MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - MrBallen and the Art of Storytelling
Episode Date: June 25, 2025Start listening to Audible today when you sign up for a free 30-day trial at https://www.audible.com/mrballenJoin my sister and me as we dive into the art of storytelling in this never-before...-seen Live Podcast Recording Presented by Audible!WATCH the full event here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DW5aWKXOPAsSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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This special episode is brought to you by our friends over at Audible.
If you're watching or listening to this right now,
I know you are someone who craves stories that challenge what you think is possible.
Stories that make you think, that keep you on the edge of your seat.
And those are the exact types of stories I'm going to be talking about in today's episode.
But before we get into this special episode,
if you're a fan of the strange, dark, and mysterious delivered in story format, then you've come to the right place because that's all we do and we upload once a week.
So if that's of interest to you, please sneak into the Like Button's house and replace all
of their vanilla ice cream with unsalted butter. Also, please subscribe to our channel and
turn on all notifications so you don't miss any of our weekly uploads. Okay, let's get
into today's episode. ["Wonderful Wonders of the World"]
Welcome everyone to the live recording
of Wandery's Mr. Ballin podcast presented by Audible.
Please welcome your host, John Allen,
and special guest, Evan Allen. Thank you all for being here tonight.
I had a chance to meet many of you before the show.
Amy, a repeat offender, she was at our show in North Carolina.
There were other folks that were at the New York City show.
It's wonderful to see you guys come out here tonight.
This is a really cool thing.
We've never done a show like this.
We've just basically done like the live tour,
and we're trying to experiment with some new concepts.
This is you guys getting to see it first.
Also, this is being recorded.
It's going to be dumped across social media.
So that's cool.
You guys get to be a part of that.
But anyways, you guys, you all basically
know me for the most part. I'm John Mr. Ballin. Yep. And I tell stories for a living. I sort
of fell backwards into this. And what people don't know is that, you know, early on when
I first started, it really was just me. I was just telling stories. But then fortunately, my very talented sister,
Evan Allen here, who happens to be a Pulitzer Prize winning
writer.
Thank you.
She came along, and she actually jumped in
and is now leading the creative side of Ball and Studios.
So it's funny, working with my sister,
because we grew up best frenemies, you know?
And now we're working together here at Ball and Studios.
It's really, it's incredible.
And she is, although it's sort of seemingly nepotistic
that my sister's working with me,
the truth is, Evan is vastly superior at researching
and writing and frankly storytelling in its purest form,
like written story. Well, it's purest form, like written story.
Well, it's purest form since this is an Audible event.
It's spoken word, but Evan's incredible.
So, but tonight we're here and thanks to Audible
for sponsoring this event.
Let's hear it for Audible.
Yeah.
Good.
So tonight we're gonna be doing a whole bunch of stuff.
We're gonna be getting into like literally how we go about choosing stories, how we tell
stories.
We're going to rattle off some stories.
It's going to be a whole storytelling thing, but we're going to get pretty tactical at
certain points.
And so that's sort of how we came to collaborate with Audible on this because Audible and Ball
and Studios share the same passion,
bringing great stories to life via the spoken word.
That's spot on.
I've been memorizing that line for like hours.
Yeah.
He says that every day.
So yeah, so let's start by, we actually have a specific story we wanted to look at first.
So Audible has this really cool book club, right?
And Evan, why don't you take it away?
So there is a story in the book club, it's a true crime title, that we were tasked with
looking into and sort of dissecting and talking about up here.
And why don't you tell us about what we chose and what you think of that story?
Okay.
So, hi everybody. Sorry, I'm really not doing well with that story. OK, so hi, everybody.
Sorry, I'm really not doing well with the microphone.
They spent so long getting it.
I'm also hitting the microphone.
They got it just right, and I immediately just
knocked it with my arm.
Yeah.
So yeah, so we read the, well, listened to the audio book,
The Debutante.
The Debutante.
Debutante.
We were arguing about how to say it.
How do you say debutante? Seriously, I actually don't know how to say it. I do know how to say it. How do you say debutante?
Seriously, I actually don't know how to say it.
I do know how to say it. I know how to read it.
It's debutante.
That's why she's here.
So,
the debutante, the audiobook.
It is an
investigative sort of podcast
audiobook by
John Ronson, who if you don't know him,
he's a really great investigative reporter
who writes about sort of fringe,
like people on the fringes.
And sometimes this is extremists,
sometimes it's people who do or believe
really horrible things,
but sometimes it's also sort of like outcasts.
Like a book that I read by him was,
So You've Been Publicly Shamed,
which was really interesting.
It was about people who got canceled when canceling first became a thing. And so we chose the
book in part because I just like John Ronson.
You're a big John Ronson fan. I'm obsessed. This audiobook is about the Oklahoma City bombings,
which happened in 1995.
It was the biggest, or the deadliest act
of homegrown terrorism in American history,
where Timothy McBey and two buddies from the military
blew up a federal building in Oklahoma City,
and it killed 168 people including 19 children.
So this happened in 1995.
I was a little bit surprised to see that there was an audiobook about it because I had sort
of, I remember it because I was nine when it happened and there were child victims and
so I just remember being like there were pictures all over the news and it sort of sticks out
in my memory.
It was 30 years ago now so I didn't really know why there was an audio book about it.
But John Ronson is investigating this theory
that has sort of kicked around among people
who know anything about the Oklahoma City bombing
that Timothy McVeigh did not work alone.
Now he had two accomplices who also went to prison,
but the idea is that like,
was it possible for the federal government to have known
that he was going to blow up this building?
And there are people who believe yes,
and that is because of the debutante.
And so the debutante.
The debutante.
The debutante.
And so the debutante was this young woman named Carol Howe,
who was literally a debutante was this young woman named Carol Howe who was literally a debutante like with the dresses and like you come down the stairs. But then she did not like being a debutante. So instead she became a Nazi.
Feels like a sharp left.
These are natural progressions guys.
Trying to do this efficiently.
And then she became an informant for the federal government.
And she was informing on this sort of white nationalist movement, which people think,
maybe Timothy McVeigh was sort of like circling around.
So the whole audiobook is John Ronson's
pursuit of this question.
If the feds had listened to Carol Howe,
could they have prevented the Oklahoma City bombing?
And so it's actually super engaging.
But when we think about story at the studio,
we think about you always need a character on a quest.
And in this case, the quest is John Ronson's quest
to find the answer.
And it's a really murky world that he is reporting in.
Like, I mean, he's interviewing white nationalists,
he's interviewing people who lived in this very strange,
like, militia town.
He's interviewing very unreliable narrators. And so you kind of go with him
on this journey to talk to all these people. Like he's hunting a conspiracy
theory by talking to all these people who believe in conspiracy theories and
he's trying not to fall down like a rabbit hole of conspiracy theories. So
anyways it was great. It's a great book. It's a really interesting book but you
know part of the reason I think that we're talking about
it and talking about like, that looks really natural.
That's right.
This chair is throwing me off too.
There's actually no way to sit comfortably in these chairs, but yours is worse.
I'm trying to be natural.
You're not.
I spilled water as well.
But anyway, so we were sort of looking at it, we're thinking about it in terms of, I
mean this whole evening is just thinking about how do we tell stories?
What is a good story?
What makes a good story?
And so, you know, for me, the debutante is it has a great quest.
Wouldn't you also say that like one of the things that you said to me when you finished Tant is it has a great quest.
And wouldn't you also say that, like, one of the things that you said to me when you finished it was this notion of surprise being a big part of that story
and why it stood out to you?
Yeah, well, you know, I was the Oklahoma City bombings feels to me like a closed
chapter of history when I think about it.
I mean, I don't think about it very often, but it happened a long time in the past. I don't
really have a lot of questions about it, or I didn't. And so what I liked the most
about this book was that it's a super surprising look at something I thought I
knew. And I think in part of the reason it works well told in this format, like spoken, you get to hear from the
people who lived it, is because the stories they have to tell are so wild that if you had like a
single narrator trying to write it out, you might not believe them. I felt like I got through the
book, I got like halfway and I was like, oh, I have really strong feelings about what I think now.
And then I got another quarter of the way and I was like, no, I have the opposite side of strong feelings. So
So yeah, I always like stories like that that give you like a new perspective on something that you thought you knew
Right actually so maybe on that note. So the debutant the debutant definitely check that title out. So a fantastic audiobook on audible
you know the idea of there being a the debutante, definitely check that title out. It's a fantastic audiobook on Audible.
You know, the idea of there being a reversal or a change of perspective at the end of a story is so central to just the way we produce studio stories at Ball and Studios. When I look back at
sort of how this all came to be, you know, it started on TikTok. I tried my hand at some dancing
and some other things of that ilk and it didn't land,
which was shocking.
But sort of as a last ditch effort,
I, and what I mean by last ditch,
I just decided social media wasn't for me.
I told a story and it was about these hikers
that went missing in the 1950s.
I've told the story a million times.
I'll shorten it for the sake of this
That's the Dyatlov piss mityatlov pass mystery and I think it's fascinating
Effectively nine hikers in the 50s were super skilled
They they go out into the Ural Mountains Which is this totally rugged terrain and they're trying to pass their level three hiking test which seems pretty mild
But it's actually like a really big deal.
In the 1950s in Russia,
this was like the equivalent
of being like a master mountaineer.
And these nine hikers were truly like the best mountaineers
in Russia at the time.
And they set out,
I like how I said I was gonna truncate the story,
immediately not doing that.
I wanna know more about the level three.
Is there a level four? Yes. You know, maybe we should not doing that. I want to know more about the level three. Is there a level four?
Maybe we should get into that.
But they set off on this quest to do this hiking test, and really all it was is they
needed to go through the Ural Mountains.
They had charted a course that would take several weeks.
And it's like, okay, do the course that you've set.
And if you successfully navigate this course in the times you've given that demonstrates your ability to be a level
three hiker.
And so that and off they go and they take cameras with them and they take photos and
videos and imagine these nine hikers they're like all in their twenties with the exception
of a few of them.
They're all young, inspired, they're hungry and they disappear.
Like within a couple of days they've lost contact with the hikers and lots of people were aware of
The fact this test had begun there was actually an entire protocol for what happens if the hikers don't reach their checkpoints
And basically it's the military gets called and they get they go they go across their path to see if they can find them
and so that's what happens the the military figures out after like a week that they're missing and they they
basically go in reverse because they're at the back end of the course they're going in reverse and they find their way up to this mountain and
Immediately they see on this windswept snow-covered mountain about halfway up
there's a couple of small canvas tents and there's no people they just see them on the side of the mountain and
Immediately, it's this huge red flag because
if you're a skilled mountaineer, there's one place you don't put your tent and it's on
the leeward side of the mountain where you're going to get destroyed by wind.
You either go to the top and go to the other side or you make it up halfway and it's getting
too late, it's getting too, the storms aren't, it's too bad up here, you go back down.
You never stop halfway.
And so they see them halfway up the mountain it doesn't make any sense they make their
way up to the tents and they find that they're all missing the nine hikers are
gone but the tents have been cut open from the inside they've been cut open
with what appears to be a knife almost like with precision and then inside the
tent a lot of their clothing was left behind it was folded up neatly in the
corner now this is like the dead of winter.
This is like not a time to be ditching your winter clothes.
And they found there were also footprints in the snow going down the mountain from
the campsite.
And they noticed that lots of the footprints, they found all nine hikers
were accounted for in these footprints.
But many of the prints were bare feet, or one shoe and barefoot on the other.
And so the military follows the prints down to the base of the mountain, and there's this crops of trees
that's maybe like half a mile away from where the tents were, and they find three of the hikers.
And they're all basically nude or close to nude, they're deceased.
There's one of the hikers who's basically basically dangling over the branches of a tree up high, and there's two others that are down on the ground, and there's these
deep gouge marks in the tree, almost like an animal had been clawing at this tree, but
this is the middle of nowhere.
There really are no animals out here.
So they're just deceased.
The footprints continue from where they are another mile or so to the snowdrift that sort
of created a pseudo cave, like a snow cave.
And inside of that cave they find the remaining hikers who are also all deceased.
And the women were wearing men's clothes and vice versa, not entirely, but they had sort
of exchanged bits of clothing.
There were trace levels of radiation on several of them.
One of the women, she had her nose, her lips, and her ears that looked like they had been
surgically removed. And this is not so far into them being missing that you would
expect animal predation at this point. This is pretty early on in them being missing.
So it's surprising that that would happen. One of the gentlemen, his chest had, they
described this catastrophic chest injury where basically his chest was caved in, but there
was no impact on the outside. Like there's no bruising, nothing on his chest was caved in but there was no impact on the outside like there's no bruising nothing on his chest
Just his chest had the effects of like a train
Hitting him and they're all pushed inside of this cave and they're all deceased
And so naturally that the families are you know, they're beside themselves when they find out this has happened
How could this have happened all what happened to them? And so the government launches this investigation into what happened and
They begin to dig into it and it actually made the news
it was a pretty big deal at the time people were closely following the story and
abruptly the Russian government
Stopped the investigation and came out and said an unknown
Unnatural force was responsible for their deaths
case closed and unnatural force was responsible for their deaths. Case closed. And there are
pictures, there is testimony, there's all these weird things about the story and
it's been one of those enduring mysteries that I thought was really
interesting and I managed to tell that in a 60 second clip that was very rough
on TikTok and it went viral, went super viral on TikTok and I didn't really know
what to do with it so I just kept sort of posting more stories that were like
that because I
At the time in in my life i'm fascinated by stories like that and there's quite a few believe it or not that are like out there
Actually, you know that you you subscribe to the channel. Believe it or not. That's sort of the whole point
You won't believe this
But the reason I just did that is one I can't help myself but two
There's something so simple about telling a good story. Like that story, everybody's
waiting to... I'm taking some liberties here. Everyone's basically paying
attention because they want to hear what happened. There's some sort of payoff at
the end of the story. If you go... basically this is not a dig on any other channel on YouTube because there's
loads of successful channels out there that do amazing content.
But the next time you hear a story that's being presented to you, it could be a YouTube
channel, a TV show, movie, doesn't matter.
Oftentimes the first thing you hear is what happened.
I'm going to tell you a story about the nine hikers who all died in mysterious ways
and they were found with trace levels of radiation and their faces were cut off and it was totally
crazy. And back on 1954, they started their journey. And it's like, that's fine. I mean,
that's a type of storytelling that's perfectly acceptable. And Evan coming from the Boston
Globe, that's a traditional reporting. She was a big time investigative journalist, won multiple
Pulitzer prizes, no big deal. But they news, it's like, here's what happened and then here's the
narrative. If you want to draw people into a story, it's about having payoff at the end and being
ruthless about not giving it up at all before you get to the end. This is a good time to turn it
over to you. So Evan writes, researches, she's got an incredible team. Evan, the end you should this is a good time to turn it over to you Evan so Evan writes
Researches she's got an incredible team Evan is is the stories you're hearing that i'm telling on the internet
Evan has found those and put them together. Evan is the brilliant mind behind the scenes
The amount of work that goes into ensuring we do not give up information too early is staggering
And so with that Evan
I want to talk about your role
and how you go about selecting story.
Maybe touch on our childhood and what led us to this moment.
That was good.
Just put that all in there, dude.
We had like a framework.
And as you can see, Johnny is remembering late.
I forgot.
Yeah, yeah.
That's OK.
So we're going to naturally now segue into our childhood. Yeah, right
And what made us and then we'll come back to the thing. We're making sure there's payoff at the end
This is part of it. We're doing like a whole meta thing
So, what am I talking about? Well, so okay what I should have said before I went sideways is you know, Evan and I
Grew up in the same house.
We are related.
And we literally were like raised to be storytellers.
It's like unintentionally.
And you have a great anecdote about our mom, who also works for the studio as well.
She's a pioneer for writing the podcast.
She was like a walking audio book.
And that's not even a plug for audible.
It's like facts.
Like, what was it?
We are a library card.
What was it?
So when we were growing up, we, my mom was very like,
she's kind of a hippie, no TV.
We got to watch a half an hour or an hour
of masterpiece theater on Saturdays.
And so that was like big.
But the rest of the week, we were kind of on our own,
but she read to us all the time.
And she also took us to the library all the time.
We actually had for a while the highest circulating library card in the city of Quincy,
which makes you popular at school.
But she read to us all the time, like for like an hour, an hour and a half at night.
It was kind of like growing up with a human audiobook.
It's funny, we sort of went in very different directions.
You didn't become a Navy SEAL?
I did not.
I didn't become a Navy SEAL.
We came from the same place.
We learned how to speak English from the same people.
Our family is full of people who talk
and tell stories.
Like I remember my dad read The Call of the Wild to us
when we were like five and seven.
And I think he thought that because it's about animals,
it's about dogs, that it was for kids.
But in fact, I'm not gonna spoil anything,
but many of the dogs die.
And my mom got really upset with him because we were both hysterical
at the death of one of the dogs.
Still hurts today, honestly.
It's a deep trauma.
But yeah, so we grew up, like reading was just a huge central part of our childhood, really,
because we were deprived of television.
But then you became a Navy SEAL. I went into reporting and it didn't seem, I
would not have predicted that we would work together. But we kind of, but I mean
even in the even in the military though, what was your nickname? Shakespeare?
Because you were always telling people stories. Yeah, yeah. Actually, so in the Navy, so when
you become a Navy Seal,
there's a lot of hazing that happens. And one of the ways they haze you is they like make you give
these ridiculous speeches that you don't know they're ridiculous, but everybody else does like
you're a new guy, you've checked into the team. And like, they're like, all right, dude, you got
to give this brief to like, all these commanders over here. And you're like, really, this seems
irrelevant to brief them about like the ballistics of like this plastic here and you're like really this seems irrelevant to
Brief them about like the ballistics of like this plastic round. They're like now get in there and do this
And so you go into this room. That's not just the commanders of the team
It's like all the senior personnel and you the brand new guy
And so you like would have to go up there and give a presentation that oftentimes you don't have any information for though
Okay, just just go up there and do it and that oftentimes you don't have any information for. They're like, yeah, just go up there and do it.
And I would just default to telling stories about things that didn't really have much
to do with what I was supposed to be presenting, but it got me through the presentations and
they liked it a lot.
They liked that I would tell these stories.
And so it became like, John, yo, tell a story.
And so I became Shakespeare in the Navy. But I mean at a certain point what you you got me to come work with you. I
Was just helping because you're my brother and it was pretty small team at first
But as I did more and more of it, I realized that
You know, even though I think I come from legacy media. I worked at the Boston Globe
I was an investigative reporter,
we can be slightly snobby about YouTube.
But I realized that it's like this very sort of elemental
form of storytelling.
It's like sitting around a campfire.
I think there's something, I mean, I have a six year old,
she's here.
Shout out Dylan.
But she's always saying to me like, to me, like, tell me a story.
Tell me a story.
It's like this very like, it's like instinctive in us
to want to hear stories, to want to tell stories.
And I feel like the type of storytelling that we do
and good storytelling, any kind of good storytelling,
it has like some fundamental elements to it.
And you know, that's character, that's quest.
That's also I love in our stories.
There's always like a surprise at the end.
There's sort of like a tweet.
We refer to it in the studio as the twist in the reveal.
Like the twist is here's what's really been going on this whole time.
It suddenly becomes apparent.
And the reveal is like the truth of the situation.
And it works really well.
People, that's what makes our stories,
if you think about them, they're all constructed
heading towards the twist and the reveal.
But that's not something that we created.
I mean, if you read, and this is gonna sound ridiculous,
but just bear with me,
because when I get to the end of it,
it's gonna come together.
If you read Aristotle's poetics,
which is like his treatise on storytelling.
Classic legacy media.
So stabby.
He talks about the climactic moment of reversal and recognition.
And that's just the twist and the reveal.
And I say that not because I feel like I'm like Aristotle, I'm not.
But because these are sort of like fundamentals, like the fundamentals of good storytelling.
Oh, I got one to show Evan's prowess.
I'm going to set you up for something.
You're going to tell a story.
They're going to love it.
So initially, the reason that Evan really
succeeded at coming in and writing for me
was not just that she was an incredible writer,
because she was.
But she also knew me.
She grew up with me and knew how to write in my voice.
And so she was amazing at being able to write for me.
But the thing is, is one of the things that I demanded was you have to find stories that
have a twist at the end.
That's what you got to do.
You got to find stories with twists.
But the reality is, is just about every story can have a twist if you're a good enough writer.
Okay.
So like what I was doing is I was literally looking for stories like Googling what story has a twist if you're a good enough writer. Okay, so like what I was doing is I was literally looking for stories like
googling what story has a twist and I was like doing those.
And Evan took it a step further and she's like you have to think about things
like the unreliable narrator or like sleight of hand when you're
writing and I'm like I don't really know what you mean.
But there's a great example that you have that it's entirely Evan's
construction and you might as well just riff it off right now it's the one
the the African one. Oh this this is
like as you're listening to it to go through the story just like think about
what this could be and some of you may have already heard this story it's okay
keep it to yourselves okay but think about like the device that's being used
when you get to the end of the story you'll realize that a very intentional
thing has happened that's totally by design and you'll see at the end as well that other people screw the story up all the time when they try
To tell it so now just just nail it dude. Yeah
so a
Man in Cameroon wakes up in the morning just feeling like crap and he doesn't know why he feels like crap
He remembers the night before was a normal night
It was definitely raining. He heard thunder. He remembers the night before was a normal night.
It was definitely raining, he heard thunder,
he had kind of a headache so he went to bed.
Now he wakes up and he just, there's something off
but he can't identify what it is.
So he decides he needs to go find someone.
He needs to find help but he doesn't really even know why.
So he gets out of bed, he goes out of his house,
his house is on sort of like the edge of a cliff,
it's like high up, and there's a lake below it,
and then on the other side of the cliff,
lower down is the town.
So he starts going to the town to find help.
And he gets about halfway down,
and he realizes that it's very quiet.
It's like weirdly quiet,
because like this is a place where you can hear
the baboons barking, you can hear the bugs,
you can hear the birds.
This is a loud place full of nature and it is silent.
There are no baboons, there are no birds,
there are no bugs, there's nothing.
Doesn't know what to make of this, freaks him out,
but he just keeps going.
And so he gets to the edge of the water
and he's heading towards the town, and he sees this woman.
And it's a woman that he knows.
She lives right at the edge of this lake.
And she and her family tend to goats.
And so he sees her, and he wants to ask her for help,
but he realizes that she's screaming.
And she's screaming, and she's surrounded
by what looked to him just like her family
members who are sleeping. but as he gets closer he
realizes that her family members are too still to be sleeping and he realizes
that this woman is screaming because our family members are dead so he doesn't
ask her for help but he continues on to the village and as he's going into the
village he's seeing cattle and goats and livestock,
just like dead around.
And when he gets to the village,
he goes, starts going door to door looking for help.
And every door he opens,
the people are, everyone's dead.
They just dropped.
They just dropped where they stood.
And so he finally manages to make it out of the village
and go for help.
And actually no one believes him at first.
Eventually someone does believe him.
And they come and they find that like
a couple of almost 2000 people,
I'm not sure that we actually even know
exactly the number.
But a huge number of people just died.
They just died like where they were standing.
And you know, causes all of the government comes
and scientists come and people try to figure it out.
And it turns out that the night before,
what he thought was thunder was actually an explosion
or some kind of rock slide,
but it was some kind of large disruption
that caused the lake, which was a crater lake.
And so it's sitting on like an active volcano
or near an active volcano, I'm not a scientist,
to emit this carbon dioxide, like a huge
bubble of carbon dioxide burst up out of the lake immediately after that,
the crash that he thought was thunder.
And remember, he lives on the edge of a cliff. Carbon dioxide is a little heavier.
So the carbon dioxide went up, it made him sick,
it gave him a headache, but it didn't kill him
because it sank.
It sank onto the town, and it killed almost everyone
in the town.
So that is the way that we tell the story at the studio.
That is, we do it through point of view,
we do it through omission
where we're locked in this man's point of view we can only know what he knows so all he knows when he wakes up is he doesn't feel well there was thunder last night he starts getting down the
the side of the cliff and everything is quiet well that's because the carbon dioxide killed all the
birds and the bugs but he doesn't know that and so it is only we like to tell stories in a way that like
we can only know what the characters know.
That's what makes real life so scary.
We all have to live in this liminal space where there's stuff that's going to happen to us
if we don't know what it is yet.
That's actually somewhat terrifying.
All of our stories exist within that space and the moment of
reversal and recognition or the twist and the reveal, whatever you want to call it, is the moment when the
true nature of the world becomes apparent to us. And it is both shocking but inevitable
when you look back on the clues that we lay through the story to get you there.
Picture this. You're alone in your car at the end of the night on your commute back home
and you're stuck in traffic, but you're completely absorbed in the story you're listening to
on Audible.
And actually, even though you're in traffic, you're kind of hoping that the traffic continues
just so you can listen to one more chapter.
That's what Audible does to you.
Now, if you're anything like me, the type of story you might be totally engrossed in
on that ride home would be one
that sort of makes you question reality.
I mean, that's sort of the whole point
of my YouTube channel is to sort of see what's out there
and question it.
Like the whole world is a big mystery to me.
Well, Audible is absolutely packed with stories like that
that make you question reality, and I love them.
You can find anything and everything in their collection,
from supernatural encounters to, you know,
people being stuck out in the wild,
being pushed to their absolute limits,
and everything in between.
I mean, it's all there.
Take for example, the story called The Debutante.
And it's the story about the Oklahoma City bombing
in the 1990s.
It was this huge, horrible thing.
But a lot of people have a pretty fixed idea
of what happened, what led to the bombing,
how it happened, the outcomes.
It's sort of like a closed chapter in history.
But the debutante, it takes you into this world where you realize there's so much more
to that bombing to include maybe it could have been prevented.
I mean, there's a lot of twists and turns, but it's a very surprising story, just like
all the other fascinating
tales with crazy twist endings that are littered all across Audible's amazing collection.
And the narrators of the audiobooks on Audible are incredible. They don't just read lines,
they bring the stories to life. Plus, on Audible, there is a ton of exclusive content, like
Audible Originals and Audible Sleep Collection. So if you're ready to experience stories
that will transform your daily commute
into a trip into the unknown,
then you gotta try Audible.
Trust me, once you start, there's no coming back.
Start listening today when you sign up
for a free 30-day trial at audible.com slash Mr. Ballin.
Again, that is audible.com slash Mr. Ballin.
And so going back to sort of how I joked
about the Dyatlov Pass story,
that a lot of people, the way they would tell it
is to lead with the fact that these hikers died
in suspicious ways.
And then you get into the story.
I would challenge you to look up,
it's called Lake Nyos, N-Y-O-S.
If you look up the Lake Nyos disaster,
virtually every time it's told, it's about idea like can you believe it the lake blew up?
And it caused carbon monoxide to kill all these people
But what we do what Evan did masterfully with that story is think about like who's experiencing this in real time and put yourself in
That perspective and so going back to this idea that like anything can have a twist
Take like in a in a twist. Take like in a typical
police investigation, like a homicide investigation. There's a pretty good
chance that there are people who are going to get interviewed who are lying.
Okay? But they do say the things out loud that seem relatively convincing and if
you were to inhabit their POV when they said it, you know as the writer they're
lying and you know it's going to be revealed later that they're lying.
But you can in all honesty tell the story through their point of view at that point in the story and it's honest storytelling.
And it creates a setup to reveal that it turns out Joey was lying, he was the killer.
So it's about the unreliable narrator is a really, really easy way to take
virtually any story and create a twist
Just use somebody else's person or actually Evan
So she was an investigative journalist and she covered crime like that's that's that was her her MO in Boston
And Evan was telling me the other day in preparation for this that she would like be at crime scenes
And she's she's she's written about all these murders like a shocking of murders, and honestly a very dark life, to be honest.
Thank you.
A very dark life.
But she's like in some of the most dangerous parts of Boston where like murders have been
committed.
She's at the crime scene, like where someone has been shot and killed.
So she's as primed as you can be to be like in tune with violence in your area.
And she's described hearing gunshots at the crime scene,
distant gunshots but gunshots nonetheless.
And she immediately thinks, oh, those are fireworks.
This is someone who's at a homicide where someone was shot and killed who sees this
stuff all the time.
But that's what humans do.
They rationalize because it's your brain, the way you're sort of the way you think is
when bad things happen, you actually immediately go into this hyperdrive of telling yourself. Everything is okay
Like I keep this is too long of a story to get into but this I'm not I can't I literally can't take it two hours
Put everybody to sleep. So when I was 16, I had this experience out at this cabin in New Hampshire
It's like there was one of the earliest stories I told on YouTube were effectively over the course of several nights, I had either the most visceral,
terrifying, living nightmare, like a sleepwalking scenario,
I don't even know, where like this figure
was basically walking around the cabin.
This is not my origin story, it isn't like this happened
and I became the storyteller, it's purely coincidental.
But I had this horrifying experience as a 16-year-old
where I'd be laying in bed in this cabin in New Hampshire,
up in the White Mountains, very isolated, it's dark,
there's not even really any roads that go up there,
and I'd be laying there, and I would hear footsteps
walking around the cabin, and then at some point,
this figure walked into my room,
like two nights out of the three,
something walked into the room that is inexplicable to me,
still have no answer for it and sort
Of like bowed into the bed next to me and vanished. There's a there's a much larger story to this
It's called what I saw in my room still haunts me. You can look it up
But I can say firsthand that as I'm laying in bed as a 16 year old kid
Hearing footsteps walking around the cabin clear as day. I am awake
I can hear footsteps and
No one's awake right now in the house that I'm aware of there's no one coming to visit and my first thought was everything's fine
This is okay. I think that one of my friends brothers could be coming by it's 330 in the morning in the middle of nowhere in New Hampshire
They're probably stopping by to say hello and what's gonna happen here is they they're going to come in here and they're going to talk to me, say hi, socialize.
And so what I'm going to do is when they come in here, I'm just going to pretend to be asleep because I don't want to have a social interaction right now at 3.30 in the morning.
That's all I'm thinking about. Not there's a effing intruder in your house. That's a problem. No, my brain's like, everything's fine. All the way until something entered the room.
And even then, as I'm staring at this tall, dark figure that has walked into the room
that I can't make sense of, I'm still thinking to myself, is that Nick's brother?
Right?
And then like the next day, you know, because there's this horrible night where I'm awake
all night like stressing about it because it literally vanished into the floor next
to me.
And you know, in in real life that doesn't
Really happen, you know, so I'm thinking when's it gonna stand back up again? Whatever this thing is the next morning
I'm talking to Nick's mother in the kitchen and she she's listening
I'm like telling her like ah did did your son come by at some point last night?
Like what happened and she's like John don't worry. I
Heard that last night too. It was my husband who was walking around here, her deceased husband.
That's what she's telling me.
And I'm like, oh, this is fine.
This is OK.
The story progresses to where it just happens for several nights
and there's really no explanation.
But I had like this point in my life where there isn't an explanation
for what happened in that cabin.
It's it there is it. I don't. I'm sure there is, but I explanation for what happened in that cabin. There is it.
I'm sure there is, but I don't have access to that information.
It is unreal how much my brain was going into overdrive to convince myself everything was
okay.
It's automatic.
It really is.
And actually, just to get a little morbid, I had an experience in Afghanistan where when
I was deployed, I was nearly killed by a grenade and
When the grenade came over the wall and we're like in the middle of this like as intense of a gunfight as you can be in
I watched this grenade come over the wall and we were under the strobe light the strobe light cast down on us
From the plane overhead and it's like flashing and you can only see the light on on infrared or on your nods
So it's pitch black to the to the average person, but to me, it's like a disco strobe, right?
And a grenade is is is curdling over the wall and I'm seeing it. Absolutely. There's gunfire
There's all this stuff happening
but I see a grenade coming over the wall and it's coming in and out of focus because the lights flashing on it and
It was so like matter-of-fact time did seem to slow down
Which I guess when your body goes into you're about to die mode
It's like all your senses fire on a level that you really can't do art. You can't artificially do this
It's basically like in true fight-or-flight scenarios. Your brain reacts differently
And so it gives the impression a real impression of time slowing down and so this grenade comes over the wall and
It's like I can see it it disappears. I can it's just happening in a fraction of a second
The grenade comes over the wall and all I thought was like, ah fuck
The grenade is gonna detonate next to my head and it's gonna I'm gonna die
But I won't be able to have an open casket funeral. It was not even sadness. It was just facts.
Ah, shoot.
Well, that's it.
I'm about to die.
I have my head blown off.
It hits my shoulder.
This is again in a fraction of a second
and it began to tumble towards the ground.
And again, I can see it here.
And when it made it to about my torso,
it's just falling to the ground.
I was like, oh shoot, like maybe my mom
will be able to recognize me at my funeral.
She'll see my face, thank goodness. And so it's not like, Oh, I'm going to make it.
It's just, Oh good. My face will be intact. But it kept on falling and it reached,
it reached my legs. And again, it's in a fraction of a second, but I was like, Oh,
man, I might live through this. And then it detonated and it felt like somebody
threw rocks at me and I wound up like in a, in a surgery tent. Uh, it was,
it was quite the blur.
But the point I'm making with that is,
actually I'll say, before I went up in the surgery tent,
it blows up, I get dragged to cover, I'm in this alleyway,
and we were in this village that it was very kinetic,
and it just meant people shot at us
every time we went in there.
And we were fighting with people that effectively
had been saying over their radios,
when we got there we can listen to the radios that they were all going
to fight to the death which really means they're going to shoot indiscriminately
at you even if it means targeting their own people and so when a contact would
break out literally the town would just or the fighters would begin shooting
arbitrarily in your direction like they didn't care if they hit their own they're
martyring their own people and so like rockets are flying and like traces are coming in traces of rounds
that you can see like every fifth round or so you can see the round.
And I remember laying in this alleyway bleeding to death.
I couldn't get my tourniquets off to put on my legs to stop the bleeding.
And it was just so matter of fact, the way, like the way, you know, how to live,
like right now, all of us are doing it.
You're all living, but you're not really thinking about living you simply are I I don't know
This is comforting or horrifying you know how to die too in the moment when I was literally about to bleed out
I was very likely seconds away from just bleeding to death all I thought in my head. Well, there's a couple things
There's one sad. It's like I wish I'd started a family. that's sad, but there was also just this weird like nonchalant
Specific thing that I was hung up on I'm laying in this alleyway. I'm just like I can't even see anymore
So I'm blind. I'm deaf. I'm in the void of my brain and I remember thinking like I wonder if it will say
John Allen killed in action or
Jonathan Allen killed in action Press Jonathan Alan killed in action
pressing questions, but the point is if
You think about what I've just told you those two ends those two stories about your brain
Operating in a way that you really can't control think about all the people in the world over time who have been in
horrifying situations
Way worse than anything anything I just detailed, that
have testimony, they have the things they saw.
You can operate their perspectives if it's available to you and really live in that liminal
space as you described, which is a really powerful place to be.
If you write a story from that perspective, it's bizarre, it's detached from reality,
but at the same time, it's exactly human
And so Evan is masterful at finding stories that have somebody that we call the unreliable narrator
That went through an experience that they literally can't fully understand like Evan not knowing it's gunshots
If we had told the story about Evan at the crime scene
We'd say and then the reporter she heard fireworks off in the distance, but we'd reveal later on it was gunshots.
It applies to any story like that.
And so Evan is masterful at finding stories like that.
So that's a device that is useful for telling stories.
Don't know where I was going with that.
That was good.
No, that's a good, good point.
You went where I had to go.
You know, I guess we could talk about the, the other one, which is a sort of slight of
hand, which is like, you want the caving one?
Yeah.
Or take it, whatever you want to do. No, I mean, I think sort of what we're sort of hoping to do is a sort of slight a hand, which is like the caving one. Yeah, we have- Or take it,
whatever you want to do.
No, I mean, I think sort of what we're sort of hoping to do
is just sort of talk about some of the ways
that we make the stories that we tell feel really engaging.
I think one of my favorite things to see from viewers
or listeners is when people say like,
"'Oh, I know this story, but I didn't realize
I know this story until like halfway through.'"
And that's because we're trying to tell it in a way that you haven't heard before.
What you're talking about with sleight of hand is sort of the we talk a lot.
So we have we have like weekly writers meetings
and we use for inspiration, like a lot, like a huge number of things.
Like every every writers meeting, we talk about something.
This past week, it was the opening scene
of the Seinfeld episode, The Briss,
because the Seinfeld writers are really, really good
at setting up each of the characters for the episode.
They do it in this like very economical way.
It's like so fast, it's so perfect.
But if you watch that episode, I will not explain it to you now
because it is too much to explain to you now and at Seinfeld.
And that would just be weird.
But they set up all the characters in the first like minute
and 20 seconds for the whole episode.
And it's just like a really great model of like economical storytelling.
You know, we've done we looked at lots of sketch comedy. Sketch
comedy is all about taking a scenario that seems like it's gonna be familiar
to the viewer and then sort of like flipping it on its head and using the
viewer's own expectations against them. Like there was a Shane Gillis sketch
where they're like in an airplane and the airplane is about to crash and so we
all know that story, right? It's like somebody comes out and they're in an airplane and the airplane's about to crash. And so we all know that story, right?
It's like somebody comes out and they're like,
oh, you have 10 seconds.
Everybody call your loved ones.
And so everybody in the plane in the sketch
starts calling, like, mom.
And so you don't even need to play any of what they say.
It moves really, really fast until you get to Shane Gillis,
who picks up his phone and he's like, hey,
this Frank's auto body?
And that's funny because it takes what you were expecting
and it just flips it completely.
So we look at stuff like that.
We look at, I mean, so we pull inspiration from everywhere,
but one of the places is we talk a lot about,
where's the camera?
Camera's zoomed really close in on moments of high tension
or high suspense.
We kind of zoom out when we need to like move a little quickly through something.
So we're often think we actually read a lot of like screenplays like if you read 1943's
The Leopard Man, excellent screenplay.
But so one of the ways that we often obscure what a story is about so that when we get
to the end, it feels like a surprise, but also inevitable because it can't just be a
surprise, right?
Because then it's like, well, that sucks.
That's weird.
Like if it turns out to be some random thing, it's not cool.
It has to be, it has to snap everything that came before it into focus.
And so one of the tricks that we use is we think of it as like zooming the camera really, really,
really close in so you lose all the context. So like you know those, there is a style of
photography but I don't know what it's called. When you take a photo of something so close,
super close so it doesn't even look like itself. You'll be looking at it and you're like is that
the moon? And it's like oh no it's just pebble, but they like magnified it a thousand times.
That's kind of what we do sometimes,
where we'll be like,
the camera will be really tight in on a character.
And so you're seeing, you know, I remember one story,
we had three guys in a boat
and they're doing something in that boat.
And we're like really close in on what they're doing.
They have like these strips of fabric
that they're tearing apart
and they're making sure the strips of fabric
are different lengths,
and they're putting the fabric in a hat,
and they're being like really, really serious
about this activity.
But to the viewer, it's like,
why are we so focused on these strips of fabric?
Like, why are these three guys in a boat?
Like, we don't have any of that.
We have three guys in a boat,
we're looking at what they're doing,
we're looking at their hands, the camera's real close.
And so slowly they each pull a strip of fabric
out of the hat, and then one of them looks at his strip
of fabric and just starts crying.
And it's revealed that they're basically drawing lots
for who's gonna get eaten, because they're shipwrecked.
But if you think about where the camera was
while I was telling you that story, it was so close
that you miss the wider context.
And we do that a lot.
And so you, I don't wanna give away
too many of our tricks here, but like, you know, you can.
Send it, dude.
We're always, we're thinking very deliberately
about what we're showing and what we're not showing.
So POV is one way to hide a bunch of stuff
because characters often don't know what's happening because as Johnny said much better than I can say it, you never really know what's happening
when it's happening to you. It's only in retrospect that things look inevitable. But another way that
we do it is just that sort of like so close that what we're saying is true but it is disguising
reality. There was actually I just thought of this one this was unscripted but I think it's a good one. Another example of zooming in
really closely so another good story that demonstrates this although it's
less severe but it's a good one. So this actually is on our Instagram right now
it's going pretty viral so maybe you've seen it. Okay so there's this this this
guy and a girl who are on a first date in Utah
this is in the 1970s and they're at a restaurant and
The dates not going very well. It's not going bad. But you know, there's there's not any chemistry
And the guy, you know, he just sort of thinks you know, there's this isn't probably gonna go anywhere
This is the last time I'm gonna see this person. So
He sort of just says hey, do you want to like just leave and do something else? I got a pretty
good idea. Like forget the restaurant. You want to go on a hike with me?
I know there's like this overlook out in Provo Canyon. It's got a great view of
the stars. Do you want to go do that? And the girl's like, okay I'll do that with
you. Like suddenly this is exciting. Like this boring date has now become sort of electric.
Like what are we getting into tonight?
It's late, right?
So they leave like the Waffle House, wherever they are, they hop in the car and they drive
like, they drive to this parking lot and it's nighttime but the moon's out, you know, there's
some good illumination and they park in this parking lot and they get out and now it's
like it really is exciting
There's just something sort of crazy about how this night has turned and so they're both that now they're almost is chemistry
And so he's like it's this way you just go and you just go in the woods right here
And it's like out of a storybook like or what's it the witches fables?
What's it what's it the Hansel and Gretel like it's like this this forest with like a cutout of like a
pathway that leads into darkness like this is a
sort of foreboding trail they're gonna go on but he's like I promise you you just go down this trail
it's a great overlook and so off they go down this trail and it's a paved trail and they're walking
along but it's really dark and nobody else is out here on this trail this is not the time to go
hiking on this trail but they're walking along and remember they're excited but very quickly and they would only
know this after the fact, very quickly as they start walking down this trail they both
start to feel this intense sense of dread but they don't know why.
But they both begin walking faster because they have to get to the overlook.
The overlooks you know half a mile away or whatever it is and they've committed to this
and this is supposed to be overlook. The overlook's, you know, half a mile away or whatever it is and they've committed to this and this is supposed to be fun. And so down the trail
they go, they start walking faster and faster. Neither is recognizing that
they're going faster, but it's clear because they're holding each other's
hands that there's tension, something's wrong. And they make a turn around this
corner and suddenly the guy steps on something soft and comes to a dead stop.
He doesn't look down at it.
The girl has stopped abruptly with him.
They're holding hands.
They already know something's wrong.
They haven't addressed it directly, but they know something's wrong.
Without saying a word, without investigating, nothing.
They turn around and speed walk out of there.
And when they get out of the trail and they're back in the car, they're like, whew, oh my God, like what was that?
They're like, oh, I don't know.
Fast forward 10 years.
10 years later, those two actually did get married.
It worked out great.
The decision to go down the trail paid beautifully for them.
And they're in their home and the TV's on
and it's playing a news segment.
And it's a reporter who is interviewing somebody
on death row.
And they're about to be
executed and they're giving this expose into their crimes and they were asked as the tv's playing
you know the she's she's in the kitchen he's in the living room they asked this person before you
got caught was there ever a time you almost got caught? And he said, yeah.
I was in Provo Canyon back in the 1970s, whenever it was, and I had just killed this young girl
and I was dragging her across that trail out near Provo Canyon.
And this couple comes storming around the corner and the guy stepped on the body.
And I'm crouched down next to the body looking up at them waiting
to see what they're gonna do. I would have had to kill them if they looked
if they looked down and saw what was going on but for some reason they just
turned around and they left. That couple had run into Ted Bundy and was one of
the last people he killed and he literally said I would have killed them
if they had simply looked down. So in that story, there's obviously huge payoff, but there's loads of stories about Ted Bundy
encounters that typically begin with, let me tell you a story about the time somebody
almost got killed by Ted Bundy.
Doesn't work as well.
You know, it's like telling the story I just told you, that story has been told many times
across the internet and everywhere.
But I bet some of you had no idea
That was Ted Bundy until the very end
Think about just the discipline of if you want a story to land you start with the end
What am I gonna reveal that I will not reveal until the end and once you have that in mind you build the story as
With as much discipline as you can to ensure nothing is tipped.
And that includes even like stuff like if like you joked about this, if we tell a story
that is on our channel and it's like, oh, Joey hopped on a boat to go on a fishing trip.
You're like, oh, Joe's dead.
Joe's going to die.
It's like understand if you if you make content, understand that you might have tropes that you've created.
You might have things that you do all the time
that give away what happens.
We actually have a rule in the writers room.
Do it, send it.
All bad smells are dead bodies.
All boats sink, all planes crash.
It's true.
And so I think it's really just about discipline.
And I think the way you sort of manage the writers room
Is the testament to that? Yeah, I think I mean one of the most frequent edits I give is
The writers are they're anxious. They're impatient. We feel impatient
We're telling a story and the tension is getting to us too
And so you see people starting to like give away the ending too early and it's like nope
Gotta hide it hide it for one more beat
This doesn't even pertain. It's just one of my favorite stories I'm just gonna
tell it it is a great ending it's a great ending this this is in my opinion
I'm setting myself up for failure potentially but I think I'm good I think
it is one of the best endings period of any story I've covered so there's this
woman whose name is Ellie Lobel I'm sure some of you already know the story
Ellie Lobel was a woman who lived in California who lives in California I should say and she
She came down with this mysterious illness. This is like in I think was at the early 2000s and you forgive me because I didn't prep
The story I'm just sort of telling it off my memory
so she she comes down with this mysterious illness
and she went to doctors left and right
and everybody was giving her different diagnoses
but no one knew what was wrong with her.
But her illness was not something that could be,
it wasn't that extreme.
It was like she was really tired.
She was lethargic, she was sore, she was achy,
she had flu-like symptoms.
Periodically her skin would you know break out in rashes
But there wasn't anything that was so severe that she really took it to the next level and really demanded somebody figure out
What was wrong with her?
For years and years she has this illness and she's like this very high-powered person like she's a lawyer. She's a mother
She's like she's killing it in life. But in on the backside, she's really struggling with this this mystery illness and
Over the course of it's like 15 years or something and you got to forgive me because the details could be a little bit wrong.
This condition got worse and worse to the point where again, it's not really life threatening. It's more like her quality of life was just shot like Like she could barely get out of bed in the morning,
you know, like low energy, she didn't feel good.
It's like something's wrong with her.
No one knows what it is, but now she's just living with it.
It just, it is what it is.
Well, she went in for a doctor's visit.
Like this is like 15 years into this saga.
And also by this point,
she had went through this horrible divorce
with her husband.
And it basically was over the fact
that this is gonna make him sound horrible.
I don't know the guy, but it it was like you're not the woman I married
You're like a shell of yourself because I think people thought she was lying that like whatever this is
What are you just tired all the time? Like what's that about? Right?
So she goes this horrible divorce her kids also apparently didn't really believe fully what was going on with her
and so she's living this like isolated life and
And like that the prestige and like that the careers the career success
She had had was sort of wiped by this mystery illness
She ends up going to the doctor. This is when she's like in her mid 40s
this is like years and years into this whatever this is she's got no answers and
The doctors don't discover what's wrong with her
however
they do determine that whatever this is is now actively killing you your organs are beginning to shut down and
Unfortunately, we don't know what this is, but it is killing you. That's that's what's happening here undeniably
So and Ellie's reaction actually was some level of relief her life to this point had become so far from what it was
She was so sad. She was so broken down physically emotionally mentally
That she actually sort of embraced
this idea that finally it's going to end, whatever this is.
And so she's given a prognosis, which I actually don't know how long it was, but it was relatively
quick considering it was like, let's say within a year or something.
And you know, her mentality after she's told you're going to die from this was she really
allowed herself to shut down.
She mentally really turned it off.
In fact, she began looking into an end of life care person, somebody that doesn't try
to resuscitate you but who stays with you until you die.
And so she actually did hire this end of life care person who she gave strict orders that
when it's time to work together, when I'm in what I believe is gonna be my final moments
I do not want you to save me
I just want you to help me stay comfortable and tell people when I die
That's your job like she was really explicit about it
And so finally it comes to the time where Ellie believes she's on she's on death's door, you know
She didn't know for sure but it felt like it was nearing the end
And so she actually rented an Airbnb out in Southern California in this beautiful part of Southern California forget the name of the town
But it was like one of the places that she had loved growing up and she's she's all alone
You know her family doesn't even know that she's doing this. She's doing it to spare her family
But she rents this Airbnb and the only person who goes there with her is this end-of-life care person
They go to the Airbnb and literally Ellie just gets into bed and
waits to die. That's it. She's not drinking anything. She's not eating
anything. She thinks that she's gonna die soon. She believes it. But after three
days of that, she doesn't die. She's not doing good but she hasn't died yet. And
so she decides that she's just gonna go on a quick walk. It's a beautiful summer
day and so she has her end-of- to go on a quick walk. It's a beautiful summer day.
And so she has her end of life care person come with her and she leaves the Airbnb.
She goes outside and she just goes on this walk and she passes by this beautiful pasture
full of these all these beautiful flowers.
And she's just looking out over the fence of all this beauty like the Earth's natural
beauty and you know she's sad but she's also like this is a wonderful place to have my
final moments. And as she's standing there, she hears a buzzing over her head.
And she looks up and she sees there's a bee floating like it's flying right above her
head. And now she doesn't think much of it. There's flowers everywhere. That's where bees
could be, you know, but quickly a whole massive conglomerate of bees, a huge hoard of, I don't
know what the word is, a myrrh of bees?
It's not conglomerate.
I think it's conglomerate.
A 501C3 of bees.
It's an LLC of bees.
So a 501C3 of bees shows up and there's these bees that are flying around her head, but
they're huge.
They're these big African killer bees.
And Ellie, by this point, is basically not immobile,
but she can't move quickly.
The bees come down and they begin stinging Ellie,
like repeatedly in the face.
And she can't go anywhere.
And her end-of-life care person is like, nope, turns,
runs away.
And so Ellie has been left.
And she literally collapses
to the ground. She can't go anywhere and she's getting stung over and over and over again
by these beasts is an onslaught. Eventually the end of life care person has some humanity
left and they come back for their run back. Sorry, scoop her up and they run her back
to the house. And when she got to the house, she actually was sort of not relieved, because I'm sure
she did not feel relieved, but she's thinking, great, this will expedite my expiration here.
And so she tells the end-of-life care person, I don't want to go to the doctor.
I don't want anything.
Just put me back in bed.
I want to die.
And so Ellie Lobel, because this end-of-life care person is there to help her die, does
just that, puts Ellie back in bed.
And for three days she laid in bed, and she didn't die.
She actually got better.
She actually got so much better that on the third day, she's swollen from all the bites,
all the stings from the 501c3 of bees.
That, you know, she's a very intelligent person she's not
thinking oh everything's fine this has been like 20 years of problems in her
life. So she gets up out of her bed after three days she's like something's going
on here and she begins to research like what could bee stings potentially help
me in some way and she discovers this totally obscure study in Australia
from back in the 90s, where these scientists,
they came up with a theory that if you had full blown
Lyme disease and you got stung by a whole bunch of bees,
it might cure Lyme disease.
The problem being they couldn't ever conduct the study
because it was highly unethical
to dump a 501c3 of bees on a terminally ill Lyme disease patient.
But Ellie Lobel unintentionally conducted that study on herself and she found out she had Lyme
disease. That was what was killing her and it cured her completely. She literally tours the country
talking about the benefits
of being stung by bees.
If you have Lyme disease, her name is Ellie Lobel.
It's fantastic.
It's a crazy story.
So yeah, that's that story.
Pretty good, pretty good.
Good story, good story.
Good story.
Any, we're about to wrap up here.
We're about to wrap up, I think.
Graphic novel, aren't you talking about the graphic novel?
Graphic novel, yes.
So as we are, so part of what we've been thinking about
as we were giving, sort of preparing for this talk
was just like the different,
how medium affects how you're telling a story
because it is different.
Like we, it's actually, Johnny tells the YouTube
and he tells the podcast,
but it's actually a completely different voice
when you write podcasts versus when you write YouTube. We have different
writers for it. It's like an entirely different thing and that's due to the
medium. The podcast is actually I think a little easier to write for because you
can't see Johnny but YouTube he's on camera so it has to be like exactly his
voice. But anyway we were thinking about like,
we also do graphic novels. And we have the second graphic novel coming out this fall,
but you'll have an audio book of the graphic novel.
And I know we only have a second, but I wondered,
I know that when we did the first graphic novel,
a lot of these were YouTube videos
that we converted to graphic novels,
which is like, that's a big, that's a big jump in writing.
I mean, the graph, the YouTube scripts tend to run about 2500 words or so graphic novel
scripts, the much shorter because it's not very many words.
But the pictures interact so beautifully with the script itself.
We work with this really talented graphic novel writer, Robin Diddy, who's done like
a ton of crazy things.
But it's like watching him take your video
and turn it into poetry.
And that is not an exaggeration, he's very talented.
But then you turn it into an audiobook.
And I just wondered, I know that in the first one,
you were surprised by how different the audiobook was
from the graphic novel.
And it's because, again, of the meaning,
even though you go YouTube to graphic novel to audiobook the
audiobook winds up being different than the YouTube or the graphic novel. Yeah
actually on that so so this is gonna seem like a shameless plug because it is
but it's actually the truth and I'll stand be I'll stand by this so when we
when we wrote or really Evan and her team really put together the first graphic
novel, which was a New York Times bestseller.
Evan, great job.
Thank you.
It was my job to translate that into an audiobook.
The easy approach would be to just read the words on the page and make it an audiobook,
but I didn't do that.
I don't know if you've listened to the audiobook for the first novel.
It's pretty good. I'm going to be honest. I did a pretty good job.
It's a whole performance and I'm gonna do it again for the second graphic
novel which is coming out this fall. The graphic novels are gorgeous. This one I
think is better. The second one coming out this fall it's called Where Nightmares
Live and there will be an audiobook component that you should totally go
look for on Audible. Audible is the home of the best oral storytelling in the land, you know?
In the land.
In the land.
In the land.
There's conglomerates of Audible books you should listen to and 501C3s of bees.
So on that note, thank you all so much for being here.
Thank you, Audible, for being here.
And again, go check out Audible if you want to hear some cool storytelling.
You guys are great.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Huge thanks to Audible for sponsoring this episode.
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well, you are going to love diving
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Listen today at audible.com slash MrBallin.
Thank you very much.
If you enjoyed today's episode,
let us know down in the comments section.
And also if you enjoyed some of the stories
that were told in this episode,
be sure to check out our main YouTube channel
called MrBallin, where we have hundreds more stories
Just like the ones you heard today. If you want a recommendation from me, let's say this one's pretty good right here
Click on this one. It's really good. All right. Thank you very much until next time. See ya