The Joe Rogan Experience - #614 - Christopher Ryan, PhD
Episode Date: February 19, 2015Christopher Ryan, PhD is a psychologist, speaker, and author of New York Times best seller "Sex At Dawn" - http://chrisryanphd.com/ http://podcasts.joerogan.net ...
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back from the rain-soaked jungle of the pacific northwest where hippies flourish
chris ryan dude they're out there man they are man They are They're like monkeys in the jungle They're like bugs in the forest
Yeah
Flowers in the garden, yeah
Oh, that too
You could look at it in a positive way
Yeah, yeah
It's a good place for them
It's an interesting place
You're going to be there soon
Yes, this weekend
You're on your way
I'm very excited
I love Portland
I fuck with them about being hippie infested
But better that than fucking psychos, you know?
That's true.
That's true.
It's an interesting place that it's got such a strong culture for such a small city.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
There are huge cities three times that size where, like, you don't even know you're there, right?
Based on how people dress, food, you know, attitude, whatever.
Portland is so specific and sort of micro-cultural.
Yeah.
I was talking to a friend who grew up there the other day, I asked him, what's the biggest change from 20 years ago?
And it was interesting. He said, not eccentricity. It was really eccentric then. It's the same now.
That sort of became the calling card of Portland. He said, the big difference is there was no
smugness 20 years ago. Oh, now people are smug there? Yeah, because I think people who sort of choose that identity
then go to Portland.
You know what I mean?
Like hippies who are actually kind of Nazis.
Yeah, there's a lot of those, right?
Yeah, like really judgmental hippies.
Like super ultra left-wing people who are really just mean
and they just find a target and the target is a right-wing. Right. so they go after them with or whomever or they often go after each other you
know it's like and so there's like a fascist mentality that just happens to have chosen a
hippie you know outfit off the rack exactly i had an ex-girlfriend who was really into fashion and
i remember one time her saying we lived in san francisco for a while and i remember her saying yeah i want to i want to go for a hippie look
you know and i'm gonna like buy the the fringe and i just remember thinking like that is so
antithetical to what a hippie is you know like to go buy expensive hippie outfit isn't that perfect
though that it's america it's like it's like spraying body odor deodorant so you'll smell like a dirty hippie.
Well, I saw this commercial, not a commercial, like a website rather, online that sells used
jeans.
Right.
They sell jeans that people wore and they have like, I mean, they have like stains on
them.
Some of them have patches.
And they were $270 for a used pair of jeans
good gig though be a jean wearer yeah or a good gig to be selling these jeans you can probably
buy from goodwill for you know really cheap yeah and i forget the name of the company but
their their hook is they're trying to make you look like you know you've worn these man i don't
care about what i look like man yeah you're buying 270 used clothes yeah like you're wearing these, man. I don't care about what I look like, man. But you're buying $270 used clothes.
Yeah.
Like, instead of wearing them and turning them into that, you're immediately trying to, like, adopt that persona.
Right.
I'm a comfortable pair of jeans.
Yeah.
Look at me with my, like, when you see, like, fake rips, those fake rips that people have, they're crazy.
Like, what are you doing?
You're buying torn clothes.
Yeah.
And you think it gives you a look i'm down home i'm you know the knees are just all worn out in these
pants man i'm waiting for you know it works with clothes i'm waiting for it to work with the body
you know because i just turned 53 recently and i'm like when is old and fat going to be in because
it's about time when genetic engineering kicks in and everybody looks like Dr. Manhattan.
Yeah, then like old, ugly fat will be, wow, interesting.
It's new.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's something different, man.
It's like a lot of white guys who are into Asian women will go to Asian countries, like
China, for instance, because there's no white men there, or not as many, rather.
And so they become an oddity.
I've experienced that. I remember that that i can remember the first night i can remember the minute i
experienced that thinking like what you know first everyone's looking at me okay i'm a foreigner
whatever is weird but these women are smiling and flirting and what that what's going on and
and you know eventually someone explained to me, like, dude, you're white.
And I've always,
the one thing about my body that I would complain about is my skin.
I've never liked my skin.
I've got as much melanin as anyone else,
but it's all in my teeth.
So I've got yellow teeth and super pale skin.
Do you get burnt real easy when you go to the sun?
Oh, completely.
What is your background?
10 minutes. Irish. Irish, yeah. Very Oh, completely. What is your background? Ten minutes.
Irish.
Irish, yeah.
Very white, yeah.
And I'm a redhead, which is like, you know, one tweak away from albino.
Right.
Are you redhead?
I used to be.
Your hair has gone gray.
Do you prefer the gray or the red?
You got that kind of cool thing going on.
You got a lot of blondish sort of accents.
Well, that's it.
When you mix red with gray you get blonde right but no when i was a you know until i was in my 30s or 40s probably um you know
i had sort of orange red hair whoa yeah it was dark orange it was like copper wire kind of color
um so it wasn't bozo that's very close but people are prejudiced against that in men. Yeah.
Women, it's sexy.
Yeah.
What the fuck is that?
Men, it's geeky.
How does that happen?
Well, maybe because of the novelty.
And also there's a reputation among redheads for being sort of temperamental.
And everybody knows a temperamental woman's a lot of fun in bed, right?
Hmm.
Maybe that's it.
And temperamental men are just dangerous drunks.
Exactly. Assh drunks exactly assholes
irish assholes that's funny i mean raquel welsh was a redhead although she was mexican so i'm
not sure how that happened everything i've seen from raquel welsh like it was so old i can't
remember or was black and white black and white yeah she was a redhead like a dark red i think
she dyed it yeah but just like auburn, reddish kind of.
What did you think dye was like back then?
What, would they just grind up some leaves and fucking rub them in their hair?
Well, they probably had, what's that stuff they use in Pakistan?
Henna.
Oh, yeah. You know, henna goes way back.
Yeah, that stuff is strong as shit too, right?
People get those fake henna tattoos, they last for days.
Yeah.
Can't even scrub them off. The dudes inistan henna dye their beards which is interesting
that's a nice look oh that's funny so like when they're when they start going gray that's their
version of just for men yeah exactly that's funny man yeah yeah everyone no one wants to be gray
that's the one thing like universally people like, that's a fucking tricky one, man.
You think so?
I'm not happy about my gray hairs.
I just grew in a little chin beard here, and it's completely white.
And I had one five, six years ago when I was traveling,
and it was still red.
Really?
So I don't know what happened between then and now.
I got old, man.
Oh, so you weren't shaving.
You were shaving it completely.
Yeah, so it was like a snapshot.
There was no gradual process i still have mostly like say like 80 black in my beard but like the sides
of my hair like where if i had any this is all going white now yeah all this is gray on the sides
so you think the gray is more traumatic than the balding because i've gone through both both of
them are rough um the gray is probably less traumatic because i know dudes who
are totally gray who dye their hair and they look fine or they look fine with the gray yeah
distinguished gentleman kind of thing i know both yeah it just well it just represents reality
represents the finite nature of the body and you're going through a process you know but also
like i was talking about how i'm hoping that like old and fat comes in now that I'm almost there or, or there depend arguably,
uh,
you,
your,
your sort of balding experience happened at a really good time.
Historically,
I got lucky sort of,
but I fought it for the longest time.
I had hair transplants,
propitia,
and I put Rogaine in there and all,
which is very ironic.
When your name is Rogaine,
you're going bald and you're buying Rogaine sponsorship,
especially when you had to go to the counter.
Like now you can just buy it.
But you used to have to go up to the fucking pharmacist.
You used to have a prescription for that shit.
Yeah, I've bought a lot of Rogan in my day because my ex-father-in-law in Spain had me bring it back from the States every time I came to visit.
He couldn't get it over there?
I think it was like he thought it was stronger or better in some way.
So it was like the only thing that kept my relationship with him
partly civil. I so wish that I shaved my head way, way, way back in the day when I first started
worrying about it. Yeah. It would have been way better because I love being bald. Like I really,
I don't, if I could grow hair back now, I would still shave it. Right. It's the easiest thing in
the world. I don't have to go to, I had a great barber and she was hilarious. A hairstylist,
my friend Gabriella she worked on
news radio with me she was my she cut my hair forever you know but at a certain point in time
she was cutting it it just looked like dog shit after she was just like it get thinner and thinner
and then once I quit taking the Propecia then it was like a serious downhill slide oh really
yeah yeah shit was just dying left and right it It was horrible. Well, I agree with you.
I think that all young men, like in their mid-20s, should shave their heads.
Just so you don't worry about it.
If you're going bald, for sure shave your head.
I say, people don't like to shave my head.
Believe me.
Take control.
Yeah, it's better than whatever the fuck is going to happen if you don't shave your head.
I wanted to shave my head.
We were in India.
I was with my wife, Casilda, in India, in Goa for months.
We were in Asia for like over a year.
And I thought this is a perfect time to shave my head because if I've got a weird shaped head or I look like a dork or whatever, who gives a fuck?
Nobody knows me.
And I came to her one day.
We rented this house on the beach.
I was like, hey, cut my hair.
I want to shave my head.
And she said, oh, please don't do that.
Please.
Why? I was like, hey, cut my hair. I want to shave my head. And she said, oh, please don't do that. Please. I said, why?
Why?
Well, it's not just because she's used to me looking like a dork, but it was my father
had just had a liver transplant.
And she said, in India, you shave your head when your father dies.
And she's very suspicious, and she's got all these beliefs.
And she's like, you know, if your father's in rocky shape, you don't want to be shaving
your head, you know? Yeah, that's different shape. You don't want to be shaving your head.
Yeah, that's different.
Yeah, I can see that.
Oh, I missed my chance.
Yeah, I missed my chance when I was on news radio.
That's when I got my hair transplant, my first one.
I got three of them.
When I got my first one, I was on news radio,
and I was like, God damn, this shit is going, man.
I just was seeing it falling out.
And I was like, I'm thinking about shaving my head,
and they're like, don't do it, don't do it.
I'm like, my hair's starting to look like shit,
and they talked me out of it.
Well, because it would look like your character, right?
Yeah, because you'd look like a psycho.
I'm like, all right, so I didn't.
People get used to whatever the fuck you look like.
Right, exactly.
I have a picture of Joey Diaz back when he was like 210 pounds.
It's crazy.
It's on my wall in my office.
I stole it from the comedy store.
It was a headshot that he had up.
I don't even think it was up.
I think I stole it from the office.
I don't think they had put it up, so I snacked it.
But it's Joey thin.
But if he walked in today looking like that, I'd be like, what the fuck is going on?
You sick?
Yeah, but I see him the way he is now.
I give him a big hug, and that'sey you know you get used to you get used to the change definitely
and i was thinking about that i turned 53 last week right so i'm thinking about time and all that
and um here in la visiting my parents who are in their 70s so there's all that you know there are
a lot of cues for these things and um there's this famous poem by uh
dylan thomas where he says rage against the dying of the light you know and i often think like i
don't know i don't know maybe embrace the darkness you know like the light you know like people fight
he lost a fight against pancreatic cancer well you know maybe the that's not a fight worth waging you know well no i know
a guy who's got pancreatic cancer who's fighting it and they gave him a very short window to live
and he's pushed way past that and you know and everybody's completely shocked but he has this
amazing attitude and he's positive and enjoying life and i think his point of view is not instead
of rage against the dying of the light, enjoy the moment and live your life.
That's yeah.
And I think because of that,
he's actually living longer.
Right.
There was a guy,
his name was Bill Hoyler,
uh,
who I became friends with from the internet,
from my,
my own message board.
And,
uh,
he was,
uh,
a young kid who got pancreatic cancer and he lived for years.
And,
uh,
we became friends from online. know he used to he would
have a he had a screen name we would call it uh i think his screen name is called pan can fighter
or pan can like pancreatic cancer i believe that was his screen name and um i would get him tickets
to the ufc and get him tickets to a comedy show and one time he came to visit me in florida and um
he came to the show i got him tickets to the show and then you know he told
me he's gonna go sleep in his car and I was like you drove all the way down here you're gonna sleep
in your car he goes yeah I just wanted to see the show so I got him a hotel room and you know like
this guy's got cancer you can't let him sleep in his fucking car like your immune system is like
super important when you have cancer sleep is super important for the immune system but he was
always so thankful and never weird and like for a kid a
young kid who was facing this horrible disease that almost nobody escapes from it's like the
percentage of people that survive one of the worst very very bad but his attitude was always like i'm
gonna fucking fight this and i'm gonna and he would post these tweets on the messages on the
message board like uh three years later i'm still alive motherfucker like that kind
of shit and you know he had tubes in his stomach when i saw him once we saw him eddie bravo and i
became friends with this kid we saw him maybe six or seven times over the years and uh you know one
time we saw him his head he lost all his hair his eyebrows were gone he had tubes coming out of his
stomach because you know some surgery that he had and He was still alive, and he still had a good attitude. It was amazing what an attitude he had.
I think that that attitude is probably what allowed him to live for so long,
but he eventually did die recently.
As we all do, right?
Yeah.
It's funny. I saw the guy from 60 Minutes who was in a car crash last week. Did you see that?
I forget his name,
but he's 73.
He was 73 years old.
And the headline said, this gentleman whose name I can't remember lost his life in a car crash.
And I thought,
you know,
when you're 73,
you're not losing your life.
You've already banked 73 years,
right?
You're losing a couple of years.
You're losing whatever was
left 11 yeah yeah yeah actuarial tables or something yeah right um that's not losing your
life you spent that money that's like you know somebody robs you and they got everything well
they didn't get everything they didn't get what i already spent right right right yeah it's not
like they spent they robbed your whole life savings. Well, I didn't really save my whole life.
Exactly.
I've never saved.
I've been saving for a couple of weeks.
Yeah, really.
Look at this picture of Vince McMahon from the WWE.
Wow.
He's 69 years old.
Seriously?
Yeah, this is insane.
And that's not shopped.
I'm going to, should I forward this to you, Jamie?
What's that?
I'll pull it up on the line.
Okay.
He's on the cover of Muscle and Fitness.
Tony Hinchcliffe sent this to me because Tony Hinchcliffe is a fucking WWE fanatic,
and he's in love with Vince McMahon.
But nobody in human history has ever looked like that at 69 years old.
Testosterone is a motherfucker.
Yeah.
So if you want to rage against the dying of the light, that's the way to go.
Get all pumped up
testosterone replacement therapy go to a doctor they bring you to the same levels you look at
that picture that's ridiculous it's up oh sorry it's behind you yeah he doesn't have that other
one that's okay it doesn't have you know but it's just ridiculous like who the fuck has ever looked
like that at 69 is it good or is it bad you know i don't think it would be too terrible if people
could live to be a thousand years if i knew that we had the resources to support it.
Because I would think like, man, what kind of amazing philosophy and insight would you get from a thousand year old woman who's lived hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of years and, you know, and seeing culture shift and change and remembers as much as she could and tells you about life in a way that only a person has lived a thousand years,
and we are a little blips.
If you talk to a guy that lived a hundred years,
you're going to be fascinated if he has his faculties.
But someone that's lived a thousand?
My God.
Holidays would be a bitch, though.
Imagine the great, great, great, great, great grandkids
she has to buy shit for.
That's true.
Imagine the candles on his fucking cake.
Exactly.
Dude would die blowing him
out well isn't it ironic don't you think um i think that we're gonna see a great advance in
our lifetime of of lifespans but the real issue is do we have the resources for that because one
of the things that is going on with our world as everybody knows is there's a lot more people
today than there's ever been in recorded
human history by a giant number. And when you see places like India that are in dire poverty,
it's one third the size of the United States. It has three times as many people plus. It's like,
wow, I mean, you're dealing with a lot of poverty and a lot of suffering. And maybe it's a
perspective issue. And maybe what I consider poverty they consider life and then if i lived that life i would be accustomed to it it would be
normalized but i've got to think that most people don't want to sleep on dirt and most people don't
want to eat food that's bad or you know struggle to survive in any way and dealing with rampant
diseases and that you're dealing with in impoverished nations you know when they don't
have enough medicine to take care of people
I don't know. It's but if we did have the resources man
It would be amazing to talk to a thousand year old person who knew everything about the mean if you could keep your faculties
How grumpy would they get?
These fucking kids today in their electronic hologram music pull your pants out when I was a kid
We had drums we made out of animal skins fucking kill those animals we chopped those trees down we hollowed them out we stretched
the skins made the pom-pom boom boom boom boom but seriously i mean if you think about you know
just how much things have changed since you and i were kids you know if you're talking to a guy
that's 500 years old it's like holy shit man well yeah the other thing is a
thousand years from now i mean if we really could live to be a thousand years old a thousand years
from now people might not be necessary i mean we we might have evolved past this state in some sort
of a gigantic technological leap i really believe that when you're looking at the the iconic image
of an alien you know the big heads the big eyes and no genitals i think i we're looking at
what holds us back as organisms and what the things that if you look at our wars and our greed
and just all the crazy fucking larceny and crazy shit that people do it's all attached to the
primate body you know it's all attached to sex and breeding and greed and guilt and fear and the worry about being mortal.
If we can move past that in some genetic engineering leap or if it goes Kurzweil on us
and they develop some insane artificial body that you transfer your consciousness into,
then it's just way more preferable.
You know, you've got all the buttons you can push for orgasm,
all the buttons you can push for adventure.
All those exist inside your head and they can access them at any moment.
But you're looking at the world in some crazy 3D, you know, minority report fashion where everything you see, you're interacting with the world in a very different way.
You might get a bunch of people to jump ship, and the models might get better.
And then the next model might be so pleasurable so much better than being a human
being that it just fucking people just start jumping ship especially if the ship's sinking
you know yeah we're fucking polluting the ocean guess what how about you live off photosynthesis
we're going to cure the whole thing all right you got bulletproof gim no you live off the sun
oh you incorporate algae somehow into the genome or something. Somehow. Look, there was a snail that I read about recently, or a slug, that shifts between photosynthesis and actually eating things.
And it eats certain algae, and then through eating that algae can actually absorb life and exist off photosynthesis.
And this is a new find.
So it's like colonized its food and it's still alive.
Yeah, yeah, that's...
It's somehow or another taking this ability from its food.
Do you know how sea slugs have sex?
No.
Oh, this is great, since you mentioned slugs.
I wasn't planning to talk about slugs today, Joe,
but since you brought it up.
Sea slugs are so interesting.
They're on the bottom of the ocean.
They're just sort of wandering around blind, right, on the bottom of the ocean.
What are those?
Can they see with those things?
I think they're like motion detectors, you know, whatever, antenna.
But when two sea slugs, now, sea slugs contain both male and female reproductive organs, right, inside their bodies.
So they've got sperm and eggs.
organs right inside their bodies so they've got sperm uh and eggs and when two sea slugs meet each other they sort of rear up and and with those horns these horns come out of their their heads
and they start slamming each other with these horns like a couple of you know mountain goats
or something and eventually one of them will break through the skin of the other with his horn. And at that point, he injects sperm into the other.
And so the other becomes female because now the eggs have been fertilized.
And that one's a male.
So it's like when they're fighting to see who's male and who's female, which may be reminiscent of private school or summer camp.
Boy Scouts.
Yeah.
Who's the boy?
Religious retreats.
Yeah, man, that's fascinating.
That's fascinating.
It's amazing when you see all the different varieties of life, when you see all the different forms that it can take,
and then you stop to consider that that's just in our Earth's environment imagine like what they're going to find if they can chip through europa
and get to those oceans it's very possible there's something alive under there that's being fueled
from the heat of the volcanic vents right most likely nothing we've never seen anything in the
ocean other than like you know we see like hermit crabs they'll use other people's uh you know oh
get a shell yeah we've never seen anything like build a structure other than that i don't think We see hermit crabs. They'll use other people's shell.
We've never seen anything build a structure other than that, I don't think.
Nothing you could consider like, look, there's a house.
A beaver has a beaver den.
It's crude as fuck, but damn, they're building their own little house.
It's kind of crazy.
And we obviously have insects in the world above ground that build incredible structures.
And termites.
Yeah.
Oh, my God.
Have you seen a cross-section of a termite mound?
It's insane.
With the vents for keeping the temperature. Are you thinking about leaf-cutter ants?
Is that?
The one where they filled it up with cement?
And they bring the leaves back, and then they have a fungus that grows on the leaves, and that's what they eat?
Yes.
Yeah, that's wild.
I mean, termites probably do something similar, too.
Well, the termite thing I'm thinking of, I saw some BBC special recently, and I think it was termite mounds in Africa.
And what they do is, like, where they have all the eggs has to be an exact temperature and humidity.
Wow.
And this is in, like, Kalahari Desert, right, which is dry, and the temperature changes a lot night to day.
dry and the temperature changes a lot night to day and so they build these things and they've got this chamber and then below the chamber are cooling fins that that hang down perfectly spaced
and the air circulates through them so that it keeps the temperature exactly the same all the
time wow it's like how does i mean there are things in evolution that are not understood, right?
Like there are things where it's like,
well,
there's no,
um,
uh,
gradual way to get from point A to point B here.
How do termites know to do that?
Right.
You know that,
how do you encode that in DNA?
That doesn't seem possible based on what we know of DNA,
especially since it's not an isolated incidence.
Right.
This is happening all over the termite world.
Yeah.
It's crazy. They don't communicate in a way that we understand.
Right. So, yeah, it's very mysterious. And I think there's a, you know, you're talking about
like quantum leaps and thinking and stuff. I feel like in a strange way, and I'm even hesitant to
say this publicly because it's an example of what I'm talking about.
It's really hard to talk about the areas where Darwinian notions of evolution don't quite make it because you immediately get lumped in with the religious lunatics.
You know what I mean?
Or the woo-woo people.
Yeah, so it sort of shut down an important conversation, you know?
Much like the Nazis.
I mean, the Nazis were doing all this interesting science that you can't talk about, you know?
Or you can't talk about eugenics.
Right, right.
Like, well, that's a legitimate thing to talk about.
Sure, everything's legitimate to talk about, including when you're talking about Nazi history.
Why is that legitimate to talk about, but eugenics as a concept?
I'm not saying as an actual practice.
I don't think you should take people's lives because they're dumber than you.
No, but you could encourage some people not to reproduce.
How dare you?
Like people who have a genetic propensity to a certain illness.
Like, hey, maybe you should adopt, and here's a massive tax credit if you do,
right? I agree with that, but man, I don't think you should be able to tell anybody that they can
or can't breed. I think education is important with all aspects of breeding, but we all know
that people make terrible decisions when it comes to breeding because they want to get that nut,
son. And then they're like, oh no, I met a person. All right, now I got to deal with it. You know,
I mean, I don't think we should take that away from people just because they have diseases or force them to get an abortion.
Also, one valid point that people who have illnesses say is, I don't want anyone else to have the illness that I have.
But I'm alive, and I'm okay.
And I have cerebral palsy, and I have whatever I have.
And I can still enjoy life.
It might not be perfect, but you're telling me that this experience, my experience in
life because I have cerebral palsy or because I have something else is not valid.
And I'm saying that's wrong.
I'm hampered.
I'm hindered.
I've certainly can't move the way a regular person moves.
However, my experience is my experience and I can make the most of it and I enjoy it.
And I'm not necessarily trying to give a child this, but I'm not trying to invalidate, you know, there's an argument for
that. Right. But, okay. But let's look at the counter argument, right? Because the assumption
there is you're, as you said, you're invalidating my experience, but looked at from another way,
what are we comparing that experience to? Right. We're comparing it to nothing.
We're not comparing it to, you know, you should die, you should be, you know, we're saying nothing.
Now, how do you compare it to nothing?
A kid who isn't born isn't suffering.
Right.
So, I mean, I think that the assumption, I've got a cousin, this really smart smart little kid he's like five or something and the other day he was talking about how he uh before he was born he was saying that all fetuses
should have um uh ipads but but no password right because because they wouldn't understand
how old is he it's like five i think and because it's boring you know boring being a fetus right
and i was like well or my my aunt was talking to him and he said she said, well, where were you when you were a fetus?
He said, I was sleepy dead. Like sleepy dead. Yeah. It's not like dead when you die. It's it's dead before you're born and you're kind of sleepy.
So it's sleepy dead. Whoa. And like, OK, yeah, this is a kind of a genius kid.
What if that kid actually
knows something what if you remember some shit that we forgot i'll tell you i mean this is gonna
sound crazy but i remembered when i was a kid i remembered you remembered what i remembered the
the feeling of where i came from before i was born what and what happened, and this is a weird thing, I was just talking to Casilda about this recently.
I remembered it as a general, how can I say this?
Like, what I remember is, as I got older as a kid, I remember thinking, I'm losing this memory.
I'm losing contact with something I know. And as my consciousness was
getting more sort of aware as a person, right, I realized that that was a really valuable thing
that I was losing. And so as I was like 12, 13, 14, I was like, I have to remember this. I knew
I wouldn't remember it as a memory so i was creating
like a a record of it that i would remember if that makes any sense to you know what i mean
like i know you know it's like people who have um i forget what it's called where they don't
recognize faces like uh that all oliver sacks the neurologist has that and he describes it in one of
his books and he's like they've got this face blindness.
So what they'll do is if they're having a conversation with you and they're going to go to the bathroom and they know they're going to come back, they'll be like, okay, the guy with the blue shirt and the thing and the tattoos is Joe.
You know, just to create a record in his head.
And then he'll go to the bathroom.
So when he comes back, he'll remember your Joe
Yeah, it's a it's a really interesting neurological thing. I would like to see that guy draw a picture of a face
Yeah, I wonder if they what is it works? Do you know Oliver Sacks? He would be an amazing guest. I don't know I don't know have mom though. I'd be know who he is. Yeah. Yeah. I've heard of them
I've heard of him actually described that I forget what show I was listening to but he was actually describing that issue yeah not not knowing what people's faces necessarily look like yeah
it's hard to like imagine it is right because it's something that's so automatic to us yeah
he also wrote a book about hallucinogens hallucinations which was very interesting
because it was the first this came out maybe five years ago and it
was it struck me as the first like mainstream uh sort of non-apologetic discussion of the use of
hallucinogens by a very mainstream doctor who's written all these bestsellers and he talks about
when he lived in topanga in the 60s and he took some acid.
Of course he did.
You have to get in there.
Exactly.
To go to the farmer's market to get the acid.
That place is ridiculous.
Yeah.
I was looking at a house there once and these fucking hippies talked me out of even looking any further.
They were like, the house had a tennis court behind it.
They're like, if you buy the house,
you're going to let the community use the tennis court, right?
I go, what?
That's right under my bed.
Get the fuck out of here. No, I'm not gonna let okay well you care you fucking people are too much yeah imagine all
these dirty hippies showing up sunday morning you're trying to sleep in here hey man that was
in bounds knew it wasn't man you should share the score no fuck you that's good you sound like the
californians the saturday night live that's them, dude. I know. It's so true.
I want to go back to what you were saying, though, like your memory of before you were born.
You know, I was listening to this Radiolab podcast.
I know that I've said that about a million times.
If you're playing the podcast drinking games, time to have a shot.
Drink up. Because I listen to that podcast all the time.
But they were talking about memories and how poor people's memories truly are and how many people like believe that they have an idea in their head
that's carved in stone this is what happened but if you if you look at the the actual events the
provable actual events in comparison to their idea what happened oftentimes they're way off
yeah you know eyewitness reports are terrible yeah yeah a lot often people
see that when uh they go back to where they grew up you know and you go back to your home and like
your house looks smaller yeah everything looks different it's just like wow it's like it's like
someone he made a replica of where you grew up but did a shitty job because they didn't have all the
data do you ever feel betrayed when you had that experience no no no i the opposite for me when i went back
to where i grew up it was amazing i took my uh my wife and my kids and we walked through the
neighborhood there wasn't even a neighborhood i lived across the street from the charles river
this is big park like area and uh i would go fishing um down the river there was like this
pond it was i would catch bass at and I took them
on these walks
that I used to take
through the woods
and I was like,
this is a crazy spot
to grow up.
I didn't realize
how weird it was.
I grew up near this place
called Echo Bridge
and Echo Bridge
is in the place
called Newton Upper Falls
and it's,
I had a waterfall
across the street
from my house
and I never realized
like how cool this was
like until I took the kids there
and walked around.
I was like,
wow,
this is a wild place to be. Like all the places where i used to hang out with my friends and just
you know it's nice and it wasn't all built up it was still there's still like that yeah i mean it's
the hemlock gorge reservation that's like the area i think it's preserved that sounds nice i
always imagine you like inner city because I remember you talking about rough neighborhoods and stuff.
I lived in Newton from the time I was 14 to the time I was 17.
Or until the time I was, well, that was high school, you know, 14 to 17.
And then like a year and a half, two years after that, I stayed there.
But before that, I lived in a place called Jamaica Plain.
Right.
Jamaica Plain was rough. We only lived there for about a year and a half maybe two years at the most but i went to
high school or um grammar school in this uh i think it was curly i think that was the name of
the grammar school but it was bad man it was real bad it was jamaica plane has become more gentrified
now but when i lived there in 1979 1980 i guess it was somewhere around then i think my first year
high school was 81 it It was really bad.
There was a lot of, like, bad shit going down.
There were 17-year-old kids that were in the seventh grade.
You know, they would, like, never graduated.
And, like, you'd be in, you know, I was, like, a little kid, and I was going to class,
and there was these fucking full-grown adults that were in my class.
You know, there's guys and girls making out in the back of the class.
It was all these, like, inner-city kids. Like, they were so i'd come from florida where i lived before that in a college
community in gainesville florida and we moved to like the only place in boston that my parents
could afford and it was this jamaica plane place and they worked really hard to get us out of there
and moved us to newton and newton was like way more urban way more relaxed but jamaica plane
was fucking sketchy.
It was sketchy.
It was a lot of crime.
Like there's breaking and enterings in our neighborhood all the time.
You know, like we got a dog just to bark to let us know if someone was trying to get into the house.
It was very weird.
It was a weird place to live.
And then Newton was a total different place.
That's cool.
That's something you and I have in common moving as kids.
I moved a lot as a kid.
I went to three high schools.
It's real common with people that are interesting, for whatever reason.
Yeah, I mean, I have a younger sister, and she and I sort of dealt with it in diametrically opposed ways.
Like she had developed a real need to be part of the community so as soon as we moved to we've
been jacksonville for example as soon as we were in jacksonville she developed the local accent
within a week you know i never developed any accent i sort of i became the pedantic arrogant
asshole who doesn't need friends you know that's how i dealt with it right you know okay i i mean
i got used to eating alone in the lunchroom, you know, like reading a book.
Like, I got my book.
I'll ignore the rest of you fuckers.
I mean, I made friends, but the point was that I didn't, like, I wasn't reaching out, you know.
I was trying to be, and then that worked great in the, you know, the rest of my life, traveling all the time, living overseas, all that.
I don't have a home.
And you're like this too, right? You move enough. It move enough it's like well okay i lived here for a couple years i lived here
for a couple years but when people say don't you miss your home all your friends the people you
grew up with i don't know the people i grew up with you know there was stages i'm still friends
with uh a couple guys from high school really yeah yeah me too yeah one guy from high school actually
i have two two buddies from high school that we talk one that i'm pretty close with uh i saw him
last when i was in boston and um you know we've known each other since we were like 14 so it's
it's weird you know like seeing us now he has grown kids we went to dinner with him and his
kids his daughter's like in her 20s i'm like like, this is crazy, man. You know, I've known his wife forever, too.
It's interesting to see.
He grew up in that neighborhood.
He lived there.
And, you know, we became friends when I moved into the neighborhood.
But almost all my friends, like Joey, Ari, like all these guys moved all over the place.
You know, Duncan.
Yeah.
You know, Brian Callen's the worst.
Like, not the worst, I shouldn't say, but the most experienced.
Because he lived in Saudi Arabia.
Oh, wow.
His family was involved in international finance.
And so he lived in all these crazy Middle Eastern countries.
He lived in Afghanistan, I believe.
That's a whole different level.
Oh, he lived everywhere, man.
Yeah.
And he's one of the most interesting people I know because of that.
It's just like he – there's pros and cons,, man. Yeah. And he's one of the most interesting people I know because of that. It's just like he there's pros and cons. I think definitely there's like a definitely like a more calming confidence of growing up in a neighborhood where you know all the people and you. Yeah. But there's also like a limiting aspect to that, too, especially if it goes wrong. Yeah. You know, like if it depends on the neighborhood. Yeah, sure. A bad neighborhood, or if you get labeled as a person in the neighborhood where the kids ostracize or they get mad at you for something.
Right.
Yeah, it's like you redefine yourself when you move to new places.
That's like the new girl.
Oh, she's the new girl.
Where's she from?
She's from Portland.
Oh, does she smell like feet?
You know, like you see her.
She's wearing a granny dress.
She's got a patchouli on her thing, dude.
I like patchouli.
Oh, good for you.
I got to sign.
You're the guy.
You're the fucking problem.
I'm the one guy. I'm the one guy. I mean, everyone always, I like patchouli. Oh, good for you. I got to say. You're the guy. You're the fucking problem. I'm that one guy.
I'm the one guy.
I mean, everyone always, I like patchouli.
I like prune juice.
I mean, I know it's a joke, but it's like it tastes good.
It's good for your body, too.
I guess.
It makes you shit or not shit.
I don't even know.
I know it affects shit somehow.
But, I mean, I just like the flavor.
And patchouli smells good to me.
It's not the worst smell.
Yeah.
I like incense that's
a very hippie thing people get angry at you like you don't like the smell of incense uh not if
they're any anything but nag champa i like the nag champa some stuff laying around here somewhere
you know i don't like one right there tell me if this one smells good to you i'm sure it'll be fine
yeah hey shout out to Duncan.
Are we shouting out?
White people shouting out.
Well, you mentioned Duncan, and when I tweeted that I was going to be on the show, everyone's like, oh, you and Joe and Duncan.
Like, oh.
Yeah, Duncan couldn't make it.
He's a big sir, living the time of his life.
He is.
That fucker.
He likes it up there.
Oh, he loves it up there.
He's trying to talk me into buying a house.
Dude, I'll watch your house when you're not there.
What a favor he'd be doing you. Yeah. Oh, he loves it up there. He's trying to talk me into buying a house. Dude, I'll watch your house when you're not there. What a favor he'd be doing you.
Oh, he would be.
I would do that, too.
I would totally trust him.
It's pretty cool up there.
I love it.
It's a very unusual place because you can't really support a large population.
It's like you can only live so far in.
You can't drive in and out.
You're kind of butted up against a mountain.
The water's right there.
It's like this is all you got.
You spend time at Esalen ever?
Never.
Talking about hippies? No. I was invited to do a right there. It's like, this is all you got. You spend time at Esalen ever? Never. Talking about hippies?
No.
I did,
I was invited to do a workshop there.
How's that smell?
Is that okay?
I don't even smell it yet.
You don't smell it?
It's going that way.
Damn,
what's wrong with you?
Yeah.
I guess I'm wrong with your nose,
son.
You should smell the fuck out of that.
Oh,
there it is,
yeah.
How's that?
It's nice.
You sure?
Don't lie to me,
man.
I'll put it right out.
All right.
I hardly noticed it.
I tell you,
I mean,
I don't,
it must be the coke.
Oh,
sorry.
Did I say that out loud? How dare you? that's a bad drug don't you understand that's a drug i had
access i mean you're in this position all the time i'm sure but you know having access to like the
best of the best of something i knew a guy in college who was the son of an oil minister from
a country i won't name just to keep me out of trouble.
He had a private jet. He used to fly to Columbia. He had a diplomatic bag so he could bring anything
into the country. He'd bring this shit into the country and he was like in this frat and I knew
someone who was in the frat and I was never a frat boy at all, but they would invite me in like
these like yellow rocks of Coke you know and it's like
and it was the i mean i went to this dumbass college where everybody was rich so the drug
scene there was off the charts and like i've done the best coke there is right i mean i know the guy
who invented mdma i you know it's like i've got I had these really good connections for drugs and coke sucks.
The best coke in the world is shit.
I don't get it.
Wow.
I mean, my in my sense is that it it affects a certain personality structure in a really pleasant way.
And I don't have that structure.
So for me, hallucinogens are like boom
that's pushing my my button right right coke it just made me fucking nervous and drink too much
well you're a self-deprecating guy and you joke around about a lot and you're also introspective
and i think that one of the things that people don't like about people that are coked up is that
they want to talk about themselves they want to tell you how fucking badass they are they want to brag they want to they want to talk about like
making money we're gonna buy this forest we're gonna fucking you know like you know i mean like
mike young used to always talk about how uh people on coke always want to start a business with you
and it's really kind of true it's like they always have these enthusiasm yeah they have these crazy
grand plans and it just i i've never been interested in it i i got lucky and i ducked it
yeah when i was a kid i've told the story a hundred times but i had a friend my friend that
i'm still friends with in high school right his cousin used to sell it and his life went down the
toilet and i watched him wither away lost lost a shitload of weight, became weird.
He was just always on coke.
And when he wasn't on coke, he was just exhausted.
It's just like, Jesus, that looks like knowing someone who got bit by a vampire.
Like, oh, my God.
You get that bug.
They got you.
Yeah.
It's like you're taking all the energy from part of your life and concentrating it in the few hours after you do the coke.
And like, well, what are you going to do with all that energy except irritate people?
But I knew a girl, and she was a great girl.
She wasn't a mean person.
She wasn't nasty, materialistic.
She was beautiful.
She was really nice and sweet and kind.
But fuck, she loved coke.
God damn.
And she would feel bad about it.
She'd go, I fucking love it.
I love doing coke.
And I'd be like, really?
Like, what?
You know, I was not curious enough to want to do it.
But listening to her, you know, she knew it was bad, knew she shouldn't do it, didn't want to do it anymore.
But she'd tell you, God damn, when I'm doing it, I love doing coke.
In my experience, the people who tend to get really hooked on coke are people who have issues.
They feel bad about themselves.
They feel they've got a lack of self-esteem.
They feel like they're not good enough.
They're not whatever.
There's shame and all that.
Because the coke takes that away for a while.
That totally makes sense in this case.
Because this woman, her mother was like really overbearing.
And her mother was like super alpha successful.
Her mother was a single mom and was like,
no man's going to fucking run me.
And so she was a lawyer and she ran a successful business.
She had a law firm.
And she was super intense with her daughter about achievement, about pursuing things, about don't eat the wrong foods.
And it was really overbearing and gave her a hard time about her weight.
Like, you're too fat.
You're never going to be a model.
And so I guess the coke weight like you're too fat. You're never gonna be a model and like
And so I guess the coke was like, uh free I don't have to think about I give her like maybe she had a deficit created by her mom's constant, you know
Ever letting her just be herself. Yeah, you ever you know, Gabor Matei is no he's
Yeah, I know it didn't know the name and I've only seen it written. Yeah, he's he's uh yeah i know i didn't know the name i've only seen it written yeah he's he's a cool
guy and if you ever want to have him on the show let me know he's he's a friend of mine he's a very
interesting guy he's a doctor who works with addicts he's been working with addicts in vancouver
in like the slum part of vancouver for a long time a lot of like real down and out people
um and he also is very interested in alternative approaches to addiction
and you know he's written about ayahuasca as a way of dealing with addiction treating addicts and all
that um but anyway he uh his theory is that all addiction is due to trauma it's not it has nothing
to do with the substance or the activity it's's that's just how it manifests. Right. But it's all about psychological trauma. It's all trying to alleviate suffering of some point of some kind. And it's interesting. His research sort of meshes very well with this experiment that was done also in British Columbia.
in British Columbia. I can't remember. Williamson, I think, was the scientist's name. You know,
those famous studies where they give rats, like they've got a water bottle, it's just water,
and then another one that's got Coke in it. And the rats will just keep doing the Coke and they'll forget to eat. And then they, you know, like die, like these people you're talking about,
lost all this weight and just like completely focused. This guy looked at that. He was a professor of sciences.
He looked at that and he's like, okay, well, that's the sort of main study that everybody
cites that shows that Coke is addictive and it's Coke that causes the problem and it's
the substance and molecular problems.
But what if we took those rats, same kind of rats, but instead of just being in a cage
where there's nothing to do
put them in a really interesting environment where there are lots of other options there are lots of
other rats there are tubes to go through and things to climb and things to hide under and
lots of stimulation right and then let's try it they try it what happens the rats do the coke
once or twice and then walk away from it. Never go back. Right.
So there's an argument to be made that, a strong argument, that it's not about substances.
It's, like I was saying, it's about the way this substance intersects with whatever your particular suffering is.
Right.
So these rats in a cage are obviously suffering because they're not in a natural environment.
They're in a fucking cage.
There's nothing to do except, like, get high.
So they get high.
That's a very good point that I never considered that is a very very good point
it's called rat park if anyone wants to google it just google rat park because that's what he
called this you know like sort of enclosure that he made for the rats imagine being a rat being
stuck in a fucking fluorescent lighting room and the fucking metal cage and the little water bottle
you gotta suck on big too i mean the fucking life they live the little water bottle you got to suck on big two
the fucking life they live is dog shit yeah you're in a prison so yeah i imagine you got you got a
prison a guy in solitary confinement right and you're offering him to get high of course it's
going to get high and you're being surrounded by giants everywhere you go there's these enormous
creatures who could easily reach in and just snuff your life
out by squeezing it's true ridiculous and by nature you're terrified right because you're a
prey animal you're you know yeah you should be running from everything and all of a sudden you
can't run you can't hide right you're in a cage and they just reach in and grab you
and they fucking give you coke yeah which makes even more apparent what a fucking shitty life goddamn peter might
have a point i interviewed this guy recently talking about animal stuff he uh he was doing
his phd in uh university of pennsylvania and he was working in psychology but there were chimps
involved in his research and so they like they would come into these cages but they had this big
area outside back behind the cages right where so like at night they would come into these cages but they had this big area outside
back behind the cages right where so like at night they would go hang out there were trees and stuff
and whatever and so this is in the i guess 60s or 70s and uh so he would hang out until everybody
went home and he was alone and then he'd sneak back into the area where the chimps were where
he wasn't allowed nobody was
allowed right like walking around with chimps but he was like fuck it if they kill me i don't think
they'll kill me no problem so he and he was a hippie right um actually he's the guy who who
now owns this chain of paleo restaurants in portland really cool guy richard um figures yeah
he opened the first mountain bike shop in the country he's a very good businessman
then he opened like he went to portland because he wanted to um be in a place where you could get
all your supplies for a restaurant all the food within a hundred mile radius and he studied all
over the country and he said portland's the place everything can be grown within 100 miles he sort
of was ahead of the mountain biking craze.
Then he was ahead of the sort of farm to table thing.
And he opened a chain called Laughing Planet,
which there were like 15 or 20 of these
like vegetarian burrito shops in Portland.
Sold that because he had quintuple bypass surgery.
Whoa.
And he thought he was going to die.
Sold that, bought this beautiful farm
where he grows stuff now.
It's just amazing.
Quintuple bypass surgery?
And he's a vegan mountain biker?
He was a vegetarian.
Not vegan, but he was a vegetarian.
And so that's what he said.
He's like, I work out.
I'm eating vegetarian for 20 years.
What the fuck?
And he started reading about,
like, wait a minute this
idea of low fat is bullshit you know he wasn't taking healthy fats right he didn't know you know
so now he shifted to paleo and now he's opened like you know he's got this expanding business
of paleo restaurants anyway what am i talking oh so he would go back with these chimps and he told
this hilarious story where he's with this chimp and he'd like go back there and you know smoke a joint at the end of the day and the chimps are wandering
around and one day this chimp comes over and sits down next to him and he's smoking a joint and the
chimp reaches out no he does not get this chimp high he hands the joint to the chimp no the chimp
hits it and gives it back to him oh my god that that would be the greatest
video ever on youtube a dude get there's one of a chimp fucking a frog have you ever seen
oh i have seen that that's kind of sad yeah not for the chimp but but one of a chimp smoking a
joint with a dude especially a hippie right that would be the ultimate don't bogart don't bogart it
man and if
you did bogart what are you gonna do you know you better just give the chimp the joint shut the fuck
up exactly it rips your arms off exactly and a high what's a high chimp like you know probably
pretty mellow it's like a it's like a paranoid rat like how do you know it's well that's another
thing we're talking about um rats being in cages i i got super high once and I wrote a piece way back a long time ago in my blog
Before my 2009 special before I started podcasting
I used to write a lot and put it up in blog form and one of the things I wrote about is it's called animal prison
It became like the foundation for a lot of jokes that I went to use in some of my specials
But it was about getting high. I got really high once and i went to the zoo and i was super depressed yeah not you know me personally in my personal life
but being at the zoo stoned made me like like especially edibles you know i had eaten a pot
something or another cookie or something like that and i was like really fucked up about this i'm
like this is just not fair it's it doesn't it's like it's cruel it's cruel and it's
cruel in a way we're insensitive to and the joke was like hey man you know i watched the chimps
they were playing with the tire swinging around looked like they're having a good time i'm like
yeah well you can go to prison you'll see dudes playing basketball and it doesn't mean it's
awesome right you know like people do what they have to do and they're in prison to have fun but
they don't want to be there and that's the same thing with these animals that didn't like the idea that somehow or another they're being saved.
I guess we're supposed to accept that they're doing conservation work for sure.
And that some of these animals can only exist in captivity in this day and age or or or at least we have to have some of them in captivity to ensure their survival.
Yeah.
Because humans are pushing in on their area where they live.
But fuck, man, that's especially with intelligent animals that's depressing as shit
yeah i've got a friend i just did a podcast with him the other day he's uh sort of been hired by
the whole marine mammal uh consortium to try to help them deal with their image problem from black
fish and blah blah blah, blah, right?
So we were talking about this, and he's been working a lot in this place in Florida
where the dolphins are used for therapeutic, you know, with like vets with PTSD
and kids who are autistic and stuff.
And the dolphins seem to have a real sensitivity and there's an interaction.
And a lot of them are born in captivity.
If you let them loose, they'd be dead within hours.
You know, they don't know how to survive and stuff.
But anyway, we're talking about this.
And, you know, I said, like, OK, you know, what are you going to do about the.
I understand he has good arguments about the dolphins and the smaller animals.
But, like, what are you going to do about the orcas, man?
You know, how do you fix that? And like he said there's no way to fix that like they just should not be there because you can't build an enclosure that is even arguably big enough and
interesting enough for them and they live they're social so you can't just have one you got to have
like 15 of them you know they're very community-based animals so like isn't it possible that they could
take an area in a bay like a very large area and take all the world's captive orcas and transport
them to this large bay like take a large area in a part of the world that we don't go but it's
habitable right habitable for them and then you know fence something off underwater spend a lot of money
to fix this issue and then slowly but surely reintroduce them to the wild give them a steady
source of food like provide them with food and then provide them with food that's you have to
catch yeah like give them more and more food that's like you're gonna let a tuna go or whatever
it is yeah habituate them and make it a project I don't buy the idea that it's impossible to take them and let them live in the wild.
You can take a 40-year-old man and teach him how to go forage through the woods.
I mean, look at Survivorman.
That fucking guy, he taught himself how to do that shit.
He can exist for months at a time out there in the wilderness.
And there's a lot of people that do that.
They have survival skills.
That's what we call it.
We used to call hunting and gathering is now survival skills.
It's not just existing as a person foraging for food like people used to do for fucking untold thousands of years.
I think you could teach orcas, but it would have to take a long time.
It would cost a lot of money.
But you owe that to the fucking orcas, man.
I agree.
I agree.
But, you know, we're not, yeah. We get into what we owe to agree but you know we're not we're not yeah we
get into what we owed other you know beings sure it's a never-ending i mean you ever read peter
singer you know him no he wrote animal liberation which sort of started the whole animal rights
frenzy in the 70s whenever it was really interesting philosopher teaches at princeton
now i think um and he made a really interesting
argument about using primates in drug testing and because you know the argument there is well
they're close to humans so their responses to pharmaceuticals and things is as close as we're
going to get for our own testing and uh what he said he's one of these guys who just thinks
really clearly wherever it goes and he doesn't give a shit.
And so his argument was, OK, a chimpanzee has the intelligence and sort of demonstrable awareness of a three or four year old kid.
So they're they're beings. They're thinking they're experiencing. They've got emotions. They've got relationships.
There's no question. Right. They're not fish they're not you know um and
every year thousands of babies are born with no brain with i forget the technical the medical
term for it but they just their brain never developed in the fetus and they're born and
thousands really yeah maybe it's hundreds i don't know but a lot um and his
point was these babies are all going to die they're born they put them on these machines keep
them going they're you're feeding tubes and whatever um but they're never gonna survive
they feel no pain because they have no brains so why aren't we testing pharmaceuticals on them wow because they're human that's some dark shit
well it is you're right but it makes sense it certainly makes sense logically it's the
emotional fact instead we're torturing you know these living thinking you know aware beings yeah
um the idea being of course i mean the argument against that is that if it saves one human being
who cares about the champ that's that's the the idea is that if it saves one human being, who cares about the chimp?
That's the idea.
You know, if it saves your wife, you know, if your wife is saved, the person you love more than anyone else in this world is saved because they tortured some chimp.
It's not a beautiful thing.
You know, it's very dark, but you would be happy that that chimp gave up his life.
Right, but I think that's why we have governments, right, to think beyond that personal level.
Because, you know, that's what war is, right?
War is innocent people are dying so that, you know,
and, you know, there is no good choice, right? It's like, okay, a thousand innocent people die there
or a hundred thousand innocent people die here.
Well, a government exists to kill those thousand innocent people, essentially.
Isn't that the
real problem like what makes someone uniquely qualified to be the person that makes a very
difficult choice yeah and really no one deserves to be the person who decides this group of people
dies so this group of people lives or that this monkey gets a you know a battery cable attached
to his dick right that's why psychopaths do so well because they're not worried about the consequences they're able to make those decisions is it psycho or sociopaths
i've never really understood the difference between the two to be honest with you i think
sociopaths don't feel empathy and psychopaths like we're prone to more violent behavior
if that makes any sense like i think sociopaths from what has been explained to me and i might
be butchering this probably should look but uh i think the idea being that they're not feeling empathy like the rest of us are like if
so if they by their actions they get ahead but somebody else suffers it doesn't bother them
whereas for you you would do something that would hurt someone's feelings to be like man i just can't
fucking sleep this is so freaking me out you know they don't have that right that sense of empathy
i have a friend who wrote a book called The Psychopath Test.
Oh, I've read that.
Yeah, John Ronson?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I started reading it, I should say.
I think I bailed on it.
I got bored.
Yeah, well, you get the idea pretty quickly.
I'm all ADD on that shit like that, man.
I'm really good with a documentary and stuff like that,
but getting deep into the dry issues of psychopaths and sociopaths.
What's his take on
it uh you know essentially that uh psychopaths are very uh prominent in fields like wall street
military you know high they do really well in areas where you have to make decisions that
you know hurt people and you don't give a shit here's
an article in psychology today that explains it in a way many forensic psychologists psychiatrists
and criminologists use the terms sociopathy and psychopathy interchangeably uh leading experts
disagree on whether there are meaningful differences between the two conditions
i contend that there are clear and significant distinctions.
Sociopaths and psychopaths share.
This is what they share.
A disregard for the laws and social norms.
A disregard for the rights of others.
A failure to feel remorse or guilt.
A tendency to display violent behavior.
In addition to their commonalities,
sociopaths and psychopaths also have their own unique behavioral characteristics as well sociopaths tend to be nervous and easily agitated they are volatile and prone to emotional outbursts
including fits of rage blah blah psychopaths yeah psychopaths on the other hand are unable
to form emotional attachments or feel real empathy with others although they often have disarming or
even charming personalities interesting that's what i would think of as sociopaths. Psychopaths are very manipulative and can easily gain people's trust. They learn to
mimic emotions. Now I've met people that do that despite their inability to actually feel them
and will appeal normal to unsuspecting people. I've seen that. I've seen that where I've had
conversations with people and I realized that they're like mimicking emotions like oh yeah
man it's horrible that that happened to him like oh you don't care at all like you're feeling like
no you know there's a there's like certain feelings that people have where you feel you
you see it in them that they feel remorse or they feel sad or they feel empathy and then there's
other people that are like faking that where it's like they're doing bad acting on a soap opera.
Especially in L.A., dude.
I mean, I was on a TV show here two weeks ago or something, and it struck me how the sort of their concentric circles of bullshit that get more intense the closer you get to the cameras.
You know, there's like you check into the hotel and they're like, hey, Dr. Ryan.
Kind of light but friendly, but they don't give a fuck.
Right. And then you got the driver who's like, but friendly, but they don't give a fuck. Right.
And then you got the driver who's like,
Hey,
is everything good?
Can I help you with that,
sir?
You know,
and then you get the assistant producer who greets you at the door.
Oh,
we're so thrilled.
You're here,
Dr.
Ryan.
You know,
it's just,
and then you're actually on stage in front of the cameras and the shit is
just like up to your fucking neck.
It's unbelievable. Yeah. Like all the fake emotions emotions what kind of a show was it well i'm legally uh
can't talk about it i can't name it but it was like a like a talk show you know kind of like
where i was talking about monogamy and you know hey you know, and the like the segment before me went long.
It was about dirty underwear.
And, you know, so I'm like, that's important.
That's important to discuss.
Are there issues?
Is there bacteria?
Can people die?
What about vaccinations?
They protect you against dirty underwear.
And I'm not saying it's a I don't I've never seen the show.
So I don't know if it's a good show or a bad show, but's just and i've experienced this in lots of shows not this show all right but lots of shows where like your tv particularly you know
why am i talking to you about tv but in my experience at least the way i interact with tv
it's just such bullshit yeah it can be certainly can be but there's some shows you do that aren't
bullshit like they're like the jimmy kimmel show for instance you talk to jimmy kimmel he's like totally there he seems
like a real guy he's a real guy he's totally i often wonder about i i was talking to his buddy
the doing the dolphin stuff his he dated a woman who was on a rebound from george clooney
talking about a tough gig right like you're the rebound from George Clooney. I would take that over the rock.
I'll take George Clooney all day.
All day.
I dated a woman who told me I was even better than Fabio in bed.
You should never know that a chick fucked Fabio.
You're taking Fabio's sloppy seconds?
Good Lord.
I know.
Good Lord. Well, she didn't tell me until it was too late to change course but it's one of the most dubious
compliments i've ever received that's interesting uh even better than fabio so jimmy kimmel was
dating a girl who's on the rebound from george no not jimmy kimmel my buddy oh your buddy was
but anyway that got us talking about about famous people seem cool, like George Clooney.
To me, George Clooney seems like if you hung out with him, he would actually be a cool guy.
Yeah, I would imagine he'd be pretty cool.
And so, like, how hard is that?
For a guy like that, who's probably a thousand times more famous than, like, my level of fame,
he's probably, like, legitimately, like, a thousand times more famous than me that's pretty intense fame he can't go anywhere yeah george clooney shows up
like helicopters will start circling the restaurant that he's at people just jump out of
buses with cameras and try to touch him and it relates to what we were just talking about like
that fake emotion thing right how much true input is he getting from human beings well he goes to other
countries that's one of the things that i think benefits you for a guy like that i think he's got
like a fucking villa in france france notice i said france because i'm really sure yeah i didn't
say france okay i'm not like that he uh he's got he's got mad cash that's cool because it insulates
him from a lot of the bullshit but Yeah, but it also attracts the bullshit.
Well, I was going to say my buddy is friends with Johnny Depp.
Also in France.
And he spent some time with Johnny Depp in England.
And he said it was the most ridiculous scene you've ever seen in your life.
The guy can't go anywhere.
Everywhere he goes, there's people with earpieces in and suits.
And they follow him everywhere.
They're peripheral. And you try to go outside.
He was going outside to have a cigarette, and they swarm on him.
Can we get you a ride somewhere?
Do you need something?
You're always catered to.
So he lives in this weird, insulated world where he runs from restaurant to restaurant
and has chefs come over his house and cook.
He can't go to stores.
Everywhere he goes, he's being swarmed upon.
And for him uh apparently it happened
uh after the pirates of the caribbean movies that like took things to this critical nuclear place
where it's at right now where he's just like he's a story he's an object of attention everywhere he
goes it's got to be really hard to keep your shit together when you're like that yeah your version
of reality is so fucked yeah i mean you're not getting the sort of feedback that you need just to like know what's real. Yeah. You know, how do you it's it's interesting. The character that put him over, you know, into that world of strangeness was based on Keith Richards. Right. Yeah. right yeah who yesterday i was talking to my friend tau who um he's an italian prince talking
about european he was married to olivia wilde for seven years you know so he's sort of like
he's like in this world a strange world and uh he was talking his father was this crazy italian
prince who hung out with felini and bridget bardot and Salvador Dali. And, you know, he sort of started the Dolce Vita in Italy in the 50s and squandered this
huge family fortune, like in his lifetime on women and boats and parties and all this
shit.
I love him.
Yeah.
Really interesting cat.
Anyway, Tao is a great flamenco guitarist.
And we were talking about like like how do you get in you
know how when did you start playing guitar and he said well when i was 13 um the rolling stones came
to like rome or wherever they were playing and my dad is an old friend of keith richards and he took
me to the hotel where the stones were staying and keith had like a whole floor to himself right
and we went in and there were all these people and all this scene and actually keith richards where the Stones were staying, and Keith had like a whole floor to himself, right?
And we went in, and there were all these people and all this scene.
And actually, Keith Richards' father was there,
he mentioned.
And my dad mentioned to Keith,
like, hey, Tal's learning guitar.
And Keith had a flamenco guitar there.
And he picked it up, and he did a few riffs.
And he said to him,
if you want to learn to
play guitar learn flamenco because if you can play flamenco you can play anything wow and tal now is
a fucking great flamenco guitarist and he's like man if keith richards like tells you what to do
like you know that's what you do you know he fucking went with it it's great that makes sense
because that flamenco is very fast finger movements yeah like you would have to develop some incredible coordination of your
fingers yeah like doing a stones riff after that is easy yeah it's uh i've always loved music but
i've never had any inclination to learn an instrument yeah i love it do you regret that
nope no there's not enough time you know i mean, I have enough forms of expression that I'm enjoying.
I think it would be cool as fuck, man.
You watch like a Jimi Hendrix solo and you go, good Lord.
Can you imagine if you could just...
Just the feeling of being in it that deeply.
The flow, you know?
It's just...
That's what I regret.
I never had the discipline.
I took electric guitar lessons for two weeks and quit.
And I took piano for a week and quit.
And, you know, I was just too much of a fuck off as a kid.
I could never get over the hump to where it started being enjoyable.
You need to be obsessed to get really good at anything, whether it's the drums or the guitar or playing chess.
I mean, it's all the same thing, really.
It's like you need to just get obsessed at that particular discipline.
Whatever it is that it takes to get really good at it,
a big part of what makes someone really good at anything
is this crazy obsession.
If you don't have that obsession,
you'll just drift in and out from one thing to the other
until you find the thing that you really are obsessed with.
Do you think the obsession is know in the psychological terms as
a pathology right obsessive compulsive disorder and and you know this is a very subversive kind
of thought but it's like in our society this relates back to the psychopaths who who attain
great success are i mean are most really successful people
responding to some deep trauma. You know what I mean? Like they say comedians,
you know, there's some need for approval and, you know, make people laugh, make people love you,
you know, because whatever your family structure, I don't know as many comedians as you do, but,
you know, you always hear that right you know
because i needed the attention in actors like they need people looking at them they need to be on
stage they're like drinking that up because there's some need it nourishes them on some level
right so i wonder like is there you know like i'm thinking about people who say like i learned to
play guitar so i could get laid you you know, because the girls were.
I guess I didn't think of it that way.
So, like, if you had a strategy.
Nobody told me I would get laid.
Or maybe if you and your friends got together and you were like, man, we're having a hard time getting laid.
Okay, here's the deal.
Let's form a band.
We're going to make a band.
I think you probably wouldn't be as good as if you guys were like, man, look, the Stones were our age when they got together.
Let's just fucking do this, guys.
You know, if you really had this desire to produce something that people loved.
Yeah.
And that's what you kind of have to do.
I think to get to be a Keith Richards, you have to have this desire to produce something that people are going to love.
Because when you listen to his guitar riffs,
or any great guitarist, Stevie Ray Vaughan, anyone,
they have to have this deep desire to connect
with just the correct sounds that's coming out of their mind,
their imagination, their skill,
their interpretation of the moment.
That's why people like when someone does a guitar solo the
idea being that this guy's just feeling it you know it's not the exact same solo every time
every time they're doing it like you know if a guy just just starts riffing and everybody starts
cheering and going along with it you want to see like what's what's in that guy right at that
moment it expresses itself through all the discipline and all the years that he's practiced guitar and then the finger coordination that it's able to achieve and and you know you
there's some that's like you could tell they're just kind of they're just going fast
right you know there's going fast yeah there's people that shred and it's really cool and it's
really impressive and then there's like some stevie ray vaan shit there's some Stevie Ray Vaughan where you
like feel like him crying through the guitar yeah like there's like there's like this emotion that's
attached to it and then people connect to and when you see like Stevie Ray Vaughan's version
of Little Wing yeah you know you see a great guitarist inhabiting and loving another great
guitarist you know there's something really beautiful about that.
Fuck yeah, dude.
Fuck yeah.
His version of Voodoo Child is the only version I accept other than Hendrix.
Right.
Obviously, I'm a huge Hendrix fan.
Yeah.
I mean, that's why I named this the Joe Rogan Experience to rip off Hendrix.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Huge.
Right.
Always.
From the time I was a little kid.
I mean, he has a special quality to him. Like that song Voodoo Child, to me, like that, just the opening. Yeah. Where the fuck did that come from? Who did that before him? I mean, compare music before Hendrix and after Hendrix. It's like, I really believe that like, especially Voododoo child there's something about that beginning riff like when he really gets into it it's like god he was on some new place he was in
some new dimension when he was and restring the guitar like fuck that i'm not learning that i'm
doing it my way that's he's just like so unconcerned with what came before in a way you know it's
drugs he was on drugs well that that's what I was going to say.
And honestly, the first time, it's special drugs, not coke.
Oh, yeah. No, he was on all sorts of different drugs.
Acid, generally, yeah.
There it is.
Hit that. Crank that shit up.
Listen to this.
What you really have to think about is,
this is the late 1960s, when this guy comes out with this.
Now, if you just go 10 years before that, you're dealing with Buddy Holly, which is great music, but this is just some next level shit.
Listen to this part.
This is one dude, the way And the distortion
Yeah
That's my
I have a few all time favorite songs
I don't have like
All time favorite song
But I listen to that motherfucker
When I'm in my car
On the way to the gym
I'll time it
For like the last five minutes
Before I get to the gym
Is Voodoo Child
Cause it's just
Just fucking blasted.
Put my phone on airplane mode.
Fuck you.
And hear this?
Cranked.
Always high.
It just touches your DNA.
You feel that guy's expression right through the sound.
I get that with, do you ever listen to Danny California?
Red Hot Chili Peppers? Oh, yeah. Okay, yeah. There's a guitar. the sound i get that with the do you ever listen to danny california red hot chili peppers oh yeah
okay yeah there's a guitar there's a there's a thing like the whole song builds to this
wild guitar lead near the end and like if i'm working out or running or something i always
have that on my playlist because i just there's like energy comes out of the ether you know
it's amazing yeah they had a cover of higher ground that was one of
the few uh covers that i actually enjoyed as much as the original just like steve ray vaughn's
version of voodoo child there's some covers that are better i really love that genre of music
you know where a cover like gets the essence of the song in a way that the original performer
may have missed like there are a few a few I mean, all along the Watchtower, you know.
I think Hendrix does that better than Dylan.
And Dylan actually said that as well.
Yeah.
It's just so different.
His version is a different song.
I mean, it's just so different.
And, you know, here's one that people don't talk about.
Suspicious Minds.
Dwight Yoakam did a cover of Suspicious Minds. Elvis, right.
Oh, it's better than Elvis.
People get mad.
Fine young cannibals.
Fuck you, white people.
Fine young cannibals did a version of it, which isn't bad.
They did a great version, too.
It's a funny song, Suspicious Minds, too.
It is, yeah.
Because it's Elvis saying, oh, come on, baby.
You know I wouldn't lie to you.
Who are you going to believe, me or your lying eyes, right?
Especially in the context of Elvis's life.
Exactly.
You're a ghost, dude.
Come on, baby.
It's like JFK saying, hey, I'm a one-woman man.
Yeah, sure you are, dude.
Well, not only that, Elvis was probably on so many pills, he didn't know if he was a monogamous.
He probably had no idea.
When he was the drug czar.
Oh, he was drifting in and out of consciousness all day long.
Poor guy.
Talk about trauma
leading to great fame right yeah in a way yeah yeah a damaged soul you know seeking
approval from the world well i often wonder if what we're seeing when we see great like
great resonating forms of expression whether it's art or whether it's comedy or, you know, any music.
I always wonder if what we're looking at is a mathematical equation.
If we're looking at like a yin and a yang, an ebb and a pull, and that the ebb, you know,
whatever it was that created this great deficit responds, the body, the mind, the soul, the
spirit responds with this incredible work of art to sort of make up for all the trauma that it experienced when it was young which is
why it's it's really tough to find someone who had this really ultra
privileged life who was accepted and loved and nurtured in every way who
becomes really fascinating great artist right like what you usually find is
these people that are in pain and torn up and exactly
yeah and i i often wonder if we're looking at in a cultural context and we sort of like oh that guy
is an asshole or his life sucked or she was abused or he was neglected and we're we're looking at it
in terms of like these um these definitions that we've already categorized in our mind. But in fact, what it really is, is like math.
It all evens out.
Yeah, we're looking at a minus and a positive.
We're looking at a Jimi Hendrix, this young black man in this incredibly racist world
who comes along right at the moment of this psychedelic acceptance
where the whole world, especially young people,
are turning on in a way that they never had
before the Beatles come along they do the white album people are freaking out Clapton Pink Floyd
Layla Pink Floyd and then all of a sudden this dude comes along who's dressed like a fucking
Indian he's got a headband on and he's playing music from outer space chewing gum yeah I mean
you know Phil Hartman uh rest his soul, who's a good friend from news radio.
And he was he grew up when he was young.
Rather, he lived in Hollywood and he worked as like a stagehand when Jimi Hendrix played the whiskey.
And so he was right there with Jimi Hendrix holding the speaker because sometimes the speakers would fall off
the stage like they were on the edge of the stage and you had to be there in case something happened
so he was there when hendrix first burst on the scene so he's as close to hendrix as you are right
talk about front row seat right he played guitar phil was oh phil did everything he could do he
was a true genius i mean he really could anything. And he had an incredible work ethic, that guy.
Like, we joke around about it.
We had this thing we did at the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
He got a star earlier this year.
And Stephen Root and Candy Alexander and I were joking around about how Phil had these notes.
Like, he would have his script would be, he would have tabs for each scene.
And, like, these different color tabs for every scene that he was in. And everything would be, he would have tabs for each scene and like these different color tabs for
every scene that he was in and everything would be highlighted and he would have notes and stick
thems and everything was like super organized. And we were always like, can I borrow your script?
You know, like nobody could find their fucking script, but Phil had his in a binder. He would
take his thing, he would punch holes in them, stick them in a binder. You know what I mean?
He was super duper organized and anal about that kind of shit.
But one of his greatest moments, you know, when we were friends,
somewhere along the line he started smoking weed, like all the time.
This was before I actually smoked weed.
And he did it because he had a lot of problems.
There's a lot of marital issues, obviously, that led to his wife killing him.
But he enjoyed, like after work was done, not while he was he enjoyed like after work was done not
while I was there but after work was done he enjoyed getting high he loved
getting high and going on a boat and he had a boat and he would take his boat
out and he would just love being high sailing and he was telling me one time
we were hanging out in his room who's after after filming and he was high and
he was telling me that story about him working at this club and
holding the speakers for Hendrix and to this day it's like one of my favorite memories of him you
know because it's just I could see him as this young guy it's like he was so fascinated by
everything he's the only guy that I've ever met that I went to a strip club with and it didn't
feel creepy because he he sat down he was uh he sat down I could say this now because he's dead.
If he was alive, I'd probably not tell you this story,
but he used to love to go to this place called Bob's Classy Lady,
and it was in the valley.
That's great.
And Phil took me there, and he would sit by the stage,
and the girls would come out and dance, and he would give them money,
and he was like a genuine childlike enthusiasm for their bodies
yeah you know they would be like moving in front of me like wow you're beautiful oh you're beautiful
he was high as fuck just high as fuck and he was watching these girls dance and stick their
genitals in his face and he just was loving it he was loving it in a way that wasn't creepy yeah like it was weird it's like he had this almost like innocence about
the way he was appreciating their bodies that i didn't feel weird being near him while this was
happening because it was just me and him could you feel it as well or were you too insecure yeah
yeah i was too uh for whatever reason there's too many preset ideas about yeah bodies and i also i was like at the
time i was 26 or 27 20 maybe 28 at the most and i was pretty fucking crazy you know i was just a
different person i was still operating on the momentum of my youth and chaos and i couldn't
even believe i was hanging out with phil hartman a strip club. Like to me, like seven years before that I had been fighting, you know, it was like so recent. It's like my
competition days so flavored, like who I was. Cause like, you know, you're talking about the
word obsessed, what it means. I, if it is a sickness, the sickness, meaning that you can
get good at something because of that sickness. I was a hundred percent sick when I was a kid.
I was sick as fuck as a psychotic
in that way you know not in a way where i didn't care about other people's feelings but
just maybe psychotic's not the word now that we've researched it maybe it's the word is just
just singular in my purpose and vision on on earth i just wanted to do that and only that
monomania yeah and so it was hard for me to get out of that headset
for a long time it was i was i would drift back into that headset and try to fight it off and try
to like assimilate and be normal but i felt like i like almost like a drug addict who had stopped
doing coke or heroin or meth or something like that i had like gone into this world where there
was no more fight or flight there was no no more terrifying bouts of competition followed by preparation, followed by more competition. Now all of a sudden
I'm hanging out with Phil Hartman at his strip club. Did performance feel that way at all? Like,
you know, you got a taping on Friday leading up to it. You're sort of nervous. You're preparing,
you know, to some extent. Definitely not a TV show. TV shows, especially news radio,
was one of the
easiest jobs i've ever had in my life yeah in terms of the actual performance of it i mean you
would be a little nervous before make sure you knew your lines make sure you get it right but
the cats was so fucking good that like you were working with these people that were so funny
all you had to do is just do your thing like if it was me in a scene with andy dick all i had to do
was just go, Andy,
what are you talking about, man? What are you talking about? And then he would do his wackiness
and then I would do whatever I had to say. And the hard part was not laughing, you know,
it was remembering your lines first and then not laughing. That was amazing. But the acting,
what about standup? That's a little different because you're creating it, you know, in news
radio, they allowed us a lot of room for ad-libbing, but even because you're creating it, you know, in news radio, they allowed us a lot
of room for ad-libbing, but even if you do create it, you're interacting with someone else and it's,
you know, you're, you're pretending some things are happening and either works or it doesn't
work and it doesn't work. You get together, you take a five minute break. The writers all would,
you know, Paul and Josh and all these guys would all huddle together and we'd try to come up with
another line, you know? So it's like everyone was working together on this thing. So it was,
in a sense, way easier than stand-up.
Because stand-up, you're on your own, bitch.
If you're out there bombing, especially people who paid money to see it,
it's fucking, you better come correct.
You better have some shit to say.
So stand-up more so, but still never as terrifying as the in-between bouts
between competition.
It was terrifying.
Was there ever any sort of possibility of you being on Saturday Night Live?
I never wanted to act at all.
You're not a sketch that... No, I don't want to do that.
So how did it happen? I mean, you don't have to talk about it. You've covered this before.
I definitely have. It's super simple. I just got a development deal. I did MTV Half Hour
Comedy Hour. I got a development deal. They offered me a lot of money.
Next thing you know, I was on a Disney show, of all things, for Fox.
Two hilarious things.
Wow.
Disney show for Fox.
It was called Hardball.
When that was over, I was totally ready to quit show business.
You're doing a voice?
No, I was a character.
I played a baseball player.
Frank Valente.
And it was a terrible show.
It started off really good.
The guys who created it were writers from The Simpsons, Jeff Martin and Kevin Curran.
They were writers from The Simpsons.
They wrote for Married with Children.
They were brilliant, brilliant guys.
But they were soft-spoken, you know, writers, intellectuals.
They got steamrolled.
They got steamrolled.
They got steamrolled by hacks.
Yeah.
The people who came in, you know, Fox didn't think they were strong enough to run a show,
so they fucked up their pilot.
They fucked up all the episodes. and they tanked a great idea.
They were baseball fans, and they wanted to make a hilarious sitcom about baseball akin to Married with Children for Baseball.
That was their idea, and I hated it.
I didn't hate them, and I loved being in the pilot.
Jim Brewer was actually in the pilot with me.
Jim played a one-time role for him.
And it was just a bad scene.
It was just not fun.
I didn't enjoy working with actors.
I thought some of them became friends,
but a bunch of them were, like, unbelievably self-centered and weird.
So you got no training.
No, none.
You never did theater in Boston.
Zero, no desire either, which is, which is infuriating to them.
But all of a sudden, I was in their turf.
Yeah, right.
Of course.
Who the fuck is this guy?
And I played the baseball star.
I was the guy who was the star of the team.
So it was based on your comedy?
No, not at all.
Oh, the MTV thing wasn't a...
No.
My comedy got me to the MTV thing.
Right.
But the sitcom, they had already written it I just they just cast me I met them yeah and they said you could be that guy and
so boom all of a sudden I'm in Hollywood and I'm they're putting makeup on me is that when you
moved out here um I did the pilot first uh so I came out here to visit I got one of those oakwood
apartments right you know I'm in Burbank that everybody automatically goes to.
They have these rented furnished apartments.
They have cable.
It's beautiful.
You just move right in.
Sleep in some bed that some dude before he's been farting and jerking off in.
And I did that.
And then it got picked up.
Then I got an apartment.
I signed a lease because I figured, oh, this is going to stay.
I had the Oakwood for a couple of weeks.
I go, oh, the show's doing well, and they thought it was going to get picked up,
and then it got canceled.
So then I got NewsRadio, same thing.
It was just an audition.
Went in for an audition.
It was a cattle call.
It was like 100 dudes.
Really?
Yeah, I met them, went in, did the audition, came back, did a second audition.
Bam, I'm on a show.
That's amazing.
Sitting there at the table read with Phil Hartman, Dave Foley.
So all told, being on news radio,
I had even thought about ever acting for less than a year.
And this was on my second TV show.
That's fucking insane.
It's totally insane.
And the second show I ever auditioned for, by the way.
I'd only auditioned for two shows ever, and I was on both of them.
It didn't make any sense.
And so, you know.
So to what do you attribute this?
Lucky as fuck.
That for sure.
Lucky as fuck.
And the ability to perform under pressure.
One of the things about sitcoms, about auditioning for them, it's so unnatural.
You're in this room.
There's a table.
There's these people that you don't know.
And you're supposed to pretend that, you know, we're on a tropical island.
And we're trying to find where the first aid cabin cabin is, you know, you it's, it's fake. Like, and a lot of times people
like, Oh my God, my life depends on this, my bills. And some people have never had to perform
under pressure before, but being a standup helps that tremendously. Cause you're, you're accustomed
to being nervous and then fighting helps that tremendously because you're accustomed to being
nervous. So those two things, you know, I performed under pressure more than the average person,
even though I didn't have a lot of acting experience.
Interesting.
That's a very interesting way to look at it.
Yeah.
I just, I mean, I'm interested in all this.
I just watched that SNL special the other night.
Yeah.
A lot of Phil Hartman.
He was amazing.
And a lot of audition tapes as well.
He's one of the reasons why I never wanted to do it though his his depiction of working in siren live was not good
no a lot of people hated he hated it well phil is a nice fucking guy he was a nice fucking guy
he was that's a shark nice it's a it's a very ultra competitive mean-spirited place and phil
had the remnants of that almost like as a
defensive shell when he first started working on news radio like he would say like things that like
were really uncharacteristic of him later and it was really and he we actually talked about it he
I don't want to name any names but he was talking about some mean people that he worked with on the
show I don't know I don't believe he's got that reputation he does yeah a lot of people that come from that environment do because I think it's really hostile, and they're all competing to get their stuff in the air.
Right.
And there's a lot of backstabbing.
There's people doing favors for writers and trying to get their stuff in, and there's a lot of greatness that comes from that, too.
I mean, Saturday Night Live, if you look at the overall body of work and you just cherry-pick greatness, my God.
at the overall body of work and you just cherry pick greatness my god i mean you have this incredible bouquet of john belushi and phil hartman and adam sandler and chris rock i mean
yours greatness eddie motherfucking murphy who was genius on that show him playing buckwheat
my god i mean it was amazing it was it was a but i never had a desire to do that i don't want to
compete with a bunch of people i don't want to be in a hostile environment i've always believe it or not it doesn't make
sense because i i did martial arts my whole life i was trying to avoid hostility like i don't want
to i don't want to argue i don't want any conflict i'm not i don't want to compete like the beautiful
thing about stand-up comedy is you're creating it yourself you go up there you do it you're the
right you don't have to argue with people about it if they don't like it they're not going to
laugh and then you're fucked you got to restructure it and figure it
out yourself you know that's how i feel about writing books i mean sometimes i miss like an
idealized team kind of environment because i know how wonderful that can be but the reality is that
generally when you work with people you don't necessarily like each other and it's a pain in
the ass because of all the weird ego shit and
so i kind of like that i can at least for a while make a living sitting in a room alone you know
it's it's got its ups and its downs of course there's also a positive aspect from the reader's
point of view that if i read a chris ryan book i know i'm getting chris ryan's thoughts
they're coming unadulterated from your mind to your typewriter, your keyboard, rather.
Yeah, and that's something I'm conscious of.
I read, I don't know, maybe it was that book you recommended to me, The War of Art.
But somewhere I read, someone said, always write posthumously.
Write as if you're dead, because you will be, and the book will still be there.
So like, let go, you know, say what's true. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. That's amazing. Yeah. That's
way better than like, if you're like a Beverly Hills housewife, you're going to write some
shit that's only based on, you know, like what's going to sell. Yeah. You know what I mean? Like
they'll create these things like, okay, how is this going to work the best?
I don't mean to single them out, but I mean, just like some people that write some books where it's pretty obvious as they're writing the book, they're kind of bullshitting who they are.
Right. Rejecting. Yeah. This will connect with that part of the audience.
But I don't offend that part. So I got to. Yeah. Yeah.
You know, you're talking earlier about that whole ebb and flow idea, the mathematical sort of it all equals out at the end.
I've thought about that a lot, not so much in terms of individuals, though it makes sense, but I've thought about that a lot in terms of historical moments, historical periods.
You know, like Vietnam, the late 60s, right, like 65 to 71.
like 65 to 71. That's when more Americans are dying in Vietnam than any other period earlier than that. And before they ramped up, it wasn't as many. So you've got all this conflict,
all these riots in the street. You've got Selma and Martin Luther King and all this agitation.
And at the same time, you've got Jimi Hendrix, you've got the Beatles, you've got all this music
we're talking about, amazing literature coming out of that, of that fashion craziness tie-dyes and afros and you
know it's like when the shit hits the fan it's really interesting you know and interesting people
rise to the top whereas when things are stable the interesting people just you know they don't
get anywhere because it's too the structures structures are rigid and controlling, you know.
Well, sometimes there's a need for reform and change that makes these interesting things blossom almost out of pressure, almost out of like two rocks pushing together and they create a, you know.
There's this effect that happens because people are pushed into a certain way.
there's this effect that happens because people are pushed into a certain way.
And in that sense, there's always been the argument that we need a certain amount of evil to appreciate love,
to appreciate happiness and good times. We almost need a certain amount.
Like people who, this is certainly no way supporting war,
but people who look at war, like people in this country especially, as just something and they
don't think about it deeply, they don't think about it in a way
where they comprehend the loss of lives and the sadness and the sorrow. They just
look at it as those are our heroes, they got to do what they got to do over there
so we could do what we do over here. All right, woo! And it's like this really
surface way of looking at this thing, but it's,
it's almost because they are not experiencing the suffering.
It's almost because they're not experiencing the sorrow that they don't have
this,
this,
this appreciate,
like the appreciation that you have of not being at war shouldn't be that
someone's over there fighting war so that you don't have to have war.
It should be that you,
you,
you realize that people can get along,
that people can love each
other they could be friendly we could be nice you can go to a farmer's market and everybody's saying
hi you know you could you know that's a bad example but you know we can interact with each
other in a positive way yeah or we could fight over an oil hole right you know we could shoot
each other and kill babies and fucking gun down innocents and untold numbers over an oil hole. I mean, it's almost like having no interaction with it,
and also having this sort of archetypal patriotism
that everyone subscribes to.
There's a very cookie-cutter vibration
that certain types of patriot-type people give off,
where it's like, this is where we're going to operate.
We're going to operate in this very small box where the soldiers are heroes and there's no, there's no doubt they're doing what they do over there. So we could do what we do over here. And they'll repeat that mantra over and over again without any consideration whatsoever for what it means as human beings that you're, you're, you're dealing with groups of human beings fighting other groups of human beings for some reason that has not really been clearly defined to me.
That most of the people fighting have no clue what it is.
Yeah.
None of us do.
Very few of us do.
And I think that for someone who goes over there and experiences it, it's probably got to be really weird to see that sort of cookie cutter
version of it um being expressed by people like uh i have quite a few friends that have uh been
overseas and been involved in the war and you talk to them and man they have sorrow they have
some horrible stories they have some shit they don't like to remember they have some you know
some really difficult things on their you know this brian williams thing that happened in the news one of the things that i took from it especially hard
was not that brian williams was not telling the truth because i think he's a fucking hollywood
guy he's just a showbiz guy he's an actor he's an actor he's an actor that reads the prompter
instead of a script right he acts like a standard actor. I mean, like, they have the tie,
and they talk like most of them do.
I made a mistake.
You know, like, come on, man.
You're fucking lying.
You lied.
You lied about some shit that went down.
But what hit me harder was the pilot that was involved
because there was a pilot involved
that gave his version of the story
and did some interviews,
and he said that they were in a helicopter and the helicopter took small arms fire and
that the helicopter in front of them was the one that got hit with the RPG and it
wasn't the one that Brian Williams is in but he was telling his story about this
and then people started questioning no you weren't in the helicopter with Brian
Williams this guy was in the helicopter Brian Williams and so the guy says man
you know what I'm I don't really completely remember, but it's hard for me to
go over this. I had put it aside, but now that I'm being forced to remember it, the nightmares
are coming back and I'm having a really hard time sleeping. And he was talking about it. He said,
I don't really want to talk about it anymore. I said what I had to say. This guy is certainly
not lying. He certainly did serve. He certainly did get shot at. He certainly did see some horrific
things. There's no doubt about that. No certainly did serve. He certainly did get shot at. He certainly did see some horrific things.
There's no doubt about that.
No one questions that.
They're just questioning his version of events versus a couple other people have their version of the events.
And there's just so much trauma involved in this guy's experiences over there that he's like, I had tried my best to forget about it.
This was what I can remember.
When people ask me about my experience with Brian Williams, this is what happened.
And he gave a very logical account of it. The reason why we were an hour late, he said,
is because we had to drop off a payload. We dropped off our payload and then we went to,
it took us about an hour. And then we went to the site where those guys landed with, and then we all
had huddled down together in a snow, a sandstorm. And it was an incredibly traumatic event for all
involved. So it, I'm not giving Brian Williams a free pass because he remembered this in a fucked up
way because I do think he bullshitted it.
I think he added a bunch of shit to his version of it and put himself in more danger because
he didn't think that anybody would put the pieces together.
And when it came out, look, his story as itself would have been just as good if he said the
helicopter in front of us got hit with an RPG.
It doesn't make you better because you almost died.
You definitely almost died anyway.
Like his version, the real version, he almost died.
The real version, he still was in a convoy that got shot at.
His helicopter didn't.
They were all forced to land and endure a sandstorm for two days.
I mean, that version is amazing.
You don't have to.
But it's indicative of the kind of bullshit artists that we have that are reading off the news
that he didn't like that version.
He wanted to jazz it up.
He wanted to make it a little bit better.
My life was in danger for the news.
But it is, as we started this conversation, talking about how unreliable memory is.
And Milan Kundera said memory is not the opposite of forgetting.
It's a way of forgetting.
Right.
Because we do.
We remember things, you know, based on emotions.
And over time, it changes.
And especially a story like that.
I know a guy who's a compulsive liar.
I mean, within 15 minutes of meeting this guy, he told me he had trained with the Seals.
He had played semi-professional basketball in Europe.
And he owned this amazing apartment that we were in that I knew he didn't own.
His boss owned, who was this billionaire guy.
And he was the private pilot of this billionaire guy, this friend of mine, right?
And so I knew this guy was full of shit. But I also knew he flies a fucking Learjet for a living.
He's like on standby to fly this guy
wherever around the world.
Like, dude, that's a good story in itself.
You don't need to lie, you know?
The guy who's working at Starbucks,
okay, you make up some shit, why not, you know?
Gets you through the night,
but you're a fucking pilot?
I knew a dude who was a successful comedian
and a multimillionmillionaire and was would
do really well but he would be he's a compulsive liar right if you started talking to him about
something that you do uniquely he would also do it you know like if you you talked to him about
you know whatever going to the jungle and researching ants he he would tell you about
his time yeah always a little better than your story right yeah he smoked cigarettes and he
would tell me about his uh kickboxing experiences with world champions that's ballsy though like to get into your
realm right oh it was ridiculous funny that's that's risk high risk well he was crazy completely
still is completely crazy but he's really talented too which is interesting like he's a really good
comic so it's like it's i can't give his name away folks i'm so sorry
so maybe maybe maybe he likes the thrill like that maybe you're gonna call him out nope i don't think
there's no masochistic no just ego and alcohol and a bunch of craziness but smoking cigarettes
tell me about how he's just sparring eight rounds with a world champion which isn't totally
impossible i had this guy in joe shilling recently he's one of the best kickboxers in the world.
And he admitted on the podcast he smokes cigarettes on a regular basis.
It's fucking crazy.
But he's also, outside of that, very dedicated as an athlete.
It's just ridiculous that he smokes cigarettes in an endurance sport.
But he's a bad motherfucker.
I mean, like bonafide, legit, trains all day.
This guy wasn't training.
This guy's drinking all the time.
I know he wasn't kickboxing.
He's nuts. But he almost can't help himself he has to just he starts talking and it just comes out and then he gets away there's a weird craziness i remember meeting
a guy once at a wine tasting uh who told me he was a demigod what does that mean well that's what i
asked like what does that mean well it means i'm i'm half human my father was human my mother was from and he tells like some some latin word for a star system
somewhere and uh and he said like again within 15 minutes he said uh that uh he was the highest
paid artist in the world because he had designed the that atlas uh thing in front of rockefeller
center which was the highest like
most expensive piece of art any whatever like whatever blah blah and and i was fascinated and
the guy was super good looking dude like he had like a little beard and a bit he was big and dark
you know he looked like satan like the mephistopheles kind of thing you know and i thought
he was bullshitting me i thought that my my friend had, like, put him up to it
because I was high and I was just like, what?
So you thought he was just acting, like he was just being silly.
I thought he was goofing, you know,
and that after a few minutes he'd break character
and we'd all get a good laugh out of it.
And I even called my friend.
I was like, hey, Dave, come over here.
I'm talking to the devil here.
He's got some great stories.
And then Cassie was was there and then she came
and he and he got into her and he started trying to impress her and telling her all these stories
she's a psychiatrist right she sees bullshit like before the rest of us even though it's coming you
know it was very funny like the whole interaction wow yeah but it's a it's a it's a form of insanity
you know like people have to scratch that itch i
don't know and they kind of keep moving those people almost by nature have to keep moving
because eventually they leave a mess behind them their lives implode yeah the lies come down and
cave in on them and then they got to find some new person yeah to sucker in and that does happen
you know you see that you see people drifting from one group of people to the other group of people.
And I've seen it.
I've seen it happen.
Yeah.
It's weird.
It's weird when you meet someone who's just obviously full of shit and lying through their teeth as they're talking.
It's a very strange thing.
Like, do you know that I know?
And you're just going to, like, hope that I don't call you on it?
Because you've seen that before, too, right?
Or you want me to.
Yeah.
I wonder about that, too.
Like, some people, well, again well again you know my wife's a psychiatrist
she she's dealt with all this kind of stuff and like she laughs she just cracks up when she sees
it because she sees it immediately and just like her way of dealing with insanity is laughter
and she works with well she's worked with all sorts of people, but her sort of specialization is loony, like one flew over the cuckoo's nest kind of scenes, right?
I remember going in with her the first time I visited her at work.
She was running a mental hospital with like double doors and bars over the windows.
These criminally insane people who had killed their kids and, you know, like crazy shit, right?
And we went in there i wasn't prepared
man we went in and it was just like lunatics and there was this woman like must have been in her
mid-50s lying on her back in a little nightgown no underwear with her like arms and legs you know
like a crab doing a crab thing and we walk in it's like this you know pussy in the whole scene just scared the shit out of me and and Casilda just
started laughing like you crazy old lady what are you doing get up from there
she just like laughs and the thing that I didn't understand until I hung out
with her is that people who are psychotic know they're psychotic and so they kind of know how
ridiculous they are and as a doctor when she laughs she laughs in such a loving accepting
i get you kind of way that it creates this instant rapport and they start laughing oh so she like
relieves a little tension right like it's all okay i know you're just another crazy person i deal with you all
the time and come on it's it's kind of like how you know like a gynecologist i imagine would have
to sort of be so laid back that you kind of you know okay he's seen a million pussies at this
you know like it relaxes you in a way you you know. And I think she does that with crazy people.
It's normal people who make her really uncomfortable.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, imagine if you were a gynecologist and you were super nervous about seeing someone's pussy.
Okay.
I guess we're about to do it.
Hold on.
Throw some water on my face.
Let me have a little more wine.
Just another drink.
Take your panties off.
Oh, Jesus.
It's happening.
It's happening. All right. Let's see what you got wrong down there. All right. I'm going to look. I'm going to wine. Just another drink. Take your panties off. Oh, Jesus, it's happening. It's happening.
All right, let's see what you got wrong down there.
All right, I'm going to look.
I'm going to look.
I'm looking.
I'm looking.
Going to use a mirror.
Like it's a fucking vampire.
It's Medusa.
You can't look it in the eyes.
Yeah.
So if you had to have a job, like a normal job, what job would you be good at?
What would you want to do?
Not a gynecologist, I imagine.
Outside of comedy, I would probably be a martial arts instructor.
I enjoy doing that.
You like teaching?
Yeah, I enjoy teaching.
I'll bet you're good with kids, I'll bet.
I enjoyed it.
Yeah, I used to teach a kids class.
I taught a lot of kids.
I taught several kids from white belt all the way up to higher belts.
I don't think I taught anybody up to black belt, but I got pretty close.
Because it takes quite a few years to achieve black belt.
So for most of them, it is very rare that they make it to that far.
They'll learn some lessons along the way, and it'll help them in life.
But to achieve that level of ability is a lot of commitment.
So most of them didn't make it.
It's like maybe one out of 1,000 never make it to black belt.
Really?
Probably.
In a good school, maybe, I mean, might be one out of 500 or 600.
Whatever.
It's close to 1,000, whatever it is.
It's not 1% by any stretch of the imagination.
It's probably at a good estimate is 1 tenth of 1%.
Right.
You know. Yeah. stretch of the imagination it's probably at a good estimate is one tenth one percent right you know
so but yeah i mean you i imagine you'd be really good in that kind of an environment not just
martial arts but kids in general because they there's like a sort of an immediate respect
you know like you're you know you look like a badass so it's like oh take that guy seriously
well i like kids yeah and you're amenable.
You're open to them.
I also, I'm a big take in strays sort of guy.
I've always taken in stray dogs and cats.
Yeah, I've been following your Instagram.
Lots of good cat shots in there recently.
I got a new kitten.
I love cats, man.
I do too.
They're fun.
They're fun to have around.
They don't require your constant attention too.
They've got dignity.
They've got their own life, man. And especially the key, which you obviously understand, is have multiple cats.
Yeah.
Don't have one cat.
Because then you're going to have the neurotic, freaked-out cat pissing in your bed.
But the difference between no cat and a cat is significant.
The difference between one cat and two cats is negligible.
Yeah.
Right.
As far as, like, the toll on you.
Whatever.
Yeah. I mean mean so get a few
cats if you're gonna get a cat and so they have each other when you're not around yeah you know
yeah i got three of them yeah that's what we had three plan you know interesting enough um teaching
was one of the things that really helped me on fear factor which fear factor seems like it's
such a stupid show and it was kind of dumb but it was some people that were like really freaked out and didn't know
how to deal with like the stress of competition right and I was so used to
it I was so used to not just not just teaching but coaching like even when I
retired my friend Dimitri was fighting in this big national tournament and I
was in his corner for like and I pumped him up like during it was like one of his best performances ever. Like I'm good at getting
inside of people's heads, especially people that I know and telling them what they need to hear
to get them to go out there and fire them the fuck up, you know, and telling them like what
you're really good at, man, you can do this. And it's all about not having any doubt. It's all
about knowing how to stay intense and focused and, and, and, and go out there and do what needs to
be done and, and giving them this and do what needs to be done.
And giving them this sort of technical advice as well as like this emotional pick-me-up.
Yeah.
Like some people have like a knack for that, and I developed it by teaching kids.
Right.
Because kids are always freaked out, man.
I took a lot of kids to tournaments.
And, you know, they'd be fighting other little kids, and most likely they wouldn't get hurt.
But, you know, when you've got a little 7-year-old in front of you and you're putting pads on his head to protect him from kicks
and you're like, listen, you just got to stay focused and don't be afraid. All you need to
think about is what you're doing. Don't think about what happens if it goes wrong. Never think
of that. Always think about what are you trying to do? And if things go wrong, reset and think
about it again. What is my objective? What am I trying to do stay defensive keep moving never stand in one place at one you know never
stand put always always keep fainting always keep the opponent guessing and
I'd go over all the most important things to them and then pump them up
until you could do this when you get through this you're gonna feel so good I
know you feel terrible now but it's terrible as you feel now when it's over
you're gonna feel so good and when they would do it and they would compete even
if they would lose it'd be so relieved I'm like see now you feel now, when it's over, you're going to feel so good. And when they would do it and they would compete, even if they would lose, they'd be so relieved.
I'm like, see, now you feel good.
And this experience, this harrowing, stressful experience can give birth to this new appreciation of peace.
Right.
It's the yin-yang again, right?
Exactly.
We were talking about earlier.
I read a book recently, a fascinating book called Paradise Made in Hell, Rebecca Solnit. And it's about disaster sociology,
right? So it's studying people's behavior in disasters, right? And so it's fascinating
because the idea we have is like, that's when people get really crazy and they loot and pillage
and, you know, oh, now I can rape and nobody will catch me there are no cops and in fact what happens is the opposite that that's when people are most generous most kind
they form communities they meet the neighbors they never said a fucking word to for 10 years
they're like taking care of each other and people and it sort of relates to war too you know
people look back on it and they say yeah there was a lot of horrible shit if people
were dying stuff was happening but i remember it as the best time in my life and the the main guy
there's this really moving passage where this guy who sort of started the the field who's no hippie
he's you know teaches at nebraska or something he's like very straight up scientist but he said he said the best way to think about disasters is not as
a disaster but as relief from the disaster that is normal life because a normal life we're all
isolated we're all suffering alone he's like man when the shit hits the fan that's when things get
really wonderful well well there's no escaping the fact that that's when things get really wonderful.
Well, there's no escaping the fact that it's finite when you're watching people die around you.
That's for sure.
Yeah.
Well, and again, it's like you were saying about, you know, you need the pain to enjoy the pleasure.
You need hunger to enjoy the food.
You need, you know, loneliness to enjoy companionship.
There is no light without dark. There really isn't.
Right.
There is no light without dark.
There really isn't, right?
And I think people, one of the things that people miss in their lives that leads people to become very stagnant and disappointed in their existence is that there's no thrills.
I think that's what leads people to get divorced or to become drug addicts or to be self-destructive.
It's almost like people need thrills.
And when you get stuck in a really secure job where you know,
all right, Chris Ryan, for the next 40 hours, you're going to be stuck in this spot or eight hours a day for the next seven days, five days, whatever it is,
you're going to be stuck in this spot and you're going to be at this desk
and you're going to be dealing with all these cases that come your way
and you're going to have to file them and then you're going to have to write a report and it's going to suck
and you're going to just be lumped in to this group of people that are all doing the same thing
and you're going to do it every week and at the end of the week you know when when the day is done
then you can go home and you can relax but there's going to be no thrills the the biggest thrill
would be merging onto the highway oh my god here God, here we go. Like, other than that, there's nothing.
There's no ups.
It's all just steady and normal.
And I think that's one of the reasons why people have so much road rage and stress.
There's no real experience.
Yeah, they're not flushing.
I often say in Spanish, the word aislar means both to insulate and to isolate so we you know and this gets into this whole book
i'm writing like civilization is largely an attempt to insulate ourselves from uh danger
from strangers from any sort of uh predators you know from anything that could be a danger to us. We try to
insulate ourselves from it. And then at the end, we're isolated, right? Because we're surrounded
by this margin, this moat that protects us from what? From life, right? From the thing that makes
you feel alive. Like, okay, you want to be completely safe? You know, get inside this coffin,
you know, and, you know, take some anesthetics and you won't feel a goddamn thing.
But how's that different from being dead?
It seems like we're all doing our part in this existence.
And we're moving past what we used to be from single-celled organisms to higher primates to some weird thing right now that's a combination of conscious being and physical animal.
Someone like Duncan.
Someone like Duncan.
Yeah.
And we're moving in this sort of advancing direction, and it's not done.
Yeah, it's never done.
Yeah, we're a part of a great process.
And the stage that you and I are in, they're going to look back at us and laugh the way we look back at Isaac Newton
wearing a powdered wig or any of the weird know, figured out all sorts of incredible things back in history but also believed a bunch of stupid shit as well.
Like, you look back at Copernicus and the things that he discovered and it's unbelievable and amazing.
But today it's like, duh.
Like, everybody already knows that.
You know, like, look at the life that you live. Like imagine being Darwin and trying to express these ideas that you formulated over the course of your life's work to a bunch of Christian scientists, which is what he was dealing with.
It's hilarious. of this idea of this monotheistic world that scientists pretty much universally existed in at that time
and tries to push forth these crazy theories that he's coming up with uniquely on his own.
I mean, the resistance that he must have experienced to something that today is instantaneously accepted by everyone
that's in academia, in science, I mean, almost across the board.
His ideas are accepted.
So we look back at those times and we go, God, they were fucking so stupid back then.
Well, they're going to do that to us.
Sure.
And it's not going to be that long.
I mean, with Darwin, you're talking about a few hundred years.
With us, it's going to be a few decades.
And then a few decades.
Because everything goes faster now.
Yeah, it's faster and faster and faster.
And we're in the middle of this.
Yeah. Because everything goes faster now. Yeah, it's faster and faster and faster. And we're in the middle of this. We're in the middle of this weird process of human beings changing and becoming more aware of all the flaws and the folly in our civilization and our existence.
And all the shit we're fighting for today, all the protests like Black Lives Matter and people fighting for rights of everyone across the board from women to gays to this to that.
What we're doing is we're trying to patch up the holes in this crazy system
with agitation and anger and loud voices and social media campaigns,
and it's essentially all just trying to make this thing into a more coherent,
more advanced version of what it is now,
and then that in turn will find the inherent
problems in its existence and it will move just like the monkeys from you know 200 000 years ago
that became human beings were fighting off all these different creatures and realized like yeah
we got to make houses this is bullshit like this this fucking living in trees is bullshit the cats
climb trees man yeah i'm fucking tired of my baby's getting eaten
Let's figure out fears and snakes. Yeah, you know let's let's figure a way to make a better situation
And I think we're in the middle of that man
I think we just like like all things you take it for granted that you're in the middle of it
Well if you look back on your childhood, you know and today you look back and you go wow when I was 10
I was doing this and I was doing that but when you were 10 you were just in the middle
of it you know you look back on how much progress has taken place in your own
life as a microcosm to your existence you know the are all of our existence
you want your own individual memories and your own individual experiences
they you're in the middle of it you don't think it about being what we're
civilization we're in the middle of this babyhood we're in the middle of it. You don't think it about being what we're as civilization. We're in the middle of this babyhood
We're in the middle of this adolescence, whatever the fuck it is. Yeah, you know and we're moving into some new place
Yeah, and it's arrogant but very common for people to think we're at the end of it. Like this is the cutting edge
It is the edge, but it's not the end. It's not perfection. It's like yeah, it's always
Always in in process always in process, but amazing to think that right now we are at the pinnacle of human knowledge.
We are at the peak, the tip of the spear as far as like everything that people have learned and figured out up until now.
We have this database that we've accumulated from hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of years of records.
And then, you know, after that it gets a little sketchy.
And you go a few thousand years, things get real weird in different languages,
things get even weirder, and it gets more vague and more strange and more difficult to decipher.
But all that data that we've accumulated and the access to it that we have today,
unprecedented as far as we know in people.
It's amazing.
It's amazing to be at that time where you have a question.
You're just like with a psychology psychopathy thing we
just bang we just google it and we didn't have to go to a library we didn't have to order a book we
didn't have to go to a bookstore or go to a class you just instantaneously get that information
and i think that that is accelerating us in a way that we can't even comprehend yeah
no doubt yeah i think we're all experiencing it in a way that's it seems so
normal because everyone has a phone you know whoa let me just check my my phone and see let me just
call my friend who's nowhere near me and you know this affects getting back to the earlier thing
about aging right like i this affects the experience of aging because more has changed in our lifetimes
because it's always accelerating.
Yeah.
That, like, I remember the first computer
I interacted with, right?
It was, I was in my late 20s
working in the Diamond District in New York,
and one of my jobs was to back up
the disks in this computer.
The computer was the size of a big refrigerator
and the discs were like you know double the circumference of a of an album and they were
these massive things and they were probably like 50 megabytes each or something you know if that
if that right i mean and i probably got a thousand times the computing power in my pocket right now
it's just easily insane maybe even more than a thousand.
Yeah, I don't know how it works.
Yeah.
Hey, I got to roll.
Get out of here, man.
Yeah.
You got things to do.
I'm going to see you this weekend?
I'm tempted to miss the plane.
When's your flight?
This is so much fun.
It's not the plane.
It's the rental car.
Oh, okay.
They're going to rape me if I'm late.
We'll hang out this weekend, and we're promising to do one with you, me, and Duncan again.
We're going to figure it out.
I know we've been getting tweets.
Everybody's busy, folks.
Shit happens.
But we'll get it together.
We'll get it together.
But thank you, brother.
Appreciate it.
You guys pick a date.
I'll fly down, folks, for sure.
And you can follow Chris
on Twitter.
Is it Chris Ryan PhD?
Yeah.
Or is it Christopher Ryan?
Chris Ryan.
Chris Ryan.
Chris Ryan PhD.
The one book
that you can buy
that he has
is Sex at Dawn. Fantastic
book. Guaranteed to piss off your wife.
Leave that shit around.
What are you reading? Getting these fucking
ideas out of your head.
Chris Ryan, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you, brother. Appreciate it, man.
It was a lot of fun. Bye-bye. Thank you.