The Joe Rogan Experience - #2418 - Chris Williamson

Episode Date: November 26, 2025

Chris Williamson is a podcaster, YouTuber, and host of the "Modern Wisdom" podcast. See him live on his "Mostly Wise" tour.www.chriswillx.com  www.chriswilliamson.livewww.youtube.com/@ChrisWillx ... Perplexity: Download the app or ask Perplexity anything at https://pplx.ai/rogan. Buy 1 Get 1 Free Trucker Hat with code ROGAN at https://happydad.com Try ZipRecruiter FOR FREE at https://ziprecruiter.com/rogan Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Joe Rogan podcast checking out The Joe Rogan experience Train by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night All day What am I? I just feel a bit less shit about myself To stave off death Well doesn't it do something for your mind
Starting point is 00:00:20 Doesn't it help you? Yeah, of course it does But when you compare it with Life and death There's a little bit of a difference Oh yeah, yeah for sure Yeah, there's definitely a difference But just for mental health
Starting point is 00:00:34 That's the main reason to do it for me It's mental health It's such a difference between not doing it and doing it And be like two different totally different people You got notes on that thing or something? Always You gotta get one of these babies A little kickstand jammies
Starting point is 00:00:47 Those shit Oh, sexy Look at that. It's flat. Yeah All right All right Encourges you to waste your time watching YouTube videos Yeah without having to hold it
Starting point is 00:00:58 Because it props up Yeah, you feel like a fool sitting there staring at your camera, holding it in your hand. I always said, like, if there was a drug that made people stare at their hand for six hours a day, everybody would be like, oh, my God, was this really a problem in this country? People were just staring at their hands. Well, we looked at that last time that we were on. We had the photo of that guy, that artist, that had taken images of people looking at their phones. Yes, with no, with no, with no phone in there. And then remove the phones.
Starting point is 00:01:24 It's such a crazy thing we're doing. And now, of course, there's AR glasses that are. eventually going to put whatever TikTok feed in like one eye where you're watching someone on the other eye. Have you ever tried those? I've messed around with them a little bit. Zuck was here and he let me try the new ones that haven't been released yet. They were really interesting.
Starting point is 00:01:44 And you move a cursor around with your eyeballs and you can do things with your fingers. You can pinch and spread things and stuff with your fingers and play games with your fingers. It's not quite as responsive as you'd like it to be. but it's very beta. You know. It's pretty cool. It is pretty cool. But also, we're losing humanity. We're going to be taken in.
Starting point is 00:02:09 We're going to incorporate with the machine. Yeah, well, I don't know. I think a lot of people feel like that would be a better version of the life that they have, and that's the saddest thing, that people of older generations look at young guys and girls and how much time they spend online, and they think, this is ridiculous. Why are they caring so much? about what is occurring on the internet, but they don't realize people spend more time on screens
Starting point is 00:02:34 than they do asleep. So the digital world is the real world for these people. Like the digital world is more real than the real world is. Ooh, I didn't think of it that way. There are a lot of people that do spend more time on screens than they do asleep. That's really common. I'd like to balance that out.
Starting point is 00:02:53 I'd like to spend half as much time on my phone as I do asleep. Well, that would be a good way to enforce it, right? You have to, you log how much sleep time you've had. Yeah, so I'm going to start sleeping 12 hours a day. So I can spend six times. Six hours wasting. It's quite a resource if you think about it, like a lack of an appreciation of your resource. Because the resource of your time and your attention is very valuable.
Starting point is 00:03:20 And you can convert it into all sorts of amazing skills and information and, you know, knowledge. and change your whole life. Or you can just stare at stupid shit all day long. It's so compelling that, dude. It's been designed by the most profitable companies on the planet with the smartest behavioral scientists in history. Like, it's an unfair fight. It really is an unfair fight.
Starting point is 00:03:43 And that's why... Sort of. You could not do it, though. Oh, you need to lean in, but it's like, there is way more willpower you need to use in order to be able to not than just whatever the course of, natural human history as a natural human behavior yeah it's so easy to or alternatively you could
Starting point is 00:04:03 die the venice river green that's what happens when you don't have an a phone battery i sent that to chris today greta thurnberg she died the venice canals green to protest what a lack of action and and climate change yeah pull back a call to pull back carbon fuel in Europe and they didn't just do it in Venice they did it at 10 cities around Italy but Venice has obviously got this gorgeous waterway it's an entire city built on water bro yeah that's hard to see how ugly it is Jamie I can send you a video of it she because I sent Chris a video it's so you know it's just like how much attention do you need lady okay stop the Sky News Australia refers to her as a Swedish
Starting point is 00:04:57 Doom gobblin. Sky News is the one that's weirdly pro-Republican American politics. Super right-wing. It's like, who's funding that? There's no way that there's that much of an appetite in Australia for American politics. So that's what it looks like. That's disgusting. I was there this summer.
Starting point is 00:05:17 It's fucking beautiful. Venice is so gorgeous and so ancient and so interesting. and to have this self-important twat pour a bunch of green dye into that water. You should go to jail for that. Like, you're ruining this experience for thousands and thousands of people who don't, not just the ones who live in that amazing place, but the ones who get to visit.
Starting point is 00:05:44 I mean, someone figured out a way to make a whole city by shoving pylons into the ground, and they did it a long time ago. It's all wood. whole city is stacked up on wood. They take these wood poles. They shove them into the ground. It's a specific type of wood that doesn't rot when it gets wet and waterlogged that actually
Starting point is 00:06:06 hardens. I forget what kind of wood it is. I watched this whole thing on it. But, I mean, it's very stable. I mean, sometimes they get some flooding. Like, one time we were there and, like, the lobby of this place was flooded. It does flood. But it's also, it's so fucking beautiful.
Starting point is 00:06:22 And the architecture is so amazing. a gorgeous place and it just relaxes you like instantly when you're there like wow i just want to have a espresso and eat some pasta and just chill out last summer it's one of the most beautiful places i've ever been and this fucking dummy decides to just pour green dye and how much green dye did you put in there and what kind of an effect is that going to have on life so they claimed that it was environmentally safe rah-rah i don't know how environmentally safe anything of that green color can be uh but yeah what was it 48-hour ban and a $170 fine. That's it?
Starting point is 00:06:56 Yeah. Yeah. Wow. Actually, you should go to jail for a night. I think about this a lot, man. In some ways, I understand why the rhetoric gets more and more inflammatory. So if you care about an issue, if you really, really think that this issue is important, and people don't listen, you start to shout a bit louder. Right.
Starting point is 00:07:20 And then you shout a bit louder. and then you shout a bit louder. The British are coming. The British are coming. You know who first said that? Wasn't Paul Revere. Bonnie Blue. Who's that?
Starting point is 00:07:30 She is the lady that slept with a thousand and fifty-seven men in a day. Oh, that poor lady. Yeah. So people don't listen. Do you ever see a Don't Look Up, that movie on Netflix? That's very funny, by the way. I missed that joke because I didn't know who that was. Jamie got it from over there, even with a toothpaste.
Starting point is 00:07:46 I'm kind of proud that I can't recognize her name, though, honestly. I'll take that. Yeah, it's probably a good sign. So don't look up that film with Leonardo DiCaprio a couple of years ago. You remember it was like an asteroid coming in? Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. It's a funny movie, right? Like half funny, but kind of it's supposed to be a comment on the impending doom of climate change.
Starting point is 00:08:08 Black Friday is here at IKEA and the clock is ticking on savings you won't want to miss. Join IKEA family for free today and unlock deals on everything from holiday must-havs to cozy at-home essentials. and big things you need to make this season shine. But don't wait. Like leftovers at midnight, our Black Friday offers won't last. Shop now at IKEA.ca.ca slash Black Friday. IKEA, bring home to life. Nobody's listening.
Starting point is 00:08:37 Yeah, they're not correct. That's the problem. Who are those two gentlemen that we had in recently, Jamie? The guy from MIT and the other guy from, was he from Yale or Stanford? Where was he from? Anyway, these two brilliant scientists who have analyzed the data, and one of them was going over the actual understanding the equations that you would need to understand in order to really be able to calculate what is having an effect on the climate and how many different factors there are, and all of them working synergistically in some weird, unexplainable way. And then the cold, hard reality of climate data over the past X amount of millions of years where it's always done this glaciation and then the glaciers they recede and then you get higher ocean levels.
Starting point is 00:09:29 It's like constant. Every 12,500 plus years, it goes up and down and up and down and it never stays static ever. It's never static. And the real fear is not global warming. The real fear is global cooling. Why? Global cooling kills everything, and we got that close at one point in history to having such a low oxygen level on this planet and such a low carbon dioxide level because there was no plant food, right, that these fucking plants almost died. We almost lost all life on this planet.
Starting point is 00:10:04 We've gone like a few degrees from that happening. This is the glaciers are fucking scary. Ice ages are scary. When it gets warm, you just move. And I know that sucks if you're living in a city of 20 million people, but it hasn't happened yet. And they've been talking about it forever. That fucking stupid movie and inconvenient truth was wrong about everything. He should have to give back every fucking penny he made from that movie.
Starting point is 00:10:34 You were wrong about everything. You scared this shit out of everybody, and you were 100% wrong. One of the problems I think people have is if you really care about something and you're convinced, whether your conviction is incorrect or not, you're convinced by it. So what you do, you say a thing, people don't listen. Right. Say it a bit louder. People still don't listen.
Starting point is 00:10:53 Right. Say it a bit louder again. People still aren't listening. And the problem is it's a misunderstanding about what compels and convinces other humans. What we think is if people aren't listening, if I shout louder, they're going to pay attention. What we don't realize is that actually turns everybody off. Because if you just see someone throwing soup over a Van Gogh painting, turning the canals of Venice green, gluing themselves to the M25 in London and stopping people from being able to get to work, like, it gets attention, but you're not looking for attention. You're looking for conviction. You're trying to compel people to believe the thing that you believe. And I think that it does the opposite. And I understand why it's so seductive because you think making, it's cool to your own to do something flaming sword wielding truth teller,
Starting point is 00:11:44 I'm going to charge through and look at how cool it is. But making somebody feel stupid or embarrassed or inconvenienced or upset is a really bad way to change minds. So I think if people really care about changing minds, they need to realize, and assuming that they think that they're correct, they need to realize that intellectual chasm from where they are and where other people are. And you go, okay, I'm going to take you one step at a time.
Starting point is 00:12:09 So even if you were to accept that the science and all of the stuff that the climate change people believe in is accurate, I still think that the strategies that they're using aren't going to be effective because I think it turns more people off. Right. They're scolding. They're shrieking, scolding, and they're not the type of people that you want to talk to, so you avoid them. Ho-ho. I like that. Looking down from one, huh. Yeah, it's my British heritage.
Starting point is 00:12:34 It doesn't cause you to feel inclined to support them. The opposite. It causes you to want to burn tires. I want to buy spray paint and fucking hairspray and just blow it by my car. Have you heard of the Cassandra complex? You know what this is? No. Fucking brilliant, dude.
Starting point is 00:12:53 So in ancient Greek mythology, Cassandra is given the gift of being able to see the future by Apollo. And then she rejects his advances. so he curses her and he says that for the rest of time you're still going to be able to see the future but people aren't going to believe you. So she foresees the downfall of Troy. She warns everybody, people don't listen, Troy Burns anyway.
Starting point is 00:13:17 And it's basically being right but early. So Rachel Carson, she wrote that book, Silent Spring, 1962. It's about DDT, environmental epidemics. She gets mocked by scientists, castigated by everybody, but her work led to the banning of DDT. What year was this? 1962. Interesting.
Starting point is 00:13:39 Ignis Sammelweis, like 1840s, he realizes that doctors are transmitting childbed fever from corpses to mothers because they're not washing their hands. So he begs his colleagues to start adopting handwashing, and he gets mocked by academia. He dies in an asylum. He dies in an asylum. That's how badly he's treated. germ theory of disease gets a couple of decades later gets proven.
Starting point is 00:14:03 Edward Snowden, who you've spoken to. Like some people saw him as a traitor, some people saw him as a truth teller, but I think everybody had a bit of, really, is that what's going on? A few years later, it turns out, yep, the government is spying on you. Yeah, 100%.
Starting point is 00:14:17 And this Cassandra complex, so if somebody ever says, I'm a Cassandra, I'm feeling like Cassandra today, I foresee this thing, you don't, you're not listening to me, it's a big deal. And the problem is the difference between somebody being a righteous Cassandra with the ability to see the future and just being a crazy person who's being convinced by bad data or like perverse incentives, it's very hard to work out which one you are. Perverse incentives is the real word because here's the thing, folks, we do have a horrible impact on the environment.
Starting point is 00:14:54 It's factual, it's measurable, you can go see it. There's many third world countries that have rivers that are completely clogged with garbage and plastic. That's real. If you're not trying to stop that, but you're railing about carbon. Well, carbon is a weird thing because carbon's essential to plant life. There's more green on earth today than there was 100 years ago. And that's because of our carbon emissions. That is an inconvenient truth.
Starting point is 00:15:25 All right. Fuck Al Gore. That's an inconvenient truth. So carbon is a part of the, is it good that we're burning stuff and putting it into the atmosphere? No, I do not think it is. No, I'm not arguing that. I'm saying that our impact on the environment that is tangible and disgusting is pollution. That's the impact on the environment.
Starting point is 00:15:44 And if you're really thinking about our carbon footprint and carbon taxes and carbon incentives, you've got to follow the money. Like, what is happening here? Well, there's a bunch of green initiatives, and those green initiatives get funding. And they get funding to the tune of billions and billions of dollars. And if you know anything about any sort of nonprofit, like someone just pulled up some, there's a nonprofit about animals and they just release what a fucking scam it is. There's so many of these nonprofits where the vast majority of the money is going to salaries. Like the most of the money is going to salaries.
Starting point is 00:16:21 And there's a tiny fraction of that money that gets allocated to whatever that cause is. Which is why it justifies people who work for the organization to sustain the organization's existence. 100%. 100%. But there's no data. Here's the thing. All of their predictions, all of the climate change predictions are totally inaccurate. Every single one by all the doomsayers.
Starting point is 00:16:46 So you would think they would course correct. You would think they would say, okay, no one's arguing that the particulates that get emitted into the atmosphere by coal play. by coal plants are not terrible for everyone. No one's arguing that glyphosate is good for you. No one's arguing that the poisons we're putting in rivers and streams. No one's arguing that's good for you. The stuff that gets into groundwater. No one says that's good.
Starting point is 00:17:13 That's our real problem. A real problem is pollution. It's fucking terrible. There's a real problem with waste. There's a real problem with landfills. All that's real. This carbon thing is a way. The carbon thing is a weird one.
Starting point is 00:17:26 It's a weird one to concentrate on solely because it seems to have an effect on the atmosphere. It has an effect on the temperature of Earth. But not what they're saying. Can you think of a perverse incentive other than people just want to keep their jobs? Is there something else? It's people keeping their jobs.
Starting point is 00:17:43 It's righteousness. It's virtue signaling. And it's also the extraordinary amount of money that gets put into green initiatives. It also helps people campaign. When you're campaigning, if you say climate change is real, we will follow the science. Oh, thank God, you get my vote. That's what happens.
Starting point is 00:18:06 And these fucking dumbasses just fall for it every time. It's not that it's a real impending doom scenario. That's not real. It's not real. It's not real. But what is real is humans' impact on Earth. So you've got to figure out why is this one thing. Why are they concentrating so much on carbon when it's not a measurable thing?
Starting point is 00:18:29 It's not a thing where you're seeing this hugely detrimental effect by this one action that we have. Well, because someone's trying to make money. It's it. No one's doing it for your own good. There's not a fucking single person on earth that's involved in any of these big causes that's really concerned about us. No, they're all making money. And they're all making, even if they're not making money other than their stuff. salary. If your salary is a million dollars a year to run a charity, maybe that charity is
Starting point is 00:19:01 fucking horseshit, you know? Because if you make a million dollars a year, you're rich as fuck. This episode is brought to you by Happy Dad Hard Seltzer. A nice cold, happy dad is low carbonation, gluten-free, and is easy to drink. No bloating, no nonsense. When you were watching a football game or you're golfing, watching a fight with Boys are out on the lake, these moments call for a cold Happy Dad. People are drinking all these shelters and skinny cans that are loaded with sugar. But Happy Dad only has one gram of sugar in a normal size can. You can buy Happy Dad on the GoPuff app and your local liquor and grocery store,
Starting point is 00:19:41 including Walmart, Kroger, Total Wine, and Circle K. And you can't decide on a flavor, grab a variety pack, lemon, lime, watermelon, pineapple, and wild cherry. They also have a great flavor in collaboration. with death row records and snoop dog. They have their new lemonade coming out as well. Visit happydad.com for a limited time offer and use code Rogan to buy one Happy Dad trucker hat
Starting point is 00:20:05 and get one free. Enjoy a cold Happy Dad. Must be of legal drinking age. Please drink responsibly. Happy Dad, hard seltzer. Tea and lemonade is a malt alcohol located in Orange County, California. Well, the argument would be in order to get somebody of the standard that you need to run this charity
Starting point is 00:20:26 at the level that it needs to be run at, you need to give a competitive salary. What an amazing job they're doing worth 95% of the money goes to overhead. What an amazing job you've done in having zero progress. Please show me your efficiency plans, the blueprint. Zero progress in any of your air quotes science
Starting point is 00:20:45 that you're pointing to that's showing these prediction models. All their prediction models are wrong. And they always quote things that are wrong, like storms are stronger, there's more, they're more common. No, you're just looking at a strong storm. If you look overall, there's always been strong storms. They're totally unpredictable.
Starting point is 00:21:02 Have you had Alex Epstein on? Do you know him? No, I don't know. The case, moral case for fossil fuels. Oh, okay. Interesting dude. He has, like, one of the most interesting stats that I learned from him was climate-related deaths have decreased by 98% over the last century.
Starting point is 00:21:20 Yeah. So one of the things that people don't consider when they look at the cost of energy and energy production, is that you need to be able to protect. More people are killed from heat than are killed from cold, and you need to protect from heat by using energy. And if you're going to produce cheap energy, some byproducts are going to be spat out into the atmosphere.
Starting point is 00:21:40 But the impact of the creation of the energy is way more effective at increasing human longevity than the side effect of the energy being made. Does that make sense? Totally rational. Yeah. It seems like that would make sense. Dude, I've had Richard Betts, director of the IPCC,
Starting point is 00:21:56 into governmental panel on climate change on the show, Hannah Ritchie from Our World in Data. Like, I've really tried to get a good balance on all of this stuff. But Alex's position in that area, which is it's a very luxury belief to hold to talk about how green we must be in the West when you have access to unlimited energy. I think a billion people worldwide
Starting point is 00:22:20 don't have access to reliable electricity. Like half a billion people are still using wood and dung in order to be able to produce their electricity. That was the data that he showed me the last time we spoke. That means that if you've got a baby that's on a ventilator in a newborn baby that needs to be put on, like that baby dies. That baby dies because that particular country does not have access to clean, to cheap and reliable energy. Cleanness does not matter for these people. Yeah, I've heard that argument that the best result worldwide would be to,
Starting point is 00:22:52 increase the power supply to all these third world countries and then you would have this ability to start manufacturing doing a bunch of different things that we associate with the negative aspects of the west you know the negative aspects of the west that cause pollution that calls all these different things the problem is electricity is a real bastard to try and move I think the the entire grid has got eight minutes of battery backup 10 minutes of battery backup it's so little and it's so cumbersome and you lose it as you transport it further. Dude, I get it. Like, I really believe that existential risks,
Starting point is 00:23:27 climate change included, are things that humans should pay attention to. But if you were to rank, Toby Ord wrote this great book called The Precipice, and he is from the Future of Humanity Institute at Oxford. He wrote the best researchers in the world. He got them to rank what are the most dangerous existential risks to humans. And it's a one in 10,000 chance over the next century coming from climate change. It's one in six from AI or one in 10 from AI, one in 10 from engineered pandemics, like one in 30 from natural pandemics. There's so many other huge issues that are really pressing.
Starting point is 00:24:03 I'm not saying that climate change isn't a priority. I'm saying that if you were to rank the priorities, it actually starts to move pretty far down. And when you think, if people are worried about the future of the world, they have a worried about the future of the world budget to spend. almost all of that is going on climate change. Jamie, can you try and get up? It's a chart by Toby Ord. It's just called, if you search like the precipice chart, Toby Ord, can bring it up. And you just think, how much attention is being paid to all of these other things?
Starting point is 00:24:36 How much attention is being paid? Nuclear war, I guess, gets a little bit of attention, but slightly less so now. But natural pandemics, engineered pandemics, AI, these are big deals. And I worry that a lot of attention has been focused on to one, actually relatively inconsequential, at least in the immediate time. No, go back, do a Google search for me. Top left. Yep, that's it. So nuclear war, one in 1,000.
Starting point is 00:25:07 Climate change, one in 1,000. Other environmental damage, 1 in 1,000. Engineered pandemics, 1 in 30. Unaligned artificial intelligence, 1 in 10. total the total risk is one in six but climate change is one in a thousand over the next hundred years that's stellar explosion there you go one in what's that a billion that's what we need i don't like that one that one scares a shit out of me still i remember a documentary i watched back in the day that was about hypernovas and when they first started measuring these gamma bursts in space they
Starting point is 00:25:38 thought that maybe alien races were at war with each other because there's this enormous burst of energy and they realize it's stars going hypernova and how many of them do it all over the universe because the universe is so big and there's just a single beam of like a death ray that gets sent out across the universe just unimaginable power and it happens all the time it's happening all the time in the sky and if it happens anywhere near you it just takes out the whole solar system takes out everything you're gone if it happens in neighboring solar systems it takes us out takes out everything yeah you're fucked wow if that's not a justification for just living your life and getting the fuck on with it and not coloring the venice canal green i don't know what it's the you know
Starting point is 00:26:28 it's the you know it's the thing that gets you attention unfortunately that's really what all this is about you know send her back to israel they'll give her attention they gave her some great attention. I mean, I'm kind of obsessed with this idea of toxic compassion, which I think is what you're talking about. Yeah. So the prioritization of like short-term emotional comfort over everything else. And I remember Elon was talking a couple of years ago, someone had accused him of contributing
Starting point is 00:26:58 to climate change, so on and so forth. And he says, I think I've done more to reduce climate change than any other human on the planet. that if you look at the EV revolution being started by Tesla, plus everything else from a technology perspective that we're doing, I think that there's an argument to be made that I've had a more positive impact on the future of the climate than any other human.
Starting point is 00:27:18 He said, what I'm interested in is the reality of doing good, not appearing good, and not appearing to do good while doing bad. And this, the opportunity people have to be able to look like they're doing good, while not doing it is exactly where this toxic compassion thing leaks in. So, for instance, people will proclaim that body weight has no impact on health over a long duration, even if this causes overweight individuals to not take their health as seriously and literally die sooner, but we're here. Joe, you don't understand.
Starting point is 00:27:54 We're trying to be inclusive here. We're trying to be understanding of what's going on with these people. if someone was to say that a male athlete has no advantage in a sporting competition because Joe, we're trying to be inclusive, we're trying to be empathetic, we care about these people. Well, even if that's done at the exclusion of female athletes, right? People are prepared to show, they're prepared to do whatever is needed to appear good. Yes. And the alternative, which it makes complete sense, who wants to do?
Starting point is 00:28:28 good while looking bad. Right. That's the thing you're saying is so important. They will sacrifice everything to appear that they're doing good. Because that's really what they're worried about. And that is all stemming, at least in part, I should say not stemming, but certainly accentuated by the social media world that we're living in now. Because everyone has this opportunity to appear like there's something other than they are.
Starting point is 00:28:54 They're using filters, they're standing in front of a lease car. all the above. They're doing things. They're wearing cheap fake fake fake jewelry. They're trying to look like something. They're not. And there's a culture of that. And there's also a culture that that gets, well, I'm not one of those because I don't care about material goods, but I'm really interested in climate change. And so then, you know, you join up with whatever fucking climate change group that's yelling and shouting and you carry a sign and you do all these things that you're supposed to do and you get free water. The whole thing is just, it's a psychological game that people are playing
Starting point is 00:29:27 with themselves. They try to appear that they're special and to be in competition or in battle with the other side, you know, but if you're, if you're in battle with people that are saying, hey, none of these models are correct, hey, none of these predictions have come to bear, zero, not a single one where they say, the sea level's going to rise. There's going to be no more Miami. Nothing. Not a fucking thing has happened. Like, you're wrong. Okay. So we need to figure out That's right. If we can all agree that if we're doing something bad to the planet and it's somehow or another avoidable, let's work towards that.
Starting point is 00:30:05 But if you're telling me we're doing something bad at the planet and then when I say, well, show me and you can't. Well, what about all these predictions? Well, they're wrong. Well, what about that movie that ever got everybody? Well, it was totally inaccurate. Okay. Well, you can't use that on your side anymore.
Starting point is 00:30:22 I never saw that movie. Nah, so bad. What were the claims? An inconvenient truth. Let's find out. Put it into perplexes. perplexity what the incorrect I was already asking what did it get right and what did it get wrong yeah what did it say I'm gonna get fucking I guarantee you they didn't get
Starting point is 00:30:38 nothing wrong or they didn't get nothing right what's from you want to start with right or what are the the predictions for catastrophic events what did it get wrong about the predictions for catastrophic events it's just predictions that were incorrect rapid sea level rise 20 feet. The film depicted a potential sea level rise of up to 20 feet, six meters in the near future from the collapse of Greenland or West Antarctic ice sheets. While this extreme scenario is considered possible over centuries or millennia, scientific consensus does not support this happening. Imminently, current rates are much slower, even with acceleration reaching 20 feet would take many centuries. Another one, Mount Kilimanjaro, glacier melt caused by global warming.
Starting point is 00:31:22 Goal attributed the shrinking of Kilimanjaro's glaciers mainly to global warming, but later research points to other major causes like sublimation and reduced snowfall unrelated, primarily to temperature. Impression of imminent chaos. The film often implies that catastrophic outcomes like rapid ice heap collapse and dramatic sea level rise might occur within decades when in reality such processes are expected to take much longer, often centuries or more. And then legal findings. A UK court found nine errors of exaggerations in the film, mostly involving a lack of clarity on timescales or oversimplified attributions like Kilimanjaro. Overall, climate scientists judged an inconvenient truth as mostly accurate with its projections, particularly in broad trends, but criticized its presentation for occasionally exaggerating the speed and certainty of some changes.
Starting point is 00:32:17 Well, I think this is... Yeah, well, this is the thing. It's most... It's climate scientists judged it. I'd like to keep this climate hustle going on. So, well, they were mostly accurate. We do have a sincere problem. Stop putting a British accent on when you do that.
Starting point is 00:32:29 Stop putting a British accent. That's not even British. That's like a fake British guy. That's like a posh shithead from Connecticut. Okay, okay, okay. But you're right. The lack of scrutiny that people have of their behavior, the distance between our opinions and our deeds.
Starting point is 00:32:43 Yeah. Never been greater. That's the internet. Right. And what it means is you're allowed to do good while appearing bad and do bad while appearing good. And it's way easier to do bad or to just not research or, and it's significantly harder if you're like, I'm going to go out, try and invent something, try and push against an idea or an ideology or a campaign for a movement that I think is really, really important. And people are going to say that I'm doing something mean or people are going to call me names for doing it.
Starting point is 00:33:13 There's no incentive to do it. Why would somebody do that? And I think that's what Elon's point is, right? What I'm interested in is doing good, not the appearance of it. And I see a lot of people who are doing bad while appearing good. Well, you know, I think it's no, through no fault of their own, young people are indoctrinated into this world when they start going to college that you have to be active and to be an activist is to be a good person. To be involved in these campus activities is a good thing. And there's also, there's a tribal aspect to it.
Starting point is 00:33:41 You know, you're on a tribe of people that are the people that are on the right side of history. These are the people that are kind and compassionate, unless you disagree with them. And these are the people that are they trust the science and unless it's inconvenient and these are the people that, you know, you want to be in the educated minority. You want to be the people that get it. And you want to, you're, it's very important that you use your voice. You know, and so they think they're being good people. And I get that and I understand that. But it's being weaponized against you. And it's probably not even funded by legitimate people. It's most likely there's at least some funding by some foreign entities that are just trying to so discord and make sure that everybody hates everybody. That would be a wonderful way to take down any country, right, to make it feel as if it was coming from inside. Yeah, sure.
Starting point is 00:34:33 There's a lot of that going on. That's been absolutely proven. There was a thing recently with ChatGPT where they found out that these entities in China were using ChatGPT to argue about USA shutdown to, like, they were just, they ran all Do you see the Twitter account thing where you can see where the accounts are based? Yes. I know. Bro.
Starting point is 00:34:57 One of the ones that is like a fan account of the JRE, people thought it was me forever. And I was like, I didn't correct it. It says it made it say parody accounts. It says either commentary account or parody account or whatever. Fan run account. Just so you don't think it's me because people do it thinks of me. It's in Asia. So in Asia is doing that.
Starting point is 00:35:18 Allegedly, unless he's got a VPN. I mean, you could. Who are you? Hardworking Asians supporting the Joe Rogan podcast? Well, you could, right? That's the question. How do they know where you're from if you sign up with a VPN? And you say, I'm in the South Pacific. Like, how do they know?
Starting point is 00:35:34 I don't know. I don't know. I certainly know that assuming that you're on the right side of history, especially if you're in a big group, is often a bit of a dangerous position to be in. So that Cassandra complex thing that was talking about before, sometimes people might say it's your duty, if you believe in a thing, to stand firm, right? You should make your case known. You know, you're Ignis Samuel-Wise,
Starting point is 00:36:00 you know about the germ theory of disease. You're Rachel Carson. You know about the impact of DDT. You're Edward Snowden. You know about the surveillance that's going on. So there's a really wonderful example, the comparison between Copernicus and Galileo. So Copernicus in the 1500s,
Starting point is 00:36:14 he begins to realize that the earth might not be the center of the solar system, let alone the universe. And he has enough evidence to justify it, but he waits until his deathbed to actually sort of whisper out his great work, which is de revolutionabas, this work that he made, and he does it on his deathbed, presumably to avoid the wrath of the church. Now, some sort of hardline freedom fighting, you should do it, don't listen to the man, don't back down, like just stand.
Starting point is 00:36:44 on your principles, people would say, well, that's a cowardly thing to do. You knew what the truth was and you didn't stand by it. A hundred years later, Galileo comes along. He sees the moons of Jupiter, sees the phases of Venus, sees the pockmarks on the surface of the moon. And he realizes that the heliocentric model, this like Copernican revolution is true, proclaims it from the rooftops. What happens to him? House arrest. He gets put under house arrest. He gets forced to recant under the threat of torture and spends the rest of his life under house arrest so what you have here
Starting point is 00:37:17 and I fucking love this example so much I think it's so cool because it's two guys 100 years apart with the same realization and the justification for the first one not saying what he didn't say loudly is the treatment of the second
Starting point is 00:37:30 I think it's like just this perfect explanation of irony you know what I mean like it's so perfect yeah you go well the main issue that I have with like basically being right and early often feels a lot like being wrong. And if you make an example of somebody in that way,
Starting point is 00:37:51 it is basically you saying, if you step out of line too far, this is what's going to happen to you. And it causes people who are trying to move conceptual inertia forward. We're trying to do research. I'm trying to assess whether or not this is actually the way that the world should be. It causes them to be more Copernicus, not more Galileo. And I think that's
Starting point is 00:38:12 That is not what you would want in a civilization That's trying to continue to make progress You would want to be accepting of new ideas And you would want to encourage them as opposed to castigating people Do you think that social media And the influence of other people's opinions It makes someone more likely To be able to think for themselves
Starting point is 00:38:35 Or less likely Like more likely to be able to examine and preconceived notions recognize like, oh my God, maybe I'm biased or maybe it's just like a group bias that I've accepted because of all the people around me. And I think this is wrong. And I think this is what I think is really going on. Or do you think it encourages that kind of thinking or discourages it? I think it certainly encourages group think very much so.
Starting point is 00:39:03 But both, right? It would open up the opportunity for some people with a very unique. psychological profile yeah to be able to step back against black helicopters yeah there's a few guys out there I can think of but I think on average what you're seeing is basically this huge big swath of people for the first time ever you're able to aggregate just how much support or criticism something has you know this is what like to dislike ratios are this is what up vote to downvotes are on Reddit and I think that that that causes people most
Starting point is 00:39:39 people don't want to have to do the thinking of coming up with an original opinion. I'm sure that most of mine aren't original. But given the fact that doing the original thinking is hard, most of the culture war is actually two armies of puppets being ventriloquized by a handful of actual thinkers. Most people are just being brought along and pushed along by people who came up with an idea. And they're assuming, well, we know this for a fact. Well, it's interesting because both sides know for a fact the thing that the other side says is a lie. So that can't be true. See, I get the sense that it causes people to adhere to the crowd more, more than they would have done previously. And you also have to think that if you're spending that much time on it,
Starting point is 00:40:19 like six hours a day, it's one of the primary influences of your life, probably more so than any other media in the past, because it was very rare as a child that you would listen to six hours of the news. You wouldn't really be indoctrinated into six hours of whatever the latest cultural dilemma was or the latest social issue was. You wouldn't get that much of it. You'd get people talking about it like normal people do during the day or maybe you'd be talking about a newspaper article you read, but you're not getting six hours of it all day long. But now we are at least six hours. Let's find that out. What's the average number of hours a 18 year old kid is on social I would guess it's at least, I would get, social media maybe four.
Starting point is 00:41:04 Or their phone, let's just say their phone, screen time. Screen time, at least six, probably more. Yeah. At least six, probably more. And the mad thing to consider here is your parisocial relationships, people, think about this, people will listen to your show and listen to my show more than they see their parents. Oh, yeah. By a huge margin.
Starting point is 00:41:23 Huge margin. Yeah, if you saw your parents that much, it'd be kind of creepy. The average screen time for 18-year-olds, seven to eight. eight hours of total screen time per day is common though it varies a lot by person and country okay what country has the least amount of screen usage would you want to discount school time too because aren't they you're on screens technically in school um so you're like phone time i guess right yeah i think it's personal phones are talking are they on screens i mean a lot of kids i've noticed i've counting my laptop open in my screen time because i'm connected to the same like iOS system so i'm
Starting point is 00:41:59 getting like 18 hours a day but I'm like I'm not on my phone 18 hours a day interesting um so let's guess like what countries well you'd have to have first world countries for it to count you know like if you're in the Congo you probably don't get as much screen time no you're busy mining the fucking yeah raw materials exactly yeah you're making the phones not using them which is the craziest thing of all that the thing that people virtue signal on the most at the end of the line. Japan. Someone pulling it out.
Starting point is 00:42:32 Lowest global average. Interesting. Three hours and 56 minutes is still a lot of time. That's kind of crazy. But they're probably a little healthier with it. How is nine hours and 24 minutes less than 10 hours and 56 minutes? Like, how is that the highest global average if 10 hours is the... That's weird.
Starting point is 00:42:50 I don't understand. Yeah. Close contender is more than the highest global average. I don't know. I don't get it. But either way, the Philippines, they're kind of. killing the game. 10 hours and 56 minutes. Dude, there was a 2023 mental health report. The UK came in second most depressed country in the world. Second. Second most depressed country in the world.
Starting point is 00:43:14 UK. UK. What's number one? Uzbekistan. So it's just above Uzbekistan and just below South Africa. Did the UK used to rank higher? Yes, it's tracked down over time, but it's never been superbly. I mean, we're, misery is our, like, melancholy is sort of our personality. It's our national sport, right, being a bit more melancholic. But, yeah, the Ukraine, who were just about to go into their fourth year of war, came in higher. And Yemen, who apparently are going through, like, one of the worst humanitarian crises in human history, also ranked higher than the UK. So, yeah, second most depressed country in the world. That's crazy. That's a wild number, man. That can't just be the weather.
Starting point is 00:43:57 that it has to be like a weather might contribute a little bit a little bit like Seattle does like people in Seattle are depressed as fuck maybe it's the online safety bill could be that would get me depressed I would be so depressed if I lived in England right now I'd be like I'm fucked like legitimately fucked like imagine if I was running this podcast the exact same way out of England not for law yeah I'd get arrested I'd get arrested I saw them they arrested a teacher because he refused to refer to one of his students as a they. And this was like his second infraction.
Starting point is 00:44:32 And so they arrested him for failure to recognize a singular plural. Look, I really don't like, I don't like shitting on the UK because it feels like I'm pulling the ladder up after I've just got out of it. But it's just, I don't know how many more ways you can face plan. over and over again. And there's a strange kind of romanticization of the past of the UK where we are English common law
Starting point is 00:45:01 and we stop the transatlantic slave trade and we use the Navy and so on and so forth. But like we're really living on borrowed time now as the UK. It's been a good while since the UK's sort of contributed in that sort of a way. There was Alan Turing
Starting point is 00:45:16 from World War II. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So he was the guy that decoded the Inikering test. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So he was gay and he was chemically castrated by the British, despite the fact that he was literally our equivalent of the atomic bomb, right? He was a very British version as well. It wasn't kinetic.
Starting point is 00:45:34 It was cognitive. So he decodes the machine that the Germans are using to send their secret messages. This means that we're able to detect exactly where the U-boats are going to be. And it results in some really awkward situations. Like if we are before we're going to use all of our force to try and take Germany. down if we avoid all of their planned bombings they're going to guess that we might have the keys to some of their communication so they had to start making decisions about which boats needed to be let attacked and which boats needed to be saved oh my god they knew all of the different attacks
Starting point is 00:46:10 that were coming but if they got rid of all of them if they were safe from all of them the germans would start to catch on so they had this really oh god so this guy this guy is is our equivalent of the atomic bomb, right? He's our Ropenheimer. He gets chemically castrated just after World War II. It's in the 50s, right? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And he kills himself. He takes his own life. He puts cyanide in an apple. Oscar Wilde in the 1800s, one of the greatest writers of all time. He's jailed and then dies in exile as a peasant in France because he was gay. And then 70 years after touring, Gordon Brown, it's like 2008, 2009, public. apologizes. They bring out this thing called the Turing Act, which gets rid of the criminal
Starting point is 00:46:58 records of all of these people from history, like posthumous. And some of them are probably still alive, actually, like some of these people that had been, whatever it was, convicted of indecent behavior, improper behavior at the time. And then they put Turing on the 50-pound note. So Britain has, for all that it's fantastic, and I love it, and it's the country that I came from, like it does have a history of fucking persecuting people for what's deemed improper behavior at the time and then apologizing for it a couple of decades later and I think with the online safety bill thing
Starting point is 00:47:28 just I think it's going to be the sort of thing that you look back on and go that that was not in no one's world was that a smart move I don't think that it's a I don't think that it's helping anybody at all well it just appears that they want total complete control of what people say over there and that they don't want criticism of the government
Starting point is 00:47:50 criticism about immigration criticism about you know fill in the blank they don't want it and the best way to stop that is to keep everybody scared make everybody self-censor what's the best way to make everybody self-sensor
Starting point is 00:48:01 put a bunch of fucking people in jail so last year what was it 12,000 12,000 people got arrested for social media posts supposedly more than Russia although the Russian stats might not be yeah well they didn't arrest them they just shot them in the face
Starting point is 00:48:15 They don't count that Gulaq for you Yeah They just kill folks over there But yeah It's really bad It's really bad And it just doesn't seem
Starting point is 00:48:26 Very progressive It doesn't seem like You're moving towards the future It's not progress Like this We've figured out a long time ago That free speech is very important To figure out what's right
Starting point is 00:48:37 And what's wrong And when you suppress people's speech You can get away With a lot of fucking horrible things Because you stop people from being able to protest test it. You know, in a small part, we saw a lot of that during the pandemic. And, you know, and you see what the consequences of that are. You can't trust people that want power. You just
Starting point is 00:48:57 can't. What you mean? Anybody that wants any kind of control over a group of people. If you want to control what they say, if you want to control where they go, you want to put them in 15-minute cities, you can't trust that because the natural inclination when someone has power is to never let it go and to ramp it up they're in the power business if you're in the power business you don't want to keep making the same amount of money every year you want to you don't want to have the same power every year that's boring right like if you're an insurance salesman you want to be the fucking employee of the month you want to make more money next year you got your eyes on a new lexas you're trying to make more you're not trying to stay maintained that's not the game
Starting point is 00:49:34 you're in and if you're in the power game and if you're in the game of enacting new laws in order to have, we need safety, safety. Under the guys of safety, you can get so much evil shit done. And if you start doing that, you're not going to say, you know what, guys, we were, that safety bill, we were really wrong. And what's really important is discourse. What's really important is that maybe I wonder why you think the way you think. And, you know, maybe part of this polarization process is not enabling us to see valid points the other side has. Let's all come together and talk about this as reasonable human beings.
Starting point is 00:50:09 No, that's not what they're going to do. They're going to come up with more fucking reasons to put you in a cage. They want you to shut the fuck up because they want to make more. They want to have more. They want to get more power. They want to be the best leader. They want to be the most powerful leader. Isn't that a ruthless part of human nature that trajectory is more important than position?
Starting point is 00:50:30 Jimmy Carr taught me this. So your industry, imagine that you're the 250th best comedian in the world. Let's imagine there's a ranking. And last year you were the 300th. You were in a more psychologically preferable position than somebody who's number two in the world, but last year I was number one. This sense that humans have of where am I now
Starting point is 00:50:53 compared to where I was previously. I spoke to Dan Bilzerian about this forever ago. And I was like, dude, you've kind of climbed the peak of the mountain of hedonism. Did you ever think that you kind of front-loaded it too much and that it's going to be really, really difficult for you to ever, like reset, like I do a hedonic reset.
Starting point is 00:51:11 How do you go from the most amount of girls and the cars and all the dopamine that the world has to offer? Where do you go from there? And he basically said, yeah, he was like, I'm going to try. I would consider shaving my head and my beard and going and working in an Amazon warehouse for six months
Starting point is 00:51:24 to see if I can do like a hard reset. But you always know that you've got the get out of jail free card, so it's not going to be the same. And just the idea, as you're saying, somebody has power. They want more people. power. Right. They want more power. They want more control. That
Starting point is 00:51:40 sense... That's the sport they're playing. Bingo. Scoring. They're scoring. You have to keep score. Greta Thumbach. The same thing. We need more eyeballs. We need a bigger bigger... Because where do you go after you've made the rivers of Venice green? Yeah. Well, you need to do something bigger, something more.
Starting point is 00:51:57 I need more likes. That didn't get me enough likes. I need to go viral. It's a ruthless... I'm being shadow banned. No, you're not. You're content. just sucks. Some people get shadow banned, but most people that are shadow banded, they just suck. Yeah, most people just don't understand that they're not interesting. But there's definitely real shadow banning going on.
Starting point is 00:52:17 One of the things that was interesting is that once Elon purchased Twitter, I gained like 5 million followers over the course of like a couple of months. I was like, what's going on? It's because I was somehow or another, they had locked my followers down. I'm not complaining about this. I'm just observing. I know I have a lot of followers. It's ridiculous. But I started, I think I had seven million. And I used to go up pretty steady. And then somewhere during the woke days, during the dark days of woke, when it all started happening, which is around, I think, 2014, 15, 16, started really ramping up. And then it seems like from 16 on real censorship started really kicking into high gear because then they had a reason for it. Donald Trump is our president. We have to make sure. this never happens again. In fact, there was a meeting. I believe, I don't want to say
Starting point is 00:53:10 the tech company, because I might be incorrect, but one of the people, one of the main people at this tech company, specifically said at the meeting, we have to make sure this doesn't happen again. As in Trump being president. They did a fucking horrendous job there, didn't they? Well, they fucked up. But the point being, imagine you are in control of an enormous An enormous media platform that controls the discourse of untold billions of people in the world and you have a very specific mandate that you've given to the people that work for you. We have to make sure that we control who the king is because that's what you're saying. You're saying we're going to make sure this doesn't happen again. Well, how do you do that?
Starting point is 00:53:59 How do you do that if 50% of the people don't agree? By force. There's only one way. You have to do it by force. Or if you control the narrative, then you just hide information, accelerate information that's incorrect. You just ban people from communicating. You kick people out. Well, I mean, some people would say that getting to choose who's king is what you do if you then buy that social media platform.
Starting point is 00:54:25 Sure. There's an argument for that, like what Elon did. There's a real argument for that. But there's also an argument for, don't you think it's a good idea if we, have at least one of these motherfuckers that's huge that you can go wild wild west on and say whatever you want i think that's very important you don't have to agree with them there's all these tools you can use one of them is the moot button you can mute people bye bye i don't want to you anymore you're annoying or you can ban them i don't want you looking at my page get out of here
Starting point is 00:54:55 those things exist like you can curate who you're communicating and interacting with But if you don't have one of these groups that's resistant to intelligence agencies shutting down legitimate voices, including during the COVID times, it was guys like Jay Battacharya from Stanford, guy from MIT, because they were saying something that didn't jive with what the agenda that Fauci was pushing through. Where do you think we're at now if you were to sort of predict what the trajectory of the speech stuff is online? Talk about America. The UK, I think, is just a lost cause. Do you think that we're going to continue on this general path, which seems to be a little bit more sanity from the peak? This episode is brought to you by ZipRecruiter.
Starting point is 00:55:42 Have you ever lost your keys and ended up tearing your house apart, trying to find them? What makes it even worse is when it's the most conspicuous, obvious place you could have sworn you checked already. It'd be nice we had the ability to find whatever we're looking for right away. And at least for hiring managers on the hunt for talented people, that's possible thanks to ZipRecruiter. Try it for free at ZipRecruiter.com slash Rogan. Using ZipRecruiter almost feels like having superpowers.
Starting point is 00:56:13 It works quickly and efficiently at finding qualified candidates for your role largely because they have incredible matching technology and an advanced resume database that can help you connect with people instantly. No more wasting time and energy. ZipRecruiter can help you find exactly what you want. Want to know right away how many qualified candidates are in your area? Look no further than ZipRecruiter. Four out of five employers who post on ZipRecruiter get a quality candidate within the first day. And right now, you can try it for free at ZipRecruiter.com slash Rogan. Again, that's ZipRecruiter.com slash Rogan.
Starting point is 00:56:53 ZipRecruiter, the smartest way to hire. I think people realize from the peak and most importantly realized from Elon's purchase of Twitter. When Elon purchased Twitter, and I don't say this lightly, I think he changed the course of civilization. I really do. I think we were on our way to this weird dystopian censorship complex that was already moving. We had already had intelligence agencies that were contacting Twitter. We know this through the Twitter files. And they were banning certain people that weren't.
Starting point is 00:57:25 saying incorrect things, but they were saying things that were inconvenient. And they turned out to all be accurate. All the things that they were warning about, all the things that they're saying all turned out to be accurate. They stopped the distribution of the Hunter Biden laptop story by the New York Post. The New York Post, the second oldest newspaper in America. It's a fucking huge newspaper to stop that from being able to be distributed on Twitter which turned it would turn it to be a totally accurate story and to stop that accurate story is wild that is scary stuff that if Elon didn't purchase Twitter we would have just had to deal with that kind of stuff that would be and it would
Starting point is 00:58:08 accelerate it wouldn't stay where it is it would ramp up it would get more there were the they were started using the term malinformation so there's misinformation disinformation and then mal information mal information Malinformation is factual information that might cause harm. Can you give me an example of malinformation? Children don't need a COVID vaccine. That's malinformation because it is true. Statistically speaking, like especially healthy kids, they kick it off like it's nothing.
Starting point is 00:58:38 They don't need a vaccine for that, but that might cause people to not get vaccinated and that might kill your grandmother. So that's malinformation. Can you think of an example of malinformation where it's justified in doing that? Yes, I would say, like, if you had some information and you were releasing it online, that was an accurate depiction of some things that the federal government is involved with that would compromise national security to a huge extent. Yeah, we'd get people killed, could start conflicts. Here's another one that I've just thought of, how to, you know those desktop DNA printers, this is how to put smallpox together. Right, right, right, something like that. Something which is true, but would be, would be dangerous.
Starting point is 00:59:33 And this is, the devil's in the fucking details. 100%. With stuff like this. It's never binary. It's never incorrect or correct. Sometimes it's binary. Sometimes. I shouldn't say never.
Starting point is 00:59:42 Some things are binary. Sure. Like whether or not you should win a fucking world's woman stronglifting, strongman power woman competition. that just happened I thought we were done with that it just happened would you know why it was able to happen it's because that person lied
Starting point is 00:59:59 that person lied about their sex oh interesting Jamie can you try and pull up an image of the current 2025 world's strongest woman winner please just for clarity
Starting point is 01:00:15 Mitchell Hooper that is the world's strongest man Canadian dude he's 6.3. 3.30. The person who won Woman's Strongest Man is 6.4 and 400 pounds. She makes the current
Starting point is 01:00:31 World Strongest Man look like an infant. Oh, World Strongest Woman, Women's Stripped of Title After Organized Discover, she was born a man. That was an hour ago, dude. Okay, so an hour ago they stripped her. Is that the person? Yep. Jamie Booker. Disqualified... That's a man?
Starting point is 01:00:47 Are you sure? It appears the athlete who is biologically male and now identifies as female competed in the woman's open category. They were unaware of this fact ahead of the competition and have been urgently investigating. I want to know what urgent investigation is. They went on Twitter. So that's a biological male. That's interesting. Correct.
Starting point is 01:01:08 It looks like just a big lady. Had we been aware or had this been declared at any point before or during the competition, this athlete would not have been permitted to compete in the women's open category, the move comes after runner-up, Andrea Thompson. Hey, was filmed storming off the podium as she raged about the bullshit decision toward the title. So the other competitors evidently knew. Okay, so Thompson is now the winner, so the UK gets the gold.
Starting point is 01:01:30 I think about this so much when it comes to sporting competitions. And it's not just with the trans thing, although this is a huge deal, and I did think that we kind of got past it. How horrible is it to be the person who won, but had that moment, the podium
Starting point is 01:01:48 moment stolen from you by somebody. I think there's a weightlifting Olympic weightlifting championship final where currently like the 11th place finisher is now first because each person has progressively got pop for PEDs. Number one did
Starting point is 01:02:04 that number two did the number three did it. It's like 11 people have been popped for PEDs now. That's the Tour de France. You know when they took away Lance Armstrong's title so the Tour de France, well they didn't tell you that if you want to go and remove all of the that have tested positive for something,
Starting point is 01:02:21 you got to go down like 18th place. For real. For real. Like all those guys were doing something. They were all blood doping. They were all taking EPO. They were putting motors in their fucking bikes. I've seen a video of that.
Starting point is 01:02:38 Yeah. These guys tried for fucking every edge humanly possible. So, you know, he was just a scapegoat. But what he was doing was he was serious. people that were saying that he did PEDs. It's a smart way to silence them. But yeah, I mean, sort of. Thinking about, I would be really interested to see what the reaction is.
Starting point is 01:02:59 That's hot, the fucking wet clay stuff, right, hot off the press a couple of hours ago that it's been rescinded. I think we would be more outraged if they accepted this transgender person as a female and then say, oh, a trans woman's a woman, let her compete. It seems like this person lied. And so that's different. But still identify. So I agree that it's reassuring to see what the world's strongest person organization decided that they were going to do in a sort of repercussion to it. But you can already predict. Both of us can already predict what's going to happen online that this person shouldn't have been stripped of their title.
Starting point is 01:03:39 Maybe they lied, but they should be competing inside of this. The side of the aisle that always agrees with this, do you not think that they're going to be pro? I think that is slowly but surely losing traction and support. I really believe that. I believe that's where the rubber meets the road because you're going to lose most women that have ever done a sport. You know, if you are a sedentary woman that has no interest whatsoever in athletic competition and you think it's more than a good price to pay to let biological males who identify as women, And because we want them to be exclusive, it's more important to recognize and affirm their identity than it is to be fair.
Starting point is 01:04:23 You haven't done any sports. So you're going to lose not just most of the men. You're going to lose a lot of – you're going to lose anyone right of center, like libertarian, anyone – anyone – you're going to not just lose all of the right. You're going to lose a giant chunk of the center because I think the center in this country is probably the most rational. of all groups. Those are the people that recognize kind of a little bit
Starting point is 01:04:50 of everything here you know and right of center or left at center you're going to lose all those people and you're going to lose most women
Starting point is 01:04:57 you're going to lose most women that have gone to most women that have daughters you're going to lose them the only ones
Starting point is 01:05:02 you're not going to lose are the fucking cooks the SSRI filled up anti-anxiety medication transitioning
Starting point is 01:05:12 happy cooks those fucking cooks that you know, think that you have a hierarchy of who's oppressed the most. And trans people are people, trans women are women. And they want to scream it out and yell at.
Starting point is 01:05:25 They're just crazy. You're going to have those people that aren't going to be with it no matter what. Get into the boxing ring with that trans woman who's a woman. I thought the one that was a man that lied, that the Olympic champion, that they just took away his gold medal. That story flip-flop back and forth like 10 times. It was like a Christopher Nolan movie. Well, because that person was threatening to sue a bunch of people, right? They were threatening to sue a bunch of people that called them a male.
Starting point is 01:05:52 But then... Rescended it, made a statement. Let's put this through perplexity or something where we can figure out what... I want to know what the number is. I want to know what's true. Because what I think is there was another organization that did a chromosome analysis and found out this person had an X, Y, chromosome. So this is a specific type of disease.
Starting point is 01:06:15 or genetic abnormality where your testicles don't drop. Ferdockeys again. Edg cases. It's so strange. You can ask it. Ask it, did that person get their gold medal taken away and why? Well, yes, they did. Right, and why.
Starting point is 01:06:33 Just see what, I know, but let's see what it says as far in terms of why. Why, because they're a man. And how did they find out? Find out how they found out. Because I think the narrative is that there was another boxing, organization that it already suspected something was up. Did some testing. Did some testing.
Starting point is 01:06:49 Found out this person has an XY chromosome. You know. So, one of the Golden Women's 66 kilogram boxing event, uh, strip now a derecognized international boxing association previously disqualified Kaleef from the 23 women's world championships after she failed eligibility tests under its own rules. Later claimed those tests showed she was inel eligible for women's competition because of these tests, IBA officials, some media and advocacy groups have publicly demanded the IOC strip
Starting point is 01:07:21 or reclaim her gold medal, arguing that she could not have been allowed in the woman's, should not have been allowed in the woman's category. Like they're still saying she. Despite those demands, IOC has defended allowing Khalif to compete in Paris, describing the IBA's disqualification decision as arbitrary and saying she met the IOC's eligibility criteria at the time. So what is the IOC's credit, what is their
Starting point is 01:07:46 eligibility criteria? Boxing must be a fucking nightmare for this because of all of the different organizations that exist and each one is going to have its own different set we have a coordination problem here. Here's an even more, here's a bigger nightmare. Prisons.
Starting point is 01:08:02 Prisons have a self-identity thing in order to be eligible for female prisons. There's a lot of prisons including, I believe New Jersey, California. California has 47 biological males that are housed in women's prisons. Okay. At least. Are they, so who runs a prison?
Starting point is 01:08:18 Is it the state? Is it an independent organization? Well, some of them are independent. Some of them are privately owned. Chromosone test results were kept confidential by the IBA but were leaked after and widely reported. The IOC nonetheless rejected
Starting point is 01:08:33 IBA's findings as arbitrary, even with the chromosome test. That's really standing your ground. Why, you silly goose is. Well, see, this was only, this was only 2024. So to say that maybe this is the landmark case, maybe it wasn't Leah Thomas as a swimmer, maybe it was somebody in a physical sport.
Starting point is 01:08:52 But I mean, when we're talking about the strong woman competition, dude, if you're six, four, I think the next tallest woman was 5-8 or 5-7. Think about what you're doing. You're like wrapping your arms around. You can, it always gets slippery, right? Because it's like, well, there's not very many of them. So why are we making such a big deal out of it?
Starting point is 01:09:10 And it's like, hey, if there's one rapist in the local community, you don't go, well, there's only one of them. Like, what's the other chances that you run into? It's like, no, no, no. We try and, you know, treat this problem. So first off, there's not many of them. Then, well, you know, look at what happens when you take these estrogen. You downregulate your testosterone. It's below this particular level, therapeutic, da, da, da, da.
Starting point is 01:09:32 And you go, well, yeah, but it's like being on a heavy course of steroids up until you stopped doing that. And how much of that does carry over? That gets a bit slippery. But just the size, the size of the hands of a person who's 6 foot 4 and 400 pounds compared with a woman who's probably like 220 and 5 foot 8, like grip strength, being able to do like, that's pretty important in the sport of strong women. All of it is. Wrapping your arms around an Atlas stone. Yeah, you could do this forever. It's all ridiculous.
Starting point is 01:10:00 It's ridiculous. It's not the same, you know. It doesn't mean that someone shouldn't be able to change their name and identify as a woman. It's just like you can't dominate women's sports. Can't dominate women's spaces. You can't. You can't. You're not a woman.
Starting point is 01:10:15 You know, we'll call you one if we want to be nice. But the reality is, there's a, there's biological sex is a real thing. And when it comes to competition, physical competition, there's a reason we have Title IX in America. There's a reason why we recognize women's sports. There's a reason why you have it set up that women will compete against each other because it's fair. It's not fair to make women. Or else you just have a unisex category. Yes.
Starting point is 01:10:39 And it would be dominated by men. dominated by men. And then girls wouldn't have this amazing opportunity to get scholarships, which they're being denied because biological males are winning in their category because they allow them to compete. And there's a thing called, this is what people don't want to believe. But it's true. It always has existed. No, they're doing this because they really are a woman. There's a thing called sandbagging. Okay. And sandbagging has always existed. Sandbagging is, let's say that you're going to enter into a jiu-jitsu tournament. and you're going into the purple belt division. But you've been a purple belt for eight years, and you're supposed to be a brown belt. And they, you know, for whatever reason you, or you could even, here's a worse one. Maybe you're a black belt in judo,
Starting point is 01:11:24 like an elite black belt, and you enter into a jujitsu tournament in the white belt division. And you're in there with some fucking dork who's a plumber, who's just started taking classes. I think it'll be fun to compete. And you fucking flip him on his head and break his arm in an arm bar in like 15 seconds.
Starting point is 01:11:40 like that's sandbagging because you're an elite athlete you're a you're like a world class judo guy that's just thought it would be fun to put a white belt on and enter into jujitsu tournament there's people that do that because they just want to win that's why people cheat at video games that's why people cheat at golf right people cheat because they want to win they just want to get that w and there will there's people that will pretend they're a woman to beat up women and if you don't think that's the case you haven't met enough. psychos? Because are there people that are in the wrong body? I don't know. I'll give them that respect. I'll give them that dignity. Are there also people that are out of their fucking mind and want an excuse to beat up
Starting point is 01:12:22 women and pretend they're a woman? If you tell them, they could wear a dress and they could just run past all the ladies and dominate them on the field. Yeah, they're going to do that too. That's a real type of human being. And if you don't have an accurate test for that, if you don't have a thing, you make them lick, oh, you're a fucking psycho. If you don't have that, then you have to judge each individual situation based entirely on why would someone do this? How much crossover would there be? If somebody was a black belt in judo, how much crossover is there to... An immense amount.
Starting point is 01:12:56 Yeah. In immense. An immense, immense, immense, immense, immense, immense amount. Especially if it's a ghee tournament. Oh my God. You're virtually helpless. Helpless. Even though judo's primarily done on the feet?
Starting point is 01:13:09 It is, but they do arm bars. They do. Look at Rhonda Rousey. She's one of the best arm bars in the history of the sport. Look at Kayla Harrison. Look at all these, look at Carl Peresian. There's elite judo people that were wizards at arm bars, wizards at chokes and leg locks. And of course, they're submitting each other as well.
Starting point is 01:13:30 It's not exactly the same. And if they went like gui to ghee with some prime Leo Vieira, Black Belt, you know, Gie Master, you know, one of, you likely would give the Jiu-Jitsu person a giant advantage because they'd spend way more time submitting people. They'd spend way more time working on submissions. So Judo to Jiu-Jitsu in a tournament, I would say, Black Belt to Black Belt, they probably have a disadvantage in judo. But a huge advantage over a white belt.
Starting point is 01:14:04 What do you think about Jake Paul, Anthony Joshua? Boy. Well, realistically, it's one of the craziest propositions of all time. You take a guy who just had a boxing match that looks like a sparring match with a 58-year-old Mike Tyson, and then you're going to fight one of the absolute scariest knockout artists in the heavyweight division. Maybe we should watch the Francis Ngano fight. So you could see, let's watch that real quick. Just so you can see what Anthony Joshua is capable if he's fighting someone that's not in his league.
Starting point is 01:14:45 Okay, look, Ussick beat him, and he beat him twice, and Andy Ruiz caught him in the first fight and dropped him and stopped him. It was spectacular. Andy Ruiz is super fucking talented. Usik is perhaps the greatest heavyweight boxer of all time. Maybe one of the, maybe one of the greatest of all time in any weight class, Ucic. You know, and Usik beat him, and he beat him twice. But Francis Ingano is coming off of this fight with, like, go a little bit before that so we can see this happen. Watch this.
Starting point is 01:15:19 So he drops him with a right hand early, and this is like two minutes into the first round. And Francis gets up, he survives, and then Joshua check out this combination he hits him. with. I mean, dude, the speed that he hits him with this, he's so dangerous, man. It's like you're dealing with a guy who's an Olympic gold medalist, and he's enormous, and he's got vicious knockout power, and he's got immense amount of experience at world-class levels. Just think about what we said earlier. Fought Usig twice. Fought Andy Ruiz twice. Oh, man. Bro, the timing in that right hand, just spectacular.
Starting point is 01:16:14 That's it stepping in as well. Over the top. I mean, that was a full four shot to the temple. I mean, he's Fuxville right now. So they wipe off his gloves, but you look at him, like, he's really feeling it right now. I mean, he probably has no idea where he is. And Anthony Joshua, flat ones. Absolutely folded in half.
Starting point is 01:16:34 Watch, back that up again? Watch this. I mean, just steps into it with every ounce of his body. Perfect right hand. So the fact that Jake Paul wants to fight that guy, hey, I'll watch. I'm going to watch. I'm definitely going to watch. So you got me there.
Starting point is 01:16:54 And if you want to show you're legit by taking on one of the scariest fucking heavyweights alive. Can you get the tail of the tape of Paul and Joshua? I was just saying they got him no way I agree to. 245, it's only like seven pounds less. Yeah, that's nothing. And there's some sort of a rehydration clause. Listen, kids, it ain't going to matter. You know, there's not a chance that Anthony Joshua is not going to just lose the weight
Starting point is 01:17:17 beforehand. He's not going to come in drained. What he's going to do is just do extra cardio. And that's just going to make him more dangerous. He's going to be terrifying. And he's going to have a lot to prove. He's going to be very angry that Jake Paul wants to fight him. Very upset that this YouTuber who's fought Tommy Fury, who's a religious
Starting point is 01:17:36 And, you know, a couple other guys that were legit boxers. That's it. Like, everyone else he's fought. He's fought Ben Asgren, who was really a wrestler. You know, he fought Tyron Woodley, who was an elite MMA fighter, but, you know, not an elite boxer. He fought Nate Robinson, who was a basketball player. At least he's fought these guys, he fought Anderson Silva, and he dropped Anderson Silva. And Anderson Silva is a really good striker. But also in his 40s, you know, different time. It's, you know, not the same guy he used to be. This is this, this is a 34-year-old Anthony Joshua. This is a terrifying human being. Terrifying.
Starting point is 01:18:10 Again, a guy who survived Ussick twice. You know, you saw what Ussick did to Dubois. You see Ussic take out Dubois? Did you see that? I mean, that's the Ussig you're talking about. There's an Ussig that rocked Tyson Fury, who's fucking 6-9. So, Jake Paul's 6'1
Starting point is 01:18:26 versus 6 foot 6, Anthony Joshua. Jake weighed in for the Tyson fight at 199. Joshua against Ingun, it was 252. 6-6. Just not just 66, but 66 and knows how to use every fucking inch of it. Knows how to keep that stick in your face.
Starting point is 01:18:44 He'll keep that jab in his face and that right hand if it hits you, you're fucked. And he's not worried about you the way he's worried about Usik. You can't move like Usik. You can't constantly be frustrating and overloading his nervous system. Usik is overloading every aspect of your senses at every moment. He's constantly moving and then punches are coming and he loops punches around your guard and he's constantly shifting his feet and you think he's going to be there and he's over here and it's like this overload of thinking. It's not a casual, relaxed fight where you can kind of move around and get your groove and he's going to stay on the outside and you're going to, no, it's just constant. He survived that guy twice.
Starting point is 01:19:27 He survived, in my opinion, the most skillful heavyweight of all time, twice. And you're going to go boxing? And the toughest guy you fought before was 40 years old Anderson Silva. Those are the toughest guys so far you fought? You've lost to Tommy Fury, who's a very good boxer. But this is a giant Olympic gold medalist heavyweight. I mean, Anthony Joshua is fucking terrifying. He's the thing that nightmares are made of.
Starting point is 01:19:51 And he's got that one-punch nuclear power, one punch, and he's fast. It's an explosion. There's certain guys that, like, in kickboxing couldn't translate. laid over to MMA because they didn't have the kind of speed like Peter Ertz is a good example. He was a world-class kickboxer, one of the best of all time, but didn't have the style that would allow him to tramp, but then there was Merco Crow Cop. Merco Crocop, who was violently explosive, would perfectly transition to MMA, because you got to be able to hit people quick.
Starting point is 01:20:26 It was like a big part of it is speed. Anthony Joshua has that kind of speed. With 252 pounds If you don't have the skill to get away from that kind of power What happens is Francis and Gatto and Anthony Joshua You have to be a very skill You can't judge that guy based on Dubois Who's a fucking murderer
Starting point is 01:20:46 Daniel Dubois is a tank And he took out Joshua But that guy's fucking terrifying You're staring in front of that guy But Usick didn't stand in front of him Usik moved all over the place Joshua's and he's gonna have a lot to prove He's gonna be very angry
Starting point is 01:21:01 Do you think they'll let everybody take the breaks off because there's all rumors about Tyson versus Jake that both of them were sort of pulling punches and not fully letting it go? I think that's a different deal, you know. Do you think there was something probably just below the table? I do not know. I do not know if it was said. I do not know if it was understood. I do not know. In your professional opinion, based on what you saw, do you think that the people were holding back?
Starting point is 01:21:25 It definitely looked like sparring. But it could be that he didn't want to hurt Mike Thompson. because Mike Tyson's 58 years old, or it could be that Mike Tyson didn't want to hurt him because he likes him. I don't fucking know. But it wasn't what I was tuning in for. It was not for me. I was there. I went to it live.
Starting point is 01:21:43 I was tuning in for Mike Tyson coming full 1988 Mike Tyson, full chaos. That's what I was hoping for. We walked out like that. It looked like it. Yeah. But that's what everybody signed up for. So they got us. Whatever.
Starting point is 01:21:55 And do you think that... This is different. I don't think this is that. I don't think this is that at all. First of all, it can't be that because Joshua was still competitive in the heavyweight division, and he's only doing this for money. Like, he's still set up for world title fights. After he knocked out in Gano, you could still sit a minute like Joseph Parker just lost. You could set him up with Joseph Parker.
Starting point is 01:22:14 You could have until a year ago, he could fight Deonté Wilder. You're saying that the lineage and the trajectory that Anthony Joshua is on, if he happens to go a little bit too gentle and lose by decision to Jake Paul, it doesn't exactly look great for his future heavyweight chance. It fucks up all of his marketing opportunity. So that's a really, so what we were saying before. The Ngano fight is a godsend to him, right? The Ngano fight is like, hey, boxing's back. This guy knocked down Tyson Fury. This is how it was supposed to go.
Starting point is 01:22:40 Anthony Joshua, you carried the torch for the boxing community. Because I know a lot of like straight up boxers, and they absolutely felt that way. Like this is what needed to happen. These guys can't come over from MMA and think they can box the best. Yeah, you need to put them in their place. It's, what's great there, and it loops back to what we were talking about before is incentives, incentives align the incentives yeah like if you've got joshua i mean this is for however i should i should caveat yeah here's the caveat this might earn him 200 million dollars so if it earns him
Starting point is 01:23:12 so much money joshua or jake paul joshua like either one which how much money is involved oh dude this is a saudi organization right this is reality isn't this that was putting this on probably they seem to earn everything i think they own me now. And you and Jamie and Carl? It's Netflix, right? Right, yeah. This is going to be on Netflix. Okay, so I don't know. Maybe it's not, maybe in Viyadh's not involved, but the money
Starting point is 01:23:38 they threw Canello Alvarez to get him to find Terrence Crawford, this is, like, they're throwing insane money to people. They're throwing nutty sums of cash at people to make amazing fights happen. Like this is always been the hiccup in boxing as if people don't want to fight certain people because they want to protect their record. The Saudis are like, how much?
Starting point is 01:23:57 Everybody's got a price. Everyone's got a price. We've got the bank account to pay it. So here it is. The reported total prize purse for Jake Paul versus Anthony Joshua is $184 million, with an even split expected, meaning each fight will earn approximately $92 million. Some reports initially suggest a different figure, $184 is the most frequently cited total from sources like Daily Mail and Wikipedia. Okay, that doesn't mean anything. Some have also mentioned Jake Paul's cryptic $267 million tweet, which made.
Starting point is 01:24:28 have fueled rumors. Listen, it really depends on who's setting it up. Netflix doesn't have to tell you how much they're paying, but the thing about Anthony Joshua, if he loses this, if he, so let's say he's only getting the 92 million, which I bet he's getting more. Let's say he's getting 92 million. If he loses this fight, he misses out on that Saudi money because they could set up a Tyson Fury, Anthony Joshua fight, and each one of them gets $200 million. You can, you could do a fight. like that. The Saudis can do a fight like that. They can do a fight. They have enough resources to throw at boxing where they could change the entire landscape of boxing. If you were the guy that stands in between six foot six, two hundred and fifty pound Anthony Joshua and $200 million. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I don't think he's going to, I don't think he's going to lose to you on purpose. I don't want to be that guy. But I'm not saying that anybody lost to anybody on purpose. I don't think that's happened. But what I do think is that people take it easier on people if they like them,
Starting point is 01:25:32 and it looked like they were taking it easier on each other than you would expect. I'll just say that. It's just my personal opinion. I don't think that's going to happen with this fight. I don't think there's any chance in the world. Knowing what Anthony Joshua is a specialist at, he's a specialist at putting knuckles through your fucking brain, you know, and that's what he's going to try to do to Jake Paul.
Starting point is 01:25:51 And anything other than that from a 34-year-old Anthony Joshua will make us all think It's a fixed fight. Whether or not Josh can do it, whether or not, I mean, Jake Paul shocks the world and shows us that he really does not how to box really well and moves really good and uses his jab and blows us all away with a strategy and a lot of footwork and movement and brings Usik into his camp and or Lomachenko's dad even better who's the guy who trained Usik. He trained Usik as well. Lomacheco's father.
Starting point is 01:26:22 That's why they both are the best moving fighters in this generation by far. By far. They're in a group of the greatest of all time, like Willie Papp and Pernel Whitaker. There's like a group of, like, defensive wizards that exist today that they're in that group. And two of them that exist in that group are trained by the same guy. Lomachenko and Usik. I don't want to be Jake Paul. Yeah, fuck that. I know that. I do not want to be.
Starting point is 01:26:48 But what better way to show the world you're legit. Go get knocked out by Olympic gold medalist, former world heavyweight champions, six foot six, 250 pounds. Yeah, I mean, it's wonderful. Show the world you're ready to win it. You're definitely not fucking about. I had this guy in my podcast, Bugsy Malone. So he's a British grime artist. And he had this home.
Starting point is 01:27:06 What's a grime artist? Like a drill, a rap. Oh, okay. Did you know what that means? You did? Damn. Keep up with the Times. I can't.
Starting point is 01:27:14 It's too late. I missed it. I missed everything. He grows up in the north of the UK in gangs, Manchester. And he's in juvenile detention. He gets stabbed with a screwdriver. Like rough stuff, rough, rough northern stuff. But some part of his upbringing just sort of really compels him to try and bring himself out of this situation.
Starting point is 01:27:36 Starts making music, gets super successful, does this fire in the booth with Charlie Sloth that gets like 35 million plays. And he starts boxing. Boxing is like one of his salvages. It's one of his safe havens. And it's the thing, one of the things that's kept him very disciplined throughout his whole life. So he starts accumulating some money. And he buys a nice house in Manchester, a very, very nice house. and the local kids nearby, sort of starting to take a little bit of notice.
Starting point is 01:28:00 Maybe they know who he is as an artist, and word starts to get around that he's living there. And there'd been some concerns, some security concerns for a little while. And he gets a phone call from his girlfriend at the time, which says, there's some men here. They're trying to break in, and they're in a van. And as she's on the phone, he hears the glass shatter of this house. His mum's in the house, and his girlfriend at the time is in the house.
Starting point is 01:28:23 He's driving around. He's got his sister in the car. so he drives back in the car this is a guy who's like world famous as a rapper right this would be like the British 50 cent or the British JZ or P Diddy or something like that drives back getting down the driveway
Starting point is 01:28:37 toward this house there's a blockade there's boulders that have been laid out in front so he knows that there's going to be an ambush of some kind and he sees this guy in the bushes on the right with a brick this guy's hiding in the bushes waiting and he thinks he's going to throw it through the window but he doesn't he wants to hit him with the brick so
Starting point is 01:28:51 Bugsy stops the car opens the door and immediately He's massively into Jordan Peterson, personal development, self-growth. It's like an odd blend of rough upbringing self-discipline and sort of transcendent personal growth. And he gets out of the car and points at the guy and he goes, no way is that you. Is that a blue t-shirt? And the guy's like, and as he's doing it because he's been training so much, he's coming toward him, distracting him. The same way as I go, what's on that t-shirt there?
Starting point is 01:29:16 Immediately you go, and before he knew it, Bugsie's hit him, spun him around. Bricks fallen out of his hand because this guy hasn't set his feet in time. It's the problem of having a big weapon. Bugsy said, like, you need to set yourself and you need to be able to throw it. Like, it's good because it can hurt someone, but it's slow and it's cumbersome and you can't move as fast. And he's training every day, every single day, no matter whether he's rapping, he's on tour, he's training and he's boxing and he's fighting and he's sharp. He knows his distance. Hits this guy.
Starting point is 01:29:41 They have a scrap. Bugsy wins, moves the stuff out of the way, gets back in the car, drives in. Jamie, can you just CCTV search Bugsie Malone's CCTV? so there's footage from his house of when he pulls up in the Mercedes and um so go back back back a little bit yeah just to the start so this is him pulling in in his car having just beaten someone up this is a van filled with guys gets out of the car pulls his top off and then sprints to go and get the rest of the guys that are waiting outside that is not the behavior of a dude who gives a single fuck.
Starting point is 01:30:24 This is the British JZ ripping his top off and then sprinting out to try and chase people away. And the real kicker of it, there was like... It's week three of Canadian tires, early Black Friday sale. These prices won't go lower this year. Maybe too long. Freezing. Save up to 50% November 20th to 27.
Starting point is 01:30:38 Conditions apply, details online. ...of guys, not in that van, but in some other van behind. The real kicker was the dudes that he fought, they press charges. They press charges against him. because he's rich they pressed charges because he fucked him up
Starting point is 01:30:54 and then at oh they pressed charges did they actually wind up going to court over this yeah yeah yeah no went to court and this is it was so brilliant he told this story to me and he said
Starting point is 01:31:10 it was the middle of COVID and people weren't sure where the venues were going to be open and he had this tour this tour was going on but it wasn't selling as well no tours were selling as well as he would have liked so he spoke to his lawyer before his lawyer went to go and do the not guilty verdict and they had two statements that were ready and he came out he said very pleased to say that Aaron Davies has been acquitted today he's not been found guilty he is now getting back to
Starting point is 01:31:35 preparing for his upcoming tour and tickets are available now at he used his lawyer did a mid-roll ad read that's hilarious as part of his not guilty verdict how having just beaten up like a van filled with blokes, one of whom looked like a plumber. It was your plumber comment that got me thinking about it. Like just some white belt that decide, you know, some guy that thinks he's a bit hard. Like he's had a little bit of a thrower,
Starting point is 01:32:01 and this guy's training every single day, sharpening his skills, and he's been doing it since he was a kid. That's hilarious. And he's dangerous and he's nasty. It's wonderful when a story like that works out. In America, people have guns. It's a different sport. Have you looked at appropriate force in the UK?
Starting point is 01:32:17 Do you know what that is? The use of appropriate force? There's a lot of that in America as well, depending state by state. They have different, there's different standards that different states impose. Like Florida, I stand your ground. Florida, you just get away with killing people. California, it's very different. They were actually trying to pass a thing in California saying it's your obligation to leave your house if someone breaks into it.
Starting point is 01:32:41 I don't know if that got through. It's your obligation to not shoot them, that you can't harm them because they're just trying to steal something. They're not trying to harm you. Like the assumption should be that they're not trying to harm you. Exactly. I've had this conversation with people on the podcast, but actually with Tommy Chong. It was a mind-numbing conversation that, you know, you should not think of this person as trying to attack you. That their life is not less valuable than yours.
Starting point is 01:33:10 It's just as valuable as your life. You shouldn't take their life. Despite the fact that they're on your property. Despite the fact that, despite the fact, I can't talk. the fact rather that historically a lot of people have broken into people's houses and killed them that's happened over and over and over again you're just assuming that this time is going to be different because they just want your watch or whatever like fuck off like this is that's a dumb way to live like you have to be able to protect yourself there's crazy people that's a real
Starting point is 01:33:34 thing yeah i think the the appropriate force thing becomes interesting in the UK where you don't have as many guns because there's more levels of weapon in between nothing just hands Baseball bad and samurai sword Yeah this guy's got a brick So you're allowed to brick But if you bring a gun to a knife fight That's not appropriate force
Starting point is 01:33:56 You know what I mean He only had a knife Yes You cheated It's like I don't know It's very gentlemanly Oh God
Starting point is 01:34:03 So stupid Well the UK's got Like some odd Archaic laws Like the distance Between the front benches In the House of Commons Is the same as two broadswords
Starting point is 01:34:15 Held out at arm's length Which is just so funny Well, that's also why you guys drive on the other side of the road, right? Why? I think you drive on the left side of the road So you can use your right arm to slass each other No way Sword, yeah, I believe that's what it is
Starting point is 01:34:30 What, in case you were jousting in a vehicle Someone, if you're on a horse or if you're in a car You want to be able to get them on that side That's a strong side Someone told me that when I was over there I hope I'm not incorrect I like it as a story. Whether it's right or wrong I don't care. There's a reason that women's shirts buttoned from the left and not the right.
Starting point is 01:34:51 Have you ever accidentally put your wife's hoodie on instead? It goes in the middle ages. You knew you were going to meet when traveling on horseback. Most people are right handed. So if a stranger passed the right of you, your right hand would be free to use your sword if required. Yeah. That's why you guys do it with your cars. Well, this is the problem. If you don't have a medieval country like ours, you end up driving on the other side of the road. But yeah, so women's shirts, if you've ever accidentally put your wife's hoodie on or something, zipped it up. Women's shirts buttoned from the other side. They buttoned from the left, not the right. The reason for that is that when buttons were first introduced in the 1700s, they were
Starting point is 01:35:27 mostly for the aristocracy and the aristocratic women were dressed by mostly right-handed servants. Whoa. So they dressed them this way. So the women's shirts, button for, if you put a... Still to this day? Same thing. Dude, I promise you now. Anybody that's watching, any guy that's watching, go and put your wife's shirt on. This is how it begins. Go and put your wife's shirt on. And see, it doesn't fold that way. Right. It folds the other way. That's crazy.
Starting point is 01:35:50 And you have to push the buttons through with your left hand. How fucking cool is that? That's crazy. And it's the same with huddies. You know, we zip our hudies with our right hand. Girls zip their hudies with their left hand. Oh, wow. So fucking cool.
Starting point is 01:36:04 Weird. One other element is the gentleman of the days. They would have a sword on the left hip drawn by the right hand. The way that our shirts are put together at the moment. It can't get caught in the folds because the left fold is over the top of the right. So as you draw it, there's no chance that the hilt would get caught. So if you're a left-handed person, you have to wear women's clothes. That might actually explain more than you think.
Starting point is 01:36:30 Probably. So this is an example of path dependency. So what you're talking about, like some shit from the past that influences the future. Quirty keyboards. Right. Same thing. Yeah, I know that one. Typewriters.
Starting point is 01:36:43 Yeah. So it was made to be inefficient. to slow people down. And if you take a normal typer from a QWERTY keyboard and put them on some other formulation that's allowed, they're like 50 to 70% faster. So we're still using a designed-to-be- inefficient keyboard because if you type too quickly on a typewriter
Starting point is 01:37:03 and you use letters that are close together, the typewriter jams. So the letters that were used most frequently were put out onto the edges and it was less often that you were going to put two next to each other so that they wouldn't jam. I don't know a single person who switched to a different type of keyboard.
Starting point is 01:37:16 Do you? No, no one. Lex Friedman's got some weird super node thing. Oh, but his is just separated. He's just got a separated. It's still quarry. Yeah. Oh.
Starting point is 01:37:27 It's almost like a... Yeah, that's kind of interesting, but that's not the point. The point is the layout of the keys in a regular keyboard. There's other layouts. So it's not just QWERTY. It's not available. You could actually buy keyboards that have the most efficient layout. I forget what the name of it is.
Starting point is 01:37:42 I think it might be the dactyl thing. Yes. I think that's it. The very top. I think that's it I think Up and right Yeah
Starting point is 01:37:50 Hot Swap Dactyl Maybe That's just for sale though What is it It's still a QWERTY keyboard I can't get away from it So there's
Starting point is 01:37:59 Other layouts If you could search What styles of key What is the most efficient Layout of keys For typing speed That's what I do Yeah
Starting point is 01:38:09 That's what yes This is what's coming up This shit is way faster Than typing Okay yeah right right right but that's a different that's a different thing that's it's fastest type fastest keyboard for typing well you can type hold on let's look at that for a second you haven't seen this before no yeah it's like how does it look
Starting point is 01:38:27 they they I'll show you at a demo wow this is crazy and each one of those is a letter and some of them you like make words real fast oh this so this is a What we're talking about right here is a totally different device than a keyboard. But what I mean is like there's another keyboard layout that super nerds use. Like a tiny amount. Like the kind of people that have like, they have those Google phones that don't connect to the servers, you know. And Eric Prince make those. No, that's a different one.
Starting point is 01:39:05 He's got his own. Yeah, just that path dependency thing, like shit from the past that's still influencing us now. Yeah. Why your shirt is going in the other direction. That's pretty crazy. Oh, so here it is. It's a new class of peripheral device that allows ordinary people to type at the speed of thought. Whoa.
Starting point is 01:39:25 Breathing your keyboard can and much more. Whether you're coding, gaming, designing, or just typing, whatever you do, do it at the speed of thought. Hmm. I wonder how much of a learning curve there is to figuring out how to type with that thing, because it looks pretty dope. Ooh, they have different ones. Scroll up to that image at the top? That's a different one. I think it's the same.
Starting point is 01:39:51 It's just a... But shape different. Yeah, just like made out of metal. Right, but it's a different shape. You probably put your hands... Well, maybe. Put your hands on it the same way. It's very different.
Starting point is 01:40:00 The other one was curved. The problem that you have is like... Is this the new one? The forge. The master forge. Let me see what you got here. It's not showing anybody to use it. That's how I was trying to find a good thing.
Starting point is 01:40:09 I'm using it to show you how they type, like, words really fast. I think it's a matter of time before you're typing with your brain anyway. I think this is like learning to code. Yeah, well, I think about this with prompt engineering. Like, if AI gets progressively better and better, the idea of being a prompt engineer, I understand how to get the AI to do what I want is a job that only shortly after it becomes a job might be made completely obsolete. 100%. Yeah. Yeah, that's not going to work.
Starting point is 01:40:39 That's like opening up a blockbuster video in 1999. It's like, it's too, you know, it's too, You don't, they've so little time. Well, the problem that you have with the quality keyboard thing is it's a coordination problem. Like, if you want to borrow your friend's laptop, unless everybody decides, we're going to switch to the better type of keyboard and we're going to do it now. There you go, fine. Oh, here he goes. He's moving it.
Starting point is 01:40:59 He's typing it right there. He's typing these words as he's looking at the screen. Holy shit. How's he doing that? That guy's a fucking genius. It's like 300 words a minute. I think people can get to. But here's the question.
Starting point is 01:41:10 Like, how do you learn? Do you have to play a game? Do you ever do that? like Mavis Bacon's typing. Do that? No, what was that? It's fun. It's a game you play.
Starting point is 01:41:18 It teaches you how to type. Teach you how to do the type faster? Yeah, you like type things that they tell you to type. They time you like a race. It's like fun. So he's like hitting all these letters at once, I think, with his fingers. You can see him popping up and then it creates the word. I think it's a little bit of mixture of like, remember the T9 typing you could do on your phone?
Starting point is 01:41:38 Yeah. And you could like, you could hit four numbers and you know what word it would be. And if it wasn't that word, you'd hit next like three times. Can you get really good at that? I think it's a little, I think it's a mixture. Could you rewind that again so I could see him doing that? Can you give me some volume so I could hear what he's saying? There's no question that typing sentences at over 200 words per minute is extremely satisfying,
Starting point is 01:41:59 but does typing fast actually transfer to productivity in the real world? That's the question we'll be answering together in today's video. Does typing speed really matter? That's nuts. Wow. he just did that wow and he made butt
Starting point is 01:42:17 large yeah like he he made it all caps like how I suppose this is kind I need to know if that dude's rain man you know I'm saying
Starting point is 01:42:25 I need to ask him some questions about math yeah I it's mad to think how quickly we can think and how slowly we can communicate that to other people even with speech
Starting point is 01:42:36 right can you just please search is there a more efficient key layout than QWERty because Because that's what I'm looking for, because I know there is. Because I remember I went down a rabbit hole with this, and I was really thinking about trying it. And then I was like, God, what are you doing?
Starting point is 01:42:52 You'd have to change your phone. Yeah, and it wasn't phone days. This was way before phone days. This was the days of just typing more efficient keyboard layout than query. That's it. Dvorak. That's it. Puts about 65 to 70 cent of keystrokes in the home row versus roughly 30 on QWERTY.
Starting point is 01:43:11 So fingers move much less. now that we know that, can you search for images of Dvorak keyboard? So that's what the keys look like right there. Oh, that's it right there. See how different that is? Wow.
Starting point is 01:43:26 Yeah, very different. How long do you reckon it would take you to write out a short email? It would take forever. My stupid fingers would go right back to where they always go. You know, that was one of the things that I learned really early on from teaching martial arts.
Starting point is 01:43:40 I would way would rather, I would way rather teach someone who didn't know anything than teach someone who learned things wrong. Because someone who learn things wrong, it's very difficult to correct their technique. They have a mode in their mind that they shift to when they're panicky or when they're being pressured. They always go back to the bad technique, always. It's very hard to get someone to learn technique correctly when they know it incorrectly. You've got to re-teach them everything. You see it with pool.
Starting point is 01:44:10 There's are certain tendencies that people have with their arm being out. A lot of people just accept the bad relationship between your elbow and as long as it's consistent. Even though it's more inefficient, it's going to add extra English to the ball and spin and all these different things and probably make you less accurate. Maybe better that than try to like make your arm drop down and hang 90% because it'll feel so alien. But that's way less than in martial arts. In martial arts, like God, if you learn how to throw a sidekick with your knee down, versus your knee up, it's so hard to do it the other way. When you're being pressured, you're always going to do it the wrong way,
Starting point is 01:44:48 and you're not going to have the correct amount of power. And those tendencies that are burned into you, I've been typing for 30 fucking years. Like, they are, I don't have to look at a keyboard. I can just talk to you, and I can type, and I'm not really good, but I'm good enough. You know, I don't look at the keys. Like, I don't have to pick, like, I used to drive me crazy,
Starting point is 01:45:10 watching videos of Hunter Thompson who never learned how to type, he would type like this. He would type with like one finger in time, poke and peck. I'm like, dude, it would take so little time for you to just put your fucking fingers there and learn how to do that right. He never did. He poked and pecked his way to some of the greatest fucking books ever. Maybe that was a performance enhancer. But yeah, I...
Starting point is 01:45:29 Well, he was poking and peck when he was on Coke. That's true. Yeah, it's probably for the best that you didn't type more quickly. Imagine the crazy shit that would have come out of him then. Right, right, yeah. You ever seen him type? It's so frustrating. No.
Starting point is 01:45:42 Can we see? Is it videos? Yeah. Oh, wow. Find Hunter Thompson typing. Yeah, you'll see it. It's pokey, pecky. And Johnny Depp actually mimicked it really accurately in fear and loathing in Las Vegas.
Starting point is 01:45:56 When he's sitting in front of the thing, like pecking, yeah, like, doing his Hunter Thompson impression. And his Jack's Barrow thing. Yeah. Well, your brain can think at about 4,000 words a minute. And that's the same rate of fire as an M134 machine gun. Wow. So anything, even, and to your point of very soon, I think that keyboards are going to be obsolete. When you think about how much fucking fidelity and speed is lost,
Starting point is 01:46:24 with you going from brain to thumb, like, I wonder what another type of keyboard is. And you've got to think, okay, how do I convert this into words, where am I going to go, open the app, type the, oh, crap, man, fucking keyboard de, keyboard de, keyboard. But it is so slow compared with when we just get neuralinked up to each other. Yeah. And I'm sure you've seen that demonstration where the two guys are sitting across from each other and they have the headsets on. They're asking each other question and answering the questions without using words.
Starting point is 01:46:54 No, I've not seen that. All right. We'll show you that next. We'll be just looking up now? I can't, I find pictures of him typing, but not video of him typing. Oh, God, I don't have seen it. Let me get the bathroom. Let me get the bathroom.
Starting point is 01:47:06 We'll be right back, ladies and gentlemen. It's time to pee. where were we somebody typing like a grandma yeah the hunter thompson thing he couldn't really find it you got johnny depp doing it
Starting point is 01:47:16 okay this is how he typed this is a completely accurate this is a great video by the way you listen to this it's really it's an amazing piece you gotta cut it out it never comes again I go to all YouTube
Starting point is 01:47:27 okay we'll cut it out but that's it that's how he that's how he poked he poked and pecked like that so that's how hunter thompson used to type out of his fucking
Starting point is 01:47:38 bird just poking telepathic video too oh you found that okay okay this is the crazy one the telepathic thing is nuts because they have these headsets on these guys are laughing because they're asking each other questions and they're answering the questions and they hear the answer in their heads they hear the other person hears their question and then they hear the answer so it's a new i think it's a product or what but it's called alter ego this is the same guy who developed that device where he could uh look things up without opening as mouth are talking and just sort of like mimicking the words in his we all have moments when we're doing the same thing I sort of skip past it so he's talking he's showing it on his own here
Starting point is 01:48:19 the cool part is when he brings in someone else to talk to and this guy also has it so they're communicating where do you want to get lunch after this he's saying where do you want to get lunch after this and for the demo they hooked it up to audio so that the video could hear it Typhoon could be good? So they're laughing because their words are being... It could be a noisy environment. So would they hear this? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:48:49 It could be a noisy environment or a quiet office. Having a direct conversation is possible without saying a word. The signals alter ego detects aren't affected by environmental noise. So even if you're walking past a wind tunnel or a construction zone, what you want to say will always get across. It's like having infinite noise cancellation. Exactly what people say happens when they encounter aliens. It's exactly, exactly.
Starting point is 01:49:16 Someone's talking in your head and you hear it. So imagine this technology scaled out a thousand years and they probably don't need the other person to have a headset anymore. And they just... Would make for an interesting podcast. Yeah, I guess. And you could just tune in and nobody needs to actually listen to anything. So where's the sound?
Starting point is 01:49:37 Are they hearing the sound in a set of headphones? It's hard. Not headphones. They know it, right? They're not hearing it. I understand how, I don't understand. Because it was really loud,
Starting point is 01:49:51 then you wouldn't be able to hear it. So yeah, for the demo we just watched, they have hooked up to a speaker so we can hear what they're hearing. But I think, if anything, it's got to be some sort of jaw induction, but I don't know that for sure. Well, there's weird earphones
Starting point is 01:50:04 that you could put on that don't go in your ear, they go behind your ear, and they send the sound into your dome. People use that for running, right? So they can still hear the sound that's going around. Fucking creeps hide in the bushes. They can hear the creeps so they can get ready for them. You know Cam Haynes, right?
Starting point is 01:50:20 My buddy, Cam? His brother almost got killed by a mountain line. Crazy story. He put it on his Instagram. The day, the next day, like he talked about the story, what happened, he was running, and there was a mountain line in the bushes. And at first he thought it was a coyote.
Starting point is 01:50:37 He just saw the eyes. He yelled, and then stood up, and he realized it was a cat. And he started running after him. And he's running at night. It was in California. And he kicked rocks at it, he screamed at it. And ultimately, there's some dogs barking, and he thinks maybe the dog's barking scared the mountain line off him.
Starting point is 01:50:54 But he said, it was like, I couldn't have used, he said, I couldn't have used bear spray, even if I had it, because it would have got on me. That's how close it was. He said it was right there, like right on him. So it's most scared he's ever been in his life. I've seen that video of the guy tracking backward. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 01:51:10 As it's coming to warn him. It's coming to swing. Yeah. Hey, hey, hey. The only thing that gives me comfort about that video if I was there is like, that thing just wants to scare me. It's not trying to kill me. It wants to scare me. That's a mother that's trying to get you away from the cubs.
Starting point is 01:51:23 Because the way it's doing it, it's throwing its arms in the air in a very intimidating way. If an animal is trying to kill you, it wouldn't do that. It'd be running full clip at you and just dive on your neck. That's the difference between. between a cat that wants to kill you and something that's trying to scare you off. So the problem is you're backing up, right?
Starting point is 01:51:41 And the instincts of these predators, like if you throw a ball of yarn by a kitten, they dive on that ball of yarn. They can't help themselves. And that's the thing about you backing up or even you're running. It's like you're exciting their prey drive. Yeah, they're going to keep tracking them.
Starting point is 01:51:55 Right. So they tell you to stand tall and be loud and make a lot of noise. But there's a fine line between you being a threat and then them being scared off Like you being something they have to deal with, depending upon the distance between each other. That makes so much sense. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:52:13 Have you ever had any run-ins? I have never had like an encounter like that, but I did in the wild see an enormous mountain line once. But fortunately, it was from inside of a truck. Yeah. Me and my friend Colton, we were in Utah. We were taking this turn and it was at dusk. So the sun was setting and he stops the truck. And he goes, look at that cat.
Starting point is 01:52:36 And I go, where? And we'll look over, and I see the glowing eyes from the setting sun, the glowing eyes reflecting underneath this tree. And it's got this pumpkin head, this big fucking, these mandible muscles that just crushed things and these massive forearms. And it's just sitting, it's a big cat, man. Like, I've seen two other mountain lines before, but they were small. They were like a dog-sized. This thing was fucking big. Do you reckon you be able to take a dog-sized mountain line or are you still dead?
Starting point is 01:53:07 No, you're dead. Yeah. I mean, a cat-sized cat might fuck you up. A house cat might fuck you up. A bobcat might fuck you up. A mountain line will kill you. You know, you'd have to be an extraordinary person with weapons to survive a mountain line hand-to-hand fight. You'd have to be an extraordinary person who's really fighting to survive.
Starting point is 01:53:26 And you don't like, you don't panic at all. You have to be willing to stay calm. This thing's going to tear your arms apart. It might tear your face apart What are the basic I mean you must You hunt all the time And you do
Starting point is 01:53:38 Was it like end of September You went and did another big one Last year Elkunting yeah You must have been given Whatever the safety briefing That you have at the start of an like Aircraft taking off is of
Starting point is 01:53:49 Hey man if you see a this If you see a this or if you see a this These are the ways that you're supposed to behave No we don't get any safety briefings But you must have learned it in the past Yeah As a part of I'm gonna go out of fucking carry a gun
Starting point is 01:54:00 Bring a gun with you Point and being scared Even if you're bow hunting, carry a pistol, especially if you're in bear country. If you're in bear country, you can't depend on this mist making their eyes hurt, keeping them off of you, because it might not work. I'll just run through it. Yeah, there was a recent case in BC where a bear mauled 11 people, and they used bear spray on it and it didn't work. I think it was a teacher protecting his students. So shout out to that teacher.
Starting point is 01:54:32 He got fucked up, but they tried bear spray. Bear spray's not effective. My friend John, who lives up in Alberta, he used bear spray on a grizzly once. He said it walked right through it. It was nothing. Is bear spray basically like hardcore pepper spray? Yeah. It's like vicious pepper spray.
Starting point is 01:54:47 But you're just going to get a mad bear, you know? Why don't they make more hardcore bear spray then? It's as hardcore as it gets without killing you. Right. You know, if it gets on you. If it's that noxious, yeah. It's just supposed to be a deterrent. And sometimes it can work.
Starting point is 01:55:01 Like sometimes maybe they're just curious. And you spray them and they're like, fuck this guy, and they get out of there. But maybe sometimes no, you know, because it's like, it's like tasing a guy. You ever see a guy get tased and they just fucking, ah, run through it? There's guys who get tased and they just go stiff and they fall down. And I've seen other guys get tased where they rip it right out of their arm. Four people, including children were hospitalized. A teacher on crutches, second adult with a second adult with bear spray and a third person who punched and kicked a grizzly despite serious injuries are being praised for their
Starting point is 01:55:32 actions, saved a school group attacked by a bear near Bella Kula, British Columbia. Four people, including the children, were hospitalized Thursday after a bear attack on students and teachers in the Nux Walk First Nation while out on a school trip near the, boy, I'm going to fuck this up. Akwalka school east of the remote community. Oh, so it was a very remote place. Yeah Bear spray didn't do anything man
Starting point is 01:56:04 He said look Nothing phased it Didn't do anything to the bear Two cans of spray in the eyes of the animal Look at that This said the teacher unloaded two cans of bear spray Into the eyes of the animal And it didn't do anything
Starting point is 01:56:17 It blows my mind that people Who have been through something that scary When the kids were getting attacked One of my cousins who had his skull ripped Ran towards the bear And jumped on it with his bare hands Holy shit It's pretty hardcore
Starting point is 01:56:30 That's hard Well, that's primal, you know, that's survival in like a real situation where you're, like, your language goes away. Another lady, a teacher with crutches was whacking it, hitting it in the eyes, the face, the head for minutes. And then the bear finally, imagine being on crutches. Oh, my God. You have, well, you just, it's just survival. It's so reptilian. It's like, it's like a savage moment.
Starting point is 01:56:58 That's what blows my mind about these. situations where emotions are running so high, how people are able to come back with any kind of memory at all. Right. Because that's true, yeah. Amount of adrenaline just completely warps people's memories. I was learning about this case from Australia in the 70s, this lady gets attacked inside of her home.
Starting point is 01:57:23 So a guy breaks into the house and assaults her inside of her home, and she identifies this TV psychologist, this guy called Donald Thompson says it was this was the person who assaulted me the TV psychologist yeah yeah so she knew this guy from the TV he was the guy that assaulted me that night the police go and they arrest Donald Thompson take him in the next day there's a lineup and the woman positively identifies him and Donald Thompson's like that couldn't have been me because I was actually on television in front of a live audience at the time the arresting officer like scoffs at him and basically says you might as well have
Starting point is 01:58:02 Jesus and the Queen of England as your alibis as well like this is ridiculous we know that she's been assaulted we've got photographic evidence of the marks on her we've done a DNA test which is going to come back soon she's positively identified you from the lineup and she called you out before you were in the lineup as well like you're bang to rights but there was a wrinkle that when they actually looked at the timing he was on TV at the time that this was happening. And what had occurred was the woman had had that television program on while the attacker broke in and sexually assaulted. Whoa. And it imprinted that guy's face in her memory. Bingo. Wow. Blended the attacker's identity
Starting point is 01:58:48 with what she was seeing on TV while it happened. Wow. And the kicker, Donald Thompson was on TV to discuss an area of psychological speciality that he had, which was the unreliability of eyewitness testimony. Whoa. Dude. Whoa. Did you see that there's, someone sent me this video. Give me, pause this for a second.
Starting point is 01:59:18 Darren Brown, the psychic. Have you seen the one? British dude. Yes. Are you seen the one where he, he got a guy to assassinate Stephen Fry oh yes
Starting point is 01:59:32 yes yes yes yes yes yeah yeah fuck yeah like got like MK Ultra to guy to take out an assassin call that the jump or something or the push the push was it the push I don't remember but I watched a clip of it the other day I'm like this is this is so crazy
Starting point is 01:59:47 that you can actually do this to someone that it's just in the point of the article that I was reading on or the post on X was, you're telling me that MK Ultra has not figured out a way to do this. You can get a guy to do it with cameras, to do it on Stephen Fry,
Starting point is 02:00:04 like the comedian. And obviously, he didn't really kill him. I had a... Yeah, here it is. Yeah. So the assassin with Stephen Fry. So he somehow or another gets this guy to do it. I guess
Starting point is 02:00:23 we can't play it. But Can't be some trigger words The point is Fake gun I don't remember what he did Yep Oh shit they acted it all out too That is so crazy
Starting point is 02:00:36 That's crazy That's so crazy So that guy really thought He killed Stephen Fry Imagine being in the crowd How about those people next to him It didn't even flinch I'd be like
Starting point is 02:00:45 What kind of psychos are next to him? She's the one whispering to watch She whispered she's like good job I think she's the one to set him off Oh She's in on it Now, here's the question. Is this, can anybody, yeah, can anybody fall into that kind of a hypnosis?
Starting point is 02:01:02 Is that only certain people that are suggestible? There's high, medium, and low suggestibility people. And there's a couple of tests, Dr. David Spiegel from Stanford. He's like one of the world leaders in hypnosis. And he explained, some people are more susceptible to hypnosis than others. I have to assume that Darren will have done a profile and this guy is like really, really susceptible. Okay, what's that about?
Starting point is 02:01:29 Why is that around? Susceptibility to hypnosis? Yeah, yeah, yeah. So I think that dopamine plays a big part of it and if you process dopamine more quickly, you are more susceptible. I process dopamine really slowly. I know that from doing some genetic tests.
Starting point is 02:01:44 So I know that my susceptibility to hypnosis would be lower. There's some personality traits that make you more or less likely as well. I think agreeableness versus disagree. agreeableness is one of them. I think there'll be a sex difference, too. I don't know why it's there. It's kind of the same as saying, like, why are some people taller than others. Like, they just are, and there's, like, a byproduct that comes along for the ride.
Starting point is 02:02:04 But it's a weird thing to be able to manipulate a person's mind and to have it so clearly, I mean, this is the clearest example of it you're ever going to say. He just shot a famous person in a room full of people. It does feel like a weird backdoor. Yeah, that's what I'm getting at. Like, it's like those voting systems that can be hacked. Well, is it, I don't speak about that. Does it, yeah.
Starting point is 02:02:30 Or, like, those cell phone towers they buy from China that turn out to be transmitting everything back to China. I think, uh, why does it exist? That David Spiegel guy taught me that 25% of people that do a single session intervention for smoking cessation quit for life. From hypnosis? One session, 25%. get this and I think if you do a couple of sessions that number starts to go up and go up so hypnosis is this really weird backdoor into the human psyche but yeah the the memory thing is fucking crazy when you think about what do I actually know like how do I know that this thing
Starting point is 02:03:07 happened in the past right so um most people understand there's like two types of memory failure one is I can't remember that thing and the other is I remember it but I remember it incorrectly right that's broadly two categories I think people are really happy with the first one. Because there's tons of shit that has happened to you. And you go, yeah, I forget my memory or whatever, whatever. But your experience of your own memory is your only experience of your own memory. So for you to be able to say, my recollection is wrong, what does that mean? That's like saying this dimension that I'm in is wrong. So a lot of the time, I think people struggle to understand how often their memory of a thing is present but inaccurate. So for instance, there's only
Starting point is 02:03:48 17 colors that we remember on average. We don't remember, like if I ask you what colors are tomato. Well, I would say red, but really it's not. If it's heirloom. Typically red, but it's like a reddy orange sort of color. Sure, but those are the bullshit tomatoes, like a real heirloom tomato
Starting point is 02:04:06 because all kinds of different purpleish sort of. Tomato That's a real tomato, though. That's what a tomato really looks like. Sorry. I know. Supermarket tomato. Kind of reddish. Reddish, orangish. Reddish. But most people would default. to the red thing. Right, but not really.
Starting point is 02:04:20 Yeah, but it's not. And we sort of, we adjust. Right. So if you're the guy. Like, we're white people. Uh-huh. But we're not really white. Well, I mean, you were a bit flush.
Starting point is 02:04:30 Yeah, but we're not white. You know what I'm saying? Comparatively white. My friend Jamie, not this one, but another one, he's from England, and he's white like paper. And when my daughter first met him, that's what she said, she goes, mommy, he's so white. And she goes, yeah, he's white. And she goes, no, no, he's white like paper.
Starting point is 02:04:48 Well, if you live in England, you will be referred to as white-like paper. Yeah. If you've got, I mean, this must be the same with fighters. Even if you forget the TBI head trauma-y stuff, just the dump of adrenaline from going through. I mean, you must have done this when you've done your biggest shows. And you go out on stage. Yeah, you don't remember much. You come back and you're like, I've worked my whole life to get to the stage where I can achieve this thing.
Starting point is 02:05:14 And in the achievement of this thing, I kind of wasn't really there. Well, I was there for it, but in retrospect, I can't really recall where I was. And it's this odd duality that you want to be in a flow state. Yeah. Because it's very fulfilling. It's where you're at your best. This word's just coming out if you perfectly. And when you look back, you're like, I don't know if I was there fully.
Starting point is 02:05:38 I feel like I was kind of absent. Well, it's not that you're absent, but that you're empty. You empty out all your expectations. And you're on it for the ride. you're not really piloting it as much as you're just like making sure it doesn't hit the rocks you're on you're there for the ride the thing takes over and i think that's the case with everything that's the case when you're in the flow state of anything you're doing when you're really like you're the more you think about you being there which is what you have to do if
Starting point is 02:06:08 you're there you're thinking about you so it's like wasted resources you're better off being empty and just like being a vessel and just like taking this thing like You've done the work already, like, take it along for the ride. Just go for the ride. That's what it is. And so the problem with that is if you don't record your set, sometimes you'll say things that you don't remember, like, that were really funny. And you're like, oh, I had a totally different point that I went off.
Starting point is 02:06:36 And it really worked, but I don't remember what it was. If you don't record it, you're fucked. The only way you can get it back is you have to get back to that exact spot and hope it's still there for the next show. Sometimes it will be. Sometimes it will be. Waiting for you was a little gift. Sometimes that angle pops up again.
Starting point is 02:06:51 You're like, oh yeah, yeah, but why are we doing this? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. You're like, I almost forgot it. That must be a nightmare or must have been a nightmare before you could record sets. Yeah, but you've always been able to record sets. That's one of the things I learned really early on from this guy, Mike Donovan, who was one of like the big comics in Boston. He goes, always record your sets because you never know when you're going to say something.
Starting point is 02:07:09 And it'll be lost forever if you don't have a recording. There was a Scotty Sheffler, a golfer. he won Jamie you'll have seen this video yeah can we get the that it's a does a New York sports video like cut he does this
Starting point is 02:07:26 it's such a fucking cool explanation of what somebody who's got to the peak of their sport the absolute pinnacle like in the moments of winning and he just breaks the fourth wall open about kind of the hollowness of what this is really yeah it's really fascinating
Starting point is 02:07:43 what's the point that thing yes yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah and um it's just it's just such a fucking great explainer because we always assume here we let me hear this you might have just won the u.s open here too by the way just like the biggest event of the year life it's it's fulfilling from the sense of accomplishment but it's not fulfilling from a sense of like the deepest you know places of your heart you know i think it's kind of funny i think you know i think i think i said something after the byron this year about like It feels like you work your whole life to celebrate winning a tournament for like a few minutes.
Starting point is 02:08:22 It only lasts a few minutes, that kind of euphoric feeling. And like to win the Byron Nelson Championship at home, I literally worked my entire life to become good at golf to have an opportunity to win that tournament. And you win it, you celebrate, get to hug my family, my sister's there, it's such an amazing moment. And then it's like, okay, now what are we going to eat for dinner? You know, life goes on. Is it great to be able to win tournaments and to accomplish the things I have in the game of golf yet? I mean, it brings tears my eyes just to think about
Starting point is 02:08:54 because it's literally worked my entire life to become good at the sport and to have that kind of sense of accomplishment, I think is a pretty cool feeling. You know, to get to live out your dreams. It's very special. But at the end of the day, it's like, I'm not out here to inspire the next generation of golfers.
Starting point is 02:09:09 I don't, I'm not here to inspire somebody else to be the best player in the world, because what's the point? You know, this is not a fulfilling life. It's fulfilling from the sense of accomplishment, but it's not fulfilling from a sense of like the deepest, you know, places of your heart. You know, there's a lot of people that make it
Starting point is 02:09:26 to what they thought was gonna fulfill them in life, and then you get there and all of a sudden, you get to number one in the world, and they're like, what's the point? And, you know, I really do believe that because, you know, what is the point? You're like, why do I want to win this tournament so bad? That's something that I wrestle with on a daily basis.
Starting point is 02:09:42 It's like, showing up with them master's every year, it's like, why do I want to win this golf tournament so badly? Why do I want to win the Open Championship so badly? I don't know, because if I win, it's going to be awesome for about two minutes. And then we're going to get to the next week, and it's going to be like, hey, you won two majors this year, how important is it for you to win the FedEx Cup playoffs? And it's just like, we're back here again, you know? So we really do.
Starting point is 02:10:04 We work so hard for such little moments, and, you know, I'm kind of a sicko. I love putting in the work. I love being able to practice. I love getting out to live out my dreams, but at the end of the day, sometimes I just don't understand the point. That's honest. That's what that is. I love that video so much. That's why he's so good.
Starting point is 02:10:21 I love that video so much. Guarantee you, that's why he's so good. Because I guarantee you, that guy has to be that honest with himself about everything. Otherwise, you'd never fix the hitch in your swing, you know? You have to be honest about every single thing. You have to be aware of all of it. Every little weird fucking thing you do, why am I doing this? Like, what is the point?
Starting point is 02:10:41 of this and then when you're done like yeah I did it and then it's going to creep right back in creep right back in Nike did a back to work a commercial after that and uh it's him with his son sort of kneeling down on the uh the green and it says uh you've already won and then I think the next slide is but let's get another one and it's so fucking cool dude there it is you've already won but another another major never hurt that was a bro Yeah. Fucking unbelievable. So I think I kind of become obsessed with people sacrificing what they want,
Starting point is 02:11:20 which is happiness, for the thing that's supposed to get it, which is success. So they sacrifice the thing that they want, being happy in the moment. They make themselves miserable in order to be able to achieve a thing so that when they finally have sufficient success, they will allow themselves to be happy. It's like a very strange trade. Imagine if you had some simultaneous equation and you just crossed off success. from both sides, you would sort of be left with happiness. I think that's unrealistic, right?
Starting point is 02:11:45 Because we need social validation from people. And we want to be recognized. We want to do stuff. And we've got to put food on the table and social creatures and all the rest of it. But I think videos like that are really important for people to see when they look up to someone about how much there is there at the end of the rainbow? Elon was on Lex's show a couple of years ago. And I think Alex asked him some question, like how he's.
Starting point is 02:12:11 you doing he replied and he said people think they want to be me they do not want to be me they don't know they don't understand my mind is a storm and like that's the price you need to pay to be Elon Musk I think that was on this podcast was it this one yeah because I ask him like what is it like to be you like it's like you wouldn't want to do it you wouldn't want to be me and you could tell like when you're in his eyes like there's it's not a normal thought process it's like this chaotic tornado of ideas that's running around in his head and sometimes he spits
Starting point is 02:12:47 him out on Twitter and they're not good well it's a problem when you're on the platform right it's kind of like I can say what I want it's my own house well he can though but he's like that all the time he's fun he's like what I would want to see from a guy who's a super genius like a playful
Starting point is 02:13:03 guy who wants to go to Mars who's making right we like Jamie and I went on a tour of Starship Starbase what is it SpaceX, Starbase, whatever the fuck it is. We saw the launch. We went to the SpaceX launch. And so we got a tour of the rocket factory, which is fucking insane.
Starting point is 02:13:21 It's so much more insane than I thought I was going to be. I mean, I can't really, I don't know how much we could even say, but it is nuts. It's nuts. And the sheer quantity of rockets that they're making is mind-blowing. Like, you're like, I had no, I thought they had a couple rockets, you know, just a couple rockets laying around. They're just making rockets. I'm pretty sure they've put more stuff into space just that one company than like the entirety of the load that's being transported into space globally up until now. They put stuff in space for their competitors.
Starting point is 02:13:55 Yeah, they use their space rockets to put stuff in space for people that they're in competition with. Yeah, they take the money. Show me the color. Yeah, we know how to do it. We're better at it than you, so we'll do it. Fucking unbelievable, dude. It's kind of nuts. I think about that, like, this sort of person you need to be to drive that, though.
Starting point is 02:14:12 It's a different kind of person, right? Like, that's what he wants to do. That's what he desires to do. And, you know, this gentleman talking about golf, like, this is a different, that's a totally different thing. Because he's in a competition all the time, you know. And it's really hard to just enjoy the process when you're in this competition where, especially if your livelihood depends upon a very specific result. Like you have to be better at this thing than everybody else
Starting point is 02:14:41 Not just do the best yourself But better than the other people That are also doing their best So you're in this constant Just never escaping this pressure Fighters feel that I think more than anybody Because it's like a actual physical person Coming to harm you all the time
Starting point is 02:14:59 And you're very outcome focused Yeah And so it's all well and good him saying I love the process I'm a bit of a sicko I like my training so on and so forth but it's very different saying I enjoy the process of training
Starting point is 02:15:11 when you've just won than I enjoy the process of training when you've just come second or fifth or 20th and especially if you're laid out flat on the canvas yeah especially that if that's your humiliation there's also the damage that was just done to you where you might not really might not be the same again
Starting point is 02:15:27 and there's certain fighters that you could point to one fight and they never recovered from it Meldrich Taylor versus Julio Cesar Chavez is my person one that I always point to because Helio Cesar Chavez knocked him out with like I think it was a couple seconds left in the last round stopped him and it was a fight that Meldrich Taylor was winning a decision but he was only the greatest of all time just ripping the body constantly attack him and eventually
Starting point is 02:15:55 broke him down had him in a corner boom dropped him with the right hand and he got up and the referee called the fight with like a couple of seconds to go and it was a hugely controversial call but then when Meldrick Taylor returned he was never the same again he started slurring his words really badly so it's physical issue he's getting knocked out easily he's getting dropped easily he was just it was gone it was all gone that fight just took it all out of him you see that out so there's that too it's not just you're going to lose a golf tournament like you might get your brains punched in physical repercussions huge physical repercussions for a vicious knockout huge some guys are never the same again and much more likely to get knocked out again once they get knocked out again once they get
Starting point is 02:16:36 out really badly. Who do you think of all of the people that you know has got the right balance of is successful and is also having fun at the same time because it seems like that's a trade that a lot of people can make where they are successful but they sacrifice their happiness or they're kind of happy but they're not pursuing external successes in the same way? I would say comedians. I would say Chappelle. Chappelle is probably the most successful guy that's genuinely happy.
Starting point is 02:17:03 I mean, he certainly has a lot of moments in deep thought. and deep thought, but when you're hanging around with him, he's a lovely person. He's a happy, lovely guy. He's so sweet and so smart and so, so, like, self-deprecating and interesting, and so great at what he does, but when you're hanging out with him, it's just a hang, it's just, he's just having fun, laughing a lot.
Starting point is 02:17:28 Got a great crew, we always, you know, stays, keeps his circle tight with cool people, and just has a great time. Have you deconstructed what that is, like what the contributing elements are? I think he just, he's doing it. Well, he's a very unusual person, right? So you're talking about Dave Chappelle when Chappelle's show was the number one comedy in the country. It was the greatest sketch show.
Starting point is 02:17:53 I think it was the greatest sketch show of all time. And it was only two seasons, right? And then they offered him an enormous amount of money. I think it was $50 million. And they wanted to change a bunch of stuff. They wanted him to stop saying certain words. They wanted him to stop doing this, stop doing that. And he didn't like it.
Starting point is 02:18:09 And she said, I quit. And he went to Africa and just fucking hung out in Africa. And then came back. When he came back, he stopped doing stand-up. He would do stand-up. I remember one time he did stand-up in a park in Seattle. So he showed up. He had little speakers with him and a microphone
Starting point is 02:18:29 and just did stand-up for free to these people. Just hung out in Seattle. Just did stand-up. And he would do stuff like that, show up places, and just do stand up occasionally. I mean, for 10 fucking years, he was like a monk on a walkabout. How did he stay sharp? Well, I don't think he ever stopped thinking about things the same way. And he wasn't as sharp when he came back.
Starting point is 02:18:53 There was one famous video from him in Hartford, Connecticut, where he bombed. But I always tell people stay out of Connecticut. But that's not the point. It's like England, you know, I think England's depressed? But the point was then eventually he started touring regularly, got it all back, plus then some, and then is now widely regarded as, if not the greatest of all time, he's in the consideration. There's like prior him, Murphy, Kinnison, Lenny Bruce, Carlin for some. There's like a bunch of different people that you put into like the greatest of all time. And Dave is certainly in that group.
Starting point is 02:19:28 But he's very happy. He's a happy guy. I mean, certainly there's cultural issues. that trouble him and life issues that everybody goes through to trouble him. But genuinely a pretty balanced guy for someone who's ultra successful. But he's not stepping outside of his lane either.
Starting point is 02:19:45 What he's really concentrating on and almost exclusively concentrating on is doing stand-up comedy. And he will travel, he would get in a jet and fly to New York unannounced and just show up at clubs and start doing stand-up. And he's done this forever.
Starting point is 02:20:00 One time I was in Colorado. and I've known Dave forever I met Dave when he was like 19 and I was like I guess I was like 23 or 24 we were both very young and even back then I was like this kid is so talented it was like remarkable how poised he was on stage like as a 19 year old kid
Starting point is 02:20:19 he will just show up places I was in Colorado doing stand-up I was at the Comedy Works I get off stage it was on a Friday night I go into the green room and Dave's there He doesn't live in Colorado. He just flew to Colorado because he knew I was going to be there and he wanted to do comedy.
Starting point is 02:20:36 And so I go, do you want to do a set? He goes, should I? I go, hold on. So I went back on stage. The show was over. I go, everybody, yell at the people that are on the stairs to come back. Dave Chappelle is here. And half the crowd had already got up and left.
Starting point is 02:20:53 They all come back. Everyone tells everyone they're yelling up the stairs. Dave Chappelle's here, come back. I bring him on stage. Everybody goes crazy. And he does like 45 minutes. Just fucking around. It was back in the grab him by the pussy days.
Starting point is 02:21:05 So he had this whole like, he said, grab him by the pussy. This whole bit like it just happened that week. And he had this like giant. And he just wanted to just go places and do comedy. So he's not doing it for money, right? He's not getting paid to do this show. He would show up in New York. He's not getting paid to do the stand or wherever these clubs that he just shows up.
Starting point is 02:21:22 And he's just working. He's just working on the craft of comedy. So his mindset is not try to make the most amount of money with stand-up. Because if he was doing that, he would do an arena every night every night of the week all over the world and make way more money. But that's not what he's doing. What he's doing is working on the craft of comedy. He has plenty of money, right?
Starting point is 02:21:42 He has all this money from all these Netflix specials. They pay him an exorbitant amount of money. And he makes all this money when he does do the big show. So he's got plenty of money. So it's not money. It's just the craft. It's just the art, the new set, the new bits, the new thing. He has a guy who films all of his sets.
Starting point is 02:21:58 So he's got like a guy there filming every one of his sets and then they break them down like this rant that rant because he'll like ask questions of people in the audience He'll do like an hour and a half on stage just fucking around with a small crowd somewhere But there's a gem in there somewhere and then they take that gem and then they expand upon it He'll go over it and break it down so his process is all just about the art And I think because of that the love of the art is what keeps him happy I think if it's just the love of the money and you're constantly keeping score who's the number one touring act and you're looking at the fucking ticket master oh Jesus Christ Kevin Hart's got me beat son of a pitch I gotta do two shows a night now yeah let's matinate yeah people get
Starting point is 02:22:41 nutty they get nutty and they really do get themselves you see in the podcast world as well people really get obsessed with the number of the rankings and like who's making more and who's doing this and just do what you do well you're the problem that you to come up against there is you are going to try and trade the outcome that you're looking for for the fuel that gets you there. The fuel that gets you there is how much you love what you're doing. Yes. Yes. So I've been thinking... That's what gets you to the dance. Correct. I've been thinking so much about the shame of simple pleasures. So there's this quote from a guy called Viscan verasamy that says, I have not yet grown wise enough to deeply enjoy simple things.
Starting point is 02:23:24 and I just love the idea of it that most of us are kind of terrible accountants of our own joy that we only accept deposits when the transaction's large enough right, the day that we get married or the night that we play the main stage at Glastonbury or sell out the arena
Starting point is 02:23:40 anything less than that and it doesn't even make the ledger so we treat small pleasures like counterfeit currency and we think like we have a kind of not disgust but rejection of oh that small thing made your weak that tiny incident made your day you must not have a lot going on like how weak and how small must your life be that seeing a cute
Starting point is 02:24:11 golden retriever this afternoon was like a fucking sick part of your day and i think about scotty sheffler is a good example him making it all the way to the top and if all that you were doing was waiting for that final moment for this main stage at glastonbury day that i get married sell the business for 500 million dollars whatever you are forgetting almost all of the journey and then just cashing in at the destination and there's the guy that's just won everything in all the fucking golf like the the goat of right now is saying it's fleeting yeah it's really really short it's not going to last for very long and uh that shame that uh people have i certainly know that i do as well that it almost feels like a reflection on the smallness of my life if I take pleasure in little
Starting point is 02:24:58 things. But when you take pleasure in little things, you don't just get more of them. You get them right now. You don't need to wait. You don't need to like be a fucking world champion at the winning the marshmallow test, just delaying gratification so long that you never actually end up getting any gratification. Yeah. The problem with that thought process is to achieve true greatness, you must be mad. Madness and greatness are inextricul. connected. You can't separate them. To treat, to get true greatness. You have to, there has to be some demons. There has to be a mad struggle in your mind. And you have to want it so badly. You want to have to want that result so badly that you are willing to put in more time, more effort, more focus, more
Starting point is 02:25:46 hours. And just, you don't get to smell the roses, man. You don't, you don't get to pet the puppies. You do, but you don't, you're petting the puppy thinking about the thing that you do, thinking about getting better, because you need those resources. It's like a demon that sort of climbs inside of you and wears you. Yeah. You know Ronnie O'Sullivan is? Yeah, the snooker player. Yeah, the greatest of all time. Like, there's certain people in certain sports.
Starting point is 02:26:11 I'm going to send you something, Jamie. So you see what a wizard this guy is. I'm actually in the middle of his book. My friend Billy Thorpe, who's a top flight pool player, recommended this book. Oh, no, I'm sorry. Tyler Stuyler, who's another top flight pool player, like world-class pool player, recommended this book. And I started the book and I can't stop it. It's so good.
Starting point is 02:26:34 How old is it? I think it's fairly recent because it's post-COVID. I thought it was going. He recommended it because of the way Ronnie describes picking the perfect cue, like the relationship that he has with a cue. But it is so eloquent and so. But the story, the whole story, the whole book, rather, the story of his life, is really more of, it's an exercise in him trying to explain, like, what it's like to be this good and this mad. Like, he's a madman. Like, watch this. Watch this.
Starting point is 02:27:13 Watch what he does here. This is crazy. This is crazy. Now, if you don't know how difficult it is to make. these balls. He doesn't give a shit that that guy's in front of him, that the referee's in front of him. Watch how quickly he does this. I mean, he's making the audience laugh. He's moving around that guy. He can't miss. This is the zone personified. He gets to a point in this where he's feeling so good
Starting point is 02:27:39 and decides to start shooting things one-handed. Watch this. Watch this. Watch this. One-handed. Now he's doing it one-handed. One-handed. These are tiny little pockets. He's shooting one-handed with English and getting position everyone's going crazy I mean that's how fucking good Ronnie O'Sullivan was like but this
Starting point is 02:28:00 the book is really about managing madness it's about him being sober and now he's trans he's kind of taken a lot of that insane competitive drive now he runs like he's a runner like he runs long distances and he talks about that meets up with his running club and they all get together
Starting point is 02:28:17 and go and runs together but it's like it's just managing whatever the fuck that in in in and in and it's also describing even in his prime he was saying he was thinking he's worthless he's thinking he's not good enough he's going to fall apart he's going to choke he's going to this he's like all these demons are popping up and meanwhile he's just everybody's like terrified of him he shows up it's like oh gee the genius is here because he's a genius like he's a snooker playing genius there's something about what he does it's just different than everybody else but the book is like it's not just about like picking the perfect cue it's really about
Starting point is 02:28:50 managing madness and everyone who's great is fucking crazy there's but you can I think like Chappelle does you can take that greatness and just throw it into the thing you do and love it while you're doing it you can't it doesn't have to be a demon doesn't have to be an adversary it could be like just this romantic affair of you being so fortunate to be able to pursue this thing, but maintaining that same level of enthusiasm. I don't know if the same level of enthusiasm, though, can be maintained in something that has like a winner and a loser, like a game where there's so much riding on each shot. Yes, versus art, which is like Dave goes to, he's already won.
Starting point is 02:29:37 They're going to, the show sold out. He knows how to do comedy. He gets out there. They all cheer. He's got great material. He can't wait to make them laugh. He already won. Well, that's the problem with.
Starting point is 02:29:47 turning the art into the competition yeah she said there right the rankings well that means that even if I did it and enjoyed it but I'm number three or whatever yeah that's horrendous that's not good yeah there's podcasts that game the system so this podcast to release multiple episodes a day and their short podcasts so they have more downloads than everybody else and so because downloads relatively speaking you know this so it's it's like a scam and so like they'll be very highly rank, but no one's ever watched or heard of it. I think. But they get quoted in magazines as being the number two podcasts in the
Starting point is 02:30:22 world. But that's really what it is. It's like you've figured out a way, which there's nothing wrong with that. If you want to do that, you can game the system. But it doesn't matter. Like, what is, what are you doing? Like, are you doing something that you're putting it? Like, I don't talk to anybody that I'm not interested in talking to. That's it. It's the only reason why
Starting point is 02:30:40 I do this. I talk to people that I think will be fun and I look forward to it and I still do. That's why I do it. That's why, you know, it continues to work because I do it the same way. I've always done it. I just talk to people that I like to talk to. No, no like, oh, if I got that guy on, he's super famous. Like, that'll get a big rating.
Starting point is 02:30:59 Yeah, there's a lot of famous people that I've said no to because I'm just not interested in them. I'm like, yeah, maybe that'll get a lot of people, but I don't want to do that. What I've found, the single best determinant for when I know that modern wisdom is going well is if I wake up on the morning of the episode and I can't wait for it to be 2 p.m. I'm like fucking yes I get to speak to such and such today and then I finish up and I go I learned something that was fucking cool like that was a good
Starting point is 02:31:26 one two three four hours that was a good day and then there's other days when I've like I don't know I wake up and I just think I should have I should have thought a little bit more about it I'm like I'm looking forward to this but I'm not super fired up and the more that you push away from that instinct with whatever you're doing
Starting point is 02:31:42 because your instinct is ultimately your only competitive advantage that you have because it's the most non-fungible thing that you've got. So Douglas Murray told me this story. It's really fascinating one about this guy. When Douglas was first on the scene, this guy that was the head of the paper that he was at, it accumulated all of the fans and all of the foes that you would in an industry like that over the space of a couple of decades.
Starting point is 02:32:05 And he decides that he's going to release a West End show about the life of Prince Charles in rhyming couplets. I took this as like what okay you know you trust him this guy this illustrious history so and stuff he must know what he's doing and by the opening night interval
Starting point is 02:32:28 there is nobody left in the entire auditorium including the cast everybody's left and this guy is dejected and all of the people all of the enemies that he's accumulated throughout his career they start sharpening the knives and they come out and he's just despondent he's like so so sad
Starting point is 02:32:43 Douglas sees him a couple of weeks later and he goes what were you fucking West End show about the life of Prince Charles
Starting point is 02:32:51 in rhyming couplets what were you thinking he said Douglas I followed my instincts and the thing is instincts they may sometimes lead you wrong
Starting point is 02:33:00 but they're the only thing that's ever led you right and I thought that's such a cool insight about yes you're going to
Starting point is 02:33:10 make some errors if you follow that and maybe you need a team around you or a friend to go I'm not with that one but you just going I think this guy's interesting I think this girl's interesting I think this topic's important and I'm going to talk
Starting point is 02:33:25 about it maybe he just did a bad job like look at Hamilton they did a rap about Alexander Hamilton it's fucking huge okay yes you might have a great idea but the delivery is wrong yeah yeah that's an interesting one totally if you think about Hamilton like Hamilton is a great example that plays gigantic It's on Netflix now
Starting point is 02:33:44 And it keeps on crushing Yeah, it's killing it And it's so preposterous If you think about it And they're talking In modern language About a guy who lived Hundreds of years ago
Starting point is 02:33:55 Like that doesn't even make any sense They have black people Playing white people Like this is gonna be weird It's great It's fucking great Where do you think that drive Comes from
Starting point is 02:34:03 In people You know that that demon thing Is there a common thread That you've seen With the people That have got it? Yeah Most of them are unhappy childhoods
Starting point is 02:34:12 Yeah. It's very rare that someone has like the best in the world demon and their childhood was awesome. It's very rare. Generally speaking, there's something there. Something, some loss, some trauma, something not good. Some lack of what you needed when you were young. You didn't get it. And, you know, and then you're like, I'm going to fucking show everyone. Like Mike Tyson, maybe the best example. that ever like for a period of time the scariest heavyweight that ever walked the face of the planet and redefined the heavyweight division in modern boxing and you know he was 13 years old and customato had adopted him and his his life was hell before that it was hells no love was crime and being around the worst people and then all of a sudden he's in the cat skills with this guy who's a psychologist and one of the greatest boxing coaches of all time and also a hypnotist and is hypnotizing him on a regular basis
Starting point is 02:35:13 when he's 13 years old and teaches him to be the best and so then he's got this I will show you that I'm worth something I will show you that I'm special this one thing that I'm good at and that is separating men from their consciousness finding a way to get a touch with them
Starting point is 02:35:29 finding get close enough and launching bombs and watching them drop and he was the best at it and it was I think the drive to be the best It has to come from some, there's got to be something wrong where you have that fire inside of you. I love thinking about this.
Starting point is 02:35:49 I think it's been the question that I've probably been the most obsessed by since doing the show, the price that people pay to be somebody that you admire. And I think it's just endlessly interesting. So one thing that comes to mind there is, do you know what the fundamental attribution error is? It's like we attribute to other people motive,
Starting point is 02:36:10 for their action, it's like their character, but for us it's situation. So, for instance, I cut you off in traffic because I'm late for work. You cut me off in traffic because you're a dick. Right. So we have this asymmetry in how we judge other people's behaviors as opposed to our own. I think that there's an equivalent here when we think about our parents. So you could call it the fundamental like parental attribution error maybe, which would be we attribute to our parents our shortcomings, but not.
Starting point is 02:36:40 necessarily our strengths. Right. So we're very happy, like modern pop psychology, it's like a right of passage to lay at the feet of our parents. I've got anxious attachment because nobody ever came to look after me. You go, yeah, maybe, but also isn't this the reason that your hypervigilance means that no one ever gets to take advantage of you? It's like, I am unable to relax and chill out because love was always predicated on me performing. It's like, yes, but also it's It's driven you to be an incredibly successful person. And I think we should just be a little bit cautious when laying at the feet of our parents only our shortcomings. They can either have both.
Starting point is 02:37:20 You can either say that my strengths and my shortcomings come from my parents or my strengths and my shortcomings come from my own agency. But you can't say I authored the things that I like about myself, but the things that I don't like about myself came from some past situation. Yes. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Victim mentality, yeah. Yes.
Starting point is 02:37:37 Yeah. Yeah, and also bad things that happened to you and your kid, being bullied. Being bullied is terrible at the time, but it leads many a person to say, I'll fucking show you. Yeah. You know, and then you get this incredible result. But then the thing is, like, are you happy? That's the real dance. The dance is between success and happiness.
Starting point is 02:38:00 And a lot of people have achieved success, but have not achieved happiness. die a loser. Well, that's you sacrificing the thing you want for the thing that's supposed to get it. And that's why, like, okay, what's your definition of success? Right. Interesting question. Would you just want to be the best in the world? Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 02:38:15 Like, that's not bad. That's not a bad. Well, it's this thing we talked about before, too, that just because something's difficult doesn't mean it's good. And there's a lot of things that you do that are very difficult to do. And then you see other people have achieved them. You say, that must be really worthwhile. And then you do it and you realize like, oh, this isn't worth anything. This is just hard to do. This sucks. That's often the case with success
Starting point is 02:38:41 Because if you become incredibly successful and then you have all these haters and, you know, like the guy who wrote the shitty play They come for you and they they want to chop you down and that's part of the game that you're playing and if you don't like that if you don't like that, but then you've gotten trapped in it and you're constantly being attacked and you listen to it and you pay attention to it so you're in you see with successful people you see it really with famous people especially young people they have no history with this and then all sudden it's just thrown at them and then they are both the thing they wanted and something they would never want which is to be like constantly under attack I've thought about how brutal it must be to have the talent but not the Constitution to be able to handle
Starting point is 02:39:30 success and fame so I don't know whether you've been tracking Louis Capaldi, the Scottish singer So there's a great documentary on Netflix You've got to watch it How I'm feeling now It's a bit old now It's like maybe four or five years old Louis Capaldi breaks onto the scene
Starting point is 02:39:44 Unbelievable voice He's been playing working men's pubs around Scotland And is just a fucking phenom Right Billions of streams Billions and billions of plays Arena to a global tour All the rest of it
Starting point is 02:39:57 COVID happens He's back in his mum and dad's house Near Glasgow in Scotland and he's in the hut out the back trying to do the difficult second album and there's the pressure of the world on him now he's got the talent but the pressure from
Starting point is 02:40:13 agencies from record label from fans from himself from his parents from his peers from everybody starts to get on him it weighs on him so heavily that he develops a tick like Tourette's it turns out he's always had Tourette's but the pressure has caused him to
Starting point is 02:40:30 like he can't he can't perform and toward the end of the documentary he goes back out on stage at the o2 in London does the thing walks out on stage and he's still doing this and you've tracked this whole journey this is toward the end and he can't get his words out this is his calling in life this is what he was built to do this is what he was made for and his talent has been taken away from him by the pressure of trying to do the thing not by his inability to do thing and this is such a fucking unique kind of hell I think about that I think about fighters that have performance anxiety that just can't get themselves into
Starting point is 02:41:12 the octagon with the lights on them put them in the training camp that they're sparring does not that same amount of pressure not yet and they've they're unbelievable and Lewis Capaldi did Glastonbury I think two years ago and the same thing happened comes out on stage and basically I can't sing he can't you're hearing these little croaks and squeaks come out of him and then this year he comes back out he's done a ton of mindfulness got his health in order mental health work therapy but but but but but but comes out and just fucking destroys it oh wow dude it's like it makes the hairs on my arm stand up it's so fucking cool wow that's awesome that's a great story that's what i like to see i like to see
Starting point is 02:41:55 someone who fucks their whole life up and gets the back together again i love that i really do because i think that's what people really root for they really root for you to get it back together again what they don't root for is once you're on top like staying on top they like you to fall yeah that's a little too much I mean I think especially with with what most people feel
Starting point is 02:42:17 they want to see a little bit of themselves in that story and they want to see a little bit of struggle right and they also know that they've fucked up their life because everybody's fucked up their life at some point in time redemption yes if this person can be there and lose it and then come back. Maybe I can get my shit together. That's the problem.
Starting point is 02:42:33 As a 42-year-old alcoholic. Yeah, you're not going to be Lewis Capaldi, but... Maybe you are. Maybe you're Oliver Anthony. You know, Churchill didn't get into power until he was 65. Wow. So all of my life up until now would be less than two-thirds of the warm-up set for Churchill starting his thing. Right.
Starting point is 02:42:55 So I just, you never know sort of when this stuff's going to come along. I do love, though, the, the idea of watching somebody climb to the top, lose it and then turn it back around again. I think it's just such a fucking wonderful idea. We all love that, but I think it's because we try to see some of
Starting point is 02:43:11 ourself in someone, which is why we don't like things that are created by a corporation where they put together a band like the monkeys or something like that and fake it. Nepotism, silver spoon baby. We hate all of that. We hate all of that. We hate all the people handed their life on a silver platter.
Starting point is 02:43:28 If it feels like somebody didn't earn it, Yeah. Yeah, I worry about where motivation comes from for people in a way. If you are able to game the system, which people are now, they can like speed run relatability and authenticity, but you don't know if this is some K-pop thing, that's some industry plant style scenario that's just been placed together to try and get this, give you a sense of resonance with this person that doesn't deserve it. They didn't actually struggle in that sort of a way,
Starting point is 02:44:01 but they can construct the narrative that they did. And I think in a world that's become increasingly prefabricated, like people are looking, they're scrutinizing very aggressively, is this person who they say they are? This is the hypocrisy that points out that they're not. Right, right. And that's where you get performative vulnerability. Oh, woe is me.
Starting point is 02:44:20 They pretend to have Tourette, although I'm sure some people do. They pretend they're struggling. Correct. Yeah. Because I need the sympathy. thief out. Yeah. Ugh. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:44:33 And that an interesting. Well, the real problem was when someone pretends and you catch them pretending like that, then you're never going to trust them again. You could fail. You can fail and fuck up. You could think you got it right and you got it wrong and you just, oh, fuck. But if you pretend, if you lie, if you show deception, if you pretend you're something that you're not and they find out like Ellen, you know, she's a nice lady.
Starting point is 02:44:57 She's all dancing. Meanwhile, she's fucking screaming it. people and mean you know that's like oh you were lying that is fucking catnip yeah to people ooh they love it yeah well there's nothing that the internet wants more than to to find somebody that's a hypocrite sure right because the internet is basically one big spot the difference competition yeah you said this thing here you behave this way here right I can compare the two you have fallen short like and the fucking jury comes down and smashes you in the head
Starting point is 02:45:24 it's also because we crave authenticity we wish we had it we We crave it in other people. We want, like, we're all trying to, we're watching all these different people like this guy play golf and that guy play music and watching all these people do all these different things and we're getting something out of it all. There's a reason why you like that thing on Netflix. It's like the, it fuels the human condition. It gives you happiness.
Starting point is 02:45:50 It's like it's some, there's some, in a genuine moment like that, it's like a very special element that it adds to your life. we crave that and it's hard to know what's real and what's not real that's why people get mad at me when I say like AI music oh I know I know it's not real I still like it but I don't like it the same way I like listening to Johnny Cash thing hurt you know what I mean it's like there's an authenticity to that there's a real thing to that's like it's very tangible it's different there's an upper bound on it I certainly think I'm friends with a lot of musicians and one of the issues
Starting point is 02:46:29 I think that they have with the AI revolution apart from the fact that like they're coming for our jobs which is obvious is that learning a musical instrument is really fucking hard
Starting point is 02:46:38 and it takes a very long time I think that the revolution for podcasting has made it fucking fantastic for people to feel less lonely and have exposure to conversations
Starting point is 02:46:50 and information they never would have done but anybody that sticks a microphone in front of them can record a podcast It may be a totally shit podcast, but if you give me a guitar,
Starting point is 02:47:02 I can't make notes come out of it. So the bar that you need to get over to just be acceptably proficient, enough to be able to do, to have the conversation, right? Everybody does what is equivalent of a podcast. Everybody that has never recorded a podcast has had a great conversation over dinner and gone,
Starting point is 02:47:17 dude, if we recorded that, that would have got millions of plays on YouTube. So everyone is a little bit closer to this. And I think that one of the issues that the music industry or musicians within the industry have, is that AI feels like it's allowing people to leapfrog the first very long, very boring, very grindy stage
Starting point is 02:47:36 of, well, this is where your fucking fingers need to go on the saxophone. Or this is how you need to pick the strings in order to make the sound come out of the guitar. Yeah. And if you leapfrog it, that feels like a little bit like a technology-enabled nepotism in a way. You've got yourself toward the end.
Starting point is 02:47:52 You shouldn't be able to make this. This is like a guarded and highly invested. I mean, you guys see this in comedy. In comedy, you're like, dude, until you're eight, like the first seven years, like, they're just you earning your keep, and then you're eight, whatever it is. Like, it's a thousand shows. And once you've done a thousand spots,
Starting point is 02:48:07 then you can say that you've started doing comedy or whatever it is. For podcasting, I think it's like 150 episodes. Before anyone that asks me, like, I'm beginning my podcast and what's your advice? And I'm like, once episode 150 starts, you have begun doing a podcast. Up until then, it's basically a warm-up set. And I think with music, because it's such a high, investment that people need to have at the very, very beginning, this sense that there is a shortcut that allows people who haven't earned their way to get there. It would be like if you
Starting point is 02:48:36 were using AI to write comedy sets. Yeah, and I think you're correct, but I also think that's probably what Lyons felt when people invented guns. Like, this is bullshit. I've been chasing you motherfuckers down and eating you for thousands of years. Now all of a sudden you just squeeze your little finger and I die instantaneously. That's bullshit. It's coming. It's coming. It's coming in all forms of entertainment. It's going to, they've figured out what you like.
Starting point is 02:49:03 They've got a giant catalog of billions of hours of human beings paying attention to things. And it's coming. It's coming. It's going to overwhelm you. And it's going to be indiscernible from reality eventually. It's going to be something that you've physically experience as well as visual and audio. You're going to have the whole experience. We'd better enjoy ourselves while we can.
Starting point is 02:49:24 Yeah, have fun while you can. Chris, I appreciate you very much It's always awesome talking to you Your podcast is excellent Tell everybody where they can get it Where they can find you Modern Wisdom on Apple Podcasts and Spotify Chris Williamson on YouTube
Starting point is 02:49:38 Et cetera et cetera I appreciate the fuck out of you man I appreciate the fuck out of you too brother It's always good talking about it's always fun Goodbye everybody Peace Thank you.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.