Waveform: The MKBHD Podcast - Talking Glitterbomb, Creative Engineering, and Storytelling with Mark Rober!
Episode Date: July 29, 2022This week Marques speaks with fellow YouTuber Mark Rober! If you've ever wondered how Mark plans a video or how frisbees stay in the air this is the episode for you. He talks about why he's excited to... help teach kids about engineering with his new CrunchLabs project and also talks about his time working for NASA and Apple. This is a fun one! Links: Mark Rober YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/markrober CrunchLabs: https://www.crunchlabs.com/ Twitters: https://twitter.com/wvfrm https://twitter.com/mkbhd https://twitter.com/andymanganelli https://twitter.com/MarkRober https://twitter.com/adamlukas17 https://twitter.com/EllisRovin Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/wvfrmpodcast/ Shop the merch: https://shop.mkbhd.com Join the Discord: https://discord.gg/mkbhd Music by 20syl: https://bit.ly/2S53xlC Waveform is part of the Vox Media Podcast Network. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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All right, welcome back, people of the internet,
to another episode of the Waveform Podcast.
This week, I have a conversation with one of my favorite YouTube creators
and a good friend now, Mark Rober.
We talked about a whole bunch in this conversation.
We talked about being a full-time YouTube creator
and some of the quirks and features of that particular job, but also he used to work at NASA at the
Jet Propulsion Lab and at Apple, which we talk a little bit about that too. And sort of the
weird behind the scenes. I think he shares a story of a little bit of the behind the scenes
of Apple's self-driving car project and their ambitions there. It's all very interesting.
Obviously, you should listen to the whole thing,
but if you should listen to anything in particular,
it's how it always, for him, seems to tie back to learning.
He's always been a lifelong learner,
and now he has a new product out
called the BuildBox subscription
from his new company called Crunch Labs.
It helps kids understand physics concepts
through hands-on experimentation with videos that he made that walks people through everything. It's fascinating. It's what his videos
are about. It's what his products are about. It's what he's about. And you'll hear it in this
interview too. So without any further ado, let's get into it. All right, Mark Rober, thank you for
joining me on the waveform podcast. It's been a long time coming. I feel like we've, we've crossed
paths a few times. We've worked together a few times, but I've always wanted
to just sit down and have a chat. Uh, this is one question I think I ask every creator and I'm,
I'm kind of excited to hear your answer. What do you tell people that you do? Like,
how do you, what's your two sentence, like compact version of what Mark Rober does what is that uh I mean it depends
first of all if it's sometimes if it's a situation where it's like where it's like I it's certain
situations I just I don't want to get into it then I just like oh I just I just make uh I just make, uh, I, I make science videos, uh, and I just kind of leave it at that. And
sometimes that just leaves it in the conversation, you know, that stops the conversation. Uh,
but if I want to explain like what it is I do, it's like, I don't know. I think my,
I, I get, um, I'd say just like getting folks, especially the young folks,
like stoked about science and education and engineering
by trying to make videos that are like catchy and interesting.
It's like I trick people into learning science
by getting them excited to see a thing.
And then when they least expect it,
then I sneak some science in on them.
That's kind of what I do.
I like that. I feel like I have then I sneak some science in on them. That's kind of what I do.
I like that.
I feel like I have a lot of my favorite channels on YouTube, for whatever reason, are very educational channels, whether they're about technology or maybe it's science and weird physics questions and things like that.
I don't know why, but there's a whole section of YouTube that I'm constantly on that's all about that.
And you, of course, have a history.
Before you were making videos about tech, you were working in tech and engineering. You worked at JPL, at NASA.
You worked at Apple.
I'm going to guess that you've always been into science and engineering in some capacity.
science and engineering in some capacity? Yeah, I think certainly like math and science resonated more with me, even in like junior high. When I went to high school and I took high school
physics, I was like, oh, this feels like good in my brain. Like I like being able to explain the
world using math and equations and like no matter what language we speak or where we
live or what our you know favorite our political ideologies or our favorite sports teams like we
can all agree that uh gravity is 9.8 you know meters per second squared and if i if i drop this
rock off this bridge like we we would all come to the same answer of like how many seconds it would take
for it to hit the ground.
And there's just something so beautiful about one right answer to a thing and
being able to,
you know,
as humans,
we like to predict a lot of times we,
we,
we're really good at creating narratives,
going back through things that happened in our own lives or like on a worldwide stage and kind of creating a thread to create a story as to why it happened.
You know, hindsight bias, you know, hindsight's 2020, all that stuff.
So that I think ultimately we can then predict the future.
And a lot of times we're making poor conclusions to why it happened
and then we're poor at predicting the future.
But that's the beauty of math and science,
and especially like physics and these things.
It's like you make observations of the natural world
so that you can make very meaningful and realistic
and accurate predictions of what will then happen in the future.
And that's a huge part
of what's, you know, gotten us to this, where we are at this point in humanity.
Yeah. I feel like that was always why I gravitated towards math as my favorite subject because
there's only one right answer. And I, I know if I got it right, cause I did the process right.
Uh, but it also is interesting what you're saying about like being able to predict the future a little bit.
I just had that memory of I think the person who predicted Halley's Comet would return at a certain year, like made all the correct calculations, but then didn't live to see when it came back.
But when it came back, everyone was like, oh, this guy was on to something.
So there's.
Well, that's like.
Yeah.
And like with Einstein, too, it's like I mean, he's like people say, oh, he's like the classic.
Oh, he's a smart dude. But like today, even still, there's so many things that he predicted that like we're just now being able to have the instruments to measure and be like, yeah, the? I mean, that's pretty dope when it's like not only you make a prediction
and a statement that's
like you can test now, but like you don't
even have the ability to test it until like
10, 20, 100 years
in the future. And then when you're still right,
like, that's pretty bomb.
That's pretty, that's like
A1 bragging rights of like, yeah,
we won't know if I'm right, but
trust me, you'll figure it out eventually.
Trust me, eventually you'll find out I'm right.
So when I think about like engineering and science in school, I wonder like you basically are an educator now and more so than ever because we'll talk about Crunch Labs in a second.
But are there things that you like wish were different about your education?
Maybe there's different types of learnings that would have helped you more or do you find that
you know the normal school path got you to know you enjoy math and engineering because i when i
see crunch labs i'm like oh learning at home physical learnings like visual learnings things
in your own hands that's what i would have wanted that's way more down my alley but i wonder how you look at it yeah for sure like i think to the degree that you can
learn without realize you're learning like realizing you're learning is like that's i mean
if i think about all the things i'm the most passionate about and I'm like the best at, like, I mean, take, I still edit all my own videos. Right.
And it's like, I,
I feel like I'm pretty good at editing and writing and coming up with like a
good story and like a way to communicate something at this point because I'm
passionate about it and I love it. And it's like, I never,
I never took a class for that. Right.
Like no one's ever like officially taught me. It's just something I'm took a class for that, right? Like, no one's ever, like, officially taught me.
It's just something I'm so passionate about and I enjoy.
And therefore, I know it better than I know almost anything else.
And to the degree that you can just tap into that and just tickle that part of someone.
Like, my favorite thing in life is that aha moment where a new principle becomes
or you see something in a different way.
I'm addicted to that feeling.
I love reading books that challenge the way I think and get me to just learning.
That excitement of learning something new is such an addictive feeling.
I love giving that aha moment to other people.
I know when I'm going to drop a juicy nugget in a video that's like i'm gonna say this and a lot of people
don't realize this is true um and and so if you can make learning about that feeling and just like
the excitement i did a ted talk about a tedx talk about what i call the Super Mario Effect, which is basically like, you know,
when you're playing a video game,
you're not afraid of failure.
If you fall into a pit on level one of Mario,
you're not like, you don't throw the controller down
and be like, oh, that's so embarrassing.
I can't believe I died.
Like, I never want to play this game again.
You're like, no, like, okay, there's a pit there.
Okay, next time I got to remember, I got to cut them out with more speed. I'm going to play this game again. You're like, no. Like, okay, there's a pit there.
Okay, next time I got to remember.
I got to cut them out with more speed.
I'm going to try jumping a little earlier.
It might take six or seven tries before you land that, right?
Level 8-1, that little, you had to make that big jump,
and there's that tiny little block you had to land on and then do a quick jump.
Like, got me every time, right?
But that meant I wanted to figure it out that much more. And like, as,
as kids, as a result, we got really good at that game really fast. And we never went to school the
next day. And we're like, you know, talked about all the different ways we died. The question was
like, did you beat the game last night? And it's like, you know, I said in the talk, like the most
meaningful high fives of my adolescence was when it's like, yeah, dude, I beat it. I beat it.
my adolescence was when it's like, yeah, dude, I beat it. I beat it. And so it's like, I try and approach in my own life, like challenges that way. And so as a result, you're just way less focused
on the failure and being embarrassed and, and, and looking dumb. And if you gamify the object
of the thing you're trying to learn, you will just learn it so much faster and it's a totally pleasant experience and you love it just like we love playing video games and so that's a long way
to answer your question like heck yeah like the more you can make learning exciting and something
that the kid the the students see the passion in the teacher uh because they're genuinely passionate
about it like that's the secret sauce. And I had
a couple of teachers like that, you know, my AP statistics teacher, which could be a totally
boring subject was awesome. And that was probably my favorite class in high school and something to
this day, statistics is something I'm still fascinated about. Same. Yeah, no AP stats was
probably my favorite class actually. Um yeah no they that's a that's
a really good point like the so much of what we do now even is self-taught that's like the way
it's described like we didn't go to class for you didn't study it formally or whatever but
you do it so often and you enjoy it and you want to get better at it so therefore you just work
towards getting better at the thing and you might not even think at it. So therefore you just work towards getting better at
the thing. And you might not even think to yourself, Oh, I am self-taught at this thing,
but you are, it is, it is kind of the best way of learning something, uh, the most effectively.
But also you said something in there, you said you still edit all your own videos,
which is like probably one of the more surprising things. I think a lot of people assume that a
channel like yours is some massive production. Uh, tell me about the video making process. What,
what goes through your head when deciding to set up a squirrel maze in your backyard and like have
them go through and measure all the data and, and figure out which one's Gus and how's it all?
What is your, what on earth is your process from like ideation to making a whole video?
Yeah.
I mean,
you still,
you,
you and I are like a rare cases.
You edit a lot of your own videos too and stuff,
right?
This is like,
I feel like you and I always have the same conversation with Mr.
Beast.
So we talk with him.
He's like,
what are you doing?
Every time he's literally like, why having you hired an editor? What's happening? Why?
This is the first thing he always says. Yeah.
It's hilarious. Um, yeah, I think so for me, I think I'm different. I mean, from talking with
other folks, I think I'm different. Like I'm never, I never, ever, ever have the moment where
like, Oh crap, I don't have a video next month or even six months from now Like I'm never, I never ever, ever have the moment where like, Oh crap, I don't have
a video next month or even six months from now. I like most, my videos are basically planned a year
out. Like I'm currently working on eight or nine different videos right now in different stages.
Either it's like a research phase, you know, or I'm currently. currently okay so what are the phases because that's
that's all that a year is a long time so what are the phases i guess of these projects yeah so like
you know naturally i'm we got glitter bomb 5.0 in the works and i started working on glitter bomb
5.0 literally in january of this year because there's part of what i do with those videos is
like part of the fun is
just like the engineering challenge of,
of starting over again and like going back to the drive.
Like what are the different,
like how can I engineer this thing to be even better?
Like,
you know,
cons and that,
and that's a basic MO for myself too.
Like if I do like a sequel of a thing,
like I've done a few elephant toothpaste videos or the glitter bomb or you know
even the squirrel stuff it's like the only time i'll do a sequel is when i know there's a banger
way to make it better so like you know the glitter bombs or the elephant toothpaste or you know the
squirrel videos like if i have a really cool twist a way to really level it up then it's like i'll
challenge myself and try and level it up.
So with the glitter bomb,
I don't want to give too much away, but this year
it involves drones. And when you
open the lid,
there may be some drones
that are going to go like, some mini drones
that are going to fly around people's houses
and
spraying glitter on top of
just an absolutely uncharitable amount
of fart spray this year.
I mean, we're really leveling that up as well.
But anyway, so that's a video.
There's a lot of engineering that goes into
taking a lid off a box in someone's house
that can be banged around,
that they're not going to treat delicately
like a prototype where it needs to work,
and you need to be able to get the footage from the cloud,
and you need to be able to retrieve the bot.
There's just a lot of engineering that goes into that.
So part of the reason they take so long, especially for the builds,
is a lot of times it's just the engineering.
There's a lot of research.
One way to make a viral video, or the way to make a viral video
is to just evoke some kind of visceral response in the person watching it like that's the only
way to make it has to be for something to be remarkable it has to be able to be remarked about
and so it needs to make them feel wonder or awe or amazement or sadly anger that's like why a lot of like i think you know things are so
political are like um just kind of fractured and you know the bipartisan aspect is like the
partisanship is just if you if you make something makes people angry they're going to share it
um and so by doing like the world's largest nerf gun the world's largest super soaker by definition
if it's the world's largest longest hot wheels track it means that you've never seen that before it's
the most extreme version of anything and so it's going to have that awe aspect to it so
by doing that by trying to do something you've never seen before i have a totally
it just takes resources and time to
get to that point. So I have a word, I have a document, like a notebook, basically, that has
a bunch of ideas in it. And I've been doing this for over a decade now, like you. And I was worried
for the first two years that at some point, I'm going to run out of ideas. But it's like,
that's for sure. I'll never run out of ideas. I always have a year's worth of ideas in there and things are coming.
And so, yeah, that's basically it.
So they're just in different stages and some of them are kind of half-baked.
Some of them it's like, Hey, I need to find someone who does this thing.
Like I have this one idea that I've had a while that's like has to do,
I don't want to give too much away,
but it has to do with like a primitive form of hunting and i think there's people on earth still who do it very well like
blow your mind amazingly well and i want to kind of make a machine and go find these people and
like challenge them but it's like that's one part of it
is like making the thing myself,
but part of it is like finding the right person
and then traveling to that part of the world
to meet with them.
So like different ideas have different lead times
for different reasons.
But yeah, go ahead.
I feel like when I watch a good video,
like part of my brain anytime I'm watching
a movie sees like the plot and the movie and watches that part and the other half of my brain
is like wondering how they shot it and like appreciating the cinematography of certain pieces
so when I see a good YouTube video that I can tell took a lot of time and effort to create
then I appreciate it even more.
Like that's where my brain goes.
So I feel like every time I watch one of your videos
and you do hit that moment of like learning
or like that engineering twist or like,
dang, he really built that punter robot
to kick the football that far.
Like all of that coming together in the video,
that's like my favorite part of enjoying the video, obviously.
But just knowing that they're planned so far in advance is like, I don't know, my brain couldn't handle that.
Like when I'm making a video and I get like 98% done with the edit and it's like midnight, I cannot and I will not leave until it's done uploaded or I'll come in the next day
sick of it like I can't stand it so I I appreciate that you that you you put in all that effort
the trick though is making it look like I think there's an making it look like it didn't require
all that effort you know what I mean like I'd say this point, this is a little nugget for you on this, uh, on your,
on your podcast.
Cause it's tech,
but I'd say maybe like 20% of my shots at this point are just from my
iPhone.
Like it's not about Casey.
Nice.
I would say this all the time,
but it's like,
it's not about your gear.
It's about the story.
It's about what you're doing.
Like it's,
it's the story and what you've done that matters.
And so I almost try not to, like, I don't want a red camera. I mean, for what you do,
it makes sense. And it's cool. And it, I would say it actually is a little bit about the gear
and making it look really, really beautiful. But for me, it's like, it's not. And there's
sort of an authenticity that comes with it, not making it feel like it's not and and there's sort of an authenticity that comes with it not making it
feel like it's an overproduced tv show thing and if it just feels like i built this cool thing and
i'm just a dude and i'm just going to kind of film it and tell the story in a fun way but it's not
going to be super overproduced there's i think it just feels comfortable and i think the medicine
goes down smoother when i when i get into the science stuff because you just you feel like I'm just a dude in my backyard who's passionate about this stuff which is true
like that is what the situation is but I think there's an element if you get too focused on gear
and the beautiful shots and too cinematic or just making it feel like a standard overproduced tv
show thing that you just lose that and it sucks the soul out of it, you know? Yeah. Yeah.
There is, there is an element of like reducing all of it to just the core of the idea, which is just like, Hey, yeah, I'm a guy in my backyard.
I got some squirrels.
Let's see what happens.
And I like, I kind of enjoy like the moment when I'm watching the video, when I realize,
Oh, this was shot on an iPhone.
I didn't, I wasn't even thinking about that before.
Usually as soon as I opened the video, I'm like, Oh, what was this shot on? What? Oh, it looks like the shot
with like three angles here in this camera. So I like that. I like that. It gets me so immersed
that I don't even notice that's, that's the mark of a good video. So then, so then you get into
the editing stage. How long does it take you to edit a whole video? I'm assuming you just have
hundreds of gigs of footage of things yeah working i think
yeah for i mean for like the squirrel videos we have probably like uh i think it's like
what would it be i'm trying to think it's maybe like a thousand hours of footage or more that we
gotta break down i gotta i gotta cut it down to 15 minutes, you know?
And I,
to be fair,
I do have an editor I work with who like is a,
who goes through all the raw footage and organize it for me.
So it's like,
I'm totally editing by myself,
but it's still personally a hundred hours of me personally editing a single
video.
Like that's my time not to include the other editors so
um yeah yeah i tend to not actually even like football kicking robot as an example like
a lot of times i don't know what the story is going to be and you know my stuff is very story
driven that's like a misconception where people are like oh you're a really good builder and i
say this a lot but it's like i'm an okay builder but it's like i'm a i'm a i're a really good builder. And I say this a lot, but it's like, I'm an okay builder. But it's like, I'm a pretty good storyteller. I'll give myself credit for that. And so I
kind of don't have the video pre-planned out. I'll go out and film the thing and just get a
lot of footage. And then once I'm done filming it, it's like, okay, what happened here? And
what's the narrative here? And what's the best way to teach the science here based on the results?
And so a lot of times like the intro and not even a lot of times, every time the intro where it's like, so we're going to go out here and see blah, blah, blah.
I filmed after the fact.
So it's like I will do the thing.
I'll see what happens.
I'll figure out what the best story is.
And then I'll weave the
narrative in from there. It's all film post, you know, and obviously I do VO and that kind of helps
with that as well. Yeah, that is a fascinating. So like there are every type of every genre of
YouTube video has a different version of this where it's like product reviews are, are mainly,
and maybe it's, maybe this has room to change, but it's all shot after the fact and explaining what happened.
So there isn't really the like current events learning part of it.
And so this reminds me of another conversation we had with Jimmy, which is like he would tell you to never make a video unless you already have the title and thumbnail planned out in advance.
already have the title and thumbnail planned out in advance. But if you're, if you're in the midst of an experiment and you don't know how it will go and you don't know if it'll fail or not, or if
you have to change course, are you not able to make like the final packaging of the video until
the end? Are you, are you, you have, do you start with a title in mind and then it changes? How does
that work? No, I definitely agree with Jimmy in that sense where it's like, you know, if I made a
15 ton jello pool, I'm pretty dang sure know what the title of that will be and what the thumbnail would be, regardless of what happens.
So very rarely is it like, I generally think that's decent advice as well. And I do the same thing. If I can't find, or if there's something uh there's one idea i've had for like six years
and my team my my friends and my team would laugh because it's like i know this is going to sink my
channel i'm probably going to do it the next three months that it's like i don't generally i don't
make a video that's like very very very niche like part of me you know because i i'm reaching such a
broad audience now it needs to be broadly. So that advice of what's the title, what's the thumbnail, I have a pretty good sense.
I think a lot of the bigger creators, yourself included, who are good at this have that same
thing. That's just like a sense of what's going to resonate with people. Um, it starts with the
title of thumbnail, but there's tons of decisions throughout the video that you're making that if you have a good sense of what like generally will resonate with others, you're, you're going to pull views on YouTube, you know, if you know the general title and thumbnail and if it's going to resonate, how the story pans out is almost less important.
You know, in the end, no matter what, I've made this crazy football kicking robot.
Whether I beat the longest kicker or not, or he beats me, or how we get there, that's all stuff that I don't know.
But I know I've got this thing and that's going to be my title and my thumbnail.
You know what I mean?
We're going to take a quick break for some ads.
Then we'll be right back with Mark Rober.
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So now we're making, both of us, YouTube videos that are typically 10, 15 plus minutes long,
sometimes longer than that.
And there's a little piece in the back of my brain that's like, yeah, but TikTok,
you see what TikTok's doing, right?
You see what shorts are doing, right?
You see those like 45 second videos that are blowing up.
Are you thinking about shorts at all?
Cause I know I started making some and it's a challenge.
My first few shorts were like 59.9 seconds.
Like I barely finished what I wanted to say by the time it was over.
But in the spirit of like educating and being fun and tricking people into learning, have you thought about doing short form stuff?
I have.
In fact, I have a list.
I like really put my brain on it for like a day or two. And now I have a notes doc on my phone that has like 70 ideas that I think are
pretty banger ideas and it's kind of cool because you could do stuff in short form that
there's certain things that I would want to do in a video but it's just not big enough for a video
um like I've got this fountain in my backyard the other day and the flow is too strong so one
thing I tried was I jammed some like steel wool into the pipe to like slow the flow down.
And it turns out if you jam steel wool into a pipe, it gives you laminar flow.
And I was like, that's amazing.
And that's like a cool short I could do.
Yeah.
That talk about that, that's certainly not a full YouTube video
so it's like I do have those stuff
it's just like it's a matter of time
and maybe I'm like
the old man who's going to miss the boat
but it's like I think
when I'm ready to do that
I will jump into it and do it
for now admittedly
there's not as much revenue
in shorts
and so and for me admittedly there's not as much revenue in, in shorts.
Um,
uh,
and so,
and for me,
like mobile was down 10% last year. So that's an argument that people are like starting to watch more short form
content,
but TV was up like 70%,
like a lot of people.
And I've seen this with my friends and their kids.
Like they,
it's now a thing where most TVs are smart TVs where people will watch YouTube on their TVs.
I'm not jumping on this, oh, everyone's got to make short-form content.
In some ways, I'm doubling down on long-form content because it works really well on the TV.
I think that's a growing market.
I have thought about shorts. For now, I feel like
I'm, I'm, I have, there's only, you know, 24 hours in a day type of thing. And I'm continuing to put
my resources into the long form stuff. However, at some point, I'm sure I will do short form,
and I'm kind of excited for it as a challenge as a new way to do things it's kind of exciting for me to like think about that but right now I'm not super concerned with
it it is I will warn you it is a challenge it is very much like a a new way of like structuring
and like and making I think when you start making short stuff you'll be surprised at how short a
short really is uh and trying to like structure the information in a way that can
actually fit in that amount of time that's my that's what i think it's like it's taking i feel
like the authenticity to you know i do consume some short form content it's like it's very naked
and bare bones and there's no you know a lot of times there's no like background music and edits
it's like a one take thing a lot of times works well right exactly um and edits. It's like a one take thing. A lot of times works well. Right.
Exactly.
Um,
yeah.
So,
but that's like a different way to train.
Yeah.
Our brains to do stuff like that.
I did see an article in variety or something or,
uh,
no,
um,
uh,
Benedict Evans.
Do you know who he is?
He has a really good newsletter.
I love his stuff where he's like predicting,
he talks about industry,
especially tech is amazing. And he put a link to you, that article that you did recently that said
that you're doing, you're doing short form or look me into it. Someone wrote an article about
you with regards to that or something. Right. Got it. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. You know,
I'm just, I'm just dipping my feet in the shallow end of the pool.
I see the deep end and I see all the fun stuff on the horizon,
but I'm kind of like you.
There is limited bandwidth, and I am pretty doubled down on the videos that we're making.
So, you know, we're playing with it.
We're playing with it.
It could be a situation where short form eats long form eventually,
but even if that were to
happen from what i'm looking at that could be like that's two years away three years away so that's
like you could make a lot of content in two and three years and at that point if i'm pivoting i
mean i have put some stuff i think i have like three million followers on tiktok and i haven't
started uploading youtube shorts yet um because i'm still kind of waiting to, I'm still not clear how that looks on a channel and whether I do it on my
main channel or second. Um, so I could be wrong on that, but I don't know. I think that will always
be a place for long form content, right? You know, movies are still a thing regardless of youtube existing and so fully agreed so what did you work on at
apple is that a is that a question i can ask it's definitely a question you could ask and like they
are very clear when you leave out of like the large stack of things you signed that says you're
not going to tell about that talk about this here. Here's what I can say. I did product design in their special projects group. And, uh, there was like a leak. So it's kind of a funny story.
I don't know that I've ever told this publicly, but, um, they, um, first of all, they approached
me and wanted me to work for them. And then they told me when I came there, I can't make YouTube
videos. And I'm like
and granted at that time I had like 250,000 subs so I was pretty small but I'm like
forget you guys like you came to me like I didn't like then I'm not gonna work with you and I don't
feel like you can even tell me I can't make videos anyways like is that even legal so eventually
they backed off from that and they just said fine but wait at least three months till you make a video so you
kind of get the culture here and you can't say in your videos you work for apple i'm like fine i'm
like i don't even have like part of me convincing them was like i don't even have that big of a
channel anyways it's not gonna get that many views so i come there and the very first video i upload
after three months is how to skin a watermelon which to this day is my most popular video ever with like 140 million views
it just had a really banger thumbnail at a time when thumbnails were like really important to
the algorithm it was just like weird timing so i'm like guys don't worry i don't need that many
views anyways i upload this and in like a week it was like 25 million views. It just like totally popped.
Yeah.
So anyways,
so I'm making videos and then eventually maybe a year later,
um,
Jimmy Kimmel asked me,
you know,
his folks are like,
Hey, do you want to come on the Kimmel show?
And I was like,
well,
so I asked,
I asked Apple that and it gets bumped all the way up to Dan Riccio, who is like one below Tim Cook.
And Dan Riccio's response was like, we should be focused on making great products.
And so that comes down.
So he didn't exactly say no, but it was like, and I honestly realized from that, like, oh, they can't actually tell me no.
If I'm not saying I work for Apple, like, if I want to canoe after hours, you know, they can't tell me, like, I can't canoe because we should be focused on making great products.
So I did Kimmel anyways, and that turned out to be, you know, a really good career decision because him and I are, like, good friends now. I'm staying at his house next.
because him and I are like good friends now.
I'm staying at his house next.
I'm hosting his show next week and staying at his house and going on vacation with him, you know, the month after that.
So it's like I'm glad I didn't listen to Dan Riccio there.
That's for days.
So I kind of kept it secret, you know, that I worked for Apple
and then my channel got bigger and bigger.
And their concern like to their point is like there's nothing beneficial that there's no upside to them by
having me be an apple employee and having a large following it's only downside because if i now have
a platform to talk about them like they don't need me to get their story out right so eventually
there was i get a call one day after working for Apple for four years and it's a reporter from
variety, I think, or something. And it's like, can you comment on your work you do for Apple?
And I'm like, uh, what are you talking about? And as I'm talking to him, I get a call from Apple HR,
like peeing in on this. And, uh, so I go over and they're like, hey, look, someone's going to leak this story that you work for us.
Just be, you know, don't say anything, you know, just keep it very surface level.
So anyways, I did.
It ended up being this big story that leaked and all my coworkers like gave me a hard time about it or teasing me.
But after that, it was like not a big deal.
And I still worked for them for like another year.
And they loved me working for them and i loved working for them the reason it leaked though
getting to the everything and this is the answer to your question what did i do at apple uh i was
lead author on a patent and i could say this because it's like public domain about um using
virtual reality and self-driving cars and what are all the implications of that.
The main one being, again, because this is listed in the patent,
40% of people suffer from motion sickness.
Wouldn't it be interesting if you could use virtual reality to solve that?
Because motion sickness is when like basically your your internal
gyro doesn't match up with what your eye is seeing so that's why if you're like in the back seat you
can't see forward you get motion sick because you don't know what's happening and so if you could
really know exactly what the car is going to do and where it's going to turn and how it's turning
and show that to you in virtual reality uh then you could potentially not get motion sickness because
well when autonomous cars eventually come we'll have all this free time but if you get motion
sick you can get there's nothing you can do with it so the idea that you could strap on a virtual
reality and and by the way imagine virtual reality is like sunglasses not these big bulky things now
but it's like very lightweight thing you put on your head in the future um and then and now you
can work on your laptop because essentially the screen is like way over on the horizon you know
it would show you a fake horizon and the screen would be like in the sky basically and so if you
know no one gets motion sickness looking way over at the horizon so now all of a sudden you can look
down and see a virtual keyboard you're typing or you can watch a movie um but then there's also tons of other implications that are listed in the
patent of like what does that mean for um entertainment because like a car in some ways
is the best version of a motion simulator because you know if you go on star tours or motion
simulator they have to simulate gravity by tilting your seat back.
And then your brain's like, I'm not feeling like pressure on my butt as much.
So something just feels off when you're supposedly accelerating.
But in a car, you're you're you still keep your G's pointing down and you actually can accelerate and break and turn and impart these G's to you in a way that could be pretty entertaining
or relaxing or engaging,
depending on what kind of version you feed into the VR
or thrilling into the VR.
So yeah, there's a lot there.
I will say again, because this is public record,
Apple has continued to make updates to that patent.
And it feels like from my perspective there,
it's an interesting one for them.
So I don't know.
It was really exciting to be.
And that came about because Apple's like one of my managers at Apple was
like,
Hey dude,
you're coming up with all these banger ideas on YouTube.
Like come up with a banger idea for us.
And so I started like thinking about it and then like I was in a meeting and
I was just like,
I started shaking cause I'm like, Oh my gosh, this would be so crazy.
And so then like I started coming up with all these versions of it and to their credit
management is very supportive there.
When you have ideas, they let, they let you run with stuff and they have the funds to
invest in it.
So they were very supportive of letting me just go crazy with this idea.
And, um, yeah, it was really fun, cool experience to be able to do that.
Because it's like, you know, there's one idea of, there's one thing of like, you know, we
come up with ideas on our own, which is cool.
You own the full idea and you can really, you could technically own it and run it cradle
to grave.
But it's like working at the largest tech company in the world, you know, the most valuable company in the world with like so many resources. If you come up with an idea
there, it's like, you're going to really affect the world in, you know, what would be, you know,
hopefully a very positive way. So that was kind of an exciting thing about working with Apple.
It's just like, if you do have an idea, like the leverage that could come from that idea is so much
more than if you just had it on your own. Yeah. That sounds like the most fascinating
like conundrum of like being in a meeting, like, Oh, I have an idea, but is this better for Apple
or for a video later? Huh? Which one, which do I do? I didn't give him the glitter bomb. I kept
the glitter bomb to myself. Good call. That would be bad. I cannot imagine. I ask for give him the glitter bomb. I kept the glitter bomb to myself. Good call. I didn't give him all the glitter. Good call.
That would be bad.
I cannot imagine.
I ask for Apple all the time to get into various things.
Like, yeah, you guys should make a camera.
That would be sick.
You guys should make a printer.
Printers suck right now.
I don't know.
Glitter bomb?
Yeah, that's a YouTube video for sure.
I don't like the idea of that being real.
No, that's also like a lot of people asked me when I was in school,
did your classmates find out about your videos?
And like I didn't tell anybody about the videos.
It was just something I was doing at home.
It was a different part of my brain.
But I feel like the channel as a creative outlet like is important to your brain.
You know what I mean? It's like you have work mode and you're i mean it's like you're you have work mode
and you're on for work and then you're done with work and you get that creative version of your
brain that has all these other crazy ideas and come out so it's a it's a little bit of yin yang
100 totally agree let's take one more quick break we'll be back with Mark.
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All right, we're back.
Let's get back to Mark Rober.
So, okay, I have to ask because now that you're essentially educating, I mean, Crunch Labs, the product, maybe you can give a two, three-minute explainer of it, but it is basically, in my opinion, a better version of education because it's helping kids to understand these concepts because they have the real hands-on experience.
And then I want to ask you if you think you could teach me enough to work at
like JPL if I, if I got good.
I mean, yes.
To the second question, I'm sure JPL would love to have you.
There's a lot you can do for them.
Uh, so the first part, yeah, it's this idea of like, you know, going back to what we said
before, like, um, anything where you're stoked about it and it's hands on is the more immersive something and the more visceral experiences, the more it's going to like leave an imprint in your brain and the more you're going to remember it.
Right.
So I started this company called Crunch Labs.
And really, it's a it's a location, too, which you have been to amazingly.
Yeah.
For the good listeners at home, Marquez just happened to be in town i live in the silicon valley he was here for the apple
wwdc right and i was like dude i'm filming my next video and i would love you to have a cameo in it
so basically it's like this willy wonka factory for engineering uh and so we've got all these
cool inventions in there a foam
pit the actual cannon from american gladiators that can like shoot a tennis ball through a wall
uh um and and that's also where i make my youtube videos it's kind of a shop as well
um i've got all my old builds there but it's also where i started this company that i've been
working on again going back to having secret projects I'm working on,
I've been working on building that location,
this engineering, you know, Iron Man, Willy Wonka lair,
as well as launching this building products for this company for over a year,
where basically we make, it's like monthly builds you can do at home,
where you build alongside me. I build it with you but then i teach
you all the juicy science that goes along with it and i i think part of the reason i'm like
i still like mentally can check into that space of being a kid i remember what it felt like to
be a kid so well i feel like and you know so the first one is like this cool six shooter disc launcher that
launches these mini Frisbees, like, and just like a perfect form. And like, it's super accurate and
they glide. And I know I would love that as a kid. And as an adult, I still freaking love it. And
so we build that together. And then we talk about flywheels because the main mechanism that makes
it work is like a flywheel so the promise of the
box and the and the thing is like i will teach you to think you know to play to build to create
but most importantly to think like an engineer and that means to think critically and to step
through things and to you know a real big part of it is the being okay with failure going back to
what we talked about earlier like not being embarrassed when you fail but understanding that's part of the learning
process that's why we call it crunch labs is because we crunch things there and so much stuff
doesn't work and that's the process by learning one more way not to do it until you've got the
final version that just sings every single one of my builds have so many failures along the way
and just owning that and being proud of that.
And,
and that's great because that makes you a better soccer player and piano
practicer and,
and math homework doer,
because it's okay that it's like you're struggling with it and you're failing
and you're finding ways not to do it.
That's part of the fun of nailing it.
You know, if you made a video game that was so easy to do it. That's part of the fun of nailing it. You know, if you made a video game
that was so easy to do there, that's a boring video game. It wouldn't sell anything. It's the
triumph over the challenging bits that makes it actually worth, you know, that which we obtain
too cheaply, we esteem too lightly is like a great saying that I love. And so it's like,
that's the beauty of the engineering process and
so teaching kids that that's okay and then teaching them the cool science behind frisbees and how they
fly because there's so much juicy science in fact i'll tell you this because this is for all your
listeners this is so exciting on a frisbee what makes a frisbee fly and marquez mr professional frisbee player do you know this
you know why frisbee's flying i know that number one it has the it's like an airplane wing kind of
in that there's like a low pressure above high pressure below situation happening as it flies
through the air yeah i have a more better way to phrase that.
But yes, that's one. That's right. You're exactly right. So that's right. So there's two things,
basically. One is the angle of attack, which means because it's a little bit up, it's basically
bumping into all these stationary air molecules. Like air is a fluid. We don't think of it because
it's not thick like water, but there's air molecules and that's air resistance, right?
So you're bumping into all these air molecules and it's conservation momentum that deflects you up.
You deflect the air down a little bit and equal opposite reaction.
It bumps you up a little bit.
So the fact that it's not flying perfectly flat, but it's a little bit angle that that makes it stay in the air. But the other is this thing called the Koanda effect, which is, you know how if you put a spoon in running water,
how it like curves and follows the spoon?
Like if there's running water and you put a curved spoon in,
the water will kind of curve and stick to the edge of the spoon
and it'll change direction, right?
Well, air does the same thing, again, being a fluid.
So as the Frisbee passes through the air uh the air will
go over the top of the frisbee and then that it importantly the edges of a frisbee are curved like
a curved spoon of water so the air will go like go over the top and then curve down right curve
downwards and because you're now curving air downwards all around the frisbee it creates a
freaking jet pack like if you had a jet pack on your bag and you turn it on it's like and you
point air down and then and then you and the jet pack go up like that's essentially what's happening
with a frisbee it's curved because as it goes through the air it's like jet packing itself
to stay in the air as it curves this air downwards right how juicy
is that what a juicy nugget that i'm able to that's incredible and when they can and when
they can hold the frisbee themselves and see it and fling it and see that like jet packing action
they will never forget that fact and every time they pick up a Frisbee and throw it, they're like, I'm going
to basically make a jet pack out of this thing. And how dope is that? And so the idea of just like
having kids build alongside me and have these engineering lessons just more seared into their
brain, I can't think of something more lovely than that. And I feel like everything I've done up to this point in my life has basically
led to this moment of creating this company.
Cause this is like the most impact,
you know,
you reach a lot of,
you know,
I think I've got 3 billion views on the channel at this point.
And that's a lot of people who've seen a video,
but,
but now to reach a whole new level of brains in a,
in a way that's a little bit deeper is like,
and getting into the like, how do we educate better?
You know, because there's a potential here.
Like, you know, I'm a big fan of like, you don't really know.
You can't predict 20 years in the future.
And people like, oh, what do you want to be when you grow up when you're eight years old?
It's like, nobody knows.
And even someone starting their career at 20 has no idea where
they'll be when they're 40 and people who say they knew their path are totally lying and that's
again going back to hindsight bias bringing it back to what we talked about before where you're
creating this narrative so my my philosophy is like you just take it one step at a time and it's
like a train on a track you know you got a flashlight in front of you just pick the best
path that's in front of you and just dominate that path and just like i'm gonna do
the best i can of this thing and once you get to there you'll learn these new skills and now
these other opportunities to find the next best path and i think there's something to be said for
education and learning to educate people better in in the this country and in the world like how do we make the learning process just
improve that as opposed to what it is in schools a lot of times just like worksheets and grades on
tests and to me doing this company and like these key learnings is i don't know maybe i'm i think it
will teach me something and i will unlock something and I will learn something that will kind of maybe help for the next step,
which is like eventually how do we,
how do we do this better in schools and reach an even larger audience?
So yeah,
I'm pretty stoked about it and it's gone really well.
We,
I think publicly we're saying we,
we made in the tens of thousands of boxes and in less than a week we sold
them all out.
So,
and this is subscriptions to boxes.
So this is a subscription.
So you get 12 boxes in a year.
Each you unlock a video from me.
And so we're making a butt ton more for the holidays.
So if you want a good present for your kid and you're listing this
or your nephew or something, might I suggest Grinch Labs?
I will second that suggestion.
And I like it, man.
I think this is like one of those all-time,
like putting the brain to work,
like YouTube business ideas in that it like really speaks to the mission
of like what you've been doing.
And I think it,
this is something I wish I had when I was younger,
which is like the true,
the hands-on demo type stuff.
I just learned something about a Frisbee.
I'll never forget.
And I've been playing for 20 years or something ridiculous.
So I think it's incredible
and I'm happy you're doing it.
And I could think of no one better to be doing it.
But I want to end this with a lightning round.
I got a bunch of quick questions for you.
Okay.
But they got to be quick.
No thinking allowed.
You just got to blurt out your answer.
That's helpful.
And it's like one word answer or it's like one sentence answer?
You'll go one sentence.
One sentence answer.
Tops.
Okay.
Yeah.
Okay.
Actually, first one's true or false.
Talking to a camera is a learned skill.
True.
True, true, true, true, true.
Okay, true.
Which job was harder, JPL or Apple?
Equal.
Equally easily and hard.
Yeah, equal, similar.
Fair. Favorite YouTube creator you're watching right now
can't say me
yeah I was going to say
that's cheating
probably Chris Gazette
my boy Phillip
nice I like his videos
is there a story behind the hat
no I actually have
like decent hair the It's just the
story is it's way easier not to do your hair in the morning. So like, why don't, why wouldn't you
wear a hat? Totally fair. Um, favorite person you met at the Met Gala? Uh, Derek Bladsberg,
the guy who took us around the fricking mayor of New York city. Yep. That was also my answer.
us around the freaking mayor of new york city yep that was also my answer um what is harder about working at a large company managing the tech or managing people uh people
politics is lame oh i fully agree uh what's your go-to snack when you have five minutes?
Freaking the hot, flaming hot Cheetos are kind of,
I like with a lime.
Yeah.
Okay.
Lime-o.
Okay.
How fast can you type the alphabet A to Z?
Like words per minute or like seconds?
Like how many seconds?
Do you want to pull out a clock? You want to type me me actually we this is a this is perfect so what i'll do is i'll send you a link
in the chat to a site which has a measuring tool where you just start typing and all i need you to
do if you have a screen do you have a screen recorder by any chance because that's all we got
that's the last question yeah yeah yeah i do i do hold on let me pull up quick time i mean that's what i just
use quick time i was hoping to bs you but now you got it you're gonna hold me on it okay lucky for
you we have a we have a whole leaderboard note not to put any pressure on it but we uh we every
guest that's on waveform we we have them type the alphabet and see how it goes. It's amazing.
By the way, in high school, I figured I had a typing class and I figured out if you could,
they would judge you on how many errors you had, but then how many, how many keys.
And if you just, if you made a mistake on a word, it only counted as one error, but
it would count all those words at your speed.
So I would wait till the last one is mash the keyboard.
I don't know if that's like a known trick.
And then it's like,
I'd have this massively high words per minute
and only one error.
But I bet I can't get away with that here.
Yeah, this one, you gotta get all,
W, X, Y, Z, the whole,
everything's gotta be on point for this one.
If it's wrong, what happens?
It stops you?
So this, yeah, the second,
so if let's say you type A, B, C, E,
it won't keep going until you hit the D.
So you have to hit every letter.
Okay.
Yeah.
All right.
We'll see.
So we'll give you, I'll do,
we've given everybody three attempts.
Oh, love it.
Okay, great.
Okay, I got it.
I'm going to guess,
I'm going to guess you'll be, no, I won't even put that pressure on you. I'll just see what happens. Yeah, great. Okay, I got it. I'm going to guess you'll be...
No, I won't even put that pressure on you.
I'll just see what happens.
Yeah, don't put the pressure.
I mean, I'm not that...
I'm not...
To set expectations, I'm not like an amazingly fast type or anything.
I'm not the worst, but...
Have you had any people who are just like legendarily bad or legendarily amazing?
Once you get your three attempts in,
I'll let you know where you rank
among our leaderboard.
How about that?
Oh, man.
Alright, okay.
Okay, I'm going to start.
Let's see. Screen recording.
Let me just do a fresh one.
Okay, here we go. Are you ready?
Here we go.
I'm ready.
Oh, damn.
Oh, shoot.
I hit enter at the end, and then it started it again,
so I didn't actually see what I got.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But on this stream recording, I'll play it back,
and we'll be able to see.
But I don't know what my time actually was.
1.39 seconds is the best time?
That would be like the best time ever made by anyone ever.
I see, I see.
Okay, okay, okay.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's a bot lane.
All right, we'll give you two.
Okay, here we go.
Yeah, we'll give you more.
Okay, here we go.
Okay, here we go.
Okay.
7.8 seconds okay
7.8
you want to give it
another one
that's
yeah yeah
assuming we find
the time
do you think
the first one
is faster or slower
I genuinely
don't know
it probably was
it was probably
close to that
alright
okay okay let me go I'll do one more and then I'll kind of tell us hold on I genuinely don't know. It was probably close to that. All right. Okay, okay.
Let me go.
I'll do one more, and then I'll kind of tell us.
All right, hold on.
6.6 seconds.
I got better.
Very nice.
Yeah, I think we've seen a little bit of a trend.
We give people a couple attempts.
They usually have their best one on the last one.
So that's good.
That's good.
Where do I rank?
Did you think it would be around six seconds?
That always seems crazy fast to me.
No, that is faster than I would have thought, I think.
It's also something I've never actually done.
There is an advantage if it's in your muscle memory of typing the alphabet.
You know, like you would just get faster and faster with it.
I think as evidenced by even I just went from eight seconds to six or whatever um but uh give it to
me easy marquez where do i rank no you're good so your 6.6 seconds is right behind colin and samir
and right ahead of hank green you would be one two three four five six seven eight nine ten twelfth on the leaderboard
right out of how many that's pretty good okay right around the middle as long as i'm green
hank read the smart guy so yeah you're it's always surprising who who bangs out the fastest times our
last guest tom scott dropped a 3.55 wow wow just banged out of 3.55. Wow. I don't know.
Wow.
He's number one on the leaderboard. Just banged out of 3.5.
He is number one.
He is number one with a 3.5.
That is the fastest we've ever seen.
I'm going to practice this now.
I am a competitive human being, so I'm going to 3.55.
I can beat that.
I'm going to get it in the muscle memory.
If you beat it, definitely tweet it as a response
so we all see the improvement over time.
Okay, okay, okay.
We'll verify it.
I will, I will.
Either way, Mark, I've taken enough of your time.
I appreciate it.
I'll let you get back to glitter bombing.
Thank you so much for the time and for joining us on Waveform.
Yeah, it was great to be here, Mark.
It's always great to talk to you, man.
All right, that is it.
Thanks again to Mark Rober for joining us and shout out to the respectable
score on the leaderboard. It's probably better than he was expecting. If you haven't already
checked out Crunch Labs and the box that they're building and shipping and helping kids learn with,
definitely check it out. And also I'm in the launch video. So if you didn't already watch
the launch video, check that out too. But we'll be back next week with your regularly scheduled programming
until the next one people of the internet see you soon the waveform podcast is produced by adam
and ellis rovin we're part of the vox media podcast network and our intro outro music is made
by vane sill Bye.