The Joe Rogan Experience - #2057 - Dale Brisby

Episode Date: November 3, 2023

Dale Brisby is a cowboy, bullrider, rancher, YouTuber, and the star of Netflix's "How to Be a Cowboy." www.rodeotime.com https://www.youtube.com/@DaleBrisbyBullRider ...

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Joe Rogan Podcast, check it out! The Joe Rogan Experience. Train by day, Joe Rogan Podcast by night! All day! Joe Rogan, it's good to be here. Pleasure to meet you. Likewise. I feel like I shouldn't have these on either.
Starting point is 00:00:19 Show me that hat, bro. Let's go. Oh. There's a couple. I hope I didn't overdo it. I've been here for three years. It's about time I wore one of these fucking hats. My brother made this belt and buckle. Oh, nice. That was an idea I had.
Starting point is 00:00:35 Oh, that's very cool. Oh, fuck yeah. Oh, it's got my name on it and everything? Yeah, it's handmade. It's got a little elk antler. Look at that, folks. It's Christmas. Lee Willard Gibbons made that.
Starting point is 00:00:48 Christmas, really? I hope that fits. I hope it fits, too. Here we go. I got a fat head. Oh, it's backwards. Oh. Oh, my gosh.
Starting point is 00:00:59 Is that good? Bro, that fits. Fits. How's it look, Jamie? All right. You fucking. That face. Honestly, I don't know how they're supposed to fit.
Starting point is 00:01:12 That's pretty close. Because they stick up a lot, and I feel like that's not how it's supposed to be, but everybody says that is how it's supposed to be. So it does. There's like two modes that you can put it in. Yeah. You know, like there's just like if you're just out honky-tonking, or then if you're about to, like, you know, get on a bronc or something.
Starting point is 00:01:30 I'm getting serious. And you, like, pull it down, and it makes your ears crunch. No. That's like a fight mode. I think maybe this is too small. Does it stretch? I was thinking it's a 3-8. Does it stretch?
Starting point is 00:01:45 A little bit, but I'll get you a half. Does it heat it up? Steam it. Steam it. Made here in Texas. Are they? It's an American hat made in Texas. Feels like an American hat made in Texas.
Starting point is 00:01:55 I'll get you a half. That's a 3-8. It's pretty close. It's right about there. How does it feel? It feels like I'm fucking real Texan. God damn it. That's what I was thinking.
Starting point is 00:02:09 I was like, my mans needs a cowboy hat. I definitely need one. Now I have one. We're good. Now I feel complete. I'm real close to saying y'all. Yeah. I'm getting close a couple times.
Starting point is 00:02:19 Right around the corner. I've been here for three years now. Yeah. I'm never moving. i fucking love this place do you yeah love it i can't imagine living anywhere else texas is fun it's just like you go everywhere else and there's so many rules you're like why yeah why you guys have all these rules like do we really need them does it make you better does it make society better does it make you safer fuck out of here i feel like like in Texas, you can experience true freedom.
Starting point is 00:02:48 Yeah. Well, this is a crazy place. You ever read the history of the place? You ever read, like, any books on how this place was sort of established, like when they conquered the Comanches and the Texas Rangers? The Llano Estacado and all that. Wow. The history is just so insane. insane like no wonder why they resisted
Starting point is 00:03:07 becoming a state for so long like we got this it's brutal yeah some of that some of those stories are just like oh my god you got to set them down come back to them yeah empire of the summer moon is like that like there's some of the horrific tales of torture and what they who those come at you some wild folks they were some wild folks i mean if i could have like a like an invisible bubble and go back in time and just experience it without them knowing i was there i would love to see what that was like yeah it was a brutal time man i feel like brutal have you seen lonesome Dove? Yes. Yeah, I feel like it's probably Pretty close to what it was like
Starting point is 00:03:48 Yeah, I mean just guessing I mean everyone's just sort of trying to recreate those moments and try to but I think It's just hard to believe That just I mean when did they really conquer this area? It was like the 1800s. So less than 200 years ago. Not that long ago. Not that long ago. This place was wild. Yeah, like my great-great-granddad was a Texas Ranger.
Starting point is 00:04:18 And he actually met Quanah Parker. Whoa. Yeah. Like sitting in a teepee with him. Whoa. Yeah. Like sitting in a teepee with him. Whoa. Like he wrote a book. It's like really wild times of back in the day and like homesteading. But it was like,
Starting point is 00:04:36 I'm not that far away from meeting that guy. I mean, obviously you can't meet your great-great-granddad, but like you can almost reach out and touch him. Yeah, not that far when you think about a human life like how long ago it was right i would say but like 19 1776 united states was established people lived to be 100 that's three people ago three people that's three people ago three people ago i mean it's when you think about it that way you're like wait for real right three people ago was 1776 but yeah you put them birth to death that's real that's real that's real that is all fucking snap of the fingers when it comes to human history
Starting point is 00:05:14 it's nothing yeah yeah that's why people go to talking about changing like i don't know we're changing pretty fast it's changing pretty fast here right now i think maybe we could slow down a little bit i wish we could i had uh elon musk on the other day we're talking about ai like slowing down artificial intelligence and you know he's basically like yeah i said maybe we should do that but no one's gonna listen yeah he went to that conference at the end of it yeah it's fucking scary shit dude because as quickly as the world changed for the Native Americans when the Europeans moved here That that world is gonna change even quicker for us if AI takes over It's the Terminator man, and he's like he's so close to it and he's worried about it the way he talked about
Starting point is 00:06:01 You know just like the extinction people and you guys are like that's a whole nother world i didn't realize like people that don't value human life are in charge of this it's like it gets a little scary yeah there's some people out there that are not well and they miss the point and they probably don't have anybody around them that gets it but anybody that says like i don't want to have kids and why would you have kids today? I would never want to bring a kid up in this world. People had kids before they figured out floors.
Starting point is 00:06:34 That's why we're here. Don't you like people? This is my thing. You don't want to have kids? How do you think people get made? You need kids and then they become people that you like. Right. Like, yeah, it's a lot of responsibility.
Starting point is 00:06:49 Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's difficult. It's hard. If shit goes wrong for them, it feels terrible for you. Yeah, yeah, yeah, the world's crazy. But there's more books and medicine and information now than ever. Yeah, there's problems. Yeah. Right.
Starting point is 00:07:03 There's never been a time when people have been alive ever that didn't have problems. We create fucking problems. We just kind of swapped them for the early days. It's just different problems. Yeah, we don't have to worry about starving to death anymore. Now we have to worry about being too fat and eating ourselves to death. It's a different problem. We just got to put them on carnivore.
Starting point is 00:07:23 That would help. Yep. That would help yep that would help but then the the people that are thinking they should eat bugs and only vegetables are freaking out yeah you know because they there's this mantra that people chant out that like you need to stop eating meat to save the world like that's not going to work kids right that's not going to do it that's not going do it that's not gonna do you want to say we should get rid of factory farming yeah horrific conditions that animals live under there's no reason for that they should be living like regenerative farming we should figure that out animals should live like animals are supposed to live it shouldn't be stuffed into little cages and you know fucking pumped by machines to get their milk out. Like, it would be nice if things were more nature-like.
Starting point is 00:08:06 Like, if you get, like, a good regenerative farm, like White Oaks Pastures or someplace like that, what they do is just recreate nature in a contained environment. Yeah. Cattle's roam, chickens roam, you use the manure to fertilize your food. That's how people are supposed to do it. Yeah. Vertical integration. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:23 It's supposed to be like an ecosystem that it all nature knows how to do it it all works together and when it does that it's basically carbon neutral which is really incredible but instead of concentrating on the things we're doing wrong they just they have like this blanket solution we eliminate meat and save the planet like you're still not going to save the planet like it's not and it's not saving the planet it's saving the human impact of the planet and unless china's on board unless india's on board you're not going to put a dent in that right it just seems like yeah like maybe it is making an impact but like if everything else that's going on is going to cause it i mean how much of an impact at what cost? You know, like Jordan Peterson talks about with are there some other things we could be doing with like helping poverty, you know, raising up the impoverished.
Starting point is 00:09:14 That would be much better. You know what I mean? Like all these resources that are going towards certain things, like I'm not saying we shouldn't do some of it, but are there some other ways that. We shouldn't do some of it, but are there some other ways that I kind of threw out the playbook as far as like nutrition? Somebody said half the people that die of a heart attack didn't have high cholesterol. I think it was on Huberman that I heard that. And I mean, you can fact check me, but like I'm pretty sure like Huberman has said that, but like 50% of the people that died of a heart attack didn't have high cholesterol. And that like high cholesterol, it just made me question everything.
Starting point is 00:09:50 I'm not trying to make like some scientific claim because I'm a cowboy, but it made me, it's like maybe meat is less of an enemy than what mainstream is trying to tell everybody. That's the main point. Meat is eaten by 95% of the people on the planet. And we have since the beginning of time if if meat was killing everybody that would kill us off a long time ago meat's the most nutrient dense food you can eat we just have all these problems in this country in terms of what the what narratives are being spread and what information is being spread and one of the big ones that started it off was was the 50s or the 60s with the sugar industry.
Starting point is 00:10:25 So the 1950s, the sugar industry paid off these scientists to fake this study, to fake these results, and have it say that saturated fat is the cause of heart disease and not sugar. Right. Because there was an obvious increase. So here it is. and not sugar because there was an obvious increase. So here it is. Documents show that a trade group called Sugar Research Foundation, known today as the Sugar Association, paid three Harvard scientists the equivalent of about $50,000 in today's dollars
Starting point is 00:10:54 to publish a 1967 review of research on sugar, fat, and heart disease. So it was a complete bullshit heart paper that these guys created that had everyone, including me when I was growing up and most people that have listened to this that haven't looked into it. We thought that saturated fat was causing heart disease when really it was sugar. Right. The massive overconsumption of sugar that started when people started adding sugar to everything, adding corn syrup to everything. When they subsidized corn and they had all this corn, turned it into corn syrup, started adding a sweetener to everything. And, like, people started getting fat as fuck and having heart attacks. And the sugar industry is like, we've got to blame somebody else.
Starting point is 00:11:36 Who are we going to blame? Let's blame this thing that people have been eating since the beginning of time. Let's blame saturated fat. And let's say, you know, the dietary cholesterol affects your overall health. And like, God damn, cholesterol is like literally what you need to form hormones. It's a building block of your human body. It's like, it's critical. It's a critical thing. And there's LDL and HDL. And to try to figure out what's well, you need like a Huberman to sit down and break something like that down to try to figure out what's well, you need like a, like a Huberman
Starting point is 00:12:05 to sit down and break something like that down to you. And then there's also hereditary issues that people have. Some people really should be on a low cholesterol diet and some people have heart disease they're born with. There's a lot of factors. Yeah. Yeah. The, um, the carbs and the sugar.
Starting point is 00:12:24 That's the big one, man. That's the big one, man. That's the big one. You can cut that shit out of your life. You'll be better off. You'll be better off. A lot better off. And I don't mean all carbs. Aren't you on it right now?
Starting point is 00:12:33 Yeah, I'm on the carnivore diet. Yeah. But I did eat a pizza. Minus the pizza. Couldn't stop. Couldn't stop. Thank God Jamie took it away. And then you got mad at him for taking it away.
Starting point is 00:12:41 I know. I was like Gollum in the ring. My precious. My precious. My precious. How many of those slices did you smoke down? At least five or six, right? There was only two left.
Starting point is 00:12:53 So he only had like one or two. I ate most of the pie. That's why he took it. He wanted a piece. He didn't want a piece. He did not. He was not interested in fish. Jamie is an anti-fish man.
Starting point is 00:13:03 That's right. You said that. You know how people are pulling all the fish out of the ocean? Jamie is not responsible for any of that. He lives guilt-free about the fish genocide. Nothing to do with that. If I had a piece of pizza, it would wreck me right now. Well, you just got done working out with Tim Kennedy.
Starting point is 00:13:18 Yes. That's not a good idea to do anything where you have to be functional for the rest of the day. My man, Ty, in there that was with us? Yeah. a good idea to do anything where you have to be functional for the rest of the day my man ty in there that was with us yeah we got done with the warm-up and he went in the bathroom started throwing up the warm-up like tim's warm-ups are way more extreme than most people's workouts yeah and he does that all the time he's not fucking around just for you that's like he just took you he just he didn't have to torture He just take you and do what he does, and that'll torture you by itself.
Starting point is 00:13:47 Well, I got him a ticket last night to your show, and that was how he repaid me. By torturing you? He was like, all right, I'll go with you. He was planning on torturing you anyway. He told me when he was sitting in here, he told me he was going to get you. Yeah, I don't work out with that fucking dude. Get out of here, man. He did.
Starting point is 00:14:07 That's a real savage right there. Yeah. Bonafide. Like I was saying, I bet that dude makes his gum bleed every time he brushes his teeth. He does everything hard. Yeah, he works out the way you would expect him to after you have a conversation with him. Oh, yeah, he's intense. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:14:21 But, you know, we need people like that. I'd like to see him and cam work out together oh it'd be fun yeah i haven't has he not done cam show yet not yet oh he needs to do cam he's talked about it oh they have to do it yeah those are the only two times i've thrown up in workouts and with cam and with yeah cam is all about reps he'll make you do like 100 reps of 135 pounds like what the fuck are we doing dude we got off that mountain and went straight to the bow rack and i kept going into the bathroom we're adjusting my bow and i kept going to the bathroom and wayne was like i think you need to check on him and cam was like well he's fine we just it was like 12 miles and i was throwing up
Starting point is 00:15:01 it was coming out both ends him and tim they're the only ones that got me like that. It's hard to shoot after you're that tired, too. It's hard to stay stable. If I come here after lifting and I try to shoot, my arms just don't communicate well. My arm doesn't want to stay steady. This arm's all shaky. He calls it lift run shoot but i fucking think it would should be shoot lift run i don't think you should i don't when i
Starting point is 00:15:31 practice like archery in the morning i don't do jack shit before i practice archery yeah i want to be loose i loosen my arms up a little i would take some breathing exercises i don't want to be out of breath i don't be anything like i on the mountains, there's going to be moments where you're out of breath and all that stuff. But I feel like getting in shape is the solution for that. Right. I don't think the solution is try to shoot when you're exhausted. You just develop bad habits. But Cam doesn't really shoot before he, he calls it lift, run, shoot, but he really shoots before he lifts. Yeah. He'll tell you the same thing. Like, you know, you really want to be, you want to have confidence in your shooting.
Starting point is 00:16:09 And the only way to do that really is to be, like, relaxed and not exhausted. You don't want your arms exhausted. The whole idea is, like, you're trying to build repetition over. You need thousands of reps to be able to execute the way he does. Yeah. You know, you watch him every fucking day. He does it the same way. Every day.
Starting point is 00:16:27 Every day. His muscle memory is just built into him. Whap. Yeah. It was intense being up there. There's a lot of similarities between him and Tim. Mm-hmm. You know, being around him.
Starting point is 00:16:39 Yeah. And I'm sure you're pretty similar to both of those guys, but. I'm a little more loose than those fellows. I like to get fucked up. I like to party a little. I like to have fun. Yeah, you're also a comedian, so you've got that side to you. Yeah, it's different.
Starting point is 00:16:53 But in the comedian world, I'm about as disciplined as it gets. I can tell. In the comedian world, my life, the way I live, is a little odd. Well, if you're thinking about what I think you're thinking, like how long, that was like an hour last night that you were on stage. I had two shows too. I had a 10 o'clock too.
Starting point is 00:17:12 And I just kept thinking like, damn, like that's a lot of work and the timing of it. And like, I can't imagine the work you have to put it. Cause like I got comedian in my bio, but that's really like YouTube, you know and shit is a little different than stand up yeah it is it's different because you're not doing in front of a live audience but it's still being funny you know i'm not dismissive of youtube comedians you know there's a lot of people that don't like when youtubers go and do live shows like should be happy that anyone's doing live shows let Let's have fun. Like, what do you give a fuck?
Starting point is 00:17:45 You know, like some comedians don't like it when comedians use music or when they use props or when they use this or that. Like, who gives a fuck? Yeah. Just go have fun. Right. You can put on a good show. You can put on a good show with a slide show if you're good at it.
Starting point is 00:17:58 Right. If you figure out a way to put together a great show with slides. Pauly Shore's there this weekend and he's's got this great show of the history of his life, all these jokes written into it and everything, but he shows all these slides of him as a young kid and all kinds of shit. That's hilarious. Him being babysat by Sam Kinison.
Starting point is 00:18:15 So it's like, you could do comedy all kinds of ways, and Pauly does it regular way too, but he put together this thing. Like, yeah, why not? You know, fucking do a YouTube comedy show. Do fucking TikTok. Who gives a shit? Have fun.
Starting point is 00:18:29 Yeah, that's, I guess my life was just kind of pointing in a different direction with, you know, rodeoing. And, you know, that was kind of my deal, you know, and that's what all my time has been my entire life is like in and around an arena or on the back of a horse out in a pasture but i've always had a respect for stand-up comedians that's kind of my skydiving i guess maybe one day you should try it yeah yeah just sit down come up with some stuff to talk
Starting point is 00:18:56 about fuck around practice it record it see what it sounds like you know maybe try some jokes out on your friends yep you know maybe sneak it in there if you have a couple of beers yep just fucking dip your toes in who knows man most of the time with cameras we'll do one take but yeah you don't get that second take on stage no you don't but you learn how to knock it you don't get that second take on a horse either that's 100 true yeah i mean it's like with a lot of you don't get that second take on a horse either. That's 100% true. Yeah. I mean, it's like with a lot of, you don't get that second take and you're shooting an arrow at a bull. Right.
Starting point is 00:19:27 It's like, you know, there's a lot of things in life you don't get a second take. That's a good point. You prepare as much as you can prepare. Yeah. And then you got to figure out how to go with the flow. Yeah. You got to figure out the thing. And that's what's fun.
Starting point is 00:19:39 What's fun is you don't know what's going to happen. Like, wee! That's some of the most fun things in life. You have fucking no idea where it's going to happen like we that's some of the most fun things in life you have fucking no idea where it's going to go well it's crazy about the the stand-up part is whenever guys you guys go to talking to the crowd like matt rife that you had on the other day and like his crowd work and oh he's great at that yeah i get that's where i think it's like you're able to still be funny but i mean like it's improv oh yeah yeah a real real good guy who's really good at that. It's really fun to watch because they're just making a show out of thin air
Starting point is 00:20:11 and fucking around with people. Hinchcliffe's really good at that. Andrew Schultz is amazing at that. He might be the best at it. He's really good at that. Yeah. Yeah. That Hinchcliffe was hilarious last night.
Starting point is 00:20:22 Oh, he's a maniac. His delivery, you know he's setting something up. Yeah. That Hinchcliffe was hilarious last night. Oh, he's a maniac. His delivery, you know he's setting something up. Yeah. This is kid Rick Ingram out of LA. He's one of the best ever at crowd work. He's fucking amazing at it. He'll do his whole show with crowd work. He's got baked in bits, too, that he can go to.
Starting point is 00:20:39 Someone's from a specific place, and he's a fucking genius. Yeah. He's a master at that. There's a bunch of different ways to do it you know you could you could do it i i feel like anybody could do it if you're funny right you're definitely funny yes sir no i appreciate it i feel like you know like i would get on a bull or a horse and like have a certain feeling and then that would be completely different for me i'm sure it'd be swapped for a lot of you guys you know if you had to switch and get on a bull obviously but oh yeah every new crazy thing is a totally different experience you know like i can't imagine riding a fucking bull
Starting point is 00:21:14 that was one of one times on fear factor where i told the producers don't do it don't do it i got there and they had these one of the girls was like 98 pounds just tiny little lady And they had her riding this boy go dude Don't don't do this to these people and the fucking the Stunt men are some of the hardest dudes you will ever meet those dudes are not worried about broken bones They break them all the time. They're not worried about shit, so they're not worried about themselves getting injured They take precautions. You know they they're professional, but they're definitely not worried about these fuckers getting injured either. They don't want them to get injured, but they'll put them in danger. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:21:50 And I was like, these are fucking bulls. And the stunt guy, he was hilarious. He always had a dip in his mouth, and he was on set so often that he stopped spitting his dip because he couldn't, like, carry around a cup. So he just started swallowing it. Yeah. So he swallows his dip. What kind of a man is there swallowing dip for decades? There's a lot of them.
Starting point is 00:22:08 That kind of dude. Yeah. And so he's like, don't worry, boo, they're stunt bulls. I go, they're stunt bulls. I go, does that bull know he's a stunt bull? I bet he thinks he's a fucking bull. I bet he has no idea what a stunt bull is. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:22:20 And the stunt bull is like less aggressive. For sure. Yeah. That thing was aggressive as fuck. I call him, I call like the one I have, he would be like my bucket list bull. Because like if somebody just wanted to get on a bull for the hell of it, like I would put him on this one black bull. We call him trunk. He just jumps and kicks around there.
Starting point is 00:22:40 And he's a little, he's kind of predictable. And he's not mean at the end of it. And then we've got some other bulls that will get it on in the gate and then be mean and might try to kill you. But I imagine I vaguely remember the show, and what I remember about it, it would be like something probably a notch or two above trunk, like my bucket list type bull ride. Like if you were to get on a bull, I would put you on trunk.
Starting point is 00:23:02 Yeah, it's not going to happen. I'm still not interested in that. Right. They don't want me on there. I don't want to get on a bull, I would put you on trunk. Yeah, it's not going to happen. I'm still not interested in that. Right. They don't want me on there. I don't want to be on there. We've got a relationship that way. We've got a good agreement. And normally I try to talk people out of it.
Starting point is 00:23:14 Good. Like I got my whole program like revolves around like interns coming in. Like my Netflix show was those like my interns learning how to rodeo. And they, uh, and so I've got guys coming in that want to ride bulls, want to ride Bronx. And I'll tell them like all the things like, listen, number one, you could die or worse, you know, you could die from the neck down and not the neck up, you know? Right. And I'll just be real with them. I'll have three or four of those conversations. And if they still want to do it, well, then I'll teach them, you know,
Starting point is 00:23:50 because there are some precautions you can take to minimize risk, but there's always risk. Yeah, you might get kicked. Yep, stepped on. You might get stomped. You get stomped by a bullet. Good Lord. Have you been stomped?
Starting point is 00:24:03 Oh, yeah. What does that feel like? bullet good lord have you been stomped oh yeah what does that feel like uh i broke i broke a lot of bones like this i broke my sternum like you know getting kicked you know stepped on in the chest that that one's pretty bad but a lot of the worst ones would be like concussions that's those are the ones that'll stick with you you know those bones will heal but the concussions will kind of you know that cte that's something that's not measured in rodeo right you know what i mean right you get some guys that all of a sudden start getting knocked out just they can think about getting jerked down and it might knock them out yeah that gets sketchy right yeah when
Starting point is 00:24:39 their chin goes yeah yeah i mean it's just like fighters you get knocked out too many times then you get knocked out really easily. Right. It's very spooky to see. When I see it in fighters, it makes me very concerned. Like, sometimes you got a guy who's just maybe had just too many fights, and they used to be real durable, and then you see him get dinged once, and you see, like, instantly the legs go, and you're like, oh, my God, he barely got touched. Yep. And he got rocked.
Starting point is 00:25:04 like instantly the legs go and you're like, oh my God, he barely got touched and he got rocked. Yeah. And there's just, I'm sure with fighters too, there's just this, once that sport grabs a hold of your soul, it's so hard to let it go. And it's the most exciting moments of your life is winning and competing. And that high is so high that regular life seems like a dull gray. And I think it's very hard for them. And it's also hard for them because their identity gets wrapped up in being a fighter. A lot of my friends that have retired, they really struggle trying to figure out who they are afterwards. And then they entertain one more fight. But they don't really want to fight.
Starting point is 00:25:43 They just want something that makes them excited again yes sir and there's kind of a i think the winning and going down the road is part of it and then you you have those certain individuals that and i think i mean you know a lot of them in that world i feel like cowboy is definitely one of them serone but like in rodeo when there's somebody that is in love with the actual fight yeah you know like i think a lot of people and these guys get weeded out they don't have that long of a career in rodeo i'm sure fighting's the same that like they like to have fought they like to have ridden bulls but then you get those guys who like cameras are off nobody's there and they don't like they want to get on a bronc like they love the thrill of that fight not on your head the gate opens and it's it's you and it's so pure it's so pure and i'm sure like a
Starting point is 00:26:38 fighter that is just they're just hungry for it yeah the actual between the bells yeah that's what's scary maybe maybe all of them that on your level they're all like that i think they would have to be i guess to a degree once they get to the highest level i mean that that is who they are you know like donald i mean he's a pure fighter but donald is also very he has a lot of interests i'm not worried about donald transitioning because he's he i think he has a legit possibility to be a movie star i think he could do it if any of those guys could do i mean movies are always looking for like a real hard-looking cowboy motherfucker and donald's that guy yeah i mean he's perfect for movies i i could see him like randy couture's turned into a
Starting point is 00:27:23 career in films you know with the expendables movies and all kinds of other shit i could see him, like Randy Couture's turned into a career in films, you know, with the Expendables movies and all kinds of other shit. I could see Donald doing that easy, 100%. Yeah, Chuck did it a little. Mm-hmm. Yeah, we're working on a comedy. I don't know if you saw his short that he did at his ranch the other day on Halloween. He put out like a 10-minute, like a little mini movie. Donald did?
Starting point is 00:27:43 Yeah, it's really cool. It was very well put together. And we're working on, he and I are doing like a comedy where. Nice. Yeah. So I got a guy working for me that's writing it right now. Beautiful. So it'll be fun.
Starting point is 00:27:57 I love Donald. Yeah. He's a wild boy. Yeah. He wants you to come out to his kids camp. What is that? What is his kids camp uh it's it's in the summer in june he does like he just has kids come out and they just learn to be like miniature cowboy saronis like they they we shoot bows guns um they roll every day and
Starting point is 00:28:22 they just there's sessions campfire sessions at night. That's awesome. It's like 50, 60 kids. That's probably the thing he's most passionate about now that he's done fighting. That's beautiful. He talks about it all the time. He's got a good heart. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:37 He really does. Yeah. He's a good man. He told a story on this podcast about getting trapped in a cave while cave diving with this dude. And the dude panicked and the cave got filled up with mud. You couldn't see anything. Even though he was right there and I knew he survived. Like it was one of the most fucking terrifying stories I've ever heard in my life.
Starting point is 00:28:55 Because he was running out of air and he couldn't figure out how to get out of the cave. Because it was all filled with silt. So he's like searching around for the opening to try to figure out how to get out. Yeah. That's an intense story thinking about his family thinking about his kids and his wife and never see them again he's gonna die in this cave like fuck he's got that never quit attitude yeah and also like don't go cave diving with people who panic yeah you, just people who panic are dangerous.
Starting point is 00:29:25 Don't do anything with people that panic. Don't do anything. Like, you have to experience panic many times in your life and figure out how to manage that before you start fucking around in caves. Yeah. That should not be the first time you really panic. I'm nervous if a situation went down that I...
Starting point is 00:29:42 I'm not saying I'd be something badass i'm just saying like i might be too desensitized having been around rodeo like yeah an emergency situation would be like we'd be eight nine ten seconds into it before i'm like oh man we need to do something right just because like seeing guys get crashed in the arena and and like having to help them you know situations like that right i don't know but i'm sure fighters are the same way but they definitely get desensitized to people getting hurt yep for sure you know one time uh my wife uh she had like uh one of those uh suvs with a hatchback thing and she was taking something out of the back and the corner of the door was above her head and she didn't know and she stood up and slammed it
Starting point is 00:30:31 the corner of it right into the top of her head and blood starts trickling down her face she was freaking out and I looked at her I'm like it's like that big it's like a little cut we could superglue it I was like it's nothing yeah I was to me. It was like if it was that was my head. I'd be like oh, it's just a little cut It's no big deal, but you're like blood Yeah, and I'm like oh my god. I'm so it's a person. I love more than anyone, and I'm so desensitized Like a little cut yeah, I'm like this is nothing yeah, this is like a barely an injury I'm so used to seeing people just bust it open, their fucking eyelids hanging off their face, and they're like, don't stop the fight.
Starting point is 00:31:08 Let them fight. You're so used to seeing guys that probably have a broken hand because they haven't thrown it in two rounds. You're so used to seeing guys get fucked. I've seen so many guys. I've seen like four guys have their legs snapped from checking kicks now. You see so many injuries.
Starting point is 00:31:25 Yeah. It gets so desensitized seeing people just getting fucking knocked into another dimension with a head kick. It's so normal. I rodeoed with a guy. We went together for years. Ross Sherrod, he was a Marine. So he came back from Iraq and started riding bareback horses. And he got jerked down into like a pipe
Starting point is 00:31:49 fence and uh just like crushed his face oh like had to like surgery and like and he just never knocked out just like stood up and he's this little stocky you know marine you know like door-to-door marine and he just just, like, walks out and is like, I'm going to go down here to the hospital. Just blood everywhere, broken eye socket, broken everything. And, you know, we helped him. But it made me think, you know, like, I feel like I've seen quite a bit of injuries with the rodeo arena,
Starting point is 00:32:17 but I can't imagine guys like Ross or even Tim who have done MMA and been to Afghanistan. Yeah, that's a different level of seeing people get fucked up. Yeah. Watch somebody come out without an arm, not just an arm broken. Well, you know, Tulsi Gabbard, she has that white streak in her hair. That came when she was deployed, when she was working on these medical units. Dang.
Starting point is 00:32:41 Yeah. That's where she got that, just from the horrors of seeing all these people shot up blown up just the stress of their lives trying to put them back together again yeah dang yeah yeah that's something you can't unsee yeah yeah there's i mean and there's so many people in this world that have experienced nothing. Right. And it's floating around. Yeah. Not having any experience with any kind of chaos.
Starting point is 00:33:13 Yeah. A little bit of pain here and there is, I don't know, just to show you what the good times mean. It gives you some perspective. Perspective. For sure. And seeing how vulnerable the human body is. You know, we're vulnerable as shit. Yep.
Starting point is 00:33:30 Whether we like to think of it or not, think of yourself as a badass, you're still made out of basically a fucking meat water balloon. Right. You know? It'll make a, is this water open? Yeah, yeah. Let's grab that. It'll make a guy come to Jesus on the back of the chutes, that's for sure. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:33:46 Especially coming back from an injury. Oh, I would imagine. You know. Because then you've got to get back on the horse. Right. Literally. Yep. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:33:54 How did you start rodeoing? How old were you? I mean, I was born into it. My dad was, I was kind of, I was on the rough, roughy end of the arena. was i was kind of i was on the rough roughy end of the arena so like if you go to a rodeo arena there'll be timed event side and a rough stock side the timed event is like team roping calf roping barrel racing and then the rough stock end is the bucking horses bucking bulls bullfighters pickup men there's five things you can do down there um bareback saddle bronc bull riding and then the pickup man and the bullfighters so there's five things you can do down there. Um, bareback saddle bronc bull riding,
Starting point is 00:34:25 and then the pickup man and the bullfighter. So there's five jobs you do on that rough stock end. And my dad did all those. And so like, I grew up like a roughy, so to speak, and fell in love with all of it. And, uh, you know, it's kind of two stories, bull riding. I'm the greatest of all time and the most humble you know i'm sick and tired of youtube pulling down all my bull rides you know it just gets old do they pull your bull i'm just so violent just so violent but bronc riding has been like the thing that i've chased and like that's what that's one of the last things my dad did and bronc riding it's similar to bull riding except it's a horse, not a bull.
Starting point is 00:35:07 But, yeah, I got started young and got on my first bull whenever I was like 10 or 12. Oh, my God. You know? And then it was all down here from there. I mean, I had a little bit of fear involved, but I just knew that was the path I was going on no matter what. And my dad didn't push me, you know, but he, that's just, that was in our blood. That's just what we did.
Starting point is 00:35:30 And I was gonna do it whether he pushed me or not. And then I just, once it got, once that fight, experiencing that fight of every night, I wasn't much for the partying. There's a lot of guys that all of it together, the partying and that lifestyle, like I enjoyed having a good time, but for me, being behind the shoots,
Starting point is 00:35:51 getting ready for that fight, that was what kept me coming back. I would imagine very few people party as hard as rodeo guys. I would agree with that. 100%. In Vegas, there's a lot of times Where UFC events Or I'll do a comedy event And it'll align with
Starting point is 00:36:08 When the rodeo's in town The NFR And those dudes Are just different Like you could see it In their fucking face You know They're just different
Starting point is 00:36:15 I'm usually driving them Yeah I'm usually driving them Yeah I've always been You know the sober one Of the group But How'd you avoid the partying
Starting point is 00:36:25 my dad did it and so like just when i was a kid like i just kind of i've not really ever succumbed to peer pressure like i just kind of was going to be on this path and uh he was like john wayne mixed with woodrow call mixed with Billy Graham. He was like a Christian man, hard cowboy, still a hard ass. And it was, so I kind of, he didn't tell me you can never drink, but I just didn't. And then before I knew it, I looked it back and I just hadn't drank and I was having a pretty good time. I'm like the old Vaughn, Like when I get something, I get it. And I knew that if I got that, it would get me.
Starting point is 00:37:10 Like I just know that. Yeah, that's why I've avoided cocaine. I don't do cocaine. I do like the way it smells, but I don't. I've never even smelled it. I'm just kidding. I haven't done that either. I had a friend of mine when I was in high school, and his cousin started selling it.
Starting point is 00:37:26 And his cousin, like, is almost like a dude who got bit by a vampire. Like, he became a different person. Like, he lost a lot of weight, got really skinny, wasn't eating. And him and his girl would just, they had an apartment that was, like, in the attic of this house. And they would just sit in their apartment and like do coke and watch movies and and sell coke and his life kind of just like slipped away into this very bizarre addiction thing and this was like i guess i was like 16 or 17 when that was happening to him and i remember thinking like fuck that drug whatever that is that drug fucking grabs you i don't want to have nothing to do with that
Starting point is 00:38:06 it seems like one of those forks in the road and like when you do try it or do it a little bit like it's going to take you down this other like your life takes a turn like that seems like a good illustration of it's just like what would he have been like had he never done that you know right like it just that and maybe that's kind of the way I viewed alcohol, but. Mm-hmm. Well, it certainly is the case for some people. I mean, if I had an alcoholic in my family, maybe I would have avoided alcohol, too.
Starting point is 00:38:34 That was kind of me, too. Yeah. I didn't have that. Yeah, if you have that, too, and you see how it could wreck someone's life, it's hard, man. It's having control over your urges, and especially if you have a physical
Starting point is 00:38:46 addiction you know like you get physically addicted to alcohol that is one of the ones that if you kick it too quick you'll die yeah alcohol and benzos xanax when people just try to kick that cold turkey there's a possibility you could die yeah scary shit yeah i thought it was my sternum i went in i had some big life stuff happening and i was like went in my doctor i thought like you know something with my because my old man died of a heart attack actually while he was at a rodeo and uh like in the arena but anyways i had like some some chest pain and he went in and doctor was like well do you have anything big going on i was like yeah and then he started talking about xanax and all this and i was like i guess
Starting point is 00:39:29 half-assed like panic attacks or whatever i don't know and i was like oh that's what okay forget we had this conversation i just walked out like i didn't want no part of like i just that kind of stuff would those kind of drug or pills or whatever you want to call them would just grab me and not let go i think well that's jordan peterson i mean he it took him like a full year to recover so it took him a long time to kick it and then a full year to get back to normal again yeah that's that xanax stuff scary and they're just willing to give it to you they're like hey dale what are you freaking out a little bit here take. This is our anti-freakout pill. Yeah. It'll only cost you.
Starting point is 00:40:06 Apparently, it's amazing. I've never done it, but apparently people who've done it, they go, oh, like all of a sudden life is a breeze. Like, wee. And I'm sure when there's, like it was for me in that moment, like there's this professional telling you you should take it. Makes it like, oh, man, this guy said I should. He's got a fucking stethoscope on.
Starting point is 00:40:26 Yeah. He's legit. He's got a pocket protector. Yeah, that's like Dale Brisby. I got this buckle on. You might as well listen to me about bull riding. You must listen. Yeah, and they want you to try it out.
Starting point is 00:40:38 And unfortunately, they're incentivized to do that, which is even scarier. And also, a lot of people want it, right? So if you're a doctor and you've got someone who's got a lot of anxiety and you say, would you like Xanax? Like, yes, I would. And then, boom, they got it. And they're like, thank you, doctor. I feel so much better. Well, he did his job, I guess.
Starting point is 00:40:55 I don't know. Just not for me. Yeah, me neither. So you didn't have a, like, the sternum wasn't, like, rebroken or anything. It was just a panic thing. Yeah, it was just, I was just short of breath, you know, and that's, it was kind of the start of me, like, starting to look into, like, you know, cholesterol and whatnot. And, like, really, and it ultimately led to, like, I'm just going to change my diet around. But that had nothing to do with the panic attacks, but that was kind of, it it it snowballed into like me changing my diet and doing all kinds of different just realizing you got to
Starting point is 00:41:29 get control yourself yeah yeah for sure but there's a lot of people that argue that i went the opposite direction now just eating all meat yeah those people i think they should try it yeah it's i mean it's the best i've ever felt right i feel my best when I don't fuck around with bread and carbs. I don't think salads are a problem, but I do think there's a real concern about the amount of glyphosate that gets into people's system from monocrop agriculture. That's real. I don't know how much that's doing to you. And I know that there's been many times in the past where people have dismissed the health concerns about a certain substance and then later on you find out you know that
Starting point is 00:42:10 that fucking kills people causes cancer and it's a real problem and it's contributing to all these autoimmune issues and this and that and that and this and like oh now we know but it took 10 years before people figured it out right there's a lot of like very legitimate people that are sounding the alarm about the dangers of glyphosate and the fact that when they do, they did this blood test, like, this study on people, and they found that, like, 90-something percent of the people had glyphosate in their blood.
Starting point is 00:42:36 Even if it's a small amount, like, there's a lot of apologists who want to say, oh, it's a small amount, it's very safe. Like, a small amount of something that kills you and causes cancer doesn't, I don't like that. And it doesn't sound good in any way, shape or form. I don't think that should be dismissed, especially when we don't have long-term studies. And how long have they been using this shit? A couple of decades?
Starting point is 00:42:58 Who fucking knows what it's doing to us? I don't know. What I do know about is like the beef, you know, and like, well, I say I know more about that than I do vegetables and farming. And like, I'm a fan of, you know, I just watched this, you know, calf grow and I fed him out and then I took him and got him processed and now I'm eating him, you know, and like, there's just something to that where I just, I don't know, that seems, like, natural to me. Yeah. And that seems like the way God designed it.
Starting point is 00:43:31 And I like grain finished, but some people like grass-fed, I think, whatever. And, but that just, I don't know, I just don't feel like that's wrong. I don't think it's wrong either. And I think there's a reality of life and death that a lot of people avoid. And they think that by not eating meat, you're somehow or another making life better for them. If you wanted them to live naturally, they would get killed by wolves. And it would be horrible. The way they get killed, they get their fucking hamstrings torn off.
Starting point is 00:43:59 And they get taken down. And they immediately tear their guts out. And they swarm them. And it's a horrific death. Hor long painful death and if it's not that they're freezing to death and if it's not that it's mountain lions it's not that it's bears it's not that it's starving and that's the reality of being an animal in the wild and if you think that somehow or another like pasture raised animals that are just chilling having having a good time, eating grass, not a concern in the world. And then one day they get fed into a chute and they get a bolt in their brain.
Starting point is 00:44:29 It takes a second. They're instantly dead. That's a better death, a better life, all the above. 100%. I went to the sale barn the other day, and I took an old bull, old bucking bull there. He was probably like 10. Like, if you're eating beef odds are that sucker didn't live past a little over a year like at the most and so like this joker had an
Starting point is 00:44:52 extra nine years on his life as a bucking bull and it's pretty laid back you know he does his deal once twice a week and i and when i sold him i I bought another bull, just, I thought he looked cool. And now he's at my house and, uh, he's a bucking bull, a practice bull, but those other order buyers that were in the sale born, if they'd have bought that bull, like he was going to go, I guess this is just like an extension of what you're saying. Like even with rodeo, people that argue with it, like, man, if anything, I'm giving them a better life, you know? But regardless, whether that bull would have come to be a bucking bull at my house or gone argue with it like man if anything i'm giving them a better life you know but regardless whether that bull would have come to be a bucking bull at my house or gone to you know be burger i don't
Starting point is 00:45:31 know is that what they would normally do to them when they're done with them they turn them into burger yeah so whenever you get like an older cow an older bull um the sir the the steaks from them are just not as good like you want a young either, either, like I said, grain-fed for me to like this perfect point. You got people in the feedlot that'll watch them, be like, that one's ready. And that's what, like if you go to these steakhouses and get a prime ribeye, like that was a calf that was,
Starting point is 00:46:00 I mean, that was not an old steer. You know, he probably weighed 1,100, 1,200 pounds. And once he got to that weight, it was his time. And a steer is a castrated bull, right? Correct. So how old are they when they castrate them? We'll usually do it pretty young, like maybe three months old. And the whole idea with that is if they grow up like that, then their meat is more tender, then they get bigger.
Starting point is 00:46:24 Their hormones just go a completely different direction. And you can tell, like in a pasture, my dad could tell just even a six-month-old, just he'll come down the chute, he'll look at his head, and he'll be like, I've got a heifer, got a bull. But when they're older, like a year or two, you can tell out in the pasture, like that's not a steer, that's a bull. Like the way they grow is much different they're like a bull is going to be more lean a steer is going to have more fat to them
Starting point is 00:46:50 and heifers will be that way too they don't they're they're not as good to eat as like a steer like if you're getting a prime steak somewhere it's probably a steer how come again like those hormones like they're just there so like a steer is going to be more muscular than a heifer. Like he just doesn't have the focus of like reproduction that she does. Right. You know, and now he doesn't have any focus of reproduction now that you castrated him. And so like he's all about, his only deal is he's going to grow and sleep. He's going to eat and sleep.
Starting point is 00:47:25 And so you grow them and eat them to this perfect point in the feedlot. They'll start on a cow-calf. There's three phases. When they're born, it's called cow-calf. And that's the more sexy part of cowboying and ranching is, like, you see them out in the pasture. And then that middle phase is the stalker phase. And that's where, like, like a yearling you'll wean
Starting point is 00:47:46 them at like 600 pounds and almost a year then you'll send them to a wheat pasture and they'll be there for you know they'll gain however much weight maybe get to like 900 and then they'll go to the feedlot till maybe 1200 pounds so that's the third phase is the feedlot and they'll get finished out and then they'll get slaughtered have Have you ever eaten an old bull? Yeah. Yeah. So I had an old bull get, um, crippled and I was like, well, let's just try it. Like I got some ribeyes now that I'm on carnivore, like I need to meet, you know? Right. And I had this old bull get crippled and sometimes when they get real bad crippled, you don't want to take them to the sale barn. So we'll just process them. And it is so much tougher.
Starting point is 00:48:26 It's so much tougher. Like they wouldn't even sell it at the grocery store. Like a 10-year-old bull, if you get that ribeye, it's just not good. Did you try different ways of cooking it? Did you try like – because I would think that would be – There's probably some ways you could doctor it up. And when I say it's not good, I'm talking like compared to a prime one steak. But is it more like wild game?
Starting point is 00:48:49 Like what is it like? Yeah, it's just going to be harder to chew through, you know, like an old bull. It's just going to be harder to. Even the tenderloins? Even the tenderloins. Now, those are going to be better than like your sirloins, but they're still not going to be. There will be a noticeable difference between like that and a little over a year old steer that got processed it because i've
Starting point is 00:49:12 always felt that steaks are kind of unnaturally tender anyway it's kind of weird that when you see the difference between like eating an elk steak and eating like a beef steak it's like you're used to like if you eat an steak, you're used to chewing through it. Right. That's what meat is supposed to be like, like dense fibers. If you like the round steaks of an elk, then that would be similar to like a ribeye maybe of an old bull, bovine bull. Because I know there's a place in Vegas that we eat at all the time.
Starting point is 00:49:48 It's called Bizarre Meats, and one of the things that they have on the menu is old cows. Like he likes the different flavor that you get from an older cow, and so it's like they have that as an option. I've tried it. It's really good. I was about to say, I'm sure those guys, as good as they are, like I just got like this griddle I throw it on. Right.
Starting point is 00:50:10 You know what I mean? Right. And so I'll sear it. Maybe sometimes if it's real thick, I'll throw it in the oven. But they probably got all kinds of tips and tricks that they could make a nine-year-old bull taste good. Well, they do it slowly over hardwood. So what they do is they have a fire and one of those Argentine grills, you know, that cranks and lowers and raises it, a grill works grill. And so they'll have it up on high and it's getting just barely touched by the flames and a lot of smoke.
Starting point is 00:50:34 And they'll slowly bring it up to temperature then. And then they drop it down and sear it at the end. And it's. It sounds amazing. It's pretty amazing. When I'm at my house, I like to cook them all the same way. That way I can kind of judge them the same way. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:50:49 Like, this is my process. This is how I cooked it. Right. You know what I mean? Then I'll know. But if I got to do all that extra stuff, and it's three meals a day, so like sometimes I'm just trying to have lunch, you know, and I just need to... Yeah, I need to do it quick.
Starting point is 00:51:03 Eat and go. Yeah, I get it. I get it. Yeah. It's, um, so when you started and you were 10 years old, what was the, when was the first time you got fucked up? I went to, I was at Charlie Thompson's he's in Lubbock. And my dad was like, my dad used to work for Charlie. He started, and my dad was like, my dad used to work for Charlie. He started, he's this old stock contractor, and he's like, Charlie, I need something for him that, I don't know, just jump kick,
Starting point is 00:51:34 and he put me on this big bastard, and I was maybe, I don't think I was 13. I was maybe 12, and for me, it was big, but so before that, like eight, nine, 10, like I'm riding steers and stuff like that. So then like, but my first bull was, it was right around 12. And this joker came out, big spotted bull. And they come up in the front end. And everything in bull riding is counterintuitive. So like when they come up, you've got to go up with them.
Starting point is 00:52:01 And then, but your intuition is telling you to get back away from their head right and uh well i mean this big scary bull so like first thing i did is get back well then when he drops if you're back he's gonna like whip you down oh and it's called getting jerked down and it's the only time that i got jerked down because every time after that i jerked the bull up is what happened i'm just kidding but he jerked me down smashed my face and it didn't look like ross's from that bareback ride but for a 12 year old it was pretty bad i wasn't wearing a helmet so you went face to face to the top of his head oh god which would it's like a brick i was i would have been what's called hat down. And now these days, like everybody wears helmets, you know, like JB, Mooney, good friend of mine.
Starting point is 00:52:50 And me and him are two of the arguable goats, you know. And anyhow, JB, he's one of the last ones, like he's Marlboro man and he's he would go hat down. And but like usually in a lineup, you'd see one or two guys doing that everybody else is wearing a helmet these days yeah it seems like a helmet would be a good move yeah especially like if i make all my interns like new guys if you're an established bull rider and you show up at my house to get on a few that's one thing but if you're new you're wearing a helmet yeah every time i mean it just seems like it could save a lot of people, no? For sure. Yeah, for sure.
Starting point is 00:53:26 Yeah. But is there a thing still, like a bravado, about being a no-helmet rider? There's just something to it. Damn, it's just. It's got to be like a motorcycle rider too, right? I don't know. There's just something cowboy about it. I hate to say that because kids out there that might be listening to this, I think you need to wear a helmet.
Starting point is 00:53:44 Like, I hate to say that because, like, kids out there that might be listening to this, like, I think you need to wear a helmet. But, like, when J.B. Mooney is wearing, like, there's just something to that, like, ride or die. Like, this is, this is, it's just, damn, I don't know. That's what I'm saying. There's something to it. Yeah. I don't suggest it. Right. But, like, when he's got that Marlboro, and, like and I don't even smoke, and I don't think you should smoke,
Starting point is 00:54:05 but when JB is smoking a cigarette and he puts that, he'll be in AT&T Stadium. There he is. He puts that cigarette down, and he's cowboy. That's a cowboy. Show me a video of him running. Okay. That's a cowboy.
Starting point is 00:54:21 That's a cowboy. Show me a video of him running. Okay. There's a, yeah, there's, I mean, Bushwacker is one of the greatest. There he is. Yeah, that's in Houston. There's a little bow sheath fighting bulls. Does the audience appreciate him more when someone's just wearing that cowboy hat? Yes.
Starting point is 00:54:38 Kai Hamilton on the shoots, he goes hat down all the time, too. That is so crazy, watching that thing kick and watching him stay on it. That is fucking nuts. Yeah, he's – there's a reason people – there's probably some goat emojis on that. Yeah, like I saw a couple of them. Yeah, people – G-O-A-T. Yeah. I mean, that's it.
Starting point is 00:54:59 Look at that. So in the PBR, you can have – there's a point during the bull ride when you can pick your bull it's called the draft and like they'll they'll come certain times there he is damn i want to run something in the chute right now this gets your blood going oh my gosh yeah this is in Austin. I mean, obviously. Look at him go. That is crazy. There's Weston. He was there with me the first. How many times did these guys get blown out? Knees, ankles. He's had too many surgeries to count. Died on operating tables.
Starting point is 00:55:38 Like both shoulders done. He just broke his neck the other day. And that might've been the end of it for him he did announce that that he was done but it took and one of my buddies Randy was like man I'm sorry it had to be like this you had to go out like this you know breaking it and he said man this is what he was going to take what do you say break his neck like what what's the extension of the injury like get to the hospital and they say, okay, lay right here and don't move until the surgeon gets here because you could be paralyzed if you make a move.
Starting point is 00:56:11 Oh, God. If you make the wrong move. I've had two buddies this summer go down like that. Another one is a bronc rider, Jacobs Crawley. They're like, do not move until a surgeon flies in and does this surgery and that was his back but it was jb's neck scary that's scary shit and that that's like that's the worst of the worst kind of situation you know what i mean but i'm not suggesting people go try this like get on the other end of the arena you know do team roping do some calf
Starting point is 00:56:45 roping like like i don't know like i just can't i just have to be down here it got in my blood and i can't get it out and i'm going in for a surgery next week for what my shoulder but i've had two back surgeries i've had like six surgeries like in the last five or six years. Like it just, I got to a point, I went several years with no injuries. And then all of a sudden it kind of, like in your youth, you just like, you're just hitting the fence. You're hitting the ground. You're getting stepped on. And then all of a sudden, like once they start, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:57:21 But I'm going to get my shoulder redone. Is the shoulders from falling? It's dislocated five times. Oh. Yeah, three of them were in the last few months. Jesus. From riding. That was all from bucking horses.
Starting point is 00:57:36 And is it, are you getting the shoulder dislocated from hanging on, or are you getting the shoulder dislocated from getting bucked off? No, like the way I landed, like the first time it came out, it was right before my back surgery because I didn't realize I was hurt, and I kept bucking off weird on bucking horses. And when I hit the ground, my elbow drove, and it came out the front. And so, like, you kind of have a little bit of a socket that your shoulder's in. It's not like your hip.
Starting point is 00:58:03 Right. And so the bone broke off the front and so now it's like i was trying to turn a horse the other day like i just reached down he was running off with me and i reached down to turn him and my shoulder came out and so we just kept running off like it it'll just get easier and easier at this point so that's when i gotta have surgery what's the extent of the injury? What's going on in there? Ligament tears? That bone that holds it in. Oh, so it's broken off. Yes, sir.
Starting point is 00:58:30 Oh, so it has to be screwed back in place? He'll take, there's another bone above that they can use and he'll graph it and he'll screw it down to essentially remake that socket. Oh, God damn, dude. But it's bad, but also like I'm FaceTiming JB while he's in a neck brace, you know? It's like, I'm notTiming JB while he's in a neck brace, you know? It's like, I'm not going to complain. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:58:52 You know, I went to go visit Jacobs, and he's like... So this is the video of him breaking his neck? Yeah. Yeah, I haven't seen it. It's not from super close up, but you can definitely see what happens here. It's not good. So here he is. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:59:03 Oh, Jesus Christ. Oh, he landed neck first. And then his, like, he ain't going to get pulled out of there by a stretcher. Oh, God. Like, he's walking out. If his legs work, he's walking out. But he's hurting right there. Oh, God.
Starting point is 00:59:17 They told him he shouldn't have been able to walk out. But he didn't get jerked down there. It was just the way he landed on the back of his neck. Like, his vertebrae got, like, twisted in like twisted in there it like broke it and twisted it and somehow so did they have to fuse his neck yes oh god yeah like maybe a couple of vertebraes fused a couple of them oh it's serious like i said try calf roping but i guess once you do that the thrill of it is probably very difficult to recreate in anything else in life yes sir when you were talking about that a while ago with fighters
Starting point is 00:59:53 like that's what i was envisioning like what level of fight is there outside of getting on a bull you know same thing for maybe like tim kennedy when he got back from why do you know you guys call it bull fighting this is interesting like what is the difference between bull riding and bull fighting for maybe like Tim Kennedy when he got back from Afghanistan. Why do you guys call it bullfighting? This is interesting. What is the difference between bull riding and bullfighting? I'm sorry. I was talking while that video was playing. There's guys around the bull ride that are bullfighters,
Starting point is 01:00:18 and their role is to, when he gets bucked off, they go in and distract that bull. Right. So I think that was Nate Justice was fighting bulls there at that rodeo, and he snuck in, got that bull's attention so JB can get out. And so you're basically goading the bull to attack you. Correct. But you got on cleats and pads and you're, you know. This guy?
Starting point is 01:00:34 Yeah, that's Nate. Oh, look how he fell. And I think that's either Nathan Harp or Cody Webster around to the right. Like he's already getting that bull's attention. Either Nathan Harp or Cody Webster around to the right, like he's already getting that bull's attention. So like, and we're talking about like the best of the best bullfighters. So JB's got no chance at getting hooked a second time. Right.
Starting point is 01:00:57 God damn, the way he landed, that is crazy. Yeah. There's certain ways you get thrown into the into the air that's like scary that i i've the scariest moments are like when you're flying through the air and you can't you can't control how you land right another scary moment is when you get hung up there's a bad hang up on my instagram it was like two or three videos ago like when you get hung up by your hand it ago. Like when you get hung up by your hand, it's bad. But when you get hung up by your foot,
Starting point is 01:01:29 it's... And this kid almost dies. Like in my arena at my house. But like, because then you can't do anything. When you're hung up by your foot, by your hand, you're standing up, so your head's not under the bull. Uh-huh.
Starting point is 01:01:45 Yeah, that's Tyler Kipps on a bull we call Prison Mike. Good bull ride. Now he's about to get off. And see his foot? See his foot is hung? So first, like that's how you work a normal hang up when they're hung up by their hand. That's my brother right there,
Starting point is 01:02:03 Leroy. I don't know. that's not really protocol. And then my brother comes in with a knife, look at him dragging. At that point he's out of harm's way because his head is so far away from that. But you can see his foot. Oh Jesus Christ.
Starting point is 01:02:24 Oh man. So right there, Jesus Christ. Oh, man. So right there, if he went under that bull, that's where we're talking about if you got stepped on. He could have just died. And I had been in that situation, so when I saw him in it, it was like, okay, he's either going to die here, or we got to get him out.
Starting point is 01:02:41 Like one of the two. We either get him out or he dies. Right. And anyway, Tim commented on it. But it's a, and that kind of stuff, it's can happen really with any, there's accidents that can happen with horses or bulls outside of rough stock.
Starting point is 01:03:02 Like you could just have a horse buck with you out in the pasture and little things like that. They're more rare. But when you go to rough stock like you could just have a horse buck with you out in the pasture and little things like that they're more rare but when you go to rough stock like riding bucking bulls and bucking horses you kind of ask for that but it's such a strange subculture that most people aren't aware of it's a niche yeah but it's a very passionate niche. Yes, sir. And the people that are involved in it, man, it is everything to them. I think a lot of people, their eyes got open to it a little bit from Yellowstone, from that series. Yeah, Taylor Sheridan's. He's amazing. He's the man. He's the man. Yeah. He's a cool dude. He is. You know, he owns that Four Sixes
Starting point is 01:03:41 Ranch in Texas. It's 270,000 000 acres i'm supposed to be there right now oh really you're going there after this no um so there's i i go there in the spring and fall sometimes there's like full-time guys that work there and then when they wean in the fall or when they brand in the spring they'll hire day workers and they'll just come in for like a week at a time, two weeks. And I would be classified as a day worker. And what do you do there? So like right now they're weaning. So the cow-calf phase that I explained earlier,
Starting point is 01:04:19 where that calf is born and stays on the cow, well, when he gets like 600 pounds, they'll wean him. And so you got to gather the whole pasture. We'll put them in the pens and we'll strip those calves off their mamas and send them to the stalker phase. So that's what they're doing. It takes like two weeks. So on top of doing all your YouTube stuff and your podcast stuff,
Starting point is 01:04:41 you're still out there doing like real ranch shit. Yes, sir. Do you love that? It's, yeah. I mean, this was an easy thing to say like, hey, Dusty, Dusty manages their Dixon Creek branch. And he's one of my best friends. But I was like, Dusty, I got to go up here. And he was like, yeah, you got to go up there.
Starting point is 01:05:02 But, yeah, like if I wasn't here, I'd be there. And I get to film a little, you know Taylor he doesn't mind me like little snapchats and little videos here and there because he also knows that I'm going to promote the four sixes you know I'm not going to disparage anybody and so uh but yeah like that's I've seen opportunities and my lawyers like dude you got to get out of that small town and come to College Station or Austin or Dallas, Fort Worth to grow your business. And I just can't. I'll be smaller and stay where I'm at. I'm not going to trade this lifestyle for more money. You just love it that much.
Starting point is 01:05:43 What is it about it that just gets in your blood like that i mean it's i mean like you've you've you felt being out you know elk hunting you know cowboys get that every day and then when you get to do a job on the back of a horse and you like you've got to there's so many things involved like you've got to know that horse you got to know the cows you got to know your guys next to you and when you get done with a full day's work like there's there's just something super romantic about being able to accomplish that task i don't think anybody ever recreated it to a point where people understood it before taylor did anybody ever recreated to a point where people understood it before taylor did there's something about the way the dutton family describes it on that show and it's like that i mean how many people
Starting point is 01:06:33 moved to montana because they saw that fucking show and it's real yeah like people feel that way yeah about ranching they feel that way about rodeo yeah and it's just, and there's so much passion behind it. And here's the thing, like the cowboy way of life, Chris LeDoux had a song, like, you just can't see him from the road. Like, it's not dying. You just can't see us from the road. Well, I have a job now because I got good at Snapchat
Starting point is 01:07:00 and, you know, and I'm showing the world, like what's going on out here. And when we did the Netflix show, they were like, what should we call it? And I was like, well, I get 50, 60, a hundred messages a day from people wanting to be in my intern program to just learn that they're sitting on a couch in Maryland and they're like, I want to learn to be a cowboy. And so that's why we called the show how to be a cowboy was because the world is interested like i foresee rodeo and the ranching industry growing like i'm i'm super optimistic about it like if legislation and all that bullshit you know can can fade away where people think cows are the demise of you know society like then if that can like not get in our way then the future of
Starting point is 01:07:47 agriculture and rodeoing is super bright because america is interested the world is interested yeah they are and they're i think people are interested in something that they weren't totally aware of but that looks like it has this very passionate following you know and that's the thing about people who ranch and and cowboys it's like they fucking love it they really love it and there's a lot of people out there that they want to know like why do they love it why does someone we everyone wants to have something that they love the way a lot of people love ranching and they're like why what is it what is it about cowboying these guys seem so satisfied and fulfilled like there's something very appealing about that to the average person that doesn't really like what they do. And there's something rugged and pure about it that just seems to appeal to people.
Starting point is 01:09:03 Well, it's definitely more than just a job, you know, like if you had a, it's a job. And then, like I said, it's got that that that lifestyle passion factor to it where like, if you're working on an assembly line, you know, in a warehouse, when that bell rings at the end of the day, and you clock out, like sometimes like that's it. And if it's five o'clock, you're out of there before 5.01. Like I was in a factory the other day and it was midday and I was like, what are these people doing in their cars? And they were like, well, it's break time. Like they leave the building. By the time they get to their car, they only got like nine minutes. But they hated their job so much, they didn't even want to be in the building. So they went out to their car for their break. so much they didn't even want to be in the building so they went out to their car for their break and just in the ranching and rodeo community you have people making arguably the same amount of money on the on on average you know like it's not a high paying you know lifestyle but they're not
Starting point is 01:09:37 leaving right at five like they're passionate about it they're roping the dummy or working with a horse or you know heaven forbid heaven forbid solving problems, cows out on the highway kind of stuff, you know, but it's, it's something that grabs a hold of you. Cowboying will grab a hold of you the same way that like rodeoing grabs a hold of you. And I, I, I'm honored that like, I have this program where three or four people a year get to come into it and they get to learn that. And I've got a few guys like my top interns. He's been with me the longest.
Starting point is 01:10:09 His name's Donnie. And Donnie was working at a bar for his dad in Missouri. No horses, nothing around him. And he came in and he learned to ride Bronx. And after four years, like now he makes money riding Bronx. Now, I don't want him to get hurt because I would feel a little responsible, but, like, he's hooked on this lifestyle now. And I don't know.
Starting point is 01:10:34 I wish and I pray that everybody had some sort of opportunity in their life to grab a hold of something the way that rodeo and cowboying grabs a hold of me. Well, I think that's what's appealing about it to people is that the people that are involved in it love it so much. And for someone who has no experience in it, it doesn't make sense. Like, what is it about it? So that's one of the reasons why people get so addicted to watching stuff like Yellowstones,
Starting point is 01:10:58 other than the great writing and the drama and all that bullshit. But there's something very appealing about that you know i don't want to say simple life it's not simple it's just not modern civilization it's not the bullshit that you have to deal with in cities and traffic and bosses and fucking cubicles and it's a different complicated but it's a complicated that seems more pure and that has people that feel deeply satisfied about doing that job it's i think yeah you hit the nail on the head like it's a unique thing like most of the time people driving down the highway they just expect animals to be out there and then all of a sudden you look over and somebody's on top of one of them gathering the other animals and it's just like
Starting point is 01:11:42 what is going on like if you knew nothing about it, if maybe an alien showed up, you know, they're just like, and they're just like, what are they doing? You know? And, and so like to the uneducated eye, it's just so intriguing and unique. And then you get into it and you realize that like, there's like a, there's a code and there's a, you know, there's passion and there's and it's a lifestyle for people. And at the end of the day, if we just break even, well, it was a free vacation. And that's how people feel about money. And rodeoing, the only reason rodeo cowboys care about money is because that's how they keep score.
Starting point is 01:12:18 And that's how it's like, how much money did you win? Okay, now you get to go to the NFR. If they did like a point system system we would be so broke because then we'd care about money even less because that's not why we're doing it but thankfully anyway and that's how cowboys that are like ranch cowboys are the same way like i saw a guy the other day he's a day work cowboy and when you're a day worker you bring your own horse you bring your own trailer truck everything you have your own insurance like you're 1099 you're a day worker, you bring your own horse, you bring your own trailer, truck, everything. You have your own insurance. Like you're 1099. You're not W2. And so, yeah, you might make $150
Starting point is 01:12:52 in a day, but if you blow out a tire, a new trailer tire is 250. So like you got to work two days for a tire. Well, I saw one the other day and we were, and he bought this new bit and I know his financial situation, but as soon as he got an extra $1,000, he bought this badass bit that he had wanted. Well, that's his thing. That's all he cares about. And he's not doing that for money anyway. So part of that might also just be a little irresponsible with money.
Starting point is 01:13:22 You can be wise with what you're given but at the end of the day also like for that particular person like why this is all he wants to do some people money's just fun coupons once you get past food food and shelter it's fun coupons yes they're not thinking 1099s 401ks yep 40-year plans they're not thinking 1099s, 401ks, 40-year plans. They're just thinking, let's go. That's rodeo cowboys. Yeah. Well, there's something appealing about that to people.
Starting point is 01:13:53 You know, the people really enjoy watching other people that love what they do because I think that's what we all want. We all want something that we do that we love what we do. We look forward to it. When someone sees something that's so counterintuitive, it seems like such hard work, so difficult and time consuming. And it's just requires everything of you. And it's not like a thing you do for a couple hours and then take a break. Like, no, you're doing it all day long, every fucking day. Yeah. Yeah. I just started jujitsu.
Starting point is 01:14:27 I'm like 10 rolls in, 10 sessions. How's your shoulder holding up to that? It's pretty good. The guy you met out there, Ty, like he's my partner. We take it pretty easy. Like I don't know even what half guard, like this morning I rolled with a big guy and he was like, all right, get in half guard. And I was like, okay. You don't know what half guard is? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:14:46 I mean, once he put me there, I was like, oh yeah, yeah, yeah, but I'm learning. But like learning, starting out jujitsu is very similar to be like, if you wanted to learn to rope something. Like you just, your very first time against like a, for instance, this guy was like jujitsu Dan or something, this big 250, in like a minute he submitted me 15 times and he was just rolling through me like folded me like a cheap chair and that's what it would be like if we went to the ranch and had like some sort of like
Starting point is 01:15:18 roping riding type competition right the opposite because like he's got these years of just It would be the opposite because he's got these years of just everyday grinding at his craft where mine is, and most of these guys that are raised in the lifestyle, is rodeoing and cowboying. The jiu-jitsu lifestyle is very similar because people get really banged up and they can't stop. They can't stop training. I had a bad neck injury that just kept getting worse because I wouldn't stop training. I was like, it's all right. I'll work around it. Yeah. I never worked around it.
Starting point is 01:15:47 And then my hands were going numb and I was like, motherfucker. Yeah. You know, and then I finally had to get it worked on. But it's just, it's a thing where people get so addicted. They get so addicted that time off is just so, fuck. You feel worthless. Yeah. You feel worthless.
Starting point is 01:16:02 Time off is just so, fuck. You feel worthless. Yeah. You feel worthless. Also, it's just like there's something about the struggle of jiu-jitsu that makes regular struggle easier, makes regular life easier. It's like a medicine. It's like this literal life or death struggle that you're having on the mats, which is about as safe as a life or death struggle can be. Because you were training partners, and if someone does get your back and they do sink in that choke, you can just tap and then you're back to square one.
Starting point is 01:16:27 And then you start again. But that guy just killed you. That's what just happened. Yeah, yeah, yeah. He killed you. Yeah, he killed me 15 times. Yeah. I mean, that's really what's going on. And so if you get accustomed to that life or death struggle on a daily basis
Starting point is 01:16:40 where that is your high watermark for difficulty, it makes everyday life way easier now when that high watermark is removed completely from from your life normal bullshit bill stuff like nonsense your your neighbor's complaining your fucking dog did something that becomes more tense and more difficult to handle yeah for you know reasons. You don't have the adversity that you need in order to have what you have built up in your life as a healthy existence. I'll say that my interest in jiu-jitsu has been to, I don't know, I just get nervous about a lot of people show up to like a booth that where I'll
Starting point is 01:17:28 be like doing autographs or whatever. And like, I just get nervous. Like it would, I told cowboy, all I have is that I'm not in terrible shape and I probably won't quit. But other than that, anybody who's like done any training could just walk through me. So you're worried about like someone coming up to you that maybe just thinks like your videos are serious and when you're talking all that shit that you're a hundred percent yes you're there you just arrived there yeah and then they just grab my hair and then just i'm done right and that makes me nervous and so i guess like
Starting point is 01:18:01 every little session there's this black belt that comes over and teaches us. And he's so smart. And I'll just at the end of each little move and I'm like, OK, but if they're trying to kill me right here and he'll teach me like some street tactics. Because like that's essentially what I'm. And I don't think I mean, just like you, like, you know, most people that come up to you are just. Most are nice. They're so nice. The vast majority of people are real nice.
Starting point is 01:18:29 It's one potential instance out of maybe 10 years. One potential crazy person. Yeah. Yeah. And I would like to be kind of ready for that. Yeah. Whereas with rodeo, my drive to do that was a little different. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:18:41 Have you done any striking? I did one session at cowboys camp with uh coach ray his coach that had been around for a while and uh like one 30 40 minute and i could see that being really fun yeah my dad was a boxer so like we had a punching bag in the barn growing up but nothing like i like i said i wouldn't anybody with any training could walk through me that's a good thing also though for alleviating stress nothing like hitting a bag hitting a bag is like one of the best stress relievers ever yeah you just womp on that thing and after three rounds of that you're like i feel pretty fucking good yeah you just feel relaxed and just squeezes
Starting point is 01:19:22 all the caveman out of you right just really release it yeah i'm supposed to we were supposed to at this last kid's camp but i'm supposed to fight cowboy oh no in what way just i don't know we were gonna do something like just kind of get in the ring and he'll be nice to you yeah that's what i think everybody says he's gonna kill you I'm like he's a professional he'll touch you up a little bit but he's not gonna kill you he'll pop you a little bit
Starting point is 01:19:49 he'll just touch you up he won't hurt you yeah he's not gonna hurt you when we were first joking about it on social media like a mutual friend of ours
Starting point is 01:19:57 was like hey you're you're not you're not like serious you don't think I was like what are you talking about but apparently
Starting point is 01:20:04 random people just think they can beat him up oh yeah I'm sure yeah You're not like serious. You don't think I was like, what are you talking about? But apparently Random people just think they can beat him up. Oh, yeah, I'm sure Yeah, Chuck Liddell used to have that problem Which is crazy. Just some people are just out of their fucking minds They see someone who just beats the shit out of people on TV. They're like I want to fucking try that dude Why do they think that like something in the cage doesn't transfer over to real life? They they think some people are just really delusional and they think somehow or another because of whatever delusional thinking and their ego and maybe they're schizophrenic i don't know what it is they just think that they could beat up francis and gano like yeah i guarantee you
Starting point is 01:20:42 somebody somewhere at some point in time has tested tyson fury has gotten in his face just like it's crazy there's people out there that are just out of their fucking minds and they're just not well you know i was at uh power slap like a week ago and uh um i was sat there and visiting with Strickland for like 45 minutes. And he was like, yeah, that guy over there, somebody. He's like, I think he wants to fight an MMA guy. And we just got to talking about it. And I just like, I don't know that like, like I feel like Strickland would be really good in the street.
Starting point is 01:21:21 Oh my God. Yeah, he's not scared of shit. You know? He'd be awesome in the street. Cowboy too. Like Cow he's not scared of shit. You know? He'd be awesome in the street. Cowboy too. Like, Cowboy's apparently been in like hundreds of street fights.
Starting point is 01:21:30 Yeah, there was a famous incident where some dude on a boat dock just wouldn't leave him alone and was fucking with him. The cowboy was like, God damn it.
Starting point is 01:21:37 And the guy did something and the cowboy just head kicked him. Knocked him unconscious for everything. Is that the one where Dana got, had to get involved? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:21:44 And yeah, he said Dana still gives him a hard time about it every now and then well you know that guy fucked up and he found out yeah exactly he fucked around and found out that you're picking on the wrong dude so i i heard that like he'll when he was in the ufc i guess maybe he learned his lesson there and like he would literally people be trying to fight him in the bar, I guess maybe he learned his lesson there. And like, he would literally, people would be trying to fight him in the bar. He's like, bro, I will pay you $500 to just leave me alone.
Starting point is 01:22:10 And then he retired. And I was like, Hey, you still paying people not to fight you? And he was like, Nope, bring it on. He's like,
Starting point is 01:22:17 I will whoop your ass in the jiffy lube. I don't care. Because now he doesn't have to worry. Yeah. He's not worried about it anymore. But he's still, it would be a problem. Everybody knows who he who he is you know he'd get sued for sure especially if there's no cameras that show the other guy started it and the other guy has a fake
Starting point is 01:22:33 story yeah because no one tells the truth about altercations he's and he he i was with him in traffic the other day and this guy like road raged him and was almost trying to drive us off the road. And I was like, man, if this guy only knew. But he just calmed down. I think he knows his hands are weapons. He's not going to use them against somebody. Also, people have guns. That too.
Starting point is 01:22:58 That's the real problem with road rage. Some people aren't playing by the rules. Just engaging with random people on the street is so fucking dangerous and stupid you just never know and you also never know where that guy is in his life that guy might be suicidal he might be ready to take you with him he might have reached his end he might have everything might have happened wrong for him that day he might have caught his wife fucking his neighbor or he might have went bankrupt he might have you know that's such a good perspective to have. You always got to.
Starting point is 01:23:25 You never know what the fuck that guy just experienced before he got in his car. And that's why he's driving like a maniac. He's freaking the fuck out. And if you contribute to that, now you're his focus. Yep. Yeah, that can happen. I've been soul-searching with, I guess, my pride
Starting point is 01:23:44 and trying to be you know be more humble rather than prideful and traffic is my gauge that's where for me like that's where i think for guys like well i mean i used to get pissed off at people you know but i but now like that's just kind of my gauge of where i might be at in the day. Like, if I'm able to just let stuff go and not, like, compete with the next driver, then I feel like, you know. Do you know why people get road rage? Do you know why it's so common and it's not common with people just walking around? Well, I think pride starts it. And then from there, it's just like you feel like you're impenetrable.
Starting point is 01:24:25 Impenetrable? Yeah. Being in a car. There's definitely a little bit of that. But there's also a heightened state of awareness because you're driving. Because when you're driving, you have to make fast decisions and you're moving fast. So everything is quick, quick, quick, quick, quick. So someone gets a funny, motherfucker!
Starting point is 01:24:41 It's like you're already at seven. And so when someone just gets in front of you they bring you to ten like that Whereas on in the walking around if someone got in front of you you wouldn't care at all Yeah Like if you're just walking somewhere on the street and there's a bunch of people walking Excuse me some guy walks past you and walks in front of you. It means nothing right? It doesn't even bother you But when you're a car like you're this fucking guy because you might have to make like this guy decides to change lanes like fuck Like this guy's an idiot. He's making me hit the brakes right now. I got a fucking what are you doing douchebag?
Starting point is 01:25:13 Look at this asshole. Yep, and you're already ramped up Yeah, and so people they go they get so angry so quick And that's why because you're at a heightened state of awareness because you're driving and when you're going 65 miles an hour you have to make quick decisions and when people are changing lanes and doing stupid shit like you're at the whim of their shitty decision making yeah yeah i guess so i guess i i agree with you i think we're saying the same thing i think i think it it probably amplifies i think that's like a true test of someone's character i guess yeah like if you when you like i'm not saying like anybody that gets mad is a piece of shit because you got mad in traffic but i guess for me personally when i look at
Starting point is 01:25:54 myself like it does the the the heightened sense of awareness would like amplify the fact that like my pride is what's controlling me that day right you. And if I'm able to like walk through the day humbly where I'm not at competition with people, well, that means, you know, then all of a sudden I'm like, oh, okay, I'll just hit the brakes, let them go, and I'll probably get to my destination at the same time. Yeah. And it's no big deal. Instead of like making this gigantic problem for no reason, like pull over. Fuck you, man. And then guy has a tire iron and you're fucking swinging at each other like what yeah over what like exactly and people die
Starting point is 01:26:31 all the time doing that fighting each other for no fucking reason for zero reason not to save people not to protect property not to no right no fucking reason yeah just because they got let their emotions take control of them they didn't have control of their mind and their humility and all those things. And the sad thing is they'll probably realize that. Yeah. Once they calm down. Or if they get arrested. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:26:54 Five days later, they look back and like, that was so dumb. So dumb. Yeah. When you're in a good place and you think about the stupid shit you do when you get angry. Like, oh, my God. It's so embarrassing. Yeah. It's like like who was that person how did i let myself become that person where i was fucking screaming in my car for no fucking reason right where i could have just let let him go let him go and then breathe back to normal no problems no problems yeah yeah that's a um
Starting point is 01:27:22 like i said that's a that's that's where the true me comes out, I think. And then I'll go back, go home and work on it. Yeah, well, it's good, man. It's always good to have something to work on. How did you get involved in making these comedy videos? Man, so 10 years ago, July was our first video. But three years prior to that, I'd been, like, prank calling people. And, like, I just prank called my dad.
Starting point is 01:27:53 I prank called, like. What did you do with your dad? Oh, man. I was sitting. He texted me. He was at, I was at A&M at the time and he was at the ranch like 30 miles away where we, anyways, and he was like, hey, call the house. I want to see if the phone works.
Starting point is 01:28:11 And I knew he didn't have caller ID. So I called him and he answered the phone like it could be anybody. He didn't answer the phone like it was me. You know, usually I can tell his voice, you know, it was my dad. And he answered the phone like it could be anybody. And I was like, hey, yeah. Oh, yeah, I got your radiator here at the shop and you need to come get it like it was real like impromptu like right and uh i just told him he needed to come pick up his radiator and uh and then i just started prank calling a lot of people like it was fun he fell for it and uh hook line
Starting point is 01:28:42 sinker and then i just started prank calling a lot of people. And then, yeah, in 2010. No, I'm sorry. That was when the phone call was. And then in 2013, we turned on the camera. And like just started saying what I'd been saying on all these prank calls. And we never stopped filming. what I'd been saying on all these prank calls and we never stopped filming. And so like since 2013,
Starting point is 01:29:13 like, I mean, I'm still rodeoing, still cowboying, still, you know, living my life. But then there was just YouTube got introduced and, you know, so then it was more about, I don't know. I got to be me, you know, I grew up rodeoing. I grew up the class clown. My old man had me. He was an ag teacher too. And he had me in this organization called FFA, where I did a lot of public speaking. And so I'd done public speaking. I was a class clown. I was a rodeo cowboy. And they all came together in these videos. And so we started 10 years ago. And I bet I made videos for two or three years before I even made any money. I didn't realize, you know, how to make money on YouTube. And then, you know, along the way I started the apparel line, Rodeo Time.
Starting point is 01:29:55 And that was kind of my, one of the things I always went to, like it's Rodeo Time, old son. And the apparel line did well. And that's been kind of my main source of revenue followed by YouTube and sponsors. And so it just, it started out just for fun. For sure. Which is always the best way to start something out. For sure.
Starting point is 01:30:15 Because you're not thinking about it as a career. Like, how do I get the most engagement? I'm just having fun. We didn't make, like I said, we didn't make money for a few years. Like I just didn't really even think about it. Yeah. That's similar to this podcast.
Starting point is 01:30:28 When we started out, I never thought it was going to make money. It was just for fun. 2057 episodes later. Yeah, and a bunch of other ones. There's like all the Fight Companions. The Companions. MMA podcasts. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:30:40 It's, I think that's the best way to do something. You do something like, because you want to do it, because it's fun. Right. And that's what's most engaging to people, too. And it's interesting because now you've got this Netflix show, but would Netflix have ever given you a show if you didn't prove that you could do something on your own? Absolutely not. No.
Starting point is 01:31:01 And they would probably control it more and fuck with who you are more and there'd be a lot of a lot of you know a lot of other people trying to shape what it is whereas now they go we got this kind of finished thing we just need to apply dale brisby to this we know who dale brisby is and they did try that did they yeah it was, they wanted me to take my glasses off, and they wanted to, like, bring the story of my dad into it and, like, how he shaped me as a cowboy. And I just didn't feel like it fit. You know, like, I'll talk about it here on a podcast, but, like, if I'm making a video, like, I'm a comedian, you know?
Starting point is 01:31:38 Like, I don't want to talk about. Anyways, I just didn't want to bring my dad into it. Right. And it was nothing against them, and they didn't have anything against me. It was a good conversation, but I was like, these are kind of some bugaboos. But I had already established who I was for 10 years. And so I had the mob's approval, like in Gladiator. He tells them to win over the mob, like yourself.
Starting point is 01:32:02 It's Joe Rogan and then the audience like there's no middleman anymore and like if if i tried to do this 20 years ago like you've got to go through an agent and networks and it's like do those gray hairs think it's a good idea and it's like okay maybe we'll try it and then you maybe get to try a show and like so going through that whole acting route well with the internet i go straight to the source and the mob approved of me and so that was the beautiful thing like nobody could have planned like my small story you know much like they you couldn't have planned yours big story but we went straight to the source and they liked it and so then net Netflix was like, okay, cool, let's do something with this. Same thing with Spotify. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:32:47 Well, that's the best way to do it. Do it because you love doing it. Do it because it's fun. And then along the way, get better at it. And along the way, people start realizing it, recognizing it. Then they start calling up and they're like, I want to be in business with Dale Brisby.
Starting point is 01:33:00 Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, wait till they call you, you know? Yeah. Well, that's the unique thing about our time. with things like social media, with YouTube and the like, you can create your own thing now, like Cameron Haynes has done. You just create your own thing. And through that thing, you know, you don't have anybody telling you what to do. So you do it the way you think it should be done and you learn how to do it better with each episode if you care. It's fun.
Starting point is 01:33:28 Yeah, Cam's, he might even be more of a niche than I am, but like being like not only hunting, but specifically bow hunting, specifically elk. Yeah. But, yeah, you're right. I mean, he's, and then the mob approved of him and he's running. He's also an undeniable person. You know, you see what he's done in terms of like ultra marathon running.
Starting point is 01:33:54 It is his work ethic and the fact that he did all that shit while he had a full time job for the most time. For the last five years, I was trying to talk that dude into quitting his job. Yeah. Every day I'd text him, quit that fucking job. Every day. You don't you don't need that job. He was making more money from his sponsors than he ever was from his job. Right. But, you know, he identifies as a hardworking, blue-collar guy,
Starting point is 01:34:13 and that's what he always was his whole life. And he felt like somehow or another not having that job would maybe even disconnect him. You know, but it's not. It's the opposite. He works even harder now, but now he does what he wants. Right. And he can actually sleep, and he has time to recover to recover and he said physically feels better Than he's ever felt before because you know has real time to train and recover Before he was working eight hours every day and then still running a fucking marathon every day when he was preparing for fucking ultras
Starting point is 01:34:41 That dude was running 13 miles in the morning and then another 13 at night wild shit and then shooting his bow and then going to the gym and then getting up in the morning going to work again yeah that that's another level of passion that like that's so yeah anybody that can run 100 miles i think is you know that's easy to say that they're just a unique individual yeah well he's done 240 like Like that alone is incredible. But then the sacrifices he made to go do that. Yeah. You know, like what you said, like all of his free time.
Starting point is 01:35:13 Yeah. He's not going to sit in his car because he hates his job. He's going on his lunch hour to run because he's passionate about this additional thing. Yeah. And there's people like that in rodeo too. I think that the people that have that kind of work ethic, a little bit of talent, and then they're passionate about a certain thing that will go all out, and then eventually they're the ones that are successful, provided they stay healthy.
Starting point is 01:35:39 Provided they stay healthy. Yeah, that's the hard part, right? Especially with rodeo. I mean, any one day could be the last time you ever get it. And the more you get on, the more you're reminded of that. Like, it crosses your mind. Like, I haven't been on in a couple months because I'm having this surgery. I was supposed to have it a month ago, but I just got down in the shoot,
Starting point is 01:36:09 and we weren't even filming. I just got super emotional. I just started crying in the shoot. I'm emotional. I had to get out and start over. It looks like he's bitching out or something, but really I was just like, because I'm just thinking about my dad, thinking about this.
Starting point is 01:36:30 This could be my last brawn cry. This could be it. And you just get overwhelmed. And then the smell of the arena and the music playing and your buddies are there. But just that fight, like as soon as the gate opens, it's just so pure. It's so pure.
Starting point is 01:36:44 And like all the shit talking like all that's out the window and it's you and the horse because the horse he didn't hear it you know it's just like can you execute the fundamentals in the midst of your emotions running among and essentially that's what it is like executing fundamentals in the middle of the fight or do you let the fear overcome you and you do what your intuition says to do, which unfortunately is opposite of what you're supposed to do. Like in Broncride, you're supposed to lift on your reign and stay back. Well, your intuition tells you to sit up and pull. And I'm sure it's a lot of the same things in fighting. Like your
Starting point is 01:37:20 intuition is telling you to do this and you know, that's the move they want you to do so they can put you here. And so once you get control of your emotions and you execute the fundamentals and that's what makes guys like jb so great you know there's something that people experience when they do something very difficult that makes them want to keep doing it that the rush of doing that of keeping your emotions in check in this insanely high pressure situation that becomes so addictive to some people. It says it's so hard for someone like me to understand has never done it, but I kind of get it. I kind of get them. I get the mindset for sure. I don't, I don't think, again, I'm not suggesting you get on a bull, but I don't think you're that
Starting point is 01:38:01 far away from just realizing. I think, I think the fact that the bull is involved is maybe what's so foreign to yourself and a lot of people that haven't done it. But like, once you get over the animal part of it, the unpredictability of an animal, you just like, oh, this is like a thing. It's like, you know, football or fighting or, you know, going overseas.
Starting point is 01:38:26 Like, those guys, like, I got to go on Marcus's podcast and become good friends with Marcus. Marcus Luttrell? Marcus. And since then. I love that dude. Yeah, he's a big fan of you, too. He's an awesome guy.
Starting point is 01:38:39 Yeah. He's been kind of like, I don't want to say like a dad to me, but, like, I've, like, used him as that, hey, what do we do in this situation kind of like, I don't want to say like a dad to me, but like, I've like used him as that, Hey, what are we doing this situation kind of deal, you know? Yeah. And, uh, but like when them guys go around the corner at a house, you know, is there going to be a fight there? And just that thrill of like, okay, now there is a fight. And I was talking to DJ Shipley he's a seal team six guy and uh he told me we were on the back of the chutes and he was like what I respect about rodeo is every time it's a fight and he said when we go into a room to clear a room 95 percent of the time the room is benign
Starting point is 01:39:21 and so I looked up what benign meant and, but he said he, and he was, you know, obviously the stakes are different in bull riding and, you know, guys going overseas and being in combat, you know, the stakes are much different, but he was just respecting the fact that when you do go around that corner, you have to execute the fundamentals in the midst of like fear and whatnot. Same thing. I'm sure there's guys going into the ring in the octagon where it's just like they don't feel like it that day or this particular guy's got in their head well they got to get that out of their head and execute fundamentals yeah 100 and that's just to them that's that thing that they can't stop that there's this The thrill of that very insane high pressure situation and trying
Starting point is 01:40:08 to keep your wits about you and stay in control of your emotions and just banking on your training and executing. So guys like JB, I almost was telling the story a while ago. I love it and it's one that everybody in our industry knows but like one thing that sets him apart like at some of those pbr events once you get to like what would be like the short round you get to pick your bull and so that's unique you know at rodeos you never pick your bull it's more you you get drawn your bull well at these pbrs there's instances where you do a draft and you pick it and where you're sitting going into that short round determines when you pick well there's this real famous bull named bushwhacker um like unridden somebody wrote him whenever he was like a two-year-old i wish i remembered the name now but like he had this one ride when he was real young
Starting point is 01:41:00 but then once he started like going to all the big bull ridings, like nobody rode this bull, Bushwhacker. And JB picked him 13 times. Like he always picked that bull. Some guys would pick a bull they know they could ride. Like I know I can be 90, 88 points on this bull, so I'm gonna pick him. You know, there's these other two, three I'm unsure about, but I'm gonna pick this one I know I can ride
Starting point is 01:41:23 and hopefully win. JB went to Bushwhacker 13 times, and he rode him once. Wow. He kept picking him. The most dangerous, baddest bull in the world, undeniably. He just kept going back to him, and that was one of those cowboy factors. They played Bad to the Bone, that third good song. When that song comes on, the crowd goes freaking nuts and they know jb's coming around the corner like they don't play it
Starting point is 01:41:50 for anybody else and uh anyways that mentality for him to pick that bull 13 times and so when you say he only wrote it once you mean he made it to eight seconds correct 95 and a quarter points, I think. Is this it? Bushwacker. This is Bushwacker. I'm not sure if this is. Look at that neck on that motherfucker. Oh, yeah, this is the one. I recognize that hat. This is the one where he does riding.
Starting point is 01:42:16 Again, hat, no helmet. Hat down, baby. Slide and ride. He does not waste time in the shoot. Look at that bull. Oh, my God. He had a different trip every time. And then, bam.
Starting point is 01:42:29 Wow. And the crowd goes nuts. Look at that lady. Confetti swine. Look at that lady. Yeah. They love that man right there. Look at that lady cheering.
Starting point is 01:42:41 Look at her face. Look at her face. It's like she was riding him with her. Wow. That's amazing. There was one of those 13 times, though, he picked him, and two seconds during the ride. So, like, he's on his back just like he is right here,
Starting point is 01:42:59 and all the lights go out. Oh, no. All the lights shut out, and that's one of my videos, just where he tells the story. I don't know if it's actually on that one down there. The bottom one says J.B. Wright's Bull in the Dark. That's another one of mine.
Starting point is 01:43:19 I got the algorithm picked. You got it wired. Bill Brisby keeps popping up. But no, yeah, and so like two seconds in, the lights go out. And I was like, what did you do? And he was like, well, I can't ride him in a lit-up-ass arena, much less in the dark. Jumped off.
Starting point is 01:43:36 God. That would be obviously the most. I mean, I guess it would be similar to riding him if you were blind, but riding something in the dark, that would be the most. So is he the only guy other than that person who rode him when he was two? Yep. Wow. Yeah, and they retired him a few years after that, I think.
Starting point is 01:43:51 That's crazy. And nobody else tried? Oh, yeah. Guys would get on him all the time. Yeah. They just get flown. Yeah, just didn't. I can't remember how many outs he had had.
Starting point is 01:44:01 How unusual is that, that a bull's that good? In the PBR. First time ridden in 43 outs wow in the pbr i mean like there's so many good great bulls like bodacious is a famous is probably arguably bodacious and bookware bushwhacker are the two most famous bulls i would say and And Bodesha, he was more like the 90s. And he had some rides. But the PBR these days is, yeah, I think that's tough. What a crazy thing to want to do. The bull does not want you on him. And you decide to get on him.
Starting point is 01:44:43 Yep. And ride him for his life. Oh, Jesus. Yeah, I think that's tough. That's what freaks me out, when you go down and they're coming down with you. Yeah, that's tough, Hedeman. Sorry, tough. I should have recognized your shirt.
Starting point is 01:44:56 How long did it take to heal your sternum? That's a scary one to break. Like the thing that's right over your heart? It kind of just did its own thing you know just took a took take a break i don't remember exactly how long it's been a long time ago how long did it take before it felt normal again the breathing and everything like it was i don't really remember it to be honest like it wasn't like it didn't just like crack open you know it was just like a break like it was like like a, I mean, it might have even just been, I don't know what it's considered, like a fracture.
Starting point is 01:45:27 Uh-huh. But like, but yeah, it wasn't like a life-threatening type sternum deal. But it was a sternum, you know, is what the doctor said. But like it wasn't like. And was it from getting stepped on? Yeah. By a horse or by a bull? Bull.
Starting point is 01:45:46 Bull. But the back surgeries were the ones that were kind of, which they weren't near as serious as like JB's and Jacob's. What did you get done? It was a discectomies. Okay. So you had a bulging disc and they took some of the disc material out. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:46:04 Pushing against nerves. But it just, it didn'tging disc and they took some of the disc material out. Yeah. Pushing against nerves. But it just, it didn't work. And they just kept having to go back in. Yeah. It wasn't like, it's just, it was enough to take me out for two years. Mm-hmm. And it's not, like I said, it's not near as serious as like what they did to Jacobs and JB. But it was something that just like took, took me out of the game,
Starting point is 01:46:25 and then it's like now it's this lingering injury, one of half a dozen. Have you ever gotten stem cells on them? No. They're doing a lot of stem cells with people with disc issues. My friend Shane Dorian just went down to Tijuana, and they actually put him under, and they inject stem cells directly into the discs. So the discs that are degenerated, that have experienced all the wear and tear, they go right into the disc and swell it up.
Starting point is 01:46:53 And it actually helps you grow new disc tissue. And some people have gotten some pretty significant results from that. What is it? Why is it? I mean, why are you going to go to Mexico? Do we not have any? America's fucked. I don't know why. I mean, you could ask the people that run the FDA. I assume there's a lot of factors at play and probably some of them aren't beneficial to us.
Starting point is 01:47:16 But there's a very big resistance to people being able to just go and get stem cell treatments, although there doesn't seem to be any downside. I'm not seeing anybody that's getting stem cells and dying from the procedure. It's not what's going on. You're healing. It's helping people heal. And I know so many people that have had significant results. But you've got to go to Mexico. You've got to go to Panama.
Starting point is 01:47:39 You've got to go to Colombia. And these people that do that, they come back with amazing stories of healing. But in the United States, it's much more difficult to get that kind of treatment. They can't do what they can do over there. Catboy was suggesting that to me. But yeah, it seems like a miracle drug. It seems like don't have surgery, have stem cells. With my shoulder, though, I mean, the fricking bone is missing. Like I gotta, you know, that seems like something you
Starting point is 01:48:10 have to have surgery on. Stem cells can't put a bone back, but, um, but yeah, there's like, like the back thing and some other random little things. It was just like, dude, you need to, but I don't know. It just, how old are you now? 36. Yeah, that's when it starts falling apart. Yeah. That's when it starts falling apart for fighters. When I look at a fighter's age and they hit like 36, 37, I'm like. The moment I turned 30 is when I first had my first back injury. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:48:37 Well, it was a little before that. It was actually here in Austin, which is in March, in the short go. What was that riding? I was getting on a bronc and he frapped me in the chute so he like he uh reared up real hard and it and brought my legs down and kind of crunched my body together and I didn't really realize it at the time you know I made a good ride that night but then like later at rodeos after that like I just started falling off like my right leg wouldn't I felt like I wasn't stretching enough and it just got worse and worse I'd get out of a pickup I couldn't stand up straight for half an hour and uh I went to a doctor anyways then I dislocated my shoulder and finally i was like all right i gotta go you know and i went to tandy freeman sent me to andrew dawson who does a bunch for the cowboys like
Starting point is 01:49:32 worked on troy eggman tony romo and he's like yep we gotta cut you open do this right here there's a lot of opinions on whether or not a guy should have surgery but i was like man this guy's legit yeah i'm to take his opinion. Well, you know, surgeons like to do surgery. Yeah. And a lot of surgeons don't have experience with stem cell treatments. Right. What they know is, oh, your disc is bulging.
Starting point is 01:49:54 We'll remove that disc. The part of the disc is bulging and won't bulge anymore. But you're also cutting out the amount of cushioning you have in between your spinal column, and you only have so much of that. Daniel Cormier said when he got his back done, he was never the same again. He said, I'd never get back surgery again. And now that he knows, and most people know,
Starting point is 01:50:15 that there's other alternatives, specifically stem cells, and people have had great results. I know a lot of people, their back was fucked, and they got stem cell treatments, and now they feel great. Yeah. It can be done. Yeah. So the back, so then it didn't work.
Starting point is 01:50:31 I had another one and it did get better after the second one. The recovery took like a year. And then like it started to feel better. Yeah. Wow. Yeah. Like it took a year. And like before I could like get on a bucking horse again
Starting point is 01:50:45 like i mean yeah three or four months later i'm doing all the normal life things but before i get on a bucking horse it took a year because it just didn't feel strong it just felt well and just yeah exactly and then the risk of it re-herniating because of the time you could you know which that part doesn't necessarily that doesn't take a year. But just for me, it took a year. Did you ever do anything to strengthen your back? Yeah. I mean, like that deal you got out there. The teeter thing? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:51:13 I got one of those. And, yeah, they gave me a lot of exercises, which is like routine for me. Like I do the routine stuff like for a back injury. Same thing with my shoulder. So, like, that's why it's like I don't do the normal tim kennedy stuff all the time i've also got these like workouts that revolve around injuries and recovery that i'll do and uh but like when i went to cams i was getting ready for cams and i didn't tell him this but i was at about a month before like i was running a lot you know like trying because i didn't want to be a bitch up on this mountain, you know? And, uh, my, my leg pain started coming back
Starting point is 01:51:50 and then my hips started hurting and I was like, oh shit, it comes, it's coming back again. And anyways, I did the deal. We ran like 12 miles and, uh, like I said, threw up in the bow rack, but, uh, I went back to the surgeon and he was he was like where your leg pain's coming back because of your back you know but it should go away if you'll ease up on the running but your hips he's like you have severe early onset arthritis he's like you got bone spurs all of your hips you'll probably have to if you did have hips replacement surgery it'd be early and he said it's just because of your lifestyle. But so like now every time I run, it's like I got rocks in my hips. Yeah, don't do that anymore.
Starting point is 01:52:33 There's got to be other ways to get in condition. Sorry, Cam. Yeah, Cam. Joe said it. That dude doesn't have any problems, which is amazing. I'm stunned that he doesn't have physical problems. He's a real freak. It made me, like I was just like up on the mountain, like my hips are just like crunching.
Starting point is 01:52:47 I'm like, how is this man doing this? Like how is he doing this? Because he's in his 50s. Yeah, he's my age. And you know he's got some of those pains. He just doesn't, you know, like tape his feet like him and Goggins. He's a different breed. Well, I think it's just what you tape his feet like him and Goggins. Like, yeah, he's a different breed. Well, I think it's just what you get accustomed to him and Goggins.
Starting point is 01:53:09 They're just accustomed to a level of pain and discomfort that most people just would not accept. And they just accept it as a part of everyday life. But with Cam, I don't think he has any like legitimate injuries. Like his knees don't fuck with him. His hips don't fuck with him, which is crazy. You think about the amount that guy runs and works out and he's in his 50s. Do you think that he's got like his body is conditioned? Like obviously his cardio for sure.
Starting point is 01:53:34 But I mean like his actual joints. They're like we're okay with this kind of pounding because of how much he does it. Yeah, has to be. Yeah, they've done studies on people that run a lot, and it shows that the cartilage and the meniscus and everything gets harder. Your body gets accustomed to that. Whatever you force it to do, your body adapts,
Starting point is 01:53:55 sometimes to the detriment of the joint. You know, like Goggins had to, he was bone on bone for so long with his knees and running thousands of miles bone on bone that his bone was deforming and distorting bone on bone for so long with his knees and running thousands of miles, bone on bone, that his bone was deforming and distorting because it was like the constant irritation of grinding against the other bones. The doctor looked at him and said, I can't believe you can walk with these knees. Forget about run thousands of miles.
Starting point is 01:54:25 So instead of getting a knee replacement, what he did was where the bone bulged out, they cut that off. They sliced a wedge out of his bone, chopped this piece off, and brought it down so it's flat again. Yeah. So now it's just bone on bone and flat now instead of bone on bone at a distorted angle. Like, fuck, man. All so he can start over and go back to doing it yeah he just had another one just sent me a video of his i don't know what he had done now but he had another surgery yeah on his knees and you know he's eventually gonna have to get fake knees eventually it's just gonna get to the
Starting point is 01:54:58 point where they don't work anymore and then they'll put artificial knees but the problem with artificial knees is i don't know how long they would last with the way he treats his body. He would not stop pushing himself if he had artificial knees. Right. So I think those things are only good for like 20 years.
Starting point is 01:55:20 Yeah. So what happens in 20 years? They got to go back in? No kidding. And put another one in there? Right right open cut the top of your knee off again because you know he's gonna live till he's 105 yeah he probably will yeah yeah probably be running he'll probably die running die running up a mountain and be very happy yeah yeah he's an animal i mean there's but you need people like that in the world to show you you need people like like Tim Kennedy and Cam Haines and those kind of people. You need people like that out there to set the bar very high.
Starting point is 01:55:52 It helps all of us. Even if you're not interested in doing that kind of shit, like I don't work out as hard as they do. But it sets the bar much higher in comparison to what you would you would require of yourself normally yeah you require more because you know there's people like that out there that are really getting after it and then you realize you can do more you could do more than you think you do for sure i think yeah we've named all the ones that do that for me physically jaco jaco is another one i got to meet the other day theo vaughn he's that for me he's in comedyo. Jocko's another one. I got to meet the other day, Theo Vaughn. He's that for me in comedy. He's my man. I love that dude. Yeah. I met him at the Power Slap deal.
Starting point is 01:56:31 Oh, okay. Yeah. He's just like, he's like that all the time. Yeah. He's like that all the time. He's, he's hilarious. He's such a fun dude and such a good guy. And you know, he's like that. He's on all the time. Like he's on when you're out at dinner yeah he's on when you're just hanging out he can't turn it off no no no that's theo and he's all it's such a unique kind of comedy too like his comedy is like nobody does comedy like him it's so different you and if anybody tried to imitate it they would know exactly who they were yeah we're imitating it yeah and it would be a turnoff my favorite joke he goes my cousin got bit by a gay guy so we'll see
Starting point is 01:57:13 somehow he gets away with whenever he's like no no no i'm not racist you know i have some flare-ups in traffic but other than that, how do you get away with that? The stuff he gets away with is hilarious. He's such a fucking character. He's such a fucking character. Yeah, he invited me out to a show, and I'm going to go. He's another dude that seems so happy that he got out of L.A. L.A. was just not for him.
Starting point is 01:57:44 When he moved to Nashville, I was immediately like, that he got out of L.A. L.A. was just not for him. When he moved to Nashville, I was immediately like, that's a way better fit for you. And he's talking about coming out here. Yeah, do you think he will? I hope so. I hope so. He's got a home here. One thing about comedians, they need a place where they meet up with other comedians. You don't want to just be that dude on the road with only your opening act.
Starting point is 01:58:03 That guy's lonely. He gets weird you got like we're we're a tribal group we have to be around our people you know and you know when you're hanging out like get the mothership in the green room we're all talking shit and laughing it's like that's our comfort zone yeah you know and that club is like it's like a clubhouse like it's a place where we can go we're all practicing our art form we're all getting better at it we're all feeding off of each other getting can go. We're all practicing our art form. We're all getting better at it. We're all feeding off of each other, getting better at it. We're all helping each other with jokes.
Starting point is 01:58:28 We're all talking shop in the green room. And I got this bit. I can't figure out where to go with it. We're trying to break things down. And we're coming up with taglines for each other. It's fun, man. And we had that in LA before the pandemic with the Comedy Store. And Theo, when he was here, was like, man, this is what I miss the most.
Starting point is 01:58:47 And I was like, well, this is worth that, man. This is what we're trying to do here. We're trying to like – what we set up with that club was like to have a place where all of us could go and have that support and have that place where you're like, oh, this is my home base. And that's why I wanted to call it the mothership because you'll go from there and you leave to go to other places you know you leave to go but you come back to the mothership that's it's such a good system yeah and maybe maybe he can bring bobby lee to be his bobby lee's never moving here i talked to him on the phone the other day he's like fuck you joe i'm not coming i'm not coming to Austin. You're tricking everybody into coming to Austin. Fuck Austin.
Starting point is 01:59:26 He's scared he's going to have to live here if he comes and visits? Oh, I don't think it's that. He's just being silly. He's just being Bobby Lee. But he stays in his neighborhood in L.A. And he's like, where I live is fine. I don't go to Skid Row. I don't go to the places that suck.
Starting point is 01:59:41 I just stay where I'm at. Well, that camaraderie is like, that one of the major things like with rodeo. And I was talking to my guys that work for me. You'll miss the thrill of depending on how you feel about it. If you are one of those passionate individuals that loves actually the fight, you'll miss that. The very next thing, if not the more more important thing is the guys and being behind the chutes and going down the road like that camaraderie of going down the road with you know that that that's the other thing and it keeps you going a lot of times like when you feel like you
Starting point is 02:00:19 want to quit when you feel you know especially when it's a you do it for a living you know when that's like you're rodeoing for your income and so there's rodeos that you want to be at and then there's rodeos like also like hey i need to make money and so you're going but no matter even those rodeos like they're still like you're on the back of the chutes and it's the epitome of freedom. Like it's the, standing on the back of the chutes, I remember, I think it was Clear Lake, South Dakota, and I just had this aha moment, like standing on the back of the chutes, being a kid from Texas and going to those rodeos. And the national anthem was playing
Starting point is 02:01:00 and it was just, this is freedom. And I don't know that you have a more patriotic bunch than for me at least the most patriotic individuals I've come across barring you know as a group barring the actual ones doing the fighting like rodeo cowboys are very appreciative because like we get to see that freedom every weekend that's our job you know when people do something that's very difficult and controversial and it becomes their passion, they really value freedom. And when you're doing something that other people maybe don't understand because they don't have experience in it, they don't know why you're even doing that. You shouldn't even be able to do that.
Starting point is 02:01:38 Like they don't get it. You're not a part of the life. and not a part of the life. And that's why it's important to hear people like you talk about it because someone who might have had an opinion based on just a peripheral understanding of what rodeo riding, like, this is stupid. Why are they into this? Who cares about ranching? And then you hear you talk about it, and you're like,
Starting point is 02:01:54 hey, you know, there's someone listening to it right now. Like, maybe there's something in there that I don't understand because I just haven't experienced it. Maybe it's parallel to things that I enjoy in my life that maybe other people wouldn't understand. Well, I think, you know, you mentioned like the controversy. I think a lot of the controversy that's in and around rodeo and ranching are because people don't understand it.
Starting point is 02:02:15 And so they just make assumptions and they're uneducated. Like, for instance, that bull Bushwacker, like we can slow it down and I can show you like, I mean, we don't have to, but the point is is like nothing's wrapped around his balls right you know i mean like a flank rope it's a cotton rope about six feet long and it's the equivalent of you tightening up your belt that bull is doing that because he wants to and it's in his blood and that's what he wants to do like he's not you're not going to make that animal do anything there's a a rope around their balls. No, there's not one.
Starting point is 02:02:46 There's not a rope around their balls. But for some reason, people think that that's what the flank is. And I mean, in bucking horses, some of them are mares. So even if that is what we were doing, what are you going to do with a mare? Right. Because, but it gives them something to kick at. They're horses that are going to buck. And if they don't want to buck, animal, like especially horses, like when they feel pain, they're horses that are going to buck. And if they don't want to buck animal,
Starting point is 02:03:09 like especially horses, like when they feel pain, they're running off. Sometimes they might run off just if they're scared or something, but like, so if they were in pain, they wouldn't be bucking. Like they would, they would stop. Eventually you would train them to stop if they were in pain and they're just, they don't experience pain like that. And you're on their back and it's- They just don't want you on their back and the fun part is riding them when they don't want you riding them yeah yeah yeah but like you get around bulls like you can walk back there there's so many bulls that you could walk up to and rub all over in the back pens and then you run them in the chute and they know that game and when you open the chute they buck like crazy just because they want to and so like yeah they
Starting point is 02:03:45 don't they're trying to buck you off but if he doesn't want to buck he ain't going to you're not going to make him do that like you can't train them to buck there's little things you can do to improve their bucking but you're not going to make an animal buck like i said i bought one at the sale barn like i've probably bought 20 bulls at the sale barn. And this one that I got is the only one that made it. Like most bulls that you see, like they're not going to be bucking bulls. Like it's a unique, same thing with horses. So it's just in their genes.
Starting point is 02:04:18 It's in their genes. It's in their genetics and they want to do it. Kind of like how some horses are better at, you know, hunter jumper stuff or, you know, racing, you know, like my horse Boone can't run out of sight in a day, you know, but he's a good ranch horse. So that's what I've got him at. And then I got this, you know, bucking horse, um, that we call Baptist who went to the NFR and bucking and like, that's what he was made for. And when you get a bull like Bushwacker, is it very valuable to breed that bull? I mean, guys are paying $50,000, $60,000, $100,000 for bulls,
Starting point is 02:04:54 $500,000 for bulls. The last thing you want in a $100,000 bull, the last thing you want is for him to feel pain. He's going to sleep in a little padded pen and maybe an air-conditioned barn in the summer a heated barn in the wind like some of these bulls have cushy lives and again if they weren't doing that they'd have been dead at a little over a year right so i don't know it's i think people think of it the way they think of bull fighting like like in mexico right like when you see the matadors and they stab them and all
Starting point is 02:05:25 that shit yeah i think people connect rodeo to what they think of as the cruelest cruelest aspects i think also they think of these animals as having the same pain tolerance as a human you know like these these dudes ain't, they're not coming inside in a winter, in a hailstorm. They're just going to sit out in it and be fine. Like it's a completely different species. Yeah. And people look at it like, oh man,
Starting point is 02:05:58 if that happened to me, that would hurt. Yeah, of course, because we're humans, you know? And like, I'm not trying to justify anything. All I'm saying is you're dealing with a different species and like, there's just things that aren't painful to them. Like for instance, a flank, like it's a cotton rope. Like I should have brought one. So simple. I've done a lot of tutorials on my YouTube where I show like, I'll put one on, I put one on Boone in a YouTube video, like my ranch and he's like a gentle horse. Like I put a flank on him and turn it and we turned him out and he just walks out. He's like, dude, I'm not a bucking horse.
Starting point is 02:06:31 Right. And there's a lot of misconceptions like that also in the ranching world. You know, you, you might see somebody treating animals like shit because in, in some exceptional video that goes viral in the dairy or something where somebody yeah but that's not the norm right people don't feel like that like dude when my dog died i cried you know like i don't want to put if i have to put something down i'm probably gonna call my brother like i don't like to do that you know right but that's that that's a misconception that's why I say that like the animosity is really just because people aren't educated and at the base
Starting point is 02:07:12 of it you know some people do put animals and unapologetically put animals on the same level of humans well then we've got a different belief system yeah and now we're now we're going down a road where we're probably not gonna agree on a lot of things right right because as much as i love animals they're just not more important than humans no not to me either they're very important to me but it's a different thing i value humans above everything else and that's how animals feel about their species too you know all animals and that's that's the rule of nature it It's fucking tooth, fang, and claw. We've just managed to figure out cities and buildings and cars.
Starting point is 02:07:49 And we've managed to shield ourselves from it to the point where we don't think we're a part of the cycle of life. But we are. We're just in a very distorted version of it where you could just go buy the meat at the store. So by hiring a supermarket hitman, somehow or another you feel like you are immune to the the pain and suffering and so they don't those kind of people there's a lot of people that eat meat that don't like hunting and that to me is just very strange like you are you're consuming food then you have zero idea where that food came from you have a goddamn clue what kind of life that animal had and you eat that you're fine but you think there's
Starting point is 02:08:28 something wrong with someone going out and getting it themselves in the wild which to me is crazy and it's it's also like it's just ignorance it's and it's convenient thinking convenient thinking that you're you're in a morally superior position because you're not involved the the actual death itself. And I don't think that's true at all. And, and those animals do not, I mean, you've got some instances with certain horses, maybe certain dogs, but it's an exception to the rule. But the rule of thumb is animals do not reciprocate that love. Right. Theo had that mortician on, and he was talking about, like, it takes a cat, like, 24 hours. If you die in the house, that cat's eating you.
Starting point is 02:09:15 Yeah. And most dogs, all small dogs, are eating you, like, within 24 hours. Really? But the guy said that something about labs, labs won't. Like, it would take a lab a long time before a lab at you but like a little dog as soon as they're hungry they're gonna eat you really so like you got all this love for this animal and like you die and he's like all right i'm eating you kathy you know it which i'm not trying to say that Kathy shouldn't care for her dog. Right. All I'm saying is, is like, there's an order.
Starting point is 02:09:46 I think that was the way God designed us. And, um, and I'm not saying that means that we have a right to abuse animals at all. No. And cause I, again, those are exceptions to the rule in my industry.
Starting point is 02:09:59 Like people don't like other people that like do bad things to animals. We need to be respectful. It's a sign of a serial killer. Yeah. Someone that like do bad things to animals no we need to be respectful serial killer yeah someone that tortures animals or hurts animals that's a sick person it's complete yeah it's a sick person i don't know it's not it's not something that exists well those pita videos have like really poisoned a lot of people's minds too but then there is the reality of factory farming which is you know in a lot of ways very cruel yeah you know we've all seen those trucks filled with pigs or trucks filled with chickens going down the road and they're all slammed in there together and it just doesn't look
Starting point is 02:10:34 good yeah and that's that's real too but regular ranching like what you're talking about it's not the problem i took i harvested that elk i mean bow kills are right there and the second arrow he went we had lost an elk that morning like we ended up finding him but at the time i was like i don't want this rascal to leave you know so i put a second arrow in him and the way the sun beamed through the trees it just like highlighted him in the video and i was going to post it in the next day or two but and then that arrow hits him and a little bit of blood comes out and i was talking to cam about it and he was like man and he went over like the death thing like imagine that that that elk's death outside of like this merciful arrow, you know? And there are parts of it that are brutal, you know, that like meaning like just like, I don't know, manly and wild and like it seems barbaric a little bit.
Starting point is 02:11:38 But compare that to just that stun gun when they're going down a chute, you know? Right. Like it's not, I mean, like that guy is probably a little more numb to it than anybody right which i think hey i need to eat so do what you got to do yeah but that guy's just whacking them all day long right bank bank bank yeah but i don't know there's there's a certain level of connection that you get with nature as a cowboy, you know, and you do get faced with death and, you know, like when you're tending to animals, like it just happens, you know, I lost one of my dad's pickup horses the other day. He died, he colicked and, you know, like you're faced with it, you know, and we cut off part of his
Starting point is 02:12:21 mane and pulled his shoes off and put him out in the pasture where he got to go back to dust. But it's part of life, whether we like it or not. And like you said, you're not escaping it by going to the grocery store. You just don't have to look at it. Exactly. And you're not also escaping the horrors of monocrop agriculture and what that does to animals. of monocrop agriculture and what that does to animals. The idea of having thousands of acres of corn and when they harvest that corn,
Starting point is 02:12:48 all sorts of shit is getting chopped up with that corn. Yeah. Whatever grain, whether it's wheat, alfalfa, whatever. When they're harvesting that stuff, there's a lot of animals dying. There's a lot of animals dying. And then there's a lot of groundhogs that get killed, a lot of gophers get killed,
Starting point is 02:13:04 a lot of things get murdered in order to make sure that you have those vegetables that you think are so ethical. Yeah. You know? Yeah. And, yeah, the farming side of it is something I don't know. Them sod busters. It's kind of like the difference in Ruffy's and Tommy's, you know, like the segregation. It's playful.
Starting point is 02:13:24 You know, like we absolutely need farming. And I've got a lot of friends that are farmers. It's just not something I'm as familiar with. That's another thing, though, that gets in your blood. Those people that really enjoy, I think there's certain things that speak to human evolution. And hunting is one of those. Like you don't know that you have this connection with it until you do it. And then it feels so right. It feels like this is what i'm supposed to be doing to get meat like this feels natural
Starting point is 02:13:50 because humans did it for thousands and thousands of years the same with agriculture i'm sure the same with cowboying there's probably something in it that like speaks to a part of who you are and how we became a civilized agricultural society, that you had to be good at this in order to survive. And so this is sort of baked into the human DNA. Yeah, and there's certain parts of it that are, you know, maybe difficult to digest, but that doesn't mean they're wrong. Right.
Starting point is 02:14:21 When they're new to you and it's your first time seeing it, like it might be unique and different and at first glance make you uncomfortable but that doesn't mean that it's evil right you know that's the thing it's like if people are very limited in their experiences but very confident in their opinions yeah and sometimes that's those two things don't go well together right with unique things and things that they don't really have knowledge of, like cowboying, like bow hunting, like a lot of things. They don't understand it. Like, why would you want to do that?
Starting point is 02:14:53 But if you did it, you'd get it. You'd understand. How much bow hunting have you done? That was my first bow hunt in September. Wow. First bow hunt for an elk. That's wild. First time to kill anything with a bow. That's a wild thing to kill for your first thing. Yep. That's the first time bow hunt for an for an elk that's wild first time to kill
Starting point is 02:15:05 anything with a bow that's a wild thing to kill for your first thing yep that's that's the big one that's the top of the food chain no kidding i was nervous and uh wayne endicott he was like man you need to get out there and then brush and find some rabbits and whatnot but like time got away from me and i just didn't but i i practiced a lot a lot a lot a lot and uh I was kind of we were kind of glassing this one six by six and I was nervous where were you what part of the country I was in uh Kremlin Colorado place Bear Mountain um outfitters this this Brad Probst he was a genius all week. And my inexperience kept me from getting this big 6x6.
Starting point is 02:15:49 Like I should have drawn on a couple of bulls, but I just didn't like step out when I needed to. Right. And he was walking me through it. So the last day, the last day, the last hour of sunlight, we were watching this 6x6. And my heart was racing. And then he kind of trotted off. My heart calmed down, and then out of nowhere this five by five came up.
Starting point is 02:16:10 And so it caught me off guard, and I was able to. Is this it? Yeah, this is the second shot. And, man, Jamie, you found exactly what. Did you see the blood, the puff of smoke? Show me that again. Show me that again, Jamie. Back it up to the shot.
Starting point is 02:16:27 Yeah, this is my second one. That one's at like 70 yards. That's quartering away hard too. And then you see the blood. I mean, obviously he was already dying. I was just nervous we were going to lose him. Oh, that was a perfect shot. I didn't really realize he was dying.
Starting point is 02:16:43 Yeah, but it's always good to get a second arrow in them if you can always i was so jacked but brad was like he's gonna come right there and just perfect wow it was uh it's a wild feeling it was intense it was so crazy yeah it's very intense very hard to keep it together on the shot you know and then when you're eating that animal the satisfaction of it is just amazing it's crazy how good it is it's not gamey no elk is delicious it's so good it's not gamey it's so good for you too it's so filled with nutrients and vitamins and it's just you feel it when you eat it you're like feel fucking energized yeah because
Starting point is 02:17:25 sometimes i'll be eating too many steaks yeah you know like on carnivore like i ain't a lot of steaks because i love beef yeah me too it's really good to like go to some elk every now and then yeah where you know you're not you know it's just it's so lean you gotta get your fats in if you're doing that you know i usually eat it with bacon or a cooking beef tallow too. Well, it's probably usually just the next meal I'll go back to a steak. Yeah. Well, that's good too. And I'll get plenty of fat from my ribeyes.
Starting point is 02:17:57 Yeah. Though that's the best one in terms of like just being able to get your protein and your fat. A good marbled ribeye is the best. Oh, man. I'm a ribeye man. Yeah, me too. That's all I order. And when you get your body accustomed to eating like that, man, it just feels so normal.
Starting point is 02:18:13 It feels healthy. I never feel bloated or stuffed or just exhausted from food. Yeah, lunch is so easy. Easy. Eat it, feel great. I did it all through hunting camp i just ate steak and eggs that's all i did i cheated one time well so like i i do a little bit of fruit and then i'll do like mountain ops supplements like so like i guess i kind of cheat a little
Starting point is 02:18:40 but like i don't do any breads or sugars but but I'll do like protein shakes. That's the most important thing. I don't think there's anything wrong with fruit. I don't think fruit is our problem. I think the problem is processed foods. That's the number one problem. What the carnivore does is it's an elimination diet. So it takes out almost everything that might be fucking you up. It takes out all the sugar, all the bread, all the pasta, all the processed food, anything that might have glyphosate on it, anything that might be irritable to your body and cause inflammation, and then you just feel better. And then once your body adapts to eating just protein and fat, then you're running off of ketones. There's many times when you're doing a carnivore diet that you're essentially in ketosis.
Starting point is 02:19:25 And when I find myself in that state, my brain works better. I can think better. I can form conversations better. I'm less foggy. I feel like I have an extra gear to communicate with. I think it was like a year ago I heard you say all that. Yeah. Because you had said occasionally you might cheat
Starting point is 02:19:45 on sushi because you love sushi and you gave that what you just said and then i heard the deal about cholesterol and like half of the people that die of heart attack didn't have high cholesterol and i was like all right i'm doing that yeah and i started in christmas and then i've been good all year and then on fourth of j, I go to, uh, I think you, you might follow. I saw you follow one, uh, Hannah Baron. Yeah. She does a noodling. Yeah. That's crazy. Every year I go and Jeff, her dad convinced me to eat ice cream and I didn't food bright for a week. So it had been seven months and no sugar no bullshit and i ate that ice cream and for a week i kept texting jeff i was like this is your fault yeah but no that's a it that
Starting point is 02:20:34 is a crazy watching that 110 pound girl pull out 75 pound catfish with her hand yeah that that noodling thing is nuts because what if you get a snapping turtle well they say that well number one i don't do it without jeff over my shoulder there's big biceps keep me safe but they they say that like snapping turtles and snakes aren't going to be where there's not oxygen oh so if the hole is completely underwater then it's like 99.9 that you're okay so how do you find a catfish like the water's brown so what are you doing you're just sort of feeling around so we i've been in texas and you kind of just got to like either know where the holes are like a rock or you just go down the banks we just go down the banks and reach in and you'll find three and four pounders go down the banks and reach in and you'll find three and four pounders they don't let you put boxes out in texas but like where we go over there um in alabama and around there they uh
Starting point is 02:21:33 they'll it'll be like they'll put a box out what does that mean so like a little smaller than this much of the table there'll be a maybe about where your coffee cup is, and they'll put a hole in it on the corner. Oh, to set it up so that the catfish go in there. So I think the way it normally works is the female will come in, lay some eggs, and then the male will come in and protect the eggs. And there's only a certain time frame that you do it. And you go in and you put your arm in and you wave it around like this
Starting point is 02:22:05 you like you'll get shoulder deep in that and uh immediately they can they sense you they know you're in there the catfish does and they'll go to bite them like a blue the blues are like super aggressive and like you can tell the difference a flathead will kind of bite. So that's a box? Yeah, those are some different boxes that guys will put out. And then you just reach your arm in there and grab the catfish and it bites your arm. Then we do grab it. Bites your arm, and then you'll move to, like, putting your – Hannah should have – yeah, so that's Jeff on the left.
Starting point is 02:22:42 That's Jordan. She works for me. That's not Hannah. Jordan, she rides bulls. And so right there there's a hole and they're reaching in trying to grab a hold of this catfish so what are you feeling around for so you put in there and then you kind of you you just feel that fish and eight times out of ten they'll bite your arm I don't know if she gets one caught right here. Oh, it is. Whoa. And you're reaching in there.
Starting point is 02:23:12 You grab their bottom jaw with your hand, and then you run your left hand under the gill plate so you don't mess up their gills, and you pull them up. And are you letting these things go, or are you eating them? Yeah, most of the time. Because you can catch. One day we caught 20. So we them? Yeah, most of the time, like, because you can catch, like, one day we caught 20. So, like, we'll let them go most of the time. Like, you might catch one or two and eat them.
Starting point is 02:23:31 Like, that night, I think we kept two and we ate. And you keep the males because the females are obviously going to. The yellow cats eat so good. So good. And how do you cook them? Cut them up into chunks, roll them in flour, and then put them in oil. Deep fry them? Well, first you soak them.
Starting point is 02:23:55 Jeff does this. He'll soak them in Red Hot for a little bit in a baggie, like the chunks of them, and then roll them in just flour and then put them in uh put them in oil and pull them out and then put a little bit of garlic salt on them it's the best fish i don't know that that that's my that and elk hunting like those two trips rival each other really that's noodling is as fun as elk hunting They're just so different They're so unique But you just gotta experience it It's such a rush
Starting point is 02:24:30 And then you grab it And when you come out with those big fish So this is how you cook it? Yeah That looks like Hannah probably Yeah they'll cut them up like that And then once you get them in the chunks, then he does the red hots. He'll put the red hot in that bowl or in a baggie,
Starting point is 02:24:52 take that little skin off that's on there. What's it similar to? I've had catfish fried before. I've had fried catfish, like fillets. Yeah. I mean, it's like a really tender and better tasting like chicken really like that's the only thing I could think that would be the closest thing to it but yeah you can't leave it in the hole too long and you want to as
Starting point is 02:25:17 soon as you cut it up you need to be cooking it pretty quick they can that it can spoil real real fast and the big ones taste good too? Mm-hmm. Is there a difference between the big ones and the little ones, how they taste? I think there's a – now that I'm thinking about it, there's probably a way to like bleed them after, you know, when you're cutting them up at the end, like where you let that blood get out of me. They usually say that you're supposed to bleed them like right when you first catch them. We don't do that.
Starting point is 02:25:43 Could you keep them alive for a while? No, we don't do that could you keep them alive for a while no we don't i mean like it might be like two or three hours before we you know start cutting them up but you don't yeah we don't we don't bleed them right away no so what do you do when you catch them do you put them on the shore do you put them we just throw them in the boat the boat yeah yeah we'll put them in the boat and you can survive just breathe in air for a long fucking time. Can't they? I think so.
Starting point is 02:26:08 I mean, it looks like it when their jaws are kind of glamping, you know. That's the unique thing about catfish and like some carp too, right? They can just come up and get some actual air. Yeah. Jeff and Hannah would know better than me. Yeah. I don't know. They're the extent of my, like I let, like I said, I gone a few times in texas i get a little nervous about it but um
Starting point is 02:26:30 it's such a rush grabbing them and pulling them out of those those holes man i don't know something about it you should try it one day okay i i think you might really enjoy it i bet i probably would i don't i don't think you'll enjoy it more than elk hunting that was maybe a little bit strong of a statement to make i don't think that's possible but it it's it's a it's just a different thing yeah and it is so fun but well i love regular fishing yeah yeah once you once you start catching them with your hands it's kind of like bow hunting compared to like sitting in a deer blind you know like uh know like it's not that you throw rocks at it but man once you kill something with a bow that's how you want to do it that's how i feel about i'm sure bass fishing you know would still be fun to me i
Starting point is 02:27:15 haven't gone since i've gone noodling but pulling them out by your hands it's just like it's like the man stuff tell that to h Hannah. Dude, no kidding. Like that girl, you throw her out in the wilderness and she will survive. Yeah. Plus she's also gorgeous. Yeah. There's not a lot of chicks like that out there. No.
Starting point is 02:27:35 But when they are, boy, they, they could really do some damage on social media. You would expect a girl that's that good at pulling catfish out of a hole that, you know, they'd have a dip in and maybe, you know, look a little different than Hannah. Yeah, for sure. Yeah. Yeah, it's, that's another weird subculture, southern subculture of noodlers that people would look down on, like, what are you doing? Yeah, I can't remember, like, she'll, like, go out there and then go hunt squirrels. She does all of it.
Starting point is 02:28:07 Jeff and their country, they're going to be all right, their country. Country boy can survive. The old Hank Williams Jr. song. That's it, yeah. I'll be all right so long as I got access to some cows and horses. Yeah. Well, it sounds like you do a little bow hunting too now. Yep. I'm hooked now on Yeah. Well, it sounds like you do a little bow hunting too now. Yep.
Starting point is 02:28:25 I'm in it, yeah. I'm hooked now on that. Oh, yeah. That's one thing that when September rolls around. There's also something that's so unique about elk hunting because, you know, you're sneaking up on them. Hopefully they don't even know you're there. You're experiencing the screams and the bugles and the rutting, the fights when they smash into each other. It's like you feel so fortunate to be just witness to that stuff.
Starting point is 02:28:50 And the small window, like you said, September, really like even just a few weeks, depending on where you're at, that you have to like go after them, you know. And I guess that's one of the things about elk hunting. Like I have nothing against, you you know the longbow the rifle but and and i've harvested a lot of animals that way but like being able to like i mean cam was like one yard away from that one that he shot i know that was very unusual that was he was in the middle of the trail and the elk had no idea he was there until it was like literally i think it was two yards away from him so it's six it was from me to you when he releases the arrow. It was just bananas.
Starting point is 02:29:29 Bananas. You don't even use your sights. Well, he used his 50-yard pin because even though something's very close, what happens is when you are very close to someone, even though it's very close to a target, even though it's counterintuitive, you want to use the more distant pin because it takes a while for your arrow to rise up and hit its apex. So when it comes straight out of the bow, if you try to use like a 20-yard pin,
Starting point is 02:29:55 you'll be hitting it very low. Really? Yeah. You want to use a 50-yard pin. Dang. At like two yards. I know it sounds counterintuitive. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:30:03 But it's just understanding the arc of the arrow when it leaves the bow. So when your arrow leaves the bow, it goes up and drops in. And so you have to have that sight up in order for it to go straight at six yards because it hasn't started the climb yet. That makes a lot of sense. I would have not known that in the moment. It's very counterintuitive. You would think, Oh my God, I can't even have the 20 yard pin. I got to roll it back even further, but you don't, you have to have roll it up higher. Yeah. It seems I've never done it before. I've never taken a frontal shot like that either, which is also, you have to really understand what you're doing. He did it perfect. You see the arrow, he went right through the animal's heart.
Starting point is 02:30:41 And he has a photo on his instagram of the animal's heart with the arrow poking out of it was the perfect shot but that's a deep understanding of not just what pin to use but of anatomy when to pull the the trigger like like what to do you have to be very very experienced to do what he did there even though it seems like oh that was so easy you shot it at two yards i probably wouldn't have shot it i wouldn't have been confident enough and i might not have i mean if i don't have a pin that's set at 50 at that moment what would i do like that's that's the arrow poking out of the heart i mean that was an absolutely perfect shot you can't get any better than that perfect that that animal died in 30 yards which probably took three seconds for it to hit 30 yards.
Starting point is 02:31:25 30 yards. Yeah. And it was down. Three seconds. Yeah. That's insane. Yeah. It's a quick death.
Starting point is 02:31:32 It's a quick and merciful death. And again, that animal's not getting that death anywhere. I mean, that was in the mountains of Utah. They're surrounded by mountain lions. We saw some big ones. I saw a big one there two years ago. It was big. A lot of bears out there.
Starting point is 02:31:46 They're starting to see wolves. There's real animals there. And every few days, those mountain lions, bears, and wolves are going to take down an elk. Every few days. Every few days. They wreak havoc on the calves, especially the bears. Like when the elk are calving, the bears come out looking for it. They smell it. That's what they want well
Starting point is 02:32:08 cams goal was to make more bow hunters and elk specifically and he definitely did it with me yeah I did it with me too that's right yeah I mean he's the reason why I bow hunt yeah got me into it he taught me to shoot and then John Dudley gave me lessons and those guys have taken me out deer hunting elk hunting it's uh it's it's a totally different life you start doing that and then I look it's like my best escape from the grind of what I do yeah there's nothing like it because when you're out there you're not thinking of anything else you can't when you're making a stalk on an elk and you're playing the wind and you got your boots off because you have to tread over leaves quietly. You're not thinking of anything else.
Starting point is 02:32:53 It cleans your mind of all your stress, all your things. The only stress you have is of doing what you've trained to do in that moment, that very intense moment. That's exactly what it was now that you mentioned it like the only especially having messed up early in the hunt and not stepped out and got this six by six i should have so then i'm just trying to you know play catch up i mean that was the only thing i was worried about and when you're at full draw and you're about to execute a shot the whole world disappears the whole world goes away there's nothing happening other than those pins on the vitals yeah staying steady executing your shot perfectly making sure there's no movement
Starting point is 02:33:31 everything's just fluid and perfect and then watching that arrow fly and hearing that whack it's like there's nothing like it in the world how many have you harvested it's a good question dang well that's enough there's like 15 now i think really yeah dang yeah i saw them four or five out there yeah i got a whole archery range back with all the other bulls in it dang yeah yeah you can tell me and my my dusty person the guy that manages that branch at the sixes is who went with me and uh he that first the five by five my first shot before that one he like comes up and the same thing i would have done dusty like tries to stop him with like a white tail grunt
Starting point is 02:34:19 in the video like you know like you can kind of i don't know it was just funny like you can just tell that you know we're kind of inexperienced in the elk game but yeah yeah i mean it was our first one so well whitetail grunt will stop them any noise will stop them it did that day yeah yeah you need something right so i did right then that's a whole different kind of hunting that whitetail hunting that that is a mind game you know john dudley and jaco are right now they're uh in iowa and freezing their asses off in a tree stand that's a totally different game we just climb up in the tree and you wait all day yeah you wait all day and you wait many days in a row for this one moment where the deer is close enough yeah the deer walks by
Starting point is 02:35:03 you you just have to just hope that the wind is right and hope that you play it right and hope that they don't see movement. That's a crazy game because I don't have the patience for it. I've done it before. I'll do it again. It's still fun, but it's a different mental game. I much prefer stalking, the physical difficulty of getting up the mountains, getting close to them, the fact that you need to be in shape to do all that.
Starting point is 02:35:27 Because there's going to be times you've got to get to that mountain quick. You see them coming around a ridge. You've got to beat them over the side. If you don't get there in time, you're going to miss that opportunity. And so you have to be fit. And with the whitetail woods, it's totally different. You're just sitting there. Just sitting there.
Starting point is 02:35:42 The whole thing is just playing that mind game and not going crazy, sitting in a tree stand for 10 hours. It's crazy they say that. I guess that's putting words to, like, I got back from that elk hunt, and somebody's like, well, are you going to go whitetail hunting now? And I just didn't have a drive to go do it. Like I was more excited about elk hunting next year. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:36:03 But it kind of took away some of the drive of like, which I don't whitetail hunt a lot, a lot anyway. But, yeah, I just didn't get as, I'll be excited about stalking maybe some pigs, which we have plenty of in Texas. Like I might go do that because it's so similar. But the stalk of the elk hunt is so much of it. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:36:23 That's the way people have always done it i think that's why it's and it's also the most difficult way because you really got to move slow you really got to keep it together and then there's the decision like it turns broadside now's the time draw and then and then it's like oh my god it's happening and then you got to keep your shit together while it's happening that's it that's exactly's exactly it. It's so hard. It's so hard. But man, that food that you get out of that is so delicious and so nutritious. It's so worth it.
Starting point is 02:36:51 And there's so much of it. Yeah. Yeah. There are times, there are certain cuts. It's hard to compare to beef because they got to put beef in it. You know, like the hamburger, you know, if you get the hamburger or the sausage. Well, they're adding fat. Yeah. They're adding beef fat or pork fat, depending on.
Starting point is 02:37:08 But they're just so different. They look the same. You throw them on a plate, they're very similar, but they're just so different. Yeah. No, it's an awesome way to get food. And, again, it's an amazing discipline because there's so many layers to it. You know, I've been bowhunting now for almost 10 years, and it just keeps getting, I keep learning.
Starting point is 02:37:29 You're always learning. If I was like, if there's a belt system, I'm probably like a purple belt in bowhunting. I'm a white belt. Still a shitload to learn. I know how to do it now. I can pull it off. If I don't have someone telling me what to do, I'm a white belt. Still a shitload to learn. You know, I know how to do it now. I can pull it off. Like if I don't have someone telling me what to do, I know what to do.
Starting point is 02:37:49 I know to check the wind. I know to move when he's not looking. I know where I'm going to be safe and where I'm not going to be safe, where I'm going to have a shooting lane, where I won't. Don't take a shot that's not, this one won't work. This one he's quartering too. You don't have a shot. You got this one won't work this one he's quartering two you don't have a shot you got to know when to shoot when not to shoot and all that stuff takes a long time to learn and then you have to be confident in your shooting so you have to put thousands of arrows
Starting point is 02:38:14 down range so you know like 50 yards to me is a chip shot i got a 50 yard shot at a bull i'm like oh yeah that's dead yeah 100 whereas like when i first started like 50 yards a half a fucking football field holy shit that's so far yeah but you know practice at 150 looks pretty easy yeah yeah they uh that's where i mean it took me probably four months you know before i felt comfortable with anything past 40 anything yeah and then the second shot like i said was like 70 and i didn't have really time to think about it i didn't even have a pin for it i kind of had to stack a pin on top of you know and uh get a pin gap yeah but it was uh the hours that it took to go into it. Like, I mean, any, I feel like an hour less and I wouldn't have been able to harvest that elk.
Starting point is 02:39:10 Do you have a coach, like an archery coach that someone shows you proper? Wayne Endicott. Oh, perfect. I just, well, I mean, I send him videos. Like once a month I would, you know, like, hey, is my form look? Right. You know. Perfect.
Starting point is 02:39:23 Like I just, I'd have nobody. Right. You know. Cam, I'm sure Cam would help me, you know, he's hey, is my form look? Right. You know. Perfect. Like, I just, I'd have nobody. Right. You know. Cam, I'm sure Cam would help me, you know, he's just so busy. Yeah. You know, and Wayne is too, but. Wayne enjoys teaching people too. Right.
Starting point is 02:39:34 He's an excellent coach. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, he actually coaches people, you know. He's brought people to competitions and such. Yeah. Yeah, no, he's awesome. And that Bo-Rack rack is a great great fucking place
Starting point is 02:39:45 too yeah it's like to have a place like we have a place like that in texas archery country which is just like that it's amazing place it's it's like having a bow shop is so important having people that really know how to tune a bow correctly so you really have confidence in your equipment you know you could you could go to them and say this something seems off there's something i'm hitting low. You know, something's going on. Oh, your strings are stretching. Let's fucking recalibrate this.
Starting point is 02:40:13 And it's so important to have someone who really knows what to do. And the bow rack is a great resource for that, as is archery country. Yeah, I've heard you talk about them. There is one place in Weatherford, I can't remember what it's called, like I overdrew. I was trying to really extend and pull back at the same time and the the uh the limbs crunched down and stayed down they didn't explode and then my string was all and i sent a picture to wayne and he was like send that to me now but there was a bow shop in weatherford and i just went down and they were like oh please set that down on the table.
Starting point is 02:40:46 And I was like, I don't know. Here it is. But apparently it was, like, ready to explode, which blows my mind. But I think maybe it was from the heat. I left it in the back seat of my pickup only for, like, two or three hours, but it got pretty hot this summer. And I think the heat mixed with wind. But everybody was like, no, it shouldn't do that.
Starting point is 02:41:04 But they got it fixed, and I killed an elk with it, so it was fine. I wonder what was wrong. I don't know. I'll show you a picture at some point. Yeah, show me the picture. I'm curious as to what the hell was going on with that thing. Look at the size of that fucking belt buckle, son. Yeah, that's why.
Starting point is 02:41:19 Look at that. Champion this year. I run into somebody, they're like, oh, good for you. Don't get the joke. Yeah. It's such a joke, too, because that's the most preposterous-sized belt buckle of all time. Exactly. No one would ever wear a belt buckle that big.
Starting point is 02:41:39 This is not a real belt buckle. Yeah. Like, this is a real belt buckle. Right. Yeah, that's a normal belt buckle exactly yeah that thing's outrageous oh man but that is a big thing about rodeo guys okay let me see what's going on here oh yeah oh it's stuck like that that's crazy isn't that wild like i just drew back and well your string just blew out
Starting point is 02:42:06 but they didn't even and it went off the cable they didn't replace the string what like they were like yeah the string's fine and they put it back and then i kept shooting for two more months and shot an arrow so what made it uh it came if you look at the top it's off the cams the strings off the cams i wonder how that happened well when it whenever it folded like that the string was just so loose yeah well the string is off if you look at the top cam the string is not on the cam anymore that's why it's so loose oh gotcha see how it's not connected anymore that round thing is the cam yes that's the cam that's the mechanical advantage as you're pulling back the these like powerful limbs it rolls over these cams.
Starting point is 02:42:47 And your string was off the cam. So as it rolled over, your string doesn't have any resistance at the top. So it's got an extra half a foot, foot to pull back, and then it's just loose. So it's not connected anymore. Yeah. Not good. It just doesn't make sense that it rolled over like that. I don't know.
Starting point is 02:43:04 It must have fallen off. Something must have pushed it somehow or another. And then it was, as you drew back, instead of rolling through that groove, it went off the side. And then you had nothing, no resistance at all. Yeah. Yeah, because that's just flopping around. It doesn't look like it would explode, but it definitely doesn't look good. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:43:24 When they explode is when the limbs break that that can happen but it's super super rare especially if you get a modern bow like a hoyt like they they dry fire those like hundreds of times to make sure that those limbs are fucking bulletproof right by the time you get a hoyt bow that motherfucker sorted out right you know they they got so that is a cam issue something happened with that cam with a Bulletproof. Right. By the time you get a Hoyt bow, that motherfucker sorted out. Right. You know, they got all. So that is a cam issue. Something happened with that cam or the string.
Starting point is 02:43:55 Either the cam got loose or moved or the string got pushed off the side. I've never seen that before. Yeah. It made me feel like an elementary school kid. Like I was just like, I'd done this thing and I was like, son of a gun. And I had no idea. Like, I don't know any of the terminology that you had been saying.
Starting point is 02:44:09 Like Cam handed me the bow in February and I shot it a bunch. And then I message, uh, Wayne every now and then. And then I would post a video and nine, nine people would be like, give me criticisms. And I'd be like,
Starting point is 02:44:25 shut the hell up. But then I would kind of do it, you know And I'd be like, shut the hell up. But then I would kind of do it. You know, I'd be like, okay, but I'm going to remember that. And so I just slowly, and then stuff like that would happen. And I just thought like, okay, if my target is at 40 yards, I can hit it. So if I can control my emotions, like I know how to hit that at 40, 50, 60 yards 60 yards if i can control my emotions in the moment which hopefully rodeo had helped me do yeah i'm sure it did then maybe that i'll be successful and so i was super confident in the back of my head just with my ability to do it like i was also not naive about my inexperience, but if I could get drawn on one with a good target,
Starting point is 02:45:06 I felt confident I could maybe kill him. Well, I guarantee you that the nerves that someone must face when you're about to ride a bull or a bucking bronco is probably as extreme as anything you'll ever face in anything. So that would, without a doubt, help you with bow hunting. I was more nervous to come on here than i mean i could i could i could now dang sure be more nervous like to do stand up but this is easy look how easy it's been for sure it's been fun i guess there's just that not that my
Starting point is 02:45:35 what i have to say is going to change anybody but just like having listened to like i mean there's some of your podcasts that just like me personally have changed my life you know changed my life too you know me park is it yeah yeah you own me park yeah i probably i still think about her every day what her you want to talk about adversity man that lady's life that is an insane story escaping north korea at 13 years old. I mean, horrific stories. Crazy. Yeah, people like that have no patience for bullshit. Exactly. You know, like, I don't want to hear your victim nonsense. Like, you know what I went through?
Starting point is 02:46:14 Shit. She went through everything. Why are you fat? Just stop eating. Yeah, so simple. It's so simple. Like, just stop eating. Why are you fat?
Starting point is 02:46:23 People that have come from really hard places, they have no patience for nonsense. And they see it coming and like, oh my God, you guys don't even know what you're bringing on to the world with all this crazy communism talk. You don't even know what you're asking for. What you're asking for is the horrors of human civilization in its worst forms.
Starting point is 02:46:47 Totalitarian dictatorships that dictate exactly what you could do exactly what you could say exactly what you could eat what you how you work what you say how you behave what you can dress like that's North Korea yes he said that tell the only thing they were free to do is breathe yeah they didn't. They didn't even have a word for I. They don't have an I. I mean, you were sitting in front of her. You know that. I think this.
Starting point is 02:47:13 Yeah, they don't have that. Yeah, it's we. Yeah. Yeah. That's North Korea. She's who, it's just like people that, should we make communism a thing? All right, well, let's ask Park.
Starting point is 02:47:24 Right. And put her on a pedestal and say, tell us. And then she would tell us. Well, well, let's ask Park. Right. And put her on a pedestal and say, tell us. And then she would tell us. Well, look at the people that come from Cuba. They don't want to hear no bullshit. Yeah. No nonsense. No nonsense.
Starting point is 02:47:34 Yeah. Do you see the Biden administration is shipping people back to Venezuela? People that escaped Venezuela and came to America, they know they're going to vote Republican. They don't want to have nothing to do with socialism. People that escaped that and came to America, they know they're going to vote Republican. They don't want to have nothing to do with socialism. People that escaped that shit in Venezuela, they are the ones that they don't want. So they're actively working with the Venezuelan government to ship back people to Venezuela.
Starting point is 02:47:56 I mean, that's what Park is. She's like, I didn't mean to, but apparently I'm on the right. Right, exactly. I'm on the right side of the aisle now. She talks about that, like the left hates me for some reason. Well, for some reason, they just don't want to look at her suffering and her story because it interferes with their narrative. Yeah. We just haven't done communism right yet. And no one's done it correctly. What they don't understand is the only way to enforce communism
Starting point is 02:48:21 is force. That's the only way to get people to give up their property and to fall in line and to do everything for the greater good of everyone else. And it's usually one group of people have mass control of the resources and wealth, which is what communist dictatorships are, and everybody else suffers. The idea of equality is not equality. It never works that way.
Starting point is 02:48:42 That's not human nature. You know, if what you want is like genuine charity from people, what you want is people that contribute to the community and they think about it and they do it voluntarily. And it's, it's, it's a reinforced by the culture. That's what you want. What you don't want is the government telling you that you have to give up most of your money for the greater good of everybody else because then they just take it. And that's how it worked in North Korea and that's how it would work everywhere. The only way to enforce that kind of – because it's so unnatural for people to not exist in a true – like what people enjoy in life is succeeding the difficult struggle of trying to do something that's hard to do and finding your own path.
Starting point is 02:49:29 And through that freedom, becoming successful. A meritocracy. A real meritocracy where everybody has a chance. That's what we should strive for in this country. Meritocracies. Not victim mentality and certainly not communism. It's a terrible idea. And it seems like a terrible idea.
Starting point is 02:49:48 And it seems like a good idea because why do so many have so much and others have so little? Well, the problem is the culture is not encouraging the people that have so much to realize that they're so fortunate and to help out in some way. That would be better. The worst thing is taking from those people and giving it to people who are doing nothing. Then you're creating this entitlement class.
Starting point is 02:50:14 You're creating this group of people that think that somehow or another people that are successful are evil if other people aren't successful. And it's just a way to pit us against each other. And that's not what we need in this country. need is people coming together and realizing that we're all one big community and trying to do something for the greater good of the whole community and encouraging people to do better in their own lives encouraging people and giving them the opportunity to work hard and feel that satisfaction of accomplishing something that's what we should all be striving for so somehow i know that's right wing yeah which is kind is kind of crazy. What I was about to say, like pretty much everybody like where I come from is like fist pumping. They agree with everything you just said. Like selfishly for me, like as like, you know, like not selfishly. I mean, everybody's wondering it, but just like, what do I do?
Starting point is 02:51:03 Like even just me specifically, like with, you know, I've got a platform where comedy is my main thing. And that's where I'm like, there's so many things I wanna talk about, you know, but like, I think people come to me for an escape. Right. But so two different questions, like what do I do on that level?
Starting point is 02:51:25 But then also, what do I do just on the human level of like making that change or like how do how do you talk about that? Because it's so divisive to people. I think you live your life as an excellent example. That's what you do. You live your life and people learn from watching you. They learn from I want to live my life the way that guy's living. and people learn from watching you. They learn from, I wanna live my life the way that guy's living. That guy seems fulfilled and happy and he works hard and it's obviously very satisfying for him,
Starting point is 02:51:51 I wanna feel that too. And through example. You live your life through and you help people through the example of the way you live your life. That's real, man. And that's what I get out of very inspirational people like we talked about Goggins and Cam and Jocko and there's a lot of people like that out there that inspire me and Jordan Peterson and just really Douglas Murray
Starting point is 02:52:13 brilliant people who but through their own hard work and dedication have carved out this life and then through their words and their their brilliance inspire other people to learn and grow. Yeah. That's what's up, Dale Brisby. What if they knock on your door? Who's they? I mean, like here in Texas,
Starting point is 02:52:42 where the come and take it flag originated. Oh, you mean what if the government comes and knocks on your door the problem is in this country people are very independent and we're very well armed and we're also not interested in being controlled by the government and uh the problem with the government is it's filled with people and most of those people that you would have to have control people are regular people it's easy to convince some to turn arms against their brothers and sisters because the government tells you to do it. There are people that would fall in line with that. But I think they'd have a hard time convincing most people, especially most people that are
Starting point is 02:53:13 genuinely patriotic that sign up for the military and for law enforcement. They're not interested in doing that. They're not interested in forcing the will of these people that are tyrants. Yeah. It'd be harder to pull off in America than it would a lot of places. I think America has instilled in us this love of freedom. And some people,
Starting point is 02:53:33 that's one of the reasons why they try to demonize that because that's very difficult to control people that have this reinforced love of freedom. I agree with that. And to convince you that it's for the greater good of everyone,
Starting point is 02:53:46 if we take away your guns, the greater good of everyone, if you fall in line for the greater good of everyone, if you pay 90% in taxes, the greater good of everyone, if you do this, if you do that. And ultimately it's not, it's for the greater good of the people that are in control. And it seems like every time they make those decisions, the world just gets worse. It doesn't get more equitable and fair. It gets fucking worse. It gets worse. The economy gets worse. The people struggle more. It's not good. What we need to do is figure out a way to give people more opportunity to succeed, not to just give people things. And that's human nature. That's just, that's what makes people happy people. What makes people happy people is teaching them
Starting point is 02:54:27 how to live their life and allowing them to live their life in a way that gives them the maximum amount of freedom and the most amount of satisfaction. I guess I ask that, like I said,
Starting point is 02:54:37 like my dad died 10 years ago, like two months before my first video, which was funny because he was the reason that it started you know but and then there was just like this gap where I was like oh man I gotta like I've got to become a man now and it means like I've got to make decisions that are going to affect me and there'll be people looking to me like well how are you going to decide on this and I get to set the tone and and and there's certain things, you know, like my faith that are easy for me to make
Starting point is 02:55:10 decisions on, on like what I would do in certain instances. But then there's other things like as an American. And that's what makes me ask that question. It's just like, how far do you take this or that? And that's where like listening to you talk about it on this podcast listening to Marcus talk about it you know like I've I've had to look outside of myself to make decisions on what kind of man what kind of American I'm going to be and uh that's what made me ask that question like I guess you know I just kind of looked to my dad on a lot of things and like default to him and then him dying was just it tested everything i had to go back and like not that i thought he was wrong but just like start over in a way and just like reevaluate and you got to figure it out for
Starting point is 02:55:57 yourself figure it out for myself because if i'm willing to die for it, then I better be pretty damn sure. Right. You know? Right. And I don't know, sometimes I think, you know, people might say that and they're not willing to die for it. That's just sexy and fun and they jump on a bandwagon, but like, I'm kind of more like, man, I better be careful because if I do go down this route, I'm gonna, that's what I mean.
Starting point is 02:56:24 That's what I think I mean. That's what I think I mean. That's what I hope I mean. Let's hope that never is a problem. But, yeah, I don't think that would be a problem. I don't think that's going to be a problem in this country. I hope not. But my real fear is that if a tragedy happens, if some sort of an attack happens, some sort of a horrific event happens, then they start clamping down on people. Because that's what they did right after 9-11.
Starting point is 02:56:43 They passed the Patriot Act and the NDAA. That's where things get sketchy. When things get sketchy is they take advantage of something that happens and they clamp down on people more in order to protect you and keep you safe. You got to give away some freedom. And that is just not the way to go. It took a long time to create something like America. And we got to keep this thing going. Well, I mean, there's some of those things that happen where it's strengthened.
Starting point is 02:57:12 Like, for instance, COVID. I know in California, there were lines around the block for people trying to get a gun so they could defend themselves. Well, that was just fear. That was the George Floyd riots because the, yeah, because the defund the police movement and they realized that cops aren't showing up anymore and people's houses are getting broken into. And that's, that's when people were lying around the block for guns. And I had like a lot of my liberal friends asking me if they could use one of my guns. I'm like, that's not how it works, bro.
Starting point is 02:57:41 Yeah. Like you got to go get a gun. You got to go get one. You got to learn how to shoot it. You don't know how to shoot a gun. I'm not going to give you a gun. You got to go get one. You got to learn how to shoot it. Right. You don't know how to shoot a gun. I'm not going to give you a gun. You don't know how to shoot. You should go to a range.
Starting point is 02:57:49 Change teams. You should get instructions. Yeah. You got to change teams, bro. Change teams. Change the team's Second Amendment. Yeah. You know?
Starting point is 02:57:55 And when you really need that, when you really need to protect your family, that's when you realize why the Second Amendment exists. You know, it's very, it's to, when you don't need it and it's not a concern in your life and it's never something that you've had to deal with, you could easily brush aside the idea that that's important, the ability to defend yourself, but it's very important. It's just like Woodrow F. Call said in Lonesome Dove, it's better to have it and not need it than need it and not have it. Yes, sir.
Starting point is 02:58:25 And it's like that jujitsu for me, that one in 10 year, one in 20 year, maybe never happened at all. Like, it's better to have it and not need it than need it and not have it because it's about a 20 minute. Before the cops can get to my house, it's like 20 minutes. Well, in these days, like days like you know in a lot of cities where they've defunded the police that's generous it might be an hour even violent encounters you can't you can't wait 20 minutes no you can't it's it's just like the people that don't agree with ranching but they still want that meat to be in the grocery store like that's that's the level of delusion like convenientient thinking. Yeah. It's just,
Starting point is 02:59:06 I'm just not going to need a gun. Like, but I've known a lot of people though in LA that have experienced violent encounters that have completely switched sides. Right. I have friends that were super anti-gun. Now they have multiple guns. I'm curious. I don't know where she stood before. Sandra, I didn't mean to interrupt you. Um, Sandra Sandra Bullock have you heard that 911 call? no she's in the house on the phone with 911 and somebody's in her house
Starting point is 02:59:31 is that out here? where was that? I don't know like I've heard it online am I wrong Jamie? is that recent? I'm pretty sure that that
Starting point is 02:59:38 it's Sandra Bullock on the phone with 911 is it recent? 2018 2018 like like I said I don't know. Scary shit. 2014 is when it happened.
Starting point is 02:59:48 I'm sorry. Okay. Scary shit, man. But somebody like that, like, it's pretty tested. Like, you don't have time. You're on the phone with the police. Right. You know?
Starting point is 02:59:57 And it's either you or them. Yeah. And that's, like, very basic, you know? But anyway. Yeah, anyway. That's the cowboy logic. That's another thing that I think a lot of my people agree with. Yeah.
Starting point is 03:00:13 Well, it's sound logic. Yeah. Be prepared. It's better to be prepared than not be prepared. Yeah. Yeah, for sure. Well, Dale Brisby, it's been fun talking to you brother i appreciate you coming on i enjoyed it tell everybody how to watch your videos and see all that shit online
Starting point is 03:00:29 oh man anywhere youtube bull rider on youtube youtube and just dale brisby on everything else rodeotime.com there you go thanks for coming in brother appreciate you yeah it's been a pleasure thanks for the hat too yes yes you bet all right bye

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