#257: How To Find Out What Fuels You w/ Author-Comedian-Podcaster Morgan Simpson

sweq 257 audio

Wed, 9/23 · 4:29 PM39:27

SUMMARY KEYWORDS

people podcast called failure talking movies tampa life church girthy episode wrote girth ninja wear drives good book friends shit

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Law Smith

0:01

I'm excited for our guests, Morgan Simpson hosts a podcast what's running you? In a family friend of mine for 25 years 30 years or so? It's gonna act like big brother. I feel it. I feel it coming on

0:17

good. This

Law Smith

0:19

podcast called sweat equity about pragmatic entrepreneurial vice and dick jokes. Number one arbitrary rated business comedy podcast I'm here with law Smith sitting next to me trying to flex is trying to be taller. Loki flex is this kids say,

0:37

right? You're gonna get Morgan's gonna Big Brother you and I'm gonna Big Brother. Big Brother bro.

Law Smith

0:41

You're my Big Bro. Bro. You bro me bro. You listen to us on iTunes Apple podcast, Spotify, laughable app, YouTube, Facebook, Vimeo, LinkedIn, your mom's Walkman. This episode is brought to you by the fanciest sportswear out there called Roan r h o n e tri roan.com for slash sweat gets a 20% off using the link or using the promo code bridge 20 like you want the the Dr. Phil apparel of 10 years ago is fine. Nike pro combat all that stuff Under Armour 20 years ago is Revolutionary Road is gonna be that next brand that comes up. It's an insult. They're gonna step it up. You want to look sharp. You want to have the upper in high end, sports apparel, try roan.com forward slash sweat 20% off or use the promo code Britt bridge, like a Brooklyn Bridge bridge 20 a Brooklyn Bridge like oh, yeah, any of them. That's our main sponsor of this episode. Our featured sponsors are ExpressVPN trikes Express VPN comm forward slash swett gives you three months free off an annual subscription. Get your anonymous protected line out to the internet so no one knows what you're looking at.

2:07

You're not doing anything bad is peace of

Law Smith

2:09

mind. grasshopper is grasshopper business phone mine, try grasshopper.com forward slash sweat $75 off an annual plan. Have an app on your phone. That's your business phone line. Don't be jabroni with a Google Voice number freshbooks. Go freshbooks.com forward slash twit gets you a 30 day free trial on that accounting software. Do your invoicing, do your taxes, do everything within freshbooks and I'm a user. I'm not only I'm not only a spot supporter, but I'm a member and then Warby Parker Warby Parker trial club for men. Yeah, Warby Parker trial.com. forward slash like get you five free pairs to try and at home for your your sunglasses, your prescription glasses, and then exactly all these links are in the description. They help this podcast move forward. Can I get a hot No.

3:20

I literally used to do

Law Smith

3:27

the show man. You lost all that good stuff. Yeah, man. talks

3:35

about cool and whilst we are missed it.

2

Speaker 2

3:38

I listened to your party. more of that there will be more of that I listen

Law Smith

3:42

to your pod man.

3:44

Which one he listened to?

Law Smith

3:45

I listened to Joel McHale because I've met the guy and I really liked him. And I've also seen him do the soup like 10 years ago. For my friend Carrie Ainsworth it used to work at EA. And I love Kerikeri to Saturn another kid. Yeah, yeah, shout out to her she did all the E True Hollywood stories. Like the majority of them produced them all

4:08

kind of ruined my life. And I'm like, what's the salad brought down? Yeah, tapestry of lies.

4:15

Things are rosier everything

4:17

was beautiful before that she's

Law Smith

4:19

got a kit though. She will find you and kill you that she's alpha like that. Well that's what I expect after her producing of those shows. She she did I forget which one was the saddest she said the lottery winner one because all of them end up becoming broke like

4:35

yeah, they're all sad but which ones are sad it

4:41

really just give it to me.

4:42

But she What are they? Are they still in LA? Are they?

Law Smith

4:45

I think so. Last time I talked to her like a month ago.

4:49

I actually emailed with john not too long ago.

Law Smith

4:52

Say hey, we're in her husband's doing a Huey Lewis musical.

3

Speaker 3

4:55

Okay, now I love All right, that sounds awesome.

2

Speaker 2

4:58

I want to say my Second is my third concert. But my first non Jimmy Buffett concert growing up was Huey Lewis in the news, ocean center. Daytona Beach, Florida. Amazing concert concert. Yeah, so yeah, let's do let's go good. I want to hear

Law Smith

5:17

it. Forget, let's plug your stuff. Because we'll get into it. You but you have to do your plugs because we don't. We don't do that kind of stuff. So you tell, can you tell the people why and what's what's funny? Whenever was musical, what's running us the podcast?

2

Speaker 2

5:34

What's ruts? Ernie, I wrote a book called what's running you? And then I have a podcast called what's running you? I only can use one title at a time. Right? So I have a book and a podcast. Check it out. It's been a lot of fun. I was just editing an episode right before I came on here. So yeah, it's been great. And you can get us on failure. Yeah, yeah. Originally. You know, I've done acting and writing and, you know, stripping that kind of stuff. Yeah, a lot, a lot of nudity, a lot of dark and

6:07

shameful time.

2

Speaker 2

6:09

She did. That shame drove me to writing a book now. And then I did a podcast on failure, and just had an idea for books. I put that out and then started new podcasts on and still writing and doing other stuff.

Law Smith

6:21

So what what's the What did you learn about failure? Because this shows basically, that's one of the main themes is kind of a hustle advice. I

3

Speaker 3

6:29

mentioned the last solo podcast I did. Yes. about failure. So nice.

Law Smith

6:34

Big time, failures, learning. I mean, failure, whatnot,

6:37

like big time, like,

6:39

yeah, I

1

Speaker 1

6:40

haven't done that before. Eric's we call on tilt right now if you're playing but Eric goes, he goes bit

6:45

I'm going for

6:47

baby.

Law Smith

6:49

Three true outcomes. What's it called? Yeah, none of them good. Welcome to the divorce club. It's fun. So um, when are you getting divorced? Okay, so, uh, and Heather, your wife didn't want to show up? Who's a commercial actress? actor a bunch of stuff as well.

2

Speaker 2

7:06

Yeah, yeah. She's actually been Yeah, she does a bunch of acting a lot of a lot of commercials and some theatrical you know, just theatrical stuff as well. So she's, but no, she or they're not here. I'm actually here. My I just had my five year old here. They had to they are it here on the other side of town right now. But they will be back. There's getting a little exercise. Oh, dude. What are you meeting friends? They were social distance meeting friends at Lake Hollywood. You remember like Hollywood?

Law Smith

7:39

No. Is that where you meet other men in the bushes? Oh, wait. Yes. Different. confusing. There's stuff after comedy shows up like Hollywood. I heard they were networking things.

2

Speaker 2

7:55

I'm here with my five year old so she may bust in here. I got one of them. That's cool. You know,

8:04

it's all over. They're really they're totally like understanding of

Law Smith

8:07

your life boundaries. Yeah, I was just saying whatever. Just saying you should I been tricking my kids to wear masks and telling them that's how they become ninjas. And that's been working.

8:17

Yeah, dude.

3

Speaker 3

8:19

That's good. That's exactly what I said. I was like, oh, okay, that is good. I'm gonna use that.

Law Smith

8:25

I got a kid. Good. We've got a lot of ninja talk. Now.

2

Speaker 2

8:28

We've got a lot. You can't beat ninjas. I still love ninja. Do you want to be Batman or

Law Smith

8:32

not? kind of stuff going on? Hey, yeah, that's a good call into turtles pilling on purpose around the house a lot more?

2

Speaker 2

8:38

Sure. Yeah. I mean, man, I love all that you guys ever seen in the ninja movies from the 80s Yeah, like Revenge of the Ninja. Well, I'm deaths of the Ninja.

8:47

Whoa, no, those sound like deep. That user into movies. Easy care. David Carradine.

8:55

Reporter

2

Speaker 2

8:58

I know. But you know, I I Saw movies in the 70s just because I wasn't born. You know, I saw the Godfather.

9:07

Yeah, sure. Yeah,

9:08

it's good. I was thinking more like three godfather and

2

Speaker 2

9:13

this. Was that a good parallel? There's a company in the 80s canon films he has ever they made like Cobra over the top. Okay. I

Law Smith

9:21

know Cobra. I know the top. Yeah.

2

Speaker 2

9:24

Okay. And a movie I loved called Making the Grade but Judd Nelson. come off. Yeah, no, there's about preppies. We're trying to

Law Smith

9:32

Yes. And this Yeah. You guys have no idea. You

9:36

guys remember the Harry Potter movies?

9:39

Ted Nelson was

Law Smith

9:41

way past this like Harry Potter was. You'd be too young. I heard

2

Speaker 2

9:45

you have a wallflower. What do you got? I don't know. I don't know where what

3

Speaker 3

9:48

else movies? Well, I was Yeah, I was saying like three ninjas. Surf ninjas. Ninja Turtles. Yeah. Yeah, not as hardcore. I don't remember what it was like. spinal surgeon. ninjas I don't remember what you were saying it sound more hardcore than what we were. Yeah,

2

Speaker 2

10:03

these were all the show Kazuki up saying his name right ninja movies. You gotta go. You gotta check these out. You should go watch Revenge of the Ninja right now. Okay, I'm

Law Smith

10:13

writing it down.

2

Speaker 2

10:14

Pause. Yes, he can, then zoom me back. Call me back after that after you watch, we'll have a part

Law Smith

10:20

about that. will tell tell us about failure? What was the, you know, the gist of what you kind of learned about writing about it?

2

Speaker 2

10:30

You know, I'm actually I mean, I had the idea for the book before the podcast, but I think the podcast helps solidify the idea. Yeah, in my mind. But I think failure, you know, I think it's part of the stepping stone to it's how we learn. It's how we grow and it's really painful. I don't want to step over the pain part of it. But I do think it's

10:50

it's literally

2

Speaker 2

10:53

how we how we grow as people, so it's painful, but there's no avoiding it. Yeah. So I think if you can look for it as a change your mindset about it a little bit. It's not I mean, it doesn't it's not painful, because I don't want to be like, well, it's nothing, you know, although we did interview people who had that kind of mindset, where it's just like, they didn't look at it that way, which I it is painful for me, you know, so, but from the get

Law Smith

11:15

go, did they have that attitude? I feel like you get that added am 100

11:19

after failures. And there's just

Law Smith

11:20

like, you're like, I can't keep on with this. I used to do auditions, commercial auditions. And you'd be like, how are you doing with them? When I was living in LA and I'm, like, fucking terrifying to me. And you're like, you get on stage and do stand up a mic. Yeah, a bomb there. A lot. And so you don't you don't give a shit anymore. But I walk I walk into these commercial acting, you know, auditions, I'd be like, man, I gotta read out loud and I don't know how to do it. And like, you just don't have any reps. And so I'm sure I'd be like, don't give a shit after 1000 of those, you know?

2

Speaker 2

11:52

Yeah, I still even after thousand of I remember I went into one. And I had to sing and dance the Napa know how song and dance and oh my god, it sounds I left there. And I was like,

3

Speaker 3

12:05

we talked about how the entire auto industry has a stuttering problem. They got Oh, O'Reilly? No, no, Napa know how. And I think there's another one but those two I think

12:18

that's true of them.

Law Smith

12:21

You're gonna be getting, like four total. You're gonna be doing stand up stutter. You're gonna do to stand up soon. That's a bill, but I didn't doubt my fucking head. Come on. Give me a break. If you can find a third one that you got a rule of threes. That's an easy joke right there. Eric's gonna be talking failure on stage soon. Yeah,

12:39

there's no rule of two's there. There's no Rule of Two. Yeah.

Law Smith

12:47

He might be over served. I don't know.

12:50

All right, back to you guys. What are you talking about? I mean, I think that's gonna be a theme

Law Smith

12:53

I'll come up with I like how you re hosted the show.

12:57

Alright, fellas, let's get back on.

2

Speaker 2

13:00

But I think there is something where some people aren't being honest. I think some people do you definitely develop that. Like, the more you practice, the better you get at something, the more competence you have, the more you you get used to. And then I think some people actually kind of a way they deal with not dealing with failure is to like put like a block up. So it's probably like some mechanism not to feel it did actually the confidence they built through life, you know, so I think there's two different ways to handle Yeah,

3

Speaker 3

13:28

I was gonna say there's a definite thing where it's like, some people don't ever think they fail. And it's just where do you cut it off? It's like, okay, yeah, Vishal, it's a failure. Fine. That's hard to come up with that, like,

Law Smith

13:43

resilience to be able to accept it. It's It's not easy to be able to we talking the guy that can sell anything kind of guy, the guy like sure. salesman. Yeah, doesn't matter if it's an RV, or insurance or whatever, right? And then that's the same guy that'll go out when he's single and hit on 100 wins or whatever, right? What's the big deal? He's like, it's just, you know, put

3

Speaker 3

14:06

the number to a number. For me, that's an incredibly Zen style of life to just be able to be like, if I failed at that I got rejected no big deal. Like, we're sociopath

Law Smith

14:15

Who cares?

14:17

Everybody is in a way.

Law Smith

14:20

Everybody's a salesman, in a way. I would say that, you know? Yeah. So we're failure writing it. And, you know, the easy joke is did you feel like you failed writing the book?

2

Speaker 2

14:39

I think I think that's one of the things I like about the new podcasts in the book goes I think failure is a piece of it, but it's really kind of more of the positive side of it. Yeah, talking about failure every week was kind of tough. I mean, I enjoyed it. But I think the book kind of is more like, how to live you know, more free and and more yourself and kind of a more abundant life. I like you know, so the the failures kind of an aspect of it that can help you do that, you know, to get through it.

3

Speaker 3

15:07

Yeah, but failure podcast is that's that's gonna be tough to keep up like

2

Speaker 2

15:12

that. So it was good. It was like every every week was like, you know, I mean, it was great, but it was sure, get it out but

15:19

then you don't want to be doing that every week. Yeah,

15:22

yeah. Did I want to get to the other side of it?

15:25

You don't wanna be a pretty good weekend. I don't want to brag Rockcastle Well, I

Law Smith

15:30

mean, that's another part of it. A lot of people will go I you know, I'm failing, but I'm still doing it. And you got to kind of figure out when to cut bait sometimes on something you're trying. And that's something a lot of people don't assess

15:43

correctly, sometimes one of the hardest

Law Smith

15:44

and I and fail or did I just go at it and fail, like, without any real effort behind it? And then long enough while I'm doing it, I want to be a tap dancer, right? tap dance.

15:56

Yeah, I want to learn to moonwalk. I'm gonna figure it out.

Law Smith

15:59

I'm gonna be the next Gregory high.

16:01

school starts gonna learn it. I

16:03

just watched running scared the other day. You guys seen running scared?

Law Smith

16:06

No, here comes our old bit. Movies marking pitches that we probably haven't seen.

16:11

I mean, if you Hi, it's how do you not know running scared?

Law Smith

16:15

I don't know.

2

Speaker 2

16:16

Gregory Hines, Billy Crystal. All right. write that one down. write that one down. See it visible?

16:23

I'm assuming there's a lot of tap dancing.

16:26

Pop. Chicago, tap dancing cops. There's notes.

16:32

It's great.

Law Smith

16:36

to pitch with your great pubes. Great.

16:43

Put it on the top 10 great pubes list you know

Law Smith

16:45

you're on the number one business dick joke podcasts in the world. So we've my Yeah. What What an honor. Hashtag great pubes. Hashtag ROI.

2

Speaker 2

16:57

So tell you the word girth. I've noticed by the way you say girth more than anyone I've ever met.

Law Smith

17:02

Because it's a word that is a real word. But no one ever really uses it in all words, real words. No, no, of course not. All right, here's one from Heather's flim globber. That's not a real word that's in Heather's that's Yes. Because

3

Speaker 3

17:19

the word is gross. Yes, like the word moist. Ooh, yeah. But the word will go popping off about girthy moisty things I would get bored makes everyone uncomfortable doing

Law Smith

17:29

analytics for clients. And I just started going like, well, you're having really girthy ROI right here. And just try to let it slide through and see if I can just you just get bored with the a lot of the routine stuff you're doing. So you had to shake it up. And that's how I got in that. I just think girthy is like that word that only really thinks get people think of why dick? And then what?

3

Speaker 3

17:51

Yeah, it should just be shifted over to that's what it means is,

Law Smith

17:55

but I read it. And why does it dig like, put together like a symbol and nobody else uses? It's fine. Like you just you don't ever use it. You get bored with the mundane, and you have to figure out how to make it work. You got to make games out of things. Yeah. And so you got to find the girth? Sure. It's but it's not. It's not an ad word. girthy It's not a cuss word. Yeah, yeah. I didn't jokes will never not be funny. And I have a theory that every two people, two kinds of people, people that like dick jokes, and then everybody else that lies sucks. Because dick jokes are never not funny. Yeah, even.

18:37

What's your favorite dick joke?

Law Smith

18:39

Oh, you know, don't put me on the spot. I just we're

18:41

talking about you got to have an idea. You're the one I'm appeared.

Law Smith

18:47

Oh, yeah, but we don't we're not lying. Right bits. We're just letting them fly. Now. We're in profit. We're in profit, like the Yeah, no reason Boehner on the bus when you're like,

18:59

we have a great movie and 83.

Law Smith

19:02

Call boners opposed. All right. So we got off track because you was Mike

2

Speaker 2

19:08

seavers. Best friend and co owner. Yeah, there we go.

Law Smith

19:12

Just say watch the show. But I know that Yeah.

19:16

Does it just slip through the cracks? What?

Law Smith

19:20

So with the podcast, are you liking that as a format? Because it's kind of ongoing? You're kind of, in a way a lot of people we've talked about having our book parsed out from episodes of the show of people we've interviewed just like that, that whole chunk about dicks. Boom, perfect. Perfect. People got to believe that they need to have that in their head. But I mean, you can. A lot of people are extracting episodes and putting that together like a self published book.

19:49

He started talking about it and I'm like, No, we

Law Smith

19:51

can't do that as editors or like any part of it. We have to get someone to do it. But I'm saying like, you kind of did it the other way around. Which is interesting because you have a foundation normal way. And then write the book. Have you found yourself liking that better? By having a podcast

20:09

based on the book?

Law Smith

20:10

Yeah, yeah. Or based? Yeah, based on probably a lot of themes you have in the book.

2

Speaker 2

20:14

Yeah. I mean, it's interesting podcasts because the other one was, like conversational style. This is more like I asked the same 25 questions. And the first 10 are kind of because the books called what Ronnie you kind of ideas and beliefs that have run them and how they grew up and ideas they have and kind of run their lives. And then the last 15 are just kind of fun things. So that's kind of nice, because it gives me like, a kind of an outline to go off. After and I you know, I've interviewed some people I know really well, like I had Nestor Carbonell on last week.

Law Smith

20:46

Yeah. And he's The Dark Knight series. He is he does he wear eye shadow or whatever. Not very, gives mascara around his eyes look, a man to the point where I was the first thing I texted you when I saw he was on your on guestlist. I was like, I'm obsessed with his items. It's annoyed

21:05

me a lot of people are the man. I mean, people that a lot of people talk about those eyes. He's a famous actor.

Law Smith

21:11

But I was like, Johnny Johnny Depp like, I this is what I wear every day. And just get away with it. I just I don't know. I thought it was awesome. What is it?

2

Speaker 2

21:21

It's magical power that I don't that I don't fully understand. But but it's cool. Because he and I have written a lot together. Like we wrote a project and pitch it all around town. And so we spent a lot of time because I know a lot about him. But I still learned, you know about his his, you know, his parents escaping Cuban his mom not having any of her family, whether when she's 14, and you know, just kind of his life and stuff. So it's kind of fun, because even people I know what I learned stuff, I don't know, and what drives them, and what's driven them to be successful. So it's been really fun. I really enjoyed it. It's been great.

Law Smith

21:59

Now the real question everybody's waiting for? Yes. What drives you?

2

Speaker 2

22:03

What drives me? Yeah. You know, I think what drives me is just more girth. You know, that's what I'm going after. That's the attitude. That's the motto.

22:14

What's that time stamp it?

22:16

You know, I think honestly, what drives me is just,

2

Speaker 2

22:21

you know, I think this is, this is my one chance in life, and I want to try to live it to the fullest. I think that's what the books ultimately about is, you know, living from the better parts of yourself because I kind of think, you know, we can run ourselves from different ways to say your soul, your ego, your authentic self, your authentic self. So I think try to live from the better parts of myself. And live more fun and free and full is, is what drives me. Yeah, you get a little bit more out of life and help other people do it as well. Now you

Law Smith

22:50

still involved one of the things I knew when I lived out in LA and you kind of helped me find the dad's church that was kind of a nomadic churches. It's still around, it's still going.

2

Speaker 2

23:04

It is it is it's you can you can zoom on Sunday, if you want.

Law Smith

23:08

Oh, really? Yeah.

2

Speaker 2

23:10

Yeah, it actually works really well with the zoom because you know, they have discussion after the service. So the zoom actually is, you know, people still

23:19

talk and have a discussion afterwards. It's great.

Law Smith

23:22

And you got to go dads.org not.com because that is a dig site, a plenty.

2

Speaker 2

23:29

winger sided that I don't even if I've been I think it's a swinger so i'm not i'm

Law Smith

23:32

trying to show people to come to dads when I was on my phone, I got off shit and like, does it stand for something or some guy named sad sadness? He was the what the 13th the possum?

2

Speaker 2

23:44

No, he was one of the disciples who Not much is known about

Law Smith

23:49

me. I paid attention. Like I go to church still, but I just zoned out for an hour and I'm like, you know what, it's probably good that it just goes

23:56

to do that mailing it in, dude. Why bother?

Law Smith

24:00

I like the community aspect of it. I made a lot of good friends there that I'm still friends with. So Mary, Mary Kay plus a on on place. I like to call Mary Kay plus a call plus a. But I saw her on episode a Californication, I was watching I just emailed her say, hey, it's been a while since I've talked to you and she's great. She's a great actress. She's a big love. You've seen her a bunch of stuff.

2

Speaker 2

24:30

But you'd be like, Oh, another great 80s movie, The Big Chill. She's in the Big Chill.

Law Smith

24:36

Yeah, we love the Big Chill. Just watching

24:41

a great movie. We're watching stripes

24:43

before you

2

Speaker 2

24:44

got here. I don't know. There you go. I mean, scared if you guys haven't seen like stripes and vacation. Oh.

24:52

Basis checked. I know.

Law Smith

24:55

One non professional thing you were doing was something like that like helping that church out. Getting it. Going or other things that are you're finding fulfilling that kind of caught almost leveraged motivation and the other things you're doing like I find Yeah, the more I do the more I can do kind of thing like if everything's kind of humming and I make I'm getting shit done I could do a lot more in a weird exponential way.

2

Speaker 2

25:18

Yeah yeah i think that's I think that's definitely part of it and you know, it's like you said it's a it's a great community too It's nice to kind of help out and you know, help there kind of purpose and mission so it's been it's been a good experience Yeah, I thought

Law Smith

25:33

you handing out headshots was pretty tacky but you know, you got to network and

25:36

so now you look at it. I mean, it was so tacky god awful.

Law Smith

25:42

It was like the best church ban because it's all like badass musicians in their own right I still have no idea what you're talking this is the church we were going to it sounds like like a quick update last night they were nominated to be playing like some blues or some some old New Orleans style kind of thing that you're like you'd have to have 10 talented musicians to do it and they had Yeah, usually that on hand Yeah, that's it Yeah, it's really good gnostic his friends to go check it out.

2

Speaker 2

26:14

Oh, I mean, well, that's it would love it. Yeah, that's what's interesting about I mean, technically to the Episcopal it's Episcopal Church. I'm Fisk appealing. It's a it's a What's it I think it's called a mission station technically the Episcopal Church in Los Angeles but it's it's very non liturgical for Episcopal so it's like we have discussion and like people believe all over the place you know they believe don't believe whatever you know, it's a place just to come in and explore what what what you believe and talk about it in a place where people are interested in talking about it but the music is tough actually. I think religious music stuff man Yeah, they do a great job because the word you said they're talented musicians and they kind of have a yeah it's not it doesn't have that for lack of better word cheesy feel to it like they're just because they're real soldiers.

Law Smith

27:02

Yeah, they play these like every Christian songs like Jesus I love you. I love you Jesus. Like those are the lyrics almost every Christian rock song there are a lot of walk in you see the drum set behind the class you're like, oh boy, right. That one guy that's true. Yeah. I'm a camp counselor forever kind of guy.

27:24

Very, very literal lyrics. You know?

3

Speaker 3

27:27

I've been a lot of different kinds of churches and the kinds that you know might have a more musical approach to things I'm way more into that I went to Catholic school for till I was done with high school. Yeah, and Dude, I get it after three years I get it I don't need this you're just repeating the same shit over right but like can you smell energy? Okay fine like I you know, I'm not big on gathering on things like this but that I get

Law Smith

27:51

and you can cover a nine inch nail song make it not dark and the lyrics could still kind of apply to whatever you want it I don't

3

Speaker 3

28:00

even need I just need the positive energy sort of thing like I think

Law Smith

28:04

I'm thinking of that because a Johnny you're playing Johnny Cash a little bit ago. Yeah, that one song. Trent Reznor wrote Yeah, yeah produced Yeah, he's like

28:13

yeah, retro actively made it

Law Smith

28:15

Yeah. So what I mean what else what's on the horizon? Want to make sure we're on time

2

Speaker 2

28:23

we only try like the way that your half on screen half off. I know and I tend

3

Speaker 3

28:27

to ticket out more and and I told him before we start I was like, wait,

Law Smith

28:33

wait we so on your screen we're half on half off but on the real camera behind you, we're we're fine.

2

Speaker 2

28:41

We're full no just you just you is like now you're good. See? Is that better?

28:46

Everybody was still able to see it cuz I left a little window up

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#258: How To Stop Taking Yourself and This Life So Seriously with Vadim Davydov

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#256: How To Pivot The Business Comedy Scene with Comedian Patrick Keane