Exploring the intersection of cars and life, Todd and Paul dive into a variety of listener questions that range from personal anecdotes to design advice. They discuss the impact of coffee on their mornings, share insights on industrial design education, and reflect on their favorite films and music. The duo also touches on their experiences with outdoor activities, favorite snacks, and the nuances of filmmaking. With a mix of humor and heartfelt stories, this episode showcases the unique connections that cars create in our lives.
The guys turn on the camera for a livestream, taking all the non-car questions from the audience! They discuss their favorite topics, but dive into more details about filmmaking, scripts, IP, environmental + furniture design, favorite libations, favorite Simpsons characters and philosophical imaginings about traveling back in time.
Please rate + review us on iTunes, and subscribe to our two YouTube channels. Write us with your Car Debates, Car Conclusions, and Topic Tuesdays at [email protected] or everydaydriver.com. Don’t forget to share the podcast with your car enthusiast friends!
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"So thanks for the question. I love the writing questions. Thomas G 22 had one earlier on Instagram and answer that. I'll come back to others later. But he said, would I recommend writing a book?"
"... have a cool two-car comparison, the MX-5 and the Z4 comes out Thanksgiving Day. We don't have a tool ..."
Select text to request an explanation
This is a car show, but it's also more because cars connect us to every part of our lives. Families, careers, hobbies, and adventures we never expected, so you should have a car you love. We're here to help. I'm Todd, I'm Paul, and this is the everyday driver car debate.
We do not only all questions, which all of these have been so far, but we also do all questions, no cars on our car podcast, and you guys have already purchased some stuff on Facebook and Instagram to get us started, but I am really excited about this, because I never know where these are going to go, so I am bracing myself for madness.
I have a place to jump in already, guys, thank you for posting up your questions, Barbara, we see on there, thank you for jumping on. Yeah, post up your questions on the chat, we will get to those, but we do have these social media questions.
From Anthony Zurg on Facebook, challenges me to go to week without coffee. Why? Well, I don't get it. Anthony hasn't had one in nine months, and I am sorry, I feel very badly for you, because espresso is the key to my mornings.
Todd knows this when we're out shooting, and we, you know, we're trying to get filming for the cars, and I haven't had my coffee yet. Paul is worthless, and he has his got me. This is the reason I would like you to do it and coffee. There's got to be a breakfast stop. It's going to be, it's going to be a problem, so yeah, it's been really tough. Although I will admit, I didn't start really getting into espresso and good coffee until I was in my 30s, if you can believe it.
I really didn't discover espresso and how good Italian coffee really is, but then I did, and now I'm here, so we're good. It's all good for sure.
Gunsache on Instagram, that is, he says, am I still getting evil Todd comments about my goatee? Here's the weirdest thing, and I don't understand this.
I mean, we live in a culture where you be you, and yet in the entire nearly 20 years we've done this show, I've gotten consistent comments about my hair or my facial hair, and why anyone cares is utterly beyond me, people are getting somewhat used to it, but the reality is, look, on both of these realities, if my wife didn't like it, neither of these things would be this way, so she wins, so that's really the core of that reality.
I think it was last year when you started sporting the goatee, and it took me the comments in YouTube to realize that you would grow on the goatee, because you knew me forever like that.
Yeah, I just didn't even notice.
Oh, that's right, I guess, whatever thing.
So that's good.
Let's see Harvey M on Facebook. His son is a high school senior looking to study and work in industrial design that is really cool and exciting.
What advice would I give him? There are many colleges, I'm not quite sure where in the country you're located, but there's many colleges around the nation.
That offer an initial program for either high school seniors or people who have not gotten accepted yet.
I went to art center, college of design, and they've got a great art center at night program, which I did go through.
It was fantastic, and it's usually instructed by a lot of the daytime program instructors, the teachers, and they'll do, they'll help you prep your portfolio in advance for getting into the school, for getting admissions, and it tailors your portfolio.
One of the things that really inspired me when I first visited art center was a story from one of the guidance counselors that told me a transportation design student was not well off, and they bought crans and markers and pencils and tore the tops off pizza boxes and sketched their portfolio on the inside unused portion of pizza boxes and submitted that.
And you know what the guidance counselors were impressed because it was different materials, but using what you got, which is what industrial design is all about, teaching you to use found materials, but also understanding the difference between art and design.
You've heard me talk about it a lot. Design is a thousand sketches that you sell for a dollar each. A piece of art is something one time, you do one time, and then you sell it for a thousand bucks.
But design is all about understanding manufacturing and then being able to put it out there in a visual form that everybody on the planet can understand, and that can be made.
When those come together, you have sketched and designed a product that can be made for sale, and it's all about creativity in getting there and understanding those two.
So like I said, a lot of schools have various programs to help you guide your son's portfolio into the entrance and definitely visit a few different schools.
There's a lot of good ones out there and really also figure out what direction you want to go because now there's entertainment design, of course product design, transportation design, cars are just big expensive products.
Close, I wear furniture, our computers, I wear, you know, it doesn't matter what it is, but I really encourage your son and send me an email if you have more questions.
Ted Logan, I want to answer your question real quick because he said you have to go and the answer is nothing at all. Actually lawyers is the answer. Here's your question.
You said, what's the difference between a cinematographer and a director of photography? Lawyers and credit arguments?
Sometimes a director, seriously, sometimes a director. It's the same job. It's the exact same job.
Sometimes the director of photography is the cinematographer and vice versa and literally some directors will argue that they don't want the word director used anywhere else above the line.
They are the only director, so that will not allow director of photography to be used because I am the film director.
Other directors of photography want to be referred to as cinematographers because they fought to be in the cinematography union and they would prefer that term.
It entirely comes down to legal realities and how do you want your credit listed? I'll go you one further. Robert De Niro.
He has in his contract a half space between Dick and Nero. Now have you ever gotten on a keyboard and figured out how to actually create a half space?
There is no half space key, but when you are creating a credit, Robert De Niro has a half space between Dick and Nero. Not a full space, like two different words, a half space.
I had no idea. So it's more than the letters would be, but it's less than a full space. So what I'm saying, you would not believe the amount of credit stuff that goes on.
So director photography, cinematographer, same person, different credit. We've got a cool super chat going on here too.
Or hey, I'm asked when we race each other on mountain bikes or on skis are our style similarly different to racing each other on in other things.
I know you're not going to say cars, but you know what Todd is a very much a big mountain and in the trees kind of a skier kind of person.
And you know not not slow not fast, but kind of medium speed through the trees, you know, thigh deep deep in snow.
I've had my experience with trees and I kind of like to stick to more the bumps, but I also like using all the runs.
But of course if the runs are full of fresh powder, that makes it all the better. But I do like really using all the runs. But what I usually do is stick to the edges of the runs.
And that's where all the snow has been pushed off. So the best powder is always on the edges kind of next to the trees.
And then mountain bikes, yeah Todd can uphill. He's a powerful biker and he can leave people going uphill.
It's almost like he's riding a motorized bike.
I take it easy going down though. It's like you guys go I'll get it back because I'm okay.
So we just we have different specialties. I kind of like some speed going downhill and you know put it on full soft suspension and get after it.
Yeah, it's really, you know, we're never really racing, but we deff our strengths and weaknesses very much are apparent in both sports.
So thanks for the question.
I love the writing questions. Thomas G 22 had one earlier on Instagram and answer that. I'll come back to others later.
But he said, would I recommend writing a book?
And he thoughts on writing a sequel or a new book entirely. Thomas, here's the thing, unless you are a person who is striving to be a writer for a living.
Then I'm going to say yes, write a book, but only if you do not care where it goes.
You're writing it for the purpose of saying you did and getting it done and you have to release yourself. This is very hard.
You have to release yourself from the results because that will steal all of the motivation to do it.
It will also steal a lot of the joy of doing it.
And then as far as sequel or new book entirely, I'm going to read into your question because I'm not sure I'm right.
Don't write on somebody else's IP. If somebody else has an idea, you're like, oh, what I should do, I should write a Star Wars thing.
Don't do that. Try to create your own thing.
Now I know there's a lot of fan fiction that goes on.
If you're playing around, fan fiction is a thing, but there's only one exception I can really think of.
And that is, I hate to spring this up. But anyway, 50 shades of gray started as like twilight fan fiction.
And then it became a phenomenon of its own right.
Okay, but it started as twilight fan fiction.
Generally, the chances of you writing in someone else's universe and having the chance of that ever becoming something,
you have created another barrier for yourself.
So I would say create a new thing that is you.
Having said that, there's layers of this, the common way to make money as a writer now is you have one book with one character that hits.
And then that's the book and character you're going to write for the unrest of your writing life.
Lee Child that writes the Reacher books.
Tom Clancy that wrote the Jack Ryan books.
Pick your, well, there's a house made series going on right now.
Once you have a hit, the entire book world, your agent everybody just says,
will you just get to write that the rest of your life?
Because you already have an audience built in and it's so hard to find an audience.
I am the opposite of that. I just want to write something completely different than the last thing I wrote.
I'm limiting myself. I admit that I am that way.
But if you have a hit, you have to keep writing that character and keep the hits coming.
My friend Richard is talking about a time machine.
And the question is that we get one use of this time machine to go back to any time or event in the past 100 years.
And only for 24 hours you can observe but not change the events outcome.
Where and when do you go?
As soon as I pick something, I know something I'm going to think of something better.
Sure, yeah.
I'm going to have to come back to that one.
That's a good one.
Because I'm thinking about various races, historic races.
Of course, it comes back to cars, but I guess.
But observe.
But then you would know things like the JFK assassination.
You would know.
You can observe.
You can't tell anybody.
You can't change it.
But then from your observation point, you would know more than maybe somebody else at that particular event.
And then you can't do anything about it.
Can you talk to other people about it?
Can you come back here and say, well, I know what the JFK files say?
I'm going to say moon landing.
Because I think what a pivotal worldwide event.
Because if you go much further back than that, we have trouble making events that are worldwide.
And the other problem is that's a time period in which literally it was one of those things
where the whole world stopped and watched this thing.
And that is so foreign to us now.
We don't even all stop and watch the same thing as a country, let alone the world.
The moon landing.
What a pivotal thing.
That's the first one I can answer with, but there may be others.
86 says hello from Australia.
Thank you very much for tuning in for watching.
We really appreciate it.
That is awesome.
I'm going to have to keep thinking about it.
You're going to come back.
You're going to come back to that.
I know you are.
Austin, you're asking other writing questions.
You're asking about the audio version of paper, father.
It was supposed to be done this year.
And then we bought a company.
That's what happened there.
So it is not done.
It is not done.
Look, I'll tell you, look, I will publicly call my shot right now, okay?
I am almost done with the audio recording, which means that the editing is next.
I am like 80% done with the audio recording.
Good for you.
That's good.
So I'm proud of that.
It's been a fight.
But then the editing of it comes next to then do the release.
So what I am intending now since I'm not going to make Christmas, I'm shooting for Father's
Day 2025 as a release for that.
I will keep you informed.
I am working on it.
I'm working on the novel behind this one.
I have the idea for the one past that.
I mean, seriously, I just need to sit and write, which I have plenty of time to do.
So they're happening really quickly, but I'll get there.
Yeah.
Let's talk about watches.
Jason Lann has a question for me.
Am I interested in Japanese watches?
Yes, I am.
Specifically, Japanese movements.
And I like that movement.
Todd just tuned out.
Can you tell?
I'm having water.
He just zoned out.
I like watches that do spec Japanese movements in them because they are very accurate and reliable.
But of course, Swiss movements are the gold standard.
They're the Swiss standard.
But you know what I'm really interested in is the Grand Saco.
I like Saco watches, but the Grand Saco is really for a different level.
I mean, they are expensive.
But Grand Saco, when you see one of those, that is a conversation piece that really is a different
level of being into watches and movements and the construction.
It's so fascinating to me because you have a mechanical device,
measuring the minutes and seconds of your life.
That just, it still blows me away.
So for an awesome movement, yeah, Grand Saco watches are really cool.
Look those up.
There's a question here.
Derek Miller is asking, who's our favorite rapper?
And I am quickly out of my depth here, but I will give you two.
One is young MC.
That's old school stuff from the 90s.
But I like almost everything he did.
That is super easy-going rap by modern standards.
But I really like young MC.
And then you know what?
I actually like Eminem a lot.
I like Eminem because he has a tendency to do something I don't see a lot of the wise.
And that is he breaks words by syllables to find rhymes.
So he will cut a word in half at a syllable because he can rhyme it to the end of the next line
that is the end of a word.
And he's also super fast.
I find his, I know this sounds weird, his sentence structure to be fascinating.
And I like a lot of his songs, so I'm going to go with those two.
I was going to get a skilo.
We're all thinking that right now.
Anyway, yeah.
Oh yeah, we've had fun with that for sure.
I'm going way back.
And I'm going to say run DMC because I grew up with run DMC.
Sure.
And it's not that they were the best rappers ever.
It was that they were so pioneering.
And I love that about those guys.
But of course, iced tea.
Tonemoke, two short, Gucci crew, two left crew.
That era.
That's very funny.
That was really funny.
Yeah, that's very funny.
Listen to everything.
But young MC is really good.
I thought it was really good.
But he was fast too.
Yeah.
Ice tea for me, like the original OG.
Yeah.
Before you decided to be an actor.
Yeah, again.
Very funny, very funny.
Ted's asking who does the drone work a little bit of everybody.
I think I have the three of us.
Chance and Paul and I.
I probably do the majority even though Paul seconds that quickly after.
But on our recent Sierra trip, we had Jordan Sheifer with us.
And Jordan's an awesome drone pilot.
That allowed Paul and I to both be in the car the whole time.
Chance was shooting all the on the ground stuff.
Jordan was doing all the drone whenever we were stopped.
And that's some great drone work.
He's a heck of a pilot.
So that's who does it most of the time.
But it is.
I mean, frankly, we're all hands on deck all the time.
So it's a little bit of everybody.
Ray Lee's got a question for us.
Saying a lot of people work at jobs because they are good at it.
But they are not passionate about it.
If you met anyone like that as an industrial designer or a film editor,
I have.
And as we've talked about industrial design,
it is the design of everyday objects.
It can be as amazing as the interior of a custom jet or a yacht
or as mundane as a toothbrush or any product in between.
But as an industrial designer, your job is to design the product
for your client to pull the most dollars out of that category,
to beat all the other products in that category.
But there's so many times that people get bogged down in what they're doing
because they lose sight of that because just another electronic product,
how is that going to change the world?
How is that going to change my life?
I've got a number of different iterations that any one of them would sell fine
because of the name.
It used to be Blackberry.
All the Blackberries would sell just fine.
An iPhone.
It's minimal industrial design.
And it's now more about the UX design than industrial design necessarily.
But there's plenty of designers who get bogged down, especially in the car industry.
I know this is not the car podcast, but if you're talking about the door card
for three months or a trim piece and you lose sight of the overall vision
about what that product is designed to do,
that's why I do like architecture so much and because interactive spaces change people's thinking.
It kind of gets you out of your funk, your daily life, how you view things,
and architects that create spaces or products certainly, it can have that effect.
There's been so many stand out furniture designers that have created products
and it's so limited edition.
Ross Lovegrove and so many others.
There's a lot of those named industrial designers.
And they're creating individual products, some want to do products that are in mass.
Ease Bayhar did that for a long time.
I heard an interesting thing about Ease Bayhar.
He was an arts center graduate and when he was in eighth term,
he hired a marketing firm before he even graduated to start marketing him as a designer
before he had done any actual projects for clients.
Wow, that's the kind of abilities.
I can't verify that, but I know there's some truth to it.
But then he was suddenly a name designer and any big project that he had his name attached to.
Well, it wasn't that the design was so amazing.
He had the vision and he's executing.
So that's what happens to a lot of big time artists.
They're not the ones actually producing the art.
They are giving Frank Erie, they're giving the crumpled up paper
for the next museum of some sort somewhere on the planet.
He has his team executes.
So you set the vision and then that helps keep things fresh.
But of course going to companies and saying, hey, I want to do this product for you.
I know I can change your sales.
We can do something and change the perception of your company.
That's what keeps designers fresh.
Dak has got a super chat.
Thank you so much for that.
He said he's going to write him with a card of eight soon.
We hope that you do.
Your question is, favorite or several, several family-friendly podcasts.
Honestly, I don't listen to that many.
I listen to car ones, but I listen to a couple of ones that cover Hollywood.
And they're family-friendly, but you've got to want to cover Hollywood.
So that's the question mark there.
There is a funny one about Hollywood called Martini shot.
There are only about 10 minutes long and it's a former writer of cheers.
He started his career as a writer on cheers in his 20s and now he's in his 60s
and he's written all kinds of TV shows.
So he's had all kinds of writing experiences.
It's family-friendly.
It's always self-deprecating.
And they're only about 10 minutes long.
So that's an easily accessible Hollywood one.
I listen to other ones that are more intense in the business.
So that's not really a thing.
There is a comedian named Justin Nickerson.
And I just discovered he has a podcast called Don't Make Me Come Back There.
And I candidly find it a bit hit or miss.
But it's he and his wife and their family-friendly.
And that can be fun if that's your thing.
There are a lot of comedy podcasts but of course they vary
in their family-friendlyness.
I don't listen to a ton.
So I can't help you a lot, but I appreciate you asking.
Well, good.
Questions on here.
Yeah, there's tons.
I'm trying to make sure that I don't miss anything on here.
Oh, we will.
But it's good anyway.
If we do, please let us know.
Let's see.
Anthony G is all in for the pay-to-play attitude
but despises paying for parking.
The park in front of a restaurant the other day
and street parking was $43 whole hours.
Thankfully weren't paid.
Yeah.
Pay-to-play attitude.
That's all of us driving fast.
And maybe getting pulled over.
Jorge is calling me out and saying,
why would you not want to ride on other people's intellectual property?
Isn't that the way money gets made?
Jorge lend me switch my answer round.
You want to get hired to ride on somebody else's intellectual property.
You want to get hired to ride Indiana Jones and Star Wars and Marvel.
You want to get hired for that.
But if the question is, I'm riding a novel and it's yours.
You don't want to write somebody else's property
because if it becomes a hit, they're going to come looking to you
for why you don't have the rights to have it.
But getting hired to ride on somebody else's thing.
That's where the money is and you got hired and it's great.
Ben Harto asks our favorite non-car experience
that has resulted from HOD ownership.
It's certainly meeting people.
I have really decided this is a people business
that just it happens to use cars.
But it's a people business.
And I think back over the course of the year
and the people that we have met that we would have otherwise never come in contact with
has been amazing.
And where that leads, conversations, and connections and relationships
that was definitely a really great side benefit.
I mean, I kind of knew that we'd meet people,
but the relationships and like I said,
just amazing cool people and the like-mindedness.
That was pretty awesome.
There are so many questions I'm scrolling back and forth here,
but it's such good stuff.
A favorite national park to visit from Isaiah Smith.
Did you answer that already?
I did not, no.
I don't know, go for it.
A favorite national park is...
Arches is in a national park.
Yeah, it is.
State, right?
No, it's a national park.
That's a national park.
Arches is my way up there.
Arches is really good.
Zion's way up there.
Zion's good, yeah.
Hope you're going to list all the ones in Utah.
All the ones in Utah.
You know what?
Teton is amazing and Glacier is fantastic.
That's good.
Those are both really good.
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Casa Migos Tequila, 40% alcohol by volume.
Andrew M.
Hasn't hit a live podcast in Sips of 500.
Andrew, thank you for jumping back on.
Really appreciate it.
Thank you.
Colin Cutler is asking behind the scenes
what gear software camera tech has transformed
the way you guys film now versus back in the day.
Colin Cars.
You're seriously.
It has completely changed.
I'll go this far.
When we started this show,
all of the outside the car stuff was shot on a camera
that had to go on our shoulder that we had to rent
for hundreds of dollars a day.
Because it was a big shoulder-mounted camera
and getting the data off the camera
and actually dealing with it was a pain.
There were no GoPro.
I mean, there was like a GoPro 1,
which was like a potato camera that was just all fuzz.
So you couldn't use that.
So we had a camera with a small mini-dv tape in it.
Mounted in the car to get our in-car stuff.
That was what we used.
And it was all pretty marginal.
And then we went to a lot of very heavy support gear,
big jibs, big tripods,
because the gear was all big.
The coolest thing that's happened over the course of the show
and Paul was a real pioneer in helping me see this
is that the quality that we could shoot on,
we could go with smaller and smaller gear,
which was lighter and easier to carry and easier to travel with.
And the end result, YouTube, end result,
looked pretty similar in quality.
Now, I'm a geek and I want to have the camera
with the best sensor in the best lenses.
But ultimately the way most people are watching it,
it kind of doesn't matter, especially when people
are just shooting it now with their phone.
So the fact is, we use everything from iPhones to GoPro's
to DJI stuff, to whatever, to big cameras with nice lenses.
We use it all.
But even our big camera with nice lenses
is essentially a mirrorless that weighs two, three pounds.
We used to have a DSLR that weighed four or five.
Even the mirrorless is half of that weight.
Inside Ali, the first 911, the 67 911.
We had a few DSLR mounted.
Yeah.
Yeah, the very first one.
Yeah, for sure.
It was mounted.
This huge DSLR was in our face.
With a big old, it was a 5D.
It was an old Canon 5D with a big old super wide lens on it.
It's amazing how much it's all gotten lighter
and that's the thing I like about it the most.
We have a lot of drinks questions.
Anthony G asks, if single malt is worth it,
what's better a good blend or a cheap single malt?
I'd go with a good blend rather than a cheap single malt
because if you're gonna do a single malt,
get a really good expensive single malt.
Favorite craft beer from a Utah brewery,
neither of us are beer drinkers.
I worked for Budweiser and I just decided.
I know that's not the beer standard,
but I have tried IPAs.
I wasn't to have a license for a while,
but I just decided whiskey wine is for me.
And let's see, SMG MP7A1 says,
I'm a whiskey man, you're right.
Are there any cocktails that I gravitate to whiskey
or otherwise definitely gin and tonic with Hendrix gin?
I like that in the summer.
Nice refreshing drink with a slice of lime
and Anthony G, you're right.
I am, I like old fashions.
That's nice.
I'm trying to cover the drinks.
I love it. I love it.
And Derek Miller has a question for you.
What is Todd?
What is the best percent of cocoa in chocolate?
Oh, also for a non alcoholic drink.
Oh, come on.
I just have soda or water.
I'm not a, well, I don't get fancy.
I rarely even have hot chocolate.
But anyway, Edgar, I just wanted to acknowledge your comment
here. Thank you, man.
You said, you think we deserve so much more traffic
than we get every hour of your video shows hours of work.
You're right. Every video is hours and hours of work.
I'm trying consistently to make it more efficient.
But thank you for acknowledging that.
I really appreciate it.
Tell a friend about our, especially our road trip films
because we love those so much.
People seem to like them.
So thank you for that.
This live watch discussion.
Game Bear is asking if I've heard of studio underdog
and wasn't my take.
Yes, my location is set to United States.
What is studio underdog?
I'm just seeing the movement.
Okay.
Okay.
Oh, classic styling.
Some odd color choices.
But I, I think they're pretty cool.
See, I like the classic timeless look.
More of a vintage kind of a look.
But the modern watches that are out there,
I do appreciate a lot of them.
I had another question about watches.
And I forget who asked.
My apologies.
It was my favorite guilty pleasure watch.
I'm going to find who that is.
Andrew has got that question for you.
Go for it.
Andrew, thank you.
It is UBLO, H-U-B-L-O-T UBLO.
And they're apparently really just designed
for footballers in England, apparently,
because if you're a wealthy footballer,
you just buy an UBLO or a Brightling, or a Panerai,
or all the brands that we've all heard of.
But the UBLOs are really cool
with the Unico movement,
and the ceramics that they're doing
is really leading edge from a material standpoint.
All white noise.
I got into materials when I was doing furniture design
because that's what differentiates materials.
And what can you do with cool carbon fiber
or different stainless materials?
And so that's what it is in watches.
And yeah, I like this studio underdog watches.
This is what I'm pretty cool here.
Devin Bain is asking, this is it.
This is the end.
What's our last meal?
Oh my gosh.
In a vague sense, I'll go really good barbecue
in a specific sense.
I will go, there's a really good steak dish
from a place we know down here,
close by called Midway Mercantile.
I'm gonna call them out.
Their steak with the vegetable stack beside it is...
It's superb every time I have it.
Yeah.
Here's a thing.
We're in Park City where there's a lot of really nice steak restaurants
and this restaurant just kills them all in my opinion.
But there are a few...
There's a barbecue place down there in the same area
that is actually run out of a food truck
and so the best barbecue I've ever had in my life.
I'd happily have that.
It's like last meal food truck.
Let's do that.
That's fine.
It's done.
It's Texan speaking here.
This is me, there it is.
Everyone.
I've got to have a nice, flaky piece of white fish,
usually halibut.
I love halibut with the curry sauce
or the panko crumbs.
A really nice Sauvignon Blanc with jasmine rice.
Ah yeah, that's really good.
Or probably Italian food.
You know, like all the great Italian foods.
Carbonara and lasagna and all the great Italian stuff.
Yeah.
Andrew M. is asking favorite guilty pleasure book or movie.
I mean, you know, I've said this before and that is
I have a saucepot because it struck me so much as a kid
for the very terrible movie condor man.
It's a terrible movie.
Condor man.
But I have a saucepot for that one.
I don't watch it like regularly by any means.
But I do really like that.
And then you know what?
I just showed my son one last night
that is not necessarily a great movie
but it's fun every time I watch it.
We just watch true lies.
So good.
You've never seen true lies.
It is a lot of fun.
And I definitely recommend it.
That's one I'd watch anytime.
Did you tell me they were doing a sequel to that?
They aren't officially.
That would be one to do a sequel to.
Well, here's the thing.
Netflix did a show called Fubar.
Which is kind of a sequel but not really.
It gets really talking about IP.
It gets really close to the idea
as if like 20 years have passed.
But I mean Arnold's kind of experience.
Arnold's in it.
Arnold's in it.
It's just the characters have been a little bit tweaked.
But anyway.
Okay.
Let's see.
Oh man.
Good questions here.
I like how everybody's talking about drinks now.
Of course.
You're probably having drinks while you're watching us.
This is awesome.
Or AM's as best bourbon summer drink is a paper plane.
Unless he changes his mind.
I hope you're having one right now.
That's pretty awesome.
Mandy's asking favorite Simpson's character.
That's hard.
That's hard.
That's really hard.
But it's fun.
You know what?
I loved Appu.
Appu was amazing.
Go away.
Please come back.
He's one of my all-time favorite Simpson's lines.
Appu was a great now of granted.
He's not okay anymore.
So they don't have him anymore.
So he's he was an all-time favorite.
Lisa for all of our observations.
Lisa's amazing.
And then you gotta say Ralph.
I'm special.
I mean, that's just he's he's just the kid in the corner that just throws out something
that nobody's expecting.
So I thoroughly enjoy that as well.
Anthony G tracks daily crush whiskey coffee or water.
That is easy.
See whiskey and coffee both use water so I can get my water intake drinking those.
So we'll crush water.
We don't need water.
I mean, well, we need it.
Yeah.
We have some more water.
Coffee is the daily and whiskey is track.
The special use and water.
Yeah.
We don't need water.
We got whiskey and coffee.
Let's see.
What is a popular hobby that you just think is boring?
Look, the low-hanging fruit that we've talked about before is
we drive instead of playing golf.
Right.
And golf is just a thing.
And then I'm sure it's a thing where you are, but it is a plague in Park City.
Everybody's talking pickleball.
I admit I've never played it, but I don't.
This is how it's weird.
It feels cult-ish.
You've got the people that have never played pickleball that are fine with it
and the people that have played once and now they don't want to do anything else.
And I got to be honest, that kind of keeps me away.
I'm kind of like, that's a little bit scary.
I don't know.
Everybody that plays pickleball does nothing else ever.
I'm sure it's very fun, but it feels a little like a cult to me.
Yeah.
Oh, man.
Anthony G is diehard at Christmas movie.
Of course.
Yes.
Of course it is.
Let's see.
Richard is asking, what is the best trait of mine and my wife, Kate, that we're trying to instill
in our son, Bodhi?
Oh, gosh.
Many.
Many of them.
I would say patience and a tendency to not overreact.
That would be, I mean, because my wife and I are constantly learning both of those things.
But just not a lack of instant reaction.
And he's 14 going on 15.
I mean, he's just a ball of instant reaction.
You know what I mean?
He's just this constant frenetic reality.
But I think that would be something that I hope over time he is able to kind of take
the world in and then figure out a response.
Crash tests asked for our favorite on the go snack when traveling.
Fig newtons or strawberry newtons.
I love fig newtons.
They're my favorite.
And what languages do we comprehend or speak question from Purdue?
I actually took the Rosetta Stone course about 10 years ago because I was going to Italy.
And I really got into it.
And I started to speak it kind of okay.
It was like airplane conversation because I met an Italian woman on the airplane.
And she and I started to speak a little bit and she was encouraging me.
And I was trying to pronounce and I was consulting my dictionary.
And it was really fun.
I felt like, you know, I kind of was getting there.
And then of course I didn't practice it.
I didn't keep up with it.
But Italian is something that I really like.
German is tough.
Every time we go, we find new passwords.
Every time.
Things that we have three words for is one massive word for them.
It's a lost luggage is what I got to get the photo.
Lost luggage is my favorite thing ever.
Oh my gosh.
It's unbelievable.
Yeah.
Really crazy.
Very, very good says the quality.
He appreciates the quality of our sound imaging.
Is it accidental?
Honestly, very, very good.
There are problems with every single thing we post that I would like to fix.
Having said that, nothing in what we post is accidental.
Yes.
Because we were very hard on it.
What we actually do is we actually do pan the sound.
If the car is coming in on the right side of the screen and leaves left,
I want that sound to go out to the left and vice versa.
That is something that we do in post.
We do chase it.
I am in no way claiming that our stuff goes out perfect.
Every single time something of ours goes out,
I could tell you 10 or 15 things in a perfect world.
I would fix them.
But I also try to focus on the things we did right.
But it's a lot of effort goes in.
Thank you for recognizing that.
You said you typically put on headphones because you appreciate our sound quality.
Thank you because much work goes into it.
Chance helps me mix it and it's a lot of work.
He can tell you but we work hard on it.
Daniel N has been getting into Scandinavian home and interior design.
Any recommendations of sites or books or inspiration to learn more or buy products that are not IKEA?
Yes.
I have suggestions.
So you can type into any browser.
Scandi rustic books.
Scandi rustic is kind of a thing.
Actually, my sister is really into Scandi rustic.
And she and her husband have really done a great job with their home.
But two book companies.
Publishers actually that should have some books.
I can't verify how many they have.
But great titles from one publisher called Asseline.
ASSOULIN.COM.
And also Taschen.
Great for furniture.
T-A-S-C-H-E-N.
Taschen the publisher.
They've got some amazing books on furniture collections and interior design.
Go browse both of those websites and I think they'll be inspired.
Andrew M. said, is there a European country you haven't hit that you want to do an international road trip film?
Andrew, in my perfect world, we do the definitive European road trip film.
We start at one end of Europe and we do the whole thing.
It's probably not going to happen.
But having said that, I really want to drive through Spain.
I very much want to drive through Italy.
I really want to do Switzerland.
Switzerland top three.
Sure.
Those are the top three in my life that I'd love to drive through.
We'll see which ones we get to drive through and we get to do a film about.
Of course, I would love to do it and do a cool film so we'll see if we can.
Let's see.
Richard's got another question about design.
Paul, you get to spend one week learning from an artist or designer.
I admire and respect.
Who is it and what would I want to learn from him?
Wow.
Richard, with the very deep questions.
I haven't even answered your other question about the event.
What event?
The tie machine one, yeah.
The tie machine event.
All right.
I'm going to have to think about that one.
Jason Lin has a question about Sundance.
If you, if you, if you, if you know, go, go, go.
I'll, I'll jump.
Jason Lin says he lives in Salt Lake City.
He's asking if we've ever been to the Sundance Film Festival.
Is it worth it for the average movie lover who lives in Salt Lake City?
If you live here, absolutely, please come up.
I hope that it stays in Park City.
We'll see if it does.
But here's the thing about Sundance.
It's, it's over the top and absurd.
It's, it's very expensive to go and all this kind of stuff.
But here is the special thing about Sundance.
When you go to Sundance and you sit in the crowd
and you sit there in a movie that's about to start,
you will have an experience.
And this happens to some other film festivals.
But I've never experienced it more than Sundance.
You're sitting there and the vibe of the audience is
they so want this movie to be great.
Not okay.
Not I'm just here because I had nothing else to do.
They want it to be great.
And that is a special moment.
I'm a geeky anyway, but going to a movie with a full theater
is a fun experience anyway.
It's one of the last communal experiences that we have.
And I find that really cool.
Having said that, you go to the average movie theater
with the average crowd and somebody's on their phone
and that baby's crying and this person doesn't really want to be here
and that person's having a conversation
with their spouse like they're at home.
Okay.
That doesn't happen at Sundance.
Everybody's quiet, attentive, listening,
and they so want this movie to be great.
Some of them aren't.
But that movie-going experience is very special.
So if you find one that interests you, like the right up,
you're like, that sounds really cool.
Go to that movie.
Even if it's just one, I think you'll enjoy it.
Favorite Thanksgiving food.
Mashed potatoes.
Of course.
All right.
Let's see.
I've got Richard, your answer for designer.
It's two people.
Patricia Irkeola.
I think that's how you pronounce her last name.
She is a stark attack.
But she has done a lot of furniture design
and the second person is Jasper Morrison.
They both have their own websites.
And they've done a lot of different kinds of products
and furniture.
They're very wide-ranging and very diverse in the kinds of products
they have designed from spaces to products,
interiors.
They've kind of touched it all and how you move through a space.
And then the objects that you interact with in that space.
And that is really interesting to me
to get more of that interaction.
Of course, car design.
I mean, I won't say car design because this is a
non-car podcast.
But, whatever.
Giorgetto Svichara.
I mean, the master, of course.
I would love to go back in time and sit over his shoulder
and be involved in the conversations about that.
And I'm trying to think Richard of your event.
It would probably...
Moonlighting's up there.
That's a really good one.
The world coming together is a part of that that intrigues me.
It's so good.
And everybody just being so jaw-dropped that
humankind did that.
It's beyond countries.
I don't know.
It's a pivotal moment in my mind.
Yes.
And it's not a disaster.
It's not something that...
Yes.
Especially if you can't do anything about it.
I don't necessarily want to see a disaster more.
But anyway.
Colin Cutler is asking me my top movies of 2024.
They stand out either good or bad.
I'm going to go with three really good ones that I've seen.
Doom 2 is excellent.
I'm a huge fan of Denise O'Neil, the filmmaker.
He's an incredible filmmaker.
I really like Doom 2.
Wolverine Deadpool.
Come on.
That's just...
That is the right ridiculous action movie for our time.
It's been so much time winking at the audience.
I think we've all seen so many superhero movies now
that we kind of want to be in on the joke.
And Ryan Reynolds kills that role.
Hugh Jackman's great as Wolverine.
That's really fun.
And then I recently saw...
I wanted to see it.
I just now got the chance to.
And it was awesome.
The Wild Robot.
If you haven't seen it.
It is good for kids.
It is great for adults.
It's one of those animated movies that plays on multiple levels.
And it feels different than Disney Pixar in a good way.
It's not a perfect movie.
But it is a tear jerker, phenomenal film.
So Wild Robot as well.
There's so many...
It's great stuff.
I love it.
Existential and philosophical questions.
This is really good.
Tattoos are piercings that everybody doesn't know about.
No.
You know, I thought about getting a tattoo after my mom passed.
But I just realized that she...
Her memories were tattooed on my heart.
And I didn't need a physical tattoo.
Very nice.
She was always in my heart.
Daniel asks if I have any plans for another book.
I mentioned this at the top of the podcast.
So I did this one.
Some people have wanted to sequel on this.
But as I mentioned before,
I could tell you where the story goes.
I've got two other ideas beyond it.
But I want to write a different storyline, a totally different world.
So I'm going from here to a sci-fi novel.
And then I have an idea beyond that.
That's nothing like the sci-fi novel.
So I'm about 30% into a sci-fi novel that's completely different than paper father.
So that will be the next one.
And then I'll tell you about the one after that.
Once I get the current one finished.
And there's the whole audio book of that one.
So, you know, I get nothing but time.
It's going to be great.
Aaron G is asking about this big print on the wall behind us.
We're going to get it.
Aaron G sent us an email.
This is actually on a sheet of aluminum that is standing off the wall.
So it's not paper.
It's printed on aluminum.
So it's all color fast.
I've been told that the print will last for 250 years.
So it's going to be color fast for a long time.
Somebody's going to have it.
So you know.
Anthony Goddard is,
I heard a Christmas movie.
Yes.
I feel like we get that every year.
Yes.
I answer that.
Yes.
It is absolutely a Christmas movie.
There is no question.
I don't even know why we're talking about it.
Also, Devon, who I know is a barbecue guy said,
what is my barbecue preference and why are beef ribs?
Heresy.
I agree.
I agree.
Pork ribs for the win.
Absolutely.
Yes.
Okay.
Let's see.
Oh my gosh.
Other motor vehicles we enjoy from Angel Rivera.
Other motor vehicles.
Oats are kind of cool.
Flains are cooler.
I'm not a pilot.
He was a pilot.
He enjoyed going with him.
Yeah.
Got a friend in town who is a Sirus aircraft owner.
And he's been offering to take me up.
And I'd really like to go.
We just haven't had time.
So.
Okay, Chad.
Today, you're going to drive the all-electric Toyota Beasy.
But my electric vehicle phobia.
I'm not ready, Dr. Ross.
I believe in you.
Oh my gosh.
Oh my gosh.
We're inside it.
Try to take deep breaths.
Okay.
The ventilated seats.
They're touching me.
I can do this, Chad.
Drive the car.
How do you feel, Chad?
I feel cured.
Woohoo.
I'm doing it.
I'm doing it.
The all-electric Beasy, one drive can change your mind.
Toyota, let's go places.
They were toy growing up.
I mean, hot wheels, matchbox.
Sure.
Sure.
Transformers.
GI Joe.
GI Joe, yep.
For sure, yep.
What else?
My friend had the aircraft carrier.
L.T. Arnold had the aircraft carrier that he got for Christmas.
I had the jet.
I had the F-14.
I had the F-14.
I would swim with it and push it under water because that was the closest I could get to
it flying.
That's so cool.
That was really cool, yeah.
He had the hole.
Anyway, yeah.
Carrier in his room was so jealous.
Have we thought about using kickstarter or physical copies of our road trip films for more
cinematic pieces?
The physical copies we did for a while.
As you can see, we did them for a while.
And it's most of the software that existed to allow you to make blue rays at home has
not been continued.
So that's died.
It's made it much harder to actually author these like we author them ourselves.
And the take rate for people wanting physical media has steadily decreased.
So it's really hard to justify the effort and the cost to get them made.
I hate to say that because I'm a guy that really, really likes blue rays.
But that is the problem.
Kickstarter.
We did kickstarter years and years and years ago did not go well.
We have Patreon and we greatly appreciate those folks and they're all involved on our
Discord.
So thank you guys for that.
That's the best way to support us if you'd like to support us.
We don't do kickstarter beyond that because it just, it hasn't worked for us.
So it's not something we've done.
But I love doing these big road trip films and the more people you can encourage to watch
them, we would appreciate it.
Daniel N.
Talking about products on, yes, I worked for Kawasaki Motors in Irvine, California.
And it was all of their products, including watercraft.
And I did design work for the Kawasaki Ultra 150 that late 90s to mid 2000s, Ultra 150
design.
I worked a lot on that.
That definitely dominated my time.
And what was so crazy is this cool new thing with a roll cage that was like a single-seat
off-roader.
There's an ATV with a roll cage and then they decided to do a tandem in line design.
I worked a lot on those and those have morphed into all the razors and plurus off-roaders
that we see now.
But it was the very beginning of that that I worked on.
Nothing.
It didn't go anywhere.
They were just sketches.
But you know, the legal department was trying to come to terms with, oh, people are going
to do crazier things with these even more capable vehicles off-road.
And so then we go to Moa.
Of course, we see them everywhere.
Like, I was there, I helped craft the prototype for the originals, you know, the Kawasaki version
of that.
And of course, now they've got them all.
Really crazy to see.
Rich Cracknell, if we had the chance, would we go to low-earth orbit, the moon or tomorrow
to Mars?
Rich, I am a space geek.
I would totally do low-earth orbit and possibly Mars.
I would go to the space station, absolutely.
I don't want to be there half a year because the spaceship broke.
I don't want to do that.
I'd like to go up, spend a day or two come down.
That sounds about right to me.
Maybe the moon, Mars is right out.
That is, people keep talking to Mars and say, oh, yeah, we're going to move to Mars.
No, we are not.
Okay, that is an environment you did not want to be in.
But I am fascinated by the moon, pardon me.
Space is one of those things I would love to say I did and be done.
Like, I'd like to do it once because I think the experience, because I also think, again,
you listen to all the guys that were in the Apollo space program and the way they speak
about being in space or astronauts that have spent time in the space station.
It shifts your perspective of being human, having a life, breathing oxygen, being on
this earth.
It is a total warp of perspective and I think that would be fantastic.
I am switching back to Instagram questions.
See, Petrol had a 2003, asks if we had to live in a state other than either Utah or
a state I've already visited as part of every driver, which is most of them, which one
would it be?
That's really tough because we've gone through almost all of the 48, the lower 48 states.
I think I only have nine left on my list.
All of the 50 states.
Wow.
We got close.
Like eight or nine.
I mean, personally, like all the states that I've ever been to.
That's incredible.
Good for you.
Hit a Y.
Lask, of course.
Colorado, maybe, but I'm definitely a West Coast kind of a guy.
Texas, there's elements of Texas that really intrigue me like buckies.
It's not Texas that intrigues you.
It's just buckies.
That's the thing.
You just got to embrace the fact that most of them are.
I get it.
I understand.
They have circuit.
We're okay with it.
Yeah.
They have a lot of Texas fangs here.
Yeah.
Texas could be interesting, maybe.
Yeah.
We'll see.
Oh.
Devin, I appreciate your concern about compression and streaming.
I mean, the thing that most people don't realize when they're watching our films or any
others.
The truth is, if you have an HD, not 4K, a high definition, which is half the resolution
of 4K.
I'm going to go geek you for a second.
Half the resolution of 4K.
You can.
It's your white noise.
These blue rays that are HD have better image quality than 4K you're seeing streaming
in most cases, especially on YouTube.
I would love to have that kind of quality, but the truth is the streaming platforms don't
do it.
Vimeo is a little better than YouTube, but how many people do I think it's going to
matter for?
It's hard to make that quantifiable, so that's one of the things we don't do, but I recognize
it.
I'm aware.
I just kind of bite my tongue and move on.
Hmm.
I'm going to have to look up these watches, Freedom Band.
Thank you for sending.
I know the glass chute, but the Lange one, meanwhile, you should talk about your favorite
plane.
I should talk about my favorite plane from Daniel N is asking Todd, what is your favorite
plane?
I mean, look, SR-71's on the list for sure.
I love that one.
That's amazing.
Concorde is up there.
Those are two of my very favorites of all time.
P-51 Mustang has got to be on the list.
That plane's amazing.
I love that thing.
So cool, but everybody has a P-51.
Yeah, everyone's got a P-47.
Yeah, so that's an inside joke.
Sorry.
Nobody has.
Yeah, we met somebody once who said that very wealthy, and they said that with a straight
face.
Everybody has P-51.
Everybody has P-51.
So we bought a P-47.
There's only 11 of them.
Yeah, so there's that.
No, P-51's are fantastic.
It's so super expensive, but they're really awesome.
The serious aircraft, if you have a personal aircraft, are really, really cool.
I'm a big fan of those as well in personal stuff, but I think that's kind of the high points.
And let's see.
I'm looking up.
Glass sheet.
A regional one.
Andrew is asking how to support what we do.
The best way to support us is to watch our videos ASAP.
Yes.
Watch it, but then 48 hours have been hitting a platform, and encourage friends you know
that might like them to watch them, especially if it's a road trip film.
Just say, hey, to your buddy, I know you like Grand Tour Top Gear, whatever.
I mean, let's be honest, we're striving to be at that level, and I think we get somewhat
close.
So if you've got friends that like that and kind of wonder what's out there, please encourage
them to watch it and encourage them to, here's the thing.
Encourage them to sit and watch it, not put it on in the background and kind of pay attention
or scroll through things like sit there like they're going to watch a movie, because I know
this is not the way we watch YouTube, but that is the way we create our stuff.
It's intended for you to sit there with a lovely beverage and watch and do nothing but
that for 20 minutes or a half hour or an hour or whatever.
So if you have the ability to do that, all of that helps us, and we appreciate it mightily.
Let's talk about watches that cost more than $30,000 of watch.
Must we?
We really should.
Yeah.
Uh-huh.
The Langen Sun watches are really, I like those, Freedom Van, those are pretty interesting,
but I cannot deny the Panamatic Laschutes.
Ah, it really does come because of their, they've both got superior movements.
Okay.
I think it does come down to the cleanliness of design.
I guess I'm all about the, well, see, Laschute is good.
They're very clean, but you know what, my leanings are more towards the Langen Sun watches.
I really, I think they appeal aesthetically to me more, and I like that 18-15 design.
I like, uh, I like their style quite a lot.
Langen Sun, uh, cars of Metal 77 called out the Bell X1 first plane to break the sound
barrier.
That's a cool plane.
I totally 100% agree with that, and that gets us into the X15 and a bunch of other stuff
that it was the actual cutting edge at that point.
There were so many crazy planes that were barely planes at that point.
So many cool things.
Got a Hill Air Force base here that, you know, when stuff comes over the house, yeah, yeah.
If you hear it, it wasn't intended for you.
If you're right, you'll never hear it otherwise.
Nope, not gonna happen.
Because once they've gone by, it's just, it splits the sky open.
It's just incredible.
So it's cool.
We did get to see, a few years ago, I saw the F-35s piloted by the female captain.
She leads the squadron here.
Amazing.
Those are crazy planes.
And she led the four planes that just real slow right over Park City, and I could see
it was just super cool.
Somehow you merge an F-22 and a harrier and you come up with the F-35, which is a ridiculous
thing to try to build.
Yeah.
Anyway.
Chuck Yeager, toughest man ever.
Yes.
Uh-huh.
I agree with that.
Let's see.
What else do we have in here?
Oh, Richard, you're asking about podcast 2000, buddy.
Can we get to 1000 first?
I just, I, thank you, man.
But my gosh.
I mean, look, will we reach 2000 in another decade?
I can't for the life of me say where we're gonna be podcasts wise in another decade.
I will say this when we reach podcast 1000 and there's, there's lots of announcements coming
up on that early and next year.
When we reach 1000, we're gonna make some small tweaks to the podcast.
It will still be the card bait.
It will still mostly be about cars, but we're gonna make some tweaks, and we're excited
about that.
We cannot believe we're at 9.50 at all.
It's absolutely astonishing to me.
9.50.
A conversation with somebody recently, we were telling them what we do.
And because I feel like now much more so than when we started, I feel like everybody
has a podcast.
There's so many more podcasts than when we started a decade ago.
And I mentioned in passing that we had a podcast, and they, and they, they had this whole
demeanour like, uh-huh.
That's nice.
Like everyone does.
And I mentioned we were in the like reaching podcast episode 9.50 and their entire headspace
change.
Like, wait, what?
Yeah.
Takes a while to get there.
Oh, you've been serious about this.
Yes.
Yes, we have been.
Mandy Combs asked for the best Chuck Norris joke I've ever heard.
I have two.
One's a meme.
The first is the joke.
Chuck Norris can cut a hot knife with butter.
All right.
Good.
Like it.
The second one shows Chuck in front of the great Egyptian pyramids visiting the sand castles
he built as a kid.
Awesome.
I love Chuck Norris jokes.
Well, favorite outdoor wildlife, I, you know, we see them around here.
I like elk a lot, but mousse are crazy.
They are massive.
Yeah.
And they, and they have this fantastic demeanor, which is very, I feel like it's very unique
among wildlife.
They aren't aggressive, but they also don't care.
Yeah.
They just have the, it's almost like the elephant mentality.
You don't want to mess with them.
They're not naturally aggressive, but you don't want to make them angry because they will hurt
you.
So they just have this.
I'm eating here.
I'm going to stay in here in the trail where you would like to bite and I'm going to eat.
And when I'm done, you can pass.
I just don't care, which is kind of fascinating to come up against because they're huge.
My dad is watching and he'll know this story he and, he and I and my sister went on a really
cool up close canoe trip with a guide.
And we were in the canoe and watching black bears on the shore bring salmon out of the
river and tear into them and we're 20 feet from these Alaska black bears.
Of course, yes, in Alaska and watching them rip into the fish and we're just far enough
and we can get away if we need to if they jump in start to come after the humans.
But we it was also a fishing trip and so we had fresh salmon because the guide brought
a Habachi.
Oh, wow.
And he grilled them right there and so we were having fresh salmon and the bears were having
fresh salmon and fresh salmon everybody.
It was so crazy.
It was cool.
Cars of metal says he's never seen me and Hugo Reeving in the same room.
I will take that as a compliment.
I will absolutely take that as a compliment.
He's a phenomenal actor.
I love his voice work.
He's really great.
He's in slow horses.
I've been getting into slow horses.
I've been getting into slow horses.
I've been getting into slow horses.
I've been getting into slow horses.
I've been getting into slow horses.
That's a surprising show that most people don't realize.
My sister got me into that.
It's a really good show.
And he's in the latest season of slow horses.
I was wondering like that guy looks familiar.
Absolutely.
I've seen him somewhere.
Yeah.
Crazy.
Mr. Anderson.
He had said that.
They have to work that in their somehow.
You would think they would, but he's such a good actor and he's been in more of the rings
and made it all.
The whole series is superb.
It's really good.
If you haven't seen that, that's actually based on a, we're back to writing.
It's based on a series of unloved novels.
This guy is a published author that wrote a bunch of slow horses novels.
It's one of those things where I say unloved.
He's been successful as an author and he's written a bunch of these books, but they never
really caught fire.
They had an audience, but they never really caught fire because they're the anti-James
bond books.
I'm a British author.
And now they have this Apple series where you have to kind of be concerned about Gary
Oldman.
I mean, Gary Oldman played Commissioner Gordon.
Yes.
You hit you and you do it.
You're going to watch slow horses on Apple TV.
You want to see, you get a picture of Gary Oldman from the Christopher Nolan Batman movies
and then jump immediately to watch him in slow horses and you'll think he's about to die.
He is so disheveled and overweight and awful looking and he nails this part.
It is the exact anti-James bond, but this TV series has made the novels a whole other
level of successful.
I love to hear that.
So that's really cool.
He was also in the Bruce Willis movie, Lee Ludalis Multipass.
Oh, yeah, of course.
Fifth element.
Fifth element.
He was in there.
Well, of course.
A long, long time ago.
Yeah.
He had some crazy movies.
He did.
Yes.
Best coffee brand and blend.
I'm currently into Lavazza Supercremor and get it on Amazon.
Sure.
It's a bunch of words I've never heard strong together.
I did discover Lavazza because they have a coffee shop inside the Palazzo in Vegas.
And there's also Ili and I like Ili a lot, but Lavazza is pretty darn good.
I have to have the medium roast because my machine that I got in January only takes medium
roasts and you can actually void the warranty if you get too dark of a roast because the
oil from the beans will clog up the grinder and void you warranty.
The ceramic bits in there won't, anyway.
There's problems I've never, ever heard of.
Yeah.
I have to be careful about the roast color of my bean blend.
This entire conversation is something I have never worried about or heard of until right
now.
So that's kind of amazing.
You know, all right.
Mandy is asking if we had to watch a show or film with a poor director with great acting
or something with a great director with mediocre acting what we pick.
You know, actually, I think, I think great performances can overcome a bad director in
most cases.
One of the rare exceptions, but you'll see proof of it, is the Star Wars movies.
George Lucas, big idea guy, created a good universe.
Watch his stuff.
He likes the acting style of the 20s and 30s, which feels really stilted and awful today.
So watch the first Star Wars movie, the original 1977 Star Wars movie.
He's clearly giving direction to everybody and Alex Guinness and Harrison Ford just don't
care.
They do their own thing and they do the best work in the film, okay?
And you go, you jump to when he did the first movie of the, the first movie of the second
trilogy, if you will.
And you have you and McGregor Natalie Portman and Liam Neeson.
Nobody's arguing that these are bad actors and they do some of their worst work ever because
he's directing them and trying to get them to act stilted.
And so when they step out on their own, they do their best works.
I do think that really good acting can elevate.
You can have the best director in the world, but if an actor gives a line and it feels fake
there's a little coming back from that unfortunately.
Anthony Zurg says Paul is the bachelor about town, which of my flea attracts more attention
from the ladies.
I can't decide if it's my Rossignol skis or my pivot bike.
I would like to think it's the bike.
You know, when you roll up and you've, you know, done some cool jumps and you're, you
know, rocking it.
Right.
That's art.
That's our typical birthday.
Oh, you're rocking a pivot.
Yes.
You do have a very cool bike.
I will say that the pivot bike is.
It's cool.
I'm hoping the ladies would like my pivot bike notice.
Notice the pivot.
Good Lord.
Thoughts on Sharknado.
I think Sharknado is a perfect, you could teach, I could teach a course on Sharknado.
Sharknado is the perfect example of why Hollywood is stupid and why it's awesome.
It is both.
The fact that there are seagulls to Sharknado.
This is what happens.
You have a stupid idea.
You get some D level actors that used to be famous.
It catches fire for its absurdity.
And then what do you think?
Not, well, that was lightning in a bottle.
We got a lot of money.
That's nice.
No, we should do six more.
The first one was bad.
So how, I mean, oh, they don't get better, okay?
When you do this, many sequels on a bad idea.
It just keeps getting worse.
You know, I actually know a producer who did a movie called Sandsharks because they saw
the success of Sharknado.
That sounds bad.
They did a movie called Sandsharks, which is exactly what you think it is somehow.
Sharks are traveling through sand and jumping up and killing people.
I don't understand it either, but that was at least successful enough to make it really bad.
That's part of the other guys.
Mark Wahlberg.
I just...
Will Ferrell.
They talk about that.
Sandsharks.
Mm-hmm.
What would be the syllabus in the Fast and Furious?
Oh, Devon, you're killing it.
I love it.
That would be an easy course to teach.
It would be a very easy course to teach because you have the first movie, which is at
most a...it's a cop entrapment movie.
That's what it is at best, if you give it like it's best version, just set in the world
of cars.
So is the second one, but worse.
The third one is essentially just a cultural appropriation movie.
Let's show you why drifting is cool because you don't even have the original people in
it.
Then the fourth one, somebody goes, what if we brought back the original cast and made
it a heist movie?
And now we're into, like, die hard on wheels.
There's a fantastic progression there.
I could totally teach this course.
Call it that.
I could retire.
Die hard on wheels.
I could teach that course.
Absolutely.
Yep.
Let's see.
Try not to miss stuff.
People are telling jokes on the live stream.
I love it.
It's fantastic.
It's great stuff.
Right.
It's great stuff.
So here's a question that gets personal and I don't know if you're going to be like
I thought so or no, I don't think so.
And it references to a question I saw earlier.
He said earlier and I think they actually removed the question, but I did see it.
They said, Todd, I was watching an old episode and wow, aging's been a problem, hasn't
it?
Yes it has.
Yes.
This is what I'm working with.
It wasn't great to begin with.
I had terrible skin in college when I was supposed to be at my best and it just hasn't
progressed.
I am aging for both me and my wife.
I have said this for years.
She is timeless and I am aging for both of us.
So there's that question.
But you also asked how old are we?
It's never really been discussed.
We don't hide it, but it's also not something we discuss a lot.
We're both 51.
So that's you right now.
I can tell you right now you're either going, wow, they're 51 or oh, that's not good
for 51.
Depending on your take, that's aging on the mother number.
It's all in your head.
It's well, here's a question.
How old do we act?
Well, but there's your actual age and then there's hopefully how old you act, which is,
but here's the problem.
I know plenty of guys in their 60s that act like they're 18 or 20 and I'm like, let's
stop it.
Stop it.
Put the vape down.
They drive like that.
Grow up.
Okay.
I've met that guy and then you meet the other person.
I was this person.
I was 17 and acted like I was 30 for a better and for worse.
That's just how it's always been.
Yeah.
Man.
Greg Evans, what authors inspire me?
I love Stephen King.
I love Stephen King because he keeps right with the exception of a couple of things.
He keeps writing new stuff.
He doesn't just do a series of books.
I mean, I love his Gunslinger series and that was very inspirational for me as a
young person learning to write.
I've read his on writing book, but I like the variety of kinds of things he's written.
A lot of people just think of him as a horror writer, but he does some of the best work
of making normal people, unremarkable people, the heroes of his books.
When you read stuff like a Jack Reacher novel and I'm not trying to pick on it, but it's
the reality.
He's a superhero in spite of the fact he's not and he does the exact opposite.
I really like that.
There are writers that crank out stuff at a constant level and I just think, wow, I
got to get after it.
So many times, I'm just like, wow, he wrote that too, huh?
So that's the thing that keeps me working on it so anyway.
I had that dream again.
My small business needs to hire, but I don't use LinkedIn and I hire wrong.
So then I'm doing IT and when I go to play the servers and they become sentient and they
won't let us access our network unless we pour their chain emails and means to more
and more and more people and then I wake up.
Don't let hiring nightmares ruin your dreams.
LinkedIn jobs new AI assistant finds and invites best fit candidates to apply so you can discover
talent you may have missed.
Post your job for free at LinkedIn.com slash quality.
Start hiring today with LinkedIn.
KASM stamps asked if we invest or speculate.
KASM does both, but more investing.
I am more of an investor, too, yes.
I haven't been lately, but I've been looking at a few things and yeah, I'm definitely
more of an investor, yep, yep.
Are either of us motorcycle riders at all, Joseph Fisher used to be, used to be, when
I had my Kawasaki design days, I would check out some bikes from the press fleet because
I could and I just decided it's not if but when something was going to happen and so
I traded two motorcycle helmets for a nasty couch and then I had a nasty couch and it served
me well.
You too could have a nasty couch.
It served me well for a little while until I could afford a different couch, but you
know what, yeah, I've just been into cars ever since and I have to admit cars were always
my thing.
Daniel is asking if we're Marvel fans, look, I have movie fans in general, Marvel completely
revolutionized for better and for worse.
How movies have been made in the last 10 or 15 years.
I think the first decade of Marvel up until they got to Avengers Endgame, I think that
is a good series, but I really think, and they were never going to do it because they
were making money, they should have stopped, okay?
Since then, what you're having now is major characters have died, the people that people
love have gone away.
Now you're trying to, I hate to say it, but kind of troll for characters.
We haven't really heard of and build them up.
They're struggling.
Sorry, what movie are we talking about?
Marvel.
Marvel.
Okay, just reading.
Yeah, I know, you've zoned out, it's fine.
I was zoning out.
It's fine.
I mean, Marvel's cool, I love Marvel.
So I really liked it up to Endgame.
I didn't like all those movies, but in general that kind of series, they should have just
gone out on a high and been like, we've done a revolutionary thing in the history of film
and we should stop now.
Now you see a new Marvel movie come up and you go, do I care?
Sometimes maybe, but in general, I think the audience does, too, they're like, I don't
know.
So anyway, we'll see where they go from there.
Holy moly, we are already well-pulsed debut-spoken word album is called Nasty Couch.
Years ago, our friend Nathan actually made a mock album cover for Paul's first album.
We should resurrect that because, yeah.
Are there Reacher movies?
There are not.
There's a Reacher TV series that's actually doing okay.
Now there was a Reacher 2 or 3 Reacher movie starring Tom Cruise, who is the exact opposite
of the description of the guy in the novel, which is why Alan Richardson, the behemoth guy,
that he is perfect because he exactly matches the thing there.
So there's been a successful series on Amazon, yeah, anyway.
Who is our favorite Avenger?
Batman.
Good night, everybody.
Good night, everybody.
Just kidding.
Just kidding.
It's funny.
It's funny.
That's very funny.
I do like that very much.
Iron Man, of course.
Iron Man's awesome.
And here's the thing.
I will say this.
Captain America, it late in the series.
Okay.
Captain America, when he's super boy scout, it's like, you know, have some reality in the world.
When he gets a little later in the series, I think he's really awesome.
As both of us have changed over the years, is there a car segment we have felt, we appreciate
more or or focus on more compared to our earlier days of reviews?
Say off-roading.
Say, doing more for by faring and off-roading, I appreciate it more, it wasn't something
I ever really was into, but with the availability of Moab nearby, not terrible.
Freedom van.
Hey, Todd.
Doug DeMiro will probably sell you his cayenne when he's done with the series.
I have to, and I am doing just fine.
Thank you very much.
We've got some cool stuff coming up with the Rubikayan, I can't wait to see you.
It's really, please stop.
Oh, he's going to start.
Please stop.
Daniel is asking for a list of movies that you must see, Daniel, how much time do you have?
I have a list.
Here's a question I love asking people, and I'm not going to run this down too far,
but this question I love asking people.
Your top three or five movies you've ever seen, because I feel like you can really find
out what resonates with a person when you find at their top five movies.
And when I say that, I'm a movie geek.
I don't mean the top five movies, a movie person really ought to see.
I mean, top five movies that if some, if one of your friends said,
I've never seen that, you'd be like, we're watching it right now.
I love it so much.
I find top five movie list to be great.
I could go on and on.
I have a list on my phone.
My son was just adding to it.
A movie's on, I'm going to make sure we see together.
There are so very many, but I'm going to give you a couple.
If you've never seen unforgiven, it is a phenomenal Western you should see.
If you've never seen Lawrence of Arabia, that is the pinnacle of old movie making.
It is shot in Panavision super wide screen.
They actually did everything you see in the movie.
People are out in the middle of the desert with hundreds of people on camels having an actual fight.
This is what inspired Steven Spielberg's.
That's sort of a joke, so he says like, but it's what inspired Steven Spielberg's set building
and the way he built the sequences of Indiana Jones comes from Lawrence of Arabia.
Now, it is a four hour movie.
It has a pacing where if you made it now, the movie be like 80 minutes long and they
did it for four hours.
It has 1960s pacing, but if you want to see how big movies used to be, Lawrence of Arabia
is a must see.
Speaking of investing, Cade Cuda is asking if I'm an investor in Bitcoin and I am not.
I have a friend who is and he's can open worms everywhere.
Sorry, what?
He's so into it.
He has a cyber truck wrapped in Bitcoin orange.
He even got the break calipers coated Bitcoin orange, so he's really into it and I have
not jumped on that bandwagon yet.
I'm not sure if I'm going to, but we'll see.
I'm more of a traditional stock market investor, but yeah, there's a lot of tech that I'm
into.
Energy.
I like a lot of things.
I'm going to stay out of the Bitcoin.
I have a lot of money.
I mean, his truck, you can't miss his truck.
Cyber truck.
I always know when I start.
Bitcoin orange.
Yes.
Quiet man, pulp fiction and pans labyrinth.
Those are three great movies.
Pans labyrinth is creepy and awesome.
Guillermo del Toro killing it with that movie.
That is such good filmmaking and actually that was a new line movie that I worked on.
I was late in my new line opportunity and I was very, very proud to work on that.
Children of men is another good one if you're talking about somebody's bringing up Clivo
in movies.
That's another really good one too.
I'm a 928 investor.
You are.
That is where your money is.
Not in the Bitcoin investment.
In the 928.
Possibly do.
All of the time.
Yes.
That's a bad one.
That's a bad one.
Well, should we wrap things up?
Man, like I said, I'm scrolling back through as we're so much good stuff.
You guys, this is always fun.
I actually really enjoy the all-questioned no-cars podcast.
We couldn't do it every time, obviously, because we'd run out of topics, but you guys
like get pent up about questions you want to ask.
It's so awesome.
It gets us off on all kinds of things.
That's true.
I really love it.
Eugene Wang asks me, what is my go-to daily sipper?
As of late, Eugene personally finds Angel's envy single barrel in Sturge's South Dakota.
It's amazing, and I still have not had it.
Let's see.
I discovered Garrison Brothers, a Texas whiskey, thanks to Monica and Nugget, who brought
it to one of our meet-ups recently, and it was really good.
We're all sort of looking at each other like, yeah.
This is great.
Good stuff.
It's not the daily sipper.
I'm still under the single malt's abalor, and the Japanese whiskeys are still good,
but that's cool.
I'm glad you found that.
I haven't been into it all summer long.
We've been traveling, and it's just been hot weather, but the snow is starting to fly.
This is how I know this needs to end.
In the chat right now, my wife is asking questions about Doug DeMiro's cayenne in case we want
to buy it.
So good night.
Good night.
Everybody that really is probably the case we need to end it, so that's really good.
Awesome.
Thanks to my lovely wife for watching, and putting up with me in general.
That's pretty awesome.
There will be more of these.
We will continue with the lives at every 25, so it means 9.75 is coming.
1,000, I promise you, is going to be epic.
We are working on that.
I wish I could tell you more, but I want to hold it close to the best until we get a little
closer, but it's going to be really awesome.
Thank you guys so much for being a part of what we do.
I know we say it over and over, but it does help.
Please rate the podcast and share it with a friend.
Please share our YouTube videos with friends.
As a reminder, we have two YouTube channels.
The other one than this one is our original everyday driver channel.
We're putting out stuff on our own cars, big road trips, big multi-car comparisons with
a TV quality.
That's about every three weeks right now because of the combination of hooked on driving
and everyday driver.
So about every three weeks on that channel, we've got stuff lined up already that we got
shot this year that we can't wait to come out.
Oh, Christmas Day, we have a new road trip coming out.
That's right.
That we did with the Griot's boys.
It's going to be so much fun.
Plan on that Christmas Day.
Thanksgiving Day is coming up.
We have a cool two-car comparison, the MX-5 and the Z4 comes out Thanksgiving Day.
We don't have a tool comparison.
We don't have a tool comparison.
Yes, right.
Anyways, that's coming up.
There's lots of stuff.
And then our test drive channel, test drive videos where you are right now is roughly
every Sunday there is a new piece that drops their podcast is still twice a week.
You guys interacting with it is what helps other people find it and thank you for your comments
and your support.
If you want to be a part of it further, yes, Patreon is a great place for you to support us.
You can get, if you're at the upper levels, you get to hang out with us once a month.
And then of course, there's the Discord and so many great people on the Discord.
It's just a community way beyond you and I love it.
It's really cool.
It's really cool.
For those of you who have joined the live stream, we really appreciate it.
Thank you for your patronage.
Thank you for your support.
And as Todd said, yes, please rate and review and share the podcast.
And for those of you who have not seen the live stream but are listening to this as the
regular audio, thank you for being fans of what we do.
Thank you for the support.
We can't believe it's 9.50 either and we're excited for a great future.
So really appreciate it guys, looking forward to next time as always, cheers everyone.
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