The Jordan Harbinger Show - 901: Lawns | Skeptical Sunday

Episode Date: September 24, 2023

Your lawn may be your pride and joy, but is there an environmentally friendly alternative? Join us in the weeds with Michael Regilio on Skeptical Sunday! On This Week's Skeptical Sunday: La...wns are a symbol of American culture, but they have significant environmental drawbacks — including water wastage, pesticide use, and habitat destruction. The origins of lawns can be traced back to British aristocracy, who sought to emulate Italian landscape paintings with vast, manicured lawns around their mansions. Lawns in the United States became more widespread after World War II, with suburban developments like Levittown contributing to their popularity. Noise pollution and the emission of greenhouse gases from lawn care equipment are on the rise in a landscaping industry that pulls in over $100 billion per year. Transitioning to alternatives like xeriscaping, native gardens, or even painting brown lawns green can reduce the environmental harm caused by traditional grass lawns. Connect with Jordan on Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube. If you have something you'd like us to tackle here on Skeptical Sunday, drop Jordan a line at jordan@jordanharbinger.com and let him know! Connect with Michael Regilio at his website, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube, and make sure to check out the Michael Regilio Plagues Well With Others podcast here or wherever you enjoy listening to fine podcasts! Full show notes and resources can be found here: jordanharbinger.com/901  This Episode Is Brought To You By Our Fine Sponsors: jordanharbinger.com/deals  Sign up for Six-Minute Networking — our free networking and relationship development mini course — at jordanharbinger.com/course!  Like this show? Please leave us a review here — even one sentence helps! Consider including your Twitter handle so we can thank you personally! See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:00:03 Welcome to Skeptical Sunday. I'm your host, Jordan Harbinger. And today I'm here with Skeptical Sunday co-host Michael Regulio. On the Jordan Harbinger show, we decode the stories, secrets, and skills are the world's most fascinating people and turn their wisdom into practical advice that you can use to impact your own life and those around you. Our mission is to help you become a better informed, more critical thinker. And during the week, we have long-form conversations with a variety of amazing folks, from spies to CEOs, athletes, authors, thinkers, and performers. On Sundays, though, We do Skeptical Sunday, where a rotating guest co-host and I break down a topic that you may have never thought about and debunk common misconceptions. Topics such as e-commerce scams, diet supplements, ban foods, chem trails, hypnosis, internet porn, and more. And if you're new to the show or you want to tell your friends about the show, and you will after that internet porn episode, I'm sure,
Starting point is 00:00:53 I suggest our episode starter packs. These are collections of our favorite episodes on persuasion, negotiation, psychology, disinformation, cyber warfare, crime cults, and more. And they'll help new listeners get a taste of everything we do here on the show. Just visit jordanharbinger.com slash start or search for us in your Spotify app to get started. Today, a beautiful green lawn is a symbol of American wholesomeness. Put a white picket fence around it and you're living the proverbial American dream. But inside the fence, we waste water, we spread dangerous pesticides, we pollute ecosystems. Is maintaining a lush green
Starting point is 00:01:27 lawn worth the environmental harm? At what cost do we pride these landscaped areas around our homes? Comedian Michael Regulio joins me to discuss why it isn't easy being green. Jordan, you're a homeowner. Do you have a lawn? Yeah, where else am I supposed to put all my political signs? Oh, yeah, of course. I forgot your coveted go-with-per-o sign. What would you say if I told you your lawn was doing far more harm than voting for a third party ever could? I'd say my lawn is an investment in not just my home, but my community at large. Plus, it's a tradition in my family.
Starting point is 00:02:01 my dad cared for the family lawn and got sunburned every weekend just like his dad did. That may be true if you're referring to the micro community in your hometown. But if one sees society as their community, a well-maintained lawn sends a very different message. Maintaining grass lawns increases greenhouse gases, pollutes ecosystem, wastes water, and diminishes biodiversity. In addition, the tradition of lawns doesn't trace its roots back to our dads and grandfathers, but to the British aristocracy and elitism. Oh, that's a buzzword.
Starting point is 00:02:34 I'm surprised you didn't even throw in lawns are racist for good measure. We're getting to that. Of course. But first we need to discuss the origins of the modern lawn. Are the origins not just the land where we build our houses? The American dream includes a house with a lawn, but the lawns we love actually come from Italian dreams. So lawns come from Italy?
Starting point is 00:02:57 Are you saying grass is Italian? Now, lawns come from Italian landscape paintings. The paintings included vast fields of trimmed grasses and tight hedgerows. The British aristocracy adored these paintings, and they loved them so much they used their riches to recreate them around their mansions and castles. But the locations in the beloved paintings were fictional, made up fantasies by Italian artists. These lawns didn't exist in Italy or anywhere. Italian artists just made them up. So the British aristocracy was trying to live inside Italian paintings that were just not even based on real Italian landscapes at all.
Starting point is 00:03:36 Yeah, and they were trying to live inside of Italian paintings and not the ones full of naked people in food like I would have chosen. In Britain at the time, affluent estates used their land to grow food and raise animals, but the lawn was garish in a whole new way. Having giant tracks of land used simply for aesthetic purposes became a potent statement of wealth and power. It was a way of saying, look how rich I am. I don't need to use my land for anything other than to be looked at. And I'm guessing since these lawns now needed teams of peasants
Starting point is 00:04:08 to maintain them, and I love saying that word, peasants, they were a good way of reinforcing the classist system of the time. Great point. You're cut above the rest, Arbinger. Can we go back and edit my opening to include lawns are classist? I think you made your point here. I'm still waiting for lawns are racist, by the way. Yeah, we're getting there.
Starting point is 00:04:28 Okay, so across the pond, wealthy Americans saw their British counterparts and understood the point of lawns, and they sought to emulate them. Both George Washington and Thomas Jefferson had lawns at their estates. Yeah, it wasn't exactly peasants tasked with maintaining those particular lawns, eh? No. Sadly, that was the enslaved people that they thought they owned. Okay, so lawns don't. exactly have the romantic roots that many of us would have imagined.
Starting point is 00:04:56 At the time of Washington and Jefferson, lawns were still just for the very wealthy. The modern concept of the American lawn didn't really explode until after World War II with the passage of the GI Bill. American men returning from the war were given a house with a lawn in these newfangled planned communities, communities like Levittown on Long Island. It was a sprawling suburban development built on what had been potato fields. these cookie-cutter communities sprang up all over the country and the American suburbs and the popularity of lawns flourished. Yeah, I've seen photos from that era,
Starting point is 00:05:30 very sort of Truman show, thousands of identical homes, all in neat little rows, and everything looks the same. Yeah, identical indeed, and it wasn't just the houses and lawns that looked the same. The GI Bill excluded most black soldiers returning from the war, and both the suburbs and lawns
Starting point is 00:05:49 became a symbol of white America. The lawn stood in stark contrast to the homes in urban communities. Suburbs had lawns. Cities didn't. Yeah, so it's really starting to sound like lawns might be racist, man. All right, it's a little depressing, Regalia. I'm getting ready to remove all of my pink flamingos from my racist lawn. Not a bad idea. Look, the fact of the matter is, lawns weren't optional anymore. Take Levittown. They had laws about the upkeep of lawns. Towns everywhere. or pass laws that your grass had to be kept to a certain length and well maintained, or you were subject to tickets and fines. So ticketed for not mowing, whatever, cutting your lawn?
Starting point is 00:06:28 Yeah. These were called covenant laws. They state that weekly mowing is required, or a community crew would mow your lawn for you and bill you for it. Or in extreme situations, you could go to jail. Jail? That seems a little ridiculous. I guess that's what they call lawn enforcement.
Starting point is 00:06:46 Anyone? I'll see myself out. Exactly. And these laws still exist. A guy in Florida named Joe Predente went to jail for law and violations. So ridiculous. Imagine what are you in for? I forgot to mow my lawn last week. Yeah. And it's not just Florida. One guy took his unmowed lawn all the way to the Michigan State Supreme Court and lost. It's so embarrassing. It's crazy. Another case in 2018 involved a man who went out of town. His landscaper unexpectedly died and so did his lawn. That guy. cost him foreclosure on his property. People actually lose their homes and are fine big bucks for unmoed lawns. I've heard of people going to jail for grass before, but this is ridiculous. That's so ridiculous.
Starting point is 00:07:31 Imagine going to jail because of your lawn. That's so dumb. You could say that they fought the lawn and the lawn won. All right. We may have hit our pun limit, Regulio, I think so at this point. Never. And it's not just the lawn that can pay. tells people to mow their lawn.
Starting point is 00:07:49 The neighborhood at large pressures homeowners to keep a well-trimmed lawn. I see the appeal, though. There is something innately American about the, it sounds corny, but the individual expression of a homeowner through their lawns. People take great pride in this stuff.
Starting point is 00:08:04 Yeah, as American as, oh, I don't know, say, communism. What? How is that, how is it communism? Think about it. Okay, that's what these covenant laws are saying. It's not your lawn. It's the community's lawn.
Starting point is 00:08:18 It's not an expression of your individuality. It's an expression of the collective, man. You may think your lawn is green, but if you live in a community with covenant laws, trust me, it's red. Calm down, man. The only thing red is your face. It's just lawns.
Starting point is 00:08:36 Interestingly enough, we're to crossroads at our love affair with lawns, so much so that there's a whole new kind of lawn enforcement officer. And these officers aren't there to make sure your lawns look nice, especially here in California, there are ordinances that say you can't water your lawn during droughts. We're waking up to all the bad stuff that comes with lawns. All right, so water wasting, but what other bad stuff exactly? Okay, let's just start with some stats.
Starting point is 00:09:02 Lawns are the largest crop in America. Lawns occupy 40 million acres of land in the United States, which is roughly three times the area of America's second largest crop, corn. I never really thought of lawns as crops, but I guess it makes sense. We're deliberately growing it, right? So anyone who's driven through a corn belt knows we grow a lot of corn, like a crap ton lot of corn. But if you're driving across country, you're going to pass a lot more lawns than you're going to pass corn. Lons in America equal an area roughly the size of Iowa. Speaking of corn, I have driven through Iowa, and it is a huge state. That's just a ton of lawn. Yeah, and when there's that much crop as there is with lawns, any issue becomes exponentially larger, and lawns have many issues. Let's start with what you already mentioned, water usage. According to the EPA, Americans use so much water on their lawns, they could fill five million Olympic swimming pools a year. That sounds like a lot, but I don't really do that when I'm trying
Starting point is 00:10:05 to convert ounces to Olympic swimming pools. Can you clarify that a little bit? Okay, fine. For people that can't do a simple ounce of water to Olympic swimming pool conversion. Let me put it this way, okay? And this stat is so stunning. When I first came across the actual number of gallons Americans use on their lawns, I didn't believe it. I had to check and cross-check, but I found this statistic from NASA scientist Christina Malesi. Americans use a whopping 20 trillion gallons of water a year on our lawns. 20 trillion! Oh my God.
Starting point is 00:10:41 For context, we use 30 trillion gallons of water on all other crops. I cannot wrap my head around that. That is insane. That is so ridiculous. Yeah, you can't wrap your head around it because no one can. Okay, here's a figure we can wrap our heads around. In coastal California, every single square foot of lawn requires 28 gallons of water a year. Further inland, where the climate is even more arid, that number goes up to 37 gallons a year.
Starting point is 00:11:11 Look, listeners should go out to their yard and dump 37 gallons of water on one spot. Then imagine doing that for every square foot of their lawn every year. Yeah, please don't go outside and do that. I think we get the point. That is so crazy wasteful. I had no idea. Yeah, again, and this is for something that serves no real purpose other than to be pretty. Lawns are directly competing with our food for water.
Starting point is 00:11:37 Lawns might feel nice between your toes, but I'm not sure this justifies using all that water. 20 trillion gallons is so much water. All that just for what essentially amounts to a visually pleasing neighborhood. Yeah, we are obsessed. And in the southwest where I live, homeowners use more water on their lawns than all other water use combined. That's particularly baffling right now as the entire country
Starting point is 00:11:59 has been subject to this massive heat wave of summer 2020. You can go outside in Arizona and take one of those meat thermometers and it'll say it's 115 degrees outside it. And you're out there watering this freaking tropical crap you planted in your front yard so that your lawns green. It's so stupid. Yeah, I know. It's crazy.
Starting point is 00:12:17 I heard a story that the air is 115 degrees, but like the sidewalk is like 165 degrees. People are going into the emergency rooms with burns, third degree burns from touching the sidewalk. Oh, God. So if your kids want to play outside, you have to watch. water down the concrete of the front of your house so that they don't scald themselves on the ground? No, if your kids want to play outside, you can't let them. Anyone letting their kids play outside in Phoenix these days probably risks having their kids taken away. It's crazy out there, Matt.
Starting point is 00:12:46 Okay, so in an effort to add some balance to this discussion, I looked up what arguments there are to support lawns, and I found the Lawn Institute. That is patently ridiculous. Of course, that exists. Big lawn, y'all. I like that. Yeah, the Lawn Institute argues that lawns reduce erosion by allowing rainwater to absorb back into the ground. Okay, I suppose that makes some sense. It does, but here's the thing. Any plants reduce erosion. You don't need these foreign, non-indigenous plants like the ones we call lawns.
Starting point is 00:13:21 Ah, non-indigenous. So first you made over-the-top statements that lawns are communist or classist or whatever. Now they're illegal immigrants. I stand by my hyper-indigenous. So you're saying grass isn't even American? That's right. The dirty little secret of the grass industry is that Kentucky bluegrass ain't from Kentucky. It's northern European. Where not surprisingly, it was much cooler and rainier than most of the southwest. Almost all the grasses we use for lawns are not indigenous. Because of that, they require a lot of artificial care to emulate the environments they naturally thrive in. Plus, they destroy the natural habitat for native plants and push them out. Lawns are non-indigenous monocultures.
Starting point is 00:14:04 So lawns are basically a bunch of European grasses taking over our country and pushing out the native plants. It's actually the most American thing I've heard about lawns to date here. That's a pretty American thing to do after all. Yeah, that's hilarious. Look, that gets the next big negative. When I just mentioned it, the lack of biodiversity we get with monocultures like lawns, and the harm they do to the natural world. I did learn from a bud-like commercial
Starting point is 00:14:30 that diversity makes for a healthy society and whatnot, but what is biodiversity? Oh, I can't help myself. I have to say this, that I found that whole bud light controversy to be absolutely hilarious, so you could say that it was a real brew-haha. Oh, man.
Starting point is 00:14:45 You're fired. Look, what is biodiversity? Biodiversity simply refers to the variety of native plants that make up the ecology of any given area. Biodiversity gives Mother Nature important biological controls. Without biodiversity, ecosystems fall apart. Think of the Dust Bowl of the 1930s.
Starting point is 00:15:05 That was an ecological disaster caused by the monoculture of farming that helped contribute to the full collapse of the ecosystem. The blame is partly due to the farming industry. If you're going to do stupid ponds, I'm going to do stupid ponds, they really put the dust in industry, am I right? Okay, now I agree. We do need a moratorium on ponds. It's only fine when you do it.
Starting point is 00:15:26 Okay. Look, it's super necessary to landscape with native plants, period. Without a rich panoply of native plants, the all-important pollinators like bees die off. And when the pollinators die off, lots of stuff dies off. Yeah, that sounds apocalyptic. All the bees are dead thing is kind of terrifying. Yeah. Look, we've all heard about the problems farmers are having because of the lack of bees and other pollinators. This is because we have replaced so much of their diverse native habitats with monocultures. Monocultures. Monocultures. are very unenvironmental. Ironically, what we call weeds are far better for the environment than grass. And yet there's an entire aisle in Home Depot dedicated to weed killers? And the toxins in those weed killers are problematic in ways we could do an entire episode on. I've heard a lot about the problems with bees dying off, and are lawns actually to blame for this? Yes, and no, and yes again. Monocultures are to blame, and lawns are the biggest monocultures.
Starting point is 00:16:26 on the block. Climate change is also a big contributor to the problem with bees, and lawns are a big part of the problem with climate change. You know what's not racist? Probably, maybe. The fine products and services that support this show. We'll be right back. Thank you for listening and supporting the show. Your support of our advertisers keeps the lights on around here. All the links, deals, discount codes, and ways to support the show are all in one place at Jordan Harbinger.com slash deals. You can also search for the sponsors using the AI chatbot on the website as well. Please consider supporting those who support the show. Now, back to Skeptical Sunday. So hold on, don't lawns, like every other plant that exists, trap CO2 to offset carbon footprints
Starting point is 00:17:12 companies plant trees? Lons got to do some good in that respect as well, right? True. They do. They do capture CO2. But when compared to the CO2, the lawn industry puts out, it's a big net negative. Let's start with simple lawnmowers. which are mostly gas powered. Unlike cars, whose emissions are regulated, few regulations exist for lawnmowers. According to the EPA, running a new gas lawnmower for one hour produces 11 times more emissions than driving the average new car for an hour. That's disgusting, actually. Yeah, guess what? That's actually an improvement. The New York Times reported that a 2006 lawnmower engine contributed 93 times more smog-forming emissions than cars from the same year. That was only 17,
Starting point is 00:17:56 years ago. So we have cut lawnmower emissions down. I wonder what a 1992 lawnmower did because I inhaled a ton of that stuff, man. Every weekend, I was inhaling three hours worth of that disgusting fumes. Yikes. Whenever someone is mowing their lawn now, there's always that strong smell of gasoline in the air. For me, it's always been a little bit gross nostalgia. It definitely seems unhealthy, but I never really connected the dots to the environmental impact because I thought it's a leaf blower, it's a small engine. and there's no way, even though it smells stronger, there's no way it's the same as my neighbor's Ford F-150 or whatever. Yeah, and you just actually just hit the next point,
Starting point is 00:18:33 which is it's not just lawn mowers. The other big menace of the lawn industry is leaf blowers. Running a leaf blower for 10 minutes produces as much exhaust as driving a large pickup truck for 235 miles. So that's astonishing and really disgusting, but also not terribly surprising. There's no way they put a catalytic converter on the back that tiny little backpack that the guy has.
Starting point is 00:18:56 Yeah, and look, as long as we're on leaf burrows, they create a very different but also harmful kind of pollution. They blow all kinds of dirt that was frankly just fine laying on the ground all up into the air for anybody walking outside to breathe. But I'm also guessing you're going to say noise pollution. Damn straight I am. I hate leaf blowers. Yeah, they are my nemesis.
Starting point is 00:19:18 I'll get into that in a minute. The World Health Organization recommends people not expose themselves to noises above 70 decibels because over time that level of prolonged noise can cause hearing loss, high blood pressure, and even cardiovascular disease. Erica Walker, a Harvard PhD, studies the effects of leaf blowers and found not only do they exceed safe decibel levels, they clock in between 80 and 90 decibels. That's as loud as a motorcycle and almost as a loud as a rock concert. If you think that's bad, don't have kids because I've got that sound app on my Apple Watch,
Starting point is 00:19:51 and it routinely tells me when I'm playing with my kids that I'm in a loud environment and I need to use hearing protection because it clocks in at 80 or 90 decibels. And that's just one kid screaming in my lap. Try two or more for an hour. Obviously, Erica Walker, PhD, doesn't have any kids. She wouldn't be so worried about leaf blowers.
Starting point is 00:20:09 But yeah, they are really loud, annoying. And as a podcaster, like I said, they are my nemesis. They are my enemy during the workday. I've actually, on multiple occasions, gone outside and told landscapers nearby to knock it off while I'm recording. Sometimes they're in my yard
Starting point is 00:20:23 and other times they're in my neighbor's yard and I'm like, don't do it. I don't care if they get mad at you. I'm trying to do something important and you are literally blowing leaves from my neighbor's yard into my yard or my yard into my neighbor's yard. You're just making it someone else's problem.
Starting point is 00:20:35 Yeah, I know. I feel bad for them. I do too. Nobody likes leaf blowers. It's like shooting the messenger. I know, yeah. And they're not enjoying with that loud thing strapped to their back but it is interesting that you should say
Starting point is 00:20:45 that they're annoying because leaf blowers have another distinctive quality that goes hand in hand with their being loud. Walker shows in her research that the particular low frequencies produced by leafblowers have negative effects on human health. The sound emitted by leafblowers is particularly unsettling to humans. Who hasn't gotten irritable when the leafblower guy just keeps blowing and blowing? But I thought it was just because I'm a cranky old fart in training and not because of science.
Starting point is 00:21:12 Yeah, without our pretty longs, we'd actually be a lot calmer. And as long as I'm on the topic, psychologists have found that complex scenes of nature, like meadows and forests have a calming effect on the human psyche as well. So you may think you like looking out at your nice lawn, but in reality you'd be calmer looking out at a pleasant meadow, like the one that you mowed down to build your house instead. Exactly. So look, noise and aesthetic issues aside, let's get into the next issue. The fossil fuels being spent on lawn care doesn't end at lawn mowers and leaf blowers.
Starting point is 00:21:45 In the U.S., it's estimated that we spill nearly 17 million gallons of gasoline, while people are filling their lawn care equipment. For context, that's 50% more than was spilled by the Exxon Valdez. And the entire world freaked out over that spill. I never even heard of this statistic until I started researching this episode. That's hard to believe. 17 million gallons of gasoline spilled accidentally. It sounds impossible.
Starting point is 00:22:13 But I guess filling lawnmowers is spill-prone task. I do remember my dad filling the lawnmower using a funnel. It seems like that would do the trick. How is that not so commonplace? How are we still spilling 17 million gallons a few? That's hard to believe. Yeah, it's crazy, man. And look, that gas goes into the ground and then seeps into the groundwater
Starting point is 00:22:32 and washes into waterways right along with all the other dangerous chemicals used to treat our lawns like fertilizers and pesticides. Now, this is not surprising. Those fertilizers and pesticides have always creeped me out. Even when I was a kid, I didn't want to get near him. I don't go down that aisle in Home Depot. It smells weird. It smells unhealthy.
Starting point is 00:22:52 It smells yellow. I associate it with just this really strong. I probably have synesthesia. But I walk in that aisle and I'm just like, this is not good for me. My throat is on fire. There's no chance that this is something that should be touching my skin or that I should be drinking. Yeah. It's one of those weird things where you get a taste in your mouth when you're around it.
Starting point is 00:23:09 They're bad. The nitrogen used in fertilizers is actually a tremendous source of carbon emissions. But before I get into just how bad the chemicals we put onto our lawns are, I want to point something out that I came across when studying this. Brown grass isn't dead grass. Grass hibernates, and unlike bears, grass hibernates for the summer. It turns brown during the summer to conserve its resources and waits for rainier times. Keeping grass green all year round is completely unnatural. Lawns are like giant green Frankensteins that surround our homes. They are abominations to nature. So, lawns definitely bring out the hyperbole in you.
Starting point is 00:23:52 You could say that. Look, I stand by my alarmism. As we just said, summer of 23 is having an effect on me. Once I read that the ocean water off Florida was over 100 degrees, I freaked out, man. And all the chemicals we pump into our world for lawns is part of the problem. I can't believe the ocean is 100 degrees. That's terrifying. Our hot tub that we probably use a crap load of solar energy to keep heat.
Starting point is 00:24:17 is 100 degrees. And it's hard to get in there, right? You dip your toe in. You're like, oh, it's hot. I'm a little uncomfortable. You got to go in slowly. If the ocean is that warm, that is alarming isn't quite the word. It's hard to overstate how alarming that really is. Yeah, I know. I've had a friend pass out from sitting in a 100 degree hot tub for too long. That's crazy that you could pass out from the heat of the ocean. And look, these fertilizers and pesticides, they're no better for the planet. According to the EPA, Americans douse their lawns with 90 million pounds of fertilizer and 78 million pounds of pesticides every year. 78 million pounds here and 90 million pounds there. Pretty soon we're talking about some big numbers.
Starting point is 00:25:01 It's a lot of swimming pools, man. Many of these chemicals are known to have health risks to us humans and to every other living thing on the planet. Just like the spilled gas, these chemicals seep into the drinking water and into our homes and content. natural habitats. I remember a few years ago there was this big thing where fertilizer would run off and it would cause these humongous algae blooms and things like that. It just ruins the romanticism of walking barefoot in the grass. You'd be better walking in the grass in a freaking hazmat suit. And you know, that might be your hyperbole, but that's actually accurate. Of 30 commonly used lawn pesticides, 19 are linked to cancer, 13 to birth defects,
Starting point is 00:25:43 21 to reproductive disorders, and 15 to brain damage. The most notorious of these is, what, Roundup? I've read a bit about that. You can't really avoid hearing about that one. Yeah, Roundup was developed by the now-defunct company Monsanto. Monsanto has settled over 100,000 Roundup lawsuits. Those are some busy lawyers. Oh, my God.
Starting point is 00:26:04 Busy, rich lawyers. And paying out about $11 billion because their product has been linked to cancer, the most common of which is non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Just this week, this is totally true. As I was studying this episode, I was scrolling through Instagram, and I came across an ad on Instagram from a law firm looking for people with cancer who think they may have been exposed to roundup. Oh my God, that's awful.
Starting point is 00:26:26 I'm starting to see why you dislike lawns so much, man. Yeah, and you know what? Here's a crazy thing. It's not just me. You know who else hates lawns? Lawns hate lawns. By keeping grass short, we keep it from growing flowers and seeds. We're keeping grass in perpetual sexual.
Starting point is 00:26:41 immaturity. Ooh, sounds like we're out there grooming lawns, eh? All right, I'm letting you go with that one, man. That was a good one. It's a little child trafficking joke, no big deal. hilarious every time. Yeah, no, anyway, continue. Cut grass has to dedicate all its energy and resources to constantly healing itself
Starting point is 00:27:01 and sealing off wounds. The smell of freshly cut grass is a chemical alarm bell that plants release when they're under attack. our idea of a healthy green lawn is a farce. Ask the chemically doused, decapitated grass how it feels. Go ahead, ask it. Yeah, okay, that's totally sane. Have you been talking to lawns?
Starting point is 00:27:21 No, but I have been listening to them, as long as there's no leaf blowers around. Yeah, lawns are bad, I get it, which begs the question, why are they so popular? Who cares now? Can't we just throw some rocks over this stuff and be done with it?
Starting point is 00:27:33 We're going to get into that, but if you want to know why they're so popular, it's because the lawn care and landscape industry rakes in $100 billion every year. That was a sly pun. I'm going to let that one slide. That is a huge figure. I would not have guessed that lawns are $100 billion a year industry.
Starting point is 00:27:50 And all that green pays for people to look past the problems with all that green. Pun moratorium officially reinstated, man. Fine. But the fact is these are powerful forces that continue to push the narrative that lush green lawns are good. The New York Times compares the pushback against. regulations in the lawn industry to the pushback auto manufacturer is engaged in when the EPA first tried to pass emission standards. The lawn industry has deep pockets and it's tough to go up against this industry, an industry that I believe you just dubbed something that I thought was very funny.
Starting point is 00:28:22 Big lawn. Yeah, I wouldn't count on that one catching on, but what can people do if they want to get off the lawn? Many things, and this is exciting stuff, but first you have to literally kill your lawn. No problem. I'll dump some bleach on it, douse it in lawnmower gasoline. There's 17 million extra gallons of that somewhere. I'll be right back. Hold the phone. Wait, and that wouldn't be very eco-friendly. Now, would it, Jordan? No, you just have to smother it. And not with love and nagging and emotional ammeshment like my mother tried to do to me. Okay. Too much information, man. What do you mean smother it? Do you just stop watering it? There's a bunch of ways to do it. But the most eco-friendly way is to cover your lawn with cardboard and let the lack of sunlight and resources
Starting point is 00:29:05 slowly kill the grass. That's going to look great. That's going to look great. Yeah. Yeah, cut up some Amazon boxes. Yeah. There are other ways of doing it. You can do sod cutters, but those things are gas powered. You can put plastic wrap over your lawn, but that stuff doesn't buy out a grade. So I say if you're going to murder your lawn, and I do recommend it, cardboard is the way to go. That's still a lot of cardboard. Yeah, I know. The average American would have to hang on to all the Amazon boxes that come to their house for a day, maybe two, Yeah, guilty. We have a crap load of those. Either way, once your lawn is gone to the big yard in the sky, you can do a lot of creative and beautiful things with the space like Xeriscaping.
Starting point is 00:29:43 I have not heard of that. What is Zeroscaping? Zerescaping is landscaping that uses only native and drought-resistant plants. The rough idea behind Zeriscaping is that it uses none of the water we get from our garden hoses, but let's rain and rain capture take all of the water needs. So I'm guessing in the southwest that means lots of cacti and some more, I don't know, rocks and little flat stones that you walk on? Yeah, it could, but it's not just cacti. In the southwest, there's a lot of perennial fowers and other native plants from sagebrushes to desert willers.
Starting point is 00:30:14 Plus, as you said, rocks. Rocks are good. Rocks, not that beats rocks. I spent a lot of time in Joshua Tree, and most people in that community have really gorgeous rock gardens. Trust me, rocks rock. But that's just for the southwest. Homes and other parts of the country have tons of lush green native options.
Starting point is 00:30:30 As much as I think it's a good idea, murdering your lawn and then Zerescaping, it actually sounds expensive. But since water use is such a growing problem, many cities have programs to either help convert your lawn to Zeriscaped yard, or in some cases, they just pay for it outright. Even if your city doesn't help cover the cost, the long-term savings of water fertilizing and paying the neighbor's son to spill gas on mow your yard, it makes it worth it in the end. Zeriscaping does sound pretty good. a lot of my neighbors around here, they either let the wild native-ish plants grow and it looks like a freaking jungle, which is kind of cool, actually, and there's a bunch of birds and animals in there, or they just dump those kind of white rocks on there. This is my lawn. Suck it. And I'm fine with it. It looks fine. It's hot as hell outside. What are my options if I'm going to slay my
Starting point is 00:31:21 lawn? Yeah. Actually, what a lot of people are doing in addition to the stuff you just mentioned is that they're letting their lawns go back to what they were originally and they're converting them to both front and back gardens. By using rain capture technology, we minimize water use. This cuts down not only on grocery bills, but makes less big agriculture necessary. Ah, right on. So plus veggies grown in the home garden always tastes amazing.
Starting point is 00:31:44 Yeah, way better than the plate of fertilizer and pesticide-treated grass. Trust me, my high school bully once made me eat a handful of grass and was not good. Ah, this is the true origin of your hatred for lawns, Gileo might well be. Look, there's even a new trend for people who can't get off the lawn, but don't want to contribute to all the problems lawns bring. Painted grass. No. Yeah, no, there are now companies that will come to your home and use environmentally safe green paint
Starting point is 00:32:16 to paint your brown grass green. I've seen this happening in China, actually, which is spray painting trees and grass green. So the history of lawns started with paintings of lawns, and is now ending with painted lawns. This is poetic, man. I'm not going to lie. That's actually when you put it that way, it is. Water issues aside, though, I don't want my kids running barefoot in all those chemicals.
Starting point is 00:32:39 I think I'm just going to become an inverse grumpy old man and be like, hey, lawn, get off my kids. That's a solid joke. No puns necessary. Yeah, maybe we'll call this episode the lawn goodbye. And you just couldn't help yourself. It was right there for the taking, man. Thank you very much, Michael.
Starting point is 00:32:58 Thank you for having me. And thank you for listening. Topic suggestions for future episodes of Skeptical Sunday to Jordan at Jordan Harbinger.com. Show notes at Jordan Harbinger.com. Transcripts are in the show notes. Advertisers, deals, and ways to support the show are all at Jordan Harbinger.com slash deals.
Starting point is 00:33:17 I'm at Jordan Harbinger on Twitter and Instagram, and you can find Michael Regelio at Michael Regelio on Instagram, Michael Regelio Comedy. And we'll link to that in the show notes because, as always, nobody can spell Regulio. this show is created in association with podcast one. My team is Jen Harbinger, Jace Sanderson, Robert Fogart, Ian Baird, Millie Ocampo, and Gabriel Mizrahi.
Starting point is 00:33:38 Our advice and opinions are our own, and I'm a lawyer, but I'm not your lawyer. Do your own research before implementing anything you hear on the show. And remember, we rise by lifting others. Share the show with those you love, and if you found the episode useful, please share it with somebody else who could use a good dose of the skepticism that we doled out today. Maybe somebody is obsessed with their lawn or needs a new lawn, and they're deciding what to do with it,
Starting point is 00:33:59 they could find out just how bad grass really is. In the meantime, I hope you apply what you hear on the show so you can live what you learn, and we'll see you next time. You're about to hear a preview of the Jordan Harbinger show with a crisis PR expert that helps people deal with scandals that seem to always happen to the rich and powerful. I don't know one person in this world that's never needed help, professionally, personally or both.
Starting point is 00:34:22 Think about some of the issues that corporations deal with, Data breach, bad press, social media attack, investigations, litigations, sex scandals, rumors, sudden death, terrorism, riots, all those things really do impact businesses. And I see leader after leader after leader hold a press conference and don't come anywhere close to answering the questions that many people have and often rely on the no comment approach. But the bottom line is there's a heavy, heavy price to pay for sweeping things under the carpet. Many of them are just not prepared. They don't have organizational muscle memory, which I speak of very, very frequently. We always say that crises cost organizations, time, money, customers, and ultimately their career. And candidly, in the worst case of scenarios' lives, the core motivators generally come down to power and control, money, sex, and revenge.
Starting point is 00:35:15 We build strength and defend reputations each and every day. And our goal here is to identify the points of exposure for an organization so that we can put in the strategies and tactics to reduce the points of exposure and save time, money, consumer confidence, and the careers of the people who sit at the highest posts. What happened, what caused it, what are the short and long-term effects, what's being done about it, and what needs to be done in the future. I always say the success is systems-driven, not hero-driven. To learn how to problem solve during real-life crisis scenarios, check out episode two of the Jordan Harbinger Show. episode is sponsored in part by Something You Should Know podcast.
Starting point is 00:36:01 Finding a new great podcast shouldn't be this hard, so let me save you some time. If you like the Jordan Harbinger show, you'll probably like something you should know with Mike Carruthers. It's one of those shows that makes you smarter in a practical, useful way. Same curiosity vibe we go for here, just in a fast, focused format. Mike brings on top experts and asks the exact questions that you'd want to ask, and the topics are all over the place in the best way. Recently, they've covered things like why we care so much what other people think,
Starting point is 00:36:26 the benefits of laughter, why sports fans get so invested, and what makes people like you or not, the through line is always the same. Smart ideas you can actually use in real life. Something you should know has been featured in Apple's shows we love, and it's got thousands of five-star reviews because it's consistently interesting. So if you want another show that scratches that I want to understand how people in the world really work itch, search for something you should know wherever you get your podcasts. Look for the bright yellow light bulb and start listening. You can thank me later.

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