The Daily Stoic - Your Worldview Is Only as Wide as Your Curiosity | Chet Garner
Episode Date: July 9, 2025You can’t expand your perspective if you never step out of your bubble. In today’s episode, Ryan sits down with Chet Garner, host of The Daytripper, to explore how traveling, even just on...e town over, can completely change the way you see the world. They talk about why you don’t need to leave the country (or even your own state) to gain a new perspective, how the Stoics thought about travel in the ancient world, and how to use everyday adventures to raise more curious, open-minded kids.Chet Garner is the creator, producer, and host of "The Daytripper", an 11-time Emmy-Award winning travel show airing on PBS stations across the country.You can check out Chet’s show The Daytripper on PBS and his videos on YouTube @TheDaytripperTV . Follow Chet on Instagram @ChetTripper and see more at thedaytripper.com📚 Books Mentioned: Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole Moviegoer by Walker Percy In a Sunburned Country by Bill Bryson 📖 Preorder the final book in Ryan Holiday's The Stoic Virtues Series: "Wisdom Takes Work": https://store.dailystoic.com/pages/wisdom-takes-work🎙️ Follow The Daily Stoic Podcast on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dailystoicpodcast🎥 Watch top moments from The Daily Stoic Podcast on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@dailystoicpodcast✉️ Want Stoic wisdom delivered to your inbox daily? Sign up for the FREE Daily Stoic email at https://dailystoic.com/dailyemail🏛 Get Stoic inspired books, medallions, and prints to remember these lessons at the Daily Stoic Store: https://store.dailystoic.com/📱 Follow us: Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok, and FacebookSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hey, it's Ryan. Welcome to another episode of the Daily Stoic Podcast.
We were out in Hutto, which is a town about 45, 50 minutes from Bastrop last weekend.
I actually got this like amazing sandwich.
It was incredible.
Like the bread was made of egg,
like they put in a waffle iron.
Oh, it was so good.
I sent a picture to today's guest and I said,
I am in huddle because of you.
This is all your fault.
And I was talking to Chet Garner.
Chet Garner is, if you live in Texas,
he's the host of this show called The Day Tripper,
which is this Emmy award-winning travel show that started on PBS.
And they just do these day trips all around Texas.
And I started watching it when I first moved here
because I love swimming holes.
And I saw this episode about this place called Lulling
that we were thinking about going,
that had this sort of old mill that you could jump in
the swim, you could jump in now the lake that was associated
with it or the pond that was associated with it.
I've been a fan for years.
And then we have this thing with our kids
where we try to limit screen time like everyone else.
But when we watch stuff, we want it to be about real life.
Like if we're going somewhere
or we're wanting to learn about something,
how do we watch stuff that opens up our minds?
And then we go do that stuff in real life.
So we have taken so many trips because of Chet's videos,
which you can find on YouTube at The Day Tripper TV.
And now actually my wife's out of town this week,
we're going back to Hutto
because there's this big hippo statue
that my kids wanna climb on again,
and they wanna get pie from this restaurant.
I wasn't called the Texan Cafe, something like that.
They got a bunch of pie when we were there last time,
and we're gonna get it again.
So this is what my life is.
I try to find places that I want to go and we travel there.
And I like being able to do it in the car and not having to get in an airplane.
That's not really what today's episode is about.
Today's episode is about travel, experiences, understanding the world by hitting the road,
which I actually have a chapter about
in the new book, Wisdom Takes Work.
That's the fourth in the Cardinal Virtue Series.
Like you gotta travel.
If you don't travel, if you haven't seen the world,
you are missing out.
You do not know all the things
that it is possible for you to know.
By the way, you can pre-order Wisdom Takes Work
at dailystoic.com slash pre-order.
There's a bunch of awesome pre-order bonuses,
but full circle, which we talk about
at the beginning of this episode.
One of the first episodes of the Day Tripper
happened in the Daily Stoic Studio
when it was John's Barbershop.
And we talk about that at the beginning of the episode,
which is pretty cool.
Chet has a similar life to me.
He owns a couple of buildings
in one of the prettiest little towns in central Texas.
Georgetown has probably got the prettiest little square,
no offense to Bastrop.
Bastrop has one of the best main streets,
but Georgetown has one of the best town squares.
And so that's the other place my kids wanna go.
They wanna go out to Georgetown
because there's another toy store that they like,
and there's a swimming hole they like there too.
So I may be in Hutto and Georgetown this weekend.
We'll see how much energy we end up having,
but this is all Chet's fault.
And I think you'll get hooked on his stuff,
even if you don't live in Texas.
We nerd out about the philosophy of travel.
We talk a lot about Herodotus as well,
who's the main character in the Hit the Road chapter
in Wisdom Takes Work.
So you can follow Chad on Instagram at Chet Tripper.
You can go to thedaytripper.com,
which they break down all the episodes.
They have links to all the different places.
And then of course, follow him on YouTube
at thedaytripper.tv.
You can catch it on PBS stations, wherever you are.
Check out his stuff and hit the road.
Pre-order wisdom takes work at dailystoke.com slash wisdom.
I don't know if you watch the day tripper
or if someone on your team watches the day tripper
or something, okay, cool.
I've watched hundreds of episodes of the day tripper.
Shut up.
Yeah.
I'll tell you this.
I know that you have been in this building before. That's how much day tripper. Shut up. Yeah. I'll tell you this. I know that you have been in this building before.
That's how much day tripper I've watched.
When we walked in,
I thought this was still John's hair design.
I know.
And I was like, oh my gosh, wait, no,
it's a secret podcast studio,
which maybe I shouldn't say that on the part.
No, no, you can say it.
No, we've watched many episodes of the day tripper,
I've lived here a long time.
And then it wasn't until recently,
we were like, has he ever been to Bastrop?
And we looked and we're watching this episode
and you come in and then you walk into John's Barbershop.
And I was like, how did we not know this?
This is crazy.
You got like a shave.
Probably in this, I don't know.
It might've been on the other side of this wall.
I don't remember exactly.
I've got the photos so we can match them up
exactly to where I was.
And we did that whole, like,
we tend to jump on pop culture references
a little too quickly,
but like I was getting a straight razor shave
and it was about the time like Sweeney Todd was real big.
And we told John that like,
he was gonna serve me meat pies as a Sweeney Todd reference.
And he was like, what is that?
I was like, it's the only musical movie about a barber
and you're a barber and you haven't watched it.
He was like, oh, whatever.
Related to that, that we sometimes have a hot dog vendor
down the street.
And I took him a copy of a Confederacy of Dunces one time.
I don't know.
Yeah, I've read it.
Yeah, yeah.
And I was really excited and he was kind of like, eh.
And then I realized this might be insulting.
Like, it was the only book I knew about a hot dog vendor. And then I was like, eh. And then I realized this might be insulting. Like, it was the only book I knew about a hot dog vendor.
And then I was like, oh wait, the guy's like a clown.
And he's not a good, you know?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Some references don't land.
So maybe the barber's just offended by the Sweeney Todd
reference.
I think it might've even been that first,
it was the Bastrop episode.
We made a Sweeney Todd reference.
Then we made a There Will Be Blood reference
with the I Drink Your Milkshake.
And then it's like all of these,
my kids have no idea what these things are.
They haven't aged well.
I know it was weird that he didn't tell you
because when I bought this place,
they told me this was the, at the time,
the oldest continually operating barbershop in tech.
Like this building had always been a barbershop.
Really?
So he was like, yeah, he had a picture of like
it being a barbershop in the 1800s.
Oh, that's cool.
And then I remember, so two funny things
when we got the place is that when we bought it,
the, we promised the people we were buying from,
I think that's why they sold it to us,
that we would let John stay and keep doing it
as long as it worked. Sure, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And so I came in and I was like,
hey John, we're chatting a bit.
And he goes, I go, so have you been here a long time?
He's like, yeah, I did all these renovations myself.
And I go, oh, really?
When was that?
And he was saying it like it was like added value.
Like it was like, I just got a deal.
Cause he was throwing it up for you.
And he was like, oh, you know,
like when I got back from the war, like 69, and I go,
I don't know if you can call them renovations.
50 years after they were done.
Hey, it's all relative, man, you know?
It's all relative.
And so yeah, he'd been here a long time.
And before we bought it, he'd cut my hair a couple of times.
When I was in town, I'd sometimes have him cut my hair
and he did okay job, I guess.
Then one day I'm walking by and I see him read it,
cause he was done a long time.
He was reading a magazine with a magnifying glass,
like at the front.
And I was like, I think I called my wife.
I was like, I don't think I'm going to get my hair cut
anymore and I'm not sure how much longer John's gonna.
Yeah, be able to do this.
Cause he said like, I think I got a couple more years.
I just want to do it.
And then when I'm done, you know,
you can do whatever you want with it.
And it was not long after.
Well, I remember, so I had to,
I was going to get a shave at an old fashioned barber shop
on the Bastrop episode.
And so I had to like let my scruff grow out
so that I could do it.
And I had to plan, you know, you film stuff out of order,
like, okay, what am I going to have post shave, before shave and how it all works? And John gave me what plan, you know, you film stuff out of order, like, okay, what am I gonna have post-shave, before shave,
and how it all works?
And John gave me what is, goes down,
the worst shave I've ever had in my life,
because he was nervous, the cameras were on,
I mean, he's a small town barber, his hand,
and I was like, the straight razor,
his hand was shaking the whole time.
I remember we just played it off, we were super nice,
and I left, I was like, we had to go to Walgreens
to buy a razor and shaving cream.
And I think I shaved in the Maxine's bathroom
across the street.
Cause I'm like, I can't do this.
I look like a mangy dog.
It was all, I was like, but I don't blame him.
I mean, he did it.
Of course, you don't have practice shaving on camera.
Yes, the sweetest guy.
And how many people come in
and get straight razor shaves anymore?
He's like, what?
He had-
It's like the diner lobster sketch on SNL.
Like, you want the lobster?
The lobster?
Yes, I love it.
Oh yeah, and he comes up,
like he's singing a sad song, like, oh no.
You're not supposed to order that.
Yeah, don't order the lobster.
That's true.
But you know, there's times where we're out on the road
and I'm like, this is the most interesting thing
you've got on your menu.
And they're like, yeah, please don't order that.
No one wants to.
Like, please don't.
Cause no one gets it, does it.
But like, look, it's creative or whatever.
And like, yeah.
It's like you go to it whenever you are at a restaurant
and it's got like the three ring, like the bound menu.
Oh, like the Cheesecake Factory.
Yeah, you're like, this should not be, you can't be doing all these things well.
This is too many options. I don't need spaghetti for this Jewish town.
Mexican food and Italian food.
Yeah, that's exactly right. That's exactly right. We did go to one place. I was one of the
funniest spots. Like it was a taco shop and a fresh bait store for fishing
and a U-Haul vendor rental.
It was a fourth business stone and I can't remember.
I'm like, I love this place.
No, I've seen many, many episodes of,
I think the first daydripper episode I saw was Lolling.
And that's early stuff, right?
Yeah, I think I saw it when it was, I mean, before,
not before YouTube, but I saw it when I was on TV. That's the first couple of times I saw it when it was, I mean, before, not before YouTube, but I saw it when I was on TV.
That's the first couple of times I saw it.
Ancient TV, yeah, yeah, I feel that way now.
Yeah, well, and now it's this whole media thing,
which is cool.
So I thought that was interesting too,
but no, I've seen many, many episodes of the year.
And like, we have young kids,
so like all they wanna do is be on their screens.
All they wanna do is watch TV.
Yeah, yeah, we fight against that too.
And so we kind of found like,
hey, if we watch stuff about the real world,
then we can, first off that's better.
Just, you know what?
It's like, if you're watching a documentary,
I don't feel as guilty myself.
If I'm binge watching something on Netflix,
I'm watching a documentary.
I'm like, hey, this isn't just raw entertainment.
But we found if we make our kids watch stuff
about places in the real world,
then they're like, I wanna go there.
Yeah, yeah, that's awesome.
That's awesome.
So that's kind of what you mean.
Like, I mean, from the beginning of making the show,
I was like, man, if people watch my show
and then they just stay on the couch and flip the channel,
like I kind of failed.
Yes.
I want to make a show that inspires people to get off,
get in their car and go have real life interactions.
Totally.
Which seems crazy now.
Well, and it's just, you know, it's like, look,
if we're watching some exotic YouTube channel
about people backpacking in Europe,
there's a bunch of logistics that are required,
you know, to do it.
Exactly.
This is like, oh, we're watching it on a Saturday morning.
Let's go now. Yeah.
And so it's actually been nice.
I would encourage people,
obviously watching your stuff is awesome,
but I'm sure there are equivalents wherever they live.
It's been great.
Cause it's like, oh, hey, here's an off the shelf itinerary
for, where did we go a couple of weeks ago?
Kyle.
Because we watched the thing about Kyle.
For me it was like, okay.
Did you have pie?
Did you go get some pie?
We got the pie and then we shot zombies. where did we go a couple of weeks ago? Kyle, because we watched the thing about Kyle. For me, it was like, okay, here's the thing. Did you have pie? Did you go get some pie?
We got the pie, and then we shot zombies in the-
Yeah, the rage room place, yeah.
Like they didn't know that was a thing.
And so they were like, I gotta try that thing.
So we did that.
It's amazing when you create something
that actually hits and inspires people to go.
So what you're telling me is super encouraging.
So thank you.
No, no, it's been awesome.
I'll get notes from places and they're like,
oh man, I could tell when they walked in
that they were day trappers,
because they were like, looked at the menu,
knew exactly what they wanted.
And then other people, this is the,
maybe it gets a little creepy.
They're like, oh, Chet's set on this wall.
Can we have that table so we can sit right there?
I'm like, that's so strange, but.
Well, speaking of New Orleans,
have you ever read Walker Percy?
Uh-uh, no, I haven't.
He wrote this book called The Movie Goer.
It's like one of the famous novels about New Orleans,
but he talks about that.
He calls it certification.
So he's in this movie theater watching this movie.
This is a scene in the novel.
I don't know if it's real,
but he's in this movie theater watching it.
And they drive by the movie theater.
Okay.
In the movie that he's in the theater, right?
Like it's a movie in New Orleans.
And he's like, it's this rapturous experience.
Anytime your TV life intersects with your real life,
suddenly it becomes significant.
Inception, I mean, right?
You're going into different levels of it.
And I think in a social media digital world,
people are really interested in,
because they are craving like experiences.
They're like, well, I watched that.
I want to go see that thing that I watched.
I want to go touch that.
And so it's sort of, that term has become a thing
to refer to like, you can take a Seinfeld tour
in New York city and visit all, you know,
what are people chasing?
It's not real.
I mean, you just did this in your Plano episode.
Yeah, we went to the Dallas, Dallas mansion.
Right, right.
It's like, why would anyone do that?
But people are interested in seeing,
like they could go to Lyndon Johnson's house,
they could go to the out, they could go to all these,
but there's something about having seen it so many times
that people wanna go see the places where,
there were basically not much more
than establishing shots in television shows.
100%.
It's not like they filmed the show in that house.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it was exteriors and the pool.
Yeah, right.
But like I'm guilty of it too.
I've got my favorite movies and like I've got,
I mean, in the beginning I was obsessing about like,
oh, oh, this movie was filmed in this spot.
Like, well, there's a gas station barbecue joint
right outside of Bastrop where Texas chainsaw massacre.
And then people flock to that.
I guess it's just a way to interact with, you know,
just these things that seem fiction and then like,
oh my gosh, they're real.
I think what it does is it makes your real life
seem more like the glamor.
It makes the ordinary not ordinary.
Like you could go to any other gas station
that serves barbecue.
Sure.
But that one has been on TV, so it feels special.
And then you can take a picture of it and post that.
So it becomes extra.
So it's like the feedback loop of like,
they filmed something here.
So I went there in person
and then I filmed something there.
Wow.
Now I don't hate my life then I filmed something there. Wow!
Now I don't hate my life so much.
So much.
Well, like, I mean, you're kind of getting
into the genesis of the show.
The Day Tripper was a way to glamorize small towns
to make travel accessible for people.
So, you know, cause I got to travel Europe
and stuff like that.
I was like, these towns are cool,
but like what's mostly cool about it is the fact
that there's beautiful pictures of them in the travel guides.
And you, you know, and you, you've been told
that you got to see these places before you die.
I can take similar beautiful pictures of downtown Bastrop
and romanticize it in a way that it makes the ordinary
special so that people get out and come see that, you know?
It's certifying, so we use the word,
it's certifying it as visitable.
And life is a lot of marketing is that, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
They're like, this is the best of this,
even though that's something you pay for.
Or like, you know, this was seen on this show.
Like if you were at a comedy club,
you could just wait three seconds
to see if you find this person funny or not,
but you wanna hear that they were featured on X, Y, or Z.
Oh, totally.
It's all about setting the context
with which you're about to consume this thing.
100%, 100%.
In my world, in the echo chamber I live in, right,
one of the biggest things that can possibly happen
for a restaurant barbecue joint is to be named
on the Texas monthly top 50.
Yes.
Because that's the certification that this is
amongst all the barbecue, the hundreds, maybe thousands,
this is the ones that are worthy.
I mean, the Michelin stars came out.
That was a big deal too, right?
Yeah, and the Michelin star guide is propaganda
from a tire company.
Yeah.
But after a long enough time, it becomes significant.
Sure.
Exactly.
Exactly.
I mean, I think we're getting into a world now too,
where curation is one of the biggest things that matters.
I mean, you do such a good job.
Like the bookstore is super curated.
You've said of all the ancient philosophers,
here's the ones you should read.
Yes.
And you've got the credibility.
And so what I do is just that in the small town,
Texas travel world, is curating it,
taking this giant world of knowledge
and then distilling it down and saying,
hey, these are worthy of your attention.
Yeah.
It's funny that I got that stamp though.
I mean, I wasn't setting out for it.
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Well, so where our worlds maybe, I thought I was trying to think of a way our worlds kind of intersected. Do you know who Herodotus was?
The name, man.
So he's the first traveler.
Basically, the guy that invents travel literature is also the guy that invents the concept of history.
So around like the fourth, fifth century, this guy decides to travel.
He sort of, there's basically all these wars
and things going on, so he's kind of,
he's basically exiled and he's like,
I'm gonna travel and I'm gonna talk about it.
And no one had ever done that before.
And he decides not just to write about what he sees,
but to like ask the people about why they do what they do
and where they come from.
And so he sort of, he writes this book called
The Histories, which is like our story
of the 300 Spartans, right?
That comes from him because he talks a lot
about the clash between the East and West
because he's traveling around.
So this one guy, he's just this very curious traveler
just decides to head around.
He's like the first person to travel for no reason.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Cause he wasn't thinking,
oh, I'm capturing these stories
to live as a narrative for the future.
You think he was just indulging himself?
I think more directly, he wasn't like,
I have to get over here to buy spices
or I have to travel over here
because the army is going over.
He was like the first person to just-
I would wander around.
Wander around and record what I see.
And so he's known as the father of history,
but he's really also the father of travel journalism
in any form.
Oh my gosh, I need to study this guy.
It's fascinating.
I know, I think I know of the tale through the 300 story
of the Spartans and then-
And a bunch of the stories we know are all from him.
That makes sense.
Obviously that's fascinating.
Yeah.
And he's just, he's just kind of like, well,
why do you do this?
The Greek word was, I think, nomos.
He was like, what are the norms?
Like, why do you guys over here do this?
And over here we do this.
And he, like, I mean, obviously this is a time of immense sort of,
the whole idea of cosmopolitanism doesn't exist.
So it's like over there, they're barbarians
and over here we're civilized.
And he kind of is like, well, what?
You know, like, he's interested actually.
What a fascinating thing,
like to be curious about another culture.
Yeah.
I mean, surely maybe that existed.
There are a lot of people I've encountered in life
who just aren't that curious about how the world is out there. No. about another culture. I mean, surely maybe that existed. There are a lot of people I've encountered in life
who just aren't that curious
about how the world is out there.
No.
You know, I'm infinitely curious about little towns,
little things, you are as well,
but there's a lot of people in that time,
I'm sure it was the pervasive mindset.
Like I don't care what the barbarians are doing.
They're barbarians.
Surely they don't have anything to offer me.
Would you know why they're called barbarians?
A barbarian was basically anyone who didn't speak Greek.
Oh, okay.
Anyone beyond the wall.
It's basically referring to the Persians
because when they talked, it sounded like gibberish.
And the gibberish in Greek sounded like bar, bar, bar, bar.
That's barbarian.
Oh, that's funny.
Like just the childlike simplicity, that's barbarian. Oh, that's funny. Like just this, the childlike simplicity
that that is based on.
And then he goes, well, I wonder what they're saying.
So like he actually went and he asked.
Okay, yeah.
And we get all these myths and stories.
Some of them are obviously preposterous
and he's pretty credulous about them,
but he's just like the first guy that was like realizing
like, oh, the Egyptians
have a history and the Persians have a history
and the Ionians have, he just goes around
and he cobbles together these histories.
Oh, that's fascinating.
Okay, I gotta read some of this stuff.
Yeah, his-
There's some of the, well, some of the best stuff,
I mean, this is kind of on a smaller scale.
I've found old travelogue books
from like the 1940s traveling Texas or before the 1920s.
Like people who just kind of wandered around
and made notes of like the times
when our town squares weren't like renovated,
they were active and alive.
And there were giant gaps between towns.
And of course you couldn't drive very fast.
You were in a model seat.
That's why they were separate towns.
You know, yeah.
So those things are fascinated
that that's a thread throughout history
of people just being curious of,
I wonder how they live over there.
Well, and realize that one of the big things
that kind of blew my mind was,
and maybe some people it's basic,
or some people it sounds like,
like a galaxy brain nonsense,
but realizing like they didn't live in the past.
They lived in the future.
Like they lived in the most,
any era was the most advanced era
in the history of the world.
This is the golden age.
Look at all we have.
Yeah.
And so it didn't feel like,
they didn't believe they lived in antiquity.
They believed they lived in right now.
They're here and now.
One of the worst rides at Disney
and also one of the best rides was,
it was like a rotating,
it was like the world of tomorrow or something,
where you got Walt Disney in different eras.
And he's explaining to you
why this is the greatest era in time.
Yeah.
You know, and they all look kind of miserable to us,
but it helps you understand his perspective.
You're absolutely right.
Or like one of the, at Disney World,
there's like the people mover as a ride.
Like basically like an escalator as a ride.
Oh yeah.
You know, or like the thing at the airport you stand on,
it just takes you around.
They were like, this is the view.
This is it, look.
We're not moving our legs.
50 years later, you're like,
I took one of those in my hotel to get to the park.
You know? That's funny.
Yes. We were looking back at old footage
and like, so I've been doing what I do for 15 years.
One of our, some of our early episodes were like Bastrop,
but also downtown Austin, South Austin.
We, and it occurred to me like,
oh, dang, I'm making a historic documentary.
Yes.
I was like, what?
You know, but like it's true because in a couple of decades,
this is capturing an era.
It's gonna be looking back like Austin in the 60s
or something.
For some people, what you captured in a particular episode
is Austin before it sucked.
Like before it became what it is now.
It was the perfect time.
Although if I watch it or some person
who's just moved here watches it, they go,
oh, it wasn't good.
Like none of the good stuff had happened yet.
So there's something kind of funny about watching that
where you go, oh, this is all just this,
we're trying to take a moment and create it
as a fixed thing when in fact,
it's just kind of always been in flux.
I got to Austin in 99 when I came to go to UT.
And at that point we were all saying,
oh man, Austin sucks now.
You should have seen it a couple of decades ago.
Or like maybe less than a decade
when Linklater made Slacker,
the film just kind of wandering around Austin.
But then they were all talking about the glory days
of the Armadillo World headquarters.
And so Austin is always,
you should have been here yesterday.
But that's literally every, they're also the myopia,
that's I think what travel does,
is everyone says that about every city in the entire world.
Yeah, yeah, that's true.
Everyone thinks like, you know, Philadelphia was better,
Philadelphia was better 200 years ago.
Yeah.
You know, like there's no-
You're like Rome now, man, you should have seen it.
Yeah, because everything is constantly being made
and remade and changing.
Yeah, that's true.
That's true.
What better illustration than our kids?
Yeah, of course.
My gosh.
Constantly having to appreciate,
well, this is what I've got now,
and not to get too nostalgic about what I had then,
because it was just as hard,
and I was as nostalgic then about what I had before, and not was just as hard and I was this nostalgic then about what I had before
and not also getting trapped in the forward looking.
Well, I can't wait till this happens.
That's gonna be the best time.
Yeah, you had this experience as a parent
where you're like, I can't wait till they can watch
themselves, can't wait till they can walk, all this stuff.
And then you get to those moments and all you think about
is how you wish, oh man, remember when we could just
put them down, we didn't have to worry about them
going anywhere, you know?
And then you're like, where's my 16 year old?
They know it's curfew, you know, like it happens like that.
That's where we are right now.
Yeah.
We just got a driver.
And I thought, and driving is the most terrifying,
but also it's the worst and also the best, you know,
because you've got him on a snow day,
like, okay, you know, like, hey buddy, be careful.
But then also like, he could drive himself to practice.
It's amazing, it's amazing.
We've got a big family too.
So, but you know, I just constantly trying to live
in the present and say, these are the good old days.
Yes, right.
One of the things I've tried to realize as a parent
is what I'm rushing towards is the end.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Big level, you're rushing towards death.
That's what we're doing.
Right, but you're also just rushing towards a thing
you will 100% guarantee miss.
Yeah, yeah, that's right.
It hit me the other day, I'm not just gonna miss this,
oh yeah, when my kids are old and moved out,
I'm gonna miss the noise and the mess.
But it's like when my wife and I go for a date,
the thing we desperately needed,
the first thing we're like, I miss the kids.
Like you're gonna miss it like six hours from now.
Immediately, immediately.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I mean, I'm not looking forward to the kids moving out.
I love it, you know, but also like it's exhausting
and there's the schedules are a nightmare,
but you know, constantly having to remind myself like,
there'll be a place for the future,
there was a place for the past,
I've got to get like, this is where I'm at right now.
Well, it's so exciting this idea
that we never step in the same river twice.
And I think it's something interesting that like,
they say in traveling, like you can't go home again,
because you're not the same person
and the place you're coming home to is not the same.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And there's something about, I imagine it for you,
you've been going to these places for a decade and a half,
the whole life in some cases.
And like, you've been in this building before,
but it's different.
Also, you're different.
Also, the world is different.
And so there is this kind of mystical, miraculous thing
about how it's always changing
and you're always changing and it's never the same.
Yeah, I think travel does that.
I mean, it can literally be said travel changes you
and it doesn't have to be on a grand scale.
Yes.
It doesn't have to be that backpacking trip
to Europe for a month, you know.
Just going out and taking a day trip to Fredericksburg,
wherever, Bastrop here.
There's just so much it does as far as broadening our eyes into the fact
that there's real humans that live in different places
and they're kind and they make great food
and if I treat them kind, they treat me kind.
And then also like the different cultures.
I mean, when I was in college, you could go to Fredericksburg
and like literally hear German spoken on the street.
And they're like, these people, like, they're not tourists.
They actually legitimately live here.
And that blew my mind
because I was putting so much energy
into going to Germany to hear people talk German
when it was just right there.
And so not enough can be said about
how much travel shapes our minds
and broadens our worldview.
And then there's something too,
I think about going somewhere and going like,
oh, they live in their own world here
and are dealing with their own shit here.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like in his book on Australia,
Bill Bryson talks about reading the newspaper
in a country you're not from.
Okay, yeah.
And you're like, oh, this is weird.
Like they have their own scandals,
their own things that they're worried about.
And then also though, I think one of the benefits
slash curses of being an American,
is they're also talking about America from a distance?
Because you can't actually,
like I was in Austria for a month this summer
and you're just like, on the one hand,
it made some of this craziness here seem clearer to me.
Cause you're like, oh, this is what a country
who's not Democrat or Republican
just thinks about the big guy.
Yeah, yeah, yep, yep.
And then on the other hand, you're like,
oh, by not following it day to day,
some of this stuff isn't of global significance.
It's just stupid or weird or whatever.
Yeah, we're petty.
Yeah, or how is Big Brother doing over there
because it's gonna influence how life is here.
But also when they get into the drama
and the soap opera of it, you're just like,
oh my gosh, we seem so petty.
Like I was in Lockhart this weekend
and I picked up like the little Lockhart newspaper.
And I was like, these are what the high school kids are doing.
And you're like, oh yeah, they only care about,
this thing only cares about this thing.
Yes.
And there's something freeing and clarifying about that.
Uh-huh.
You know? Uh-huh. Uh-huh.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, they have, I mean,
the world outside doesn't concern them.
I still, Ryan, meet people who haven't left their county.
So, you know, Texas has 254 counties.
I'll be in the panhandle
and legitimately talking to someone
and they'll be super interesting, you know?
And just whatever, slice of life, they're kind,
they've got stories.
And then I'll start talking about the beach
and then they've never gone to the beach.
I know, isn't that crazy?
And like, or the Capitol,
they went as a high school kid to the Capitol.
And that was it.
Yes.
You know, and they've been up there
doing their ranch thing.
Yeah.
Fascinating.
Yeah, I'll never forget it.
I was dragging my wife to Vicksburg.
I wanted to see the Civil War battlefield.
Okay, yeah.
And we spent the night in Natchez.
And we're in Natchez in this diner
and the waitress goes, where are you guys from?
And we were saying, and we're like,
we're going to Vicksburg.
She's like, oh, I've always wanted to go.
And I go, it's 25 minutes from here.
It's, you know, what do you mean?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And like, it's a free park.
You know what, it's not like,
hey, I've always wanted to go to Disneyland
or I've always wanted to eat at the French Laundry
where there's some like finance.
You probably drove as far to get to your job here today.
You don't live across the street.
You drove 20 minutes to get here.
Right.
You didn't, but you've never driven 25 minutes
to just see this thing of national global significance.
You know, this is where you start to get sort of like,
you know, this is where you start to get sort of like,
you know, your superiority complex.
Like it's better to have gone and seen these things.
Is it really?
I mean, I think, I think for me personally, yes,
I needed to see these things.
I needed to have those experiences,
but there's people out there
with a totally different mindset that they,
they're just as content, maybe more content than we are.
Well, I think if you're a curious person,
you do stuff like that.
And then also you're curious about the people
who don't do that stuff.
You know, like, tell me why.
So you've just never, you've never been on an airplane?
And they're like, yeah, just never.
Tell me all about this.
Right, right.
Crazy.
Gosh, and that, it stuck in my head even more
than when you look back upon the world wars
and you were plucking these people
who had never left their county out,
shipping them to Europe to fight a battle against forces
that hadn't really been explained that much to them.
It's just good guys versus bad guys.
Sure, possibly.
Imagine you're some kid in Texas,
you get drafted in World War II,
you get sent to fight fascism and bigotry and prejudice,
but that's what your hometown does.
Yeah, that's right.
And so the disruption and the roiling,
also you're a black kid from Texas, you get sent to there,
you stop in London first,
and you're allowed to go in bars and restaurants.
Yeah. So just the kind of passions that get unleashed
and what that does is it changes everyone.
Yeah, you can never go home again after that.
Exactly.
That's without a doubt.
On both sides, like on the one hand,
you got a taste of freedom, on the other,
you got exposed to your hypocrisy.
And now when you get home, you have to choose
to either double down on said hypocrisy
or you're deeply unsettled by it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Now you're fighting your own revolutions over here
because these ideas are swirling
and you can't live with the inconsistencies.
Yeah, that's cool.
That's fun.
And I mean, the whole point of segregation was,
if we keep the people separate,
they can't have that discomfort and question how it is.
Like that's, it's a flawed premise,
but then the system is about buttressing
that flawed premise, right?
It allows it to perpetuate because you're not actually
face to face with- We don't wanna deal
with the turmoil, we'll keep them separate,
we'll keep these people isolated, they won't talk,
and this will be best for everybody.
Which never works in the long run, ever.
That's why banning books and things like that's always
a bad idea, like these ideas are gonna come to a head.
They're either gonna sort of work their way through
or they're gonna explode into revolution, right?
That kind of thing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, that's one of the interesting things
Hirad has talked about is, here's about kind of thing. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, that's one of the interesting things Herodotus talks about is he hears about this practice
in like India where they eat their dead.
And he's telling someone about it
and they're like disgusted.
And so he brings them over and he goes,
okay, so what do you guys do?
And they're like, well, when our ancestors died,
we cut off a little piece of them,
we cook and we eat it and then we have it with them.
Yeah, we have a piece of them in us.
Yeah. And the Greeks are a piece of them in us.
And the Greeks are like, this is disgusting.
Your barbarians are horrible.
And then he's like, okay, well, what do the Greeks do?
And they're like, well, we take our ancestors
and we put them on this bed of sticks
and we light them on fire, we burn them up.
And they're like, how, this is disgusting.
How could you possibly do that?
How disgraceful. And basically it's this idea're like, how, this is disgusting. How could you possibly do this? How disgraceful.
And basically it's this idea that like,
what is barbaric is simply that which is unfamiliar
or unusual to us.
100%.
And I think that's kind of what you take from travel
and from also from reading and from his, you go,
oh, all this stuff is made up and weird.
It just, if it's what I come from,
there's a familiarity and a normalcy to it.
And it's only when I'm removed from that context
or I'm forced to interact with someone
who is rationally and calmly
and reasonably describing what they do.
And by the way, appalled at what I do,
but you see the kind of absurdity
and relativity of all of it.
That's right.
That's absolutely right.
And what does a fish know about water?
Nothing, until you take them out and then they're,
now they're dying.
Like, so it's, I agree with you a hundred percent.
The great pundit, Matt Damon,
I don't know if this is his quote or not,
but you might've heard this quote.
He's like, we could solve a lot of the world's problems
if we just all had thicker passports.
Ooh, sure. You understand the idea?
Yes.
I don't know if he said it,
it gets attributed to him all the time.
I don't think you need a thicker passport.
It just takes that stepping outside of what your fishbowl
and experiencing people in their fishbowl
and realizing like, oh my gosh,
we have a lot more in common than what we don't.
And then also you're doing great over there
with totally different cultural practices than me.
And I've got a mutual respect for it.
So.
Well, and what is cool about Texas is that it is so big
that you can travel quite a bit
and never put a stamp in your passport
and experience different climates, different altitudes,
different lifestyles, different,
like literally different countries.
There's all these different ethnic enclaves.
And then also you can travel back in time.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
To the days when people didn't leave their county.
Yeah.
You know, like it still happens.
I was just in the Valley.
So Rio Grande Valley, Brownsville, McAllen, all in there.
And I was mourning, you know,
this nostalgia you look back over travel.
I remember the days when I was young,
we would go jump the border
and we would have an afternoon and a meal in Mexico,
in these border towns.
And it wasn't abnormal.
We did it every summer.
And my parents would just give us money
and wouldn't watch us.
It's like where I learned how to kind of speak hack Spanish
and then how to barter.
Like I don't want to pay, you know, onyx knife.
You know, like I was like,
I'm obsessed with getting an onyx knife.
Like I didn't want to pay 10 bucks for it. Let me get it. Can I get it for eight. You know, like I was like, I'm obsessed with getting an onyx knife. Like I didn't want to pay 10 bucks for it.
Let me get it.
Can I get it for eight?
You know, whatever.
And I was mourning the fact
that we can't go over like that anymore.
And, but then down in the Valley,
what's happened is the border has just moved over here
because this is where people are spending money.
And there's a lot of cultural political reasons,
but that experience that I remember
from jumping into Mexico is very much
in South Texas right now.
And so you can walk around.
I mean, I was on streets.
I couldn't find anybody to speak English to me.
And it was in Texas.
And they're doing great.
It seems like a totally different world.
It's like this for all intents and purposes,
this is a different country.
And I'm still on the US side, I'm in Texas
and these people are, you know,
everybody's doing great.
Well, there's not that many places in the world
that you can drive for hundreds of miles
and not cross any borders, state or international.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like there's, I was telling someone yesterday
who was here from Europe, and I was like,
there are ranches in Texas
bigger than many foreign countries.
I think there's a ranch in Texas bigger than Germany.
Certainly, Texas is bigger than many European nations.
Yes, yes, yes, yes.
But there are spots within it owned by people
that are certainly bigger than Belgium or, you know,
these little, it's insane how big it is. Oh, completely, completely. The King Ranch, I think, is bigger than Belgium or- Oh, completely. It's insane how big it is.
The King Ranch, I think, is bigger than
multiple states combined.
And it's a single ranch.
It's broken into different units,
but it's one person's property.
Yes.
It's crazy.
We went to New England a couple of years ago,
and I remember seeing state lines like county markers.
I was like, wait, hold on.
I mean, you could walk across Rhode Island.
It's a full day's walk.
You know, part of me has always wanted to do that.
Yeah.
I don't have, for no reason other than just to say I did it.
Yes.
But in Texas, like, yeah,
there are not many counties you could walk across.
Gosh, no, no, no, no.
I mean, yeah, so like we have to plan our show
very intentionally.
Like if we're going out West,
it's a seven hour drive.
Yeah, we get that crap all the time.
Like that's not a day trip.
It's like, but it just depends on where you start
for the people in Fort Stockton it was.
I mean, if you leave Austin,
you can have dinner in Big Bend.
And then if you start the 24 hours
when you arrive to there, you can get a lot done.
Yeah, absolutely.
But it's not an ideal.
Have you gone out to Big Ben?
Yeah.
Bunch times, yeah, amazing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I would say that's actually one of my big,
I think it's wonderful,
much better to be a place that people want to come
than a place that people are fleeing, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So I'm very pro-immigrant, not just like globally,
but just like, I hate the, don't come here,
don't California my tax exposure.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, the door's closed.
Yeah, but like I would say one of my criticisms
of all, of many of the people that are moving to Texas
is they are locating in Texas, but it is not their locus.
So like, they're not coming here,
like they're not moving to Austin and then going,
and now the panhandle is my beach
and Big Ben's my national park and whatever.
They're here and then they're flying everywhere.
I see. They're going on vacation in Hawaii
and they're skiing in Colorado, which is all fine,
but like they're not actually exploring Texas.
They're just living in Austin or Dallas or Houston
or whatever.
Because of its proximity to an airport.
Oh, Austin airport, I can get anywhere I want.
Yeah.
Well, well, well, now you're not really here then.
Yeah, and so the people I know that have moved here,
I would say 5% of them have been to Big Bend.
And it's one of the one, you know what I mean?
It's an amazing place that everyone should go.
I get to talk in front of big crowds all the time
and I'll ask people how many of y'all have been to Big Bends?
And these are typically very Texas-centric groups,
quarter of them.
So Texans aren't that much better.
Now, a lot of people have, I've learned,
very few people have been to Big Ben once.
It's one of those that gets into your blood
and you gotta go back.
Well, I mean, yeah, it's a glimpse of Texas.
It's like the first time we went, we stayed in Lajitas.
And you're like, it's an hour to the park. You know, from there.
From the closest town, it's an hour drive.
Vast, vast expanses of nothing.
That's the beauty of it though.
Totally, of course.
My wife was like, she didn't go kicking
and screaming to Big Ben, but she loves,
we're from East Texas, so we were high school sweethearts.
She loved the trees and you can't kill St. Augustine grass
and just grow, you know, and like the azaleas and all that.
It's like the desert, ah, ah, the desert.
Like there's just no way that's beautiful.
And then went out there and it kind of clicked.
We were there for spring break with my kids and it snowed.
Like it snowed like six inches while we were there.
And it was unreal.
That's nuts.
Climate change at its best, I guess.
Yeah.
Cause like they're getting unusual snow on the regular. Yeah. Yeah. Well, I guess. Yeah, because like they're getting unusual snow
on the regular.
Yeah.
Well, and also you just, when you think of Texas,
you don't think elevation, you think plains.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And it's Scott, I mean, you got to find it,
but it's out there.
Have you done the tallest peak in Texas yet?
Which one is that?
Guadalupe Peak.
Is that there?
It's in our other national parks.
So we've got two national parks,
Big Bend and Guadalupe Mountains National Park.
And it has a roughly 9,000 foot high peak.
Takes about eight hours.
How old are you kids?
Oldest is eight, youngest is five.
Okay, yeah, they're not gonna make it.
But you and your wife can go out there.
The eight-year-old might, but I mean, it's a grueling hike.
Have you done Enchanted Rock yet?
Yes.
Okay, yeah, that one's one of my favorites.
Yeah, of course.
No, but I think Big Bend is incredible.
We've done a fair amount out there.
We're trying to do a couple of those a year,
just like the Big Dragon one.
I love it, Ryan.
You got here and you're like,
look, I'm gonna own it.
I'm going to, I don't wanna say assimilate.
You brought your perspective,
but like I wanna treat this as home.
Yeah, I think you wanna use where you are
as a chance to, like, I wanna read about this place. I wanna watch things about this place. I wanna treat this as home. Yeah, I think you wanna use where you are as a chance to like, you go, I wanna read about this place,
I wanna watch things about this place,
I wanna go places, because then it helps you understand,
because everything is a lens into the larger time period.
Like, so you're talking about Texas, German.
Like you're like, okay, so wait, why is this here?
And then all of a sudden you're understanding,
you're forced to go, well, why did they come here?
And then you're like, oh, it's because Germany was,
oh wait, Germany's a new country.
Yeah.
And then, so it's this way into this different stuff.
That's a thing that didn't even occur to me
till recently, how like Poland didn't exist,
Germany really didn't, it was all these collective states.
Like city states kind of things.
And so you had the Alsatians who came over
and were in Castroville.
So we have this little French Alsatian thing going.
And we just visited the oldest Polish settlement
in America, which is in Pantamaria.
It's outside of San Antonio.
They've got this incredible heritage museum and church
and a sausage factory that makes amazing Polish sausage.
But like when they came over here,
they were getting run out of a nation
that they didn't really even, you know, wasn't theirs.
And so, and they were just sort of a people group
more than a locale.
Well, and realizing, I think this is a thing America doesn't give itself enough credit
for is like, so America was a collection of colonies that were all kind of independently
created for different religious reasons and economic reasons, right?
And then the big innovation is Benjamin Franklin's like, hey, we're better together than separate,
right?
Which by the way, he steals from the Iroquois Confederacy.
We steal, there's another thing we steal from the Indians.
Oh, I didn't know that.
Is the idea of a confederation.
Okay, okay, yeah.
Like the Articles of Confederation
is basically Benjamin Franklin cribbing
on this whole system of government
from the native people along the Eastern seaboard.
Look at that.
But so a collection of city state colony areas
becomes a nation, right?
And that's what we sort of export that back to Europe,
right?
Italy is unified, South America, you know, comes together.
We export this all over.
And so, yeah, like as those countries came together,
some of the people were like,
well, this doesn't work for me.
They weren't a part of whatever that vision was.
And they ended up here.
We got to go to Italy this past fall.
And I was like, wait, Italy's how old?
You know, I don't know why.
I'm sure I learned it.
I just forgot it.
Yeah, this stuff is like around the time
the civil war is happening.
People are like these countries,
but yeah, sure, the country is a thousand years old,
but the modern conception of it and its borders
is not that old.
And then by the way, World War I and World War II
is really just people arguing about those things.
Just like today, Russia is like, no, Ukraine is part of us.
Historically, and then however it shakes out,
determines whether that's true or not.
My gosh, Israel, right?
The conflict there is all about, yeah,
who owns this land?
And because people can't get along with each other,
and we're not good at understanding that pluralism is the,
like the alternative to this stuff
is not everyone's on the same page.
It's that we chill out and make space for everyone.
And when we fail to do that,
those people have to go somewhere else.
And they usually, for most of the last 200 years,
they ended up here.
Like they ended up in America.
That's right.
Because there was always space.
That's right.
It's cool.
Yeah, when you explore in your area and you go,
oh, hey, there's a Christopher Columbus statue
in New York City, not because America was like,
we love Christopher Columbus.
It's because Italians in New York City
were tired of being the low race on the totem pole
and were picking a hero to celebrate.
Okay, did everybody get behind?
He's our guy.
Okay.
Like he's our guy.
You know? Interesting.
There's a giant one in Corpus Christi too.
I'm like, Columbus was never here,
but it was them saying, we're proud immigrants from Spain,
like our Spanish heritage.
Well, and then the toxic version of that is of course,
like the Confederate statues,
which go up in the 1910s and 20s and 30s and 40s,
because they're suddenly they're faced with a sort of
a more equal America.
And they're like, no, no, no, no, this is our,
Robert E. Lee's never even been here, but he's my guy.
He's my guy.
You know, and he's my way, He's my guy, yes. And he's my way,
cause we control this little town of saying,
when you walk into this courthouse,
I'm gonna remind you who the fuck's the boss.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
This is not your courthouse.
It was a flex, the lost cause.
I mean, having grown up in Texas, that was the line
through our history books was,
states rights, states rights, states rights.
You know, and then as time has sort of illuminated
how messy our history actually is.
And me traveling Texas has illuminated
how messy our history is here too,
between the settlers and the native Indians
and just the racism that existed post-revolution
against the Hispanics, because now the Anglos want it.
And it's all mess and no one's hands are clean.
But the more you travel and you see, it's like,
oh my gosh, this history was never black, white.
It was always a mess.
And it still is.
Well, I think one of the things you get
when you look at history too is it's easy to despair.
Be like, oh, they were all so awful.
Completely, completely.
And then, but if you really look,
you find little reminders, right?
Like there's that monument of those German,
I think they're German settlers
who were trying to make their way north
to join the Union from Texas.
Yes, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And they get basically murdered,
which is obviously a tragic thing.
Way like a massacre, yeah.
But another way to see that monument
or that historical event, which we don't talk about a lot,
is like, hey, everyone wasn't on the same page.
There were a bunch of people who lived in Texas
who were like, I don't want to do that.
The Germans were notorious.
They, I mean, there's Union Valley and Loyal Valley.
There are all these little German communities
that have names like that
because they got sort of ostracized
and the only counties that voted in favor
of staying with the Union were really the German ones.
I might be able to-
Well, Bastrop voted against succession.
Okay.
It was one of the few counties that did.
And so it's just like now,
like our elections are like 49, 51 or whatever.
And then we go, well, everyone thinks this.
And it's like, actually, like we're not far apart.
Like, you know what I mean?
It could have easily gone the other way.
And I think that's one of the things
one of the things that I try to take from history
is like, it could have been otherwise.
And also not everyone agreed
with whatever the countervailing negative thing was.
Like some people were like, I don't know about this, right?
Yeah.
And they were at the mercy of people who had slightly more voting power don't know about this, right? Yeah. You know, and they were at the mercy of people
who had slightly more voting power than them.
Exactly right, right?
So the victors goes to the spoils
and the victors write history and the,
everything else just gets forgotten or brushed aside.
When there were, there were reasonable people all over
and like we were fighting and this could have,
this could have easily gone the other way.
Yes.
Easily.
There's a fascinating story about,
there's one of the few civil war battle sites in Texas
is down in Southeast Texas when a group of Irishmen
kept back a force that was trying to invade Texas.
Like the Union never got into Texas
because they were able to seal the Sabine off.
And that could have, one, we would have tons
of civil war sites in Texas that we don't have
because of this.
And it could have ended the war a lot faster
because then the whole thing would have gone.
There's so many little turning points in history.
Like this would have rewritten the whole thing.
And you got to travel to see them.
Well, yeah.
And then you go, oh, hey, everyone's talking
about Juneteenth.
Well, Texas is why we have Juneteenth.
Right, right, right.
I went to that spot in Galveston recently.
Well, I mean, I was just driving,
when we drove to Lockhart,
I passed, there was like a Juneteenth grounds.
And you're like, oh, cause all these little cities
had these little parades and moments celebrating this thing
because it was basically a foreign country.
They just didn't get the news.
It took a while to come over.
That's right.
Yeah, we haven't featured that marker down in Galveston yet,
but we're going to.
Yeah, we approach those things as best we can,
as reasonable as we can,
knowing that we're gonna piss people off
on both sides, whatever.
The episode, I know you're pretty caught up
because you've seen Plano,
but we have a Jasper episode that's coming.
Yeah, I saw you mention that.
And that's one that people still shudder about mention that. And that, you know, that's one
that people still shudder about Jasper.
I mean, when I say that word, what's your reaction?
Well, I was like, why do I,
because I didn't live here when that happened.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So I was like, why do I have a negative feeling about that?
Right, and then I was like, wait, is that Jasper Wyoming
that I had a negative opinion about?
And then I was, then I looked at the Wikipedia page,
I was like, oh yeah.
You remember it?
Yeah.
So we debated that a while.
One of the most, for people who don't know,
one of the most notorious hate crimes
in American history happened.
Horrible dragging death of James Byrd Jr.
And it made national news
and Jasper was just vilified as the city that killed him.
And so, you know, for Texans,
that town has been blacklisted,
I guess I should pick a better word,
but you know, it's been written off,
don't go there, it's unsafe.
Or if you're African-American, you go there,
you're unsafe, but if you're white, you go there,
you're supporting a racist town.
We didn't, it's not true.
And so we're like, okay, we're gonna go into that.
We're gonna have to address it head on.
And we're gonna talk about how what you think you know
about this town is not true.
And it's an incredible town.
I mean, the people there are doing great for the most part.
But you gotta get into that town to see it.
And so we debated a long time.
Are we getting outside of our lane
talking about these things?
Yeah, is this upsetting to someone who just wants to know
where to get a big burger from?
Yeah, exactly.
And we've had to stop at Confederate battlegrounds,
all kinds of things.
I mean, history's just not clean.
Right.
And so you're either gonna brush it under the rug
and not talk about it,
or you're gonna try to get in and add some sort of clarity
to an otherwise completely murky situation.
I think that's important.
Like if history is clean or fun to you,
you're not reading history.
Yeah, I guess so.
That's propaganda, right?
Like if you're not uncomfortable,
if you're not getting a glimpse into the darkness
that human beings are capable of, that's not history.
That's like a book you get your dad from Costco
for his birthday.
You know what I mean?
Like there's that sort of pleasing fun,
everyone's getting along or it was bad,
but we worked on it, you know?
And actually it's pretty-
It's pretty gnarly.
Yes.
You know, I do though, one of our big things,
like, right, I want to be the joyful alternative
to all the other junk that's out there on the news.
And so, you know, I do take that seriously.
I want families to be able to sit down, watch the show,
have a great time, enjoy, laugh.
So I do wanna be light.
You know, I wanna spread light,
I wanna be light to people.
And so you're like, well, man,
there's just some hard stories that you gotta deal with.
So either we ignore them, which I don't think
is the right answer, or we hopefully shine light
into dark places for people who didn't wanna think about it
and sort of give them a way to understand it,
think about it, talk about it with their kids
in a way that's productive and understanding
when they're out traveling like you are.
Cause you're gonna travel,
and maybe you go to Jasper, maybe you won't,
but you'll travel somewhere and you'll see some things
that are probably kind of hard to talk about as parents.
So what do you do?
You just like brush them under the rug
or you kind of help your kids understand it.
But it's like that's the job.
Your job is to talk to them about those things.
That's the gig.
You're like, what am I supposed to tell my kids?
I'm supposed to tell them what happened.
You didn't do it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. You didn't do it. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
You didn't do it.
You are not guilty, but we're all responsible.
Oh, that's good.
You know, there's some distinction there between,
like, although what I would say is you become guilty
if you are complicit in the coverup of said thing, right?
If you decide not to talk about it, or you go, oh, it coverup of said thing, right?
If you decide not to talk about it,
or you go, oh, it was just unpleasant,
or if you try to both sides it or whatever,
then what you're doing is you're not just robbing your kids
of, I think, the just basic resilience
of being able to be uncomfortable
and look at things and learn,
but you're also setting them up.
You are depriving them of the opportunity
to write a better future because you are not telling.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I mean, do you believe history will repeat itself?
Certainly.
I mean, right?
You've studied history enough, right?
So how do you break the cycle?
I mean, you have to keep educating the kids
and help them to kind of seek a better future.
Yeah.
Yeah, and also, I know my kids and help them to kind of seek a better future. Yeah. Yeah.
And also like, I know my kids and I know their character
and I believe them.
I don't think when they hear about what happens in Jasper,
they're like, they're relating to the guys in the car.
Oh, okay.
Do you know what I mean?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like they're seeing themselves in the humanity of the,
they're not saying, oh, I'm a monster.
My dad made me feel bad.
I think like when I tell them about history,
I want them to relate to the underdogs or the,
you know, like the idea that you should only tell them
the history where they see a hero and are the hero
is I think setting themselves up
for a world that's not real.
I want them to see themselves in the people
that persevered and fought, the people who had dignity,
you know what I mean?
And then sometimes it doesn't always work out for people.
Right? Sure, sure.
But showing them bad people shouldn't make them feel bad.
They're bad. They're not bad people.
Totally agree, totally agree.
But also showing them that like,
all of our heroes are flawed.
Yes, definitely.
And the fact that they struggle with things
doesn't disqualify them from doing great things.
You know what I mean?
Sure.
We've got to deal with both the successes
and failures of all of our heroes.
And none of them are clean.
And so making sure that we aren't over romanticizing,
whatever our founding fathers or Sam Houston
or Davy Crockett or whatever,
like so that they understand the like,
hey, man, we're all flawed.
Like we've all got sin in our lives
that things we're trying to deal with,
that we're trying to work out.
Yeah.
And so like, you just, that's part of the human process.
Yeah, and is that flaw or that belief or whatever,
is that their main thing?
Or was that, you know, like, so like,
if you're Jefferson Davis,
that's pretty much your main thing.
You know what I mean? Sure, yeah.
And so it's like, okay, I can be like,
that's probably not someone we need to talk
that much about, right?
And probably not someone we need to name
a bunch of things after.
But if you're George Washington,
where you do a bunch of good stuff
and you have this tragic flaw or this secret or this shame,
then you go, okay, how much greater
could this person have been if they'd had the courage to face this about themselves?
Yes.
And how much does their failure to do that
undermine the other stuff?
Just like a tragic hero in a play, if they're perfect,
they're not that relatable.
If they're entirely evil, then they're only a villain.
Sure.
It's in that complicatedness that I think we see,
like what's fundamentally us. We took our kids to Mount Vernon a villain. Sure. It's in that complicatedness that I think we see, like what's fundamentally us.
We took our kids to Mount Vernon this summer.
Yeah.
That's incredible.
Yeah.
Cause you know, we were always taught,
the edge of George Washington on the white horse,
crossing the Delaware, whatever, like,
and then, oh yeah,
but his fortune was made on the backs of enslaved people.
Yeah.
And like, here's where they lived too.
And so the Mount Vernon's done an amazing job.
But you know, making sure that like, hey, our kids see too. And so the Mount Vernon's done an amazing job.
But, you know, making sure that like,
hey, our kids see the messier sides of all of it.
Well, and then when you see that,
then it makes the decision to say,
free them at the end of his life.
You understand economically what that meant.
You understand from like, you go,
oh, he would have really wrestled with this.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's not a right, wrong, easy,
if doing the right thing was easy,
everyone would do it all the time.
All the time, yeah, sure.
It's that it cost him a lot.
Like, he shouldn't have ever,
the whole thing is morally bankrupt, I get that,
but the point is, the reason Thomas Jefferson doesn't do it,
even though he actually writes more beautifully
about the wrongness of slavery
is because he also really liked expensive French stuff
and he was horribly in debt.
And he couldn't afford,
like Washington's sort of discipline and frugality
puts him in a position to go,
hey, I'm gonna do this.
He couldn't do it earlier
because then he wouldn't have had the,
like it makes it real.
It's like, okay, he knew what he needed to do, He couldn't do it earlier because then he wouldn't have had the... Like it makes it real.
It's like, okay, he knew what he needed to do,
but he couldn't without bearing too much of the weight.
And then, but he did get himself to a place
where he could do it later than he should have,
but he could do it.
And that's his spectrum, right?
There's this sort of spectrum.
Jefferson, very aware, but likes living in Monticello.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's right.
And that we're all on some version of that thing.
Like we know, hey, I should probably wear a shirt
made in America, but like when I'm at the store
and they only have ones made in Guatemala
and they're cheap, it's like, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
You're forced to compromise.
I mean, gosh, if only we could live clean
and as idealistic as we wanted, right?
I guess that is the struggle.
And it's the same, what do we prioritize
more than other things?
It's just a battle of priorities, that's what all life is.
What's interesting to me about your stuff though,
is like, you wouldn't think you could have,
like, I mean, yes, Texas is big and a lot of people live here,
but it is impressive.
I think you've built this whole kind of travel media company
about one place, you know, one state.
Yeah.
Like there's something I think about the tools
of social media and YouTube that make that possible.
That's exciting. Completely.
It's also absurd that I can do it about
and school of ancient philosophy.
Yeah, that's right.
We're both, we schemed the system somehow, right?
It shouldn't work.
You know, like if you were describing it to an investor,
they'd be like, I think that's too small.
Yeah, people are gonna be, you know,
we've sort of talked about this a little bit,
but in my travels overseas,
I gained this perspective
that everyone else in the rest of the world
wants to come to Texas at some point in their life.
We're like, they're Australia.
You know, or like, you know, I'm like, whoa, wow.
Like, well, what the heck are we doing leaving?
And so I was like, we could build something here.
I started off saying it's Texas for Texans,
then started noticing everybody else is kind of tuning in.
And now with YouTube,
some of our biggest fans are over in Germany.
Yeah. It's awesome.
They'll come over to our little store in Georgetown
and like, I bought the boots, I'm the hatchet, look.
You're like, oh, that's awesome, dude.
I didn't know you had a store.
We do. I mean, it's a shoe box.
It's mostly our production studio.
Yeah. I mean, that's what-
But yeah, but we wanted to contribute to the downtown square.
Didn't want to just fill a space with office space.
Like the bookstore.
I got mad respect for what you did.
Like we're going to contribute.
We also need a place to do our stuff,
but like we're going to contribute.
So we have a little shoe box.
Shoe box of a store,
which gives people a way to interact with us
that they wouldn't have otherwise.
Hey, Clarky.
Hey.
You wanna sit?
Here, I can stand if you wanna sit.
I think Clarky has some questions.
What's up, dude?
Have you ever seen
Are you gonna shake his hand?
A day tripper show?
Yes.
What?
Are you kidding me?
You can sit, buddy.
Dude, that's awesome.
How old are you?
I'm eight.
Eight?
So much wisdom, I bet, packed into your brain, man.
Your dad imparted anything to you
or is it kinda like, dad, quit talking about dead guys?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's awesome.
You have a favorite show?
Yes.
What's your favorite episode?
Of the day tripper?
Yeah.
Possibly Kyle.
Kyle!
What was so cool about that one?
The rage room.
I've been to the rage room.
Did you know that people would give you baseball bats?
You'd smash stuff? Yes.
What did you get to smash?
I got the hammer and I just bashed a bunch of glass.
Isn't that cool?
Yeah.
Isn't that, there's something this powerful about it.
There's like a fishbowl kind of face.
That's good.
Now, as an eight-year-old boy,
did you feel like you had a lot of like rage inside of you
that needed to come out?
No, I just wanted to break stuff.
You just wanted to break stuff.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I think it was exciting to know
there was a place you could go break stuff.
Like that got invented relatively, like in our lifetime.
The first time I heard about it, I was like,
it seems fun.
Do you have any questions?
Well, it's your favorite episode.
Ooh, man.
I think some of my favorites are like the Big Bend ones.
Have you ever been out there to West Texas?
Yeah.
Yeah?
With Big Ben.
Oh.
Oh.
Do you like all the like the goofy stuff?
Yeah.
How bad your acting is.
Oh, he's a critic. How bad your acting is.
Oh, he's a critic. Hey, it's okay.
It's true.
I didn't get into this job because I was a good actor.
I just kind of weaseled my way in.
I think that's how we heard about the Goat Mayors,
remember?
Yeah. Oh yeah.
I thought we knew that before we even knew
that his channel existed.
I don't know.
Those are fun.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's funny.
Do you watch on YouTube?
Yeah. Sometimes? Yeah. It's funny. Do you watch on YouTube? Uh, yeah. Sometimes?
Yeah.
It's like people your age call it channels.
You know, it's like, I'm not on a channel.
I have a channel.
We have iPads and then the big TV.
The big, oh, okay.
You know.
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
That's cool.
So, I mean, Big Bend is one of my favorites.
I like the ones where I get to go swimming.
That's my favorite thing to do.
Texas summer's way too hot, man.
Figuring out how they made the pool look Olympic.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Wasn't that funny?
Yeah.
They just put them on a rope and pulled them back.
And so they looked like they were swimming forever.
Yeah.
Remember when we went to that pool with the rope swing?
You liked that one.
Yeah.
Where was that?
Landa, Lamba?
What's the one in Sam?
Oh, uh, what is it called?
Landow, no.
Landa Park.
Yeah, Landa Park. That's awesome. Yeah, Land-a-Park.
That's awesome.
Yeah.
We did Belmore, he liked that.
Oh, that's the best.
So cold though.
Do you have any other questions?
Uh, yeah.
What's your least favorite episode?
Least favorite episode?
I can't tell you that.
Bastrop, man, that was a snoozer.
I got a bad shave in Bastrop.
Nothing cool was in Bastrop.
They didn't have any good bookstores.
Bastrop. Oh cool was in Bastrop. They didn't have any good bookstores.
In Bastrop.
Oh no, yeah.
I'm kidding, I'm kidding.
You know what?
I don't have any least favorite episodes
because Clark, they're all attached to memories
that I have of like being out there
with my family or my crew.
And so like they all kind of have
little pieces of my brain.
This is cool.
Guess what I get to do tomorrow?
What?
I'm gonna go to a dig park where adults and kids
get to drive full bulldozers and excavators around
and dig stuff up.
Like full size ones.
Where's that?
Katie.
Ooh, that's cool.
We should do that.
Yeah, it's called a dig world.
I can't wait.
I've never driven an excavator.
It sounds like something though would be near Kyle.
It does.
It does. It does.
It does.
I try to make the best out of every place.
So I don't really have a least favorite.
Yeah.
I think that the Texas pool was kind of just weird
cause there was that one island in the middle.
I know.
And they said it was supposed to be Dallas
but it wasn't in the right spot.
Yeah.
Okay.
It should have been like.
Yeah, you watched some new ones.
Trick question, movie magic.
Do you think I actually held my breath that whole time?
No, I thought I made it look good.
I didn't hold my breath that whole time.
I was the only person in there and it was freezing cold.
And so I was almost, but.
You left on part.
I did, I did, yeah.
We do a lot of really silly stuff on the show. Especially how bad your acting is.
We're coming back to that.
Oh, what's up?
Uh oh, now I'm really in the hot seat.
I got both of them.
The Bobs asking me questions.
I want to keep my job.
Evidently my acting's not so good.
Oh.
Hey buddy, what's your not so good. Oh.
Oh.
Hey buddy.
What's your name?
Jones.
Jones.
Oh.
Jones is a great name, man.
That is a great name.
So sir, have you ever seen the day tripper?
Yeah.
Yeah?
Okay.
How is my acting?
Like.
Yeah.
Thank you.
Thank you.
It's some of my best stuff.
When I put on a mustache,
you don't even know it's me anymore.
I just disappear completely, right?
No.
No? What?
I thought that was really good.
What about a wig?
I mean, like I transform into the character.
The girl wanted Tomball.
This is terrible.
Ha ha ha ha ha ha.
Clark and Jones, next time I need to put someone in a wig
and a dress, I'll bring y'all out there.
Y'all can be actors.
Maybe y'all do a better job.
Jonesy, do you want to go give them a tour
of the bookstore?
Yeah. Yeah.
Or do you have a question?
No.
Question, would you rather eat a barbecue
or a cheeseburger?
A barbecue.
Okay, okay.
Would you rather-
Cheeseburger, but I can just pull out the cheese.
Oh, you don't like cheese?
No.
Carson, are you used to doing an eating challenge?
It's an ice cream one.
Yeah, but he's pumped about the idea of an eating challenge.
So it's a giant ice cream bowl with a bunch of flavors
and just a donut and a chocolate bar,
and I think some fudge.
Whoa, that sounds legit.
Hey, listen, I just had this.
This is the first time I ever saw it.
They cut a donut in half.
They took an ice cream.
They put the donut around it
and then they put it in a waffle iron
and it sealed the donut up around the ice cream ball.
It was amazing, Jones, amazing.
All right, let's go see that book store.
Yeah, I'll show you.
Thanks so much for listening.
If you could rate this podcast and leave a review on iTunes,
that would mean so much to us and would really help the show. We appreciate it. I'll see you next episode.
