have tried to turn things around
in it.
You know, it's like, it's, it is the most beautiful thing in the world to see somebody
like come to life again after being in one of those, you're able to like sort of like
escape this shell of,
of all those terrible things.
And even if you are still in a bad position and you're still, you got 30 grand worth of
credit card debt and you're working some shit job and your car doesn't start half the time.
And like, you know, your girlfriend left you for some other dude and like, don't matter
what it is.
Like if at least that little glimmer of hope that like that faith that there is a chance
it's something greater, like that can'll push people you can put you can
push it you can push them out on the side with that you know like you can do
anything with that and I think it's also good I think it is important to have a
good support structure like when you get to that point I don't think you should I
don't think anybody should have to face that stuff by themselves and there's
plenty of other people out there that are in the same position.
And I think that's again, I think that's why it's so important for us to try to
get reconnected on a personal level and not just through digital communication.
Because like we don't, we don't, all we see of each other online is the good stuff.
Very rarely are people posting on Facebook talking about, you know, how could you
even, it's like how could you even?
It's like all you see is the best of people. But I don't think we realize that we're all going through a lot of the same things anyway.
You know, the low points and stuff.
Guess what happens when you lose your job or can't quite figure out a good job
and you're not making that much money or you're basically broke and you have a girlfriend
that's not happy about you being broke.
She's going happy about you being broke, she's gonna leave you.
And if it's a wife that could face divorce
and like the breakups and divorce can break a lot of people
even when they're doing well.
And now when they're not doing well, that's a rough one.
And that basically your support system for a lot of people
is the relationship, is the wife and the, and so like that's taking the support system from underneath
you and.
I've had good friends of mine.
I've seen getting destructive relationships and like they'll start to date a girl and
then like within a year they're just like a shell of what they were because sometimes
I do think it's, I do think you have to be careful with like your self validation and
the way you perceive yourself
and making sure that it's you giving yourself that
and not somebody else.
Because I do think too, it's like, yeah,
like you're, you know, how are you supposed to,
if you can't even keep a woman around to love you right,
like how are you supposed to love yourself?
It's easy to think about that.
Like I've seen a lot of men get wrecked
in bad relationships and stuff too.
That's, it's tough, you know?
Yeah.
Ultimately, I think maybe dark to say, but there is, there is a base layer
at which we're, we're alone in this world.
Like you need to be strong by yourself first and foremost, because sometimes
there'll be times in life where everybody leaves you.
Yeah.
The wife leaves you, the job leaves you,
and for some people, even people you thought are friends
will backstab you.
And even then, you have to have the strength
to find your footing again.
Like, that ultimately comes from you, right?
I mean, man, of course, like I said,
in all the experiences I've been through,
I'd be a fool to deny it, but like I do think,
there is God there that's always there.
But you certainly can self-isolate yourself too,
even from that.
If you can find faith in yourself,
I've seen it do wonderful things for human beings.
You on God, faith in something bigger than you,
yeah, that can give strength to a lot of people,
but allowing yourself to derive strength solely
from other people can be a dangerous thing.
Because people are complicated and they can betray,
they can, just like they can fill your life with love, they can also destroy
you.
That's also the beautiful thing about life.
Yeah, it is.
You make yourself vulnerable to other people, you form deep relationships.
That means they can also destroy you.
So that's life.
That's what makes this whole thing.
That's what, and then you write really great heartbreak songs.
There's something valuable about people fucking you over
and hardship and all that kind of stuff.
Even the best of us have terrible parts of us.
Like we are all flawed inherently because we're human.
And so, there'll never be,
uh, they'll never be another garden of Eden on earth, like figuratively where, where we
all just live harmoniously and everything's great and happy and wonderful. But it is,
it's those basic principles that you talk about, like love and our, and those relationships
and those connections that we have, they make it all. Cause the thing about, I mean, like in a lot of cases, it's like, what even, that's
the position you get in when you get to, when you get so depressed and you get so
low, it's like, what's the point in even doing all this?
Like it is, it is just for anyone is just so crazy, overly complicated
and exhausting to live.
Isn't it like even in this modern society where we have all these wonderful
little conveniences and we can just have food delivered right to our door if we want and all this kind of crap.
People are still more depressed now than they've ever been and all the mental anxiety and all
the mental health stuff is just probably just as prevalent as it's ever been.
People talk about money not making you happy and And you know, it's like easy when you're,
it's easy when you're broke to think, man,
if I had some money, I've, and of course,
financial freedom is what you're really looking for,
not like an abundance of wealth,
but the things that we talk about that make life worth
living aren't things that you can buy.
They are things that you obtain through relationships
and love and, and life.
And so it's a, it is just an infinitely complex and crazy thing to think about.
But it's like that human component of us is what is what we is what's so important to our to our
long-term existence like our our ability to to have connection with each other and the joy we find in that, the purpose we find in that is it's not it's not anything that's replaceable by with
anything you know. Yeah I've seen that with just seeing the effects of war on
the people and basically war strips away everything you lose your home you lose
everything and you get to see what's actually really important and there's strips away everything. You lose your home, you lose everything.
And you get to see what's actually really important. And there's the other people in your life,
friends, family.
It's almost cliche to say, but it's the people you love
in your life that make up the essence
of what makes life worth living. It's not the homes the material possessions the even the job
Whatever else it's the the humans. So
Yeah, yeah, it's important to remember a lot of us especially in the United States under a capitalist system or chasing money
Yeah, it's important like to remember what you're doing it all for.
I gotta talk to you about your writing process.
You've written just a bunch of really incredible songs.
You say you're not good at it.
You're not a good musician, which is hilarious.
Dude, I have zero self-confidence about any of it.
I mean, just about anything, but when when I say that I'm not being funny.
Like I'm like.
You get nervous when you like get on stage.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
Like I can think about shows coming up and my hands will sweat thinking about them.
Yeah.
You told me that you like haven't really played the songs for like a couple of months.
Like old songs.
Since September. Yeah songs since September.
Yeah.
It's September.
Well, dude, like think about how, like, you know, I can, I'm not going to sit around
and play, I've got to get sober for fun.
Like, and like, you know, so you feel, you feel the songs when you play them.
Yeah.
Yeah, man, that's rough.
That's, that's rough.
A lot of musicians talk about that kind of thing there, right?
About this, I don't know, I've heard about that with people, like about hating to play
songs because of that side of it.
Well, you have become close friends with Dan Reynolds, who's the lead singer for Imagine
Dragons.
And he says every time he performs a song,
I mean, he has songs that have depression in them
and all that kind of stuff.
And he says like the only real way to do it is to feel it.
You can't just fake it.
You have to like be in it.
You have to like really feel the song
as if you're singing it, as if you're writing it
for the first time.
So as a performer, he says that that's his duty he has to the audience,
but then that takes a toll.
That's not easy to do.
That's like that, especially with the songs you write.
I mean, there's a lot of darkness there in your songs.
Yeah.
And I do have some, I do have some white- hearted ones too that, that I'll, you know,
I mean, the thing is, it's like, I've only put out, I, I'm a little funny about like,
really like, God, I don't know how many songs I have written that I will probably never
do anything with.
Like, I mean, probably at least 20 or 30 of them that are just like, they're just not,
I just don't know why I don't want to put them out, but just.
What does it look like?
What, do you have like a notebook with ideas
or do you mean you have like literal videos
of half baked songs?
Yeah, I've got my old phone.
Like even just that old phone that I recorded
all the stuff for TikTok and all on,
it's got loads of like little,
just like the way that Richmond one was
where it was like in the bathroom facing this
and I had like that, you know, that's's all that even that one I showed you on there
It had been sitting on my phone probably a couple months before it. That's why I said I have too many unfinished songs
It's exactly what I meant. I've got all these little snippets of things like a little blip here there, but the writing process is
well, it's a lot different than I thought most people write because
like in the,
there's a lot of people that do these writing rooms and stuff and they'll have,
or, you know, these co-writes where they'll have people sit down and they like sit on the couch and smoke a joint and they're like, all right, let's write this
song. And they just like start plugging away. And they, to me, that's like,
I can't do that. I have to just, it's like almost the op,
it's like a lot of times the songs come when I'm not prepared for them.
You like to be alone.
Well, alone in my head, I could be out and I could be anywhere in it.
You know, some of them I'll just be in the shower and they'll just like, and
I'm like scram because the thing is, is like, Hmm, it's a certain part of your
brain, I guess that creates that stuff's a certain part of your brain,
I guess that creates that stuff or picks it up or does whatever, but they come, just they
come and they go just as quick as they come.
It's like when you wake up, it's exactly like when you wake up, you've had this crazy, vivid
dream in your head and you wake up and it's all right there.
And then you stop thinking about it for like half a second and then it all goes away and
you'll never remember it again.
You know, like you can't remember your dreams like that.
It's exactly like that.
It's like, it'll be there.
It's like perfect.
Like it's all right.
It's like, it's almost like giving to you,
like just perfect, like parts of it
or the whole thing or whatever.
And then you get into this flow state
to where you just like, it's all there in front of you
and you just figure it all out.
And it's like you've, it's like somehow you've like
unlocked this little part of your brain that you don't even really know how to get to, but you just get to it and it's all there and you just figure it all out. And it's like you've, it's like somehow you've like unlocked this little part of your brain
that you don't even really know how to get to,
but you just get to and it's all there and you figure it out.
But man, if you don't get it, it's gone.
Like you'll never, you'll never get it again.
Like you'll never even be able to replicate that song ever again.
It's like, it'll just go away.
And typically it's like, it's only maybe the first half
of the first verse is what I'll get,
or it'll be like the chorus line I'll get. And then I'll build the rest of the song around that if that makes sense
I guess well the words of the music or the melody like what what pops into your head the emotion I guess the words
sometimes it's a phrase like
Like one thing I will do is like especially out in the country people say the craziest
People say the craziest, people say the craziest
things. And so sometimes I'll like jot down a little bit of some, like I will sometimes
on my phone, take a little note. If somebody says something real crazy that I've never
heard before, and then maybe one day it'll just pop in my head like, Oh, you know, I
don't know. It's very random though. Like I don't sit and just try to write songs. That's
why I haven't put out like, that's why I haven't just been dumping out,
even though I had been writing a lot of songs,
I haven't just been like dumping out all this crazy music.
I don't want to force it.
I don't want to do truck beer girl songs.
They're like, I don't want to force song.
I don't want to like.
Do you have any truck beer girl songs?
Cause that would be an interesting.
Yeah, I've got this silly one about this guy
in West Virginia that he's like the most,
he's the most laid back because I always get in my head and go over
analytical about stuff and get real serious sometimes about things.
And he's like, buddy, you just gotta take a drag off this thing.
And he'll, you know, he was the one he'd always like, like peer pressure
me into taking a hit off a joint or something and like, just try to cheer.
And he just didn't take life so seriously.
So I've written this song about it's called Dr.
Dan and it's about, you know, he's a doctor, but he's not like a conventional doctor.
That's a silly one that I'll put out.
So I do have some silly ones like that.
Um, I have a couple of funny ones that I'll, that I'll never, ever,
ever probably play to the public, but I did, I played him at the mothership.
Um, only cause nobody has their phones in there.
I played him at the mothership,
only because nobody has their phones in there. But right after we did Rogan,
I got a chance, somehow I got connected with Tom Segura
right after Rogan, and we went over to the mothership
and I got to meet him and I love Adam Maggatt.
He was on the thing with Norm McDonald
is how I got introduced to him,
that show Norm McDonald had, but he's an awesome dude.
And so we,
we ended up at the mothership, I think it was the evening after the Rogan podcast and Tom's like,
well, they've never had, they've never had live music in here. He's like, you could be the first
one. And I was like, whatever. And so we only had one guitar and I had my guitarist Joey with me.
So Ron White was there.
It was Tom Segura and then Ron White that night.
And Ron took Joey in his car, drove him across town to his, uh, to his house
and grabbed another guitar and came back and we got up there and we did like two
really silly songs and then Richmond in between, um, in between Tom set and Ron
set and I was like, again, that was one of those moments in set. And I was like, again,
that was one of those moments in my life where I was like,
what, like what, what is this?
Like, what is this crazy reality I'm in?
But I do have some funny, I used to,
cause a lot of when I wasn't playing the open mics,
you know, the, well, like, you know, Brian that you met,
a lot of my guitar playing was spent at places
like his house and we were all heavy drinkers
and we were just sitting around at a party playing or whatever, you know, and so I definitely
like the silly stuff too, but I was really in my head when we were talking about being
low and what I would suggest people to do if they're in that point.
But if I was just to like not to flip this, but just, it just popped in my head, but probably
what I would tell anybody to do if they're like suicidal and thinking about like if they're
to that point is just to go find some go find somewhere outside like in
nature and go that's what you know that's I kind of missed this step when
we were talking about things but like selling my house and buying that
property and putting a camper on it and trying to go into this whole off-grid
thing really like I don't know it does a lot of good for you being reconnected to nature. Cause we are a part of it, but.
Oh yeah.
That's I've been to the junk.
I went to the jungle for that reason.
Yeah.
Being out of nature in every way is just, is beautiful.
Yeah.
So you got some, maybe, maybe that's what I need to do is get some goats.
You get, I got two, I can give you.
I have more questions.
Why are you giving them so easily?
Other issues I need to know about?
Well, they're goats, yeah.
There's no free lunch, man.
How many, you got goats, you got all kinds of animals.
What's the story of you out in the woods?
What are you doing out there?
No comment, I'm just kidding.
Just trying to escape this dystopian nightmare
that we're all living under. It was just a form of escapism, I'm just kidding. Just trying to escape this dystopian nightmare that we're all living under.
Like, it was just a form of escapism, I guess.
But you know, my, well, yeah,
I think in such a short period of time,
my grandfather grew up, like, you know,
they were in a survival estate,
like trying to make enough money
to pay the tax on their land, growing tobacco.
And then here I am, like, in this digital world
two generations later.
And I'm just like, something's not, you know, I just felt, just felt called to
try to figure out, figure all that out and how to get back into that.
There's just a, there's such a purity to, man, if you raise an animal and kill it
and eat it like, and I'm not talking about like, like Ted Nugent style, but just
like, you know, raising meat birds and pigs
and stuff and being, having the ability to put those
in the freezer and cook them for dinner.
Like, they taste so much better, but it's just,
it feels, it's just, I don't know how to describe it,
but it just brings me joy.
Being able to grow stuff and even just flowers
and everything else, just watching stuff that's alive
like that is just such a, you know, my, what we're doing now is I've bought this permaculture farm that
hadn't been operational in like six or seven years and they did a lot of herbs
they had a big orchard blueberries you know but my dream there is to create
this space that it's like the optimal place for humans to go to fix their mind
so like like what's the animals and the food that I can have there and the trees that it's like the optimal place for humans to go to fix their mind. So like,
like what's the animals and the food that I can have there and the trees that I can plant and the
certain types of wildlife that I can bring in and attract like the noises and the sounds and the
smells that are optimal for a human to be in in order to like fix whatever it is. You know,
like I had the opportunity to meet Robert Kennedy Jr. early on with all this and you know, like, um, I had the opportunity to meet Robert Kennedy junior early on with all this and, um, you know, he actually came out to my property and all and we taught and
we're still, I think the idea is that we're going to launch this kind of like healing
center thing out there.
Um, once he gets, once they get through all the mess that like, they got their hands full
a little bit right now with things, but whether I go that route or not, it's like, that's
my goal is to basically create a place that people can go and like, and fix their mind and find the optimal thing. You know, we've got laying birds
and meat birds. So we have, we get our eggs and meat and then, um, we've done pigs and sheep and
goats. And then I'm going to start with cat. I'm going to get cattle in the spring. Um,
so we'll start doing like Wagyu and Angus and playing around with, and I want to get some funny stuff too.
Like, um, I just, large animals have a lot of, you know, there's all these like large animal therapies out there for mental health, like with vets and stuff.
It's just something, it's something really relaxing and rewarding about being in that space.
What do you, uh, what do you find out there in nature that you can't find anywhere else?
Oh, what do you find out there in nature that you can't find anywhere else?
I can't find in the, in the, uh, quote, civilized world.
Well, everything in civilization seems so like everything we've talked about. It seems so like there's such a level of despair and unorganization and chaos
and just like, and all, and all these like terrible parts of life that seem like so unstructured
and just so uncertain.
But in nature, everything is certain.
Everything has a system like even on the microbial level of soil, there's this like intricate
system and you know, soil fixes it like the bacteria fixes the soil and like, and you
can grow certain types of plants to restore certain types of
Nutrients and then that can grow certain types of trees and then that can bring in certain types of birds and it's like this whole big
Nature is this this whole big beautiful system
You know like earth is just such an intricate complex system that is structured and although there is chaos
There's literal tornadoes, you know
like the metaphor we were using earlier like there are literal tornadoes in nature and other things, there's literal tornadoes, you know, like the metaphor we were using earlier, like there are literal tornadoes in nature and other things, but there's,
there's a piece about observing the structure there.
And to me, like, it just helps, it helps remind and restore my faith that there is something
bigger than me that like, yeah.
And there's a spiritual side to it that I don't know that I can really correctly articulate, but man sitting out in the woods with some Creek
flowing by you and just sitting in stillness, like where you, you don't
hear anything, there's no traffic from a road.
There's no, you know, you're just, you're just there in stillness and just
watching, watching the earth do its things.
Just, I've gotten a chance to spend a day and a night
alone deep in the Amazon jungle.
That's like my dream, man.
You basically take the woods and the creek and the quiet,
let's put that like a three on a scale of one to 10.
The Amazon jungle is like an 11,
because you're not just listening to the creek,
you're listening to a lot of different species
of animal having sex.
Or trying to kill each other.
And you're just like birds, monkeys, just everything.
And the floor full of insects.
Bigger kinds of ants, murdering smaller kinds of ants.
It's an orchestra of insects, there it's quiet in the sense
that there's no machinery.
The, the really dark thing about the Amazon rainforest that sometimes,
depending on where you are, you'll sometimes hear in a distance, the
sound of a chainsaw, you'll hear like, and it pierces the day because like,
there's just no machinery anywhere around.
But once you hear it, it's, you know, it is like this undeniable symbol of what
human civilization does to nature.
It pains me seeing woods get knocked down and residential subdivisions taking their place.
Like the monkey part of my brain wants to just go burn it all down.
Like it's just like not good.
Like I don't know, I just instinctually observe it as being not good.
And I don't know exactly how to describe it, but I'm with you.
Like I said, that's why I felt so compelled.
I mean, I had this little house that I had maybe a little bit of equity
in and I, it was in 2019 and the housing market was up and I was like, I sold
our little house and got that, I was able to find 92 acres for like 1100 an acre.
And so I still had to finance it, but it was at least like within my, barely
within my, and so that's what we did.
We had a, you know, I was paying 600 a month on the land and I bought a little camper for $750 off this
Hunt Club in Waverly, Virginia and drug it up there and that's what we had.
I got a little Kubota tractor for 0% financing and this property was a mile off the road
so I had to basically recutut in old logging road and stuff.
And you want to talk about putting a strain on your marriage.
That'll do it, buddy.
Is selling your, selling your modest little rancher and doing that.
But man, I was, that's when I really started to live.
And I think probably that was like the beginning point of the restoration of, of, of me,
you know, and I feel bad that a lot of people just don't even know what that's
like to be on a farm or be out in nature.
And I can't imagine just living in a suburb or a city your whole life and
never getting to experience that.
You know, it's good that we have all this technology is great and like the
the science and the innovation is important.
And even the fact that you can go on YouTube and look out, look up how to do
almost anything is important. It's just that there isn't a clear definitive line between what's
beneficial and educational and what's predatory and harmful. And so it's like, it happens to me
all the time, but I could go on YouTube and look up how to change the brake shoes on my truck or
something. And if I click on a short of somebody. And then pretty soon I'm like, wait, I'm changing my break.
That's the only issue.
And then you're just doom scrolling and it, it does something to your mind.
It just completely takes the humanity away.
Yeah.
It's, it's, it's really horrible.
Like that.
I mean, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm And it does something to your mind that just completely takes the humanity away.
Yeah.
It's really horrible.
Like that dopamine thing does something to my mind
that I hate, which really is the opposite of nature.
Like the feeling I remember being out in nature,
and not just a hike, a hike is good,
but like for prolonged periods of time,
several days away from the internet, away from all of that.
What is that?
I don't know what that is, but I don't like what X Twitter are doing.
I don't like what Instagram is doing, whatever that is.
I don't think that's good for the soul.
Yeah.
It's emulating things that we need to be healthy humans, but it's just like
feeding it visually and audibly to us,
but it's not giving us the instant gratification of it, but it's not giving us the long-term
pleasure fulfillment of it. Like I said, and the beauty is we're in this weird period in time,
like it's a breath of time that we're in where, where we are able to conceptualize and observe
what life was like in that transition point.
This got us up till now.
And we also have the, because in order for all this to, to continue to evolve, like in
order, like even with AI, like it needs us more than we need it right now still for a
very short period of time.
But we have access to nearly all the information
that the world has theoretically, but we also still have the perception and the memory of what life
was like before it. And so this is like a very short window of time, like a breath of time where
we can find a way to incorporate this into normal life. But I think like if that breath leaves us, like, I don't know, I think it's a reverse,
you know, I believe that I truly believe it is irreversible.
And I think like, and that's just going to be the end of us.
And it, and it could take two or three more generations to get to that point.
But like, I, I think like, why don't we find people that are way smarter than me
and, and look at all the things that trend on social media,
like the videos that everybody watches.
Like, I don't know what it is.
If it's wood splitting and plumbing and blacksmithing
and doing something with,
like let's find all the things
that people are attracted to online
that they obviously are like interested in
and just figure out a way to have them in real life
for people to immerse themselves in.
Yeah, I mean, it's the transitionary state.
And one of the responsibilities I take very seriously,
because I agree with you,
is I try to pierce the bubble that is San Francisco,
that is the Silicon Valley,
that is the people that build these technologies.
They often live a bit in a bubble.
Yeah.
That said, the people that criticize tech folks
also live in a bubble.
Yeah. And to sort of, first of all, piercing bubbles in general is good That said, the people that criticize tech folks also live in a bubble.
Yeah.
And to sort of, first of all, piercing bubbles in general is good for people to get along
to understand each other.
Because people that say all technology is evil, unfortunately, even if that's true,
which I don't think it is, it's coming.
It's going to be built.
And so you have to figure out how to do it in a way
that preserves our humanity,
that doesn't drag us into this black hole
of just maximizing engagement,
maximizing this dopamine thing,
where instead of reading Dusty Esky,
which I should be doing,
I'm looking at some girl doing,
shaking her ass on Instagram
and then feeling horrible about myself five minutes later.
That at scale seems to be happening.
And so like reminding ourselves that this is not the way
to steer human civilization to progress, to flourishing.
The problem is, is I think we're wasting a lot of our,
our bandwidth, like a lot of the,
like we only have so many minutes in a day
to even use our brains and our brains can only do but so much in a day anyway.
And when we're wasting any of it on just that, it's like the pro, it's like, I see it in my own professional opinion as the world is becoming just a little more in the last decade or two, as the world becomes a little more dreary and dark and more problems happen and city streets become more littered and
jobs are like all these kinds of problems that we've that we all argue about all
the time as they become more prevalent.
It's like the internet and, and just the visuals of the internet becomes so much
more immersive and video games are so much more, everything's so much better.
Everything's improving at lightning speed in technology and it's degrading
in society and in the real world.
And somehow there's got to, there's got to be a way to find a balance there.
But right now it seems like as technology becomes more immersive and addictive
and interactive, you know, like the way these algorithms like feed us exactly
what we want and there's so much psychology and just so much research that
goes into making them as addictive as possible. It's like the real world kind of sucks. Like, you know,
cities that were beautiful and thriving are now falling apart, like, and have all kinds of problems
that are being unaddressed and lack of leaders. It's like, there's got to be some kind of weight,
but it's so it's easy for us to feel more and more inclined to escape into the digital realm,
because the digital realm is becoming more fun while real life is
becoming less fun.
And there's got to be some kind of way to balance between the two.
I'm with you.
I'm not against technology at all.
I think, um, evil most certainly existed long before there were computers like,
and, and in even more treacherous ways, like now we have the ability to do.
We're like I said, we're in a very, we're in a very temporary state right now in 2025
where we have access, where the general public has access
to basically all the information there is
and artificial intelligence and just immense
and the ability that like a guy can just set a bunch
of cameras up and start doing podcasts
and have just the, like even just the fact
that your platform could be created is like immensely powerful.
It never probably never existed in world history up until now, but we also still
have the problem is, is if we just keep going without being careful about, about
losing the real world aspect of it, is that like, at some point we're just going
to get so lost and so immersed in the space, we're not even going to know what
we're, we're not even going to know what we're missing out on.
All there's going to be is girls on Instagram. All there's going to be is that.
Yeah. I've been trying to figure it all out. I just did a super long podcast with Tim Sweeney,
the CEO of Epic Games who created Fortnite. He created Unreal Engine, a lot of interesting
video games, like revolutionary video games. So I don't know if you know, but Fortnite is this gigantic video game where people
go into, uh, into an online world and they shoot stuff.
It's fun.
It's not like call of duty, intense, militaristic, like raw real kind of
shooting, it's more fun shooting at each other.
But, you know, at first I was skeptical, like, is that a good way to have.
To hang out with friends?
But then I got to do it with people
that I'm actually friends with in physical reality.
And you get to hear each other's voice,
and you just talk and talk shit about each other together.
It's basically a phone call, honestly,
with some visuals.
You're not, it's not about the visuals, it's about the phone call, honestly, with some visuals.
It's not about the visuals, it's about the phone call,
and it just makes it a little more convenient
to connect regularly.
But I think you do need to remember
that all of that only works if you're consistently
returning to physical reality.
In this case, taking the quote unquote guy guy trip, not the broke back mountain style, but just friends, you know, just friends,
a trip out in nature together, like dudes on a hunting trip or just fishing or just hanging out
in physical reality together. It's really a fun, like we should not forget the importance of that.
You talked earlier about loneliness. I think that got brought up at some point, but I do think
that's like a big think that's a problem
that's caused a lot of our symptoms
is that we are all very lonely.
Even though we all seem to be so well connected digitally,
we are all so lonely.
I think, I mean, modern warfare too was a big thing.
I was supposed to have been in class of 2010,
so you can think like when I was in whatever grade,
eighth grade or whatever,
Call of Duty was like the thing. You know, I've certainly like, trust me, I'm not saying that I
I'm right in this space of digital immersion with anybody else. Like I've,
I've been there and seen it and done, you know, like, but I've wasted who knows how many hundreds
of hours on Modern Warfare 2. And like, I really built some great friendships from it, you know,
I like I there's, there's a place for all that stuff. It's just like, we had like, there is just
this, we have this innate responsibility to like, to again, it just goes back to this goes back to
talking about our founding fathers in the way this country was created and the importance of what it did for the world.
My understanding is that it was the first time ever that people got together and agreed
that, like you said, every man was equal.
Because they were created in the image of God, they had unenalienable rights that no
government could take away from them.
That's really important.
There won't be Fortnite if we don't worry about that. And honestly, just the collapsing in our structure with the mental
health with our youth and the suicide rates with our blue collar workers and all these kinds of
things we've touched and talked about, those are all just things. We just need more time together
in real life to fix those problems. Those are just things. Like I said, I make the joke, but
there's never been one argument that but like, there's never been one
argument that I've, there's never been one dispute with my wife that I've been able to
figure out how to fix through a text message or like, it takes, it takes being in person
with people and like having human connection to fix any problem and to heal anything, you
know?
And so it's difficult.
It's like, I don't, it's not anybody's fault that we're like that.
We're not even able to really get to know each other and understand each other through the internet
like we almost have to be together in person to even just get each other's point of view and perspectives on things and
You know, yeah fuck the division that the internet creates
Honestly, like the left and the right is this bit has been it's been kind of a nightmare
For me just to watch because I see the very simple reality that we're in it together and that there's a
lot more commonality between people.
It seems cliche to say, but it's like now that needs to be said more than ever.
Cause it, when you look on X, it feels like everybody's divided, but we're not.
Well, and people are always going to think differently too.
Like just in our structure and the way we, you know, again, it's like that, it goes back to that Jordan Peterson
lecture about, I think in maps of meaning where he talks about people who think more
conservatively or more liberally about things like it's been applied to politics, but it
is more, it's based more in psychology than anything.
Like some people are going to have, some people are going to think more inside the box and
some people are going to think more outside the box, but we have to have both in order to have a healthy
society like.
Oh, and also the thing that bothers me, your song, Richmond, North of Richmond, a lot of
people, pretty even split people on the left and the right in terms of friends of mine, and sadly they've drifted towards the extremes a bit. Those on the left
definitely have developed a case of Trump-Drangeman syndrome. Those on the right seem to think
that every person on the left is a kind of radical leftist. It's like hilarious to listen
to people talk. It's like everybody's lost their mind.
It feels like, but also on top of that, people on the right see Trump as, uh, as
the savior, as this figure who is, who could do no wrong, who's going to restore
freedom in America and all, you know, continue, you can do a full list of really
positive things.
And to me, he's yet another rich man, North of Richmond.
Biden, Trump, it's all the same thing.
Now, some might be able to do more good than others,
but ultimately, they're in positions of power
and power corrupts.
And those in those positions
often forget about the everyday person, the working class, and they leave them behind.
Ultimately, serve the people that are close to them and sometimes serve themselves to
maintain power, to grow their power. I think the good thing you can say about them is they,
and I could say that about both Donald Trump and Joe Biden
is that they really love their family. As I could say that one of the things that I love
about both people is that they genuinely love their family.
And like, it was always heartwarming to me
to see how much Joe Biden loves his family.
Like, and honestly, like just do anything for his family.
And this, the same is true for Trump.
And that just reminds you that they're human beings.
And yeah, all that to say is like, we need to see the humanity in each of us.
Uh, and to some degree always distrust the people in power.
The power that people have only exists because we allow it, whether willingly or just through our own negligence.
But I think that's the important thing is like, like I said,
there's always more of us than there will be a them. There's always more,
there's always more nobodies in there ever will be people at the top.
We just have to figure out what to do with that and how to,
and I think this is like I said, a short window of time to, to,
where we can still figure that out, you know?
I got to ask you about something before I forget.
I think I saw an Instagram, you talked about a three legged cat.
Is that a real thing?
What's the story behind the three legged cat?
The reason I want to ask you that, first of all, I want to hear this story.
And second of all, I want to read to you, uh, one of my favorite
Bukowski poems afterwards about another cat.
All right. What's the story? to you one of my favorite Bukowski poems afterwards. Nice. I bought another cat.
All right.
What's the story?
I had this cat lady neighbor who's a real sweet lady, but older lady lives in a single
wide trailer, has probably got, I don't know, 30 or 40 cats that she feeds at her house.
Nice.
It was a rainy Saturday morning.
It was pouring down rain. It was going to be like, it was like eight o'clock in the morning on Saturday. It was a rainy Saturday morning. It was pouring down rain.
It was going to be like, it was like eight o'clock in the morning on Saturday.
It was going to be a great day.
I was going to, and then I hear this lady yelling, this is cat stuck in my car.
She's all freaking out and don't know what to do.
And like I said, my wife's a veterinary technician or whatever.
So she's got a little bit more sense about animals than any of us.
But we go over there and the ladies tried to start her car and there's this
kitten that was up under the hood and she started the there and the ladies tried to start her car and there's this kitten that was up under the hood
and she started the car and the cat,
basically it almost ripped its whole front leg off already.
There was just a little bit still attached,
like some tendon or whatever,
but the leg was like wrapped up under the water pump,
like the pulley of the water pump, knocked the bell off.
There was no way to save this leg on this guy.
It was like, and, but the cat was like pinned upside down.
And so we ended up grabbing a,
we asked the lady if she had like a knife in the house.
So she gave us this like terrible looking knife,
but it's all that we had, you know,
I was like, we were trying to get this done.
So yeah, my wife was the one that did it,
but we like got the rest of the stuff cut
and got the cat out.
And I'm, and I don't know, I just like to spend like, have her, I was like over a grand
we spent giving like getting this cat's likes getting it properly sutured or whatever to
where the cat could have a healthy recovery and all.
But I'm one of those types of people.
Like I'm not going to, I couldn't just let this little, I'm not going to go.
They were going to just go put the cat down or whatever the lady, you know.
So yeah, it's my, I named her hop.
So that's my little cat and it hops around and, but it was one of those things
where, uh, yeah, I don't know.
I just great example with animals.
Uh, I guess it's the same way with people.
I just always see the best and I just couldn't.
Yeah, I mean, that's one of the most amazing things
about humans.
It's irrational to spend that much money on this cat, right?
Because there's so many other cats that are suffering
and dying and so on.
But that's what makes humans really special.
We see that the person or the creature suffering in front of us and we're willing to move mountains
to save that person. It's irrational, maybe it doesn't make sense because the allocation of money
and effort might not be correct, whatever. We just don't give a shit. The reason that we're willing
to do it for a cat, like I said, it's just like the thing with the dogs about giving the dogs your medication, but not yourself.
So we see all the flaws and all the problems and all the disagreements and all the anger we have with each other.
Just like you said, your friends on the right and the left and stuff.
And like we could show that kind of compassion. And we do. I mean, humanity does from time to time show that kind of compassion.
But we could show that kind of like just undeserved, just, just love,
you know, to each other too. Like, and love is like, it's funny, you know, you talked about how
both of those presidents, you could say they at least loved their family, but love is like,
I think everyone's capable of love. It's probably the most powerful thing there is,
even beyond hate, I think is like,
but it is crazy with animals.
So it comes out of us so easily with animals,
because to us, they're just these innocent little lives.
We don't have anything against them, you know?
Like they don't have, they don't talk,
they don't have political views, they don't,
they're just little creatures,
but the reality is we're all just creatures like that.
We do that with human children,
but we don't do it enough with adults
who are also kinds of children.
We're still fucking lost in this world.
So I gotta read you this.
It's got to be one of my favorite poems.
It's called The History of Wontuff Motherfucker
by Charles Bukowski.
And people should go look at videos.
There's videos of Bukowski doing interviews with a cat
by his side, and that's the cat he's talking about.
All right, it goes like this.
He came to the door one night,
wet, thin, beaten and terrorized,
a white cross-eyed, tailless cat.
I took him in and fed him and he stayed,
grew to trust me until a friend drove up the driveway
and ran him over.
I took what was left to a vet who said,
"'Not much chance.
"'Give him these pills, his backbone is crushed.
But it was crushed before and somehow mended. If he lives, he'll never walk. Look at these
x-rays. He's been shot. Look here, the pellets are still there. Also, he once had a tail.
Somebody cut it off.
I took the cat back. It was a hot summer, one of the hottest in decades. I put him on the bathroom
floor, gave him water and pills he wouldn't eat. He wouldn't touch the water. I dipped my finger
into it and wet his mouth and I talked to him. I didn't go anywhere. I put in a lot of bathroom
time and talked to him. And gently touched him and he looked back at me with those pale blue crossed eyes.
And as the days went by, he made his first move, dragging himself forward by his front legs.
The rear ones wouldn't work. He made it to the litter box, crawled over and in. It was like the
trumpet of possible victory blowing in a bath home and into the city. I related to that cat.
I had it bad, not that bad, but bad enough.
One morning he got up, stood up, fell back down, and just looked at me.
You can make it, I said to him.
He kept trying, getting up, falling down.
Finally he walked a few steps.
He was like a drunk. The rear legs just didn't want to do it,
and he fell again, rested, then got up.
You know the rest.
Now he's better than ever.
Cross-eyed, almost toothless, but the grace is back.
And that look in his eyes never left.
And now sometimes I'm interviewed.
They want to hear about life and literature.
And I get drunk and hold up my cross-eyed shot,
run over detailed cat.
And I say, look, look at this.
But they don't understand.
They say something like,
you say you've been influenced by Celine.
No, I hold the cat up, influenced by what happens,
by things like this, by this, by this.
I shake the cat, hold him up in the smoky
and drunken light, he's relaxed, he knows.
It's then that the interviews end.
Although I am proud sometimes when I see the pictures later
and there I am and there's the cat
and we are photographed together.
He too knows it's bullshit, but that somehow it all helps.
So when you posted about the three-legged cat,
there you go.
And I think of your music and your life story
in the same way, it's just been through some shit.
Just like Bukowski.
Neither of you two have been through
what that cat's been through.
But you know, that's kind of life, that's what it's all about.
I was wondering if you could play a couple songs.
Sure, yeah.
Okay, cool.
Do you wanna take a break or no?
No, I'm good.
Am I, we might have to take a break.
Just to really get this figured out, but.
A back and break real quick.
Of course, yeah.
Where is the guitar?
Like where, no, like positionally.
I think, yeah, I think this'll be fine.
So ghetto
Call Draven and be like who?
Well, if you I guess I'll do
If I was gonna do anything on here from the older songs it that was related bolt
Everything we've
talked about it'd probably be I want to go home.
Sounds good. If it weren't for my old dogs and the good Lord, they'd have me strung up in the side
port.
Cause everyday living in this new world is one too many days to me, son We're on the brink of the next world war
And I don't think nobody's praying no more
And I ain't saying I know it for sure
I'm just down on my knees
Begging the Lord take me home I wanna go home
I don't know which road to go It's been so long
I just know I didn't used to wake up feeling this way
Cussing myself every damn day people have really gone and lost
their way they all just do what the TV say I want to go home Four generations farming the ground.
Grandson sells it to a man out of town.
And two weeks later the trees go down only got concrete growing around and I wanna go home
I wanna go home
I don't know which road to go it has been so long?
I just know I didn't used to wake up feeling this way.
Cussing myself every damn day.
There's always some kind of bill to pay.
People just doing what the rich man say.
I want wanna go home If it weren't for my old dogs and the good Lord, they'd have me strung up in the cyborg.
That's probably one of the first, it's not the first song I wrote, but one of them.
What a song, man. What a song.
What a song.
What's the story of that guitar?
Well, the guy who made this like save my butt because everything blew up
and I was playing that little Gretsch resonator that's in all the original videos and my my wife had got me that
off of Amazon I think or something like three or four hundred bucks it's like a
just an entry-level like import little Gretsch and the pickup never would work
right in it so this string would wouldn't work when you plug it in so here
we are everything happens all at once and we're trying to do these shows and
like you know I think the biggest one I did, so basically what I ended up having to do was go,
I bought one of these suction cup rigs that sticks right here and the mic goes down under here to pick
that string up. And I played like, we played like a, I think the biggest show I did with it was like
10,000 people, but it was enough to where I couldn't be doing a $300 guitar with a with a rigged up thing on it anymore.
It just wasn't going to work.
So this guy reached out and, um, Gretch wouldn't help me with my Gret.
Like, you know, there's no way to really get ahold of them because they're such a big company.
And I finally did get ahold of Diane Gretch and she's like really nice.
And so it's nothing personal against Gretch.
It's just at the time I couldn't get ahold of them.
I figured I would have been able to,
cause like everywhere sold out of those,
that Gretch model when the song blew up, you know,
like it was a real pop, but that couldn't get ahold of them.
So this guy Beard guitar, Paul Beard in Maryland,
he reached out, fixed my Gretch
and then gave me one of these and made it with him.
But it's all handmade and all.
It's like.
Yeah. You can like whack somebody over the head with it pretty good.
Yeah.
Nice and heavy.
But yeah, he makes them all by hand.
Uh, a little family on place and.
I know nothing about resonating guitars.
Is that like, uh, do you play regular acoustic?
Yeah, it's just basically a regular acoustic.
It's just a full step down is the only difference.
I've just got it tuned all the way down.
Is that it?
Cause there's also like the, this whole vibe to it.
Oh yeah, well the body's different.
So you can see it's got like a, it's got like a solid,
you know, instead of it being a hollow body,
like an acoustic, it's got that,
it almost looks like a hubcap, that black.
And like all the court that's all the same. Yeah, it's just the same, yeah.
I wouldn't be smart enough to play anything special.
Like it's just a regular old guitar.
I don't know, there's a different vibe to it.
Yeah, well I like that.
You're somehow cooler.
Well, the old, I'm real fond of like the older music.
So like where all my family's from,
so my dad was adopted, so I don't have any family,
like Lunsford's not really even a real last name to me.
They're all just, it was just my grandparents that adopted my dad.
So all of my family's angle is like INGLE.
That's like my real, that's all my mom's side of my family.
And they're all from this place about 20 miles from where the Carter family was from.
So all that old Virginia bluegrass folk music and stuff.
I was just always attracted to that.
I like the resonator a full step down because to me,
it gives it that old sound.
A lot of the instruments back then had bad,
dull strings and they were older and they were out of tune a little bit and stuff.
And I just, I listened to a lot of that type of music.
So I like, I like the strings being a little out of tune and
dull and not everything.
And just that.
Yeah.
I, that's why I was so attracted to it.
Plus like some of the old blues players, like, you know, playing the
dough, bro and stuff, but that was my, that's why I wanted to get the resonator was just because of that old, I mean, every, that's even why, like, you know, playing the dobro and stuff. But that's why I wanted to get the resonator
was just because of that old, I mean,
that's even why, you know, I had to use my grandpa's name
as an alias, but that Oliver Anthony music
is really supposed to represent like old music
from like 1930s Virginia or something like, you know,
like it's kind of got that type of feel to it,
or at least in its core, you know.
It feels like from another time, but it also feels timeless.
It's also that my music catalog is so limited,
like of what I listen to, that a lot of what's in my head,
like as you think about when you're writing songs
and like coming up with chord progressions and stuff,
whether you realize it or not,
it's all being influenced off of other songs.
So when you only have a lot of older music
and like some, a little bit of
metal and stuff in there, it's like, there's not really a whole lot.
It's like that, you know, it's kind of going to sound that way, I guess, just
in any way, cause that's what's in your head already, but.
So you're going to go out there a little bit this year.
Well, what, uh, what are some things you're looking forward to?
You're going to travel a bit.
You're going to play a bit.
The idea is, is to go to a town,
let's just use Iowa as an example.
Instead of the big city in Iowa
playing at the venue where everybody books,
let's find a farm field 45 minutes outside of that big city,
figure out the ingress, egress, the security,
find a good promoter that can,
a show organizer basically that has experience to where it's still, it's still professional and it's done
correctly, but established like a new venue space that can't be, that can't be
put under contract by a monopoly that any artist can go play like without,
like if, if all these musicians are sick of Ticketmaster and Live Nation, then
let's just, let's just start playing in fields and on main streets and set these venues up and establish them correctly and
professionally to where they exist as their own space.
And then imagine the economic impact that would provide to a town that otherwise would
never have.
You want to talk about trying to give blue collar people some hope or give them some
relatability or do anything for them.
Like bring a big band to their town that they would otherwise have to drive an hour and
a half somewhere to see and couldn't even afford the tickets to start with.
Like my tour last year, pretty much every show we did that was mine had a $25 ticket
option and everybody scoffed at that.
And I just, I was basically like made fun of for that by people in the professional
space, even people I was working with, they just thought it was so stupid. But you know what? There were people at my shows that came
up and the kids were wearing hand-me-down clothes and like you could tell they didn't have any
money and they said it meant a lot to them that they could come and that there was a $25 option.
And I'll continue to do these shows like this to where any band that wants to come play the show,
all their expenses are covered.
And I'm sure there's some kind of tax write-off component to them for them. But basically they can come in, do the show, help bring in a crowd. Like I'm taking the risk setting the venue up
and establishing it. The venue will be owned or managed by either the town or the farm or whatever,
but it'll be in a nonprofit. And then that, that space will always exist for people to rent.
And the idea is just like, man, imagine if I did, if I could do 20 of these a year,
even if that's, even if that's all I can get done, like that's 20 places that
will always have music and we'll always have a center where people can go.
Like in build the sense of community we talked about, like it's almost like a
sanctuary if you want to call it that, but it's like, it's just a space that can't be
perverted by, by corporate America and just a place where people can go and
like do all these things that we want to do.
Um, what are you excited for this year?
Obviously you're going to travel overseas and you got, sounds like you got
some, some other cool stuff you're going to do.
Yeah.
I'm going to see, uh,, I'm gonna see some world leaders,
hopefully not end up in prison anywhere.
Part of that, honestly, I'm excited,
you know, like India, to see the same humans,
but in very different parts of the world.
I'm not a travel guy, but I love seeing humans,
that there's like a lot of us humans all over the place and they're very different and they have funny accents and just funny way of being, you know, so I'm excited to take it all in because I fundamentally love people.
Yeah, man.
Like I, I, uh, I would definitely say if you're ever up, if you're ever over towards Virginia or West Virginia, either one there, like, yeah, it'd be cool to spend a couple days
out in the woods or a day out in the woods and do,
I haven't really, I'm really new to the whole psilocybin
thing, but I have tried a few smaller doses of it,
actually to help with being up on stage and all,
and it's an interesting thing, but.
It's great.
Yeah, the dog, definitely the dogs and the woods part,
I got you on that.
I would love to join in.
I mean, I've taken mushrooms a few times
and listen, I usually just love everything anyway,
but with mushrooms, you just love it a little bit more,
like especially out in nature.
When I look out in nature, I'm just in awe
of how incredibly beautiful it is
and just like a stare at a tree for hours.
And then you take mushrooms and like that tree starts like having some more
dynamism to it.
So it's just a little boost, but like, yeah, I get into this crazy, like I said,
it's only been a handful of times.
Cause I've, I don't know.
It's one of those things where it's, I'm, it's still a little unfamiliar to me, but
like, like talking about trees and psilocybin, you know, you think about, you start to look in
those trees and you think like, and their relative perspective of time, you know, cause they're
constantly moving around and growing and doing all these things. And you think about like, in
their perspective, maybe we're just, we're just moving way faster than their perception and
they're, they're moving at just a normal speed.
I don't, it's just that you get into all these crazy trains of thought when you
sit out in the woods on that stuff, but.
A hundred percent, man.
I mean, like maybe that's the history of, uh, life.
I mean, humans have some chance of destroying 95, 99% of the
population with nuclear weapons and the trees will remain and they will
Reconstruct the environment of earth and help the few humans that remain to survive
And it'll be the fucking trees that we'd be grateful for their actual deep
Ancient
wisdom
So maybe they're the intelligent ones
Maybe we're the idiots when you're out in nature like that that and just reading, just looking at and studying the way all those systems work with soil and trees and animals and how it all just integrates in together so perfectly, it does give you some sense of peace that maybe there is some, there is some system at place that's out of our hands that can just help us with our faults and our repercussions. And again, like for me, just, yeah, I think
just being out there, especially now that now looking at it through the lens of God,
of their, you know, of God, it helps. There's, I've found no greater peace than just being
out in the woods and, and praying or just, just trying to focus my mind on, on that.
Like I, but yeah, I would love for you to come out there sometime. I'm 100% will. That is it.
See, like feeling peaceful out in Virginia in the woods is easy.
Try doing it in the Amazon jungle when a giant ant crawls and just bites you.
Dude, I would do anything to go to the Amazon.
All the pieces is gone.
You're like, motherfucker, what are you doing?
And then like a second one joins in,
kills the first one and bites you again,
and then you're like, okay, nature is not all.
Yeah, it's not.
I mean, there is harmony to it,
but part of the harmony is the violence.
Yeah.
It's just the reality, It's sex and violence.
Like I guess that's the thing about it though,
is like it has all the same components of humanity,
just almost, you know, like almost to a comical level.
I mean, the real comedies, the monkeys up in the trees,
they're just, it's like,
it's like little humans and they're arguing,
screaming at each other,
throwing stuff, getting into fights.
It's like, it's like reality TV TV, but more pure, more real,
more distilled down to its fundamentals.
Like we are that.
We put on clothes these days and have fancy words
that we say to each other and look all sexy on Instagram,
but we're the same same monkeys, apes.
It's like the old lobsters, you know?
But it really is true.
Like, we all, yeah, we're all on that same kind
of same operating system in a way.
Brother, this was a huge honor.
I can't, I don't have the words to describe
how incredible this was.
And I think it was just fun.
It was really fun talking to you.
Total honor to be able to come on here for me as well.
And especially just to get to meet you in real life
and see like, you know, you are what I,
you are what I expected you to be like in a good way.
Like, you know, you just don't ever like,
yeah, you're just, you're a good dude, so I appreciate what you're doing.
I gotta show you the sex dungeon downstairs.
Nice.
Where I keep sex slaves.
It's very different.
No.
Yeah, man.
All right, time to wake up.
Let's go back to reality.
Thanks for listening to this conversation
with Oliver Anthony.
To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description.
And now, let me leave you with some words
from George Orwell.
Political language is designed to make lies sound truthful
and murder respectable,
and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.
Thank you for listening,
and hope to see you next time.