The Joe Rogan Experience - #2499 - Marcus King
Episode Date: May 14, 2026Marcus King is the lead singer, guitarist, and founder of The Marcus King Band. His most recent album is “Darling Blue.” https://marcusking.komi.iowww.youtube.com/@RealMarcusKingwww.marcuskingoff...icial.com Perplexity: Download the app or ask Perplexity anything at https://pplx.ai/rogan. Get a free welcome kit with your first subscription of AG1 at https://drinkag1.com/joerogan onX Offroad: Try onX Offroad for 50% off- go to https://onXmaps.com/joerogan Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Joe Rogan podcast, check it out.
The Joe Rogan Experience.
Train by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day.
Good to see you, brother.
What's happening?
It's crazy to be here.
It's crazy to have you here, man.
And thank you so much for the guitar.
That's the doper shit that anybody's ever given me.
Oh, man, I hope you like it.
I'm sure I like it.
I just can't play.
And I would love to learn how to play, but I know my brain.
And I can't give my brain another thing to do.
You've got a lot.
Well, the problem is I get obsessed with things.
Me too.
I'm sure.
You can't get as good as you got without getting obsessed.
Are you like this?
Like, I don't like doing things I'm not good at.
I love doing things I'm not good at, to get good at them.
Right.
But it's just, it's not leisurely to me to play golf.
Like, I can't enjoy it because I'm bad at it.
Well, you'll enjoy it if you get good at it.
But the problem is to get good at it, then you've got to get obsessed.
Yeah.
And then you've got to take less.
Like, Jamie's got a fucking virtual reality thing in the back where he wax balls every day.
He's a hell of it.
He's obsessive.
He's recovering from hitting today.
Sweating.
Wow.
My drummer's a really good golfer.
Golf is one of those things that if you get into that, man, that's your whole fucking day.
That's eight hours.
Three or four days a week all the road.
When I was living in Boston, I noticed that the comedians that really got into golf, their career kind of stalled.
Because they were just playing golf all day, having fun, drinking, and then they'd go to the club at night.
But they weren't writing any new jokes.
They weren't obsessing on their career.
They kind of stalled out a little.
When I still drank, I really liked golfing.
And then I quit drinking.
I was like, I don't really like this.
When did you quit drinking?
Well, I quit a few times, but most recent time was like a year and a half ago.
Were you quitting because you were just off the rails or like you got to get your health in order?
It was kind of a combo deal, you know.
Like when I met my wife, at that point I thought that I could drink like a gentleman.
And it just never really worked out that way.
There was just something in me that just wanted to completely burn my life to the ground every time I drank.
A real destructive quality.
Ooh, that's not good.
Yeah.
Yeah, fortunately, I never had that.
But that is a thing.
I've seen that.
What is that?
I think it's
I think a lot of it is repressed emotions
and that's where they find you
when your brain is
in the off switch.
Yeah.
They go, hey, Marcus.
Yeah, man.
Let's get those problems out.
It seduces me.
It's like you don't need anybody.
Fuck everybody.
That woman that married you,
you don't want her.
I think sometimes people do that
to almost like save themselves from heartbreak sometimes.
You kind of like wreck it yourself.
It's like making fun of yourself before anyone else can.
Right.
It's like that thing.
Yeah, right.
Like you just assume it's going to go bad eventually.
Let's get this fucking train on the tracks right now.
Crack, poor, break.
Yeah.
That was kind of my, you know, that was my approach for a while.
I just, I don't know, man, I was just, I didn't want to feel anything.
So that was where it would always end up.
And I remember even asking my wife, like, a couple years ago, we opened up for the Avitt brothers in Raleigh, North Carolina.
And at that point, I'd been sober for like six months.
And it's like, I really think I can handle it.
And then it got two, it's like the famous last words, like I chucked a jumbo white claw.
I started with a jumbo white claw
and I just got completely hammered, blacked out
pissed my wife off so bad
like I woke up and I was at our friend's house
still like on the floor
and she left in my bus
and like my wallet
everything was on the bus
I had no identification she was like
you can fucking figure it out man
wow and the bus
turn around come got me
but yeah she doesn't play any games
so did you stop then
Yeah, I did.
Also one night.
Yeah, I had one night off the leash and I realized I couldn't handle it.
You know, there's just some kind of quality in me that's like I can't stop, you know.
And maybe someday I'll find that.
It's like I got to get right in here, you know, and in here with myself before I can really consider that again.
I quit drinking for about eight months
just because I realized I just wasn't feeling good
I was doing it because of the club
I was at the club every night
and you know
it's like one night someone would say
hey let's do shots I'll do a shot
I want to be you know
cordial hang out with everybody
sense of community let's all do it together
come on boys and then you know
two drinks three drinks
go home get up feel like shit
work out, do it again the next day, feel even shittier the next day.
And it's like, God damn, I got to take some time off.
So I took about eight months off.
I think, I'm not exactly sure how much time I took off.
And then I had like a drink with dinner one night.
And I said, this is all right.
And so since then I've never gotten drunk.
I've only had a drink or two.
Yeah.
You know, so I've managed it.
But I was not an alcoholic.
I was just realizing that all this fun was,
it was messing up the rest of my time.
I was like,
there's an expression that when you're drinking,
like the,
you're taking a loan out on the good times that you could have had
for some good times that you can have right now.
Wow.
And then you've got to pay it back.
Yeah, with interest.
Yeah.
Well, physically,
the problem is physically for me.
It just wasn't worth it.
I just,
I would be working out at the gym going,
why am I doing this?
I keep feeling like shit.
And every time I'm working out,
I'm pushing through all this, you know,
toxic shit that I poured down my throat the night before,
and my body's recovering from it,
so I feel tired and drain.
And then my brain wasn't working as well, you know?
That's what it was for me.
It was like the anxiety and just like the dopamine depletion.
And just feeling just completely just like,
And I'm somebody who's already struggling with, like, that's why I drink in the first place.
It's like my mental issues and just anxiety and depression.
And then it would just kind of hit me tenfold the next day.
It's always interesting to me.
Someone with anxiety chooses a path in life, like live performing.
Yeah.
Because if it's anything that gives people anxiety, it's live performing.
And you're really good at it.
Which is crazy.
It's like, you know, you're picking this thing that you're really good at,
but that gives a lot of people anxiety and you have anxiety to begin with.
Yeah.
I mean, it's like there's something to that.
It's like Dan Soder, I always quote him on this.
He's like, you know, I go around each night, like,
craving the approval of like thousands of people a night.
You're like, you didn't think I was doing that because things went well growing up.
Right.
Like, I'm fucked up.
I need all these people to tell me I'm doing a good job.
But I think the idea is that eventually you channel that.
And when you get yourself together, the idea, some people have this idea that if you ever get yourself together somewhat.
I don't think anybody ever gets totally together.
But you get yourself together somewhat.
And then you don't do it for the approval of it.
You do it for the love of the art of it, the thing.
and bringing the thing to people
and getting enjoyment out of having
these people have a good time.
I think that can be done.
I think you can shift your focus from
I just want these people's love
to I want to give them love.
I want everyone have a good time.
You know, I want to be up there
just fucking having a good time.
They're having a good time.
We all have a good time together.
I make their lives feel better for a brief moment.
I feel better.
Everybody's better off.
And that's the shit, man.
That's what I crave.
And I mean, that's why, like, we just did a run of Texas Hockey Talks,
which that was kind of the goal,
was just to get everybody in these sweaty rooms
just for the purpose of just, like, enjoying music again,
getting back to these sticky floors.
Yeah.
Well, you reached out to me because we were talking on the podcast
about how rock and roll is kind of dead.
And you said, if that fucking rock and roll ain't dead, come on.
And I was like, all right, well,
does anybody that can tell me that rock and roll is not dead?
It's Marcus King.
Man.
Yeah, I was, my boy, Ben Jernigan, he told me, he was like, you should text Joe.
Because I'm going to have a listener.
I was like, you think I should say something?
He's like, yeah, fuck and tell him, rock and roll ain't dead.
Man, it's here tonight, Green Hall.
Well, it's not dead, but it's different.
And a lot of the rock that's out now that's doing really well is like a southern-inspired rock,
which is interesting.
There's like a southern, almost country-like rock,
like bluesy country rock,
you know, red clay strays, like that kind of shit.
They're doing great.
It's like there's a lot of that out there, you know?
Like people are digging that kind of music,
but there's just, you know, when I talk about like rock,
I mean, like when I was in high school,
it was all Van Halen, ACDC, like that.
There was so many big rock and roll.
bands, the stones, you know, there was just so much of that out there. And it's odd that there's not a
lot of big bands like that anymore. I think it's coming back around. God, I hope so. It doesn't
make sense to me because like the classic rock is still. Like we're in the green room and Freebird
comes on, still everybody's going nuts. I mean, you know, I mean, there's classics. Another
Southern rock and roll band, Leonard Skinner.
But there's still like a love of that kind of music.
But it's just, it's weird that it kind of, you know,
you just didn't, I don't know what happened.
Well, it's interesting how cyclical music industry can be.
I feel like for the first time in the last 10 years,
like since Urban Cowboy came out, like,
because I mean, for the last 10 years,
I've been going to L.A. with a cowboy hat on.
and I always get the same shit like,
where do you want to park your horse?
You know, like, what are you up to, cowboy?
People are just talking shit.
But now I go out there and everybody's got a cowboy hat on.
Really?
It's like chic.
Yeah.
That's interesting.
It's like in vogue, like the cowboy thing.
Which makes you not want to wear a cowboy hat.
Well, you know, it's just, I think rock and roll is kind of having a similar resurgence.
God, I hope so.
I hope so.
you know i mean
there's got to be
people out there that still love it
and i just don't
i mean i just don't understand
how there's no new big bands like that
well it's interesting
you know i was actually
i was in the gym watching
um
led zeppelin at royal arbor hall
oh wow
and i was like this is a fucking jam band
they're jamming
you know
and i'm like it just like the almond brothers band
was a jam band
band. They had guidelines, and that's kind of how we do our show. Like, we have songs that we're
playing just to get to that improvisational section where we can just kind of, you know, work with
the chemistry of the crowd and each other on stage. And it's just, it's interesting to me,
like, the way things have become subdivided, you know? It's like, you're not a jam band
unless it's, like, widespread or, like, fish or, like, the dead or something like that. But, like,
Zeppler was a fucking jam band.
Yeah, in a lot of ways.
Yeah.
Especially when they were performing live.
Yeah.
Yeah.
What is that band that sounds like Zeppelin?
Greta Van Fleet.
Yeah.
Grat of Man Fleet.
They're fucking great.
They are great.
It's weird.
It's weird because they sound so much like Zeppelin, but they're really good.
So, like, I give them a pass.
They get a pass from me.
I mean, they're my boys.
I really...
I really like those dudes.
Like, we used to party together a bunch.
They live in Nashville.
And the guitar player, Jake, he's just the sweetest guy.
Like, he gave me a housewarming gift.
He's, like, really into pirate stuff.
Pirate stuff.
Yeah.
He's really into piracy.
And he gave me, like, like a musket pistol.
Oh, wow.
Like what a pirate would have carried around.
A real one?
Yeah.
So, like, from the olden day?
Yeah.
Oh shit, that's got to be worth a lot of fucking money.
Yeah.
I mean, they're doing pretty well.
Wow.
What is an old musket pistol run?
How much can you get one of them for?
See if you're going to find something, Jamie.
Yeah, an old musket pistol.
You know, when the conquistadors took over Mexico, they had 12 of those.
That's it.
Twelve guns.
Twelve musket pistols.
Wow.
Yeah, I looked that up on perplexity.
I was diving deep.
Now how the fuck Mexico became Spanish?
Yeah.
You know, like, what happened?
How did it, like, they lost like a hundred indigenous languages at least.
Wow.
It's kind of crazy.
But here it is.
What?
You can get one from $195 bucks?
Modern reproduction.
Oh, reproductions.
What about a real one?
Antique ones.
17th century Barbie Wars antique pirate flintlocked pistol recently sold for $416.
That's it?
Yeah.
That seems crazy.
That seems crazy.
It's pretty good for a gift budget.
I'd say it looks based on how many reproductions
and what you just said, they're being 12 back then.
They might not be that many of them that exist.
They have to make reproductions.
But if this says antique pirate era muskets,
and it said it's sold for $416 bucks from the 17th century.
Maybe it sucks.
Maybe it's a bad one.
But it's for the 1600s, and it's all they could get.
But it's for the 1600s,
Did it sold for $416?
Yeah, I'll try to look it up.
Can you see what those look like?
We'll see if we can get one.
We should get one and put it on the wall.
Oh, shit, look at that one.
How much is that one?
I think that's the one that's sold for $400.
That says $155.
What?
That's crazy.
How are they so cheap?
There's the ones for $416.
God, that seems like they should be almost priceless.
I mean, this is from the fucking 1600s, and it's sold for 400 bucks?
That one sold for 200 bucks?
Wow.
Just go pick them up.
There's a store in Austin.
I bet they've got a bunch of bunch of weird shit like this.
Yeah.
Really?
I went to the store.
They've got a bunch of weird shit like this.
They must have it.
They would have to have them if they're only 300 bucks, I guess, I would say.
And all kinds of armor and guns and cannons and weird shit.
What?
What place is this?
It's called like Collectors.
I'll look it up real quick.
There's something weird about those dudes who, like, want to recreate wars.
Yeah.
That's an odd thing.
That's a very odd thing.
Yeah.
I mean, I've got the facial era of a civil war in a red actor, but that's about as close as I get.
Oh, wow.
That's in Austin?
Yeah.
No shit.
Well, that's pretty fucking dope.
Collectors crossroads.
It popped in there one day to see what it was about.
And they have a little musket pistols?
They got all kinds of shit
I wonder how do you know
Crossbows
Swords
Crossbow is just a shitty gun
I'm not a fan
What if it was a pirate's crossbows
Yeah I guess
It's kind of cool
But it's just
It is weird
That we're really into like old
Like you know
It's interesting
You're holding something
That's a piece of history
And what history is like
At the time
This was the shit
Like at the time, this was like the coolest thing you can get.
Like 400 years ago, if you wanted to kill somebody, this was the way to do it.
You had to get one of these things, which is very odd.
Yeah.
Which is very odd that...
Oh, look at all this stuff.
I don't know if it was George Washington shit there, but they had...
That's what it looks like it would be.
George Washington swords?
I don't know.
We should get one of those for Shane.
He's a big George Washington fan.
There is a lot.
There is a lot.
Look at that.
That's crazy.
Yeah, I mean, I don't even know what that.
That's a weird one.
Look at the handle on that fucker.
This is from Middle East, Central Asia.
It could be...
Oh, look, it's got like a dragon mouth on the back of it.
That's pretty sweet.
Wow.
Huh.
All right, so...
We need one of those.
All right.
Let's take a road trip, Jamie.
We should probably do it before this episode comes out.
I'll grab it tonight.
Yeah, we need to go down there today before this episode go.
We'd fuck up their business.
You go there, it's empty.
All these dorks have fucking armor all over their house now.
It's just people that are really into like the old wars and recreating old wars, I always want to know like what's wrong with you, like what happened to you?
Yeah, it's, um, I grew up with a kid that was like that, that was obsessed with like everything Army Navy.
But he, his father was in the military, but he had never gone into the military.
They wouldn't, they wouldn't accept him.
Why?
I don't know.
I don't think he could ever pass the military.
physical. He was a bigger dude.
Oh, okay. His name was Maurice.
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They say that 77% of American kids can't pass the physical.
Do you go into the military?
I believe it, man.
Just based on my own experience, like, I remember the presidential fitness test,
like, that's a bad memory of mine just hanging on the pull-up bar in front of all my classmates
and not been able to do one.
pull-up, just hanging there.
What is the presidential fitness test?
It's something they did when I was a kid.
It's like they wanted to make sure that you could do like 10 push-ups or however many
pull-ups or whatever.
How many pull-ups do you have to do for the presidential fitness test?
There's a different standard, but they literally, this was going on last week, they just
started it up again.
Donald Trump had like Rice and DeShambo in the White House with a couple guys, Gary Player and
the golfers?
Well, they had kids in there also.
That's funny.
It's funny because I'd go, hey, why don't you do it?
Let me see you do it shit up, bro.
22 push-ups for a 10-year-old.
22 push-ups.
That's a lot.
Yeah, 45 curl-ups.
That's crazy.
Six pull-ups, that's a lot.
What's a curl-up?
With the other way, like biceps, hands, you know, pull up with your hands.
45?
Yeah.
Come on.
That's crazy.
Wait a minute.
And an eight-minute mile?
Come on, is that really?
It says six pull-ups or 45 curl-ups.
But curl-ups aren't that much easier than pull-ups, are they?
I remember when I was 10, they were.
What?
But that's just being a 10-year-old.
Because your body, you're only away like 60.
You know, I don't know.
Kids are lighter than I am.
I was heavier than most.
I was going to say, there are different standards.
I remember kids.
But, bro, 45 is crazy.
That seems...
It seems excessive.
That seems like a lot of reps.
I don't even understand how that's...
possible that that's the standard?
I don't think I could do that.
Actually, I think those are sit-ups.
It's calling it a curl-up because here it says it measures a dominole-string.
Oh, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, sit-ups.
Okay.
Why are they calling it curl-ups?
Because it was like 45 chin-ups.
So it's like there's pull-ups and chin-ups.
Which one's a pull-up?
Which one's a chin-up?
Pull-up hands over.
Okay, and then chin-up is the same.
That's what I remember.
45 of those would be bonkers.
That's crazy.
I can't do that.
That's because like six pull-ups I could do.
Easy.
But 45, but 45 sit-ups is still hard.
That's hard too.
Well, that's a lot.
It's a standard.
Huh.
Not every kid's there.
That seems like a lot of kids wouldn't be there for 45 setups.
Yep.
What are they trying to do?
What are they doing to us, too?
I would fail not too, so they couldn't draft me.
These motherfuckers are talking about drafting people.
I was listening to Tim Dillon's show, and he was saying that, see if this is true,
or that Palantir thinks that we should reintroduce conscription,
that kids should start getting drafted again into military
and they should have mandatory military experience for kids?
I just don't understand why anybody would want to support that.
That sounds crazy.
Especially after this Iran war,
where everybody's like, why the fuck are we in Iran?
And if you signed up for that, that sounds nuts.
Is that real?
Palantir's publicly called for the U.S. to move away from an all-
volunteer military and towards some form of universal national service that many observers interpret
as reintroducing a draft or conscription.
Yeah, Tim got into this manifesto that I haven't looked into this yet.
Why the fuck would a tech company be saying that we need to move towards a universal
national military service?
How about fuck you?
How about fuck you, you go?
Because you know none of these tech dorks that are running these companies, they're not doing it.
Like, what are you talking about?
Yeah.
Throwing meat into the machine.
Right.
Throwing people's children into these unnecessary wars.
Fuck you.
It's scary.
It's very scary.
It's scary that they would, like, how about let's figure out a way to use your technology so there's no more wars.
Wouldn't that be a better goal?
Right.
Instead of getting kids to fucking learn how to go shoot people they don't know.
Sure.
because someone tells you to.
And how many of these, out of all the wars that we've been in since World War II,
is it zero that made sense?
I think it's zero.
I don't think there's one war that we've been in since World War II
that makes any fucking sense at all.
Sure.
And they're like, I think the solution is,
we need more people to be forced into it.
I mean, what would a draft look like in today's culture?
I mean, like with inclusion, would it be, like,
like anybody at 18 years old
give me drafted or do you think it would still be
just able-bodied young men?
That's a good question.
You know,
I'm for people doing whatever they want
but when it comes to like
combat, you're going to draft women.
That would be fucking insane.
That would be insane.
So are you not going to, are you going to be sexist?
Are you going to, yeah, are you going to
go?
inclusion and say everybody has to do it well then that'll be good for America
because most people would say get the fuck out of here there's not a chance in hell we're
doing that right I just don't understand how people that aren't elected officials that
essentially just run a tech company would think it's a good idea to call for
National Military Service I've heard other people say that too I've heard like
podcasters and weird tech people say it's a good idea and I don't know what the
fuck they're thinking I think they should have to go over there and experience war
and then come back and see if you really think the same thing.
Sure.
I buy that.
I mean,
or at least go on like a USO tour or something.
Go with Jeffrey Ross.
Let's see what it's about, you know?
Well, then you're just going to meet people that are happy to see you.
You need to actually see combat.
I just don't get why we're even listening to them.
You make software.
Keep doing that.
Yeah, it's interesting that they don't even have the, like,
Why would they say that?
No, it doesn't sound good.
And it's also, they make weird surveillance software that a lot of people are like,
but how much are you surveillian, how much power do you have?
Like, Tim Dillon went pretty deep on it on the show, which is I can't recommend enough.
If you did not listen to a Tim Dillon show, you're fucking up.
It's the funniest fucking take on all the chaos that's going on in the world.
I don't think there's anybody better right now.
His podcast is fucking phenomenal.
It's my must listen to podcasts every week.
Yep. It's so good.
I just listen, but if you watch it, it's even more ridiculous.
He did this thing about them giving OZempic to babies.
Oh, it was so funny. It was so ridiculous.
My dad did Ozimic, and he said, man, you know, like, you can eat through that.
He's like, you can just keep going on. I mean, you won't feel great.
But, you know, it curbs your appetite, but you can get it down.
Well, Tim talked about it.
because he did it.
And he said it didn't just stop his desire for food.
It stopped his desire for everything, which I've heard.
So there's some people that think there's some good in these GLP ones for addiction
because it curbs whatever that is as well.
So it can help people with all kinds of addictions, too, not just like food addictions, alcohol, but gambling.
Like weird stuff.
I heard that.
Yeah.
I did I actually I was doing it for a minute and it was around the time that I was like one of the times I was trying to quit drinking and I was working on a record and I was trying it out and it actually curved my desire for a drink yeah yeah what else did it do
gave me really bad stomach cramps yeah and also I mean that was like before I really I really I just I don't know
At that time of my life, I just wasn't really concerned about what I put in my body, you know.
I say that while I'm smoking a cigarette, but, you know.
But, dude, you're smoking natural spirits.
I think those are safe and effective.
Yeah.
You know, additive-free.
Yeah.
I just, I always wonder about these things when things come along to give people an easy fix.
Like, okay, maybe it works, or maybe there's some sort of side effect that's,
going to fuck you up for the rest of your life. And for some people there is. I mean, some people
are experiencing all kinds of wild side effects. Stomach paralysis is one of them. Brian Simpson got
pancreatitis from it. Really? Mm-hmm. Yeah, he was sick in bed for like two weeks. It
fucked him up. Yeah. Well, yeah, I mean, the long-term effects, like you just have no idea,
because it's new. Mm-hmm. You know? I've also heard that the problem is the dosages are too high.
And when you go into a doctor, they give you a standard dosage and the way to do it, some people feel is to make a much smaller dose than what they're prescribing.
And that that's what you need.
You just need a little bit of a curb to it, not like a complete cessation of all desire to eat.
Right.
Getting to that high dosage really fast could probably be harmful.
Or have some fucking discipline.
Yeah.
How about try that out?
How about try out?
Don't eat as much.
Same thing.
Right.
Except this way it's not going to kill your body or kill your stomach or make you go blind or what are the side effects.
Because there's a lot of lawsuits.
There's a shit ton of lawsuits that are coming down the pipe because I think people have gone blind.
I think I might have made that up.
Check that.
But this is wild lawsuits.
Yeah.
People are claiming bad.
side effects from this stuff, which, you know, makes sense.
It's medication.
People vary biologically.
Can cause.
Permanent blindness.
Yeah.
In one eye.
Oh, well, you know, you got your other guy and now you got a six-pack.
Eye stroke.
Eye stroke.
Oh, boy.
Wow.
Ooh.
Non-artoritic interior ischemic optic neuropathy.
I don't think I said that right.
sudden painless and often permanent blindness in one eye.
Wow.
Eyesbrook sounds like a punk band.
It does.
Side effects.
Acute pancreatitis.
That's what Brian got.
Galbladder problems.
Gastroporesis.
Stomach paralysis.
Bowel obstructions and potential thyroid tumors.
Hmm.
Mild GI issues are common.
These severe complications require immediate medical attention.
attention often occurring more frequently at higher doses.
Yeah, that's what they're saying.
It's apparently when you're getting it from a pharmaceutical drug company, you're getting it.
This is the argument for compounding pharmacies, apparently.
And then there's a new one that's coming out.
What is it called retuitide?
Retro to retitutide.
Retroetide.
And this one is supposed to be better because it doesn't cause muscle loss and it doesn't cause bone density loss.
and it's supposed to be more effective.
Investigational.
I mean, I don't know that.
I just typed in red at true time.
Isn't that a weird word, investigational?
Once weekly injectable triple agonist medication,
targeting GLP1, GIP, and glucogen receptors,
developed by Eli Lilly,
showing unprecedented weight loss results of up to 24% in phase two trials.
They say that this is going to be a trillion-dollar medication.
vacation.
Or have some fucking discipline.
Yeah.
Go to the gym.
Eat better.
Be healthy.
Do what Jelly Roll did.
Yeah.
You know, jelly roll was at the club last night.
He's down 300 pounds.
That's fucking nuts.
He runs like five miles a day.
He works out every day.
He looks fantastic.
He looks like a different person.
It's like I knew him when he was like 500 pounds.
Now I know him when he's in the twos.
It's like he.
He's a different human.
He looks different.
I know it's still Jellyroll, but it looks like a completely different man.
It's nuts.
I remember when we did, I was in the house band for Kill Tony at the Garden,
and Jelly came out and did New York, New York.
Yeah, I was there.
That's got to be a custom suit.
I was like, that's a big suit.
Yeah.
And then the next time I saw him, he was like he is now.
And I may help, like, what I did because I have an appetite, you know.
Like what I do now, like I'm basically doing like a keto diet because I like to eat a lot of whatever it is.
Me too.
So if it's like a big salad, you know, or whatever.
But I'm down like 25 pounds doing that.
Oh, that's nice.
Yeah.
Are you doing this with the help of a nutritionist?
Are you just doing it on your own?
Just doing it on my own.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You're laughing.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, you know, it's just I've tried a few different routes, man.
I've been, you know, husky since I was a kid and shopping in the husky department at Kmart, you know.
Is this, do you think it's a genetic thing?
Do you think it's the way you ate as a child?
What do you think?
I think psychological, a lot of it, it was like the only thing I had control of as a child is, like, food.
It was like, and a scarcity mindset as well.
Yeah.
Just like the way that I, you know, think about food is just, you know,
probably not the healthiest.
So for me, it's just easier to say, like, I don't eat these things.
Because, like, if I eat bread or something like that, it just hurts my stomach now, you know.
And I just, I can feel, like, the difference when I don't eat it.
You know, I just feel better.
Oh, 100%.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And once you get your body working on ketones, too, the thing is you just, your brain functions better.
That's one of the more interesting things.
This is why people take things like ketone, what is it, ketone IQ?
That stuff's great.
Like you just down one of those little shots and it puts you into ketosis temporarily.
Oh, really?
Yeah, they're exogenous ketones.
I think the guy who just invented those just died.
He was also a guy that worked for Balco Labs.
He developed the clear, that shit that Barry Bonds took, the steroids.
So this guy was a chemist.
He was a scientist.
I think someone, oh, I think Chris Bell,
Chris Bell or Mark, I think it was Mark Bell,
just posted about it on his Instagram page
that this guy just died.
This guy was like one of America's great chemists
and he developed a lot of these things,
including exogenous ketones, according to Mark.
But that's one of the things that I noticed
when I went into, when I did the carnivore diet,
is that immediately my brain just started functioning better.
Which is what I try to eat most of the time.
Like this morning, I ate sausage and eggs and sausage from an animal that I shot.
I like to do that.
I eat like a sable.
This is the guy.
So this is Mark's Instagram.
The greatest chemist of our time of possibly any other.
Patrick Arnold is dead.
Patrick Arnold's the guy who made the cream and the clear for the Bonds and McGuire.
Oh, that Bonds and McGuire blasted home runs off of supposedly.
In addition to those incredible inventions,
mentions he also brought exogenous ketones to the market.
What happened to that guy?
How did he die?
That's an interesting picture to put up.
Yeah.
Looks like Oswald looking at Jack Ruby.
He looks healthy.
I want to know how he died.
I wonder how old that picture was.
Organic chemists.
Andresstein Dion, too.
Oh, he had all those pro, what are those pro hormones or whatever those things were,
the people were taken that weren't totally steroids, but they were kind of steroid-like.
How did he die? Does it say?
He died at 60.
Hmm.
Maybe he's experimenting on himself.
Why don't just put in cause of death?
I know it should come up.
You would think a guy who's working on like performance and fitness.
Does it say?
When you click on what happened to David Arnold.
Somebody else.
Oh, Patrick Arnold.
Huh.
So it just doesn't say how he died?
Nope.
And it just happens.
So there's not a lot of it.
Oh, okay.
So it hasn't been released yet.
Yeah.
It doesn't say.
Made a lot of roids.
You got to wonder.
The dude is, like, doing so much work in anabolic steroids.
He worked for Balco.
They were the ones that were making undetectable steroids.
Do you know about that whole story?
This is back in the, was it in the 90s, Jamie?
the McGuire
around 2000
so they developed
steroids that were undetectable
so when they would test for steroids
what they would do is they would take
because when I guess the way it works
is when they're doing a steroid test they're looking
for very specific molecules
so they inventing a molecule
that had like additional things attached to it
where it wouldn't show up
I'll probably butchering that
but essentially they were undetectable steroids
one of them was called the clear
And the guy who ran their lab was called Balco Laboratories.
There was this guy, Victor Conti, who eventually went to jail for that.
And then when he, I don't know why he went to jail, but he got out and then became an anti-steroid sort of activist.
And he was, I don't know what to say activist, but he was essentially he was ratting people out and saying that this guy's probably doing steroids and this is how he's doing it.
And then a lot of athletes were using his company to use steroid.
free performance enhancing supplements
that were legal. So he would show you what's
legal and how to do it. He knew a lot
about it because he did the illegal stuff too.
Interesting. Yeah.
I've gotten a couple
steroid shots before a show. Like if my voice
goes out. Like what kind? Is it like a cortisone?
I guess that's what it is.
It's like that one that they're shooting your ass,
cheek. Hmm.
What does that do like for your voice?
When your voice goes? It just brings you back.
Man, it's got to be rough.
when a fucking singer loses their voice.
Yeah, I mean, people have asked me before, like, what my warm-up routine is, and, like, I've never had one.
Few cigarettes.
A couple cigarettes. It used to be shot of whiskey.
If I was really in dire straits, I would take, like, a handful of sugar-free gummy bears
and put boiling water on that.
Really?
And then the gummy bears would, like, coat my throat.
Huh.
Like, honey, ginger, lemon.
Yeah.
Hot water and lemon is a really good.
good one. There's something about that that eases.
But really, it's like time off is what fucks my voice up more than anything.
Time off. Yeah. Really? Oh, so like your vocal cords get out of shape.
Interesting. Because it's hard to like keep them up, you know? Right. Unless you're like going in your
garage and screaming for two hours a night, you know. That's crazy. I never thought about it like
that. Like your vocal cords are essentially a muscle like any other and they develop over time and you
get endurance. That makes sense.
Yeah, so like the pandemic was like the first time that a lot of us like had any extended amount of time off from the road.
And we all started noticing like, or at least me, like I came back like hurting a little bit.
Oh, that makes sense.
I saw Guns and Roses in Athens, Greece.
And Axel Rose, you know, has that crazy singing style.
Yeah.
It's like a, like, and that has to be fucking hell on your voice.
voice and you know the show was amazing but his voice is not the same it's just there's no way it can be
um i know stephen tyler like he's back is he yeah so he quit for a while because he was like
i can't sing and then he healed up and now he's back again i don't know exactly what he did but
i i played with him back in january and like the boys really boy's back no shit that's fucking
great singing his ass off that's that's
That's fucking great.
I love to hear that.
I saw the Stones a couple years ago at Circuit of the Americas, and Mick Jagger can still wail.
He can still wail.
That was a great fucking show, almost surreal.
He's got a lot of energy, too, man.
So much energy.
It's crazy.
He has two trailer trucks that he brings with them that are just gym equipment.
Wow.
Everywhere they go.
Two big-ass trailer trucks just fill with gym equipment.
They say he works out seven days a week.
That's awesome.
And he's 180,000 years old.
He's still up there.
And then Keith Richards' opposite approach.
Whiskey, cocaine, LSD.
No problems.
Still there, too.
So it's like, find something you love and stick with it.
I know.
It's so funny.
Like, it makes me thinking, like, we went out with Willie a few times.
And Willie's got, like, most artists, he's got, like, 18 tractor trailers back there.
But I don't know if you've been to a Willie Nelson show recently.
It's like, there's nothing on the stage.
I'm like, what's in all these fucking trucks?
I never really got to the bottom of that.
But there's like seven or eight truck drivers back there.
It's all weed.
It must be all weed or something.
He'd go in and it's all growlites and plants and shit.
He's got that drink that they sell.
Oh, yeah.
He's got that weed drink.
Willie's Remedy.
Yeah, and Ron White brought some to the green room of the Comedy Mothership.
And someone was saying, oh, you can't get it.
That's not real.
I'm like, it's real as fuck, dude.
That stuff's very legit.
It's real.
Yeah.
It's very, I don't know what the rules are, the laws are.
It feels like it's starting to become like a gray area.
It should be.
I mean, they just made it schedule three.
Okay.
So what that means is, and I mean, listen, it's a great step in the right direction.
I'm very happy that the president did that.
It really should be regulated the same way alcohol is.
It should be for adult use, 21 and older.
It shouldn't be maybe, I wonder what the issue.
Well, I'm sure there's a bunch of issues, right?
There's like lobbies that are trying to keep it illegal.
Like there's the alcohol lobby that doesn't want it legal because it cuts down on alcohol sales.
And I know they lobby to try to make sure those laws stay in place.
And then unfortunately, you have prison guard unions that lobby for it, which is fucked.
They want to keep their job.
And so the way they keep their job is to keep people.
locked up and the way they keep people locked up is keep laws that don't make sense.
Like, we fucked up.
That's a, that's an evil fucking, it just doesn't make any sense.
If you can buy alcohol, you should be able, like, I'm not saying you should drink alcohol.
You don't drink alcohol anymore.
Like I said, I took months off.
It's like, you should have some self-control and I know some people don't, but get your shit
together.
You should, but other people are fine with alcohol.
They go to the bar, have a drink or two, go home, go out to dinner, have a drink, go at home, have a drink while they're watching TV.
And they're fine.
Yeah.
It should be a personal choice.
No adult should be able to tell you what you can and can't do and be able to lock you up in a fucking cage if you don't listen.
That's nuts.
And in a free country, in this country, as free as it gets in this world, there's no way weed should be illegal.
It should be regulated and it should be only for people that are adults.
where, you know, you have to be 21 to be able to buy it.
Look, it's never stopped kids from getting alcohol.
They still get alcohol.
It's not stopping kids right now from getting weed.
They can still get weed.
But if it was legal and regulated, first of all, we'd get taxes from it.
And that would be huge.
For every state, you'd get a ton of tax money that you're not getting right now.
And also, you would keep people from getting locked up for their own personal choices, which is just insane.
Yeah.
I mean, not a lot of people get locked up for.
personal use these days.
That's pretty rare.
But there's still, there's just way too many laws.
Yeah.
I mean, it's interesting, too.
Like, if you have, like, CBD flour, like, technically that's legal.
Yes.
So, like, if you just put some of your cannabis in a CBD container, like, are there ways to, like, test that on the side of the road?
Like, if you get pulled and they search your car.
Not on the side of the road, but they could confiscate it and then test it, I think.
But there's weird things about legalization of, I was watching a YouTube video about what Texas's laws were.
And Texas's laws are the amount of THC by volume.
So the thing about that is if you get like gummies, like a 10 milligram gummy will pass that by volume and be legal.
So are you saying that people can take 10 milligram THC gummies?
and that's legal?
Yeah.
Because they'll fuck you up.
Like, if you don't smoke weed, a 10 milligram THC gummy will have you going,
ooh, oh, you take two of those, and who knows what's going to happen to you?
I just watched this movie that a friend of mine was in this movie, Lanny Wilson,
and we watched the movie, and I don't want to spoil the movie for anybody,
but it turns out that the girl, like, she went to,
jail because she was impaired while driving and she was impaired by weed gummies and I was like that's
kind of gay well depends on how much you took yeah but if you take 200 milligrams you get behind a
wheel you're not even exactly sure what the road is a lot yeah right so that's pretty impaired
that's that's equivalent to like eight shots of whiskey and then getting in your truck yeah you're impaired
I guess you're right I don't think you should drive on weed I definitely don't think you should drive
fucked up but it's like the
Same, like, I don't advocate drinking and driving either, but if you have, like, one drink and drive, like, you're going to feel like a little relaxed and lubricated, but I don't know how much you'll be.
And it also varies on who the person is.
If the person is used to drinking all the time, one drink is not going to do a damn thing to them.
But for some people, one drink will make you drive stupid.
You'll do stupid things.
Yeah.
It's all a personal responsibility thing.
That's the bottom line about all of it.
And yeah, you shouldn't be out there drinking and driving.
You shouldn't be out there eating 500 milligram edibles and fucking driving in a car.
No, no.
I remember one time my drummer had this like THC spray.
Have you ever fucked with that?
Oh yeah, we had that back in California.
Yeah.
Like breast spray.
Yeah.
And I was still drinking at the time.
And me and my wife were both just hammered and we were on this.
A ferry, like the tour bus goes on to the ferry, and the ferry carries you over from France to the UK.
And we were, like, sitting in the lounge area on the ferry, or lounge area on the ferry, rather.
And he had this spray, and I was like, it's not doing anything.
Oh, no.
Me and my wife both kept just spraying it.
No.
And I woke up in my bed, just like in a cartoon, just like completely removed from reality.
They just, and yeah, it was a bad, bad scene.
I remember one time I took a, they had these THC breath strips that they used to sell.
And the problem with these things, and this is back in the pre-legalization days of pre-2016
in California.
And so each store you would get weed at, like they would have medical stores.
So you could go to a doctor and say, hey, doc, I got a headache.
And they go, you need medicine.
and they would write your prescription and then you can go.
And like there's always reasons to have it,
just like there's reasons to have Tylenol.
Do you get a headache?
Yeah, well, then you need it.
Do you have a backache?
Yeah, well, then you need it.
So you could get it pretty easy.
And they had these breast strips,
and I took one and I got on a plane.
And I closed my eyes when I was lying on the plane,
and I was watching neon, like, cartoon characters
that are made out of neon light, and they were having sex.
It was an orgy of car.
And I was just lying there with my eyes closed, watching these cartoon neon characters fuck.
And they were fucking in like complete blackness, like void.
So it was just the colors of their weird bodies just banging each other.
And then they would shift shapes and another one will pile on.
I was like, this is crazy.
It was very psychedelic.
It was almost like, but when I'd open my eyes, the world was normal.
Yeah.
It wasn't like the world was wiggling.
And I was just sitting, I didn't have anything to do.
I was flying all the way in New York.
It was a six-hour flight.
By the time it landed, I'd sobered up.
But I was like, this is great.
Like, how much is in these fucking things?
Because they're not making them in the same labs where they're making fucking Tylenol.
Sure.
You know?
I mean, it's some hippie.
Some dude who's, like, pouring weed into a machine.
Yeah.
Can't remember whether he'd put weed in there because he's high as fuck.
So he adds double.
They're very inconsistent.
It's like the micro doses that I used to get in making Georgia.
I was like, some of these are stronger than other ones.
He's like, yeah.
So depending on the day, my boy Howells like, you know, he's going to write it for whatever
it is.
Well, that's why we need legalization regulation.
That's the beautiful thing about whiskey.
You get a glass of whiskey.
You get a shot.
You know exactly what that shot's going to do.
The shots of whiskey have been having the same impact on human beings for hundreds of
fucking years.
You can quantify it.
Yeah.
And that's how it should be with all these things.
But the problem is when they're outlawed, you know, some of them.
them are, you know, a glass of wine.
Some of them are fucking moonshine.
Like, you need regulation.
And it's, the idea that there's laws against people's personal choices is just fucking stupid, man.
There's plenty of laws that are good.
Don't murder people.
Don't rob.
Don't rape.
Don't do this.
Don't do that.
That's great.
Don't vandalize.
Great.
Great laws.
Makes sense.
Better society.
Laws on personal choices, especially things that you might enjoy, like having a joint with
your wife, you know, after dinner and just sitting there and watching Netflix together.
Like the fucking armed thugs can burst into your house and take the joint away from you.
Like, who are we protecting?
Right.
Who are we serving?
Who are we protecting and serving with that?
That's dumb.
Yeah.
It's just bad for society.
And it creates this business.
Once a business is established, the business of enforcement.
Once that business is established, that business doesn't want to go away because now you have a bunch of people whose jobs depend on.
forcing laws and enforcing these things that don't make any sense.
And they want to protect that because that's their livelihood.
So now you've got a quagmire.
Now you're in a fucking terrible situation.
There's no easy way out other than ripping the band-aid off and making it legal.
You're also propping up the cartels.
That's the other problem with it being completely illegal in this country, federally.
It's like, well, guess what?
There's still a demand for it.
So legal companies that actually employ people and give the employees health care and, you know, have rules and regulations.
Now, they're not making it.
So they're not growing it.
So instead, you have fucking cartels that are growing it in California on public land because if you get caught, it's just a misdemeanor because it's legal in California.
So literally, I think it's more than 80% of all the weed that sold in the United States that's illegal.
is grown in California on public lands by the cartel and they use toxic pesticides and
herbicides they use all kinds of shit that you're not allowed to use in normal farming
and you know the only reason why it exists is because we've made these stupid fucking laws
so now that it's Schedule 3 it's in the same category as like Tylenol with codeine
which is not bad it's better certainly better than Schedule 1 which is ridiculous so now
Now, hopefully, once they do more testing and more studies, they can get to a point where federally it's legal and regulated.
That would be the best case for everybody.
Just in the same category as alcohol, get all that tax money from it, and then don't make criminals out of American citizens that just want to make personal choices.
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When did it get scheduled to schedule one?
Well, the whole schedule one thing, this is what I talked about when I
I went to the White House recently, which is a hilarious thing to say for a retard like me.
That I helped get things scheduled.
I mean, when it all goes down in the history books, they attach my name to this, it's going to be really confusing.
They're going to be like, fucking that guy?
What?
How?
What the fuck happened?
So when in 1970, the Richard Nixon administration passed the Controlled Substances Act.
And it made DMT, psilocybin, LSD, all these different things.
It made them schedule one.
So the idea is that there was no benefit, including IBA game, which is crazy, which
means it has no medical benefit and harmful and addictive, all these different qualities
that they attached to it.
But the only reason they did that was to target the civil rights movement, the civil rights
movement and the anti-war movement. That's what they were doing. They didn't like the fact that these
people were causing trouble and then they were organizing, you know, marches and doing all these
different things that were disrupting the government. And there was also this movement where people like,
why are we living the way we're living? Like this was the 60s. Like, why are we doing what we're doing?
Like, well, I don't want to be like my parents. They're not happy. You know, I want to live a life that's
like freer. I want to be filled with love and joy. And I want to, you know, have a good time and
follow the grateful debt around.
Like, so a lot of people in government were very concerned with this new movement.
And if you go and, like, music is a great example.
Like, if you look at the music of the 1950s and then you look at the music of the 1960s,
like, what the fuck happened?
Yeah.
Like, if you look at the music of 2016 and the music of 2006, not much difference.
Right.
Right?
It's all great.
It's all, but it's like, it's not, there's not some revolutionary crazy.
change. But you saw that from 1959 to 1969, there is a radical difference, a radical difference.
1950, you got like, you go from Buddy Holly to Jimmy Hendricks. You're like, okay, what the
fuck happened? Something crazy must have happened. And it's drugs. It's psychedelic drugs.
It's like the stone ape theory in, you know, our modern society. Exactly. Exactly. And this terrified
the administration. And they were really.
worried that they were going to completely lose control of the country.
And so they passed this Controlled Substances Act.
And that happened in 1970.
And from that time on, we've been fucked.
You know, for 56 fucking years, we've been under the grip of this stupid fucking law that was
passed by the Nixon administration that didn't make any sense.
Some of the drugs that they attitude aren't even psychoactive.
They just threw a bunch of stuff in there.
And they missed a bunch of potent ones.
Yeah.
They missed five methoxy DMT.
They missed five MEO DMT, which is one of the most potent psychedelics, if not the most potent psychedelics.
You used to be able to buy that online.
Oh, wow.
Dude, there was a company that you could order from, and they would send you a fucking jug of it as big as this.
Now, the amount that gets you blasted into the center of the universe and introduces you to God is like the size.
It's like the size that goes on your pinky.
Like your pinky nail, like that amount.
You smoke that, you'll see God.
Wow.
And you could just buy a fucking jar of it online.
There was a company called the American Chemical Company.
American Chemical Company or American Chemical Corporation.
And you used to be able to just buy Five Methoxy DMT, and they would just send it to you, like a jar of vitamins.
Wow.
And then you could go to head shops and buy Salvia.
Oh, yeah.
So Salvia is a fucking insane.
insanely potent psychedelic, which, by the way, is also sage.
Like, sage is the same family, the same genus as salvia.
So, like, think about it, sage, meaning wise, like, like an old sage.
Yeah.
And meanwhile, that is one of the most potent psychedelics in the world.
And so kids were going to head shops and buying salvia.
I don't know if they've made that illegal now.
They probably have, right?
Is salvia illegal now?
So Ari Shafir on Brian Redband's podcast
Do you know this story?
No.
Okay.
Ari Shafir went on Brian Redband's podcast and took a giant hit of Salvia and went under for like 10 minutes.
And when he came back, he said that he had lived six months under the water with a entire different community of human beings under the water, had relationships, had a job.
like had a six-month experience and then came back in that 10 minutes and he was so confused
he was so baffled he's like i had a life under there i had a girlfriend i had friends he goes
i had all these experiences oh shit yeah or he's crazy man he's crazy he's fun he came out to my show
in new york he's the man he is the man um but i mean that's that's how potent this fucking salvia stuff is
By the way, a lady had a very similar experience recently who went into a coma.
So she was in a coma for an extended period of time.
I want to say it was like a few months.
And when she came out, she had a whole life that she said she had triplets and she had like she was married, all these different things.
Here's a story.
She asked for her triplets after waking up from a coma.
Doctors say they never existed.
When she woke from a coma, first thing she did was ask for her three daughters.
Medical staff was stunned.
The response shattered her entire world.
Just like that, the children she had nursed, watched grow, and deeply cared for over seven years were gone.
So she was placed in a medically induced coma for three weeks.
And what followed was a dream of a lifetime, quite literally.
She was obviously not aware that she was in a coma.
Instead, she slipped into a dream and a lifetime unfolded before her eyes.
Talking to the outlet, the teen recalled having extremely intense dreams and nightmares.
She was not aware that she was in a coma at the time.
So those dreams became her reality.
So she became a mother.
She said it felt so real.
She felt the physical and emotional pain throughout the hallucination.
I could feel so many things.
When I dreamed about giving birth, I felt the stress.
I also felt a lot of pain in this dream.
I gave birth to triplets, who I named Mila Miles and Miley.
My Lee died shortly after birth.
I felt so awful, overwhelmed with sadness and guilt, she recalled.
She remembers the first skin-to-skin contact that she had with her babies.
It was incredible.
I felt an overwhelming wave of love, she added.
In her dream, she lived for seven years and watched her daughters grow up.
Each had their own personalities.
One was quite shy.
The other was a bundle of energy.
I remember walks, meals we shared, and bedtime stories.
She loved them with all her heart.
And then she woke up from the coma and was told that her children never existed.
That's when they told me they didn't exist.
I was in shock.
I was so convinced that it was real that the time I saw my parents again, I told them they were grandparents.
Whoa.
It makes you like wonder, like, what is reality?
What is this thing that we're currently experiencing?
Yeah.
And we're currently experiencing this thing.
But what is this?
Is this everything?
Is this the whole thing?
Or is this like one channel on an infinite radio?
And just while we're on that channel, we think this is the radio.
Right.
Well, maybe when you go to sleep, maybe that's just as real as being awake.
It's a heavy thought.
But the idea that you just shut off every night is bananas.
Yeah.
We look forward to it.
Oh, can't wait to just go away.
Go away from you out.
Can't wait to not exist.
And if you don't, like, if I don't get enough sleep, I'm like, whatever, whatever happens
during the dream time, the sleep time, the recovery, I feel it.
I've, my waking life, like, I haven't done what I'm supposed to do by sleeping for
an extended period of time.
So my, this reality is compromised.
This reality, I'm dumber.
My memory sucks.
I'm more tired.
I don't have any energy.
I can't wait to go to sleep.
Can't wait to shut.
off so I could pay back the void.
Pay back the void the time
I owe into the dreamland
of bizarre dreams.
Yeah.
And just the symbolism of dreams, too.
I've been having a lot of crazy dreams lately.
Like what?
I dream about snakes a lot, which is a good
sign. It's a good sign.
Is it?
Yeah, dreaming about snakes evidently
just represents like shedding your skin,
going into something new, you know, growing.
Or you're surrounded by people
want to get you.
Or maybe that.
Which both can be true.
You know the music business.
Yeah.
A lot of snakes.
Isn't it every business, though?
Yeah, I mean, just the idea, like, the business side is just so in contrast to, like,
the artistic sensibility, you know?
And artist is supposed to be, not supposed to be, but just, like,
psychological our makeup is more just like open and just more just like giving and wanting to share
your craft with somebody and more emotional you know and then having to be like a shark and having
to think like these snakes contracts yeah sign at the target line Marcus you make so much money
Marcus
It's only seven years
It's just seven years
With an extension
With options
With options
I was about to say
It'll be free
Don't worry about these
song rights
Yeah
You'll have other songs
In the future
That will be even better
Oh good night
Bet on yourself
Marcus
Do the money
Don't you want a big house
Don't you want a fancy car
You need
A road
Have you ever seen Late Night with the Devil?
Yes.
That was fucking good.
Yeah, that's the talk show.
Yeah.
Yeah, that is great, man.
Who made that?
That's a good question.
That's a really good movie, man.
We watched it on the bus one night.
I was like, whoa.
That was like 2019 or something?
It was heavy.
Yeah, this was, oh, 2024.
Oh, it's an Australian movie.
Jack Delroy, the host of a failing, it's in 1977.
Jack Delroy, the host of a failing,
failing late night show decides
decides to film a Halloween special
however the broadcast takes a dark turn
unleashing evil into the nation's living rooms
yeah it's a dope movie it's really fun
it's fucking scary shit too
it was scary yeah it was good
bro you know it's fucking scary as shit
and really good that I just found out
about from my daughter
there's a new show called
well it's not even new it's like four seasons
it's called from
from
yeah
Is it on like a...
It's on Apple TV.
I don't know if it's an Apple show,
but it's on Apple TV.
It's with the dude from Lost,
one of the dads from Lost.
Harold Peronoo.
Lost was also from a...
He's been in a lot of things.
He's great.
And the show is fucking terrifying.
It's very original and very weird.
So it came out in 2022.
Interesting.
premiered on epics.
Oh, okay.
What's it on now?
Is it just on Apple TV?
Epic's MGM Plus.
Yeah.
So it says in 2018 YouTube Red.
Remember we were talking about YouTube Red?
Canada and Italy, it's on Paramount Plus.
Indeats on Amazon Prime.
Oh, it's on all over the place.
Huh.
Where MGM Plus is.
So it appeared on epics.
I don't even know what MGM Plus is.
Maybe that's just the case.
company that's the production company.
So in 2026, they renewed the series for a fifth and final season.
It's fucking good, man.
It's good and it's really scary.
It's really scary and fucking creepy and horrific.
It's about these people that are stuck in this town that doesn't make any sense.
Like, the town doesn't make any sense.
And you can't get out of the town.
and at nighttime people come out of the woods,
but they're not people.
And they're like these monsters.
And if you let them into your house,
you can't let them into your house,
but if you let them into your house,
they butcher you and tear you apart.
And people, they try to trick you
into letting you, letting them into your house.
Like, I'm not doing it justice.
It sounds stupid.
Here's the pitch.
But it's really scary, man.
It's really scary and really creepy.
To the point, like, I'm watching, I get anxiety.
And I don't like watching shit like that before I go to bed.
Yeah.
Because then I get, like, weird dreams, and I start getting...
Because there's, like, children are in trouble in it.
I'm a father, and when I see children in trouble, I get...
I fucking freak out.
You know, there's part of you, like, the sheepdog in you, just like...
Right.
So it's a good show, though.
My wife gets on to me.
I like...
It's, like, forensic files.
Oh.
Puss me out.
I love it.
You like that before you go to bed?
I don't know why.
That's crazy.
That's my comfort.
How people murdered people.
Yeah.
I remember that show on HBO, the autopsy show.
That was like one of the first ones.
Okay.
Do you know that show?
The autopsy one.
It was this guy, Dr. Michael Badden.
And what he was, it was a forensic scientist that would catch people that had murdered people and got
away with it.
They would exhume bodies and find things.
And it was all these different cases of where someone had gotten away with murder,
but then they discovered how they did it.
it was very very interesting well because people are fucking weird man like you know a lot of like wives
poisoning their husbands and like multiple husbands died of similar ways and yep nurses that poisoned
the people under their care there's some fucked up people out there's some fucked up people out there
man and the crazy thing is they get away with it that's the crazy thing is for every one that michael badden
catches, how many of them get away with it?
Yep.
Like, what percentages of murders in America go unsolved?
Let's put this into perplexity, our AI sponsor and find out what the deal.
What do you think it is?
What percentage of murders go unsolved in America?
Oh, that's a good question.
Take a guess.
50, 60%.
Whoa.
But I don't know how you would quantify it.
I guess you'd find out...
Well, someone gets murdered and they don't catch anybody.
Oh, right, right, okay.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's half.
Wow.
So you're saying there's a chance.
So you're saying there's a chance.
Approximately 40 to 50% of murders in the United States go unsolved.
It means that roughly half of all homicide cases do not result in arrest or resolution.
So I was talking to somebody and someone who...
who lives in their community got arrested because the wife went missing and they got the wife's
DNA from this guy's chainsaw.
They have no body.
They have no evidence other than there's some DNA on his chainsaw.
And, you know, he's playing stupid, so he's in jail now.
But everybody that knows him and like, like these friends of mine, they know the family.
They knew him. They knew her.
Oh, shit.
And he's just in jail.
And they don't know if they have enough evidence to convict him.
And so he's been in jail for a while now, and they're trying to gather enough evidence for trial.
But all they have is, like, DNA.
I don't even know what that means.
Like, how much DNA?
Like, did he clean the chainsaw and not do a good job?
I don't know what that means.
But they got...
Was she, like, out, like, trimming hedges?
Who knows?
That's the thing.
It's like you could use a chain saw.
and accidentally scratch yourself.
Like, you don't even have to cut yourself.
It doesn't even have to be on.
Like, if you're, if you're, you know, taking a chain,
I don't know why the wife would be taking a chainsaw out into the,
I mean, some women are capable and they do it.
My wife, you know, she would.
Accidentally scraped your arm with this chainsaw,
and they went over every blade with a swab.
They probably could find your DNA.
Go, oh, my God, you did it.
Yep.
I don't know.
I don't know what happened, but apparently these people that I know believe that the husband chop this lady up.
Oh, really?
Yeah, they think you did it.
They're fighting a lot.
I remember when I was a kid, my sister used to, and like, Shane's actually got a really funny bit about how diabolical older sisters are.
And just my sister used to say, I hope you go to jail for something you didn't do.
Whoa.
I hope you get wrongfully convicted for something in you're in jail forever.
Jesus Christ.
That's a terrible thing to say to somebody.
What did you do to her to make her say that to you?
Who fucking knows?
That's so dark.
I hope you go to jail for something you didn't do is so evil.
Wow.
We're very close now.
Are you?
Oh, yeah.
Well, she was a kid.
How old was she when she did that?
She's two years older than me, so she must have been like nine or ten.
Oh.
People say things.
Good stuff.
They're nine or ten.
They're just being.
kids. That's a diabolical mind though. Like that's how you want someone to suffer. You want someone to
emotionally suffer for something they didn't do forever. Her and a neighbor boy, it was a vacant
house across from mine and they like locked me in the back fence and my sister was like,
this is where you live now. Whoa. They were like, unless you break that window. And I was like,
I don't want to break the window. And like, sure enough, like they said, well, we're not letting you
out of this gate. And like, I probably could have waited it out, but I was like five or six.
So I just said, all right.
So I took a brick to the window and they're like, well, we're going to go tell on you now.
I was like, wow.
Really fucked up.
What the fuck does she do now?
My sister's actually, she's a badass man.
She drives for the Department of Transportation.
She's got her CDL.
She's a hoss.
Sounds like she has some devious thoughts in her mind.
She's, yeah.
Sounds like she should write books.
I know.
She's so smart.
That sounds very creative.
You know?
Like she's manipulating a five-year-old into breaking a window so she could tell on them.
But as a seven-year-old.
Yeah.
No, she's awesome.
But actually, I had a good friend.
I told that story, too, and she loved it so much.
She got me a welcome mat from my house that said, this is where you live now.
That's fucked up, man.
Where did she learn that kind of behavior?
Probably my mom.
Oh, was your mom like that?
My mom was pretty wild, yeah.
Yeah?
Mm-hmm.
We.
Yeah.
I had an interest in upbringing.
Most artists do.
Especially most interesting artists.
I don't know a lot of interesting artists that say, like, my childhood was perfect.
It was amazing.
There was so much love, and everybody was really supportive and understanding.
Yeah.
We talked a lot about stuff.
Yep.
We spoke about our feelings, mostly.
We're on the dinner table.
There's always some sort of element of psychological torture involved.
Or some kind of abandoned matter or some kind of...
Titchy uncle, whatever it is.
Yep, something, ignoring you.
Yeah.
And just not making you a priority, making you not feel special or making you feel like you're a burden.
It's something that causes you to, like, want exorbitant amounts of attention from strangers.
Sure.
Yeah.
Yeah.
but look
that's where the great stuff comes from
which is really wild
like there's this concept
that you cannot have good without evil
and I think
there's something to that
I think it's just part of the human condition
for whatever reason
you don't appreciate good
unless you experience bad
which is why rich kids are fucked
you grow up rich with everything
you've ever wanted there's no struggle
It's so difficult for those people to ever be exceptional.
Because they don't have the motivation.
They don't have that.
They haven't experienced the bad.
Not in that way.
Like I remember I went on a hunting trip with my friend Steve Ronella and Brian Callan.
We went to Alaska and it rained every day.
It rained like six days in a row.
We're soaking wet.
And we came back to L.A.
And it was sunny.
And I was driving my car.
And I had to call my friend Steve.
And I said, dude, I have never been happier.
The sun hits my face.
I'm so appreciative.
I'm so, and I've never felt like this.
Like, it's always like this in L.A.
Yeah.
But it never meant anything to me.
It was just, yep, another day in L.A.
Got to go to work.
But this one day, I was like, just filled with gratitude.
And I was so happy.
The sun on my face felt so good and warm.
And I realized, like, oh, you have to suffer in order to,
really appreciate the good. Like if it's just all good, you're, you're not going to appreciate it.
You don't, you need evil people so that you really appreciate the people that are beautiful and
that you love. Right. You need people that suck, so you appreciate people that are kind. Yeah.
You know, you need people that are mean, so you appreciate the ones that are nice. Yeah. Just people
that are on the level. Just people that are like no agenda. Yeah. Just kind to people. And it is
that duality that kind of gives you perspective.
That's what I meditate on every day is perspective.
That's why I wonder about the music business.
And then even the comedy business, I think kind of any business.
I'm sure it's the same with the music,
it's rather a movie-making business as well.
It's like you almost need these rotten vampire cunts that are,
you know what I mean?
It's like, so you.
Another punk band.
But so that like when you see fellow musicians,
that you love, like you give them a hug, like you embrace each other, like, oh, we're cool.
Like, you know what I mean?
It's like, we're together now.
It's all right.
We're okay.
It's trauma bonding.
Yeah.
We're away from the cunts.
Yeah.
We're away from the vampire cunts.
It's like my boy Charlie Crockett, you know, Charlie always says like you can do what they do, but they
can't do what you do.
Mm-hmm.
Charlie's great.
He's a fucking man.
He's an interesting dude, too.
Very interesting dude.
Very, you know, interesting life.
Like the life that that guy had.
and playing street music for so long
and finally getting discovered.
Very.
Again, but that's how you get a person like that.
When you talked about his childhood,
that fucked up, it wasn't crazy,
he was basically just on his own
from the time he was a teenager,
just running around, just singing songs.
Yep.
You know, like, that's how you get a person like that.
Yeah, you can't create a Charlie Crockett in a lab.
No, or a jelly roll.
You don't create those in the lab.
They've got to go to jail first.
You know what I mean?
But it's like, I mean, Jellie's like one of the most beautiful people I've ever met in my life.
He's one of the nicest, sweetest, kindest, warm, affectionate people.
He hugs everybody, tells everybody he loves them, and he means it.
And because he's been through hell, you know.
And that's how you make a person like that.
Gilly's in like a constant state of like when you run into somebody after they've had an ayahuasca experience.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
He has this constant like gratitude.
Yes.
That I feel like kind of fades even with people who have like ayahuasca journeys or experiences.
Yeah.
You know?
He's just, I don't know.
There's something really pure to that.
Yeah, he's maintained it, especially now that he's on this like health journey.
I think that sometimes the momentum of life takes over and you kind of forget those beautiful moments.
You're grounded in these moments where you realize like, God, I'm so lucky to have a beautiful family that I love and friends that I love and be able to do what I do for a living.
God, I'm so lucky.
And that feeling like sometimes it goes away because you're dealing with this and that and contracts and fucking then New York Times wrote a hit piece on you.
Oh, shit.
And you forget.
You lose your perspective.
But I almost feel like you need all those other shitty elements to just reinforce the good elements.
That there's this constant sort of mechanism that's going on where there's this constant process of pros and cons of negatives and positives.
And they're duking it out to see who rise.
And the more the negative comes out you, the more it has this creative design.
inside of you to excel with your music or your art
or whatever it is that you do,
to just push past it.
I mean, think about some of the great songs
that people have written just about the struggles
that they've gone through just even in the music business, you know?
Yeah.
Like Leonard Skinner, working for MCA.
You know, there's a lot of those songs like that.
It's just like people just want to tell you
what the fuck they've been through.
Yeah.
LaSheek
freak out
What's that about?
They weren't allowed to get into
Studio 54, they wouldn't let them in
and the song was originally
written as, fuck you.
You know?
Da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-fuck you.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Instead it's freak out?
Yeah.
And that ended up being a major hit.
That was because they couldn't get into a club?
Yeah.
That's pretty crazy.
Pretty crazy.
Yeah.
Yep.
but it is just about threading that needle of like wanting more for yourself but for the right reasons
and that's something that I think about every day is just like having a virtuous reason to want more
you know not just for the sake of having it or for hoarding wealth or anything like that it's like
I want to work to where I can get to a place where you know my wife and I can have our own bus
and raise kids on the road you know but you can't do it.
that unless you have a certain profit margin on the road.
You know, so I'm always kind of trying to think of like virtuous causes to want more, you know,
because in reality, you know, I should be grateful for everything that I do have.
But also speaking to that, you know, and trying to meditate on the things that I'm grateful
for every day.
That's a good perspective.
I think people get trapped in working towards a result instead of thinking about the process.
Right.
I try to be process-oriented.
I try to think about whatever I'm doing.
Just try to be better at it and do a better job at it.
And I think the other stuff sort of takes care of itself.
If you have the right people.
And that's where the evil-cunt vampires come in.
Because they'll steal all that goodwill.
Like if you leave the door open, like on that TV show, on From, you let them in.
They'll fucking tear you apart.
I'll tear you up.
Yeah.
Just and it's hard because you don't want to become jaded.
Right.
You don't want to become like, I feel like I meet a lot of people out there who, like, they're open and they're kind, but they're not interested in making any new friends, you know?
Right.
It's like they have their circle.
And on one hand, I kind of understand that.
I get that, you know, but it's hard.
You know, you've got to maintain a certain level of perspective not to become, like, angry.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's hard.
And it's hard to know who you can let it into your circle, too.
Like, you've got to give people a stress test.
You know what I mean?
Yep.
It's almost like you have to give them a baggie and then have a fake cop.
Grab them.
And say, where did you get?
Marcus King gave it to me.
Oh, gotcha, bitch.
I ran into this guy recently.
And basically what I was.
happened like I was on jam cruise years ago and I was super fucked up and I was supposed to sit in
with this band called naughty professor from New Orleans and they're like that's a great name they're so
good and they're just outrageously talented musicians and I had gone out on an adventure that morning
on a catamaran I didn't know what the fuck a catamaran was I didn't know if it was land air or sea
vessel right so we go out there turns out it's a boat and we go like snorkeling in the
Cayman Islands, and we're just, like, looking at all the fish and, like, my girlfriend at the time, and a bass player friend of mine from a band called Lettuce, his name's Jesus.
So, out there with my girlfriend at the time, and Jesus.
His name is Jesus?
Yeah.
Not Jesus?
Well, his name's Eric, but he goes by Jesus.
Oh, boy, Eric.
Oh, boy.
How did Eric get in your circle?
I don't think it's a messiah complex or anything.
I think it's just a nickname that's stuck.
But they were tripping on acid, and I was drunk on rum.
beer and just out there waiting and like when we came up for air the boat had or we had drifted
quite a ways from the boat and like we couldn't get their attention and like the waves started
crashing and like a storm started rolling in oh fuck waves and like you know I'm not the strongest
swimmer you know but we were we were basically you know we were treading water out there for like
40 minutes and like holy shit dude you know we were we were gonna drown and finally the
jumped off the boat and came out there.
And then he was like yelling at me because I didn't have flippers on.
I was just out there with just my shorts on and some goggles.
And he signaled for the boat to come around and they pulled us up out of the water.
So after that, we were celebrating our life, you know.
So I got completely hammered.
And then I was on the boat and I was like, well, I need to pick me up, you know,
because I got to sit in with these guys and they're like college educated,
like jazz musicians.
So,
this guy comes over,
he's like,
hey man,
you need a Jatuski?
I was like,
yeah,
let me up.
And he pulled out a spoon,
and he digs it down in the bag,
and I go to Teggan,
and it's like a small little mountain.
I was like,
give me a little more.
And he gave me some more.
And I was,
big snort,
my whole face went numb.
And I was like,
and it stung.
And I was like,
whoa,
what the fuck was that?
And he was like,
ah,
it's a little blow.
And I was like,
no,
it wasn't.
And like,
He said, yeah, it was.
And I grabbed him by the shirt, and I said, what the fuck did you give me, motherfucker?
And he looked at his buddy.
Like, well, I had him, you know, like this.
And he said, hey, what bag did you give me, bro?
And he was like, the blue one.
He's like, oh, no.
And he looked at me, and I was like, what was it?
He's like, it's ketamine.
Oh.
So I went in totally the wrong direction.
But I ran into that guy at the Granal Opry.
He came into my dress room.
He was like, hey, remember?
me, wrong bag.
I was like, yeah, I remember
you.
Yeah, I don't like you.
Yeah, you kind of put
me in a weird spot. What was that like?
Taking ketamine after you almost died?
Man, it was heavy.
You know?
I basically,
like, from what I recall,
like, I became part of the boat.
That's how I remember it.
Like, my feet were like
in the deck, you know?
And, like, I was moving the whole boat
with every step that I took. That's what I remember.
Whoa.
Yeah.
But there was this one guy that kept trying to get me
to come play a festival in, like, New Mexico,
and I kind of put him off the whole week,
and then he ran into me, and, like,
I just remember his eyes getting big like saucers.
I don't know what I said to him,
but it was some crazy shit.
or it wasn't English at all probably
Ketamine talk
Ketamine's a weird one man
Because there's a lot of people that are doing that right now for therapy
Yeah
Like Neil Brennan, a comedian
The co-creator of the Chappelle show
He was the first person to tell me about it
Because Neil's had depression problems
Most of his life
And we were in L.A
And he said we were in the hallway of the comedy story
He goes, I've been doing ketamine
therapy for depression.
And I go, how's that working out?
Is it good?
He goes, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But I didn't know what to expect.
He goes, I thought, oh, you know, it's in a doctor's office.
It's probably going to be just, I'm probably just going to close my eyes and I'll feel.
He goes, no.
He goes, it's fucking a full-blown trip.
He goes, tripping balls in a doctor's office is fucking strange.
I bet.
He said it worked, though, for a little while.
Like he's done a bunch of different things.
He did a ton of ayahuasca.
He's done a bunch of ketamine.
He did like magnets on his brain, I think.
He did like a bunch of different things that try to like rewire the way his brain works.
Yeah.
Like whatever it is.
That's a journey I'm on, you know.
I'm on antidepressants and I want to get off of them.
Which one's you on?
I'm on Symbolta.
What does that one do?
Well.
Is it an SSRI?
Yeah.
So basically just kind of a.
It's for a chemical imbalance, you know.
But like the best work that I did to combat my depression and anxiety and stuff was
microdose and, you know, mushrooms.
Yeah.
Like that's the most progress that I'd seen in my life.
And I'm going to figure out some kind of strategy because, you know, like being on antidepressants
and them telling you like, well, don't just stop taking them all at once or, you know,
You could have seizures and shit.
I'm like, I don't like that.
I don't want to be like, you know, enslaved by a drug, by a pharmaceutical drug, you know?
Yeah.
And it's like also like now you just take this the rest of your life.
It's like, what's the end result here?
Yeah, Theo Vaughn's going through the exact same thing.
And last time I was on the podcast, he was explaining it to me.
It freaks me out because I know Theo's had conversations before.
like even publicly he had a Netflix taping and and it didn't go well it was like they actually
never they shelved it they never used it you know there was all these stories from people that were
there saying he bombed I think he just had kind of a breakdown and then he was talking to the
crowd and there's a video of it we said you know the people were shaking hey we still love you
thank you look I'm just I'm trying not to take my own life that's what I'm trying to do right now
yeah and like you hear stuff like that and you just like oh Jesus Christ I've known too
many people that I didn't think we're going to kill themselves and then did. And then he goes down
these spirals where he starts talking about world events and freaking out. I'm like, oh, Jesus Christ.
Like, I got to help this dude. And so I send him things about people getting off of them.
And apparently there's some doctors that specialize and getting people off of them. But here's the
thing about that chemical imbalance thing. That's not real. They used to think that that was what
these things do, that they treated a chemical imbalance. But then recently, studies have shown that
that is not what they do. They don't exactly know what they do. And they kind of numb you in some
sort of a way that helps some people. And I've had some friends, and I don't, you know, I don't want to
make any blanket statements because I've had some friends that were suicidal. Ari is one of them.
And he got on SSRIs and it helped him. He got on, you tried a bunch of different.
for once, found one that worked, got on track.
And then his career started taking off.
And then as his career started taking off, he started feeling much better.
He was on a good positive path in his life.
And then he slowly weaned himself off of those.
And now he's off of them.
So I think that might have saved his life.
I also know other people that have been on those things and taken their own lives.
So I don't know because that's part of one of the side effects is suicidal ideation.
It's one of the side effects.
But see if you could find anything about the chemical imbalance not being true.
The chemical imbalance reason for taking SSRIs.
They've measured levels of dopamine and serotonin and people that take.
It's not, that's not what it's doing.
And they don't even exactly know why it works.
And it's a huge business.
That's part of the problem.
And it's also part of the problem these doctors are incentivized to prescribe people these things.
I had a friend that went to a psychiatrist and was talking about their life and things not doing well.
And immediately the doctor tried to prescribe him SSRIs right away.
Like right away.
Here's something that you're never going to get off.
I'm going to give it to you right away.
First meeting.
And he was like, well, I don't mean, shouldn't I like try exercise?
Shouldn't I try diet?
Shouldn't I try just drinking water?
And, you know, like, I read something about, like, magnesium and red light therapy being far more effective than even SSRIs.
There is no good evidence for the simple chemical imbalance like low serotonin that directly causes depression or automatically means someone should take an SSRI.
But SSRIs do change brain chemistry in ways that can help some people.
But so for decades, depression was popularly explained as a serotonin imbalance in the brain.
Large reviews of the research have not found convincing evidence that people with depression have consistently low serotonin
or a specific measurable imbalance that explains their symptoms.
Experts now describe the chemical imbalance story as an oversimplified or outdated way of explaining a much more complex condition.
And here's the other thing about depression.
It has to be connected to the state of your life.
Like if you have a terrible job, you're in a bad relationship, you have abusive parents, you know, and you live in a shitty neighborhood, why would you be happy?
Oh, I'm depressed.
Oh, you need a pill?
Do you?
Is that what you need?
Right.
Well, it's quite possible that you're eating processed foods and you have to be.
all these other things that we talked about, shitty life, shitty house, shitty job,
shitty neighborhood, shitty parents.
Maybe you just need to make your life positive, like figure out a way to get your life
in a positive direction.
They've shown that exercise is way more effective than antidepressants at actually helping
people with depression.
Just exercise.
Just fucking go on a nice long walk every day.
Do some cardio.
You know, take a fucking yoga class.
That's way better for people.
than these goddamn pills.
But these doctors are financially incentivized to prescribe these things.
And they prescribe them and hand them out like candy.
And again, I think for some people it helps them.
And that's the issue, right?
I mean, if it wasn't a financial incentive, I think it would be like, take these for six months, you'll be better.
Yeah.
It wouldn't be like, forever.
This is you now.
Even six months.
It's like, okay, how long does it take to get off them?
Right.
Because I know a guy who was on him and it took him a year and a half after he got off of him before he felt normal again.
For a year and a half, he was fucked up because he was on him for, I think he said he was on him for 10 years.
And then for a year and a half he got off of him.
And it just took that long before he finally like balanced the ship out.
Like whatever waves he had to go through for a year and a half.
But he was like, whatever I'm doing, I am not going back on.
those goddamn pills.
So he wrote it out
and came out on the other end.
It's fucked up too because it's hard to compare
your experience to other people
because everybody's brain chemistry is different.
Yeah.
So you could have two people on the same medication
like you were saying earlier.
Like it's hard to even quantify.
Like I even taught my own sister
or like other family members about
you know, their depression and their, you know,
mental health journeys.
and it's just it's interesting to think like you could say like it's hard to disprove it you know what I mean
because somebody could be doing well on it but it's also like it takes two weeks for it to really get
into your system and I've I had to try like three or four different ones before one really I felt
felt like me you know like even at my grandmother's funeral like I just felt nothing I just felt numb
and like I didn't notice it until
I got into a situation where I was like,
this woman raised me,
and I can't feel anything.
Wow.
And it wasn't until, like, a heavy moment like that
that I was able to kind of have that perspective
of, like, I should be feeling something right now.
So I put those down, and then it was like two weeks later,
I was having dinner with somebody,
and, like, this song came on that just brought all of it up.
There was this melody, this Wayne Shorter melody,
that just uncorked everything.
And I was just sobbing at the dinner table, you know.
Wow.
What did you feel like before you took them?
And what was wrong with the ones that you didn't stick with?
Well, I don't know if it was a matter of, like, maybe the dosage was too high,
and it was just kind of creating a block.
Because, like, you've got to feel some emotions, right?
So how did you feel before you were taking them?
Like what was bothering you that you realized that you needed to take something?
Well, I think a lot of it had to do with just like substance abuse,
but I was feeling really anxious and really suicidal and just really depressed, you know?
And just this overwhelming sense of dread every day.
And just also just a lot of helplessness, like just trying to go into different doctors.
and just like trying to figure out like what the fuck is it that's going to finally you know take this away
but also realizing like I rely on that a little bit you know for what I do for a little
you know so there's kind of that you know rely on the feelings like the pain yeah all that you know
all that you know for writing and for creating god that's a fucking conundra man yeah being fearful
that it's going to take your drive away
because you don't have anything to create for.
No substance, right?
So it's a, it is a strange battle.
It's one that I still kind of deal with,
but I'm just in a much better spot on the journey.
So which ones did you try?
And what was wrong with the ones that you tried?
They just numbed you up.
This was like six years ago, so like 2020.
I can't remember the name of the specific,
medication. I'm sure
I have an old bottle of it somewhere
in my house, but
yeah, I don't know.
But what did it do?
It just made you too numb?
It just made me feel numb.
And then when you found one that worked,
what did that do differently?
So the one that I'm on now,
I mean,
like if I go a day without it,
like the withdrawal symptoms
are like fairly severe,
just like headaches and just like
complete like body
tingling sensations and just like it's really scary stuff it's just you know so I'm
gonna have to wean off of it slowly over time like already did I wonder if Ibegain
would help with that well I mean you know it's like I was saying like microdose and
mushrooms was like the first thing that I actually felt some kind of lasting result like now
like when I get an anxiety attack or something I can recognize it as something just coming
from an outside force,
you know, an energy that's not aligning with me.
And I can recognize it, I can work through it,
where, like, before I would just get a little overwhelmed, you know.
But I think also just, like, not drinking
and, like, having to socialize with people
and having to have a little exposure therapy
to, like, social interactions and life in general
without just masking myself with drugs and alcohol
has helped a lot, too.
and that growth.
So when you first started taking it, you, there's all the stuff that you're doing
in terms of like abusing alcohol and substances and that which definitely causes you
to feel like shit and definitely causes a lot of people to have like all sorts of angst
and anxiety and just fucks with you.
This stuff alleviated that.
What I'm on now?
Yeah.
I mean, you know, it has.
Kind of?
And I'm afraid of like, you know, if I get off of it,
are those emotions going to come flooding back in, you know?
So did it stop those emotions?
This is all, by the way, why you were drinking, right?
And how long has it been since you drank?
Like a year and a half.
Okay.
But, I mean, those emotions do come back every now and again.
Even while you're on this stuff?
Yeah.
but it significantly curbed them.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
But it's like, you know.
At what price?
I mean, I was talking to my boy, earnest, about it, because, you know, he's kind of a kindred spirit.
And, like, you know, just talking about, like, I'll be working out and, like, getting after it, feeling good, listening to the stones or whatever.
And, like, I noticed, like, in my gym at my house, like, I guess they used to have a punching bag.
hanging up there and just like you see something like that and you just take a mental note of like
that probably hold my weight you know it's just like these oh you mean to hang yourself yeah like these
thoughts just kind of come you know and it's i don't know where they come from they just they just
pop in and as quick as they come they go and this is before you taking the medication no i mean this
is now a month ago you know okay did did you have those thoughts
before the medication.
Oh, yeah.
Okay, so they're still there.
Yeah.
So whatever it's doing, it's doing a little bit.
I mean, it's got to be helping to a degree.
Do you think it is?
I think so, but I think it's really just about, like, your will and, like, your mental,
just your ability, just like we were talking about, like, with diets and stuff, you know,
like does Ozzypic help curb, you know, appetites, but you could also just exercise and just have will
power and I think mental health can be of a similar thing one of the things that people are
finding about a Mozambic is it actually curbs your desire to be in love too yeah that's a nasty
thought yeah you don't enjoy anything yeah yeah what I'm hearing about these SSR eyes is like
um like genitalia like paralyzed I saw that yeah I saw that on Twitter some lady was talking about her
She got off of it and her clitoris is numb.
She can't have orgasms anymore.
That's fucked up.
Yeah.
If that ever happens, she's like, you know.
Well, the problem is I don't know if it comes back.
So you can't wait for it to happen and like which medications cause it to happen.
Yeah.
If you do get off of it, have you talked to your doctor?
Like, what is the protocol?
Well, waning off of it.
Yeah.
my doctor always just says like I don't know he just every time I talk to my doctor it's like every few months we check in and he's like well how you feeling you know how you doing uh I'm like well I'm okay you know just kind of feels like the same um kind of want to get off of him and he's like well you know if you want to do that like you're going to have to go slowly over time but uh you know are things good and I'm like yeah things
are fine. He's like, well, you don't really want to change things if they're good, right?
You know? That kind of thing.
And you worry what...
Yeah, I worry about what's going to happen if I...
Yeah. What's that going to be like getting off of them?
Because the thing about it is, like I was talking about this guy that was on him for 10 years,
like that year and a half was fucking rough where he was experiencing all sorts of problems
because his body was just kind of in shock.
that it'd be on,
had been on SSRIs for a decade.
And then all of a sudden he's off of him.
It's like,
like the way Theo described it is like the floor was missing.
Like the floor fell out from under him.
Getting off him?
He got off him for a while and then got back on him.
He got off him about a year ago for a little while and then got back on him.
But he wants to get off him.
He just doesn't know what to do.
And,
I mean, hell,
it's like,
it's like a,
it's literally,
a plot device, you know, like the show
of the Ozarks, you know, like
the crazy brother, like, he's
pouring his medication down the drain
and he goes fucking nuts, you know?
It's like somebody
being off their medication is
kind of a pejorative term, right?
Yeah, but I'm like, I
kind of want to get off mine. Well, it depends
on what medication, right? Some people
are schizophrenic. Yeah, if it's antipsychosis, I guess.
If you've got psychosis.
Do you exercise?
Yeah.
What do you do?
I usually do 20 minutes on the Peloton and then a different muscle group every day.
Oh, that's good.
Anything cardio-wise is great for depression, supposedly.
And even weights, weights are supposedly really good for anxiety for some reason.
I've noticed.
Yeah.
There's a real definitive difference when I'm working out versus when I'm not.
Yeah.
Man.
So, like, do you have a strategy for when you're thinking about doing this or how you're,
Are you going to try to do this?
Well, I was thinking I'd probably do it when I had some time off,
but I'm working the rest of the year.
But honestly, man, being on the road is kind of my constant.
So I think it's something that I could probably accomplish while I'm on the road,
but I'd hate to have like a breakdown.
Yeah, fuck that.
You're in Nashville about to do a show, and you're like, I've got to cancel the show.
Right.
Yeah.
So it's hard to determine.
It scares me, man, because, and again, it scares me because doctors incentivized to keep you on them and promote them and get you to do them.
Also, and they've been prescribing them for people, they don't want to ever think that they're doing something bad.
There's a justification process in there somewhere.
100%.
Justification process, financial incentives, there's a lot going on there.
And then there's also this, this.
This position that they're in of expertise where they're explaining to you what you should and shouldn't do and how it works.
And when you're like, this is fucking up my whole life and I can't get off of them.
They're like, oh, it's just why slow down?
Like, isn't everything doing well?
Just keep on the same path.
Marcus, everything's fine.
Marcus.
Bye.
Click.
Got a new patient calling.
Oh, hi, Jenner.
Do you?
Yeah, it's very weird, man.
It's very weird that our society is so hypermedicated.
Yeah.
Yeah, and injectables are the wave of the future.
Even like my boy Chevy that works for me, he used to work in pharmaceutical sales.
And he's like, everything is injectables now because that's what's hot.
Because of like the Ozypics and so.
So like every medication is like pedaling injectables.
Because like the wave of like peptides and Ozympic and all that kind of stuff.
Now it's like, it's trendy, which is really interesting to me.
That is weird.
Because I grew up with my dad having type 2 diabetes and my grandfather too.
And, you know, just seeing them inject like insulin and stuff, I was like, yuck.
Well, type 2 diabetes, the thing about that one is you can cure that.
Yep.
You just got to stop eating like a pig.
Which is crazy.
I know a bunch of people that have stopped themselves from having type 2.
diabetes. And that's
a goal that I'm on is preventing
myself from ever dealing with that.
I don't eat sugar or anything.
Oh, that's awesome. Yeah, I gave up sugar.
Well, again, the ketogenic diet
is supposed to be good for depression, too.
Do you take supplements? Are you taking
magnesium and
multivitamins and all that jazz?
Oh, yeah. That's good.
That seems like you're doing a lot of the right things, man.
Yeah, man. I'm, you know,
I just...
Don't want to be a prisoner
The pills.
Yeah.
And I love my wife, and I'm just excited to have some babies and just I want to get myself, like, her career is taking off and my career is going really well.
And, like...
Does she take SSRIs?
Mm-mm.
No, that's good.
She's very anti-like any pharmaceuticals, which I really admire about her.
I was just reading something about SSRIs and the development of children, children's brains when women are pregnant and they're on SSRIs.
Apparently, there's a bunch of issues.
Yeah.
I can see that.
I mean, look, man, there's millions of people on those things.
There's a giant business.
And they want to hide all the side effects and hide all the negative aspects of it and hide the impact that it does just to the overall psyche of the nation.
When you've got, okay, let's just take a guess.
How many people do you think in this country are on SSRIs?
With liberal women, it's like 80%.
But like, it is.
And the other 20% need them.
We're like, what's the percentage of people on SSRIs in America?
Let's guess.
Man, I'd probably say, like, I would go even higher.
I'd say like 60 to 75.
Really?
Yeah.
60 to 75% of the country?
Yeah.
Wow.
I don't think it's that.
I think it's under 30.
It's too many.
It's too many.
Yeah.
It's definitely too many.
But there's also a bunch of people that are looking for a quick fix when
there's a bunch of factors to why you don't feel happy.
Like we were talking about before, there's lifestyle, life choices, situation that is beyond your control,
like where you're born, where you live, the job that you have, where you, you know, if you're in a place of limited opportunity,
and you've got a bunch of shitty people around you and life sucks every day, it's hard to be happy.
It's hard to not feel depressed.
So then there's the question of like, how does one develop the tools to get out of that situation?
and get somewhere else.
And for a lot of people, it's something that helps them break out,
whether it's starting a business or being a musician or an artist or something that gets
you out of there.
And then you start getting around more positive people and then you make more positive
lifestyle choices.
But you just can't expect to be happy if your life is shit.
Right.
13%.
Okay.
I was way off.
American SSRI prescribing, but I bet in your business, that's why you think of it.
Because with artists, I bet it's a lot higher.
13% of U.S. adults report taking an antidepressant in any given 30-day period
SSRIs the most frequently used class within that group.
Yeah.
Okay.
So 13%.
So that's 2015 to 2018.
I asked for an update for 2020.
It said it's about the same.
For 2026?
I mean, yeah.
I asked, is there any updates in 2020?
And it basically said the same information.
So about 13.
15%. Still a lot. One out of ten people on crazy pills is a lot. Yeah. In the arts community, though.
Yeah. Much more. Within the artist community, the last data that I remember reading was like 70% of like artists struggle with some faction of mental health.
But, um. That makes sense. Yeah. And then there's also the newest element that targets your mental health.
and goes after it, which is social media.
Yeah.
That's a rough one, boy.
That's a rough one.
And so many people treat that as if it's no big deal.
Like, you're just shooting heroin into your eyeballs every day with that stuff.
Yeah, man.
Not good.
So many people are in there.
Yeah.
All day, every day, and then reading a bunch of negative shit about them and getting angry and upset.
And then carrying that weight around with them all day.
It's easy to say, like, don't read comments.
But it's easier said than done.
Yeah.
Yeah, especially if you have it on your phone.
That's the thing.
Like, you've got to not have it on your phone.
If you have it on your phone, you're going to go to it.
But then the problem is if you use it for touring and for posting information, keeping your fans engaged.
Yeah.
Well, the algorithm also serves you like you've got to engage.
Like, any time you talk to a social media group, they're like, what are your engagement levels like?
So they want you on the app using it.
commenting, responding to people.
Because if you don't, and you choose not to do that,
and they're like, well, can we go on there for you
and, like, respond to comments or whatever?
And I'm like, no, I don't want you punching in any bullshit.
So I'm like, I want to be on there and be myself.
And, like, if this is a tool that I have to have,
I want it to be me, like, authentically.
But, you know, it's a necessary evil.
Yeah, but it ruins so many people's brains.
It rots you.
Yeah, it really does.
And it's also you're absorbing so much negativity just from what's going on in the world.
Like on any given day, if I open up Twitter and I just start reading what people are upset about,
it's just like, oh my God, the whole world is falling apart.
Everyone's mad at everything and everyone and every little whatever fucking social issue,
political issue, world issue, economic issue.
Everyone's blaming everyone and everyone's pissed.
and there's so many grifters and psychopaths that are just on there all day using it and stirring up bullshit.
Fuck, man.
I know.
It's, um, yeah.
You think I could use a bathroom and then?
Fuck, yeah, we can use a bathroom.
We'll get into this.
We're going to pee, folks.
We'll be right back.
And we're back, ladies and gentlemen.
Where were we? Depression. Everything sucks.
Stay off social media.
Yeah.
Let's talk about music.
Let's talk about some music.
Damn.
That's, how.
How does it take so long?
You've seen that James Brown interview from the 80s?
When he's got those big glasses on.
Oh, yeah.
I want to talk about some music.
That's the fucking interview is amazing.
It's the best.
He had just got arrested.
I'm out on love.
Yeah.
Aren't you out on bail?
I'm out on love!
Yeah.
And he starts talking to the women in the thing.
He's like, why is that, ladies?
Yeah.
No, it's hilarious.
He's the best.
Clearly high as fuck.
Yeah, there's something going on there
James Brown was an original
When you first started doing music
How old were you?
Man, I was probably like two or three years old
When I started feeling with it, yeah
That's crazy
My grandfather played
My uncles, my dad still plays
You know
Wow
So were they professional or they just did it for fun?
My grandfather, so he was a career service man
He was in the Air Force, and he was a staffmaster sergeant, and he played hockey talks on the weekend.
He was in charge of booking all the NCO clubs on the base.
So he would book like Charlie Pride or Johnny Cash, Barbara Mandrell, and his band would open up and then back them up.
Oh, wow.
So he was a country and western purist.
Did you get a go to any of those shows when you were young?
No, well, so this was back in the 60s.
my dad's 73 i think now he was born in 53 and um i was born when my dad was like 43 oh wow so by the time
i came along everybody was you know a lot of my family traded in like uh i think they associated
music with a lot of the secular lifestyle so they kind of when they all got born again and into the
church that's around the time i came around you know so the music was really associated with
church but i was really interested in that other stuff isn't that interesting i wonder why there's a
division you know i think about it a lot i think that's the closest you can get to divinity right you know
is music really um allowing yourself to get that close to something and the conviction that you feel
in a church, you know, that's a good common thing for everybody to get on the same level.
Yeah, that's part of the church experience, that everybody having it together, experiencing it together as a group.
Being together live in a room with a great musician on stage when everyone's enjoying it together is very much a transcendent experience.
Yeah.
It really is.
Like drinking the Kool-Aid, man.
Yeah, it's like there's a beautiful moment where you're all.
experiencing it together and you're all clapping and cheering or you're all dancing and singing along
it's a beautiful moment it really is music is like a drug man it really is it's like a beautiful
drug like the right song when you're on the treadmill you're like fuck yeah you could just keep going
you know i tear a door off the hinges yeah if i hear like little feet skin it back yeah yeah
there's certain songs that just give you fucking energy man
We're like Bitch by the Rolling Stones.
Oh, yeah.
That song, if I need to pick me up in the morning, that song comes on.
A great weightlifting one is Prison Sex by Tool.
Oh, yeah?
Oh, you know that song?
Tool's a band that I never really delved into.
Oh, they got some...
I know Danny Carey, and...
I know them because of my buddy Brent Hines.
Did you ever listen to Maastodon?
No.
Man, I got to send you some choice cuts, but...
Okay.
Brent was... he was the fucking man.
He just died back in September.
Oh.
I took him on the road right before that, which was messy.
Oh, really?
Brent, he and Mastodon kind of had a mutual agreement that he would leave the band.
So he was doing his solo thing, and like, he's one of my heroes, you know.
And I was like, I'll take you out, sure.
And, like, he just threw it together somehow, and then I ended up having to kick him off.
the tour which like broke my heart but he kind of forced my hand um the night in question like i
walked outside and he had this little tour manager named angela and she was crying and my my tour
manager was holding her and she was crying i was like fucking a what happened now she said i walk into the
dressing room and brent pee on the floor and i said no no you have to stop
So then he pee in his mouth
Oh Jesus Christ
And like I know
So
You just have to picture my boy
Just like
Pissing and she's like
Yeah stop
And then he's like oh
He pisses in his own mouth
And like
At his funeral
I told Matt Pike
From the sleep
I told him that story
And he was like
Yeah
Like and
Normal
He's like it's a party trick
That's a Wednesday move
And I was like
Yeah no
It's hilarious
but it really offended her and she got very upset.
And the whole thing just fell apart.
And, you know, that...
That was the last straw?
That was it. Pissing in his own mouth?
That was what did it.
Really?
But, you know...
Get him some paper towels and fix this.
I was ready to fix it.
But, like, his whole band and crew, they were like, it's not working.
So...
What was he doing?
He was just partying a little too much, you know?
And, I mean...
I really, I love that dude like a brother, you know, I miss him.
Miss him a lot.
Sometimes it takes a really wild, crazy off the rails person to make music or make any kind of art that just moves you, drives you crazy.
Yeah, I mean, he was a true artist, you know, like he was insane.
Yeah.
You got to have friends that your wife doesn't particularly love you hanging out with.
Right.
You know?
There's something about that friend.
Yeah.
That's a lot of my friends.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, but those are the ones that make the magic.
Yeah.
There's something to it.
And again, it is a magic thing.
You know, and this is coming from someone with no music.
I have no talent.
And so for me, like, watching it and experiencing it is a pure experience.
Because I'm not like, oh, I don't like how he played that chord.
I don't like how, I don't know anything about music.
I just know I love it.
I mean, Rick Rubin, you know, he's held on to that.
He wants to be, you know, and I think he has been like the, you know, the voice of like the consumer.
He hears what the consumer wants to hear.
Well, he knows what he likes.
Yeah.
And he's got a very interesting mind, you know.
He's a very interesting person to talk to.
His perspective on things is very unique.
I like him a lot.
I really like him a lot.
I like talking to him a lot.
He sends you the wildest text messages.
He even text messages.
Oh, yeah.
He sent me some fucking conspiracies that are often.
Sometimes I have to say, hey, that's not real.
But every now and then, he'll send you some ones that make you question reality.
I like the thought of you talking Rick off of a ledge.
Not necessarily talking off a ledge.
letting him know that some of the, you know,
it's hard to know what's real
and what's not real out there in the world
if you're not like deep into the bowels
of conspiracy theory movement.
Yeah.
You know.
Right.
But again, a guy like Rick,
like his sensibility,
like he has a,
it's like a very valuable position.
A person just with a unique mind
that is just helping shape
how music gets produced and created.
Mm-hmm.
And because like whatever,
whatever it takes,
Whatever it, I mean, it's not a science, like a math thing or a, it's not carpentry.
Like, you have to level this and square that.
Like, no, man, there's like some weirdness and there's love in there and hate in there.
There's a lot of stuff that is intangible.
It's hard to describe, like, why this is better and why this is good.
But when you hear it, you know.
When you know, you know, you know.
You know, there's sun rifts.
You know, there's some riffs that just like, oh, my God, like the beginning of Buju Child's slight return.
Come on.
Yeah, come on.
Just the beginning you hear it, you go, oh, yeah.
Yeah, dude.
Yeah.
I mean, Dan Hauerbach's another one who's just.
Oh, yeah.
I love those guys.
He's perfected the riff.
Yeah.
Josh Hamey.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
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You know,
Rick's a funny one, man.
I love his philosophy on music, too.
He looks at it the same way
that Colonel Bruce Hampton looked at it.
Colonel Bruce Hampton and Rick both believed
that music is like pro wrestling, you know?
Is Colonel Bruce Hampton the Colonel from Elvis?
That's not a different colonel.
Who's Colonel Bruce Hampton?
Colonel Bruce Hapton, he was kind of like, so Billy Bob Thornton put him in a movie in Slingblade.
He was, I can't remember his name in the film, but, yeah, Colonel Bruce Hapton, there he is.
He died on stage at the Fox Theater.
Wow, in Detroit?
No, in Atlanta.
Oh, okay.
His story is he was born with two birth certificates.
He was just a wild man, he was just, he was all about, like, instead of instruction, he called it Outstruction.
And like, Billy Bob worked on a documentary about him in, like, 2003.
And he was just, like, his whole philosophy on music and just, like, why we do it and just pointing out the hilarity of, like, the business and, like, the coffee getters, as he referred to them.
You know, we have a whole industry built around coffee getters now, you know.
All the people that got the suits, their lattes and stuff in the morning, now they're calling the shots.
And that's a weird place to be.
but the Colonel Bruce Hampton
I
you know
I just
what I do now is I just buy
copies of
his documentary
basically frightened
and I just give it to people
who aren't
hip to the knowledge
so I'll send a copy down here
yeah it's called frightened
it's called basically frightened
basically frightened
Colonel Bruce Hampton story
is it available anywhere
like is it on Apple or Amazon
it's not streaming anywhere
no so I just
I just collect the
DVDs when I can find them.
Oh, wow.
Can you buy a DVD anywhere?
Like if people are listening to this and they want to get a hold of it?
Yeah, like eBay.
That's the only way?
That's the only place I've found them.
Really?
Yeah, and you'll be bidding against me.
Just keep buying copies of it?
Yeah.
Every time I give one away, I buy another copy.
Wow.
Yep.
Here's a final thread on Reddit, people looking for it,
and someone's like, just mail me the DVD and I'll copy it for you.
Like, you can't find it anywhere.
Wow.
It would be cool if it were to be streamed somewhere.
It's a fascinating story.
$215 on Amazon, but I don't know that it's going to be even real.
Right.
They might just send you a fucking brick.
He was somebody like, you know, widespread panic that was like their guru, you know.
Colonel Bruce Hampton, Jimmy Herring, you know, O-Till Burbridge, who I'm in a band with now.
you know he started with bruce really i've never heard of him before you know it's just he's one
of those guys that you know he was like to the southeast he was like our frank zappa you know
or like our son raw oh wow he was just all about just the outrageousness and you know i have a lot
of friends who spent a lot more time with him than i did but like he was one of the first people
that took notice to what i was doing when i was like 15 you know and then
And I remember, like, being in Germany and finding out that he'd passed away on stage, which he predicted.
He did?
Really?
Yeah.
He said that's how he was going to go.
Well, if you keep performing long enough, Carlin died in a hotel room on the road.
Really?
Yeah.
I'm going to have to download this for you real quick.
Oh, there you go.
It's unlisted on YouTube.
Oh, perfect.
I won't be there tomorrow, though.
after this episode gets released?
Yeah, can you download it?
I can try it, yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, this just downloads it too.
I'll figure it out, though.
Okay.
Jammy to the rescue.
Sorry, folks, if you're getting this.
You might be able to find it still.
Yeah, maybe.
Somebody can upload it on one of them other social media platforms.
That's cool.
I'm interested in checking it out.
I love music for inspiration, you know.
It's one of the,
unique art forms that it inspires you to create, inspires you to go do things.
Whenever I see a live band or a live performer, I can't wait to go do something.
I'm going to go write.
I want to go perform.
Paul Mooney, who's a great comedian, do you know who Paul Mooney is?
He used to write for Richard Pryor.
He was one of the real OGs back in the early days when I came to the comedy store.
I was kind of blown.
He was one of the guys I was always nervous around being around until he liked me.
It's like, you know what I mean?
Like, Paul Mooney hates you, you're fucked.
But he gave me that advice once early on.
He said, if you want to entertain people, he said, go be entertained.
He goes, you want to entertain, honey?
Go be entertain, homie.
Go see some other shit.
He goes, go see something that gets you.
Go see a great movie.
Go see a band.
Go see something.
Be entertained.
That's what my process is like.
in the studio man like this last record we did like we had a projector and we'd play like you know
a giant with James Dean or we play like easy writer big Lebowski or like films that like inspired us
films that we like really gravitated towards and I all the while you know waking up in the
morning and reading east of Eden and just like some of these great architects of Americana
And just like being inspired on every turn, watching live concert footage of bands that we love, Marshall Tucker band, Skinnerd, whatever the case.
Just inundating yourself with inspiring stuff, you know.
To something to get the juices flowing.
Yeah.
To summon the muse.
Something to the gods of creativity.
Sometimes we would play just the footage of like a midnight cowboy or something.
Ah.
And we would record, you know, in the mindset, like we were trying to score.
this film, you know.
Oh, wow.
Just to kind of get a different approach.
I forgot about Midnight Cowboy.
What a wild movie.
It's a good one.
Yeah, that was back when Times Square was dirty.
Yeah.
Now Times Square is one big applebees.
That's when people would go and watch pornography together in a theater.
Yeah.
In a theater.
Yeah.
Not only that, but it was a thing in the early days of pornography where couples would go out
And like Johnny Carson went to see Deep Throat.
Yeah.
There's like famous people went to see the film Deep Throat in the theater.
Yep.
Well, it was adult entertainment.
But how weird is that?
That pornography, like, there was always stag films, right?
Like that was the thing that they used to make, like in the early days of movies, they would film people having sex.
And you could watch it like at a stag party, which was like a bachelor party.
But then people tried to make films, like artistic films, that have people having sex in them.
Which is really interesting that we find that abhorrent.
Like people don't like that in today's society.
We don't mind, like, this show From that I was telling you about, bro, the violence is horrific.
The gore and the violence is crazy.
That's okay.
Just don't suck someone's dick.
Don't make them come.
That's terrible.
Do you remember the movie Bad Bunny?
No, not Bad Bunny.
Was that Brown Bunny?
Brown Bunny.
Do you remember the movie Brown Bunny?
Brown Bunny was a Vincent Gallo movie that he made.
And there was a real sex scene in there.
Like, how do you say that lady's name, Chloe?
I don't know how you say her name.
She's a really good actress.
And she blows him, like for real in the movie.
Like, it's a real scene.
and the movie is a real movie
but then when it came to the sex part
they actually did it
and people were horrified
I mean that's so weird
like if it was violence
like if it was a scene where
she beat him to death with a baseball bat
people would be like wow what a crazy movie
but it was a scene where she blows him
people like this is outrageous
outrageous and I think that movie
ruined Vincent Gallo's
career.
Really?
Yeah, because Vincent Gao had been in a bunch of movies.
He's a really weird guy, like a very interesting guy.
And after that, he kind of dipped away from Hollywood.
Like, he kind of vanished in a lot of ways.
And that was the big thing.
I remember reading these articles on how outraged people were that they had actually
seen real sex in a movie.
Like, it's so strange that we don't mind violence.
Like, once upon a time in Hollywood, Brad Pitt takes a lady's head.
and bashes it into a mantlepiece and fucking brains her.
Fine.
Fine.
No outrage.
No, everyone, everyone okay?
Everyone's okay.
But if he fucked her, like, actually pulled her pants down, you see Brad Pitt's penis and her vagina.
You're like, this is crazy.
Something that we all do.
Yeah, but the simulation of it is fine, too.
Right.
Simulation of it is fine.
Yeah.
Like, it was a sex scene, and you just see his hips and her face like, oh, and they're kissing, fine.
I don't see actual sex
Even if it was like him and his wife
Like if he made a movie with him and his wife
And they decided to have actual sex in the movie
People would be like, this is disgusting
Get this fucking smut off the screen
But if they had a movie with him and his wife
And she shoots him
Like, okay, that's fine. Didn't really happen.
Right.
Weird, right?
It is weird.
I mean, hell, I did a commercial for
Like I did a shoot for this car
and like they couldn't have me in the car while it was moving for insurance purposes.
So they had to like make it seem like I was in the car while it was moving.
Insurance purposes, that's crazy.
But that's more of a financial thing.
Yeah.
But the weirdness about sex, the point is, like, see if you can find that footage of all the people that were in line.
There's like an old, there's a YouTube video.
of an old news report of people in line to see Deep Throat.
Right.
And again, Johnny Carson was one of them.
I think they even interviewed him after the film.
Like they went and watched people fuck.
And like it was a movie.
Like, you know, you're watching The Joker or something.
Right.
Very odd.
It is odd.
And they got that name Deep Throat from the Watergate.
Did they?
Yeah.
I thought Deep Throat was.
afterwards.
I thought the Watergate thing was after.
I don't know.
I could be wrong.
Chicken or the egg.
Okay, so Watergate was what, 70?
74.
Was it?
Yeah, so the movie came out 72.
Oh, yeah.
So the movie came out first.
Okay.
And so that was after those.
So that's interesting, too, and you think about, like, 72 was not that long ago.
And people's ideas of pornography were very different back then.
A lot of my favorite venues in the country were
porno theaters first.
Comedy mothership, bro.
All right, yeah.
It was a porno theater at one point in time.
And, like, people cared about, like,
the quality of, like, the audio production
in those films.
And, like, you know, and these rooms sound really good.
Variety Playhouse in Atlanta.
It's one of the best scenes in American Werewolf in London.
Okay.
Do you remember that movie, American Werewolf in London?
It's a great fucking movie.
One of the best scenes, they're in the middle
of London and they're in an adult movie theater and these people are watching pornography.
They're watching a smut film.
And while these people are fucking, he turns into a werewolf and kills everybody.
I got to check that out.
Oh, it's great.
One of the greatest movies of all time.
That wolf that we have in the lobby, that's a recreation.
Oh, really?
Of the American Warwolf.
Okay.
That's what that is.
The thing with Johnny Carson and Deep Throat, I think, is like a conglomeration memory.
Is it?
There's a weird, there is a photo.
of people waiting in line to see
the movie.
But it's like this is it
on the screen.
But there was a video
of Johnny Carson talking
about it after the fact
during his monologue that he went to see it.
Oh, so there wasn't a photo
or a video of him at the movie theater?
I don't think so, man, I'm looking for it. Because I sort of
remember what you're talking about.
I think we might have read an article
that listed all of this stuff together.
What was that play?
where they had like, everybody was, like, naked,
and it was, like, really a big deal.
Was it, like, hairspray or something like that?
I don't know.
In the late 70s, my dad told me him and his friends
went to go see this, like, Broadway production
or off-Broadway production,
where, like, everybody was, like, nude,
and it was, like, this really, you know,
it was, like, this really racy thing, yeah.
And there was a preacher up front
just, like, really just,
Giving him hell, man.
And then he got up closer and he realized it was his uncle.
My great uncle was up there.
Just motherfucking on him.
That's hilarious.
Wily cited overview.
Many works are quoted.
Note that several mainstream celebrities appear to have seen deep throat,
including Martin Scorsese,
Brian De Palma, Truman Capote,
Jack Nicholson, Johnny Carson,
Spiro Agnew, Frank Sinatra, and others.
Barbara Walters later mentioned seeing it in her memoir.
These references are usually brief, but they're pulled into many articles about the film's cultural impact.
But that's what's so interesting.
It's like that is not normal in today's society to even think that a bunch of people would say they went to go see a porn film.
I think this is also, so Midnight Cowboy, which is where you guys started this, 1969, which is before this, and one best picture as the former X-rated or NC-17 movies.
So they started a little bit of a trend.
then.
Interesting.
This is only three years later, you know.
Why was Midnight Cowboy X-rated?
The reason?
Yeah.
Like, what was so explicit that they had to make it an X?
I would say a little bit has to do with marketing.
But I don't know if there's a reason.
This has a reason.
Marketing.
Yeah, you'd make people want to go see it.
Right, I guess.
Oh, this is crazy.
This movie's crazy.
It's not standing out here.
Right here.
After consulting with a psychologist, they told to give it a next homosexual frame reference
and its possible influence on youngsters.
Wow.
That's crazy.
Today that would be celebrated.
Right.
Oh, there's a rape scene?
I haven't seen this movie.
I saw it in like the 80s.
I haven't seen it in forever.
Yeah, but even, I mean, like in that film, it's like a distant thought that John
voice character keeps going back to
like the rape scene
whereas like
What was the last time you saw it?
A couple months ago probably
Oh really?
But like
fucking
The deliverance is
plays on AMC
on TV
Right
Right
Which is another rape scene
Nothing's edited out
Sweet like a pig
That won't fuck me out
When I was a kid
I'm not gonna lie
Oh yeah
Very much so
Not to imagine it
Like supposedly took place
Like
In the Appalachian
like back drop which is like where I grew up I was like that's fucking happening like here
because of then shocking sexual content even more importantly it's frank portrayal of homosexuality
and hustling hustling meaning having gay sex for money which the studio and censors saw as
potentially corrupting to young viewers the film includes scenes and references to male
prostitution homosexual encounters and brief but explicit situations including implied
oral sex and nudity, which went far beyond what Hollywood had shown in a mainstream drama up to that point.
Maybe now it would get just an art, but also that would be with this never existing.
Now it'd be celebrated. It's a film celebrating sex workers. It's weird. It's weird what was, but it's also weird that there was a movie that was an actual porn movie that a bunch of people just went to see and talked about. Like today, people want to pretend they don't even watch.
porn.
Yeah.
Meanwhile, I think last check we did, no, we've done this before, Jamie.
Like, what percentage of the internet is pornography, internet traffic?
Take a guess of that.
I bet it's way more than SSRIs.
Right?
Yeah.
I haven't guessed right so far, so let's see.
50%.
Oh, wow, I don't know if it's that high.
I would say 30.
I'd say 30% of the internet
But I could be wrong
I don't remember
30% of the internet traffic
Is pornography
Let's say that
Maybe it's 40
I was saying that's a myth
It's a bunch of people lying about jerking off
The 30 to 40% things are missed
Apparently
Okay
Porn makes up a small share of sites
Yeah yeah yeah but traffic
Yeah it says it
30%
Wiley stated
But what is the
What about
The amount of internet.
Searches.
Yeah, but no, but I mean traffic, like the amount of bandwidth.
All right, then it's getting lost in this word because I used.
I used traffic.
No, I used traffic.
Yeah, you did.
Why do we see higher numbers?
See 37% of the internet is porn.
BBC reported tracing one of these popular figures back to single content filter company press release,
not an independent audited measurement, some advocacy.
I bet now today because of YouTube and the amount of,
streaming that goes on with like Instagram and TikTok, I bet it probably isn't as high as it
used to be, the percentage wise, because there's so much more content that's being streamed now
than ever before.
Porn-related searches are 13% on the web and 20% on mobile devices.
That's funny.
It's more on mobile devices because people can hide in the toilet.
The content filter company.
The claim comes from this.
Yeah, we read that.
We heard of read that.
So it could be just made up to begin with.
Yeah, it could be.
But there's got to be like a number of like the internet traffic.
I don't know how you'd get that number.
So some advocacy or internet safety groups cite very high traffic shares and storage figures.
Example, nearly a third of all internet traffic.
But these are rough, sometimes opaque estimates rather than peer reviewed measurements.
Hmm.
Okay.
So it's at least 4%.
So it says roughly websites.
Four to 12%.
That's a lot.
Does four to 12% of the whole internet is jerk off websites?
That's crazy.
But the volume in terms of the amount of bandwidth used.
Right.
But...
I bet if you went and watched Deep Throat today, it'd probably be pretty pedestrian.
It'd be tamed.
Yeah.
It probably would seem just like soft core almost.
Right.
Yeah, like one of them Showtime, Late Night movies.
Yeah.
I mean, it is something that I, you know, I like to save all that, you know, when I get home off the road, see my wife.
Yeah.
You know, there's something too.
That it had originally.
The woman had an unusual birth defect that came from a doctor who has an unorthodox solution to make the best of her situation.
Is that it the deep throat?
Yes, yes.
Well, that she could just take it.
Some birth defect?
Balls deep down to her chin.
That guy Harry Reams, he was like one of the first famous male porn stars.
I think he went on to be a real estate salesman or something.
Like if you're one of those people that gets famous fucking, that has got to be a very weak.
Is that where the porn mustache comes from?
Oh, yeah.
Got it.
Oh, yeah.
He had a crazy stash.
1947.
Wow.
What's he up to these days?
He passed away.
Did he?
Yeah.
When did he pass away?
9-13.
Wow.
Didn't live that long.
All that fucking wasted all his jizz.
I bet he shaved off his mustache and he was just anonymous.
He was just drifting out of traffic.
Nobody even noticed him.
You know?
Right.
Weird life.
Having such a people on camera.
Should we add that to the wall?
Oh, look at that.
Oh, what he's got arrested?
When did he got arrested to?
If we add it to the wall, I'll probably for indecent something.
Yeah, we should add that to the wall.
Memphis.
You gotta be up to some no good to get arrested in Memphis.
What did he get arrested for?
Too much dick.
This is his appearance in deep throw led to his arrest by FBI agents in Memphis.
Wow.
And charges of conspiracy to distribute obscenity across state lines.
Whoa.
He called it forum shopping, but I don't...
What does that mean?
Forum shopping?
A courtroom job.
A real term for the practice of litigants taking actions to have their legal case heard in the court.
they believe is most out to give them a good judgment.
They're trying to get them convicted, I guess.
Trying to make an example of them.
So they found a court that would take the case.
Like for obscenity?
Yeah.
How interesting.
In the Supreme Court.
Miller v. California.
Reimton's granted a new trial.
Chargers were dropped in August.
Wow.
So the defense argues the first act
that ever be prosecuted by the federal government
for appearing in a film.
It's like the Lenny Bruce is slinging dick.
And then all these people got behind them.
Very, Shirley Maclean, Warren Beatty, Richard Dreyfus, they all got behind him, Jack Nicholson, Ben Gazzara.
Wow, Dick Cavett.
No, he was in Greece.
That's the coach.
Wow.
He was in the movie Greece, the musical?
What?
In 1978?
Out of fear of notoriety would jeopardize the film's block.
He was replaced.
Oh, he was cast and he was replaced by Sid Caesar.
That's hilarious.
Wow.
After an eight year in 1982 after an eight year hiatus from porn Reams returned to the industry and performed in the film Society Affairs and reportedly received a six-figure salary
How weird back then weird
It is the the whole pornography thing is very strange because like people want to watch other people have sex because people like having sex
But it's like
But you can't talk about it
But, you know, if you say you like it, people like, fuck is wrong with you.
And then they watch it.
But if we could destigmatize it and like not give people unrealistic ideas of what happens in the bedroom and note it as something that is entertainment, you know.
I think the fear is that the women that are in it, for the rest of their life, they're always going to be thought of a certain way.
And the men skate, they don't really have a, like, they're thought of CD, but they don't.
thought as like, you know, girls that got used.
Well, I think what's going to get weird is AI porn,
because then you can watch porn and there's no victims, right?
There's no person you feel bad for.
Like, oh, that poor girl, everyone's going to know that she sucked dick on camera.
She took it in the ass on camera.
It's not a real person.
So then maybe you can watch that and...
Remove any kind of victim, yeah.
I don't know.
People are fucking weird.
People are weird.
I'll tell you one thing I've never tried and I'm not going to.
I don't want it.
Nope.
Not going to do it is VR porn.
Because Duncan told me, dude, have you ever seen VR porn?
It's fucking amazing.
I'm not going to do it.
I'm not going to sit there with fucking goggles on, jack it off.
Joe hasn't left his house in about six months.
I mean, you imagine you're watching porn and the people are fucking 20 feet high in front of you.
They're begging.
And if you could move around it.
Like you can move around another VR.
You can get like really close to watch the dick go in there.
That's one thing I haven't tried either.
VR porn?
Good for you.
Stay away.
VR in general is weird.
You know what's really great though is VR games.
Have you ever done any VR games?
You know what sandbox is?
You ever heard of Sandbox?
Sandbox, they have one in Austin.
They had one in Woodland Hills right down the street from our old studio in L.A.
and it is a place where you go.
It's like a big-ass warehouse,
and you go to these rooms in the warehouse,
and they have fans set up,
and it's all like these walls, like it's all boundaries.
They put a haptic feedback vest on you and goggles,
and they give you rifles and the plastic rifles,
and then you get dropped into this virtual reality world
where you fight zombies.
Oh, shit.
It's fucking dope.
Dude, it's nuts.
When the zombies attack,
you, they run at you, they claw you, you see blood splatter in front of your eyes, and you gun them down.
It's fucking crazy.
There's one called Deadwood Mansion.
That's my favorite.
And the Deadwood Man.
There's a couple of different Deadwood games.
I think there's two or three now.
I think there's three.
There's three zombie games that you can play.
Three different ones?
No, it's here.
Here.
They have one in Austin.
Yeah.
It's out at the domain.
Yeah, it's out of the domain
It's fucking so fun
My family hates it because they get
Like sick and I want it
That's all I ever want to do
So on Father's Day I make everybody shoot zombies with me
Like it's Father's Day
What do you want to do?
Shoot zombies
Like no
Come on we have to do it
Yeah
Once you do it, it's fun
Father's Day's coming up
Tournament, Joe
Tournament
Okay
At one point in time
I had the number three score
In the country
At killing zombies
Yeah, I went ham one day.
One day I was just locked the fuck in.
And the key is, I'm going to give you guys a pro tip.
If you're doing Deadwood Mansion, get the shotgun.
The shotgun is overpowered.
The shotgun kills more things than anything else.
It's way better at it.
But the game is nuts, man.
I mean, there's zombie rats that come running at you.
There's fucking people that are attached to the walls.
And they shoot down their tongue and wrap it around your neck and they're pulling on you.
Show them a clip.
of it. It's crazy. It is a fucking, it is, it's really fun, dude. You'll, you'll love it.
I'm gonna tell you the band to do that.
Yeah, that's what you could do. You could do it like six people.
We're always looking for like band activities.
It's a good one. I bet they have multiple, I don't, I know of these two of Austin and
L.A.
The one I put up is in Atlanta.
Oh, is one in Atlanta? Yeah, they have to have them all over the place.
I don't know, I have no idea why it's not everywhere, because.
it's so fun.
It's one of the most fun things you could do with your friends.
We've done it, my wife and I've done it on double dates.
Like you go do that and then you go have dinner.
It's great, man.
It's great.
It's really fun.
They've got a ton of locations now.
Oh, shit.
They're all over the place now.
Yeah, that's great.
See if you can find a video of Deadwood Mansion.
Oh, Deadwood Phobia.
Oh, that's the newest one.
That's the third one.
Oh, there's a Squid Games one.
We've done that one too.
The Stranger Things one
They have so many different
Deadwood Valley
That's another one that's really good
The Deadwood Valley one
Do they have a
Yeah there we go
So check this out
So this is what happens
You get dropped off into this city
And the zombies are there
And so this is
This is you
It's like
It's cut between you with the guns
And then like
This is what you see
This is what it looks like
So but
This is more like a video
showing you what it looks like on the outside
But when you're in it
I wish they would show you what it looks like
That's what it looks like when you're in it
And these dudes are chasing after you
And you're gunning them down
It's really fun
But again there's a bunch of games
That you can do that
Survive the horrors
You gotta save the heroes
There's people in there that you have to save
and there's other people that you have to kill,
it's dope.
It's really fun.
That's badass.
So that's a good use of VR.
Don't be looking at 10-foot vaginas.
Go kill fake zombies.
You get stuck on a train,
and as a train is running down the tracks,
they're jumping onto the train and trying to get you,
you have to gun them down.
It's really fun.
That seems like it's something I could get into.
I never played any video games growing up.
Really?
That's crazy.
How old are you?
30.
How's that possible?
I mean, I just never had much interest in them.
Like when I was young, I don't know.
Do your friends play video games?
By the rest of the band, they all play, you know.
And you just say, nope, not interested.
I was just never really into it, man.
Well, this is different than a regular video game.
Like, this is very physical.
Like, you're running around.
You're in a room that's bigger than this room.
And you have your haptic feedback.
You also have fans that blow air at you.
You know, like, see, like, if it's also to cool you off too because it gets hot as fuck and you're running around, you got this vest on.
And when you get grabbed, the vest vibrates, so you feel it, like, oh, that's sick.
Oh, yeah, it's really fun.
But it's probably good that you never got into video games because they're so time intensive.
They rob you of your life.
You think golf robs you of your life?
You don't have to leave the house to play video games.
Look at Jamie over there.
How often do you play video games, Jamie?
No, not that often.
No?
I thought you were a junkie.
I actually haven't played in weeks
But you were hooked for a while, right?
It's a fun
As I'm thinking in my head
I'm like, I grew up playing video games
But I also wish I was fucking sick at guitar
So there's a fucking tradeoff there
And most people I know are sick of guitar
Aren't good at video games or play them
So that's a very good point
I did make, I made an effort
Like a year or two ago
I got a PS5
And I got Red Dead Redemption
I was like, I'm gonna fuck
I can do it. I'm going to play this game.
And I just got, I was like, I feel like I'm just doing chores.
And I asked my drummer, he was like, yeah, that's pretty much what it is.
Oh, Red Dead Regemption.
Yeah.
You got to play something like a first-person shooter.
You know, play like Quake or something like that.
Like, what's the big first-person shooter that the kids played today, Jamie?
I mean, Fortnite, really?
Fortnite, Fortnite is still.
Boy, Fortnite's been around forever.
When my kids were in, like, grade school, Fortnite was big.
Yep.
And they just made some weird, I don't, I stopped paying attention, but like Star Wars is now in Fortnite.
And the games that they made for Star Wars are just like, nope, it's just in this thing now.
You can just play it in here.
Wow, really?
Yeah, and it's like they down on stormtroopers and lightsabers.
Whoa.
Yeah, my nephews are always hitting me for, what do they call that, like, Fortnite B bucks or?
B bucks.
They want B bucks so they can play more.
Yeah, there's Robux.
My kids were always into Robux.
for Roblox so you could buy things in Roblox.
But apparently now there's like pedophiles
have been gotten into Roblox.
They try to message people.
They ruin everything.
They do.
They do.
Creeps ruin everything.
But there's some very fun video games
that you shouldn't ever do
because it'll fuck with all the other things you do.
Like not getting into golf,
not getting into video games.
Again, Jamie's dead right.
That's probably why you're so sick at guitar.
You can make a...
A guitar gently we.
Well, there's other things like
there's certain games where you can
play guitar, like Guitar Hero.
That's not the fucking same.
No, no, no, but having people learned
how to play guitar, an actual guitar
because of Guitar Hero? There's a game, technically
a game's like a training aid called Rocksmith,
which is a way it's, you actually
have a guitar and it's plugged into it, not
on run. That's cool.
Guitar Hero, you're just hitting five buttons.
Oh, I see.
Red to Red, Blue to Blue. That's a timing thing.
but no transfer
It doesn't...
I would imagine that a game
that would teach you
how to play guitar
with an actual guitar
would be dope.
Like if you got...
You know, like these games,
like the sandbox game,
Deadwood Mansion,
you get a gun.
And if you got really good,
like Staccato has a VR gun game.
Stacado, they make pistols
and there's a VR gun game
and you get a plastic
staccato. And when you're playing this game, like, you're actually pointing the trigger. And
when you pull the trigger, there's actually like a muzzle jump. So your reticle actually jumps up
and down a little. Your red dot jumps up and down a little bit. That would be exactly like it would
do if you actually shot a gun. So they have to like recenter it. Bang, bang, bang. And so you could
run around doing things and shoot stuff and shoot targets. That's here too? Yeah. But that's a game that you
can get for like meta VR goggles, like consumer VR goggles.
And so you doing that could get better at shooting guns.
Because you're shooting a plastic.
It doesn't weigh the same, but it's the same shape, the same form.
It's a plastic gun.
I mean, what they really should do is make one of those things with the weight of an actual
steel gun so that you're accustomed to the actual feel of the thing.
And then, God, why can't they do that?
They should be able to do that.
Maybe we'll talk to them
But if you did that
That would be a skill that would actually transfer over
So if they could do that with a guitar
If they could figure out a way to attach like computer sensors
To an actual real guitar
This is Rocksmith
This is a
There's levels of it
You can slow it down
And what are you playing?
Real songs
You picked the song
They're all real songs
Right but what is the interface?
A guitar
Oh an actual guitar
Yeah it's plugged in with the US
speak cable to the computer.
Oh, it's their virtual guitar?
No, no.
This is just, I showed you what it looks like on the game, but.
Right.
What is it?
But it looks like an actual guitar.
It's a real, whatever guitar you want to play.
Oh.
It's your guitar.
It's not, it's not a fake guitar.
Guitars are just things that vibrate strings and expel.
Oh, dude, that's dope.
That's, that's dope.
That is dope.
But I think after a while you'd have to abandon that, right?
Yeah, he's good at guitar.
I mean, he's just need to learn this.
Did you learn by lessons or did you just learn by playing?
So initially I just learned by just sitting around the house,
watching cartoons playing guitar.
My grandfather would teach me something.
He'd give me like a project, basically,
or my dad would leave me a record to listen to.
And it was just his old record collection.
So a lot of Almond Brothers band,
a lot of Skinnerd, Marshall Tucker Band, that kind of thing.
And then I would just sit at home all day and just go over it.
And then later when I was in high school, I studied jazz theory with Steve Watson.
It was like a vocational school for the arts.
It was called the Fine Arts Center in Greenville, South Carolina.
And I'd go there in the afternoons and study jazz theory, which was, which was
really beneficial because it's good to put a vocabulary to the things that you you kind of knew,
you know, but you didn't know how to quite name it. Right. Just kind of learning the, you know,
the vocabulary, learning, you know, what the things are called and then expanding upon that,
you know. Yeah. Music theory is a valuable tool. Yeah. Does it, does it help you in writing songs?
It can.
it helps in like
in Nashville they use
something called the Nashville number system
so like you go into a session
and like it's all based off
of the major scale so like one two
three four five six
seven and then the eight is just the octave
of the one right
so they'll say like
we got a one four five
you know and it just
represents what the chords are
yeah
where math and stuff gets
really interesting
You go down this rabbit hole forever.
You could bring a Terrence Howard back in here.
And then it's just a weird stuff.
And honestly, and then you could bring into ancient Egypt,
and so this is all vibrations,
and you can probably translate hieroglyphs
into some of this music theory stuff.
It's fucking weird.
Terrence Howard trying to find the one.
Yeah.
Like, in a beat, that's hilarious.
But the first time I used the number system with Hauerbeck.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Because Dan, like his house man,
for a long time was the remaining members of the Memphis boys
who played on like,
son of a preacher man by Dusty Springfield.
Oh, wow.
And like suspicious minds, that kind of thing.
Gene Chrisman, was 80 years old playing drums.
Bobby Wood, keyboard player, Billy Sanford.
And his second session in Nashville was Pretty Woman.
And he wrote the riff.
So I walk in, I was early to the session,
and they were still, they were finishing up their first session of the day,
which was John Prine.
Wow.
And I walked in.
It was just like, whoa.
Wow.
And Dan was like,
that Mark gets to get his ass in here and play some slide guitar.
So they threw a chart in front of me.
I just had to pretend I knew what was going on.
You know,
that's where you've got to rely on your ear.
Hmm.
But it's conversational, too.
Like, if you don't really know what's going on,
like, you don't want to say much.
Yeah.
Right.
That's fascinating, man.
I'm scared of music
Not really
But I'm scared of practicing it
I'm scared of learning it
Because I just feel like
It would be very rewarding
It is
And I'd get very obsessed
Yeah
Something to it
Yeah
Well listen man
I'm glad there's people out there
Like you doing it
Man I'm just thankful
Well that's the best attitude to have
That's what I think
I think gratitude is the best attitude to have
Anyone that's doing what they actually want to do, what's going to propel you forward and keep it going is probably gratitude.
Yeah.
Just be happy that you're able to do one of the coolest fucking things in the world for a living.
Kind of amazing.
Just and don't be an asshole.
Don't be an asshole.
That's it.
You'd be surprised how hard it is to follow that one.
I know, right?
A lot of people fail.
Well, thank you, Marcus.
Thanks for being here, brother.
It was fun.
I enjoy it.
What's that?
Oh.
Thanks for having me.
Anytime. Let's do it again.
All right. Bye, everybody.
