Shawn Ryan Show - #319 Mike Rowe - What Happened to the American Dream?
Episode Date: July 6, 2026Mike Rowe is an Emmy Award-winning television host, producer, narrator, bestselling author, and podcast host best known for creating and hosting the long-running TV series Dirty Jobs. Through his work..., he has highlighted the importance of skilled trades and vocational careers across America. As founder of the mikeroweWORKS Foundation, he has helped award millions of dollars in scholarships and championed efforts to bring shop classes back to schools. He also hosts the popular podcast The Way I Heard It, where he shares stories and interviews with entrepreneurs, tradespeople, and other remarkable individuals. Over a career spanning more than three decades, Rowe has become one of America's most recognizable advocates for hard work, opportunity, and the skilled trades. Shawn Ryan Show Sponsors: Get 20% off Rho Liposomal NAD+ at https://rhonutrition.com/discount/SRS with code SRS; risk-free 60-day money-back guarantee. Start therapy with BetterHelp and get 10% off at https://betterhelp.com/srs. #ad Go to https://helixsleep.com/SRS for 20% off sitewide. Save time and meet great candidates sooner with ZipRecruiter—try it for FREE at https://ziprecruiter.com/SRS. Get 50% off your first order of Sundays for Dogs at https://sundaysfordogs.com/SRS50 or use code SRS50 at checkout. Mike Rowe Links: Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/mikerowe Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/TheRealMikeRowe X - https://x.com/mikeroweworks Tik Tok - https://www.tiktok.com/@therealmikerowe Youtube - https://www.youtube.com/@therealmikerowe Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Mike Roe. Guilty. Welcome.
Thank you for having me.
Thank you for coming. Like I was saying earlier, this is pretty surreal for me.
I don't know how many episodes of dirty jobs I've watched, but since it's been a lot of them.
And outside of TV, when you chime in on certain topics, you always just bring a very well-articulated sensibility.
to the topic that I think that everybody seems to rally around, and it's good to see.
Well, as Steve Martin said, you know, when it comes to communication, some people have a way
with words and other people not have way.
Nice.
Well, look, we're in the communication business.
I mean, call it whatever else you want, the entertainment business, the whatever it is, TV
show podcast, and influence.
you know, journalism, whatever it is,
we're in the business of trying to articulate an idea
in a way that is credible enough to be taken seriously,
but not so credible that it's dushy.
And it's impossible to articulate and really know
when you get it right.
It's kind of like a fat girl on a balance beam, you know.
It's just like, you're all over the place, always trying to find your equilibrium,
you know, not wanting to go too far, say too much, not overreach, not sit the fight out,
stay in the middle.
All that stuff is challenging to navigate.
Yeah.
But fun.
I mean, look, the whole thing is a kick.
And if you're not in on the joke, well, you lose.
Nice.
How do you like podcasting?
I guess I love it.
You know, I was late to the party.
We were talking earlier about the, so much of what you do, I think, is dictated by when you started.
And I started in entertainment a long time ago.
And I got very lucky to have some success at a time when podcast wasn't even a word.
And traditional media was still traditional.
And so, you know, I got some breaks early on and eventually got a show on the air that I was proud of
and then had a network behind me that supported it and then had a bunch of spinoffs that magnified it.
And so I just came around at a time when I could have a, God, I hate to say brand because that is dushy,
but I could have a point of view and I could be consistent.
consistent with that point of view in a way that the broad media was okay with.
I couldn't do that today.
I couldn't get dirty jobs.
I couldn't sell that show today.
You don't think so.
Never in a million years.
Couldn't sell it.
Couldn't film it.
Couldn't do anything like the way we did back in the day.
That show literally Forrest Gumped its way onto the air.
It was, it was.
was deemed off-brand.
I shot the pilot myself.
Did you really?
Three of them.
Yeah.
Yeah, I was working for CBS at the time, hosting a local show called Evening Magazine.
It was just a little segment that I was doing.
And it was very inappropriate for that show.
But the viewers really, I was going to say the viewers loved it.
That's not entirely true either.
Every time I put up a segment, I was calling them,
somebody's got to do it.
And it was just like dirty jobs,
but it was an honest look at work through the eyes of the worker.
Unscripted, no second takes, nothing like that.
And the feedback from those segments way back in 2001
was, you think that's dirty?
way do you see what my dad does my brother my cousin my uncle my sister way do you see what they do
like for a living and um i'd never seen feedback like that before around anything i had done and i'd
been freelancing in entertainment for 20 years before that i was 42 at the time and so i was like
wow these are viewers who who want to program this segment and i thought that
that would be cool if it translated into a larger platform.
And so that's kind of how it started with like this idea that I work for the viewer.
So to answer your question, do I like podcasting?
I love it, but I didn't start there.
And so for me, getting into your world was really an attempt, ironically, to get rid of
a lot of the production
because production
can be the enemy of authenticity.
And I find this so interesting
because I've been on a lot of sets, Sean.
I've been interviewed a bunch of times
and
this is crazy what you've built here.
No, no, you...
Surely you must understand,
but your viewers should understand, too,
that in a relative world,
you've created an incredibly authentic space with a ton of production in it.
One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine.
You got like 13 cameras in here.
I filmed Dirty Jobs with a GoPro in this hand and a couple of lunatics behind me
trying to figure out what the shot was.
Like, we never did a second take on Dirty Jobs, ever.
right? I had a behind-the-scenes camera that never stopped rolling because I wanted the viewer to see
the business of making the show. And this is the first set I've ever been on where there's so
much production that actually doesn't get in the way of what you're doing. Yeah. So there's a
compliment baked into all that because it's a really, really, it's a hard thing to do to build a home
where a guest can feel this comfortable but still be surrounded by this much bullshit.
I mean it as a compliment.
I really appreciate that.
I really do.
Yeah, you know, I just, when I kind of got into this, it was an accident, to be honest with you.
And I was just really, I used to teach.
weapons and tactics and I just got so tired of that.
That old story.
Yeah.
And so I was like, well, this podcasting shit seems to be taken off.
Maybe I'll take a stab at that.
And I am not a conversationalist.
I have severe social anxiety, especially back then.
But I want to do, you know, I just, I kind of saw me, I don't know if you will call it a
hole in the market, but everybody was doing the Joe Rogan thing.
Yeah.
And what I really wanted to do is bring on former colleagues and do a life story and document history and talk about overcoming struggles as a combat veteran and all that kind of stuff.
And then, you know, I was like, the way I want to do it, I wanted to be a legacy piece.
And I kind of studied, I don't know if I'd say study, but I saw TV, you know, the thing changed.
It changes like every three to five seconds.
Sure.
And I was like, okay, that must be an attention thing.
so I wanted multiple cameras and I wanted a comfortable set, you know,
where you're not sitting erect in front of a microphone and so that people can really kind of,
you know, peel back the onion.
I'll let you know if I'm sitting erect.
I don't anticipate anything like that in the next couple hours.
Hey, look, at this point in my life, if it happens, so I'll take it as a win.
I'm sure that'll go viral.
But, but, but, but, but it's the, but, but, but it's the,
It's the combination of deliberateness and honesty that gives you authenticity.
You're a weapons expert, right?
That's a very deliberate thing to be.
That's a very consequential space to occupy.
Don't have a lot of room for mistakes.
And when you make one, it leaves a mark, right?
Yes.
So you bring that sensibility.
into the communication world.
That's interesting.
It's thoughtful,
but it's dangerous because if it goes too far,
then everybody gets a stick up their ass
and then nobody has an honest exchange.
On the other hand,
you're so aggressively self-deprecating.
You're so, like you're in the communication business
as a self-described introvert
and a terrible conversationalist,
who has conversations that often eclipse three hours.
Now, that,
makes you really interesting to somebody like me and obviously to the millions of people who are
watching this now because people love to buy things but they don't really like to be sold anything
and so you know if if i were interviewing you which i hope to one day i would love to talk to you
about the way you think about sponsorship and the way you think about endorsements because
I make my living in that space, you know, whether directly or through the podcast or just by delivering
a show like Dirty Jobs, which was paid for 100% by advertisers. You and me, we're in the advertising
game. And I think being honest about that and being honest with your viewer about that,
that's the first thing to do to get permission,
to talk as candidly as you do about the subjects you approach.
And that's fragile and it's valuable.
And whatever you've done to navigate that...
I really appreciate that. Thank you.
I mean it.
It's a short list.
and it's ever-changing.
So be careful out there.
I will.
I will.
Thank you.
No misfires.
No backfires.
We've already had a couple.
Check the chamber.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But, well, let's get to you.
So I'd love to do a life story on you.
And then...
I'll wait at the car.
And then I know we're going to talk about some AI data centers.
and all of that good stuff.
I can't wait.
I can't.
I'm so, is this black rifle coffee I'm drinking?
I think it is.
I got it out of here.
Is it?
It might be.
I think it is.
It's pretty good.
It might be Dunkin' Donuts.
I don't know.
I'll let you know when I have to get rid of it.
All right.
Because from what I can tell, I'm liable to be here for five hours.
Let me give you an introduction.
All right.
Mike Roe, you're an Emmy Award-winning television host, producer, narrator, and best-selling author,
best known as the creator and host.
of dirty jobs.
Through the Micro Works Foundation,
you've helped award millions of dollars
in work ethic scholarships
and become one of the nation's strongest advocates
for skilled trades and vocational education.
You're also the host of the way I heard it podcast
where you interviewed,
where you've interviewed everyone from entrepreneurs
to trades people to scientists
and everyday Americans with extraordinary stories.
Throughout your career, you've challenged
conventional ideas about success,
arguing that opportunity often exists in the jobs many people overlook. Welcome to the show.
Wow. Wow. I mean, I was very concise, and I got no beef with any of that. It's very flattering,
and accurate, if I don't say so myself. Thank you. I'm glad you enjoyed it. I did. I'd like to hear
it again. All right. And everybody starts off. Everybody gets a gift. Oh.
Tell me about these.
So those are Vigilance League gummy bears, and I was just telling you, actually,
that when I started this podcast in my attic with my wife,
we couldn't get any advertisers,
probably because I had no filter.
And so we started a Patreon account,
and we started selling gummy bears.
And we're still selling them to this day.
You've got to remember your roots.
Yep.
So they're made here in the USA up in Michigan.
Love it.
With that in mind, I brought you two things.
I was only going to bring the one, and then I did a little, you know, research.
You don't drink anymore, right?
I don't.
Sober four years.
And yet, what are we looking at here?
A lot of booze.
Ah, doesn't control me anymore.
You're Sam Malone.
You're the bartender in Cheers.
That's the dichotomy.
I was talking about before, right?
Yeah.
So my pop was Carl Noble.
He inspired dirty jobs.
He was a, he only went to the seventh grade.
But by the time he was 30, he was a licensed electrician, a plumber.
He could take your watch apart, blindfolded, put it back together.
Wow.
He had the chip, right?
Could build a house without a blueprint, that guy.
And I was, I grew up on a little farm in Baltimore County next to him and my grandma.
And he was the guy.
He cast like a long shadow, man.
He was so smart and so kind.
And my earliest memories are of he and my dad, like, waking up clean and going out into the world to fix some problem and coming home.
dirty. Like that was that was my first look at work. Anyway, he, uh, he turned 90 and my, I was working
for that thing at CBS I was telling you about, um, Evening Magazine. And my mom called
to say, Michael, your, uh, your grandfather's turning 90 years old and I've got, I've got the
perfect gift for you to give him. I'm like, all right, what is it? Now,
the time, I'm hosting this local TV show. And I, man, I had sung in the opera. I'd sold stuff
on the QVC cable shopping channel. I'd had 300 jobs in broadcasting because the handy gene is
recessive. And even though I wanted to follow in my pop's footsteps, I just didn't get the, you know,
it didn't come easy to me. Yeah. Long story short, his name was Carl Noble. And when we rebooted
dirty jobs during the lockdown, I decided to put it.
his name on some whiskey that's made down the street here as a fundraiser for my foundation.
That is cool.
Well, we're in 30 states now.
The thing has won, I don't know how many gold medals, and it's totally out of control.
And I'm, like, I guess I'm in the liquor business.
I didn't mean to be.
But my granddad, who really didn't drink either, his name is now on a bottle of award-winning
whiskey, and I just wanted you to have it to do with.
what you will. Give it away, put it on display. Thank you. And then, very cool. You definitely don't
have this one, but you strike me as the kind of guy that probably has a knife or two lying around.
So I've become friends with a guy called Josh Smith. Oh, I know Josh. Do you? Yeah. Have you had
him on? No, I bet him at a couple events. This guy came on my podcast a couple years ago.
ago and said some really nice things about my foundation.
And I said, if you make a MicroWorks knife to help me raise some money for these
scholarships we do, you know, that would be awesome.
So of course he did.
And we raised like 100 grand in three days.
And then he said, Mike, this matters to me a lot.
So he made what he described as the ultimate blue collar utility knife.
He called it the rocker, and he gives a chunk of every sale back to my foundation.
I didn't ask him to do this.
This guy started, he was a lineman, who starts making knives in his garage.
He was a lineman?
He was a lineman for years.
Farm boy working with electricity, also a blade smith, gets a deal when he's a teenager
to go make a sword for his sheik over in Saudi Arabia somewhere.
And he does it.
comes back, winds up getting on, what is that show,
forged in steel or something like that.
Yeah, yeah.
So he gets a little notoriety and decides,
I'm going to make the best knives in the country in my garage.
So that's basically what he and his wife did,
just like you started this podcast.
Wow.
So he opens his facility a month and a half ago.
He took it up a notch in the same way you did.
Dude, he's got 120 employees.
he's doing like $12 million a year making knives in the USA.
I love that.
And this is the very first version of the rocker.
He's just re-upped it.
It benefits my foundation, and he wanted you to have the first one.
So.
Take a look here.
And for me, man, look, this country is either going to figure out how to start making things again.
or it's going to circle the drain.
Yeah.
And if we can do it with a knife, we ought to be able to do it with a car.
We ought to be able to do it with the chairs we're sitting in.
Look at that beauty.
It's ridiculous.
Oh, yeah.
Look at that.
It's sharp, and he'll keep it sharp for the rest of your life.
Just send it back if it needs sharpening.
No kidding.
It's a great American story.
It's a great product.
And, you know, modesty aside, I was just, last night I was talking to my partner about this.
It's like, you know, the business of making whiskey and doing it right, the business of making a knife and doing it right, the business of making a podcast, doing it right, shooting a gun, doing it right.
Getting it done, whatever the it is, that's the, that's the jam.
that's what's for sale, I think.
What a great guy.
I'm glad you guys are partnered.
Yeah.
And yeah, I've seen his facility.
And I didn't know where he can.
I didn't know he's a lineman, but I know he just built that facility.
And I think, I know it started as kind of a grassroots, very small shop.
And I just, I love those stories.
Because I think that's what, that's what brings hope to all the people out there that are saying,
You can't make it.
There's no way American dream's gone.
It's like, no, it's not.
You just got to find the thing that resonates with you.
What is the American dream?
I think the American dream is the fact that you can come here and build anything you want
and find success if you work hard, if you have a hard work ethic, a good work ethic,
and a creative idea.
Let me run this by it.
I got one of the news agencies asked me to write 400 words on whether the American dream is alive or dead and why.
And, you know, I normally don't do that stuff, but it was on my mind and, you know, we're going to be 250, right, in a couple of weeks.
And so I went this way, just because I didn't want to say the same thing, I thought everybody else would probably say.
I said, uh, uh, the American dream died.
a long time ago, and I'm really glad it did, and I'll tell you why. It died in 1783 when we signed the
Treaty of Paris and actually became the United States. Prior to that, everything we had dreamt of,
life and liberty, the pursuit of happiness, the Bill of Rights, all these ideas. They were dreams.
And then they were real. And they've been real. And they've been real.
real ever since. So yeah, the American dream was a thing and then it turned into the American
reality and now it's a reality that we get to shape for ourselves. And your experience may vary.
You know, maybe you'll make whiskey, maybe you'll make knives, maybe you'll make TV shows about
work, maybe you'll make a podcast that, whatever it is. But the idea that that that that doesn't exist,
it's just bananas. Of course it exists. It has for as long as I've been alive. And I think
for as long as we've been us. Yeah. I know it's still alive. I mean, I got two examples
that are recent within the past four years. One of them, when I finally got out of my attic.
Dude, that should be your book if you haven't written it yet.
When I, when the wife finally came to me.
me out of the attic so I don't want these people over here anymore I went
and got a very small garage like a auto mechanic's you know one one one one
bay garage and with two offices in it and we built the studio in there and I had
I couldn't afford a construction you know crew to come in and design it do all
that shit and so there was a building being put up right across the street
of course, a bunch of Latino workers
that went over there. None of them spoke English.
I speak Spanish.
They come over, they're like, it was around Easter,
and he's like, I can come over on Easter Sunday,
and I'll frame this whole thing out for you.
I was like, perfect.
A couple years later, I had him do some more work,
and he's telling him he comes around.
He's speaking English now.
He's got some new cologne.
He's got an honest.
nice watch good sunglasses a brand new car and he goes he's just television he's like you know i have
like five crews now and i'm like that's fucking awesome man good for you like come here you work your
ass off you don't bitch whining complain you work on easter sunday now you have five crews yeah
and you can't even keep up that's awesome and then another one uh laura who you met yeah uh my
She's often, by the, but your whole team.
Solid, dude.
It's like a family here.
Really great.
But her husband, he started a fence company earlier this year.
And I think he's going to clear like two or three hundred thousand dollars in revenue on his first year.
Just building wood fences.
It's awesome.
It's hard enough to find clean food for ourselves, let alone our dogs.
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Is this for Patreon?
Yeah, this is for Patreon.
You've got a couple questions for you.
Hit me.
T.J. Smith.
Mike, you often champion skills.
Trades is a path to opportunity. How can young Americans entering blue-collar careers today
realistically achieve financial stability, a healthy family life, and a promising retirement
when the cost seems to demand more hours, more over time, and less time at home?
I would start by saying that virtually everyone who is working in the trades through my scholarship
is mid-six figures. They're killing it. Not everyone, but it's not like the challenges
you're going to face as a young person getting started
are the result of the trade.
People hate to hear this.
Why do you think stories like that inspire certain cohorts,
but anger others?
Like why is success so annoying to some people
and so inspirational to others?
How did they have to step?
Great question.
I think that, I mean, it's just an entitlement problem.
I think people don't.
They, I don't really know where it comes from,
but I think that there's just a lot of people out there
that are unwilling to put the work in.
Or maybe they went to a prestigious school
and thought something was going to happen afterwards and didn't.
And they see somebody who maybe has a lower IQ
who's not as smart as them and not as well educated and da-da-da-da-da-da,
but they have the work ethic and they don't have that entitlement.
And it just, it works, you know.
Yeah.
I was thinking about this in the shower this morning, weirdly.
I feel like maybe to some extent some excuses have been removed.
Like, I don't know.
I feel sometimes like there's so much information out there,
like I'm drinking from a fire hose, you know?
Like there's so much to learn, and no matter how much you learn,
all you really wind up concluding is that the more you realize you don't know.
Yeah, but the more you know, the more you realize you don't.
And it's like, so that's one thing.
But the other thing about all the information, all the podcasts,
all the interesting guests,
is that it's all that's adjacent to all the knowledge in the world, right?
I mean, like, if you have one of these things and an internet connection,
you have access to 98% of every single thing we've ever known,
and it's accessible.
Point is, like, if you don't understand algebra or trigonometry or calculus,
if you can't make a persuasive case for the real,
relevance of the Stoics or philosophy, if you can't talk at all about Nietzsche or Descartes or
force equals mass times acceleration, if you don't, like, if you don't have any of that,
what's your excuse? Like for a long time, like maybe most of, most of all of time, you could say,
I don't have access to that. I don't have money. I can't go to a school. I don't, I was born
here, I look like this, I look like that. I just don't have access. There's no way I could ever,
you know, be that informed. But if you're curious, which I think is a choice, right? It's kind of like
work ethic. You can choose to be curious. Well, now your accessibility is unlimited. You can get to
any site anywhere, anytime, 24 hours a day. I literally just watched a lecture from
MIT from my hotel room the other day for free.
It's like we're living at a time where there's absolutely no excuse not to be informed.
But at the same time, we are so overwhelmed with information that we're exhausted by it.
So I'm not sure what the point is exactly, except back to your first question, how do I like
podcasting?
it's kind of hard to answer
because I feel like part of what I'm trying to navigate
is all these smart people with all these incredible ideas
and they've made their documentaries
and they've written their books
and they've accomplished so much
and I want to hear about it
but I can't get to all of them.
And then I turn on the news
and I saw this clip the other day that really made me laugh.
The guy's like, is it just me or does anybody else
just not give a shit anymore?
Like, is it just me or like, what is happening with the chem trails?
Why do I care?
How much should I care?
The seed oils?
Is this a problem?
Is it a big problem?
Maha.
Maga?
What?
The straight of Hormuz?
Why do I know about that?
Why do I know?
Don't you care?
Don't you want to know what's going on?
Well, yes, I do.
But then once I know, you're just going to tell me about something else.
that I didn't know and I don't know what to do with that information yeah anyway if
there's a point at all that it's that people love your show because you're you're a
docent in a mousin a docent is a fancy word for a guide in a museum like you walk into a museum
for the first time, it's overwhelming.
I don't know if you've been to the Smithsonian.
It's overwhelming.
It's like you can't even begin to get your head around the totality of the exhibits.
So you need a docent to walk you around and explain what's what, the context.
Like, I need a docent in this room.
We could probably spend an hour.
You could walk me around and you could explain why the things on your wall are there.
And they would have new meaning.
for me, but I can't look at any of it and know anything.
I need a guide, dude.
I need somebody to walk me through the weaponry.
I need somebody to, we all do.
I was at a cheesecake factory the other day.
It's the last time you went at a cheesecake factory.
It's been a while.
Check out the menu.
It's just thick.
Yeah.
There are hundreds of entrees.
There are thousand desserts.
They're pictures.
Everything from a chill bowl.
a chili to sushi. There's an index in the menu. There's a tape of contents because the menu is so big,
you need a doset. You need a guide to fit. I just want a cheeseburger. Well, what kind? On page 34,
you'll notice we can get the wag goo. You got the, hey, yeah, yeah, yeah. I think people are
exhausted by the amount of information and aware that they're never going to be able to process
all of it. And on the other hand, I think people are embarrassed by their own ignorance because
there's no excuse for it. And somewhere in between this place called, I call it Podcastlandia,
this mythical kind of Narnia evolved where docents and guides have appeared to help us make sense
of the inexplicable.
It's a good point. A couple of
things. The coolest thing in this room is that sword up there. That's from a hundred. He's going to be
103 this year, I believe. Up there? Yep, that sword up there. 103 year old World War II veteran. His
name's Don Graves. He was a flamethrower in Iwojiba. And he came in and he saw all this stuff.
The majority of this stuff is not mine. It's from guests that have been on the show. And so he said,
oh, I have something for you.
And he sent in that sword that he took off a Japanese.
Is that a Japanese?
Yep.
The mandatory one they carried for the, what's the name is Sapoku?
I can't remember.
I think it's Sapoku or something like that.
But so he was on Iwo.
Yep.
Another thing.
So the, you had just mentioned there's so much information, you thought you knew so much
from all the information that you've gathered that you made,
it made you realize you don't know anything.
Yeah.
That's where I'm at.
Pretty recently came to this conclusion.
I mean, after, uh, what, five years of building this, I thought I knew who our biggest enemies were all these things, right?
All the stuff in tech.
And I was building this, you know, thing of knowledge.
Little monument to yourself, maybe?
Yeah.
And then everything I thought I believed in and was for his opinion.
the complete opposite.
And it just made me realize,
Sean, you don't know shit.
Nothing.
Well.
When did you arrive to that conclusion?
Oh, I have a version of it every day.
The Greeks have a great word for it.
They have two great terms.
I love.
The Greek word for discovery is,
and Agneresis. And Aristotle writes about it a lot when he tries to define what makes a plot good, right? Plots are driven forward by discoveries. The characters on a hero's journey, they discover things along the way that informs their worldview, their perceptions, and so forth. All good dramas, especially
especially a hero's journey, are littered with an agneroses.
And, but the great stories, you know, the ones that win Emmys and the ones that we quote,
they all have a specific form of an agneresis.
It's called a peripatia or a peripatetic moment or a peripity.
You can find it in your favorite movie, I guarantee it, or your favorite book.
And it's a form.
of discovery when our hero realizes that everything he thought he knew was wrong. It's literally
the realization that changes the course of the narrative. And remember Aristotle, he defined
a tragedy as the moment in a narrative when the hero comes face to face with the undeniable and
inescapable truth of his own reality.
So these parapetias, if you look for them, you'll find them everywhere.
Like the most famous one is probably in Oedipus, Oedipus Rex, the famous king, who discovers,
through the story, through Anagneroses, a great many things about life and leadership and war,
you know and among these discoveries is the fact that he he really enjoys the company of of older women
and so he of course famously marries one and the plot goes along and edipus is the king and
and then in act four i think you know he has a he has his parapetia when he realizes his
his wife with whom he's had several children is his mother.
Now, when you realize your wife who's also your mom,
your narrative goes in a different direction.
Okay?
This is why people still quote Oedipus today.
It's why, like if you watch The Sixth Sense,
like Bruce Willis, the whole movie is Ana Agnognearices.
Oh, he's a psychiatrist, and there's this little kid, Cole.
Poor Coles, he's got mental purpose.
problems. Why? Well, he sees dead people. And the plot unfolds and it's wrapped in mystery and
pretty soon Bruce discovers that this little kid is pretty great. And in fact, you know what? Maybe he's
not crazy. And in the end, he has his parapetia when he realizes A, the kid really can see dead people
and B, the kid is looking at him. Ergo C, he's dead. And he's dead. And that's
And when you realize you've been dead, the whole movie and you're the hero,
changes the directive of the narrative.
Yeah.
So maybe you had a parapetia.
Maybe you realized everything you thought you knew or believed in, just kind of shit the bed.
And now maybe you gotta figure out, what do you do about that?
I don't know what the hell you do about that, but starting over.
This is why God gave us a sense of humor.
it's why he gave us a sense of curiosity and most of all it's why we have a thing called humility
i think i mean that's my theory and i i look back at the pair of peteas in my life and uh they are always
humbling, discerning, unsettling, and really important.
Yeah, I definitely took something out of that one.
Well, what was it, man?
What was the inciting incident?
I saw your interview with Megan.
Well, there was a lot of it was within that.
I mean, drip, drip, drip, frog in the boiling water, or like...
Probably drip, drip, drip.
well, it didn't take long.
So probably frog in the boiling water.
It was from the get-go, I was kind of like,
I don't know about how this is all going.
But what it taught me is, you know,
maybe don't get so fucking tied to your own opinions.
Don't fall in love with your own smack.
Nope.
So it's taught me to be a lot more open-minded.
And I always considered myself pretty,
open-minded, but after this last go-around, I don't think I will involve myself in politics
very much longer.
Were you ever really involved in politics, or were you just sort of...
It kind of just happened.
It kind of just happened.
And I wouldn't say I'm involved in politics just through the interviews.
You know, but yeah, it's just, that last presidential election, I
I tried to get everybody. Actually, I did try to get
everybody. I really tried to get Camalo,
who did a couple press releases to try to
pressure her to get on. We were talking
with their team, and she wouldn't come.
But she said she was going to come
for a while, and then it just kind of fell off.
Because I always wanted to be fair and balanced, but unfortunately, I couldn't
get anybody from that side.
Why do you want to be fair and balanced?
I want to know. I think it's important
that you know what everybody's perspective
on things are.
Because one thing that I did that would go way against what I thought my audience would like is I interviewed this guy's name's Chris Beck.
Are you familiar with him?
Give me more.
The first transgender Navy SEAL.
Yes.
He wrote the Warrior Princess.
And everybody in the SEAL teams just despised this person.
And to be honest with you, he's one of the most brilliant people I've ever sat with.
I mean, the way his mind works and what he's invented and he's just a really, really bright guy.
But anyways, I wanted to bring him on because I have an opinion about that issue, especially when it comes to kids.
And he has since transitioned back to a male.
And so I wanted to give him a platform.
And I wanted to hear his journey, you know, like his legit.
jet journey into how it happened, what the process was like, why he decided to come back
without injecting my own opinions or biases. And kind of the point was the interview for me was
I wanted to showcase this is what it, this is what your kids are in for. If you're looking to do
this, here's the roadmap. This is what you're in for. It would help them make maybe somewhat of a more
educated decision, you know, and nobody else would do it.
And it was fascinating.
And it made me understand.
I was like, okay, that's how that could happen.
So he came in or no?
He did come.
He did come.
It was an awesome episode.
It's one of my favorite episodes.
And, you know, when he describes how it happened, it kind of,
For me, at least, it kind of opened my heart up to the transition or the retransition.
To the transition.
I just wanted to understand, you know, like, how the, how the fuck can somebody go through this?
Yeah.
And the way he described it and what happened to him, which was horrific.
I mean, Cliff Notes version, horrific childhood, severe abuse, lots of sexual abuse, the whipping boy of the family.
And so he would go up to the attic by him.
himself and wear his sister's clothes. Not because he wanted to be a woman, but because all that kid
knew was getting his ass whipped by his old man and being sexually abused by the neighbor.
And so he just wanted to feel like he was somebody. He just didn't want to be him because
he had no happiness. He just lived in fear and dealt with severe trauma from a very young age.
And so he'd go up to the attic and try this fucking dress on. And he'd go up to the attic and try this fucking dress on.
and he would pretend that he was his sister
because his sister was like the golden child of the family.
And it wasn't a dress, obviously.
It was armor.
Yep.
He put his armor on.
So fast forward, then he becomes a Navy SEAL,
he has all that trauma to deal with,
gets hooked on cocaine,
he's riding with the hell's angels,
does it, da-da-da-da,
starts going to therapy to clean it up,
tells the therapy, you know,
if you've ever done therapy,
you know you're going back to childhood
and tells the therapist
about the dress
when in his childhood and she is an activist and there it is you want to be a woman you want to write a book
you want to do this you want to do that and um he wrote the book high on drugs and while he was high
on drugs she slipped him an inda or not an nda a whatever a contract she he signed over the rights to the
book to this therapist anyways so that's how it happened
And when you think about it, well, it wouldn't be the direction I would go.
I can at least understand, like, fuck, man, you've been through some horrific shit that most people will never understand.
And this is a path that you kind of got coaxed into.
And now you're back.
Whether you came back or not, though, I could still understand.
Yeah.
I don't know.
Like, I don't know.
Because, you know, it feels to me sometimes like,
People think in order to understand a person, they have to understand their circumstances.
But you really don't.
Like, if you understand Anagneresis and the hero's journey,
if you understand Parapatia, and if you can find one in your own life,
it's a lot easier to see them in other people's lives.
And even though the circumstances might seem wildly divergent,
the feeling isn't when you realize that everything you thought you knew about a thing that you were good at was wrong that i mean if you're being honest with yourself in my opinion
the real gift of that is that you can see it in other people and maybe maybe it helps with your empathy
Maybe it just helps to be a better human, you know, to be, to be honest.
Now, your peripatia may vary, you know, like, oh no, my wife's my mom.
Wow.
I mean, like, that's over here.
My parapetia was I realized I was not a very good host, actually.
I was in the hosting business, you know.
I don't consider yourself a good host?
I'm okay.
I'm a good enough host to make a living.
Like, I'm, if I'm at the slot machine and I'm pulling the lever, the host lever, it pays enough to keep me pulling the lever.
And that's what I did for 20 years.
I impersonated a host.
On dirty jobs, I realized actually, I wasn't.
I was more of a guest.
We're an apprentice, maybe, or like an avatar.
Like, I started to think differently about my own job in the sewer.
in San Francisco.
When I was filming the first episode, it was like,
oh, fucking light bulb.
I'm way better not knowing things I don't know
than pretending to know things.
Oh, yeah.
I'm way better.
And the viewer likes me a lot more, if I'm honest,
about my shortcomings.
Yeah.
Of which there are many.
That was a parapetia for me
because I've been paid for 20 years
to hit the mark and say the line.
line. It's not that I'm a bad host. I can look in the lens and I can talk like this and I can
stay any number of things that, you know, would generate a paycheck once upon a time. That's not
what dirty jobs was. And that's not what most of the stuff I've done since then is. Parapitia.
Like, oh, you know. Anyhow, your brain, when you tell your brain what to what to find,
it'll find it.
When you tell it what to look for,
it's a very simple yet complicated mechanism.
So with regard to everything that's been in the headlines,
from my point of view, for the last however long,
I try and think, well, who's having the Anaegneresis?
Who's having the parapetia?
And right now, I think,
God, man, that's part of the,
back to your first question. How do I like podcasting? Well, I love it because it's filled with these
parapetetic moments, you know, and a lot of people are writing books and telling stories, whether they
know it or not, that kind of hinge on that moment. Chris Beck certainly did. I mean, that book is
Parapatia 101. So, yeah, I, the only way to understand
all the craziness and all the divergence around us is to have a look at the divergence and the craziness
within us.
Have you had any recently?
Hmm.
Parapetius?
No.
Right now, I'm having a pretty good run on, you know, the I told you so circuit, which is the opposite.
I mean, I run this foundation called Microwons.
works. It evolved out of Dirty Jobs. We award work ethic scholarships to kids who want to learn
a trade. I saw that. This is your first year. It's 10 million this year, correct? It's 10 million
this year, but 18 years ago, it was zero. I started it when Dirty Jobs was at its height. And
you're old enough to remember. It's 2008. Dirty Jobs.
was on in 140 countries.
It was launching spinoffs every week.
I was killing it.
I was having the time on my life.
I was doing the show I should be doing
on the network I loved.
Everything is perfect.
The country went into a recession.
And every morning there are these headlines
about the number of people who are out of work,
6 million, 8, 10, 12 million people.
And on dirty jobs,
it seemed like everywhere we went, we saw help wanted signs.
So I was like, well, why are all these people unemployed and why are all these opportunities open?
And that was my first introduction to the skills gap in America.
At the time, in 2008, there were 2.3 million open jobs.
Most of them didn't require a four-year degree.
No, they required training.
And people who were willing to show up early, stay late, and work, you know.
And I would go out after most of these shoots with the people who invited us in.
We'd have a beer.
We'd talk about the day.
And a lot of these guys were small business owners, men and women.
And I would ask them, you know, what's the biggest challenge you have to make a go of it,
whether it's whiskey or knives or like, what's the sticky point?
And it was always that.
It was finding that person who wanted to master a.
skill and apply it. Anyhow, MicroWorks was an attempt to shine a light on those jobs that were
open because those industries had been very good to me. And it grew from there. Fans of dirty jobs
built a massive trade resource center online. It was like zip code by zip code that hooked
people up to jobs that were available right in their area.
And this was kind of alarming because the headlines, remember, were like, there are no jobs.
All these people are out of work.
And so there's this idea, which is really like an artifact, I think, from the Great Depression,
that the way to get rid of unemployment is to create more jobs.
But that doesn't quite line up because there were two and a half million open jobs in 2009
when 12 million people were out of work.
Today, there's 7.5 million open jobs right now.
Are there really?
7.5 million.
Most of them don't require a four-year degree.
They require training and a willingness to work.
Also, quick sidebar, but outstanding student debt is $1.7 trillion.
Most of that's held by people who went to university, many of whom didn't graduate but got the debt.
nevertheless. You've got 6.9 million men, able-bodied, who are not only not working,
they're not looking for work. And that's never happened to, not in peacetime anyway. And maybe
you could argue we're not exactly in peacetime, but you've got 7 million guys not working.
You've got 7.4 million open jobs. You've got $1.7 trillion in outstanding student loans.
we're still telling kids that the best path for the most people is the most expensive path,
and we're lending money we don't have to these same kids who are never going to be able to pay it back
to train them for a bunch of jobs that don't exist anymore.
It's bananas.
So MicroWorks became an attempt to just cry foul on all of that and make a more persuasive case for the jobs that we do have.
So flash forward, I was kidding about.
the victory lap. But a lot of what I was arguing back in the day has come to pass. I went to
Congress twice to talk about the need for a national effort to reinvigorate the skilled traits.
My basic argument was, look, you have to prove to this generation that you can make six
figures working with your hands. You have to show them welders who are prospering and electricians
and steam fitters and pipe fitters and mechanics.
People like my granddad, you know, who weren't cut out at all for college,
but who were freaking smart and eager to apply their knowledge, you know?
Like, you've got to find that kid and you have to show them this path
because that's the right path for them.
And right now, look, we took shop class out of high school.
It had to be the dumbest thing in the history of modern education.
Right. So we set the table in a really jacked up way. And today, we have a colossal imbalance in the workforce. Most people simply don't realize how bad it is. But not a week goes by. I'm not even exaggerating that MicroWorks doesn't hear from the leader of some consequential industry or the CEO of a big
company or some elected official who is really like ringing the alarm belt worried about the
skills gap. Blue Forge Alliance, the company that oversees the maritime industrial base,
I'm sure you're familiar. They're 15,000 companies who are collectively charged with delivering
our submarines, our nuclear-powered subs. Two Columbia, one Virginia class a year. I think it's a two-plus-one
cadence. I might have them reversed. But there's a massive undertaking. We need three a year.
They called. They're like, we're having a hell of a time finding, finding welders and
electricians. Can you help? I said, maybe. How many you need? 400,000. 400,000 welders?
Four. In the next eight years, they need to hire 400,000 skilled workers. Many are welders.
The shipbuilding industry.
China built 1,000 ships last year.
We built three.
Yeah, right?
Rare earths, critical minerals,
we can get in all that stuff too,
but the front line of this is skilled labor.
The data center thing?
Dude, Larry Fink,
who runs BlackRock,
told me that
the companies in his portfolio alone
needed 300,000 electricians.
What's coming
is an infrastructure buildout that's being calculated at $9 to $10 trillion over the next nine years.
A lot of its data centers, but it's a lot of other stuff too.
And we can get in at data centers and AI.
It's all fascinating to me, but it's all kind of academic if you can't build them.
And if you can't build them because of a shortage of skilled labor,
that'll go down in history of one of the greatest,
worst errors of all time. And that's what people are beginning to realize. We have to reinvigorate
the trades. We must. Or we're going to be in a level of trouble that's truly unprecedented.
Sorry, I know I'm rambling, but every five tradesmen, for every five who retire this year,
to replace them. That's what I was going to ask. Do you have any idea how many welders there are in the
us right now? I can tell you that whatever the number is, we need 400,000 more. I can tell you
we're underwater, like, it's worse with electricians right now. I was in plain up, Texas. A couple
months ago, got a tour of a data center. I've been talking about them for a while, but I hadn't
really seen one up close. Oh my God. I mean, amazing. Kind of terrifying, but also kind of awesome.
enormous.
I ran into three electricians, all under 30,
all making north of 240 grand a year,
all debt free.
Now, here's the craziest part.
All three had been poached three times in the prior 18 months.
Now, does that mean that's going on in Sacramento and Phoenix and Tallahassee?
and Bangor, I don't know, but it's going on in Plano, and it's happening in different areas.
The shortages are so acute that the companies don't have time to train.
They have to poach.
And so great news for an electrician, but it's a little weird for the economy overall.
So long story short, this issue has been in front of me for years, and it evolved organically
out of dirty jobs.
And now I'm back in D.C.
because the Department of War got the memo.
And they're going to launch a big campaign
in the next couple of weeks.
I'm going to be in it.
It's going to be called Build Freedom.
And we're going to try and make a more persuasive case
for these jobs that exist in the industrial base.
I just sat with the president of META yesterday
in front of Maria Barteromo
to announce their initiative.
It's called America's Workplace Academy.
Dude, these guys are, they're in four states.
They want to be in all 50.
But the pilot program is an appeal to anybody who wants to learn to be an electrician
or a fiber optic specialist.
These are all in demand.
They're paying you to learn.
It's a five-week accelerated course.
You're guaranteed, your certifications.
All your expenses are covered, travel, everything, and you're guaranteed a job on the other end.
Wow.
Now, that's what's going on in workforce.
And you can go down the list.
Met is one company.
You look at Lowe's and Home Depot and Ford.
You look at Wells Fargo, who supports my foundation.
A bank has become the biggest supporter of my foundation and not a traditional, like, blue-collar company.
Why?
because they know.
They know what's coming.
They've done the math.
It's a problem.
Wow.
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I know you've been beating this drum for a long time, but when did you, I mean, this was way
before AI and all this other shit was even on the radar.
Oh, yeah.
What was the first inkling that you got that you were like, this is going to become a problem?
Well, on a personal level, I've become friends with the guy that,
built my house. And I think the youngest guy on his crew was 55. And so I started talking to general
contractors, you know, in the construction game. Just to say, what, how's the, how do you recruit?
How do you keep them? How long do they stay? What are the barrier? And, and it's just shocking.
Look, this whole thing, the, the sheer numbers are a problem. The demographics are a problem.
There's just, you don't need to be an economist to know that five out and two in, it's no Bueno.
But it's the stigmas and the stereotypes and the myths and the misperceptions that have kept a whole generation of kids from really looking at these jobs.
To this day, if I tell you this, we've had 3,500 people go through my program.
I got a story just like the one you told me, the guy that helped build your place out.
Do you remember his name?
Do you remember the whole situation?
I mean, I don't want to...
I don't, off the top of my head.
It's just funny for me, like the ones who stick out.
But there was a kid named Michael Gammes
who applied for a work ethic scholarship
from my foundation, maybe, I don't know, six years ago.
First kid in his family to go to college, he was two years in.
And he was in a panic because he realized,
as it turns out mechanical engineering wasn't the thing he really was passionate about.
He just wanted to work on cars like his granddad.
And he was a gifted mechanic, but he was going down the wrong road.
And he already had debt.
So he fills out his application, which is a pain in the ass.
I admit it.
You've got to jump through hoops if you're, I'm very stingy with the money I raise.
But this kid said all the right things, signed our sweat pledge,
made a persuasive case for himself.
All the references were good.
He gave him some money. He went to UTI, got his certification.
And a year later was like running the shop for Beverly Hills BMW.
And now he's way up the food chain at Rivian. Like he's making six figures. He's got a kid. He's living a...
He's making his own knife. He's making his own hooch. He's making his own podcast. He's carved out of like a real chunk.
It's exactly the story you were telling me.
I got 3,500 of those, man.
So, yeah, I'm talking to the Department of War and Meta and Ford,
and a lot of people at the grown-up table,
and I'm telling them all the same thing.
It's like, you've got employees who are like Michael Gammes.
The country needs to meet him.
I can tell a story anecdotally, and so can a lot of big companies.
But in the same way your viewers can smell bullshit,
the bullshit meter is finely tuned in this country right now,
not anywhere more so than in the generation
that needs to enter the skilled trades.
So they can't be marketed to in a traditional way.
They can't be oversold.
The good news is there's a persuasive case to be made,
and there's plenty of evidence.
And the evidence demands a verdict.
And so to answer your question,
I'm not experiencing a parapetia at the moment.
I'm experiencing something more like irony
and the surreal moment
when the headlines catch up to your own smack
and make you relevant in ways that you didn't totally anticipate.
Yeah, maybe that you didn't want.
to happen. No, I'm good. I'll take it this time. I want this. I want it. I'm proud of my team.
I'm proud of my partners. And I'm really proud to have a seat at the table. And if that's what
Dirty Jobs was for, look, I love that show. And I loved every moment of it, really. But it's just a show.
Show's come and they go, and people remember it fondly, and I'm happy for that.
But it launched this thing, and it gave me permission to sit with the Secretary of War
and the Secretary of Labor and the Secretary of Energy.
And all the cats who are now paying attention.
That's a kick, man.
What I meant is maybe the situation that we've found ourselves in right now, not what's happening.
happening for you and your foundation, but just the situation in general, because I feel like it's pretty fragile.
When has it ever not been fragile?
True.
I mean, in this way, it is a little unnerving because an out-of-balance workforce is a problem.
But, man, this last 250 years, if it's not one thing, it's another.
If it's not a civil rights problem, it's an infrastructure problem, it's a corruption problem, it's a fraud problem, it's a trust problem.
problem. We've had problems. We've had the same problems for a long time. I think maybe they feel a little
elevated right now. Yeah, I would say that's a good description. A little elevated, a little amplified.
So what is it that you and the Department of War are going to do? Well, their objective is to make a more
persuasive and more honest case for a couple hundred thousand jobs that are wide open in the
dib that's the defense industrial base and my my suggestion is to visit the companies consequential companies
that a lot of people probably haven't heard of that are really anxious to hire and have great
AI proof six-figure jobs that they're trying to fill, that I call them jobs of consequence,
you know, like a chance to work on the kind of tech that I think is going to define the future
for the country. So maybe it's Anderil, maybe it's Palantir, maybe it's a company called Hadrian.
Maybe it's apex.
They're making satellites in a mass-produced way.
A bit of a game changer.
Take the satellites out of the sketch,
and there's no strategy.
There's no warfare, as we understand it, today anyway.
So introducing people to some of these companies.
There's a company called Mock, who I'm going to talk to in a couple of weeks.
You're going to love.
You're going to love.
You know, Ma?
Talking to Ethan.
Yeah.
Fucking amazing guy.
He's...
He's...
He's coming on my podcast next week.
So I'm going to talk to Ethan.
And with his permission, I'm going to take cameras to the facility.
I want the country to understand what that brilliant 22-year-old is doing.
He's got his hands on something really important.
And I know you know this.
There's like, there's an ecosystem of people under 40 who are running companies and doing things that are so freaking cool.
They're just cool.
And those opportunities need to be presented, not sold, because nobody wants to be sold anything,
but people want to buy into something that matters.
And so, yeah, I'm looking for companies like that.
I'm looking for entrepreneurs like him that are creating jobs like the ones that are AI proof
and six-figure-ish.
And then I want to tap the country on the shoulder and go, hey, get a load of him.
Get a load of her.
Look at what they're doing.
Can you see a future in there for yourself?
No wrong answer, but at least look at it.
You know?
Because if you can't see it, you can't even, you can't even prime.
process. That was the crime of taking shop class out of high school. It didn't just build a detour
for a lot of kids who could have entered that vocation. It removed the work from sight.
So it's just a guy like me who was going to get in the entertainment business, just walking
from math class to English class. I could stick my head into a wood shop or a metal shop or
an auto shop, and I could see something going on that looked like real work. That went away.
They had a whole education of kids who weren't even exposed to anything like it.
Man.
I mean, you see a lot of kids now that he can't even change a light bulb.
You know, but, you know, so what is the Department of War going to do?
That's what I'm, because I have a suggestion.
I mean, there's all these military jobs that are also going to go away.
Pilots.
I mean, pilots have been on the chopping block since I was at war back in what,
2005. We had drones back then. Now it's all going to drones. You don't need drones. You don't need
boat captains. Or I mean, excuse me, you don't really need pilots much anymore. You don't really
need boat captains. I mean, the AI is handling a lot of these kind of things. Why don't we just
start manufacturing our own shit from within the military and start, start instead of, hey, recruiting
for pilots, recruiting for whatever the
job is that AI is going to replace why don't you recruit for fucking welders and plumbers and metal
workers and that all of that why don't why don't they do that and then those people get out and then
they go into the economy and it just fucking works that's what this is this is not a be all you can be
pitch to join the army or the navy or the marines this is not that this is more look at the
massive civilian infrastructure that serves those endeavors. You never meet the people who are most
responsible for making the hardware or in other adjacent industries. That's where most of the action
really is. That's where most of the work really happens. Most people, you know, they can aspire to be a
pilot, and it's a good point. You can see what's going to be downsized. You can see what's going to change.
But the work that's not going to do, electricians are not going to go away. Plumbers are not going to go away.
Welders are not going to be replaced. Not anytime soon, anyway. So, yeah, I can't speak to what the DOW is going to do
specifically within that vertical. I can only tell you that after going to Congress multiple times and making this case
to multiple administrations.
You can still find an open letter from me
online to President Obama in 2009
right after I launched this thing.
I've offered every administration
for what it's worth.
Just so you know, we're doing this and it's working.
Should you ever get to the point
where you're on the same page, let me know.
I consider myself a patriot.
I don't care who's an option.
I want to help.
So I wrote this letter to the president.
Do you remember three million shovel-ready jobs?
Do you remember that headline?
No.
All right.
So in 2009, that was the pitch.
There was a big infrastructure pitch,
and President Obama had pledged to create three million shovel-ready jobs.
And I wrote him a letter that you can find today.
And I just said, look, man, I'm rooting for you.
I love it.
Remember, Dirty Jobs is killing it at this point.
And I'm out there.
And I'm saying, I'm not an expert, but from what I've seen, and I have had a front row seat for a while to a lot of this, I don't think you can, I think you're going to have an easier time filling these positions if you're talking to a country who feels enthused about picking up a shovel.
right and if if you're assuming that shovel-ready jobs are just going to be filled because you create them
i'm afraid you're going to have a hard road right so i that's my message a year ago i was at a uh
an energy conference in pittsburgh held by convened by dave mccormick who i know you know
senator mccormick does this right all the cats are there man 35 CEOs
The president of the United States, they're all there.
I'm on a panel with Howard Lutnik.
Secretary, what hell am I doing on a panel with this guy?
I don't, but that's what I meant.
I get invited to these things now.
So I'm sitting in the room with the CEOs and the president of the United States.
And they're talking about the commitment to Pennsylvania that needs to happen to usher in
this giant infrastructure build out that's absolutely positively coming.
I'm in the room, Sean, when the CEOs pledge $94 billion to Pennsylvania alone
to get this thing going, right?
And when it's my turn to talk, I say, well, look, I'm rooting for you, Mr. President.
I am. I'm always rooting for you. And this reshoring, this reindustrialization that's on everybody's mind,
this building things in this country again, knives, whiskey, podcast, whatever, right? I'm for it. I am all for it.
But the two million jobs you're talking about creating in the manufacturing sector, I got it. I got it. I
got to ask you, what about the 480,000 open positions in manufacturing right now? If we can't fill those,
if we can't fill those, how are you going to fill these? So it's a math problem, which is weird
because I'm not a math guy, but that's been my question to every CEO I've met in the last 20 years
and every elected official who has called me up and put their arm around me and said,
hey, it's great to meet somebody who thinks like you.
We can work together.
Great.
But when the chili meets the cheese, what are you guys going to do about the fact that the people aren't,
they weren't lining up for three million shovel ready jobs 18 years ago?
And they're not lining up for these jobs now.
So what are you going to do to get this generation?
attention, how are you going to meet them where they are?
This is the first time somebody answered me.
What did they say?
They said, you tell us, what can we do to help?
And I said, well, modesty aside, I do want to be a part of it.
I do want to help deliver it, but I can't.
We have to hear from the people doing the work.
We have to hear from Michael Gammis.
We have to hear real-world success stories, people crushing it, and loving what they're doing.
I said, that's the good news.
You've got plenty of people.
I mean, you can find them in the primes.
You can go to Raytheon.
You can go to Lockheed.
But you can also go to Palantir and you can go to Anderrill and you can go to Mock
and you can go to Hadrian and you can go to Apex and so forth and so on.
So, you know, there ought to be a show like Dirty Jobs that focuses on this.
We can do that.
There ought to be a campaign.
Like there ought to be a big media campaign that constantly taps the country on the shoulder and says,
get a load of him.
Get a load.
Here's another one.
They're killing it, right?
You just have to drip, drip, drip.
You got to do it.
And, you know, it's easy because people hear me say that and they're like, oh, so it's PR.
You're saying we need better PR.
Yeah.
Yeah, you do.
What they need to do is set an example.
I just feel like nobody does that anymore.
They don't, nobody sets the example of what they want everybody else to become or what they want
them to be.
You're right.
Just tell them.
Well, you're right, because it's easy because everybody's got a podcast.
I'll just tell you, you know, tune in and I'll tell you.
tell you what I think today. And then tomorrow I'll tell you something else. And here's another guy.
You know what he thinks? Go ahead, tell him. That's what I meant earlier, this fire hose of people
telling me things, you know, whether it's a journalist or a podcaster or an author or a documentarian
or me. I'm not, I'm part of the problem. But what you're saying, I completely agree.
I don't think you're part of the problem, Mike. You're doing, you're doing it, you're doing an actionable.
You're not, you know, you're talking about these politicians.
And these CEOs of big companies that you've been talking to for the past 20, what, 20 years, 18 years.
And they're just doing this.
Over and over again, they just do this.
Yeah.
And then you come along and you start a foundation.
And I don't know how many people you're pumping through trade schools or helping get through,
helping financially get through trade schools, but it's got to be a lot, 10 million a year.
That's a big number.
trade schools a two-year program.
I mean, it's got to be, you're doing something.
So you're not part of the problem.
You're part of the solution.
That's nice of you to say, thanks.
I didn't, I didn't.
There's not very many people like that.
I'm part of the problem.
Like, you flick on the TV, you scroll around, you hit your news feed,
and there's Mike Roe mouthing off about something.
Or maybe I'm just telling a funny story.
Whatever, like, I'm in the ecosystem.
I'm part of the noise.
That's what I'm not part of the problem.
But it's a noisy solution.
And everybody's out there, man.
Isn't it amazing?
Like, I think of how many guests have I had on my podcast who have their own podcasts?
That's interesting.
I got a podcast.
I'm on your podcast.
No, you've got to come on my podcast.
It'd be rude not to do that, right?
So you know you got to come to, you know, you got to do that.
You know, I'm going to hit you up to do that.
that. Pretty soon, you know, everybody's going to have a podcast. Like, the entire audience is going to be
the influencers. Like, what happens if Andy Warhol was really right? What if this is everybody's
five or 15 minutes of fame? What if the audience becomes the creators in total? Do you think
that'll happen? Statistically, no, it can't. But I'll tell you what has happened, man. People have
People have forgotten.
I don't think you have.
You're, since we're complimenting each other,
who do you work for?
Hey.
All right, anybody else?
My family, my team.
Next?
Keep going.
My audience?
There it is.
There it is.
Sponsors in there anywhere?
I mean, I guess technically I work for them.
Sure.
But I don't, I have to be me.
I cannot fucking be an inauthentic me.
I cannot be controlled.
I can't, I just, I can't.
And those, those conversations happen, we just lost a sponsor from the Meg and Kelly episode.
Bye-bye.
Yep.
See you later.
We don't like what you said about MAGA.
Okay.
Great.
And then they want to know, you know, I'm like, then they want to know.
that I'm not going to tell anybody that they're dropping me.
How that work out?
I said, I'm sorry.
I'm not going to, you've already fired me.
And if you don't fucking like who I am, that don't fucking, don't advertise on my show.
I don't give a fuck.
There are only five million other podcasts.
Let go to them.
We're down to five million now, right?
And so, no, I'm never, if anybody comes in and tries to create a narrative or take me away from being
who I truly am, then this, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the,
It's, it doesn't work.
Okay.
So.
Then you are the noise.
Well, we're all the noise, but, you know, noise is different than sound.
Like, you can make a joyful noise, you know, you can be a symphony or you can be screeching.
You can be the woman at the end of the last election, whether she's just screaming at the sky in frustration, you know.
All of it together is just, all of it together is just, you know, all of it together is just.
just a cacophony. It's just a, my only point is it's super, super noisy out there. Why is your
podcast near the top of the food chain? It's because your audience believes you. And it's because
you know who you are. And they don't think you're faking it. And I don't think you are either.
But it's a great answer. Who do you work for? Me, my family, my team, my audience.
Okay. That's great. The answer,
would be different if you ask different people. People will put the audience in in
different places. I'm a little different. I don't think I'm as ethically sound as you are.
I'm pretty good, but like I put the audience at the top. Because if they go away,
obviously the sponsors go away. If they go away, if they go away,
my guests go away. If they go away, there's just, I'm just a guy sitting alone talking to himself,
you know? And so I think that the audience is like people forget, like just how important it is
when you're on a stage especially, you know, to look out and see those people. Like you completely
work for them. And they're
so special
and it's so easy to forget.
I shouldn't tell this story.
I'll try and do it without getting myself
in trouble, but I went to an event
years ago.
A kind of a
kind of a, I guess,
elite, quiet
event that
I was glad to attend.
And at the event
a play was performed and it was really good.
Like it was an original work and there was singing
and there was acting and there was a story
and there was a parapetia and there was an orchestra.
It was amazing.
And the audience, maybe 400 people.
And at the end of the performance, the authors,
took the score and the script and threw it in a bonfire gone never to be performed again
interesting fascinating and my first thought was that's just so indulgent like why would
mozart throw away requiem you do it once why would like what just happened and then
Later, I realized, oh, what just happened was the producers and the talent in this production
gave 400 people a memory that no one else has.
And they turned those 400 people into apostles of a kind, evangelist, for that moment,
that night that they had together.
where something creatively cool happened,
and it was transferred to the people who sat there waiting and watching
and wanting to be entertained or challenged or whatever, you know.
And that filled me with really a feeling I had never had before.
And, you know, if you think about all of the performances
that predated mass media, as we understand it,
were like nothing was recorded.
Nothing was ever filmed.
The whole thing, that production of Oedipus we were talking about before
took place in Greece in front of an audience.
And that was it, right, until the next performance.
So, you know, the audience used to be
such a like a vitally integral part.
They were the witnesses
to the thing.
They're the witnesses to this thing.
There's millions of them now.
And then we'll be cut up in clips
and it'll go out and but see,
that's such a different ecosystem.
You know, I think of why,
I mean, like, how do comedians get great today?
Well, the same way they always got great.
They suck.
And then they suck less.
And then they get in front of more audiences until they suck less.
And then the audiences grow, usually in proportion to their ability to not suck.
And then eventually they don't suck.
Then they're good.
And then the audiences and so forth and so on.
Like that's how you get better.
You get better in front of an audience.
And when you're just starting, the audiences is small.
I think about Lenny Bruce, you know, and some of the great comedians who, you know,
bombed horribly and early on in a little club in Greenwich or someplace, right?
Big deal.
You had a bad night.
Not today.
Today, everybody is sitting there documenting you on your first night out.
All the time.
14 cameras in here, dude.
14 cameras.
So, look, I say the wrong thing on a podcast like this.
they'll be hell to pay.
You say the wrong thing.
You lose a sponsor.
Okay.
That's cool.
We're all grown-ups.
You know, the stakes are actually consequences to mouthing off.
They're consequences.
And those are great.
But I just think about the consequentiality of the audience.
And I think about how that's changed now.
And I just two nights ago, I was on stage in a big venue.
And I'm looking out at the crowd.
And I swear to God,
dude, 90% of them were looking at me on the screen on their phone.
There's this giant filter between the audience and the performer slash influencer, whatever it is.
And for time and memoriam, it wasn't there.
And now it is.
And I reckon a lot of what we're grappling with,
all the time in every way, shape, or form is a version of that.
We're trying to navigate this weird filter that we've put between ourselves and everything
that's real.
Makes sense.
This is heavy, dude.
It is heavy.
I wasn't expected to get it.
I was going to tell some poo stories from dirty jobs, getting some artificial insemination stuff.
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I don't know. You know, it's not that I care deeply about my audience, but I do.
I just I can't let them dictate who I talk to and what I talk about.
You know, it just wouldn't, you know, something that I interviewed Jim Cabezel once,
and we were talking about money.
I brought this up a couple times on the shelf.
And he was talking about cars and motorcycles and all the fancy shit that he's bought.
You know, it was at a time where I was kind of just starting to make a little bit of money.
and way more than I'd ever made before.
And we kind of had this discussion,
and I was kind of picking his brain.
I was wanting some advice,
and he had mentioned something along the lines.
He said, you know, you just have to think of it as
it could be taken away by God at any moment in time.
And you can enjoy it.
That's what we were talking about.
We were talking about the Bible,
and there's a verse in there that says,
as something about a rich man will, you know, has a something about going.
It's through the eye, the needle.
There it is.
Yeah.
And he had said, you know, I just, I don't get attached to my shit.
And I'm ready and willing to give it back at any moment in time.
And that, for whatever reason, that just really stuck with me.
And so I kind of like consider this.
It's not mine.
Oh, too.
Every day I wake up and I look, I look around and I'm like, this can't be fucking real.
I have no college education.
I only have six years in the SEAL teams, which is a very unimpressive career is a seal.
And in that community, and this should have never happened.
You know, it just should have never happened.
I have known.
You're a bonus time.
Business.
Yeah, exactly.
You're the samurai.
And it'll be taken away at some point in time.
and if that happens, it was a good run.
I was true to myself.
I was true to my family.
You're so fatalistic at this point in your life, man.
It's so interesting.
You're such an introspective cat.
By the way, you know, the eye of the needle,
and that scripture is not the eye of a sewing needle.
It's the door through which people can pass into a furrow
fortress. Okay. It's like you can pass through the eye of the needle if you're a rich man.
This is difficult for other reasons that have nothing to do with geometry. It's not like you can't
force yourself, you know, through this tiny aperture. The whole metaphor was lost in the language,
which happens a lot, you know, I think it happens in the Bible, it happens in the Constitution,
happens all over the place.
Languages.
Always changing.
But yeah, it's not a parapetia,
but man,
there's a weird thing to wish on anyone.
But you ever lose?
You ever lose everything?
Oh, yeah.
Like flat broke.
Like everything?
Not everything, of course, but like financially,
your whole,
your safety net if you ever had one yes i mean when i left when i quit contracting for cia i had
i had nothing going for me uh but you quit i quit you didn't have to well that's not exactly
what happened but um um there was some shit going on that i did not like and i knew nobody would
stand up to it. It had to be me. And I was going on eight or nine years at that point. And I kind of
saw the writing on the wall. I was single, late 30s, mid-30s. And I just, I was like, this is a lonely
life, man, just redeploying to fucking war zones over and over and over and over again. And
That's just, I've done everything I wanted to do here.
The things that I haven't done, I've been hanging out over here for 14 fucking years.
Yeah.
It probably isn't going to happen.
And there was some really unethical things that were happening from a leader.
And nobody else wanted to sound the alarm.
It was dangerous.
It was going to get guys killed.
And so I kind of made a stand and told them a thing.
didn't get rid of them, then I would hit the media, knowing that I would never be invited
to go back.
And, uh, because they never really fire you.
They just, you don't get the invite to go back.
And, uh, and that's what happened.
So the sponsor of yours clearly didn't know who they were dealing with.
I don't think they really gave a shit.
But that guy did never did redeploy.
And, um, those guys never had to work with that fucking asshole ever again.
Good.
and reinvented and everything wound up being just fine.
But I think that all comes down to a work ethic.
Well, I think it comes down to a code.
You have a code.
You know, I know people with the code that don't work hard.
And I know people who work hard, they got no code.
The code's important.
And you pulled the pin on that scenario yourself
and you walked away from it at obvious cost to you.
but you did it because your code demanded it, right?
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, that's, I file that under character, you know, not work ethic, it's adjacent,
you know, the willingness to do a hard thing at a difficult moment.
That's a character, you know.
But when you lose everything, as a result, not as a result of pulling the pin yourself, you know,
I think that's what Kavisel was maybe talking about, you know, sort of an act of God or just an unfortunate circumstance where you're out of control.
The decision is not yours.
Somebody else made a decision and you look down in your safety night.
It's gone.
You know, that will either, you know, break you or send you in another direction or reinforce
whatever character you have.
And, you know, it's another thing that I'm interested in in people when I talk to them.
It's like, did that ever happen to you?
Was there a moment really when the rug got pulled out?
and would you do?
Did it, you know, iron sharpens iron and all that, you know, did it temper you?
Did it break you?
Did it make you a better version of yourself?
It almost broke me.
I mean, I had a suicide attempt in there.
But looking back, I sure as hell wouldn't change any of it.
It was much more impactful and much more enjoyable.
than anything I ever did for CIA or the SEAL teams.
What are we going to do about PTSD?
Well, actually, I just invested in a company.
This is more about the suicide epidemic, but I invested in this company called Envy.
And it's founded by a guy named Johnny Wilson, who's also a former SEAL, left SEAL teams, got into big tech,
started this company called Envy and it is you all these wearables that everybody's wearing to
attract their health you you get the what API keys to go into that and then basically what it
does is it it kind of tracks your health but what it will do is so let's say me and you were I don't
know sniper buddies back in the day and we got two other guys that were sniper buddies and we we
we get this thing and they package it up to where we're kind of accountable to each other.
And so when you see the biomarkers of depression start to kick in, you know, your sleep starts
getting fucked up, your diet starts changing, blood pressure's up, all of these kind of things
collectively together, it will kind of notify your team. Hey, Mike's not sleeping good, his blood pressure
is elevated, his heart rate's a little elevated,
you know, all these things, maybe call him, check up on him,
just see how he's doing. You know what I mean?
And so, and it's a lot more advanced than that,
but that's kind of the gist of it.
And, you know, I've tried, that's one thing that we've done
on the show is try to find all these different avenues
to find, to get out of that, you know, when you ask how I started it,
or maybe I just told you, you know, documenting history,
elevating the veteran talking about the struggles. This is what I'm talking about. You know, psychedelics.
A lot of guys have found, including myself, that's when I quit drinking. Haven't had one of four years.
I have a game. Yep, I have a game. Have you talked to Rick Perry? No. You should, man.
But I'm aware of the thing, the push. Yep. And I helped the Tennessee chapter get pushed through here in Tennessee
actually just a couple of weeks ago, and it passed.
Yeah.
And so I've been on this kick for a pretty long, about four years.
And that's been very promising.
But I think the envy wearable is kind of the new thing that I think brings the most hope
because it's an actual alert.
Like, hey, the signs of depression are kicking in.
Check on your buddy.
Yeah, I did a show for Facebook a few years ago called,
turning the favor. And I probably did eight or nine segments on non-traditional approaches for suicide
prevention with vets in particular. And it's just so interesting. So many of them really just came down to
you just got to get out of your head. You've got to dive into something. Like there was this thing,
motorcycle, combat bike saver, it was called up in Indie.
Indianapolis, kind of named Jason Zateman, just started, didn't know anything about motorcycles,
but he was struggling, you know, and he started rehabbing these old bikes. And then his buddies
from his unit started. And chapters all over the place now. You know, it had a huge impact.
There's these guys getting together working on something that was so tactile. There's a guy named
Steve Hots. God, you would love him. He's got a forge down in Frederick's.
He lost an eye and got his back all jacked up in a jump that went wrong and pulled out an old forge and started
making knives actually in his garage and kind of saved him.
And then he reached out to some other guys who were struggling.
This whole forge thing, Steve built, he's got over 15, 20,000 people have come through it.
Zero Suicides.
Wow.
It's amazing stories of, you know, I mean, it just feels like getting, forgive me,
I don't mean it like getting the band back together, but it's like getting the band of brothers back together,
getting the, you know, like that sensibility that exists so obviously in the military.
It exists in work, too, you know.
It exists.
I saw it on dirty jobs everywhere.
And getting people reconnected to that.
is something I've always been interested in.
Yeah, I think that's how many people?
Thousands.
That's incredible.
Thousands.
I'll get you a link.
It's Blue Forge, Black Forge?
I'll get it.
It's in Fredericksburg, Steve Hots.
You can Google the episode.
It's one of the best success stories I've seen.
I think one of the biggest issues,
maybe even bigger than the war trauma itself,
is the loss of identity.
I mean, especially if,
where I come from, you know, like, for example, when I left the agency, I mean, I joined the,
joined the Navy had really joined it 17 years old, left at 18, basically my adult, my young adult,
I was raised in the fucking SEAL teams, took about a year off, and then hated civilian life
and went back to contract for CIA, and did that for eight or nine years.
And, you know, when it was gone, I mean, you know, that has a lot of.
a people want to hear about that shit they want to know they want what's it like it's cool it's got a
wow factor it's got a cool factor when that goes away it's painful just like what you were
saying if your audience goes away well now you're just some guy fucking sitting there some days i think
that's the best outcome i would love to be just some guy sitting there uh and not have to worry
about all this i think that'll be a great uh anyways but what i'm getting at is you you lose that identity
and you're you you tie yourself to it and you know what a lot of guys can't get is you know being a seal
being a cia contractor or operating at that level that that doesn't fucking define who you are
that's just some shit that you did for a season of your life you know and but because it's it's
it's got the mystique to it it's got what everybody everybody wants to know they want to hear the
stories what's it like how do you get in there you know when that goes away you you you you feel
worthless why does it have the mystique because it's really fucking hard to get in and why do people
know it's really hard to get in because there's not very many of us and why do people know they're not
many of you i don't know probably because of entertainment and the discovery channel that's it dude
that's it 14 cameras or one or one smart ass filming himself people know about buds they know about
seals they know about the rangers they think they know about a i because they saw
The Matrix.
They think they know how it's going to end because they saw The Terminator.
They think they understand war because they saw Saving Private Ryan.
They think they know what it is to weld because they saw welding video.
You know, we, everything it is, everything that we think we know, we gather because we look around and we hear things.
And maybe we're curious and we take a look.
and then we get a version of whatever it is we think, right?
I mean, you probably saw all the war movies growing up,
and then you go into the thing, and I'm just guessing,
but some things must have surprised you, some things maybe disappointed you.
Maybe some things felt real and were confirmed.
I don't know.
But I do know that the mystique that you're talking about
was cultivated.
Not by the actual people doing the work.
It was cultivated by the people who documented the stories
and then told them the way they wanted to tell them.
And maybe it's John Wayne and the Green Berets,
or maybe it's Apocalypse Now, or maybe we're all walking around
with this incredible assumption about an endless number of topics,
including war, including
mental health, including the sexual habits of our neighbors.
I mean, like, we all think we can't help it.
Our opinions are all just an amalgam of all of these different inputs.
And so, you know, the closer we get to the truth of the thing, ultimately, the more we're
going to be disappointed or surprised or humbled.
because most of why we think we know about a thing
is based on somebody else's experience of it,
version of it.
Have you ever lost at all?
Not ever hit ground zero?
Financially, yeah.
Oh, yeah, man, my whole...
So, I told you I impersonated a host.
for years. And I did. And I was good enough at it. I wanted to be in entertainment.
But I was kind of risk adverse. I didn't want to go to Hollywood the way my buddies had or to New York.
I didn't. I stayed in Baltimore and I got a local show on the air and I saved my money and I started to invest
my money. And then I started to like narrate shows for the National Geographic, you know,
I think if there was a wildebeest trying to get across the vast reaches of the barren serengeti.
I'm telling you about it, right?
I got a lot of work, a lot of freelance work in entertainment.
I can sang in the opera.
Crazy six, seven years of my life in Baltimore.
I sold things in the middle of the night on the QVC cable shopping channel for years.
like I did infomercials, I did plays, I did pilots for talk shows, I did all these crazy jobs in entertainment.
And along the way, when I was young, I met, let's call this person a trusted financial advisor who became a close friend.
And I invested my money with this person who worked for a firm that you know.
And this person rose to the top of the profession and my portfolio rose with it.
And when there were opportunities to invest in private ventures that this person was also involved in, the opportunities were presented to me.
And by this point, I had complete faith in this person.
And so I always said yes.
And it's an old story.
This person left the big blue chip firm and hung out a shingle of their own and started a company.
And my money went with it along with a lot of other money from a lot of other people.
Blah, blah, blah, blah.
Complete fraud.
Bad actor.
And so the end.
The interesting thing for me was that at that point, I was maybe 37.
And looking back, honestly, I was, like, delightfully arrogant about my situation.
I had saved a little more than a million dollars freelancing in the entertainment business
and investing with a trusted financial advisor.
And at the time, I was in New York, like, just bumming around, taking the jobs I wanted.
And I felt so great, man, because I had this safety net.
I wasn't married.
I don't have kids.
I work when I want.
I take my retirement early and in installments.
I'm traveling around the world.
I had a job with American Airlines.
making entertainment for them on all their planes, on any flight longer than three hours,
right on.
Dude, I had a thing.
They called it a D1.
It was basically a plus one.
It was a must fly.
It was for me and my cameraman, right?
This is before the airlines realized how valuable that space was.
And that if you're a business traveler, you're basically, you're trapped on a plane.
There's nothing to look at, out the window at the back of the head of the guy in front of you,
or at the screen.
And there was no, they just put garbage up there.
So they hired me to make a show about any destination
that American Airlines served.
Right?
So we would fly around the world.
Me and a cameraman and a small crew,
and we'd film these shows.
And like, that was just one of the hundreds of gigs that I had.
But the crazy thing is, is that that pass was good all the time.
And so when that gig went away, Seinfeld,
they replaced my show with reruns of Seinfeld, right?
And then there was a big upheaval in American Airlines
and a big changeover.
One day, I went into the airport, I had this pass.
I hadn't even thought about it, you know,
and I was flying down to San Diego from Seattle.
And I was just going to turn it in, but I handed it to the gate agent,
and she did what she always.
They take it, they open it, they look at it.
Oh, okay then.
And then they pick up the phone and they come, mm-hmm, mm-hmm.
Great. So it's a must, they call them MFers, must flies, plus one. So like, seat 4A, okay?
Like, they'll take somebody out of first class to put you on if you have this pass. You must fly.
Wow. And, but the deal's over. So whatever, it was a great perk and now it's gone.
Except she says, go right on board.
Well, a story short, like for another year and a half.
this thing was active.
They never took it back.
And so I could fly anywhere in the country that I wanted to for free.
Plus one.
I was a great date.
So I'm just, so this is who I am at 37.
I can fly anywhere I want.
I'm freelancing.
I don't care about the work I'm doing at all.
I'm doing infomercials.
I'm narrating shows.
I'm not ashamed of it.
I just don't really care, you know.
And in between it all, I'm just kind of kicking around and living a really cushy, comfortable, freelancey life with a million dollars or more sitting there like the safety net, you know.
And then literally one morning, I had learned about it in the headlines.
It was gone.
All of it.
Gone, man.
So, boo-hoo, big deal.
Super interesting, though.
Like, what do you do if you're on the high wire and you're comfortable up there?
You've been up there a long time and you're walking along and you're on the high wire.
And every time you look down, yeah, you know, there's a net there, but you don't fall.
You've never fallen before.
So what's the big deal that all of a sudden the net's gone?
Well, it is a big deal, dude.
It's a big deal, except only if you fall.
And so that's the moment for me that I was asking you about.
It's not nearly as character-driven or ethically situated.
I didn't leave because of some crisis of conscience.
I didn't do that.
I just got ripped off because I bet on the wrong horse.
and I'd start over.
So that's clarifying, you know, and it doesn't matter how big your safety net is or small.
It's instructive to lose everything because it forces you to reframe stuff.
And it didn't happen right away.
I kept doing, I kept freelancing.
I stayed at like in my lane.
I was much more circumspect about, you know, spending money, but I never spent much anyway.
I didn't own anything.
I'm not a collector.
I don't have anything.
I had clothing deals, Sean, with like four different companies back then because I was working
on four different shows.
I had the airline show.
I had this thing called New York Expeditions that was on PBS.
I had a game show with Dick Clark.
I had all these different shows.
I had all these different clothing contracts.
I didn't need anything.
I didn't have any clothes.
I didn't own a thing.
I had arrangements with hotels, too.
I'm living in hotels out of my backpack.
I got a million dollars in the bank.
I got not one single commitment.
And I'm pretty good at booking work
because I did three years at QVC in the middle of the night,
and I'm a good audition, and I can sell anything.
I had my toolbox put together, right?
It was all...
It was so cozy, man.
And then it's fucking gone.
And yeah, that was the end of a chapter for me.
And the next chapter started with buildback
and stop working on projects that you don't care about.
And that didn't happen until dirty jobs.
I think this is an important discussion
because there's going to be.
a lot of people that lose their jobs and they're going to have to reinvent here within the next
couple of years. Yep. 100%. And a lot of people are going to look down and the safety
that's going to be gone. There was this moment in dirty jobs that you would appreciate that rhymes
with this pretty good. There was an episode on the McAnall Bridge. I was invited to work with the
the maintenance crew on the Mighty Mac.
This is a bridge up in Michigan connects the upper and lower peninsula, right?
It's long.
It's way longer than it's like five miles long.
It's one of the longest suspension bridges in the country.
It's all right.
Fact check me all that.
It might be too.
I know it's a lot longer than the Golden Gate, you know.
It's long and it's green, right?
It's got to be painted constantly.
It never stops.
The minute you're done painting it, it's time to start painting it again, right?
So there's endless jobs to do on this bridge.
Like you go into the towers and you go down below the water into these, like these steel coffins,
these like honeycombs.
And they all have to be scraped out with the corrosion and painted.
Everything gets painted.
It's just mind-boggling work.
But it's municipal work.
It's government work.
So I'm always leery of those jobs because I know I'm not going to get permission.
to do what I wanted to do on dirty jobs,
which was to tell the truth as best I could,
like really do the things the actual workers do.
But it was a good shoot,
and as at the end of the day, as a joke on camera,
I'm talking to the guy I've been working with all day.
And he said, well, did you get everything you need?
I've said, yeah, yeah, it's great.
But you know what I'd love to do?
I'd love to walk across that girder there
and get on that suspension cable.
and walk up that cable and change a few light bulbs along the way.
Now, I say this because there's no freaking way they're going to let me do that.
Not on camera.
No way.
No how.
Can't happen.
Guy says, okay.
So, you know, I got a helicopter with me with a West Cam unit on it.
So I got a camera and a helicopter.
This is the shot of shotgun.
This is going to go into the o.
This is going to win an Emmy, or at least get nominated for one.
And it did.
This shot is crazy.
I get over there.
I got a bag full of light bulbs and I got my safety rig on.
And I got two clips because the statutes that run up alongside that cable, like, you want to be tied off two ways.
You're 600 feet in the air.
You look down from this thing, Sean.
Like freighters look like the little toy boats and battleship.
I mean, you're up in the air.
And you're focused, man.
You are highly focused on what you're doing because falling would be very bad, right?
And so I got a guy like 30 feet behind me and we're walking up together.
And as you walk up, you know, we get to a light bulb, pause, change it, sit down, helicopter gets it shot.
We're getting everything we need for the show.
It's going great.
I get up toward the top, like the very top.
And, you know, as you go, when you hit these stanchure, you.
Like, so you're on this cable and you're walking
and you have to unclip to get past the rail
and then clip on again.
And then when you do that, you come over here and then you do that one.
So you're never untethered because that would be crazy.
And I get up to the top.
And as I'm going, like, I'm sure like anything else
that starts out high anxiety, you do it, you do it, you get used to it,
you get a little more comfortable, you start to move.
a little faster, you get confident, right? So now I'm loving the shot. I'm real comfortable. I got
an earpiece in, so I'm communicating with the pilot. And now we're getting the shots that are
going to win the Emmy. Like he's coming up under the bridge, you know, crabbing straight up,
shooting me like this. I'm sitting down, leaning over, like they're these lanterns, right?
So you've got a, I got a light bulb in my teeth. I'm leaned over. I undo it. I take it. I take it. I
take out the old ball, I put it in there,
I take this one out, and I'm screwing it in, right?
I'm doing this, I'm doing that.
And now he's flying back and he's coming in
and I'm changing my position,
and we're getting all the angles just right, all the angles.
Now, I don't know how this happened.
In the confusion of the moments,
and the back and forth or whatever,
I unclipped and didn't,
I just didn't clip it back in.
The thing's just hanging by my side.
And the other one,
is clipped to the wrong thing.
Oh, shit.
So if I fall, I mean, it lights out.
It's 620 feet straight down.
Now, I got one arm wrapped around this thing,
and I'm doing the thing.
And when I looked and I saw that I had not clipped myself in properly,
like, if you listen, if you find the clip on the Internet and listen carefully,
you can hear the sound of my sphincter slamming shut, right?
It's like absolute abject.
Like, that's how it felt years before when I lost everything.
I looked down and the net wasn't where I thought it was.
Same thing.
Same feeling.
I looked over and it's like, I thought I was tied off.
I'm not.
I'm not going to fall.
But if I did.
You're so right.
Right. That feeling and that moment in some relative sense is going to be experienced by millions of Americans this year.
Yeah.
They're going to look down and they're going to realize they're not tied off.
They're going to look down and they're not going to see the net that was always there.
So, you know, the book that I can't get around to finishing is lessons from the dirt.
and it's hundreds of stories.
You know, for me, man, if I'm being honest,
this is, that's kind of where everything actually started.
It was chapter two.
My old business model was just wrong for me.
It was right for a long time,
and it worked for a long time.
It was nothing broken about it.
Got my nest egg, got my safety net.
I got my job.
I got my toolbox.
I got my ticket to ride.
I can fly for it.
for free. It's like all that was great. And then it just was gone. And now I'm working on a show
that's dedicated to my granddad about work and real people that's totally unscripted.
That doesn't require me to do anything that a host used to do. What it requires me to do is
change a light bulb on a bridge or try. So suddenly, I'm paid to be.
try things. I'm not paid to succeed. Think about that. That's a different kind of freedom. It's a
different kind of drama because you're going to be uncomfortable a lot. You're going to be upside down.
You're going to be in a hole. You're going to be in a mine. You're going to be cleaning skulls.
You're going to be retrieving golf balls from alligator infested swamps, right? You're going to be in the
Everglades. The crocodile is going to bite you.
The shark is going, you're going to test a shark suit
for shark week.
You're going to get bit on purpose by a shark
and shook like a tug toy.
You're going to pee in your wetsuit and fear.
All these things are going to happen.
But you're going to get paid and people are going to watch
and the show is going to give you permission to do a bunch of stuff.
It's a totally different deal, totally different model.
And, you know, I feel super fortunate
that that all worked out.
But that's a parapetia.
Interesting.
You think you're tied off.
You're not.
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Are you familiar with Polly Market?
Yeah.
And Kaleishi or what do they?
Galshi.
Yeah, that thing, yeah.
Yeah, everybody's betting on everything, right?
That's right.
What will be betting on?
Polymarket says there's a 17% chance U.S. unemployment hits 5% at some point in 2026.
Unemployment's sitting at a 4.3% right now and traders have put more than $430,000 into betting
on where it peaks this year.
The crowd gives it about a one in six shot, 17% that the rate climbs to 5% at some point in 2026.
The odds drop off fast from there.
Polymarket gives it a 17% chance unemployment even touches 5% this year.
The crowd thinks the job market holds.
You've spent your career around the people who actually do the work.
When you hear 4.3% unemployment, does that match what you're seeing on the ground?
Where'd that come from?
Who's asking these questions?
It's a good one.
I'm just curious.
This is your question?
This is us.
This is me and my team.
Oh, I should have known.
It says the Sean Ryan show right on the card.
All right.
With respect to you and your team, here's a better question.
Why does anybody give a shit about the unemployment number?
What is that?
My friend Nick Eberstadt is a good.
is an economist.
Where is he?
I think he's at the American Enterprise Institute.
He wrote an amazing book called Men Without Work.
He's in 2005.
And I used it when I started the foundation to,
I wanted to be able to point to at least one egghead
with a bunch of the right initials behind his name
to justify some of my underlying beliefs around workforce.
And Nick was it.
Well, Nick was so right about so many things that the book was republished during the lockdowns.
And he writes eloquently and horrifyingly about these deaths of despair and what's happening to men without work.
And the number of men right now who aren't working, I mentioned it earlier, but it's
It's close to 7 million able-bodied men who don't have work.
Are these guys unemployed?
I mean, there's 7.5 million open jobs.
So Nick argues that the unemployment statistic in and of itself
is an artifact of the Great Depression,
along with a couple of other economic indicators
that simply haven't been updated
or revisited to make sense for the times in which we live.
And I think he's right, you know, I mean, in a depression,
when you had people standing in line for bread in cities all over the country,
when you had millions of people out of work and hungry,
then you could credibly say that the cure,
for this disaster is more jobs. We need to create more jobs because those people in those lines,
they will take a job that's available. We don't live in that world anymore. We have millions of open
positions right now. So you've got 4% people unemployed. I'm not saying that's not a small number,
and I'm not saying that's not a big deal. I'm just saying who are they? How are they on? How are they
unemployed. Are they willing to move somewhere else? Are they able to move somewhere else? Are they able
to retrain? Are they willing to think about retraining? Has their sphincter slam shut? Like many do,
when you realize, oh, no. Are they able to be unemployed and still live the life that they're
okay living? I don't know. And I don't want to paint with too broad a break. I don't know. And I don't want to paint
with two broad a brush.
But what Nick would say is there's a much more important stat in that rubric that we should be
betting on or talking about.
And that would be the labor force participation rate.
And I'm out of my lane here a little, and I don't want to say too much of the wrong thing.
but in general, the amount of people who are participating in the workforce today is simply not
hand-in-glove with the amount of opportunities that exist.
And so to have a 5% unemployment rate in 2026, what does that mean for those who are unemployed?
I know right now they're nearly 7 million able-bodied.
men who are able to live fairly comfortable lives without working.
And they're not trust fund babies.
Something's going on.
Now, Nick goes deeper in his book, which you will dig.
I recommend it, really.
It's kind of a wonky academic look at labor.
I like it.
Dude, it's just so insightful because, of course, Nick just doesn't leave it alone.
He's like, okay, seven million people, men mostly not working.
What are they doing?
What are they doing?
Well, part of the answer is what aren't they doing?
They're not volunteering down at the local food bank.
They're not involved in their church.
They're not involved with the JCs or the Rotarians or the Boy Scouts or the Future Farmers of America
or the 4-H club or the Lions Club.
They're not involved in their community.
They're not involved in civic organizations.
They're not doing anything, man, except one thing.
On average, they're spending in excess of 2,000 hours a year.
Behind a screen.
On their screens.
Swipe and left.
Watching clips.
Basking in the warmth of our guests, maybe.
Or looking for love.
Or pretty deep.
well of bottomless pornography over there too.
They're doing these things.
And they're all in.
They're in it, man.
2000 hours, you know, they're, what is it?
50, they're 280 hours a year, you know, in work weeks.
They're working full-time on their screens, do.
These guys unemployed?
I don't dispute that they're not working.
I just quite don't know what to say about the cohort
without painting with too broad a brush.
But it worries the hell out of me, man.
The skills gap is hard to talk about.
And the reason you don't hear a lot of politicians talking about it
is because it's not a very flattering indicator
of who we are as a people.
To have so many people sitting out
and so much opportunity sitting there.
And because we're in this crazy hyper politicized time,
we have to make it political.
And people ask me every day, you know, well, what's up?
You know, why do we have seven million open jobs?
I'm like, well, look, it's complicated.
I'll give you my theories, but they don't want theories.
What they want to hear is my buddy's on the right.
want me to say that the reason you've got all these people unemployed is because they're lazy
and our system enables their laziness and we haven't allowed them to hit bottom.
We haven't removed the safety net.
So their sphincters can't slam shut in fear and they can't reorient themselves.
That's what my friends on the right want me to say.
and they get pissed when I don't.
My buddies on the left, what they want me to say is, well, the skills gap is a myth, Mike.
It's just a question of economy.
If these greedy, rapacious capitalists who control all the money and pull all the strings
simply paid a better wage, why those people would run straight in to the workforce.
That's what they want me to say, and they get pissed when I don't.
Now, personally, I don't think either side is entirely right, because I think both sides really do paint with a super broad brush.
I think there's truth in both, you know, but it's an artifact of the Great Depression, that unemployment number.
And we live in a totally different time, and we are entering yet another time.
And I don't want to sit here and pretend to have a crystal ball.
I don't.
But man, I know that both sides are dug in.
And this thing is going to be so politically fraught, vocational education, and work itself
is going to become highly political this year.
And that's a shame.
Because at the moment, it's still one of the few things that I think are truly bipartisan.
in nature.
You know, I mean, Jensen Wang keeps saying, you know, that the tradesman's going to be the next
millionaire class of people.
What do you think about that?
Do you think there's truth to that?
I know there's truth to it.
He and I are destined to meet.
We haven't yet.
But we're, I shared, this is a good little anecdotal sidebar.
I woke up a couple months ago.
I was home, you know, made the coffee.
It had just kicked in. I sat down and Davos was going on.
And the first thing that popped up is this conversation between Jensen and
who's Larry Fink, BlackRock. And that's where this conversation started. That's the first time.
He described the AI technology as a five-layer cake and he really laid it out in a way that's
super simple for people to understand. But that's when he said, this all comes down to our ability to
to reinvigorate the workforce.
And if you're me, like, if you've been beating that drum
for the last 18 years and you're sitting there
in your bathrobe with your hair sticking up in the air,
trying to get caffeinated, now what would you do?
What I did was, I backed up the video,
I turned my computer around, and I hit play,
and I filmed me watching this conversation.
And then I took that video, and I put it on my social
channels. And within two days, like three million people had seen it. And I'm talking to Black
Rock now and I'm talking to Meta and I'll get to Invidia because they're all, they're all here.
But millions of people saw that exchange with me basically watching it and nodding and saying,
out of boy. So to answer your question, I'm not betting against Jensen. He's right. And
anecdotally, I have a thousand success stories to back it up. And people are interested. That's my
point. When I shared the video I made of these two billionaires talking about the opportunities
in the trades, I was eager and anxious to see what the comments were. And to my earlier point,
my buddy's on the right, see it through one lens. My buddies on the left, see it on the other.
A lot of people simply don't believe it's possible.
They just don't believe an electrician can be a millionaire.
And that's because inertia is powerful.
It's really, really powerful.
But I'll tell you something else about the skilled trades, man.
They lead into more small businesses than more people will seem capable of realizing.
And that path, nobody talks about.
and I see it all the time.
Did you say they leave small businesses?
Lead.
Lead.
To the formation of them.
I could literally give you a list of people who I helped get a welding certificate for six, seven, eight, ten years ago, whatever.
People think in their minds, ah, I'd say it's going to be a welder.
So he's going to weld.
And that's it.
Maybe you'll tig weld.
Maybe it'll migg weld.
Maybe it'll underwater weld.
Those guys make a lot of coin, right?
whatever it is, but that's what this person's going to be.
So many times that certification leads to a plumbing certification or an electrical certification.
And there's like this hierarchy within the trades.
And then they buy a van and they hire their buddies.
They got an HVAC buddy, right?
And now they got two vans.
And now they have a mechanical contracting company.
And now you've got a dozen guys, men, women, whatever.
And they didn't go to college and they're running this.
business, you know. And like knives, whiskey, success. It's like there's so many paths to that.
And the trades don't get their due, in my opinion. So many of the people I've profiled on dirty jobs.
Nobody believes this, but I'm telling you, you watch the show growing up. I know for a fact,
40 of the people we profiled were multi-millionaires.
We never talked about it.
They certainly never talked about it.
And nobody assumed that kind of success because they were normally covered in mud or blood
or shit or something worse.
You just don't equate that kind of success with that optics.
But it's always been there.
It's always been right in front of us.
And we're just, we so screwed up as a society.
to make that entire part of our workforce
and our entire educational rubric
like a vocational consolation prize.
But we did it, and we're still doing it.
That's got to stop.
So anyway, I know I didn't answer your question, but...
That makes a lot of sense.
Over under on 5%.
Yeah, I say we probably get to it,
but I don't think it's going to have the impact
that we think.
Does make sense.
How do you think we're going to fill the shortage?
Because, well, there's not a lot of, I mean,
how do you think we're going to fill the shortage?
It fits and starts.
In the meantime.
Yeah.
I mean, look, in my version of it,
I'm going to do everything I can to make sure the country knows
what the companies are doing,
because I think that's a big part, right?
It's not a dot-gov solution, but we're not going to do it without some help from the feds.
We need policy to do this, but we can't look to the government to fix this problem.
Those guys will be out of office in a couple years and who's going to do the next thing.
This is a social thing.
The government can't get 6.9 million men into the workforce, but they can pass policies
that might encourage or discourage certain kinds of behaviors.
I try and stay away from that simply because it is so inherently political and because it's so destined to change.
The corporate side is also fraught because CEOs answer to their boards and in their own self-interest, they need to address this problem.
But that's also an advantage, right?
Like, you can't expect Lowe's to close the skills gap or Home Depot because they're public companies and they got their own fish to fry.
But they're doing it.
Lowe's has like a $250 million investment in training HVAC people.
No kidding.
Home Depot, I just interviewed Ted, their CEO.
He's got a, he's in for $100 million.
They're doing something very similar.
called a Pathway to Pro.
I told you about what META's doing,
the America Workforce Academy.
That's $150 million right out of the gate.
And they're just starting.
They're in four states.
Black Rock's got $100 million in in North Texas
and some other areas.
Jensen's going to do something.
There's no doubt, Jensen.
There's no doubt.
They have to.
They have to.
A $10 trillion.
dollar infrastructure build out is upon us. If that doesn't happen, there's some stuff with China
that's going to be very, very, very, very, very bad. We can't lose this stupid race that we're in.
We can't lose it. And I understand that we don't want to be in it. And I understand, man,
you know, I just, I saw a poll that said that the general negativity around AI and data centers
It's around 75%.
75%.
Think about that from a
communication challenge,
from a marketing standpoint.
Like,
you're in a race,
you can't afford to lose
with a country
that's 75%
affirmatively nervous about the fact
that we're even in it.
How are you going to manage that?
That is beyond my pay grade as well.
But, dude, I think about this all the time.
We, our relationship with fossil fuels,
it's very difficult to manage and nuance
because it's still very fashionable to hate them,
even though we rely upon them entirely and constantly.
We're constantly at war with the shit we do.
depend on, the stuff we need. Timber. There's more timber in this country than any place on the
planet. Guess who the largest importer of timber is? It's us. Yeah. We can't clear our own forests.
We're at war with the abundance that we're standing on because we're scared to death. We're somehow
going to screw it up. Meanwhile, India and China combined are opening a coal-fired plant.
every week for the next 30 years.
Three billion people on the planet have wood and dung as their primary source of energy.
Three billion people get all their energy needs from the single worst pollutant there is burning wood and shit.
Where's their industrial revolution?
How are they going to get to where we are or some version of it?
They need fossil fuels.
They need natural gas.
Personally, I think we're in a race to nuclear.
We need small reactors in every town all over the country.
There's no way we're going to get anywhere close to generating the energy we need.
Are you familiar with Isaiah Taylor?
I know.
Valor Atomics?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I know the nuclear, many nuclear reactors.
Yeah.
I just read about it.
I'm following a Constellation Group, C-E-G.
They've done everything right.
They're not far from where I grew up.
They were called Peach Bottom when I was a kid,
and now they're going to reopen, I think,
Three Mile Island.
Oh, thank God.
You know many people died in Three Mile Island?
No.
None.
Chernobyl?
I mean, not to poo-poo it.
I know, 17, 27, something like that.
many in the explosion, some from thyroid disease years later.
The area surrounding Chernobyl is called the exclusion zone.
People are still forbidden from going there, except for the people who never left, who are now in their 90s.
Are you serious?
And thriving.
Google the exclusion zone, Chernobyl, and you will find it to be one of the most biodiverse places on the planet.
it. All we have to do is get all the people out and everything grew back. There's more wildlife and
natural fauna growing around Chernobyl than you can believe. And I'm old enough to remember
a week after that accident, there was a black cloud in the animated graphics on ABC. Like,
a third of Europe was blacked out. They were talking about how a third of Europe was going to be
uninhabitable for a thousand years. Wrong.
Fukushima, not great. People died, most drowned. That was a very bad deal, tsunami, you know, nuclear. But the proportionality, Sean, the amount of fear that we have around nuclear is so completely baked into the fact that we used it as a weapon. And that nuclear weapons still certainly exist. And that would be very bad. But what are you going to do? You can't.
put the poop back in the goose and the need that the world is going to have for energy is about
to enter that part of the map that says here be dragons way more than we have way more than we
know how to get it has to be nuclear it has to be god 100% agree with you on that one just
rewind him real quick just do you think it will be i'm just curious because that we could fill
these trade positions like that.
Tell me how.
They're south of the border.
Oh.
Or undocumented here.
Willing to work with a crazy fucking work ethic.
Listen,
I can tell you anecdotally.
I think you're right.
There is a cultural thing.
I'm not going to paint with too broad a brush.
But what are the two examples we get?
gave each other over the last couple hours.
The guy who worked on Easter Sunday, who did what he had to do and he built the business he has,
you know, the first kid to come to mind in my foundation, they're 3,500, but Michael Gammes set the benchmark pretty high.
Look, if we can find a path and if we can make it fair,
we need the workers.
But it's a very different, you know, documented versus undocumented.
I don't think you can just shrug the difference away, you know.
We have to find a way to fill these jobs, but it doesn't mean you just erase the border.
You've got to do a bunch of stuff at the same time.
And I don't envy the people who are in charge of this.
And I don't envy the people who are running the businesses who are desperate to get these jobs done.
but I know a lot of general contractors.
I don't know one who's on time and under budget for any project,
certainly not in residential anyway.
And when I ask them why, they all say the same thing.
It's labor.
So, yeah, there's going to be an immigrant question slash solution.
There's going to be policy.
It's already happening.
Like, people are going to bitch and moan about it.
And maybe they should.
But if you can't incentivize their own people to get their ass to work, what the fuck?
What are we supposed to do?
And I mean, it's already happening.
For example, when we were building this studio out, I told you we had a little garage, you know, in town.
And I interviewed Tom Holman.
when Tom Holman came to town.
He sat right here, Tom?
He sat in the old studio.
We were so close to having him in this studio,
but we just couldn't get it done.
And then Tom Holman came in town,
and not one worker would show up to finish this damn studio for about two weeks.
They wouldn't even answer the phones.
It was on my general contractors' ass, like, what's going on?
We're going to be late.
and he's like, they heard Tom Holman's in town with ICE,
and they're not even going to answer the phones.
So I brought that up to Tom on my show.
That was going to be my question.
What do you say?
I can't remember.
It was a joke.
I was joking around with him, but.
Well, you know, the first thing I thought of was your situation with your sponsor.
Right?
You say something to Megan Kelly, they don't,
like it. They take their marbles and go home. Okay. I mean, it's fair dinkum, right? I mean,
your workers are pissed off because Tom Homan represents something. They don't like. They don't
come home. They don't want to get deported. They aren't pissed. They don't want to get deported.
That's even better. It wasn't just this construction site that shut down. It was the whole
fucking county shut down for two weeks because when Tom rolled into Nashville, so did ICE.
And so I guess kind of what I'm saying is we got a small glimpse of what this looks like.
Yeah.
If there is nobody to take.
Everything just stops.
Yeah.
Dead in its tracks.
It's, I'm having a hard time, you know, aside from a cataclysm, a natural cataclysm,
finding a bigger issue.
It's, you just can't overstate it.
That's a great, that's a great example.
But look, what you said before, how do we incentivize our own people to work?
You have to change the culture.
Well, is there a difference between incentivizing somebody to work or de-incentivizing them not to work?
Like, what is the unintended consequence of every single policy in place?
that's allowing millions of people not to choose not to retrain.
I'm no authoritarian.
I don't want to flick my fingers and say,
everyone must work.
I don't want to do that.
That's not why we're walking around as a free people.
But I also don't want to enable people who choose not to work to not to work.
I don't want to pay for that.
why should I why should you why should why should anyone if if there's an option not to work and you can
afford not to work I have zero problem with you choosing not to work you you don't owe me a duty
of of labor you don't you don't know anybody that but you owe your family and yourself
a livelihood and if you can provide that without
working, I think it's fair for a taxpayer to say, am I involved in that decision? And if you are
involved in that decision, well, then okay, there's a conversation worth having. I agree with you
100% on that one. It's hard to tell when you agree and when you don't. 100% agree.
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I don't know.
I think some people, you know, they, they,
they can't get out of their own head.
They can't see themselves doing a trade.
Maybe they just don't even know where to start.
You know, but like I had mentioned earlier,
there are people out there that can barely change a fucking light bulb.
You know, and I think that for me, I have little kids.
I'm pretty handy.
I need to pass that down to them.
I need to.
Here's why I'm not persuaded.
I knew you 60 seconds.
before you told me you were an introvert who didn't like conversation,
and you're running one of the most consequential podcasts in the world.
I don't want to hear that a kid doesn't know how to change a light bulb
and therefore is somehow disqualified from the trades,
or therefore let off the hook for finding something he is good at.
You lived outside of your comfort zone.
You volunteered to get your ass shot off.
and shoot back.
Then you left the agency on principle
because you have something that resembles character.
And then you went so far outside of your own comfort zone
that you ignored the very qualities
that you used to introduce yourself to somebody like me
to do the same thing I do for a living.
What is wrong with us?
I had a stammer until I was 15 years old.
I could barely get a sentence out.
Now I narrate shit.
When people tell me that they're not doing this thing because they're uncomfortable doing it,
it's all I can do not to throw up in my mouth and look as bored as I feel.
Who cares if you're uncomfortable?
Who cares if you're scared?
Really. I mean, I do one human to the next. I would love to help if I can. But to conclude that
and therefore determine that the only logical way to spend 2,000 hours a year is swiping left or
right or doing whatever you do and then having a family that subsidizes that or a government
or a society or a culture? No. We award work ethics.
scholarships at Microworks, and I get shit for it every year. Why work ethic? What is it? What do you mean?
How do you determine somebody's work ethic? People ask, I get this every day. I say, well, I
chose work ethic because I didn't think anybody else was doing it. I know lots of scholarships
out there for academic achievement and artistic achievement, athletic achievement. Where's the scholarship
for the kid who wakes up early, stays late, and says,
give me the shit sandwich, I'll take a bite.
I don't know how to do that.
Teach me.
I'm uncomfortable.
Let's do it some more.
Where's that woman?
Where's that guy?
Right?
That's what I...
That's who I personally want to reward.
That's personally what my foundation does.
But to your point, there are not enough people out there.
right now, who will respond to that to fill the openings that exist.
And that's why you're not wrong to say we have to incentivize our people.
I hate that, but we do.
We have to make a more persuasive case for people who are predisposed to being comfortable
and unwilling to venture outside of their comfort zone.
me and you alone, you know, over a beverage, I would speak harshly about that.
In front of 14 cameras, I'm still tempted to, but the reason I don't is because I understand
that everybody is different and that everybody's background is different.
And not everybody had the mentor I had, and not everybody had the training you had,
And not everybody was forged, you know, the same way.
And so I don't want to be judgmental.
I don't want to be overly harsh, but I don't want to enable.
So look, that's why I'm in business with a lot of other companies
who are wrestling with this problem in a different way.
They're presenting the opportunity differently.
And really, man, think about the military, as I'm sure you often do.
That's a recruiting challenge at base, right?
Like, what's the Army say?
What's the single-minded proposition to join the Army?
Be all you can be, man.
You'll be a more well-rounded person.
And when you come out, you'll be that much better off in the world.
That's kind of, right?
There's an element of service and sacrifice,
but be all you can be was something that was way above that.
You know, the Navy.
See the world.
You know, Coast Guard, go on an adventure.
The C-Bs, they all have a slightly different modality, you know,
except the Marines.
Probably not for you, they say.
Just never mind the reality.
Just think about the rhetoric.
Think about what's being articulated.
Be all you can be versus probably not for you.
few proud they all want they're they're all anxious to recruit they all want the same
enthusiasm among their their cohorts but they come at it from a totally different way
and i i just think that i don't know if i have anything to offer to that whole conversation
it it's more rhetorical than anything did you watch deadliest catch ever as well oh yeah all
all the time, all the time.
Was that you?
No, I'm just kidding.
Somebody marked the time code.
When Sean Ryan realized that Mike narrated 23 seasons of Deadliest Catch.
Yeah, that was me.
And the first season, man, I'll never forget.
I was worried because it was so dangerous.
And the portrayals of this job were so,
harsh and the Greenhorn on the boat was such an important role and that season you know six guys died
greenhorn got a got his finger pulled off a boat sank and I thought man this show is going to
make it really hard for these captains who I'd become friends with to recruit like how you're
going to recruit for a job like that oh man I'll bet recruiting went crazy
after that.
Dude.
Fuck, I wanted to do it.
The next season...
The next season, they were on the docks
waiting for a chance
to lose money,
die,
get their finger ripped out.
Now, that's you.
All right?
You can put that out there
in a certain part of the population.
It's going like, yeah, man, let's go.
Bottom of the ninth,
basis loaded.
Give me the ball. I want the ball.
Most people know, right?
So you never know.
But there's, look, there are hundreds of lessons in dirty jobs.
There are a lot of lessons in deadliest catch, too.
And the fact that I had, the fact that I got attached to both those shows for the last 20 years and that both are still on the air,
best thing I ever did was have my trusted financial advisor rip me off.
I love that.
I would like to, I wasn't, I hate the word incentivize as well.
And I wasn't, I wasn't making excuses for the people that can't figure out how to put in a light bulb.
What I was kind of going towards is, there has to be some sort of a shift in culture.
And I think a lot of people don't, they, they, they can't, if they get a roadblock into success,
then they just stop, they break down.
I think that problem solving is gone.
I think that the critical thinking and problem solving
and the majority of this country and people's heads
is 100% gone.
I see it with, I see what's happening with my toddler
when he tries to get up a hill and he can't make it
and he asked dad for help.
And I won't help him.
Because I think there's always,
there is always a way to accomplish your goal.
It's just how you navigate it
And if you hit a roadblock, then you have to find another way
And so what I tell my toddlers
Is I'm not going to help you, but I'll help you find another way
Yeah
Look at that side of the hill
It's not as steep, there's no rocks
Maybe go up that way and you can get to...
You know, and I think people need to start thinking like that.
Rivers
rivers have a way of getting to the ocean.
It's never straight, ever.
You go around stuff, they zig and they zag.
That's what we do.
We have to.
There's just no straight lines.
Yeah, you know, I look at toddlers.
I think about the way we're born, the way we're hardwired,
and this idea that we're all born sort of, oh, you know,
pure and like we're just you know we're not polluted we're innocent just honest creatures you know
waiting to be corrupted by the world I don't see it you know I see it I see a two-year-old
playing with his 18-month-old or three-year-old whatever you know what I think he's got the toy
he's got the block but this one wants the block it takes the block it's him over the
had with them. We're selfish, man. We're born selfish. We're born lazy. We're born dependent.
We're utterly helpless outside of the womb for years. We're unlike anything else in the animal kingdom.
These, you know, like a giraffe is basically born on its feet. Like, point up running. Like, okay, man, we're prey.
All right. Best to run. You know, foals and colts the same way.
I mean, it's, we are born utterly helpless for years. And we think we are the sun in the solar system.
And we think everything revolves around us. Mom and Dad, they show up. They feed us. It's all just us.
Ah, just crap my pants again. I just crap my pants. Big deal. They'll fix it.
Like, we, that's who we are.
And so what's the game, man?
What's the, what's the challenge?
How do you get a creature like that to say, give me the ball?
Test me.
What's the uncomfortable way again?
I'll take that.
Mike Easter wrote a great book called The Comfort Crisis.
Don't know if he's crossed your radar yet.
Uh-uh.
You like him.
Sounds interesting.
Yeah, he was a reporter.
It was a writer for like men's health and those magazines
and wrote a lot about fitness and diet and so forth.
And I was just feeling kind of squishy with his own journey.
You know, he was just struggling a bit, I think.
I don't want to put words in his mouth, but he got an invitation
or reached out to a guy called Donnie Vincent.
I don't think Donnie's eaten anything he hasn't killed in 30 years.
He lives off the grid, and he invited this guy on a caribou hunt up in the Arctic, Mike Easter, and they go.
And what happens up there over a 30-day period is really interesting.
And the way Mike writes about it is to essentially dissect.
every bit of discomfort he experienced along the way,
from incredible physical discomfort to straight up fear, to boredom.
Like, we have no capacity to handle boredom anymore, right?
It's very difficult to listen to an episode this long
and not hit one and a half speed.
It's very difficult to go into the bathroom without the fucking phone,
just to keep the thing, you know, we're constantly involved
in everything.
And anyhow, so many good things came out of this book,
and I'm only riffing on it because one of them was rucking.
I assume you rucked your butt off.
Broked a couple of miles.
Yeah, man.
I started, after I read this book a few years ago,
I started rucking with anywhere between 45 and 65 pounds.
When I'm home, which isn't a ton,
but eight miles early every morning with weight.
changed my life.
And it's uncomfortable, man.
It's uncomfortable.
Every step is uncomfortable.
It's just...
But they're benefits.
This is not new.
It's almost probably boring to a lot of your audience.
It's just Horatio Alger stuff.
But if you think about who we are when we're born,
and if you think about, like, what's the purpose of buds?
What's the purpose of basic training?
And why is it there a reverse boot?
camp, by the way. And, you know, why do Greenhorns, why are they wired differently? What, what,
like all those things, all that stuff is shaping and tempering and, and preparing. And so that's why I get,
I get a little agitated when what comes back from the other side is this really thoughtful kind
of contemplative, well, gosh, I don't know if the trades are for me. I don't know. I guess, I guess,
maybe I could give it a, like, man, okay, but how luxurious?
How luxurious to be living in a time when, you know, maybe I'll try it.
Maybe I won't.
Maybe I'll just keep swiping left.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think more people need to feel the sense of accomplishment, too.
That's the single biggest question I get about dirty jobs.
like when people, like, what did you, what did those people know as a group that the rest of us have forgotten?
And the answer is, it's not quite accomplishment, but it's feedback.
It's like always knowing how you're doing.
People in the trades, dirty jobbers, virtually everybody I profiled on that show, crab fishermen.
You know how you're doing, man.
Not at the end of the day.
Over the course of the hour, the feedback is constant.
You don't need to be managed, really.
You know, you know how you're doing.
That's addictive.
I mean, I love that.
Yeah.
And I don't know that you teach it.
It's a quality and it's present in some jobs more than others.
Yeah.
I don't know if you teach it, but I think a lot of people don't even realize it's there
because they haven't been pushed.
But look, it's like I said before, man, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a hell of a thing to wish for.
Gosh, what you need to do is lose everything.
No, you don't really have to experience that.
I don't wish that for anyone, but you, I mean, how do you, how do you describe combat to somebody who's never been in it?
It's not everything it's cracked up to be.
And who cracked it up to be everything?
I'll refer you to the earlier movies.
Yeah.
I talked to a guy the other day, Clint Romichet, wrote a book called Red Platoon.
This was the COP Keating up in Nuristan, I guess it was, 09.
He, Medal of Honor.
He led a counterattack.
They were overwhelmed, Taliban, 4-1.
And he went back into the fort to get the down.
Americans under crazy heavy fire. Good book, Red Platoon. I ask him the same question. You know,
I think he gave me the same answer. Did he really? Ain't all it's cracked up to be. That's
interesting. It's not. You got another one for you. Yeah, man, I love it. Wrapping up the interview.
So I got a hot question for you. All right. We had Claude, since we're on AI and Dirty Jobs.
We had Claude dig through everything out there on Mike Rowe and dirty jobs to find the most viral directions we could take and then narrow it down to one hot question, and here's what it came up with.
Mike, I want to get into the most dangerous jobs on Earth.
In Vietnam, we had a job called Tunnel Rats.
One guy stripped down to a pistol and a flashlight, crawling headfirst and alone into pitch black VC tunnels barely wider than her shoulders.
And the Viacong built those tunnels to break you.
Tripwires that dropped baskets of scorpions.
Pungi stakes, they'd urinate on first, so even a scratch turned septic.
In the worst one, while they hit a guy, they'd leave him alive down there,
just so his buddies up top could hear him screaming and feel like they had to send more men down after him.
Centipedes, fire ants, snakes, and maybe a guy waiting in the dark with a blade.
That's the job.
You've personally done over 300 job.
So across everything, what do you think is the single deadliest most dangerous job in the world?
That's tough to beat.
Harry Bosch, I don't know if you saw the show Bosch, he was a tunnel rat.
He writes a lot about that.
Connolly does in the early books.
Well, statistically, just in terms of danger, and they kind of go in and out.
I mean, deadliest catch.
Crab fishing is still up there, commercial fishing.
Logging, certainly.
I mean, the whole confined space world, like, that deserves a riff on confined spaces.
In fact, we did two specials on dirty jobs over the years called really tight spaces,
because people, the viewers love the really high, crazy stuff, like top of radio towers
and like window washing from boats and chairs, five, six hundred feet in the eight.
the air, that's a good one. But they also love super, super, super tight, claustrophobic spaces. They hate it,
but they love to watch it. I remember shooting a buoy tube with the Coast Guard. These buoy tenders,
you know, they bring up the buoys that are out in the channel and they're filled with barnacles
and stuff and they clean them and refurbish them before they put them back in. But there's a
tube in the middle it's hollow it's about the size of your shoulders and yeah you shimmy up there
and scrape the crap out and i did that with a go pro because a cameraman wouldn't couldn't get a
camera up there and like there's so many moments of claustrophobia on that show that are really
i mean what can i say to a tunnel rat oh okay there were 350 jobs
There's one that I would never do again.
What's that one?
Opal mining.
Opal mining.
Yep.
Opal mining in the Australian Outback
in a little town called Cooper Petey.
It was 129 degrees when I was there that day.
This is the opal capital of the world.
And Cooper Petey is like if you, in Australian terms,
if Adelaide is like Houston,
Cooper Pedy is north, about three hours in the middle of the outback.
The city itself is underground.
It's too hot to live above.
But in the outback above, they drill prospect shafts for opals.
And the way you look for opals is you take a Caldwell bit and you start digging these shafts about 60 feet deep.
And then they got a rig over top and they put you in a Bosen's chair and they lower you into this hole.
And you get down 30 or 40 feet, you know, you got your flashlight, you got your little minor helmet and you're looking around and you're, you're in a grave, dude.
You know, and what you're looking for are trace elements of sandstone or soapstone.
They run in veins.
And if you find them in between that vein, oftentimes is opal.
So then you deal another prospect shaft in the same basic trajectory as the vein.
And if you confirm the vein, you dig another one.
And after three, if you know you're on to good Opel, you bring in the heavy equipment and
dig out the hillside and you create a cavern.
You go into the cavern and you chip out the opal.
Opal capital of the world, huge industry.
The opal miners, on the other hand, are kind of like crabfish or
in the desert and on steroids because there's no OSHA in this part of the world, right?
There's no, like I've been in every kind of mind there is.
Anthracite, bituminous, coal, copper, borax, all of them.
When you dig these shafts, they don't fill them in.
So the night before we get to Kubrapiti, and I want to look at the opal fields, because we're going to be working there all next day.
and I'm a little worried because these guys are cowboys, for real.
And they fly me over the fields.
And when you look down, there are thousands of these prospect shafts
that have been dug over the years.
And none of them are filled in.
Next to them are these big, giant piles of dirt.
It's like an insane groundhog ran amok, right?
Millions of them.
And what's left are these 60-foot shafts
with these giant piles of dirt.
next to them and there are thousands of them.
And as I'm flying, you know, the pilot's like, yeah, you know, it's a hell of a thing
because, you know, there's a lot of wildlife out here.
There's emu, there's some ostrich, kangaroo.
And there are hundreds of them at the bottom of these shafts.
They fall in all the time.
And they die down there, you know?
And I said, well, that's terrible.
He goes, ah, you know, it's really terrible.
He said, you know, Mike, what's really terrible is the tourist
I'm like, well, what, what?
And he's like, every year never fails.
Some tourists, there's an underground hotel in Cooper Pedy that's kind of famous because it's underground.
Tourists come.
And then the sunsets are incredible in the outback.
And they go out in the opal fields and they're taking these pictures of the sunsets.
And as pilot tells me a couple weeks earlier, they found a guy, found a fella, down there at the bottom of a shaft.
Oh, shit.
Yeah.
They figure he was down there for two and a half days before he died.
And he was getting a picture.
He's backed up.
He's by himself.
He trips, falls head first, 60 feet down, like a pinball all the way down.
Lands on the bottom.
His head, you know, twists his neck, obviously,
shatters his clavicle and his shoulder.
Now, he's upside down.
down and the bottom of a 60-foot shaft for two days looking up at the inky dark sky
go soft and purple and then red and then it's day and then it's blue and then it's dark again
now i'm not claustrophobic in general but i'm hearing this story and the night before
i know we're going to dig a shaft and i'm going to go in and um and we do and uh
On the one hand, I was happy to go in because it was so hot and you go down six, seven feet.
And the flies, man, you're just covered with flies when you're topside.
But you get six, seven, eight feet down and it gets cooler.
And you get 20 or 30 feet down and it's pleasant, except for the fact that there's dirt all around you and dirt's falling on your helmet.
And then you get 40 feet down and there's the sandstone and no opal, bummer.
But because it's TV and because you're creating.
and because the guys are knuckleheads, they send you to the bottom just so you can get a sense of what it's like to stand at the bottom of a 60-foot tube and look up.
And it's not all it's cracked up to be.
You stand there and, you know, the Aussies, you know, they sprinkle water on you, pretend to pee on you because they're Aussies.
It's terribly funny.
And you just stand down there, like dirt on all sides.
And it's like, imagine being like three or four millimeters tall in the bottom of a, like a liter Coke bottle.
Yeah.
And just looking up.
It's 60 feet, six stories.
And anyway, they winch me up.
And it was just an extraordinary experience.
And three days later, there was an earthquake in Kubra Petey, a mild one, but strong enough to collapse hundreds of shabye.
Holy shit.
Yeah, so for years, you know, that was my dream was that tourist in the bottom of the opal mine.
Damn.
So mining is kind of an answer.
I can riff on crab fishing, dude.
Those stories to this day haunt me.
And they changed TV, too.
Shark, oh, shark suit tester.
That's a good one.
Shark suit tester.
Yeah.
So I'm hosting Shark Week, 2008.
I think, and it's like dirty job shark week.
So it's all the dirty jobs involving sharking.
And I get a chance to meet Jeremiah Sullivan,
the inventor of the shark suit.
Like the chain, the chain suit?
The chain mail.
Now, this is before, I hadn't seen it on TV at this point.
You see them all the time now, but like, what is it again?
And Jeremiah, of course, is like the, he's like an aquatic Indiana Jones.
I mean, he has been there and done it.
He is G.I. Joe underwater.
And so the job is to go make this shark suit because it's thousands of tiny welds.
You look like Ivanhoe.
You're dressed up in this thing.
It's flexible.
And like surfers were buying it, you know, and scuba divers because, you know, nobody wants to get bit by a shark.
So I get to know Jeremiah, and it's a great segment.
And it's really a welding segment, you know.
We make a shark suit and we try it on.
And then he says, you want to test it.
And I said, yeah, sure.
How do we test it?
So we're down in Bimini, I guess, maybe, or somewhere in the Bahamas.
And the next morning, we agree to film the test.
But that night, or late that afternoon, we had to take a boat out to test the comms.
Because there's no way you can shoot a segment like that.
You know, I got four guys underwater with me with cameras at, you know, 40, 50 feet.
We're going to chum the water, like, the sharks are going to come in.
I don't know how anybody's going to react.
I don't know how I'm going to react.
But mostly, I just don't know how the communication is going to work down there.
And I had a guy from TV guide with us, too, like documenting this whole shoot.
So my crew and I were a little nervous.
I'll bet.
Because now the job is to get bit by a shark wearing one of these suits.
So we go out the night before, and I'm in the suit, and I'm geared up, and Jeremiah throws some chum over the side, and the sharks show up.
He called him the men in the gray suits.
A couple dozen of them, reef sharks, you know, 9, 10, some 12 feet long.
They're big.
And so the water's covered with sharks.
And, you know, my crew goes in and they get down to the bottom and they get situated.
And I jump in.
And the sharks are leaving us alone.
But Jeremiah's got the chum with him and we'll bring some in close.
They don't want to bite you.
They're not interested in you.
But they know he's got food.
They can smell the blood.
But we're in the water.
And I've got my face mask on, and it's not a normal regulator.
So I don't have it in my mouth, right?
I got a full face mask on.
So I'm breathing the compressed air.
I've got a bicycle helmet screwed into the shark suit and my mask because a couple weeks ago,
Jeremiah went down with a friend and his buddy got bit in the back of the head.
So the insurance company was like, you know, you got to wear a bicycle.
So I looked like a complete album.
And at the time, I had a deviated septum.
I got my nose fixed, not too long after this.
But, I mean, I'm certified, but it's tough for me to decompress sometimes
because I can't breathe that good.
And you have to, you got to clear your air.
But if you have a full face mask, you can't grab your nose.
So I can't decompress.
I'm 12 feet down and my head's going to explode.
and I can't fix it.
I've got to jam the whole thing up into my nose,
and I'm going through a lot of air because it hurts.
And I finally get it decompressed,
and a shark swims up and bounces off my chest, right?
Same sort of sphincter effect I described before.
It's a terrible moment, and I'm just, like,
the sharks are everywhere.
It's all dark and purply,
and I'm pulling myself down on a rope,
just to meet Jeremiah, who's now,
I think we're 45 feet down, and he's just kneeling on the bottom waiting for me.
Sharks everywhere.
My crew is at a respectable distance.
The communications are working, but we just want to get to the place where we're going to be tomorrow
when we actually film it for the Discovery Channel.
And the TV guy's down there, he's very experienced scuba diver, and everybody's got cameras.
A long story short, I get down there and Jeremiah opens up his thing, and the sharks come,
they're everywhere and it's like, all right, I get it. This is going to be an amazing shoot.
And then the craziest thing, man, my chest started to get tight. And I took a deep breath
and exhaled and I went to get another breath. Nothing. And the TV guide guy swims up to me.
And I basically burned through 40 minutes of air in
18 minutes. Holy shit. I'm out of air. Never occurred to me to check my gauge because I was only down
20 minutes, but in hindsight, it was this the whole time. Now, I'm 45 feet down. I'm out of air.
I got a 45 pound steel suit on. I've got no buoyancy. And my last breath was an exhale.
So I start panicking.
Are you totally out of air?
I'm out of air.
Oh, shit.
I can't.
My last breath was out.
I'm out.
Leon was his name.
This guy, he immediately sees a situation.
And he's not in a full face mask.
He pulls out his regulator to give me the air.
I can't get my face mask off because the fucking bicycle helmet is all screwed
into the thing, and I'm going to die.
Like, the air is right there on the other side of the mask.
So this guy floods his BC, grabs me, and together, we kick.
And we rise at a fairly stately pace.
Because, you know, you don't want to go up faster than your bubbles.
She's also dangerous.
You get the bends, right?
So, no, we're just going up like this.
And I, uh, I mean, it's, it's.
Again, if you've never really been out of air at depth, it's hard to describe, but all I could see was the bottom of the boat, you know, and it looked really far away.
And I'm kicking, and I'm out of air, and I lose my peripheral.
Oh, shit.
Vision starts getting black.
Starts to gray out.
And he just stays right with me, gets me up.
We rip off all the gear.
obviously I live and stuff and whatever but the next day we had to shoot the scene
now that's not tunnel rat stuff that's nobody's peeing on punchy sticks nobody's torture
and your buddies but you know jumping jumping back into the water the next day with all
those sharks that was um I the yeah the only other thing the only other thing the only other
thing that rivaled that was the Golden Knights. I jumped with the Golden Knights.
Oh, did you? Yeah. Right. I don't know. What was that?
I don't even know if it... All right. It was great. It was great. It wasn't for dirty jobs.
It was for a show called Somebody's Got to Do It, which was very similar. And I was doing a lot of military stuff.
I had just gone to, I mean, I'd done the C-Bs and I was on the Stennis for a couple of days.
you know, it was Summer Eid show.
And the Golden Knights called.
And I'd already done, I'd jumped out of planes before,
but always tandem and always for TV.
And somebody's got to do it.
It wasn't about me.
I wanted to be about them,
but I also didn't want to jump out of a plane again,
strapped to a dude's, you know, this guy behind me.
And I just had done it.
And so I was like, you know,
it was actually, it was the same moment.
on the McAnall Bridge when I said to the guy, oh, you know, it would be fun?
I'm going to walk across the girder and climb up the cable, change a light bulb.
Let's do that, knowing there's no way they're going to let me do that.
I say to the Golden Knights PR guy, I said, look, the only way I can do this for a show like
this is if you let me pull my own shoot.
Because there's no way.
There's no way the PR organ for the audience.
for the army is going to let me pull my own shoot on television, right?
They can't do that.
He says, okay.
So I go to, was at Fort Bragg, and I mean, I'm so in my head with this thing.
These guys are amazing.
I work with the shoot Packers.
I meet all the guys.
We do a tandem jump because you have to do it.
But the point of the story is to follow me through an accelerated free fall training, right?
Which they can do in eight hours, apparently.
I didn't know.
Who the hell knew that?
I mean, I sure as hell didn't.
I didn't know it.
Until just now.
I didn't know it.
But they were great.
And they walked me through the whole process.
And it was a two-day shoot.
The first day was the process.
And the next day in the morning, I would jump alone and pull my own shoot.
fine the night before dude I am in my head because I had made a pact with God after the
shark suit incident look I'm not going to do this again I mean this I've done a lot of things I've
been uncomfortable in a lot of ways and a lot of situations but I'm not a stunt junkie right
I'm not I'm not in it for the adrenaline I I do it for the show to make the point to work with the
people who do it every day. And then I just move on. Well, I'm never diving with sharks again.
Well, no, not going to do it. And I said the same thing about jumping out of planes, but here I am.
I'm going to do this and I'm going to break my, I'm going to break my vowel, you know, and I'm nervous.
I'm just in my head. So we get there early in the next morning. And, you know, these guys jump
eight, ten, sometimes 12 times a day. That's all they do is jump. They go up and they're out and
they're working on their formations. So I get there about eight in the morning and they're already up.
And so my camera guy's with me out in the LZ and I'm standing there looking at the plane way up there
and, you know, the guys come out of the plane. And I turn to the camera and I start to really just
kind of spill my guts, you know, like, look, man, I have nothing but admiration for these guys.
and I'm so proud and privileged to be here, but I'm nervous.
You know, this is not what I do.
I'm older than I've ever been.
You know, and why am I doing this?
You know, I don't need to prove anything to anybody,
but they're so, they're great and they're enthused.
And so I guess what I'm saying is I'm glad to be here.
I'm lucky to be here.
But I feel like I could maybe throw up a little bit, you know?
And I'm just like, so I'm like,
spelling my guts to the camera.
Meanwhile, these guys are terminal velocity.
They're coming in hot.
And this is, what is it?
Halo, low openings, right?
So they're popping their shoe, I don't know how like a couple hundred feet maybe.
And they're coming in like a lawn dart, one after the next.
And they're doing the swoop thing.
So now I got another one of those Emmy shots, right?
You're the camera guy.
I'm spilling my guts.
And behind me, the pros are coming in at like the speed of sound.
And it's like, and then,
they're coming by head high right next to me. So if you're the cameraman, this is, this is the,
this is amazing shots. I mean, it's just forced perspectives and the second one comes by.
And they're coming like within three feet of me. Just fly. And in my head, I'm like,
going, all right, well, this is working out. This looks pretty badass. They're going to do their thing.
Plan's going to land. I'm going to go up and I'm going to do it. Seven of them come by.
Eighth one.
pulls up a little short,
hits the ground,
about 35 miles an hour,
maybe 60 feet behind me.
So the sound of body makes,
when it hits the ground at that speed,
there are a couple things happening.
The first is just a general,
like a, I mean, really, it's like thud.
When people write thud,
it's really because that, that's the sound.
It's just,
And then there's simultaneously a sound, like a wishing sound.
And that's all the air leaving the body really quick.
And the third sound, in this case anyway,
remember when Bo Jackson would like strike out and crack the bat over his leg?
It was that.
Crack.
So I instinctively run to the guy.
And my cameraman follows me.
and he was shooting anyway.
He doesn't stop.
It doesn't occur to him.
We're just following the action.
Like, what the hell just happened?
And we get close and he's unconscious and his femur's clean in half
and way out of the, way out of the suit.
And then he comes to and it's terrible.
And then everybody runs to him and my camera guy, Taylor,
immediately realizes this is not, this is nothing we want to see.
and the whole team is there.
The guys who just jump with him, they're all there.
They get him together.
They get him in an ambulance and he's gone.
And now I know what happens next.
Now I know the Army is going to come up to me,
no, my flight, my jump instructor,
and he's going to apologize and he's going to ask for the tape
because this was no.
No point. And of course, I'm going to give it to him because I'm not there to do anything other than honor these guys.
This guy walks up to me, looks me square in the face and says, well, you ready?
One more sphincter slamming shut moment. I'm like, ready. Ready for what? He said, look, I won't use his name, but he said, what happened to that guy? I don't know what happened.
but I know he's jumping with an 86 square foot canopy,
and he made a mistake.
Your canopy's 170 square feet.
You're going to float to the ground like a butterfly,
and I'm going to be right with you.
I'm not going to touch you,
but I'm going to be a few feet from you
when you come out of that plane.
And there'll be another guy on the other side,
and you're going to be good.
Dude, I couldn't believe it.
the most bureaucratic, I mean, there's nothing I can tell you about the military you don't know.
That's just crazy.
And I was so, I mean, horrified and overwhelmed and grateful.
I just said, I just need a minute, you know.
Can we just have a minute?
And he says, yeah, take all the time you need.
So we go inside.
Plains leave it in five minutes.
Well, the plane wasn't even down yet, but it was coming.
You know what I mean?
And they're like, look, we're going up with or without you.
But you don't want to not do it, do you?
Mm-mm.
So I'm in the briefing room, and on the walls are pictures of, I mean, it's D-Day.
I mean, it's Normandy.
It's just this, this is the 101st, right?
I mean, storied, legends.
And I just like, those kids were up.
they're, you know, 800 feet off the ground, jumping out with 100 pounds on their backs
getting shot at while the plane disintegrate.
I'm like, don't be a pussy.
Jump out of the plane.
Just do it.
Do it for them.
Yeah.
So I do it.
I jump out of the plane with the Golden Knights.
And now what I hadn't really thought through, yeah, they were with me when we went out.
but they stay with me
till I pull my shoot
which I do and then they're gone
they're fucking gone
right so I'm up in the air
for like I don't know maybe four minutes
figuring it out guiding my way down
and it was
beautiful
and terrifying and lonely
and amazing
for me it was my first jump
And I missed my mark by like 10 feet and actually landed on the macadam of the runway.
And I stumbled and I fell and I tore my jumpsuit, skin my knee.
I was fine.
I jumped up and it was just absolute euphoria.
I'm fine.
And so we wrapped the shoot.
And, you know, obviously I promised to never.
show that footage and I never have.
But I'm telling you the story now because it's 12 years ago.
And I saw the Golden Knights jump at the Army Navy game this year.
And a couple of the guys were with me that day.
No shit.
Saw him on the 50-yard line at Baltimore Stadium where I think Navy beat Army this year by like one point.
But he reminded me of the funniest freaking thing, man.
I don't know why I did this.
This is just the asshole in me.
couldn't help myself. The guy who jumped a couple hours later, the report was he was going to be
fine, bad break, but he's going into surgery. He's in good spirits. And spoiler alert, to this day,
he's still doing this thing. He has thousands of jumps. All went great for him. But his buddies
were like, he's so mortified
that this happened in front of Mike Rowe and the crew.
He's so...
I mean, can you imagine?
Like, you're the, one of the elite parachutes in the world
on one of the elite themes.
And this happens.
This goes wrong on camera.
Yeah.
So I got a cell phone from the Jumpmaster
and I sent him a photo.
And the photo is me.
Sitting on the curb near the jump site.
Like, I'm really about this angle, right?
And my knee is here.
It's got the tear and the thing.
And you can see my skin knee, right?
So I sent him a picture of my knee and me thumbs up with a caption that says,
Brother, I know exactly how you feel.
Holy shit.
And so we texted and talked a few times for years after that.
But that's my, I'm going to go with that.
That's the answer to that quite, for me.
Nice.
For me, you know, sometimes it's a tunnel.
Sometimes it's a plane.
Sometimes it's a skin knee.
Sometimes it's a freaking shark.
Sometimes it's an upside-down tourist and an opal shaft.
Yeah.
If it's not one thing, it's another.
And I'll tell you something else.
It's not everything it's cracked up to be.
Well, speaking of dangerous jobs and tunnel rats, I got one last gift for you.
Oh, no.
I know you've got to go here pretty soon.
No way.
Oh, yeah.
No.
Oh, yeah.
Have you ever heard of Sig Sour?
What the...
Sean?
That is some tunnel rat shit right there.
Holy crap, dude.
With a suppressor?
That is the Sig Sour-Sour-3.
365 macro with Sig Sour Light holds 17 rounds plus one in the pipe.
It's got the new SIG, Red Dot, and to SIG sour suppressor that's from silencer shop.
And so I got a buddy over at SIG's name's Jason and a friend at silencer shop too.
I don't even know what to say, dude.
That, they thought you might like that.
Wait a minute.
You gave Micro a macro?
That's right.
Wait a minute.
Who specifically is responsible for this?
Who gave this to you?
Well, ultimately, it's me.
I got lots of shit on my walls, too, dude.
I've gotten many gifts.
This is the best story I'm ever going to have in the future
is going to be the day I tried to get through security at the airport with this.
It's going to be amazing.
That would be a good story.
Fortunately, we're going to send it to you.
With 14 rounds?
17.
17.
We'll leave one out of the pipe, though.
Probably for the best.
Yeah.
My UPS guy is not totally trustworthy.
He's not qualified for that delivery.
I'm so honored.
God, I should not say this out loud, but we have such a coyote problem.
Let me know if you need some help with that.
Or do we?
Oh, man.
What happens now?
What did we do?
How long have we been talking, by the way?
Well, it is now 242.
Is that normal?
It feels normal for this.
We could go a lot longer.
At this point, I figure I talk another hour.
Maybe I get a flame thrower.
Let me see what I can work out.
No, look, it's a...
I remember the first time I was on, Rogan.
I told him, obviously nothing he didn't already know, but you can get a sense of somebody
in a half hour.
You can maybe get to know him in an hour.
But truth doesn't really come out until around hour three.
And I think maybe that's why Kamala didn't come on.
I don't know.
I don't know.
But, you know, if you're a handler and you're, and you're, you know, and you're, you're, you
you're trying to get somebody elected.
Look, my own partner is nervous as hell
that I'm here right now, mouthing off for three hours.
Like, what the hell are you gonna talk about?
I don't know.
But I do know that the only thing worth a damn today
that's truly for sale is what we're doing right now.
It's not the news.
It can't be.
It can't be, man.
It can't be the packaged focus grouped.
thing.
It can't.
Doesn't work anymore.
You know what focus groups do?
They get rid of the really, really bad ideas
and the really great ones.
And they leave you with the soft, squishy middle.
Which is why
most music sounds the same.
Most reality TV shows look the same.
Most newscasts are the same.
You better keep doing what you're doing.
whatever that is.
You too.
And thank you.
That means a hell of a lot.
Thank you.
What other country?
In what other country could a guy sit down for three hours,
give him a bottle of whiskey he won't drink,
a knife he probably doesn't need,
and have the favor return with a sig sour.
Are you telling me he like the sig better than the gummy bears?
I'm saying I'm going to eat,
as soon as I get this sig delivered,
I'm going to eat all the gummy bears at once
and go out and introduce myself to those coyotes
especially what happens.
Send pictures.
Yeah, from jail.
Mike, it was an honor, man.
I enjoyed every minute, too.
Me too. Really?
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