SmartLess - "Michael Lewis"
Episode Date: April 11, 2022We’re an island of misfit toys with big-brained Michael Lewis (author of books such as Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game and The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine). Michael ...teaches us how different objects drift at sea, Jason pitches him a book idea, Sean learns the importance of the left tackle, and Will reveals something, um, very private. Welcome to SmartLess.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This summer, in a place where no one feels safe.
Every once in a while, a story comes along that fills your heart.
Two brothers, one canoe.
This Christmas, get ready to, oh my god, my voiceover alter egos are taking over my
brain and I like it, I'd just be my self.
Will Arnett here, welcome to an all-new smart list.
I was about to say, Sean just told me in the middle of saying something I proposed and
he told me to go fuck myself and here's right before we logged on and here's a reminder
me, I think I talked about this, I hate when people, when they do pictures and people give
the finger in pictures, not funny, it's not interesting, it's not funny.
People think like, hey, let's get a picture and then everybody goes fuck you.
You know the only time it's funny is when little, little, tiny, tiny kids do it.
I guess, but even.
You know, I've got one of my favorite, favorite pictures, you both will appreciate this, is
a picture of Jimmy Burroughs looking just dead into camera with those dead shark eyes
and just a flaccid old finger right at me, right at the camera and it's one of my favorite
things.
I know, but here's my point and obviously we love Jimmy.
Jimmy Burroughs is a director of Lots of Sick Coms and.
Every episode of Will and Grace, cheers.
Cheers, cheers.
I mean, he's done everything, but the message is what?
Fuck you?
I guess it's sort of like.
It's people thinking they're feeling catchy and they're feeling like, oh, it's a bonding
thing and it's saying, hey, we're so close that I can do this.
I think it's in a good spirit.
I always take it it's in lieu of actually something funny.
Did you just say lieu?
He did.
Beautiful pronunciation.
In lieu.
In lieu.
Can you just say lieu?
You're saying and maybe they're, what if they're a little insecure about their ability
to smile in an attractive way?
Well then just say that.
Well, sorry.
Did you want to hang on a second?
I think Will needs to burp, hang on.
If you just rotate your chin away from the microphone next time you have a bubble.
One of the great things about you having difficulty signing on was I hammered my food before you
got on because I thought, if he sees my fat face gorging out on this food, your face has
been beautifully less fat lately.
I really been, is that fight camp or are you sick?
Either way, thank you.
When people say like, you know, I had a customer once say to me, we were doing a fitting sort
of mid show and she goes, Will, you can't get too skinny.
And I said, that's what I always say.
You know, I ran down here this morning, I'm so embarrassed.
I was on a phone call.
I was running late for this.
And so I'm like, I go, Scotty, can you just put my, can you hook up my computer?
And he's like, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So I come into where I usually sit right here in front of this computer.
And it was like 30 seconds before we started and I screamed, I go, Scotty, Scotty.
He goes, yeah, I go, give me the plug, I don't have the plug.
Like the, the, the power plug and he walks in and he goes, it's already plugged in.
And I'm like, what?
Very, in that very calm, your hysterical twit voice.
But this is, I have, don't you guys have like a specific set up the way you have everything?
Yeah.
So he, he switched all my wires on all the opposite sides of my computer.
Jason, you know, there's, there's, there's a sexual input joke here, Will.
I don't know if you want to take it.
Go for it.
Or you want, you want a moment to write that?
We'll come back to it.
No, no, no, I was going to, I was going to, I was not going to make a joke there, Jason.
Because I'm respectful.
I don't know if you'll get me.
No, me too.
That's why I wasn't going to make it.
I'm very respectful.
I don't even think it's funny.
Hey gang, to me, there is no better human moment than when you hear someone or see someone
that you immediately feel a connection to.
Sometimes that's in person, but at other times it's at an audience distance.
When you hear a song they write or a performance they create or an interview you watch or a
book they write, you get the sense that that person may tick like you and they put that
similarity into words or action in a way that you never could.
This next guest is one of those people.
He is a writer and his talent in articulating his thoughts is matched only by his enormous
curiosity and intelligence.
He has written articles and books on many subjects covering sports, finance, and most
recently the pandemic.
Some of his books have even become some of our favorite movies such as The Blindside,
Money Ball, and The Big Short.
Oh my God.
Friends, please welcome the big brain, Michael Lewis.
Oh wow.
Kidding.
There we are.
Good morning.
Hello there.
Hello there.
So cool to meet you.
I'm so, so happy you are doing this with us, sir.
We had a brief chance to talk a few months ago and it was one of the greatest conversations
I have had that I'm not exaggerating.
I'm not puffing there.
It was great.
So thank you for coming on and sharing your head and your thoughts with us.
No, it's a total gas.
I can't believe that what I just heard.
Is anyone listening?
Well, I just wonder what's left.
Like, yeah.
It was great.
Michael, I've read a number of your books.
So this is such a thrill to meet you and what I love about your books is that you hone in
on subjects that are kind of right there in front of us, right under our nose.
But you offer a perspective that you say, hey, look, this is right here, but actually
look at what's happening.
So let's say we'll take the blind side, for instance, I didn't understand anything.
You know, I watched football my whole life.
I didn't understand the importance of the left tackle.
And now, of course, people in football would, but you, you honed in on this idea of the
left tackle.
And then you brought this, you told it through the lens of this, this young man who was an
incredible talent at left tackle, the money ball, you told it, you know, you, you talked
about what Billy Bean was doing up in the Oakland athletics.
And then you taught, told it through the lens of a guy who was a kind of a renegade who
was amongst GMs and outlier, if you will, because he approached the game differently.
At a certain point, he changed the way he looked at the game.
All of your books seem to hone in again on these ideas of, you know, things, subjects
that are right there, but you find a different angle on it.
What, how, A, how do you find these stories and B, what, what sort of leads you towards
these kinds of stories?
Let me give you a couple, I'll give you a couple examples, because it is, it's a really
undisciplined process that is, it's not like a formula.
And every time I finish one, I think I'll never find one again, because it just, it
just, everyone's seen, felt so sui generis, like you just, you just not repeatable.
By the way, by the way, not to interrupt, well, to interrupt you, but I just to let
you know, every time I finish one of your books, I always think, well, that's it, there's
no way Mechalooze is going to find another story like this that is so surprising.
I'm not kidding you.
And then every time I get your newest book and I always go, wow, how surprising.
So the two examples you mentioned, so Moneyball, I just, we'd been living in Europe for a couple
of years.
I hadn't watched American sports in forever.
We came back and I flipped on the television and the Oakland A's were playing.
And I was watching and listening to the announcers.
And I noticed, I mean, this was what, 2001, and salaries exploded.
And I noticed that the left fielder was like being paid $6 million a year and the right
fielder was being paid 150 grand.
And I thought, I wonder how pissed off the right fielder is when the left fielder drops
a fly ball.
And that was like sort of like, is there class resentment on a baseball, they're now social
classes on the baseball field because you've got these people getting paid so much money.
And so I started watching just the money on the field.
I would stop watching it, like the money, just try to see if they hated each other because
of the money.
And I couldn't detect anything.
But then when you start looking at the money, you start to realize that, whoa, it's not
that it's the players.
It's like the Yankees have $150 million to spend on players and the A's have like 30.
How are they even competing?
And why are the A's winning as much as the Yankees?
And so that gets you to a question you want an answer to, right?
That doesn't make any sense.
In a normal, if this is a market, it's a free market for baseball players, you would think
that the team that has the most money would just buy all the best ones and just win all
the time.
And that wasn't happening.
So I called up Billy Bean to ask him this question.
I went and went to see him.
And I didn't know it was going to be a book.
I thought, I didn't know it was going to be any more than a conversation.
I was just kind of curious.
And that day, I walked to his office, I asked him the question.
He said, no one has asked me that question.
And it's what I spend my life thinking about.
He says, the sports writers aren't interested in anything but like the sports.
And you're asking me about the money.
And what we think about is like, how do you value these people?
So then I thought, wow, you know, this is kind of cool that I'm looking at the game
in the way the person who's trying to manage one of these teams is looking at the game.
How do you make it?
What's the story?
And then it's gumbo.
It's like you need these ingredients.
And so the fact that, you know, it takes a while to get it out of him that Billy Bean
kind of has a motive that he has, he was misvalued by baseball coming out of high school.
They thought he was going to be this stud and he drafted him in the first round and
dissuaded him from going to Stanford and he hated him for it ever since because he never
really panned out.
He really wished he'd been, his life had been disrupted by baseball's inability to understand
the players.
But the moment, there's like a moment.
I can remember there's like a moment where I said, all right, this is a book.
It was like six weeks into it.
And I was interviewing the players because the A's were obviously doing these things
that other teams weren't doing.
They had like a fat guy leading off and they had a guy playing first base who'd never played
first base and half of them looked like a beer league softball team.
And I just thought like, what are the players, like the players know they don't look like
other teams.
And how do they feel about that?
So I was moving down the cubbies in the locker room.
Each day I'd take a different player.
And this was like one day I was going to go see a player.
It was after a game.
I'm waiting for him at his cubby.
And I was watching the A's come out of the showers and it was the first time I saw the
Oakland A's naked.
It's like, I never like watched.
And it was the most appalling sight.
It was just, it was like, there's like fat ankles.
They were just like, it just, and I thought, if you line those naked bodies up against
the wall and ask anybody what they did for a living, they'd say, like, I don't know,
are they certified public accounts?
Right.
They would never guess they were professional athletes.
Let me just say to the CPAs out there and cool it with the responses to what Michael
said.
Okay.
Right.
So, so I think I go to the front office and I said, you know, I know this is going to
sound out, but I was just watching your guys naked and, and they don't look like athletes.
They don't look like anything.
And the guy in the number two played by Jonah Hill in the movie said to me, you know, that's
kind of the point.
You know, we've been using better analysis and better data to figure out who's actually
doing what on a baseball field and what it's worth.
And when you find like people who are much better than the market knows they are, the
kind of players we need, if we're going to win because we can get them cheap, usually
there's something wrong with them that they usually look wrong because if they look right,
everybody knows they're valuable.
And I think they look like a stud baseball player.
People are looking for a stud baseball player.
If they look like our guys, like people say, nah, he can't, he can't, and he started going
down the list.
They had a guy with two club feet, he was a pitcher with two club feet, which is, and
they said, you know, people wouldn't hire him because he couldn't move very well.
The ball was hitting near him, but the club foot actually imparted this weird spin on
his screwball that that's, so it was like one thing after another.
And I thought, oh my God, this is gold because it's no longer, it's no longer just baseball,
right?
It's like, all right, they're building a juggernaut out of, out of misfit toys that out of people
who nobody's seen the value in, and forget it's baseball.
Think of it as like a business that you've got all these guys doing their job, same job
for a hundred years, people watch them on the job, millions of people watch them on the
job, their stats attached to every move they make on the baseball field.
If that person, that employee can be misvalued, who can't be?
Right.
So they're in line, the, the sort of relatability, the evergreen thing that you thought would
lend itself to something for mass consumption, not just baseball fans.
So yeah, a stupid question, like, is the right fielder pissed off at the left fielder
when he drops a fly ball, led me down a rabbit hole to a place where I had another, I had
an observation that I thought, wow, this is an important observation.
But also you've kind of honed in on, there's like an underdog element, I don't know if
it's underdog, but it's people who are succeeding in whatever field, whatever their discipline
is, almost against convention.
And are you drawn to that?
And I think in a lot of your books, that element exists, you know, people who are doing it,
who don't seem like, like, if you were to look at Sean, you know, you'd be like, there's
no way that he's going to be successful, you know, look at him, he's barely sitting
upright.
You wouldn't think like comedy, you might think romantically, you know, he's just miscast.
He didn't even know his computer was plugged in this morning and it was right in front
of him.
His husband had to tell him.
But wait a minute, Michael, for dumbass me who knows nothing, what is it like now?
Do people, because I don't know about any of this stuff, how do they put a price on
it now knowing all of this information on each player?
Well, you're much less likely to be undervalued if you're homely or misshapen.
People now see beneath the surface, you know, in baseball now, but I don't think, but baseball,
you know, it's a, it's a little lab, it's a, it's a very orderly universe where it's
very easy statistically to assign credit and blame and figure out who did it.
It's not like in life.
Yeah.
Most of life is much harder.
Yeah.
So it's just telling you that in life, this stuff is going on too.
And it's very hard to, it's much harder to see below this.
What made you become like obsessed with finance and money and like want to explore all facets
of it?
Because I, I am too, I think, you know, when, when you're lucky enough like me or us or whatever
to have made a few extra bucks in your life because you got, I got lucky, and you know,
most Americans, most citizens don't have the time, energy, resources, anything to learn
about or educate themselves about how money works because they have families, they gotta
go to work, they come on, you know, so once you start to force yourself to learn a little
bit about it, you go, wow, this is really complicated.
It's almost like it's, it's built on purpose to be complicated to keep everybody confused.
It is built on purpose to be complicated.
What got me interested in it was, I mean, I think it was an odd thing because this is
the beginning of my career.
You have a degree in economics, don't you?
Yeah.
Yeah.
But I have a half-assed degree in economics.
That's not half-assed.
And he worked at Solomon Brothers and.
Yeah, you worked at Solomon Brothers.
That's right.
Yeah.
But that's what I was going to say.
I grew up in New Orleans.
Right.
And I grew up in this culture.
I call it Nolans.
Nolans.
Sorry.
That was, it was a really strange place to grow up.
It was like, it was not like the rest of the United States.
There's a line that, to understand New Orleans, you have to stop thinking of it as the southern
most city in North America and start thinking of it as the northern most city in South America.
And it really was, it was, it was not a, it was not a successful place.
It was like, it was in permanent decline and people define themselves not by what they
did or how much money they made.
It was really like family.
And it was, but it was pretty happy.
Like it was like, and when I left, I was shocked when I went east to college.
I was shocked by the connection between success and unhappiness.
I would not have put it that way at the time, but like there are all these people who came
from New York money, who are all these kids in my class who are going to go to work on
Wall Street and, and they were kind of miserable.
And, and, and I didn't even see the value of it.
Like what is this Wall Street thing that everybody's obsessing about?
I was an art history major in college.
At the end of my college career, I thought, actually the world is a conspiracy of people
who speak this language that Sean is so popular by.
I got to go learn the language.
I didn't know what I was going to do in my, so I went and got a master's degree at the
London School of Economics and got a job on Wall Street and I'm writing about it.
What I think would drew me to it was that original feeling like there's some, something
screwed up about American culture and the epicenter of the screwed upness is this place.
And I'm going to understand this place and, and then, you know, I mean, I, my first book
was Liars, called Liars, Poker, it was this little memoir of me working on Wall Street.
Which is, by the way, being made into a film now, right?
It's always being made into a film and never being made into a film.
It's one of those things.
So it's, Warner Brothers bought it and it's been sitting inside of Warner Brothers for,
you know, 30 years.
We'll get it made.
We're going to, after the interview, we're going to make some calls.
But let me ask you this.
So, so I would imagine at that time when you went to, when you worked at Salomon Brothers
and you went to an Ivy League school, those, that people who were in, in that sort of world,
whose parents worked in finance and, and then they went and worked in finance.
And now, of course, we have an entire, talked about class in the baseball field.
We have an entire class of financiers, especially on the coast, Los Angeles and New York.
If you want to send your kid to school, you got to, it used to be, you had to be worried
about sending your kid and be worried about, you know, showbiz people, too many showbiz
people at your school.
Now it's too many finance people and they're, they're kind of everywhere and they've dominated
and of course they've, there's lots of stories, of course they've, you know, increased the
gap between the haves and the have-nots and there are all these people who have ridiculous
wealth.
Were you ever worried seeing those people, especially with a, with a art history degree,
do you have a healthy dislike for people in finance and for the, and for the kids, and
for kids who are, who have now are in the position where they have inherited or are about to
inherit vast sums of wealth and have no discernible talent for anything.
And cause this is something that's, we used to call them gold card, you know, Rastas or
whatever back in the day.
And now these kids, there's an entire class of people who don't know how to do anything
and they're given everything.
You must be exposed to lots of that.
So I have been throughout my life, but it's case by case basis.
Some of people are great and some people aren't.
It's a, but it's a, it's a really goofy system.
And that's the thing that is sort of despicable is the system and the system revealed itself
to me immediately because like you get a degree in economics.
You don't know anything about money.
You don't, you don't know like what to do in the stock market or you don't, you just,
that's not what they teach you in economics.
It's much more what theory?
It's theory.
Yes.
And so I didn't know anything about money.
And within 18 months, I was being paid hundreds of thousands of dollars a year to talk people
into doing things with money that they shouldn't have been doing.
And professionals, I mean, like they're not, not moms and pops, but people who are managing
hundreds of millions of dollars.
And it was clear I had no value to the world, like probably negative value to the world.
I was getting people to do things they probably shouldn't do half the time.
And we made money by moving the money around.
And it was that, that original observation is like, there's no connection between what
I'm extracting for myself and what I'm putting in.
Like I'm not, I'm not being rewarded for making the society a better place for adding value
to the society.
I'm just, I'm like, just like taking rents out of the economy.
And I think that is a pretty good description of much of Wall Street.
And what's happened is it's just grown and grown and grown.
That it's, when I got there in the late 1980s, the Wall Street was, you know, twice as big
as it had been in the generation before as in relation to the rest of the economy.
It's now twice as big now as what, than it was then.
And so that it's become this machine, the other thing about it was, like the Wall
Street, there was a thing about old Wall Street where the kind of people who went to
work there were either sort of the C students at Yale, not so bright, but like, you know,
everybody thought they were a nice guy, or, you know, Vinny from Staten Island, who had
a high school diploma, and Vinny could do really well.
It was a way, it was a kind of partly an engine for social mobility.
And now it's become, you have to be so highly credentialed up front.
Are you wearing underwear?
I'm wearing shorts.
Listen.
Oh my God.
I'm wearing shorts.
Listen, that's what we're going to get.
That's your next.
Sorry, sorry.
Sorry.
You just like flashed me in the middle of.
Yeah.
It's a lot of thigh.
Well, there we go.
It's a lot of thigh.
All right.
So, but that, now it's sort of like you need your physics degree from MIT to go work at
Wall Street.
And the kind of, it is not an engine for, for social mobility.
It's kind of an engine for ossifying the existing social relations.
Rich kids get to go to Harvard, Princeton, Yale, and then they go to the Wall Street
firm where they get paid a lot of money doing things that aren't really very useful for
everybody else.
And you want to know why our politics are that way they are.
A lot of people are justifiably pissed off.
Yeah.
Of course.
And you have people, right.
All those kids, they graduate and they all get, they all become associates at Goldman
or wherever and they get fed into that machine.
And I think you're right.
That used to be a thing.
I guess those guys, people who would come in as, you know, you, you call, you said sort
of the guy from Staten Island, whatever that, those were the people who were the traders
on the floor, right?
The class system within Wall Street that existed.
They're gone.
They're gone.
Wall Street is, oh yeah, they're all gone.
The machines have eliminated their jobs.
Right.
Right.
So you, and so, so now it's MIT and now you're creating the perfect black box of the thing
that's going to predict what the market does, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
Or the thing that's going to rape you when you go into the stock market to do your trade.
Right.
The most efficient.
Right.
It's not all bad.
No, no.
There's a lot of dandies out there keeping, keeping up the good side of the ledger.
We got a good guy.
There's a good guy we know.
There we go.
Dandies.
He's a friend of the podcast.
We'll be right back.
Back to the show.
Michael, so, you know, you touched, we touched on just the politics of it.
I'm always fascinated with, well, I'll just cut to the chase and ask the question.
What is your prediction in the next election?
How will affect finances?
Because I'm always fascinated about how that works.
It seems like every election cycle, something happens where, you know, it goes up or down
or something shifts kind of like glacially, but it happens.
You seem susceptible to hearing false wisdom.
Oh, thank you.
It's nice meeting you too.
You're asking me to tell you something no one knows.
You said that nicer than Will and I ever have to know.
No, no.
It's really, it's such a sweet question because you're sort of like, oh, you must know.
Yeah, right.
I know you don't know, but I know nobody knows, but I like to hear people's opinions and predictions
anyway.
No, no, no, no, no.
I think it's fascinating how elections affect money.
Yeah.
Is it sort of the common thought that, you know, to oversimplify things, if Republicans
are in stock market goes up, if Democrats are in stock market goes down, but hang on
a minute because if it goes up with the Republican side, it may burst.
The Democratic, it may go down, but at least it's a true down and it'll slowly creep up
in a legitimate way.
Can I answer a different way?
Yes, please.
I think it's sort of like a train that's on a track and it's not going to go off the
track unless there's a big catastrophe.
And I think there's one, so I mean, like the market, the market is just, in the end, what
it is, is giving you your little percentage of corporate earnings.
And I don't really see forces in our society that are going to undermine corporate earnings.
It seems like those, the forces for corporate earnings, political, et cetera, keep getting
stronger and stronger, unless there's a revolution of some sort, some sort of, so I can imagine
that happen in a couple of ways.
But the way I think about, like the one thing I watch and think about, oh, I've ought to
take my money out of the market if that starts to happen is the solvency of the country.
Like will the U.S. government honor its debts?
Like, do you trust the treasury?
Do you trust these things called treasury bonds?
Because the whole global financial system is premised on treasury bonds, U.S. treasury
bonds being viewed as a riskless asset.
But what do you think about that, the idea of the myth of the deficit?
Did you read that book?
I just got it.
What's your name?
I haven't.
It's not a myth.
Okay.
So yeah.
So I haven't read the book, but I understand that we can print as much money as we want
to pay off our debts.
But this is a matter of faith, that if the Chinese government decides that, oh, and other
governments, that we're not going to actually pay back our debts and they don't want to
hold these pieces of paper, there's a vicious cycle that would kick in.
And what I kind of imagined Trump was going to do, and he never did it, because our debts
never really became a huge problem.
We haven't got the point where we're cutting federal programs because we need to serve
us to the debt.
But that's not that far away, that if I would imagine Trump was going to get up and say,
you know, who do we owe this money to?
We owe it to the Chinese of $2 trillion of these pieces of paper.
How do they get that?
Raw trade deals.
We're just not going to pay them back.
The minute you start to whisper that kind of thing, or the minute the society proves
incapable of handling its finances, that's when I would start to think, I'm not sure
about this.
But to answer your question, like, what's going to happen?
I got no idea.
And I don't actually...
And that's our time.
I don't actually take action based on, like, some future events that are unpredictable.
Let me ask you your opinion about this thing.
There's this interesting article about, you know, when you talk about the corporate earnings
and the debt, it's potentially sort of the lifeblood of this country and how we maintain,
you know, health and to be, quote, unquote, number one in the world and all that stuff.
They were talking about the existential risk and crisis of what is potentially happening
right now, which is everybody kind of quitting their job because of the...
Everyone kind of got used to being able to live with a little bit less and not chasing,
you know, not on the hamster wheel as much through the pandemic because everyone was
home.
And the article went on to kind of talk about how what if people stopped buying into this
race for dog eat dog and being better than your neighbor and this capitalism sort of
rushed to acquire everything and to be the richest and have the most bling and all the
creature comforts and all that.
What if people started living a little bit more like some of the number two or number
three countries, you know, that take all of August off and they have these four-day work
weeks and they just like...
You're talking about Denmark or France or any of these other places that are comfortable
not being number one there because they're older and more mature and they're not like
trying to show off and like what if America just kind of found that place and all the
corporations were like, uh-oh, they're not buying it anymore, that they need to be better
than their neighbor.
I think about that all the time.
So it was like that's something a big brain like yours could probably really get your
arms around and write a really compelling book about just everybody kind of going,
yeah, we're good with less and what would the corporations do about that?
Are you pitching me a book idea or asking me a question?
Can we talk offline about that, please?
So, you know, what I was hearing you say is what if America became a sane place instead
of the moronic inferno?
And it's, I don't know, can our culture change that much?
Maybe, one of the things that is happening that is sort of maybe behind all this is demographic
change, right, that the new people coming into the workforce, it's smaller numbers than
we've seen forever compared to the size of it.
So the reason you're going to see kind of a tilt, I think, in negotiating power towards
employees is they're fewer of them.
That seems to be kind of happening and maybe, yeah, I'm all four.
So this gets back to how people lived in New Orleans.
So American materialism, when I collided with it for the first time, just shocked me.
It jolted me because I hadn't really grown up with it and it seemed so unhappy.
Don't come between us and our stuff.
I remember once seeing a documentary about a guy and he followed, I forgot what it was
called and his parents were immigrants, I think, from Hungary and his dad hadn't been
back there in sort of 30 years, this is maybe in the 80s or 90s, anyway.
He goes back to Hungary with his dad and his dad sees his family there and they all sit
out and they have this huge meal outside.
And he starts talking to his family and his dad's crying with his brothers and the extended
family, et cetera, and they interviews his dad after the dinner and he says, how is it
being back?
What's the difference?
What I forgot, he says, when I'm in America, people say, what do you do?
But when I'm back here, people, the first thing they say is, are you happy?
And that's the difference.
And I think that that's a cultural, Jason, to answer your question, I don't know, I'm
not answering it, but my sort of feeling on that is there needs to be a major cultural
shift and it's something that doesn't necessarily exist in this country and frankly, never has.
I mean, you look at New York, you look at these places, they were built on this idea
of trade and always at the heart of it.
Michael, I'm not telling you anything you don't know, famously New York didn't have
a lot of great churches because it wasn't a religious center, which at the time was
unusual for a founding of a new city.
They were always, that was kind of the centerpiece.
New York wasn't about that.
It was always about trade, it was always about commerce and that is at the heart of the,
when people talk about the American idea, they always talk about getting ahead, getting
all the things you want.
And it's about degree, but the white picket fence, the house, all that stuff is stuff.
Yeah.
I wonder if it's still just sort of like a long tail to the fact that we're young and
that we're just starting out and we're trying to prove it to the world that this country
can make it.
We're only, what, a few hundred years old.
I mean, there's, you can buy cigarettes in a building that's 600 years old and in any
part you know.
I'm very young.
That should be, sorry, this is an aside, but I'm very young.
Still anyway, that's, I guess, watch this space.
We'll see how our country does.
Change directions for once.
Your podcast against the rules is in its third season now.
And so with this, do you have, you really like exploring these subjects more deeper,
more fully through conversation as opposed to kind of just with your singular prism
of just you in front of a screen typing away.
Tell me about that.
The answer that is no, because it's not like this.
It's crafted storytelling that it's essentially taking my magazine life into audio.
And what interested me was audio.
It was the different kind of muscle you have to use with an audience when you're writing
for the ear as opposed to on the page, and I just wanted to see what that felt like.
And I felt like from the beginning of my career, I found that was after I finished a book,
the best thing to do was not write another book and find something else to do.
And what I used to do is write screenplays.
And that was, it was almost like, like literary cross training that, you know, I'd spent all
this time running marathons and I was going to take the off season swimming and lifting
weights.
It was just like a different thing.
You were using different muscles.
And I wasn't very good at it, but even though I wasn't very good at it, the kind of the
nature of the medium, how compressed it is, how you're forced to visualize what you're
putting on the page, which you're not when you're writing just prose, it just, it brings
something out.
It improves you in ways.
And so I did the podcast in the first place just to see if it would do the same kind of
thing.
And the nice thing about the podcast is that you don't need really anybody to make it.
I mean, you get, it goes out there and it's been an education, how different the form
is and what are the kinds of things that rewards a writer for doing.
And it's, it's fed back into the books like the screenplays have.
It's made, I think it's made me just a better prose writer.
And so one of the things that you're exploring with the podcast is the subject of expertise,
like the sort of the notion of how many things can you really be expert at, great at, how
many should you try to be great at, or should you just focus on one or two things in your
whole life or, or, or is everyone just sort of spreading themselves too thin and they
should just focus on not your lane, but I don't know if there's this sort of the sense
of too much ambition maybe in this world or I don't know, help me out.
What interested me in this subject was sort of like the status of the expert.
What is, what's happened to that person in our society that the pandemic is like an incredible
example of the problem that there was like a smart way to approach the pandemic.
There were people who actually knew what to do.
We never access them and, and we still to this day kind of people don't know who they
are.
And the kind of question was like, why are we, this country has this unbelievable ability
to generate expertise, knowledge that, that there are, we lead the world in Nobel prizes.
We, you know, the government, the US government filled with people who know more about some
subject than anyone in the world.
Sean knows the fastest route to Chin Chin from every point in Los Angeles.
Can I pick something up?
Yeah.
Okay.
Can I give you, I'll give you one example.
This is one of the episodes.
Yeah.
I have a friend, his name is Max Steyer.
He runs something called the partnership for public service, who's, and he's trying to
fix the US government in a nonpartisan way, just trying to like make it work better.
And he figured out that one of the problems is the morale of the employees, because every
time they do something bad, they're like publicly humiliated.
Every time they do something good, nobody notices.
So he tried to create a kind of Oscars like a, create an award for really good government,
federal government workers.
Calls it the Sammys.
Nobody's paying any attention to it, but he's managed to get like thousands of people nominated
for the Sammys.
And he was reading to me to this, for this list of his Sammy Award nominees one day.
And I realized like, what this really is, is a list of unbelievable experts.
Everybody on this list has done something extraordinary with a very narrow expertise
that would bore you to tears if you had to listen to it for very long.
I said, but I want to take, so what in the show, I want to take one of these and just
to sort of dramatize how we aren't valuing, how we don't even know this sort of stuff
exists.
So randomly off this list, I picked the guy who was, he was just, it was an alphabetical
order who was at the top.
His name was Arthur A. Allen.
And but Arthur A. Allen had done in his career in the Coast Guard as an oceanographer, was
figure out how objects drift at sea.
So if you fall off a boat, you know, if any of you fall off a boat in the middle of the
ocean.
But one of you will say, but you, you will all float in slightly different ways.
And you'll float in a different way if you're on a capsized sailboat or if you're on a raft
or you're in a life preserver.
No one had ever bothered to try to figure out how different objects drift at sea.
Arthur Allen had watched some people die when he early in his career, book a mom and their
little girl die on the Chesapeake Bay because they, the Coast Guard couldn't figure out
how the boat they were on was drifting when it was lost.
And he said, I'm going to figure this out and spent 15 years dropping objects into the
Long Island Sound in his free time, measuring how these things drift and, and, and putting
it into mathematical equations so the Coast Guard could identify where you might be if
they knew where you started.
So in the history of like, of, of people lost at sea, nobody was up until very recently.
Nobody even bothered to look for them because once you were lost at sea, you were lost
at sea.
Like we, the US government doesn't even bother thinking about this until World War II and
pilots are shot down over the Pacific Ocean and even then they're not very good at it.
It sounds like something I was almost going to do, but I just got super busy.
So in 2007, he's finally finished his work.
He's taught all the Coast Guard search and rescue people about how objects drift.
A few weeks later, a 350 pound man runs out of his cruise ship window 75 miles off the
coast of Florida into the Atlantic Ocean, like, and they don't discover he's gone for
hours.
They when they realize he's gone, they can look at the ship cameras and figure out where
he went over.
But normally again, they would, you know, a person in the ocean and you would just never
bother.
But this guy's equations led them right to where he was in the ocean.
They pluck him out of the ocean.
And since then, thousands of people have been similarly like rescued at sea because of what
this guy did.
That's crazy.
Wow.
So, so, so one of our episodes is, the episode is just an example and this is a little, this
is, it means it's sort of like written stuff, but it's the story of this guy, Arthur Allen,
and this other guy, another fat guy who went off the boat of a fishing boat off the coast
to 14 miles off the coast of Los Angeles.
And eight hours later, they find this guy.
And this guy, the question is sort of like, do we understand what we just did?
Like, but in fact, there are no articles about Art Allen.
There's no, no newspaper articles about how they did it, sort of like a miracle.
They found a guy and the guy himself who's pulled out of the water.
When you ask him what happened, he says, it was a miracle.
I found Jesus while I was on the water and God saved me.
So it's sort of like, this is just one of the episodes, an example of like how we don't
get our minds around the value of the expertise we've created.
Like we're incredibly good.
Did Arthur win the Sammy?
Really dumb with that.
Did Arthur?
And he didn't even win a Sammy.
He didn't even win a Sammy.
Oh God.
He got beat by someone else.
There's a guy, the guy on the cruise ship, he had like 50 Sammys and then, let me ask
you, and then, and when they, by the way,
It's also, it's also a good, a good word for where your tax dollars go, you know, like
you never, you never realize, well, I'm paying all this money.
This goes right into again, where we started, which is like you are finding kind of finding
value where it has not been assigned properly is obviously something that interests you.
And I think it is such a great sort of.
Well, you stay curious, which is so great.
And you did an incredible example of this with the premonition, right?
But the expertise is the, the experts you found there and followed them.
I mean, for, you know, the listeners out there that aren't familiar with the, with the book,
the concept of it, the subject matter of it, speak just a little bit about that, please.
As an exercise, it was, it was a little different for me because I realized before the, even
the pandemic happened, I realized that like the best things I'd done were character driven.
And it was where I, and where I was weak in the books I'd written, where the books felt
weak was where I didn't have a character who was, who could quite hold the story.
And it was, and that the idea is kind of overwhelm the story.
So I thought, next book I do, I'm just going to go find the characters and let the story
take care of itself.
I didn't know what it was going to be about.
And then the pandemic starts.
And the thing, and it was a question in the beginning of the pandemic, like four months
in, five months in, there was this stat that remains stable up until the time we had vaccines.
And it was that the United States had fewer than 5% of the population in the world and
we had more than 20% of the deaths.
And at the same time, there had been like a ranking done at the cost of millions of
dollars and lots of research before the pandemic of how prepared each country was for a pandemic.
And the United States came out number one.
So it was like the Texas Longhorns ranked number one in the beginning of the football
season and they went 0 and 11.
It was like the preseason, it was something really wrong about our understanding of ourselves
and our ability to deal with this particular threat.
So I thought, I'm going to try to figure out not the pandemic because it's going to go
on forever.
I'm going to write about like how we screwed up all leading into the pandemic, like what
happened that we were supposed to be so good?
We obviously had more resources than anybody.
And it went so badly at the price of hundreds and hundreds of thousands of American lives.
If we just performed as well as like the average G8 country, several hundred thousand people
would be alive now who are dead.
But I did it with like, okay, I'm going to find characters and they have to be obviously
relevant to the story, but I'm going to start with people I'm just interested in and I'm
only going to write a book if I find people I'm interested in.
And it took a while, but the three people who were at the center of that book are the
three best characters I've ever, I've ever had.
And they are like unknowns.
I mean, like one quick example, I mean, Charity Dean is a local public health officer who
has been like fighting disease on the ground for the last 20 years, who let me leave her
to one side because the guy who's easiest to describe is the guy who wrote the pandemic
plan for the United States, who invented basically an idea, an idea of how to respond
to a pandemic.
And his name is Carter Mesher.
He was a ICU doctor by his whole career.
He was really good at, he said he had like ADHD, he doesn't pay attention.
He kind of had to fake his way through medical school, but when he got in a place in a situation
where life or death really had to focus, he was really good.
And he was a brilliant ICU doctor who had risen up in the veterans administration to
run whole hospitals and had been plucked by the Bush administration to answer the question
like, what do we do if there's a pandemic?
Bush, George Bush had been traumatized by Katrina, Iraq, he had like 9-11.
He had all these bad things going on.
And he read a book about the 1918 influenza pandemic.
And he said, what's our pandemic plan?
And they told him we don't have one.
So he said, find some people who can put together a pandemic plan.
And one of these people they bring in is this Dr. Carter Mesher.
And Mesher starts to, there's a conventional wisdom at the time that until you get a vaccine,
you can't do anything.
That all the, like the attempt to like social distance, what they call non-pharmaceutical
interventions, closing schools, all that stuff didn't work in 1918.
And he just doesn't believe it.
And he goes back and looks, he recreates the history of 1918.
He goes and looks like, what happened in different cities?
How many people died?
What did they try to do?
And he figures out that like, St. Louis had, you know, half the death rate of Philadelphia.
But St. Louis actually did do things like distance earlier in relation to the arrival
of virus.
He completely changes the world's opinion about what you should do in the beginning.
Manages with colleagues to write it into a plan, persuades the CDC to adopt the plan
as the official plan.
The CDC persuades the rest of the world that actually all your kind of beliefs about social
distancing are wrong.
And although along comes a pandemic and these truths are uncontroversial and like Australia,
you asked Australia, like how they've done so well, how they've kept people alive.
They said, we use the US plan.
We ourselves didn't use our own plan.
It was not, had not been accepted in the way it had been accepted other places.
Not all tracks back to this one guy who has this passion for saving human life that he
developed and cultivated in ICUs.
And I, so I found like, I found like the seeds of why, why we were a mismanaged team, like
why we were this really talented team that just didn't perform well once the thing happened
and built it around these characters and it was a total gas.
I mean, it's horrible to say, but it was like the most fun book I ever wrote was a book
about the pandemic, but it was the most fun book I ever wrote.
We will be right back.
And now back to the show.
Michael, I just want you to read, read us your new book right now.
Just to us.
I'll just sit here.
I'm going to block out the day just to have you read it.
So you emphasize the right words.
It's so mesmerized.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's so, so good, man.
I love it.
Right.
Exactly.
But as you like, you all have knows for like audiences.
As you can imagine, it's very hard to get people to want to read a book about the pandemic.
It's been interesting that you, when you deliver a message is as important as what the message
is.
And some books have really good timing and some books have really shitty time.
Well, when and when and how also, you know, what it is, and you, again, you're telling
it the story through the lens of that story of that guy that Dr. Mesher is fascinating.
What a fascinating figure, a guy who, you know, and you, you know, and you said that
he's all of this was done pre-pandemic.
So there's, so it's kind of void of any political influence, et cetera.
It's just, it is what it is.
He's just simply doing his job based on, you know, the facts of a previous pandemic.
And I think that this, this book, if I'm, if I'm right, is, is a, is another one that's
possibly headed to the, to the, to the big screen.
And so those who are not great at reading like myself might have a chance to experience
it.
Is that, is that true?
Is it, is it headed for a movie, perhaps?
So you know this better than I do, but nobody knows whether a book is going to be turned
into a movie.
Yes.
Universal bought it.
Yes.
They say they're going to make it.
Yeah.
It's got more, it's funny.
I mean, like Moneyball took seven years between the time they bought it.
The blind side, nobody wanted to make that movie, and they only got made because Fred
Smith, the chairman of federal express said, I live next door to that story of Memphis.
And I was too good a story not to get made and we're going to make that movie.
But so this, I think this is kind of as much momentum behind it as anything I've ever had,
but who knows.
Yeah.
And you've been so blessed with such great filmmakers and screenwriters that are taking
on your material.
I imagine that your fear of execution is somewhat mitigated by their talent or do you even worry
about that?
Have they done your medium and whatever they want to do in their medium with your IP is
up to them?
Or do you like to be in there and try to maintain its quality, its perspective, its themes,
or you just kind of, you sign off?
It's really funny, this relationship between the author and the movie.
It's true that, I think it's true, that on balance, movie makers would much prefer the
author to be dead.
A living author is just like a nuisance.
All they're thinking is like, this guy, the author's going to run around saying they ruin
my work of art, that kind of stuff.
And I took the view right from the beginning that I'm the least well suited to take this
thing that I made and break it and remake it into something else, that I made too many
decisions that I'm wedded to that need to be undone for a movie to be any good, that
someone as fresh as is going to have to come in and just own it.
And what's funny is, I've said that to each of the directors who've taken the projects
on.
John Lee Hancock with the blind side, Bennett Miller with Moneyball, Adam McKay with the
big short.
And in each case, they refuse to believe me.
They're like, yeah, yeah, he's saying that he doesn't want anything to do with it and
it's all mine, but I don't believe it.
So there's this dance ritual that's happened in each case where they pretend to be interested
in what I have to say and solicit my views about how to do the thing.
And I have to pretend to believe that they're interested.
And it's a total lie, like nobody's interested in anything, I have to say, and I know it.
But it's not true that you can't build a great relationship out of a lie, that I love these
people and the relationship started in a completely holy dishonest way.
So I've kind of gotten to be friends with all the people who have made the stuff without
having any influence whatsoever on how the thing got made.
And it's been, I think it really works that way because among other things, if you persuade
them that they have ownership, they also have the fear of the ownership, like it's their
fault if it sucks.
It's not my fault, the book's the book.
And I don't, you know, does it mitigate, I have had unbelievable experiences, right?
I've been unbelievably lucky in how good these movies have been.
And I have, I do have kind of zero fear that, but the worst they can do is make a bad movie.
That won't do any damage to the book, just like it'd be a bad movie.
Well, you humbly say that they may not be interested in what you have to say, but I think you're
wrong and you're certainly wrong with us and with me.
And particularly in this next subject, before I let you go, I want you to, you know, in
my intro, I talked about your unique ability to articulate complicated thoughts and subjects.
And I heard you discuss grief on Andrew Sullivan's podcast.
And I was just knocked out by how incredibly generous you were with sharing the tragedy
that you and your wife, Tabitha, have gone through with the loss of your daughter, Dixie,
your boyfriend, Ross Schultz, with all the grief that the country and the world are experiencing
through this pandemic.
I was just wondering if you could share with this podcast audience some of the insights,
the discoveries about grief that you guys have perhaps experienced that might be of some
help to them, because it was just amazing to hear.
Sure.
I'm just going to lather on a little bit about this, without any particular structure to
my thoughts.
Daughter Dixie was 19 and Ross was 20 and they were killed in automobile crash last
May.
Just like incredible kids.
And I had a couple of realizations after Dixie died, and this is going to sound awful.
But one is there was no one who could really help me in that it does what does help me
is the love of my community and love of friends.
They can help you in that sense.
But there's nobody who's gone through what you've gone through that it's such a particular
experience.
It's so particular to your relationship with the person you lost.
It's so particular to your feelings about death and life.
It's so particular to the way they died.
And I had a lot of people, a lot of people come to me telling me that, oh, I went through
the same thing and here's what you're going to feel or here's what you're going to experience.
And it was very well meaning.
And I didn't mind it, but I found it, it was never true.
One example, a lot of people, parents who lost children said, you're going to live with
the guilt forever, which is not something you should say to anybody, but it's like they
were living with guilt about something in their relationship with their child.
And Dixie and I loved each other.
I mean, it was just, she was very well-parented and she was very loved.
And there was no one to be angry at or angry and nothing to be guilty about.
So the fact that we didn't have these toxic emotions of guilt and anger meant that it
was just, in our case, it was a kind of pure sadness.
But the broader thing I realized was don't go looking for people, don't force a kind
of pretend similarity identity with other people who've gone through the same thing
because it's so particular to the circumstances.
You're going to have to kind of work through your particular journey on your own.
You don't have a map.
You've got to get from one side of the jungle to the other side of the jungle.
You have to pick your path with machete by yourself.
And I mean, people may not want to hear that, but that's how I've come to think about it.
The other thing was, you know what it's been, I mean, it is, I've never had any experience
like this in my life.
It's just, it's so disturbing and upsetting and so exhausting and disorienting, and it
took me a while to figure out why I felt so tired every day, like what is going on there?
Why am I so, you know, why can't I remember where my keys are?
And I realized that my mind was, had just presumed, and I think this is how your mind
works, it presumes a reality, like I was taking for granted a future without even thinking
about what that future was.
And now I had to rewrite that, my brain had to rewrite that reality without living Dixie
Lewis in it.
And it was busy doing that on one track, like humming in the background all the time, especially
the first three or four months.
It's doing it less and less, like the reality has started to sort of, the brain has sort
of like figured out that I'm not going to have her, and as a result, I'm finding myself
feel more myself every day.
But it was like, the cognitive thing was, I hadn't any see anybody kind of describe
this, but I thought like, that's what that's what's going on, is that I am trying to, I'm
trying to break a story and remake it, because the story just, we just lost the main character.
But it's, it's been extraordinary.
I tell you the other thing is that, I mean, this is, I don't want to bore you with a subject,
the things that the most emotional moments came when people just insisted on being there.
Like it is, you never know what, what do you say to someone whose child has just died?
It is, my instinct probably would be to hide, like I feel so sad for my friend whose child
has died.
I don't know.
There's nothing you can do to make it better.
I'm not going to show up on their doorstep and bother them.
I think my instinct, before I had this experience would have been leave them alone, because I
don't know what to say.
And there's nothing to say.
I have, I give one example, you know, the writer Dave Eggers, wonderful writer, wonderful
friend, wonderful, wonderful friend.
He lives across the bay, Dixie Dot, I got the news in the morning, an hour later, he's
sitting on my doorstep with food, he just went and bought food and he's crying.
And he says, I'm not leaving, I'm not going to buy, I'm going to sit, I'm going to sit
outside in my car and I'm not leaving.
And I would never have thought that would be something I wanted.
In retrospect, it's like, it was, it was, it was just such a gift, just to feel that
feeling of being connected, someone insisting that I'm, I can't help you, but I'm going
to, I'm going to be there anyway.
It's so interesting when you said that about like, because I think a lot of people feel
that way about like, do I impose, do I not impose, nobody, nobody knows exactly what
that person wants because that person isn't being vocal about what they want and they,
they don't know what they want.
Yeah, exactly.
They don't know what they want.
What they want is love.
That's all they want.
And they don't, they don't, even if they don't know it.
And I didn't know I, that's, that's what I wanted.
And that Dave is a gift for living and feeling and he's just got a gift for being a human
being and he taught me something in that moment.
And it was like, force it, like you love this person, let him know, right?
Let him know right there because, because the essence of loss is the feeling of the
loss of love.
And you got to insist that that emotion is going to be there for that person.
And it still, it still moves me just thinking about like that.
It's like a heroic act.
Not an easy thing to do.
It's not what you want to do.
Go sit on someone's front porch whose child has just been killed in the car crash, but
you go do it.
That I think I'm, I hope that I remember it for the rest of my life.
I, Michael, that, that's, that's the most well articulated description of, of somebody's
experience with loss that I've, I think I've ever heard and, and I don't look it, but I'm
51.
So I've been around for a long time.
I honestly, that, that was incredible, man.
It was really, really beautiful.
What a really beautiful.
Yeah.
And so I'll, I'll never, ever forget that story actually.
Yeah.
It's incredible.
It's inspiring.
Yeah.
And, and, you know, we and, and, and our listeners are not as, as fortunate as, as, as Dave and
that we don't, we're not as close to you, but, but know that we would, we would like
to be and we, we, we think about you and we are fans of yours.
I'm sure any and all of us that heard about the tragedy immediately thought about you,
your family, your wife, your other kids, and would hope that you would somehow in some
miracle, get through it, come through the other side or take with it everything you
possibly could to carry on Dixie and, and become an even stronger family and, and some
odd way that probably only somebody like you and Tabitha could.
So I was just so obviously thrilled to hear you say that, yes, you would come talk to
us because we hadn't talked for since our that, that, that one discussion and, and I'm
just so thrilled that you are back out talking with everyone and I'm sure writing again and
thinking again and, and don't go keep coming because we're all incredible fans of yours
and, and are thinking about you and your family and wishing you guys the best.
Yeah.
And what a, what a treat, what a, what a pleasure to meet you and sending you and your family
so much love from us.
And thank you so much.
Incredible having you.
Thank you so much.
Thanks, pal.
Thank you.
All right.
Our best to you and your family and patiently awaiting your next, your next country.
Yeah, come on.
Can we get advanced copies?
Is that possible?
Cause I always have to.
An audio for Jason.
Oh yeah.
An audio for Jason.
Jason is an audio.
Yeah.
I'll need you to read it to me.
Thank you so much.
Thank you, pal.
I'm going to meet you and thank you for all of that.
Beautiful.
Take care.
Bye.
See ya.
Bye, pal.
Bye, bud.
Well, that's a, that's the first time my, my eyes leaked on this podcast.
Yeah.
What a, what a, what a, what a man that was, I mean, that's an incredible, you know, it's
such a relatable thing.
I think so many people don't know what to do when there is loss or tragedy.
They just don't know because so you end up just doing what you believe is right.
And it sounds like Dave Eggers is, it just was a perfect kind of reaction.
Yeah.
And it's funny.
It's like that, the thing you were saying about people saying you're going to have this
and you're going to have that really, it occurred to me in the moment that it probably
is so much more about that person and what they're feeling than it has nothing to do
with him.
That's right.
It's all about their experience.
That's right.
And I'm not blaming them saying that that's how they're, they're continuing to, you know,
evolve and move through that loss.
And by doing that, they say, you're going to do this and you're going to do that.
And, you know, when you meet those people in life, the people do it all the time when
they sort of give you advice, but they'll tell you things like, and you're going to,
this is going to happen.
You're thinking, yeah, for you.
Yeah.
Well, what an incredibly amazing and thoughtful and just, you know, connected guy and how
amazing was it for him to share that with us?
That was pretty special.
I have so much respect for that guy and, and he takes what he knows to do so well, which
is form a thought and articulate it in a way that people can digest it and something is
as complex as all of these emotions and challenges that he and his family are going through to
share all that with us in the way that he did.
That was pretty generous.
The only thing for me today, I guess that I feel particularly bad about is the fact
that I, I guess I flashed everybody and you guys all got to, to peak my unit.
Jason, Jason, I feel like the last time you saw my privates was when we were on that camping
trip and I woke up about this for a second.
You're the, the shorts thing, the legs and, you know, okay, let's get, okay, let's take
a look.
How are you standing up now, everybody?
Yeah, that's okay.
Sit back down, please.
They're not that bad.
Thank you.
Just go ahead.
Are they not that short?
No, you got good legs.
You got to show off the assets.
I've got great.
He does have good legs.
Thank you.
Yeah.
Thank you.
I've been, I've been lucky.
My mom said that she married my dad because he had good legs.
Excellent.
You know, I think I have noticed that your dad does.
He's a nice slender, tall man, right?
Very slender.
Yeah.
I'm better in wind, you know.
High wind.
I've got the shorter legs.
They're still not bad in, in, in, in short pants.
Your legs, I'm trying to think, I'm trying to think of your legs too.
So, so listener, if you, if you, if you're wearing pants now, so basically everybody
except Will, if you look down, your, your, your pants, where they hit your shins, it's
kind of on the outside of your shins, not on the inside, it's on the outside.
I've noticed that I've lost all the hair.
I do too.
My hands have been rubbing against my leg.
I, I have all kinds of hair on the inside of my shin, like from my knee to my ankle
on the inside of both legs, but on the outside, nothing.
Like I've, like I've shaved because I'm a, I'm a bike rider or something.
You guys are getting old.
That's what, oh, that's what happens.
You see that thing with old men where they've got those like shiny legs and you're like,
did that guy shave his legs?
No.
No.
He just used a lot of moisturizer.
You know, I was always wondering that.
Hey, is this, are these shorts too high or anything?
Oh no.
Yeah.
Uh-oh.
Listener, Sean has his pants pulled up just underneath his breasts.
Yeah.
But I've been noticing as I get older, you know, I can go to the gym, I work out and
do all this stuff, but I'm still able to maintain pretty good muscle on my bicep.
Bicep.
Smart.
What?
Smart.
What?
Smart.
What?
What?
What?
What?
What?
What?
What?
What?
What?
What?
What?
What?
What?
SmartList is 100% organic and artisanly handcrafted by Rob ARMJERV, Bennett Barbicow and Michael
Granteri.
SmartList.
Our next episode will be out in a week wherever you listen to podcasts or you can listen to
it right now early on Amazon music or early and add free by subscribing to Wondryclass
in Apple Podcasts or the Wondry App.
Yep.