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The MJ38 Show Episode #34

Matthew and Justin talk about the Origins Of The 40-Hour Work Week, Cooking Shows, and Going To Mars #MJ38 #podcast #podcasts #funny #instagram #sub #subscribe #youtubechannel #youtube #youtuber #youtubers #youtubevideos #like #podcasting #peace #love #positivity #newpodcast

MJ38 Productions

1 day ago

it all Blends together bro it all Blends together people will be like think I'm not a competent person because I don't know what day of the week it is I've seen it I remember being like you know enjoy your weekend to a table and it was like Tuesday and they were like this guy's an idiot it was such a might be a little drunk yeah right it wasn't like funny to them at all you know what I'm saying M but uh are being that service industry schedule definitely throws off your what you consider to be a
weekend and a Saturday yeah it's like Saturdays we're we're working man we're working man because everybody's out everybody's off it's so strange the normality of a 9 to5 and how many people have Saturdays off and just like the energy behind a Saturday yeah sometimes I forget if I have a Saturday off for whatever reason and I'm going doing whatever like God that's so [ __ ] people out here Jesus go home I'm trying to do stuff yeah you you getet you a little bit like you'll begin like kind not a
ngry but yeah I'm was like God so many people or yeah it's cuz then you feel it whenever there's lack of parking spots or it takes forever to drive through or whatever the ramification is for having so much like population or like a too much demand it's like oh my gosh there's so much demand now everyone's out or whenever you go to a restaurant it's like oh my God 45 minute wait hour and a half wait yeah go home people yeah I feel you I'm trying to eat yeah man eat bro let me eat man especially
because there's this like it's hard for me not to be like man I serve like a billion people all the time every day y'all [ __ ] make me wait 45 minutes I should be royalty here yeah come on I could I could roll up in the back of the house and be right at home yeah bro thought that's that's a hard sentiment if you figure out a way to wrap that y facts it's that's tight the heart of the house yeah bro but that's just how we are cuz we treat every anybody else from the service industry super well l
ike there is that kind of code or like you want to show some extra love you know what I'm saying something something life for yeah we uh it's a shared adversity or whatever it is we are we're able to identify with that yeah the commonality yeah being off on a Tuesday is nice oh yeah yeah oh yeah being off in the middle of the week when ain't [ __ ] going on everything's open and like the lines are minimal it's like oh yeah I can do anything it's nice bro I think about it too because it just feel
s weird sometimes it hits me like you said where the rest of the world is doing this today but like I'm doing this today and like we're just not on that regular metaculture schedule of like I work Monday and then thank God it's Friday and then hump day was on Wednesday just thinking about all the cultural hits but then you get to Saturday and it's like this is my free day and then on Sunday everybody's like resting up to go back for the week so like yeah getting charged up yeah for the next five
facts so yeah whenever I like that that's like what's going on most time yeah yeah yeah yeah I guess when when did that start when did cuz back in I don't know let's say 100 years ago yeah 150 years ago in the 1800s and before then we were just working all the time while the sun was up probably is probably the thought right yeah and then if you were was working all every day all day except for whatever Sundays or Saturdays or whatever trying to keep the holy day holy you're following that tradi
tion but besides that we're working all the time I guess when did the formal 9o5 get established like in the Industrial Age with [ __ ] the Rockefellers and [ __ ] probably right America like uh yeah Thomas Shelby times m M they had people that 1900s yeah there was regulations and stuff like that they had like uh yeah I think that show said in like 1904 or something like that trying to create a 40 hour work week yeah when did that get established I'mma look it up yeah yeah where's my phone oh [ 
__ ] I don't know where it is I got you it's gone he's swimming it's somewhere in the world in the ocean it's in the ocean it's in Ean yeah no but the thing that the thing that hits me crazy though is the [ __ ] dude like so my whole career and I'm like cuz I'll be out there on you know a Tuesday doing my whole day and there's like nobody anywhere like I I was cut last Tuesday and I was like okay I need to go stop at a place to get some tax information I want to look for some new work shirts and
I'm going to get some coffee and then go to the grocery store it's like a lot to do and I was like getting it all done and there was just like it was nobody's out super easy I was just like oh yeah like it's just another way that you just kind of get hit with the fact that like we're on the shadow schedule of the meta schedule yeah and it's crazy normal or whatever right and then I kind of want to complain about it or like there's a part of my brain that's like that sucks and then I'm like well
the crazy thing is like I'm paid a premium to work against the schedule of the N that's like part of what I'm like this I am there to serve them when they have time to spend which means I I don't have time to spend while they have time to spend and then like they're tip like tipping people extra on top of what they pay for being available and serving them while like they're able to consume it so like it only exists in the shadow yeah you know what I'm saying our whole industry is like that whic
h is kind of [ __ ] I think that's why we [ __ ] with each other so much too cuz it's like sh adversity but it's also this whole thing you know what I'm saying mhm it is a whole culture a whole world and it's crazy too cuz I was thinking about I'm not sure why maybe that's partially why I'm like subconsciously attracted to uh cooking shows and like that kind of stuff and Victoria is as well so it's like super tight so we're like always watching cooking shows and [ __ ] but cooking is inextricabl
y tied to the service or like I guess to restaurants restaurants are built around the kitchen like what the [ __ ] else are you going to do like we're not I guess part of the serving job is like the social interaction and like the mingling and making people feel at ease and warm and like they're welcome to ask for stuff and you're going to like make it happen but they came there to eat you know so like every restaurant's built around like the the kitchen and like watching the these cooking shows
and it's crazy cuz we're watching uh we stumbled upon a cooking show in uh HBO uh Tournament of Champions is what it's called and Guy Fetti is the host but it has just like a whole bunch of badass chefs on it and it's like a bracket more or less and it's just like a blind tasting completely blind tasting and just a bracket and whoever wins wins simple super tight like a marsh Madness for chefs yeah that's that sounds tight gas it's crazy too because it's like it's like a crossover moment in my
life as well or it's like an echo moment in my life where we started cuz as I mentioned big big time into the in the cooking shows watching all Gordon Ramsey stuff like Hell's Kitchen and Next Level chef and then I think Hulu added chopped or a season or a couple seasons of chopped so I was like oh yeah [ __ ] it let's watch chopped we watched a couple episodes of chopped for the last couple weeks maybe a month or two and then we stumble upon this show on HBO and then it's like we're watching th
e first season first episode and all the chefs are being kind of introduced it's like a 16 yeah it's eight on each side 16 total chefs and they're just badass and like most of them are are like I like I guess in chopped there's a three panel of Judges who judge the food and that three panel of Judges gets like changed out throughout the seasons and throughout the episodes and whatnot okay I'm with you and uh there was at least like five six of the chop judges that were like competing on this sho
w and I was like this is [ __ ] tight dude that's super tight yeah cuz like as and months or maybe a month or two ago when we were watching chopped early on we were made the comment of like uh it'd be cool to watch the judges you know they're always giving the critiques it's like you do a [ __ ] that's so crazy and then we're watching the stumble into the show like oh my God they're all here like pretty much all of them this is tight this show is badass dude that is tight yeah it was super super
cool kind of a it's like boop boop boop you know what I'm saying like the synchron or not synchronistic but yeah not even just how cool they wrote the show but like that you were just watching like one show at a time kind of randomly and it's like the dots just connected for you like that M it's [ __ ] cool bro yeah but I think partially why I love those cooking shows so much is or also why like we like subconsciously in the service industry or how that came about within our stories just like u
h I don't know it's weird no I feel you I respect the chef like a lot just like supernaturally because it feels like they're the person at the top of the responsibility pyramid of producing said food you know what I'm saying like a lot of pressure because the entire business is around like you said like we can't if the came here to eat good food yeah if all the food came out completely wrong and tasted terrible and didn't look pretty our jobs would be terrible it would be terrible terrible job f
or us because the food sets its own or like it's both you know what I'm saying mhm that's why yeah it's combination it reminds me of like just it's not like this but it reminds me of it when I'm at work of like the same kind of relationship between skill position players and like the lineman on the football team because there's like a little bit like the linemen have like a like a different brotherhood like they're like super bonded and super tight and then most of the time they think that the s
kill position people like are more or less don't understand like what they do at all and what they do is what makes this whole thing work and it sucks way worse than like just running routes like you ran like 50 routes that's what you did I got hit in the face 200 times yeah you know what I'm saying absolutely we ran for 212 yards today and that was 30 run plays and my face hurts and compared to like a wide receiver who scored two touchdowns maybe and like uh you know be on TV later big differen
ce yeah super difference it's the game within the game yeah right it's like quidd and that's a relationship that you have to manage as a team because you don't want like people not [ __ ] with each other more or less or like uh yeah respecting each other's roles yeah the respect thing needs to gel you need to have like Synergy and you need that energy to be kind of like bonded together more or less but if you have like places where it's off because the respect isn't quite there or like someone's
you you know and I'm just thinking about football but I think you can think about that in any workplace it's similar bro you know mhm every Branch does its part has it role to play it's job to do yeah that's what isn't that what bellich che's about just do your job just do your [Laughter] job that's really funny that's it oh man it is like that though it's super true bro yeah yeah I I realized that the the just do your job aspect and like that that's the idea of that that's like a a primordial
or like a human Beyond language like first language you know it's like cuz I guess it's like in the tangible like our tangible cuz I remember realiz this kind of came about Within Myself whenever I was started at uh the other spot and a lot of the back of the house were uh Spanish speaking only more or less but I realized that I was able to jive with them and meld and gel with with them easily cuz I know a little bit of Spanish at at the time I knew a little bit or at least some a lot more now s
till been going on that [ __ ] but I remember just like feeling cuz I guess whenever you meet a new person at work at the workplace any of the new employees you're running into you're kind of have to like figure each other out you know or like TR try to figure out how to work into this social setting cuz you're like the outsider and they're like kind of taking you in and like you're figuring out how to get in you don't want to like just like jump in and be like what's up I'm the new guy how you
doing I'm doing good I'm doing new you don't need to be doing that we also don't want to be super like reserved and maybe cold or perceived to be cold you know antisocial yeah so it's it's a mix of mix of that somewhere in the middle of those two yeah well said that I put it great I feel like uh but oh sorry but all that to say whenever you're meeting anybody in the new soci social workplace I remember meeting those guys back at the house and Spanish speaking only but we jailed really easily and
and I was like cuz a it was a mutual respect thing about working hard and just doing your job just doing your job I'm like oh they go hard they do their job really well and then they're like oh he goes hard he does his job really well and then it's just mutual respect based on that bang bang bang mhm yeah across the Spectrum the hard work every or the language of I forget what the quote is but like um hard work's like a language that uh transcends language or whatever the [ __ ] you don't have
to know English and I don't have to know Spanish but like if I you know when someone works hard like that that has it own language like if you're if you're a hard worker then there's things that you know where like you know to check the thing behind the thing and then you see someone else doing that and you're like oh [ __ ] they go hard like they're doing it for real you know like there's nuances to all of our job and then when you see someone like hitting a high level of nuance with what they'
re doing you're like okay like respect happens in basketball too if you're just like mhm absolutely the third play of the game the quietest dude on the court just [ __ ] Yaks on someone like two-handed right on the rim you're like oh my gosh like that you now respect him a little more than you did three plays ago you treat it differently he's a hoopa you got to worry about that guy now like it just is like that's the thing is it's almost primordial like it's not like okay I'm going to choose to
think different ly about this person it's like you you just you you're like oh I have to respect that you know what I'm saying yeah yeah or at least have to pay attention to that yeah what just happened there yeah cuz there's like a crazy if we're really playing the game then there's like a similar we're all operating on similar game theory which means like we similarly probably give importance to like these things or those things and then yeah you just see someone like for instance showing up e
arly all the time like that's just a trait where you're like um that person probably goes hard as [ __ ] it's like imagine some someone being like always the first one in the locker room on any football team or any basketball team like it's like that guy it doesn't necessarily mean he's cold it doesn't necessarily mean that that's a good person but like it does show it does Trend towards that that person might be someone who he might be going hard as [ __ ] if he's really that dedicated really t
hat committed yeah that level of commitment right is uh in line with an ideal trait or you know ideal traits ideal Behavior cuz how else can you manifest commitment and discipline it's a hard thing to outwardly Express what your inward level of commitment is but when you get an opportunity to flash that if you want to like at the gym when I'm playing open gym and stuff like that I've noticed this crazy thing bro where you have to uh if I want to get picked up early and not have to sit three or f
our games I got to like get out there I got to dab people up then I got to like shoot a lot of shots look super athletic for a second so that hopefully I could get like drafted little mini combine seriously it's like in my head it's so crazy because you know I've played basketball there probably 18 to 20 times over the last two years for sure and like I usually like to just go in there and just like quietly find out who's next and then just be like okay I'm going to run with you if that's cool a
nd then I'm going to go over there and like warm up super slowly and then kind of let the game like be when I actually start like running around and start going crazy like I want to warm up into it like that just like shoot threes with my shooter shirt on shooting those Steph threes not really thinking too much I'm hitting little dances just trying to be loose but no the last time the last two times I went out there I'm like doing a skips doing some B skips throwing the ball off the glass let me
just let me just see how how I can rebound right here you know what I'm saying come out there you got to hit some in Rhythm like let me show my hesi heesy pull up okay yeah yeah okay now they know I'm hooping yeah then it's super way more likely that either someone will ask me if I want to play with them or if I ask the person that has the last sometimes they have five but if I'm asking them after I've done all that they've definitely got room for me and it's crazy bro the doors open up yeah bu
t it just made me at first I wanted to be like I don't know cuz the first time it happened so two times ago I was just kind of angry and I just got out there and I was like dude I'm going off today Red Room I was like started warming up aggressively let me just oh yeah two hands okay I feel good my ver skin there thank God we're doing ddiy with Justin let's go and uh picked up really quick and then I was like man that's crazy okay well let me just science come in kind of hot next time and then e
asy to get on a team I was only like two games out instead of four games out that's a great social science experiment right hilarious I love it right that would kill well just to actually film it oh no like that reminds me of I think in college it was a I forget what class it was but there was a requirement to do some sort of social experiment I forget what class it was I remember some of our some of our friends had taken it and they were telling me about it or either way I I heard about it but
there was a assignment of doing a social experiment and some people would stand the opposite way in an elevator or some people would like sit next to some or like purpose purposefully sit next to somebody when there's plenty of space and stuff like that and we would like record the results but that's that's a great one too or you know yeah cuz there something going on there hold before we get going we're going to quit take a quick break cuz I realize the lights h on the what the lights oh hurt y
eah we're get them on real quick we'll be right back bam and we're back we're the talking about social experiments and stuff but um yeah I had turn the lights on realize that we still got like good like 30 to 45 left I was like oh [ __ ] let's pop on real quick thank goodness nice catch it's weird cuz it's the morning so the lights are feel extra good morning good morning the morning pod yes man but we're talking about talking about you picking up a or getting picked up a basketball after a soli
d combine showing yes because I realized it also that thing had been presenting itself at work for me like maybe like I don't know since I started at Blue pretty much where I just realized that like uh if you don't like it's if I don't you don't do some kind of Comb like okay that's not the thought the thought that came to me was um the respect thing is like you can't help but give or take respect for someone or like take it away from them based on what you see in game yeah based yeah like the t
he tangible Life game that we're all playing here cuz at work basketball it's like obviously uh tangible and you could it either goes in the hoop or it doesn't go in the hoop and you either got the nuances and you or you don't have the nuances or whatever your basketball IQ all that but life is the same or it's like the tangible work environment like your job whatever your job is 100% this restaurant we're doing this thing like my job is to do this I run the food I'm like the I'm like the assist
ant I assist and I help and I pre-bus and I take the [ __ ] away and I'm whatever their jobs like whatever the responsibilities are yeah like how they uphold them is tangible yes it is yeah and there's an ideal and there's like in basketball it's easier cuz you're going to like keep score but you could like keep score in restaurant too you could say this is how many dollars we want to have how far close away are we from it and our performance affects that more or less yeah there's some restauran
ts that record how many trays you run that's crazy numbers on the board yeah bro I'll be running trades like a cracked man back whenever I was running trayes mm when that fell on the servers I was running trays dog yeah bro all the trays that was one of those things that it it was just easier to run if I hated it the whole time and was only going to run 10 it was just easier to hate it and run 30 I was like I'm going to whoop the tre's ass I'm tired of this Trey who my ass you know what I'm sayi
ng MH yeah being able to flip the script like that super important yeah he put on his head yeah yeah yeah yeah that that presented to me last night the server was like I don't know what to do about about this problem at my table I was like you just put it on his head you go talk to them directly about it like yeah you say something like this you address this yeah say something along these lines usually give them usually just give them the dialogue and off they go I did that a lot last night that
was like all probably say this say something about this MH ask him if this is going to happen and the response will tell you what to do yeah it was tight too cuz like early on I was like words are powerful like if you phrase something this way you're going to get these kind of responses from them if you phrase it this way all of a sudden now you've been taking blame and and you're like unsure about yourself just because of the words that you used to express the same thing you're trying to do he
re and so like make just make sure you're using the right words when you're like asking for things or when you're like spieling something or even just like asking for a raise like there's a difference in saying um give me more money yeah that's give me more money now I deserve it give me more money M that's like uh that's one way to put it run it that's like your option way that's your option b that's option 21 the 21 pack 21 pack no but just in stating like um I wondered I'm wondering what it w
ould take for me to get a race that implies that like you were okay with a time frame you're like I'm wondering what I need to do here to get a race or if you say I think that I'm ready for a race but I wanted to know what you think about that like as well or another way to put it is like yeah I'd like a race that's that's the phrase you can say like um when do you think I deserve a rise or you can say I like a race and I think that like the phraseology of I like a raise and if you're the other
person and they're due for a raise and someone says I'd like a raise it's hard not to be like a [ __ ] they're due okay we'll give it to you but if someone's like what do I need to do here to get a raise it's easier for you to be like um show me this this and this and then we'll talk about aise because now the problem's dealt with and you don't have to pay money out like that but it's just in the phraseology of like just saying like I'd like one I think I'm ready for it if if they're going to pr
ess you on like if there's like hesitancy like I think I'm ready for it I have certainty I'm pretty confident I I'm worth it I'm at that level I know I am and if it's cool with you I'd like to just like you know make that jump that right there is power it's so much more powerful than um well okay what do I need to do here I think I'm there but like what do you want to see like that's a good I mean it's honest you're being humble but like I just think the other option is more dynamic yeah for sur
e yeah I think you need to be willing to I guess do the work on the back end or guess unless you know well either way like doing the work is like the inevitable you know what I'm saying yeah so it's like if you do it's like I've been doing the work and no matter what like whatever stipulations you're going to put in front of me I'm going to do those regardless as well or like doing or upholding my responsibility at a high level is what I like just kind of do so I'm just going to keep keep doing
that and because I've been doing that I think I deserve a raise and if even if uh you don't give it to me right now then I'll I'm now on the track for sure to get it right yeah I think we both have been that's the way to go about it I agree with you that's what I'm saying yeah yeah yeah but no I think yeah I think you definitely hit hit hit a truth with the energy behind your phraseology and also like like the truth that whenever you give someone dialogue there's only so many things they could r
espond with or there's only so many things that could logically happen in the story as far as like storytelling goes uhhuh cuz things could be completely spontaneous and random sometimes you have to do that out of nothing yeah out of nowhere it's like we're having this dialogue and then this happens or like then you mention this or this this thought populates but for the most part it's like whenever you're spieling a menu or talking to guest at a restaurant like there's only so many things they'
re going to have questions about about the menu there's only so many things you're going to ask about about the wine or what whatever there so many things so many things you're right and like your dialogue is super important because it helps it opens the doors I guess it it opens the the potential your use of whatever you say opens up the potential responses and the kind of creates manifest his whole everything you know what I'm saying yeah that whole situation that clip that that's Genius Like
I for context like I feel like like if you ask someone do you have any questions about the drink menu or if you ask someone do you want to hear about the most popular drinks that we've been selling so far the ones that are doing the best and then the like the information that you then have to provide m is obviously different you know what I'm saying way different super different and then once I get them on like that's that's the question that they're asking anyways like unless they have a specif
ic question about a specific drink I kind of like can just like expedite that process be like I'm going to tell you about these ones these are these ones these are this this and this and then from that point like the what what what's happening there their lack of information their their wanting of context their need for Direction has then been met in a way that's like in our favor like we're up from that conversation rather than being on our heels and having to like get burnt downfill Deep by th
e wide receiver because you don't know the answer to a question that you couldn't that you helped them propagate like you know what I'm saying it's like bro like we could just play to our advantage if they let us sometimes they don't let us you know what I'm saying but the percentages play out that's one thing I realized working years in a row at a restaurant is like the questions are similar over time not any given dayto day I can't be like this table I mean sometimes you can read a table and b
e like first time table super noobs they're definitely super noobs they're definitely going to want XYZ and like not in a I'm just like that's obviously a gross [ __ ] stereotype I don't really think that about people but just over time if I think about the stats like and you could recommend Bella gloss at J Prime like a billion times in a row and it hits like as long as you know when you're playing that card and you play it to the percentages you hit like 99% of the time mhm and there's other t
hings that just like same questions get asked all the time if you learn how to tell the difference between this and this because steak eaters get to this point in the decision tree and you just have a really good this working on that move yeah like it's over time it gets so it's crazy how many times you'll get better at saying the the same thing because you say it a 100 times over a year 100 times bro yeah 20 different variations people on throwing into it trying change it up a little bit you ge
t it like past tense and then present tense and sometimes you're talking about it from this angle but it's still like the thing you're talking about from it you know mhmm if you work in steakhouses long enough you're going get the same state questions at every Steakhouse you work at of course can you explain what age and dry age like can I was like what what what cuts the most tender let me tell you sir about Tender Cuts a steak you get to be a [ __ ] genius in that moment if you know what you'r
e talking about you know what I'm saying you [ __ ] bad Damon how do you like them app yeah good hunting for real yeah Ser it's hilarious but yeah it's all information based it's all information based and you can uh help guide your information or help guide the information in the story yeah the entire situation what's what's happening at that table like just based on your dialogue oh it's crazy cuz Yeah you mentioned that yeah you're able to like dish out [ __ ] real quick you know what I'm sayi
ng and I've I've been uh empathizing with that feeling and it's funny because I saw it manifest and play out in a cooking show in a Next Level chef with Gordon Ramsey because it's Three Chefs or it's Gordon NAA Arington and Richard Blaze and all three of them are like the mentors and like they all have teams and uh there's like four or five on each team to get started but and there's three different levels to the kitchen and throughout the competition they're just competing and doing different l
ike specified challenges for each week and there was a Gordon was just doing his last week and like they were just cuz each Chef is like mentoring them and like kind of helping their team it is ultimately like unbiased as far as who wins to a degree you know like all of them are just competing and whoever the like if one team has three of their teammates or three of their team members in the finale then like that's just like it is it is what it is like the the eliminations are blind tasted so uh
regardless so like but but they do Mentor their team like as the weeks go on so like they're kind of getting coached up by whoever their head captain is or whatever their team leader so Gordon's team he's just going off and he like it just there like a scene of him in like the last couple minutes of the their Challenge and he goes there's like four chefs or five chefs on his team and it just like a scene of him going from like each Chef to like in their final minutes and he's like taste someone
's pasta he's like I'll taste that pasta cuz you can't like tell them exactly what to do or you know what I'm saying you can't like cook the dish for him but he's just like giving them advice and trying to point them in the right direction he's like taste that pasta and he's like oh my God yeah that pasta is almost inedible he's like all right thank you chef and Cooks It Up more and then he's like um this goes on to I forget who else he goes on to but there's like two or three of them and then t
here's like another one and this chick has like a I think it's called a duck egg it's like a black egg a Sentry egg is what Gordon Ramsey refers to it as but she's like I'm trying to figure out how to how to use this or how to incorporate this duck egg and then he's like get your knife really hot cut it in half cut it in a quarters and put that quarter on top as a garnish and he's like that's what you wanted to do yes she's like yes chef he's like it's just like seamless like he just knows how t
o handle like at all all points in throughout their cooking experience he's able to just like kind of know and they're all cooking different [ __ ] they're all different ingredients but he's able to just know enough about the meta of cooking in general to like address every potential issue that they every question they could have about cooking whatever it is they're cooking and he just handles it all just like Bam Bam Bam Bam was like oh my God he's nasty he's [ __ ] nasty oh man dude that's awe
some he's like a master Craftsman you know what I'm saying that's what it looks like yeah he's Master it's crazy yeah I was I was just knowing the answers to the knowing the information he has all the information yeah as much as any chef alive I'm sure that motherfucker's going in bro he's been going in for decades now yeah he's correct he's cracked he's a cracked man he was like my mom's favorite Chef like right 15 years ago you know what I'm saying at least 10 years ago it's crazy yeah I think
I remember your mom watching Hill's kitchen yeah for sure I remember seeing or like the red and the blue like chef coats and stuff I remember like seeing that in my mind's eye as a child like in your house like at least once or twice for sure for sure no yeah definitely watch that show's yeah like 20 years old for sure super deep that's a fun show to watch while you're cooking dinner cuz you're like [ __ ] I got can't lose I ain't getting kicked off tonight bro yes it's yeah and that's another
thing I kind of realized when I was thinking about like wow like cooking show so much over the like I guess probably the last day or two but I was talking to Victoria about it I was just like I think cooking shows are dope because it's like it's like a creative art or creative expression art form and there's like taking the raw ingredients of life and creating masterpieces you know what I'm saying it's like art it's art for sure it's definitely an art and it's a creative expression it's like mus
ic like any creative expression to a degree but cooking is tight because [ __ ] tastes good or it doesn't taste good or it's cooked or it's not cooked you know it's like there's no debate it's like with rap there's a lot of debate with art is abstract and I guess we can debate about Grammys and emms and nominated Awards and such but still it's like there's always the debate in the abstract whenever you're talking about I guess Merit or quality of abstract creative art but food is like pretty tan
gible like that [ __ ] tastes good don't it's [ __ ] not dog this [ __ ] it's [ __ ] raw like you can't tell me this is cooked yeah it's like that I love that aspect of it and then also it's also because it's so relatable at least in the sense that everyone not everyone's a chef but everyone's a cook everyone has to prepare food for themselves in some capacity you have to make cereal you got to make sandwiches you got to [ __ ] do do something to keep your human alive we're all tasked with that
so we all have to do it and these [ __ ] just take that to the nth degree It's Like Rappers it's like not everyone's like we all use words it's like we all think and use words but it's not the same it's a little different too true mhm yeah what it's what do you what how do you get to that place you know what I'm saying Cat Williams says we should just be blessed and grateful we use words to make crazy amounts of money like everybody talks Joe but like not everybody gets not everybody talks exact
ly exactly and that hit me I was like oh [ __ ] like I do want to use my words to make money and I was like I do use my words to make money M boom you know what I'm saying got them so I was like okay I'm already on that track you know what I'm saying I'm already practicing that [ __ ] like it's just and it's not like it's not worth the money like we love rappers you know what I'm saying like great service is awesome you know what I'm saying like we appreciate it so being good at that thing whate
ver it is or even like you said cooking like so good at so knowledgeable about not like cooking necessarily like cooking the dish but just like cooking as like a whole [ __ ] meta subject you know what I'm saying like if you can get to that point where you like transcend what a general person's experience of that thing would be and you can just like walk in and fix it for them instantly you can know what they're thinking it's like what M yeah know what what tool to use and how to use it to get i
t to get the job done to get this bridge built yeah I guess what I'm saying is if you can do that well you get paid like a lot of money like Gordon Rams is making a lot of money you know because he knows how to cook that [ __ ] making lots of money he knows how to cook and he's on$ 30 different shows he has a crazy amount of shows and he's doing them all the time all the time so is that the other part of making the wealth is like knowing the craft super well but also being able to dominate the i
ndustry like so Drake's doing too definitely helps and he has yeah he's doing so many shows and he's been cooking for so long and he has so many restaurants he has a lot of restaurants dog he's deep he's deep he's [ __ ] goated bro he's goated he's one of my goats I was like that man's doing it in his industry in his field of study in his domain in his Arena he's a [ __ ] He's him dog he's [ __ ] hitting the gritty bro for real he's crazy and he like I also empathize and like [ __ ] with him hea
vy because he records it all or you know saying he like not like a documentary style of his life but he's on so many shows he's on so many shows like bro content content machine he's a Content machine bro yes dude and everyone loves to see Gordon Ramy clip it's like Tiger Woods effect or like you're just like oh Gordon Ramsey Gord Ram let me see let me check this out you know what I'm saying like he's just one of those people that he's crazy yeah he's crazy he's cracked he's a cracked man yeah s
o yeah cooking goat go that cooking are ti I [ __ ] with him that's a cool thing to be into cuz it's just like people just be watching TV you know what I'm saying yeah yeah it's it's tight too cuz Victoria likes it a lot as well so I'm like that's tight I remember Watching Chopped like a long time ago I was a kid maybe not kid like teenager probably I was like oh man this Show's tight this is a good passing of time whenever there's nothing else to watch or like whenever there's a passing of time
you have to do as a kid there's like a hierarchy of shows to watch whenever they're available whenever that was the thing we had to deal with in life you had to wait for shows to come on at a certain time there was no really instant streaming and like too was kind of new like recording in DVR and [ __ ] yeah that like slowly integrated into it but whenever you're were a kid you just have like regular cable or whatever it's like yeah whatever's on at six o'clock you get to like flip through the
like your usual channels like ESPN Nick the cartoon channels fing TVs Fox if they had to TNT go to Channel 14 TV guide and you're like watching all 100 channels like okay that's on that that's on that that's on that no Family Guy I'm putting it down yeah what wins yeah for sure I don't even have to see anymore we've seen enough yeah chop would chop would win sometimes for me I'm like this is this is a this is a good sure it wins for sure I watch it again nice I was young and now yeah know love w
atching cooking shows yeah C and [ __ ] yeah and it also hits especially because you're living in the the shadow of the service industry yeah so that's your life almost you know what I'm saying like that's like if we were 49ers it'd be watching a show about gold you know it's like this is why we're here it's this thing right here this is what we're doing watching how to how to swing a pickaxe this is what it's about boys thanks yo the 40 hour week we oh yeah back to that back to that initial tho
ught I see plenty yeah the thing that we're in the shadow of that thing came to be uh in 1938 Congress passed the 38 squ I've been holding on to that I just wanted to drop a 38 real quick sorry uh yes uh 44 hours was the original work week I guess they had you go 9 a day out early on Friday I don't know what that is Congress amended the fair labor standards act limiting to 40 hours in 1940 so 44 hours yeah what nine hours a day and out early on Fridays that's how that's how I assigned those hour
s I don't know what they were doing and then in 1940 it was 40 mhm who who decided the work week was 5 days Henry Ford in 1926 under the leadership of Henry Ford instituted a 8h hour 5day work week then in the Great Depression owing to unemployment the idea for a 6-hour work week came for a while but it says that they were probably working like a lot and then I guess Henry Ford if he introduced it in 1926 it was probably the best model for like people in labor unions to be like well why can't we
have it like them they were like you can you can't have it like them and then yeah that was probably the model for a long time after that it's almost been 100 years it's been like 84 years yeah cuz back in the Viking days I'm Prett like early bird gets the warm if you can get up like while it's light but the sun's not up start working those fields and stuff you know they're probably working I mean could you imagine being a viking and I'm I'm like I think we should take more days off kill him I'
m like no listen listen listen just hear me out just hear me out okay okay we'll get more work done in the long run guys okay hear me out think about this yeah you guys are hurt this guy's KNE is destroyed you guys can't walk right now I know just a little more rest like can we just be friends bro like let's hang out bro let's cuz we day off bro come on man five on difficult [ __ ] because yeah I think you know Farmers back in the day what are you goingon to say sorry even just if some if a powe
rful leader was like always said the idea like if we stop working we're going to die yeah you and your kids and everyone we know go if we if we don't work very hard all the time and like it's a fair argument you know what I'm saying it's still today it's like sometimes you want to even with yourself you're like I kind of want to take the day off you'll die you'll die kid yeah I was just going to say you like like with Farmers for example back in the day you kind of had to or it's like we're goin
g to not [ __ ] tend the tend the field today it's like we gota eat bro literally need to put food on my table yeah yeah no they were they [ __ ] lobbied for more hours in the day they're like we need more time not enough time let we need more time give me an extra hour dude what a genius farmer was just like hear me out we can't move the Sun but we can move the US which just just imagine moving your watch back in hour we take bikini bottom and we push it somewhere else this guy's crack yeah I l
ike what you're thinking though come on kid let's do it yeah we still deal with this it's crazy say [ __ ] time let move move that [ __ ] back an hour H yeah we got still feeling the ramications of that to this day you mug me last week couple days ago people from 1940 mhm man gone 23 hours in that day yeah I want we always talk about [ __ ] daylight savings every time we it's a song [ __ ] it'll be nice when it hits on the backside though it's a sweet kiss yeah yeah what we're talking about thou
gh we're talking about [ __ ] just the 40 hour work week was kind of yeah because I mean yeah you probably did work six days a week and rest on the Sabbath because it's all institution that's what I'm saying when it was Viking times depending on your tribe leader probably M like and then if you know I don't know there's probably some ter tribe leaders that were like no like I'm enslaving people and we're taking prisoners and we're working all the time and we ain't never going to stop making this
dynasty that was like a real way of being and [ __ ] and that's [ __ ] I'm sure that [ __ ] sucks I'm sure really bad that's like the worst of the in the Barbarian times bro we were Savages back in the day yeah couple thousand years ago or however long yeah almost inhumane we're different Savages now for sure yeah I was thinking about that the other day that thought populated my mind of like how Savage we were to like create the [ __ ] Bill of Rights I think it's in the Bill of Rights it's like
the eighth amendment I think it's like no cruel and unusual punishment it's like what need [ __ ] was so cruel and unusual but it was usual back then so now we had to deem it unusual cuz that shit's [ __ ] up that's unusual what what son like pulling people apart Li but limb from limb stop you they have devices and machines to do that [ __ ] bro yeah bro they [ __ ] just like pull you apart and like cut you in half and [ __ ] put your head on a spike all kinds of crazy [ __ ] at what point did
that become unusual Testament to the Consciousness preach that's gone yeah seriously well that was the institution that I'm talking about too that made the Sabbath holy you know like people that was probably a response to Pure Evil was like something holy to protect them and keep them up because bro stop beheading people [ __ ] yeah that's crazy stoning people to death yeah no whatever the [ __ ] definitely all through so Viking times was like through the 1600s 15 to 1600s was Viking times okay
um which is only like [ __ ] couple hundred years ago yeah bro it's not that long not that long bro long yeah and then uh I don't I mean George Washington and them were 1700s 1770s yeah and so that's when they were like I don't know when they wrote the Bill rights but I I don't think it was too long after yeah it had to be early Inception yeah because there were like the no quartering soldiers was a big thing just say like 1800s or so right so no cruel and unusual punishment was probably going o
n through like 4 or 500 years ago yeah [ __ ] dog all before that back to the Greeks to Romans back to the Egyptians they back to Mesopotamia dog way back that sh go way back dog that's scary bro that sh scary bro n just scary a scar movie for real okay there's an argument to be made that this [ __ ] up right we were doing crazy [ __ ] that's why the urge to be a Savage is so high that's why testosterone exists so you can be like I ain't going out like that [ __ ] [ __ ] that [ __ ] I'm killing
you dog I'm saying we should be like that I'm not but like I think that's why that's there like [ __ ] the only people that survived were people that had that bro oh my God and we needed babies that's that's why estrogen exists bro we needed babies we trying to make this thing last bro going yeah for real oh my gosh Elon mus says the same thing it's funny how it transcends time bro what Elon mus says we don't have a [ __ ] global warming problem we have a [ __ ] population problem like the the n
umber of people the growing rate of people has slowed down significantly and that there's a lot of of social pressure and a lot of Life pressure and a lot of overpopulation quote unquote issues that are making people not want to reproduce and it's creating like such a dramatic slowing in the rate like yes we have more people than we've ever had on Earth but in the last like 20 years the compared to the 50 to 100 to 200 years before that the amount of kids that we adding is like super lower it's
like yeah the rate increase yeah and so um Elon Musk is like that that should be one of our like Prime concerns because that's like yeah yeah Elon Musk um so he's saying population problem on the other side not over but going on the trend of under yes and that's why he's trying to take people to Mars I mean he's Cra Crazy is a weird word right like this man's cracked he's cracked for sure he's like let me I know how we could solve this problem by continuing to move us into this futuristic [ __ ]
that no one thinks we can do just like every other [ __ ] technology Advance we've ever had we take people to the Moon we buil domiciles or then we take people to Mars we find water on Mars we find a way to turn this like ice crystals into water we find a way to control the atmosphere with the water that we find we build domiciles we send people up there they start having kids that are born up there all they know is trying to make Mars work and then humans do what humans do like like that's tha
t's the one of the smartest guys in the world this [ __ ] makes electric cars rocket ships flamethrowers he's one of the craziest people in the entire world he owns Twitter and he's so rich like that's the other thing you can't say this man's like not successful you guys all the people in The Meta play the money game he's big up on you guys so like he's got like [ __ ] what you have to say money he literally was like [ __ ] you guys you want to block my ad campaign on Twitter you want you don't
want to sell me ads on Twitter cuz I on Twitter [ __ ] you I don't need your money he's cracked dude and like that guy says he's a bad man we don't have enough family units and kids like it's going to be a real issue so that's crazy we'll see how it plays out yeah yeah yeah for real yeah just thinking about people as a whole coming from 500 years ago we had being Savages dog Savages be [ __ ] moon man we be Spaceman what we be Spaceman bro that's crazy bro I wonder if we're going to go to Mars i
n our lifetime or I guess do you think we're going to go like a a human touchdown in Mars dude I think like In Our Lifetime by the time we're 50 the news is going to be so nuts to us cuz we like saw a cell phone happen but like in 20 like of that technological boom before phones yeah people had internet but it was like like super slow like crazy dial up yeah people playing like [ __ ] pinball and stuff on had a landline yeah all that like what that was crazy to our parents so like we saw that ju
mp too our parents were like oh my God technology is nuts bro watch nut bro every step believe this [ __ ] BR you can't believe can't believe this [ __ ] BR you'll never know I had an Atari bro Walkman bro 12 12 track is that what it's called 12 track at track at track there it is something like that all 12 bro got four L tracks bro you we wish it was a 12 track yeah bro I'm saying like that shit's bananas bro Joe says it's aliens so this too maybe assume in the next 40 50 years some crazy shit'
s going to happen What you going to say Yeah well yeah that's what we were talking about by the time I'm 50 or 60 I do think that I think Elon Musk might be like 5 years away if I'm being like my most generous I think within five years he's going to pay people a million dollars each they got to sign all the waivers in the world and they're going to try to be the first people to go to Mars and he'll probably bring them back too he's probably just going to try to like get it there touch it come ba
ck no way bring him back too let's oh yeah I guess he not going to leave him there he wants to do that he's not quite ready to do that yet like domiciles lose age or some [ __ ] are they going to be like yeah I don't know all that space [ __ ] though whatever whatever the price is it's going to take yeah they're going to they're going to come back and be the same age but like three years will have passed they'll be like the leap it'll be like [ __ ] M and interstella dude but but I think that th
at's like where his head's at you know what I'm saying like how do you eat an elephant right like we got to send some people up there and try to bring them back send a monkey up there first dude yeah Space [Laughter] Monkeys yeah for sure but yeah so then okay that's my most generous so I think you could poke some holes on that for sure but I think 20 years I'm like there's no way he doesn't get to the point where he's like I'll just go myself like [ __ ] him I'll find the water how old is he is
he in his 50s I don't know yeah quick quick Google search how old is Elon Muska I had to guess 52 okay 50 early 50s but I mean if anybody's going to have some good health the timey 70 he'll still be all there hopefully right hope M physical health I mean he does have like the highest level Ops coming at him so it's hard to trust a doctor you know what I'm saying facts that's how they got Michael how they how they what's going to happen man yeah he he had to buy Twitter like [ __ ] everybody I'm
buying Twitter yeah he's playing Kanye West like put it on his head game but put it on his head game gets dangerous when you're deep Bro he big up though he's got to have some like some sort of crazy kind of security right that's what I I was going to ask you what you think of security got to have some some [ __ ] some haters on that [ __ ] right dude his life got have some ninjas couple snipers I don't know roaming helicopters yeah yeah dude I feel like he some Gillies in the Mist bro for for
sure but he's got some bulletproof glass wherever he's at M that's why he made that cyber truck a little a little nervous that's his bro for himself so you guys can have some too yeah that's crazy bro I'm saying bro like his life has got to be nuts nutso life nuts that's got to be if you can ever play Roy my boy going play musk that shit's Nuts play musk you've chosen Elon Musk yes bro that man's crazy okay so the bigger thought that led me to talking to you about all that is these things transc
end time like population problems M and like over savagery and I could probably think like war and famine these things like Transcendent time it's kind of crazy and then the other thought I wanted to share was the Egyptian culture might have been like as sophisticated as us just like different and then we have this natural predisposition to think that the further back in time you go the more like super dumb people prehistoric yeah you're like can't talk C man yeah you're like banging clubs like
who the Flintstones right and I didn't really watch The Flintstones but like the idea of these like kind of super unsophisticated peoples like the nicest put it yeah yeah more animals than whatever we consider humans to be now yes but I don't know I we don't know if that's I don't know if that's true you know what I'm saying maybe not all the time who knows yeah I think I've been listening to enough Joe yeah and it makes sense or it makes maybe that makes sense to me like I'm able to accept it j
ust right away that the Egyptians were or I guess prehistoric or what we consider to be prehistoric thousands of years ago cultures could have been more advanced than us like I could I could see that happening like I don't and the thing that I guess the thing that makes me lean that way is just the idea of or having the openness behind the uncertainty of who really knows how the [ __ ] who knows who knows for sure that's a thing you know that's a thing like no one can really definitively say one
way or the other exactly what the hell was going on how they built the pyramids what they were doing what they were up to the technology they had how sophisticated or lack thereof sophistication they were I think in any time period That's the truest thing about it is that you can never know mhm unless you were there right and there's no there's there's written testimony mhm but like you know that's what makes it so fascinating I think that's why narrative can be manipulated yeah 100% super true
Game of Thrones bro really yeah I Love Game of Thrones I got to watch Game of Thrones that's one of the I remember or coming to that kind of realization or that uh stumbling into that thought of appreciation of why I like Game of Thrones so much and what like what was so cool about it and what was so drawing and gripping about it like off the rip like within the first season or the first yeah the first book whatever is because it was uh that was one of the truths that it kind of played with and
incorporated into its storytelling was the how that narratives can be manipulated to the general public and they're none the wiser but like the truth there is a ultimate like truth underneath but you can just like completely manipulate the narrative and people don't even know you know what I'm saying because they weren't even there they wer they weren't the room where it happened and and like [ __ ] what's what's her name like they uh d paa chick on Joe Rogan podcast when she's talking about pe
ople going back to oral oral traditions and meetings what was called pencils up or whatever that terminology where in which you don't write anything down it's just there's no paper trail within anything that you're talking about so like it's who really knows anything about [ __ ] anything dog yeah bro that shit's crazy you know what we're told you know yeah and that creates this dissonance that would make it like it's when you know something it's like not unknown it crosses the threshold into kn
own territory and that's like not interesting or satisfying or scary or anxiety inducing it's not there's no potential to it wait what do you mean information that you can't just like know like they found a methodology to create information that like you would never exactly know what it is that's why the Egyptians I think are so fascinating and why if Joe Rogan talks about it all the time he can always be like making money or like these conspiracy theory Pages like they are able to exist and be
popular like shows like Ancient Aliens because you don't we'll never know it's like ah you might be right like [ __ ] I don't know like if someone was just saying Finding Bigfoot yeah if someone was just saying the sky is red like if there's a whole show about the sky red but like it obviously it's not red like I look outside and it's not red like it wouldn't be it it might be funny after you're saying you know what I'm saying like the ambiguity behind the uncertainty creates this like drawing y
eah it's drawing almost you almost want to hear about a conspiracy theory sometimes like you're like hold on what's going on here I don't [ __ ] know damn I don't know it could be son of a [ __ ] who knows they know let me go figure it out what do they have to say do you know there's like a whole thing that happens there and like obviously you shouldn't as a person you shouldn't get drawn into conspiracy theories because like you go down the rabbit hole too far yeah maybe Me Maybe me commit to t
oo many commit on a on a emotional level an emotionally attached level you shouldn't get emotionally attached to any conspiracy theories they're fun to play with yeah yeah but that that thing exists because of the ambiguity behind the uncertainty there's some kind of drawing Force to it yeah and I think that's um then then the a pencil up meeting is like a methodology of creating information that has ambiguity to it versus like if someone records it on video and there's like proof there's like p
roofed information there's no ambiguity to it it crosses a threshold where it's like safe information but but like solid within objective reality yes that shit's going on you have to agree that that's true or you're off the path of like what's going on here you're crazy you're but more than just calling someone crazy like there's a truer thing going on and it's a lot like basketball that if you're not trying to win the game then like something's wrong like you're doing something wrong more or le
ss like you you might not get picked up or you might get benched or a coach might get fired if you're not doing your best to win and then in life there's a similar thing going on where if you're not like if you know something but you're not doing your best with the thing like if you're have solid concrete objective information but you are like your game plan or how you're playing is goes against that solid information that you have you're creating like an energy disruptance and you're not maximi
zing your potential for every day and then the ultimate pursuit of this game I think personally is to be on that maximum personalized energy every day like doing your best and and if you're even subconsciously or consciously knowingly not doing your best and like you're okay with that doesn't bother you like I'm not trying my best every day I've got this thing happened to me and I've got this thing going on and I'm tired and all this like it's so easy to think like that right but like there's a
life then has ramifications for you like your your karma isn't like pure and you don't I don't that's we're stepping into a spiritual ambiguity side of things that like who knows know I don't know I don't know I don't know out yeah you know what I'm saying but I think when I notice the game of life and I notice the people that are being successful and the people that are not being successful it's like it seems to me that like pursuing your best self is the thing across the board and the true pur
suit of being your best health I guess is up to your own perception of what that means but for me personally it's hard not to like I think that that comes into contact like you so what overall what I'm saying is this objective known information everyone has to play with that or they're going to not be respected in the community because respect is UN we have to give it to someone so if someone says something that's the truth they they're you're like [ __ ] that's the truth you know what I'm sayin
g or you could say that's not true [ __ ] him no no no no no but but if you know it's the truth though because you can't help but give respect to someone that's doing the thing in the field like then you become on a negative trajectory yourself and ultimately if someone doesn't want to make that compromise if they're like well I'm not going on a trajectory like I know what the truth is now I'm not going to act like I don't know what it is because that would make me not a good human and make me n
ot myself like those people I think those are the leaders in the community those are the people that we respect as humans like those are the people that get to this elevated path because they're being true to themselves and they're playing an honest game with an honest hand and that's what's life is genuine genuinely about I think mhm and with that comes the stipulation that you have to play fair with objective information and that's why subjective information is so [ __ ] lucrative because it c
ould mean anything you know what I'm saying yeah yeah you know we're not sure we're not sure about some things and we love debating about it we love uh hypothesizing and debating or dramatizing kind of you know what I'm saying imagining yeah like imagining we love we love our imagination we let that [ __ ] run wild that's another thing that's who doesn't love that if you could sell that to people that's tight Rick Morty sells that to me and I love it love it like I'd pay more for it you know wha
t I'm saying pay premium because they really play with my imagination like they make me [ __ ] think I'm like man you know you just watch portals and time jumps and different universes going through trop typical things and it just like un it un Loops some of your Loops like I'm able to think broader and yeah yeah yeah it widen it kind of widens your I don't know what it is exactly scope or reference point of just like thinking about life itself it's very abstract I [ __ ] love love that about th
at show yeah super abstract your thinking yeah more abstract it's well done too it's like written in a way where they're going through these like character arcs and like these they're addressing I think the people that write it are very aware of like their own like stories and like their own uh moral dilemmas and their own like tragic things that have happened and their own character arcs that they've had to go through yeah their own life story and they're able to write that not necessarily stra
ight up from their life but able to give these like they're tropo typical in the sense where we would maybe a lot of people go through them in the span of their life but they're able to draw it out really quickly and like write it really well into the story like you seen the movie the one where I think it's in the most recent season but like they're doing the spaghetti people I don't think so maybe but I don't think so no hold on there's another scene um you know when they're doing the [ __ ] uh
the cookies and it's like the guy's having a moment of pure joy and they extract that feeling and putting it into a cookie yeah like the way that it presents that moment of pure joy and it's just like you're like oh my God like I felt that [ __ ] bro like their ability to do that is kind of crazy right but it's something about like emotional intelligence of what people go through and like kind of like ta it into those raw emotions that life will make you have about stuff you know mhm it's like
sharing a cookie with his daughter or some [ __ ] yeah yeah they're like after like a long day of like a good and a bad thing happening and they're finally got done fighting and they're like you know I don't know what the [ __ ] it is you know what I'm saying but it's real I remember [ __ ] CU it's hilarious yeah the first one's like that and then at the end of it it's like they captured the guy who like went crazy in his job and like killed his boss he went postal like for real and they tried t
o trap him and he's like breaking out and he's like like you made it out you broke out you did it he's like I did it you leave you're fine and they capture [ __ ] encapsulate that feeling and put it into a cookie liberated R yeah bro it's so funny yeah it's so funny so broad so even what you think is not what you think about what you think like it's doing that to me you know what I'm saying you're able to like Escape some of your presuppositions and your Notions yeah and great show great show lo
ve that show man but there's just something to like known information that's kind of crazy cuz is that so true it's like cuz you know I'm like [ __ ] yeah that's what the the entirety of Science is based on known objective information that's what we're trying to do or that's what the entirety of science is or I guess so there's like whatever like social sciences but what I'm like a more physics and [ __ ] you know yeah those types of Sciences yeah definitely trying to study and uh create concret
e objective reality or scope it out and field it out and map it out what's going on here what do we know what do we know is true objectively true and maybe not you're trying to do that literally you but like as people like the mass of people starts to collect data like someone wants to collect the data other people are interested in it they realize it's important and then they start recording stuff you know MH trying to yeah trying to map out what the hell's going on here in this 3D Matrix that
we're in yeah cuz a compass what the hell is this what [Laughter] this what is this what is any of this what was that I don't know I'm not sure science is born yeah that's it especially yeah that's super simple like from that moment to figuring out we had oxygen that we breathed in like and I was always like how do they know they're right that yeah starting from that what the [ __ ] is any of this H kind hands what is this call it a hand what do I do with these like there had to be a period of t
hat I mean babies do that you know what I'm saying they're always experimen or trying to figure out what the hell's going on always like squirming and moving and kicking their socks off their feet and [ __ ] maybe it's because at a super like base level primordial level infancy level knowing what's going on around you is like hyper valuable like the most valuable thing it's like way more important than knowing anything else is understanding what the hell my feet are you know yeah you can't go an
ywhere forward outside of this unless you like know what the hell's going on with this at least at least a little bit at least a little bit like just that you have motor function you have this like okay this is this is mine okay okay and then you move [Laughter] forward yeah I guess like I don't know I don't maybe like animals just like move they're not like yeah we have to deal with being conscious we're like oh my gosh I'm a I'm a person I have people I can trust okay they're taking care of me
okay that's tight that's tight like you just like figuring out what's going on you know try figure out what [ __ ] is maybe that urge is just still in us like in our 20s and 30s and 40s and it's just like even when what's going on isn't like so right here it's still like hyper valuable mhm if you know what's going on in the marketplace if you know what's going on in the world you know what's going on in your office I see you're saying yeah yeah yeah yeah what what uh Circles of information you
have yeah information everything's information there's no information Joe all it is is information Joe telling the same story Joe C CS is awesome I love them great episode good episode oh man you want to want to finish this up and uh head out to the em time let's head over to the Y be Playdoh brother I love it I love it to death [ __ ] hell yes whatever this PO hits you I hope you have a freaking great day get in there whatever you're doing get in there with the dishes the drive the walk the run
the lift the life keep on pushing and enjoy it enjoy it all that's what we're here to do we're here to enjoy it it's an enjoyable experience yeah enjoy the hard work that's another thing enjoy the abstract oo not just pure joy but how you do that just go hard I enjoy going hard yeah I enjoy upholding responsibilities yeah you got to kind of get off on the savagery of it yeah I'm waiting I'm up feels good yeah you can get off on the like the objective or to get off on like the ego like the subje
ctive you know what I'm saying get off on the objective story of who you are you know what I'm saying it's like watching that movie it's like yeah this movie is good man this movie's just like watching the Montage of Rocky like yeah I like watching this [ __ ] go in right here he's he's going to get it that's what I'm talking about I got to go get mine I got to go get mine I love y'all make that Montage see R through the city to the ain't no where we might go I [Music] just

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