Mission to Fyxx

1h 5m
Cast members of Mission to Zyxx answer listeners' advice questions! The first of our monthly one-off podcasts leading up to the release of the Young Old Derf Chronicles later this year. Support us on Maximum fun for a chance to suggest ideas for these episodes, get tons of bonus content, and help make our new prequel spinoff a reality.

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Transcript

Hi there, it's Alden Ford with the first of many monthly episodes leading up to the release of the Young Old Derf Chronicles later this year.

Now, if you're thinking, the what Chronicles?

You should go back and listen to the previous episode where we explained the new prequel show, which is a spin-off of Mission to Zix featuring everybody's favorite geriatric weirdo.

And it also explains why we need your help to make it happen by going over to maximumfun.org/slash join happy Maximum Fun Drive, by the way.

One of the many perks you'll get as a supporter of Mission is Xix over on Maximum Fun is to join our Missionized Discord and suggest pitches for these one-off out-of-character episodes of podcasts we have never done before and will never do again,

like this one.

The episode you're about to hear comes from the mind of supporter and Discord member Noel, who made the mistake of suggesting that we do an advice podcast answering questions also submitted on the Discord.

So here it comes.

Enjoy.

Welcome to Mission to Fish.

Mission

of Fix Quadrant.

Where the crew of Mission to Zix solves all of your problems.

Yes, sir.

Those people listening might be wondering: are we in any way qualified to give advice?

Oh.

And I think the answer is is a resounding, you know, we can all say it, no.

No one even thought to wonder that we might be.

Yes, if you're listening to this, it's on you a little bit.

If this is your only resource for good advice,

good job.

Good luck.

Good times.

Good job and good luck.

And we have great news for you.

If you don't like the advice, this is the first and last episode of this show.

There will be no follow-ups.

No.

Well, let's introduce ourselves.

I'm Alden Ford.

You may know me from Mission to 6.

I am, how am I qualified to answer your questions?

I am a father of three.

I'm a 42-year-old.

I'm a 42-year-old person.

We're saying our ages now?

This is getting.

What else do I have?

I've owned pets.

Okay.

I've owned pets.

That could be, you could be a pet serial killer.

How about I own pets?

All right, Seth.

What's your qualification?

Introduce yourself.

Yeah, I'm Seth Lynn.

You might know me from maybe Mission to Zix.

And my qualification.

I've had pets.

You have currently a live pet, which is more.

I do have a live pet.

Is it too late to pivot to a pet stroke?

Oh, man, I'm down.

I've had pets.

I've had pets.

Mujan?

I'm Mujan Zolfogari.

You might know me from Mission to Zix.

And my qualification is I have in the past voted voted at least once.

Oh, wow.

That is a qualification.

You've thought about stuff before.

Like a BuzzFeed poll?

At least once.

At least.

No follow-ups.

I'm Justin Tyler.

I play Derf when asked on Mission to Zix.

My qualifications for this,

I once streaked college campus

at a below zero temperature.

Okay, great.

Justin, you're also wearing a hat indoors.

Well, sorry, are we under like 19th century Victorian rule?

Yeah, this isn't just in the manners podcast, Mujahon.

It was a sin at one time.

Should we jump right in, guys?

Oh, absolutely.

Let's jump in.

Just like Justin jumps into the streak.

Into the streak.

Yes.

You got to jump into the streak.

That's a famous fixed quadrant pivot, Mujan.

Thank you.

That's what we're known for.

Our trademark here at the long-running podcast, The Fixed Quadrant, also known as Mission to Fix.

Welcome to the Fix.

We have solicited questions of philosophical quandaries, relationship drama, moral dilemmas, questions of anything at all on our Mission to Zix Discord.

And we've gotten a number of excellent questions, which I would say run a pretty wide gamut of very serious to very silly.

So I'm excited to get into these.

Yeah.

Let's get started.

So first,

this question is from Octo, Mystery Contraption.

Dear Council, my counsel and me.

I see what you did there.

Do you think astronauts take their wallets with them when they go to space?

Why or why not?

Wow.

Sincerely, Octo, it's not really advice, but you know, that's a really good question.

Do you take your wallet with you when you go to space?

I really, well, you said it's not advice.

I like to think that Octo is an astronaut who's really has everything else figured out about going to space, but this last spring.

On the platform, he's

in a hurry for this.

It's nine, eight.

I got to keep it or drop it.

It's seven.

I got it.

I'm not holding it.

I got it.

I'm not.

But imagine if you have like a heavy wallet and you keep it in the back pocket.

So while they're going into space, they have to have that uncomfortable bulge underneath them.

So I would say Nick's no on this wallet idea.

Here's the thing, though.

I feel like you're, you know, anytime you go out somewhere, especially a place you've never been before, you always regret not having your ID.

That's true.

And space is the last frontier, the final frontier.

That's true.

Alaska is the last frontier.

I feel like I have a guess about where this question is coming from, which is that you probably won't need it in space.

You probably like your identity is known.

You're not going to be purchasing anything with a credit card probably.

But at the same time, you'd want to know where it is.

Sure.

Well, yes.

And here's the thing.

What if you, you might, now we buy stuff everywhere.

Like, what if, you know, I'm often out doing something and some of my family is like, hey, could you pay for this real quick?

And I'm like, ah, yeah, I guess.

I'm, you know, streaking right now.

You're thinking that an astronaut might get a call from a loved one and be like, hey, there's an eBay auction.

I can't, my internet's not working.

Could you just bid on this vase?

And the Wi-Fi in space is great because you're right by the satellites.

They're right.

They're so strong.

Oh, that's true.

Now, a truth I do know is that astronauts, they get to choose like a small amount of personal items that they would bring for themselves up into space,

like mementos photographs like what would you guys bring here's my question to you what would you bring oh wow this is famous uh fix quadrant an additional question asking our own question musician fix thyself says music uh what do i bring um

oh boy boy i feel like so many things that i use regularly are like really because of gravity

you're very gravity focused something a lot of us and i say seth take for granted and you honor gravity every day.

You bring it up.

You bring it up.

And then you drop it down.

You let gravity.

You bring it up and you drop it down.

So Mujan, you're thinking like sentimental items.

I mean, it doesn't matter.

You decide yourself.

You can bring whatever you want.

The temptation, I think, would be like, oh, well, I got to bring like pictures of my family, but that's not for you, potentially.

You need to bring stuff that makes you feel good.

Wow.

Take care of yourself for this.

What's called a personal preference kit?

So, Justin, we know you wouldn't bring pictures of your family.

What else would you bring?

I'd be an iPad with a Starman comic book series preloaded on it.

Wow.

Okay.

Not a single picture of my children.

Someone did bring an alto saxophone.

Does that make sense?

Can you play those

in space?

That seems like you shouldn't be allowed.

Oh, man.

Can you imagine one dude brings a saxophone?

That's right.

It did happen in 1984.

Astronaut Ronald McNair was the first person to play a saxophone in space.

To be fair, 84 was the year of the saxophone.

Yeah, that's true.

And they say in space, no one can hear you.

So,

in summary, yes, you should bring it.

I would bring the wallet.

I say, bring like $40

in cash.

That's like my mom and always say, put $10 in your shoe.

And I was like, what?

Yeah.

You never know.

You never know.

How much money you got?

How many shoes you got?

Multiply that by 10.

And Octo, I think we can confidently say, EAFIX!

EAFIX!

All right, next, Howdy.

This is from Cam Wing.

Howdy, you've worked with a number of well-known guests on Zix, and the interactions always felt very natural.

Thank you so much.

I was invited to an event where I'll be mingling with a bunch of fellow YouTube creators, some of which I'm a big fan of, and I'm worried that I'll be seen as more of an awkward fan than as a peer.

Interesting.

What's the appropriate amount of geeking out when interacting slash working with a relatively famous person?

Looking forward to hearing from members of the Zix crew again after so long.

I feel like Mujan and, well, actually, all three of you guys, less so me, are really qualified to answer this question because you've all worked on shows where you've been next to very famous people.

Cam Wing, thank you for asking this question because three of the four of us are uniquely qualified to answer this.

Seth, you want to start?

If I can start in a kind of sincere way, I do think the fact that you are thinking about this question and asking it means that there's such a tiny chance that you would be awkward or annoying to these people because you have the self-knowledge to even wonder that.

So in a basic way, I would just be like, don't worry, these people are there for the same reason as you.

And so you're going to be totally fine.

But Alden, what did you say?

You wanted examples of interacting with very important.

Oh, I just just know you guys have all worked on shows and on projects that you were next to very famous people.

And I know for a fact that you guys are fans of those people too.

So if you have any stories about that.

I can tell a couple of quick little ones.

Yeah.

I worked on a show called Dezus and Merrow, and we did two pieces where I was directing the field piece.

They were both sketches.

One of them was Lynn Manuel Miranda, very cool.

And I was like, oh, how do you, and we were improvising a musical based on the idea, this came from the host, that

Babe Ruth was secretly Dominican.

And super funny.

They pitched it live to Lynn Manuel on set.

And then they sat down and literally wrote this musical together.

And it was amazing watching them work.

But to get into the question, like,

Lynn Manuel showed up.

He was the first one on set.

We showed at the UCB Theater on 42nd Street when that was a thing.

He was there first.

He was incredibly down to earth.

He wanted his own space and to chill.

But he then, when we were like, yeah, we'll be with you in like 10 minutes, he just sat down at the piano, started just like making up a song.

I was like, turn the cameras on immediately.

We have to capture this.

And it's in the Ps.

It's on Showtimes YouTube.

Check it out.

That was really cool.

That was very fun.

And truly, like, especially then and still one of the most famous people in the world and just like wanted to do the work and hang out and be cool.

And the other one, similarly, is John Legend, a little more private, but we had an hour with him where he wrote a song about eating ass with these.

Wow.

And he was why did we get him on Zix?

That's good.

He could have played that character the whole time.

I did a show where I was a series with John McEnroe, famous for being a diva.

And again, takes a little while to warm up, but at the end of the day, he's like, we're all working together.

And he wants to be with people who are all rowing in the same direction like these fellow youtubers yeah that's a question for you justin like you when you work with somebody like john mcenro who's like oh this guy's famously sort of prickly are you like am i going to butter him up by like yelling stats at him or am i going to act like i don't care who he is like what's this what's the strategy my strategy with any celebrity interaction is always just like be the most basic and down to earth and just positive.

But like, I'm a regular guy.

you're a regular person, let's just talk and hang out because we're here to do it, we're here to work, you know, it's like we're all in the um comedy mind.

Let's all get our picks and work together to do it.

You're just the one whose face is on the banner out front, yeah.

That's a good point, Mujan.

Uh, I've, I've worked on shows where the people were very well known, and I usually, I think, as I've gotten older, I'm just like, people are just people.

Just be yourself.

If yourself is a kind, nice person, if it's not, then maybe don't be.

They go home.

They go home.

Yeah.

But the only time I think I was starstruck only because I am such a big fan of hers.

And then I got to work with her for a couple seasons was Amy Sederis because she's just like, you know, they say don't meet your heroes.

And there's been a couple times where I have met people of that caliber and they weren't as great, but Amy was and continues to be like a just top tier best person.

So kind, so nice.

Oh my gosh.

I'm not surprised by that, but it makes me feel like it's so great.

I mean, the fact that she asked me to be in her show is, is, you know, she didn't need to do that.

We did a show on, um, we did a show, rest in peace, on Go 90 together called Thanksgiving that Bethany Hall made.

And she got to see me do like Pratt Falls and be fake drunk.

And she, so she saw me do my best and my character work.

We filmed Westchester and we showed her at Cab Rag Bat to Manhattan.

And I got to like talk to her and she was so lovely and she brought me back.

But I wish

because she's like incredible and an idol of mine, I think on set I was a little like intimidated, not intimidated, that's not the right word.

I was just in awe on her, but so I feel like maybe I wasn't able.

This is just, oh boy, I'm letting it out.

Like on home with Amy Sederis, maybe I wasn't able to like be as kooky or as crazy as I wanted to be because I was so much in my head.

Cause I'm just like, this is Amy Sederis.

I have to get these lines right.

I don't know if I should improvise.

I don't know what I should do here.

So if like sometimes you go and you meet people that you look up to, I think you never really know how you act until you're in that moment.

So

you'll go there to this YouTube event, have fun, say hi to these people, because I'm sure they'd love to hear from someone who's a fan of theirs.

Like whenever we have Zix events, I love it when people come and talk to us and acknowledge that there's other people who actually listen to this stuff because most of the time it's just us and on Zoom or in a room and we don't really realize that people listen to it.

So just, it's really nice if, you I like it.

Yeah.

Can I say a couple awkward things I've done around the famous people I've interacted with by accident?

Yeah, now we're talking.

So my day job is at This American Life, the public radio show podcast.

And I've worked there for 19 years.

Whoa, that's awesome.

And damn.

In the beginning, I was like the front desk person.

And

at one point, Kirsten Dunst just walked in and I was like,

hi.

And then the way the office was, like, the front desk was like right in front of this bench where the person would sit to wait.

So, like, Kirsten Dunce was looking at me, and then I very close.

I needed to pick up the phone and call the person she was meeting with to be like, She was here.

And then I, I could not remember her name.

I looked, like, I blanked because of the weirdness.

And I was just like, and I called my co-worker listen and I was like,

Your 11 o'clock is here.

Nice.

And as I'm like looking in the eyes, I'm like, and I feel like it just made it feel like I was being weirdly aggressive about refusing to say the person's name I clearly knew.

Was it the Kirsten Kristen situation or just a total?

No, no.

Like I just blanked.

Like I like when she walked in, in my mind, I was like, that's Kirsten Dunst.

And when I picked up the phone, like it was just anxiety about a famous person that wiped all knowledge from my mind.

So one other awkward celebrity interaction was another, this American Life live show.

One time we had Tig Notaro in a live show doing this really funny story about meeting Taylor Dane over and over.

And then we surprised the audience by having Taylor Dane perform at the end of it, Taylor Dane being a 80s pop star of some renown back then.

Anyway, backstage before the show, I was talking to Tig in the green room.

It's where they have like plates with crudité and stuff.

And I think I was kind of nervous.

So I was sort of like filling the space by talking.

And Tig's like, uh-huh.

Yeah.

Oh, okay.

Okay.

And then I finally pause and she goes, you're eating off my plate.

Woof.

So

you're like, no, I know.

I know.

I don't.

No, I'm eating off our, I like to think of it as our plate, Tig.

So

don't, don't do the things I do.

That's my advice.

One quick thing, and I won't go into it, but I almost killed a Jonas brother like on accident.

Let's like move on.

Let's move on.

Yeah, that's all you want to say about it.

It was when I was interning at late night with Jimmy Fallon.

You had a sniper rifle, and you had to kill.

It doesn't matter.

Let's move on to the next one.

Wow.

Wow.

I will say this to Cam Wing.

As someone who's been on sort of both sides of that equation, I think we all have, of being on the side where you are sort of starstruck by someone, but also being on the side on a much smaller degree of being around people who are fans of yours, which is always a great feeling.

Everybody likes to hear that someone likes the work that they do.

You should never worry about that.

So, Cam Wing, in conclusion,

next question.

Next is from Zalkatron 5001.

Oh, wow.

My moral dilemma is this.

I have a friend who had a pretty nasty breakup.

Afterwards, the ex started accusing him of some pretty nasty stuff that I won't repeat, but are unsubstantiated.

This ex later started working at the same company as my wife.

Not just that,

the plot is thickening and every word.

Quickly.

Not just that, but they regularly work together at the same station.

My wife's station.

It's a Chipotle?

I don't know.

Spitnose space station.

Oh, right.

Space station.

Do they have their wallets?

That's the real question.

My wife and I hosted a party last September as a late wedding celebration.

As a courtesy, my wife gave an open invitation to her coworkers.

The friend's ex decided she wanted to come too.

This caused a brief bit of drama to the point where my friend's current wife even called me trying to sort out the whole thing.

Ultimately, the ex never showed up to the party, but how should I have handled this situation?

I wanted to remain neutral for the sake of getting through the event, but loyalties were called into question.

What would you have done?

Wow, that's

a thorny tale, Zalcatron 5001.

I mean, I think Zalcatron, I think you handled it well.

Like, that's such a convoluted, thorny vine of drama.

And you're only in charge of what you're doing and you're connective.

So I would talk to your partner in that situation and be like, hey,

be friends with who you want to at your station, but just know that when we're going to this event, it might get a little spicy and you might be standing right there when it happens.

And then otherwise, like, I don't think you can get involved and choose a side, especially when your personal life is now intermingled with something that you don't know exactly what happened.

That's good.

That's true.

Yeah.

Can I also just add that by coincidence, the question you asked is verbatim the log line for the young old Derf Chronicles.

And so I want you to know, first of all,

we came up, this was just parallel thinking.

We did not steal this idea based on your question.

And number two, you should just know that going into the show that it could be triggering.

There are multiple stations involved in the young old d'Orford kind of true.

Definitely.

And just, I guess, just really have a lot of hors d'oeuvres at the party.

Be ready to eat off yours or any other plate you can get your hands on.

Easy.

Yeah.

Right.

I think if you're going to have a party like this, just make sure it's in a very big space.

Yeah, if you can arrange a lot of doors that can slam.

And if someone throws a glass of wine in another person's face, you can jump in front of it and sort of mouth open, take that wine.

Oh, yeah, it's free wine.

It's loose wine.

When the wine's in the air, it's up for anybody.

Also, if you listen to Mission to Zix, we have an episode that's about this

with Tim Dunn.

Oh, yeah, Trace to Gram.

The real house husbands of Manch.

Yeah, right.

Tim Dunn's Instagram or Twitter, I forget, is Tim Dunn HeFun.

And it gets me every time.

Yeah.

Green handle.

Tim Dunn, he fun.

I do know he, like, someone stole his Instagram.

I coveted it and I took it.

Okay, got it.

It's harder to use since my name's not that.

Justin Tyler, he liar.

Hastily taking that.

You, you, you, you, you, fix.

You fix.

So this is a three-part question from Dr.

Pickle.

The double black diamond of question.

From Dr.

Pickle.

Okay.

I am co-raising two teenagers and I i work with college undergrads sometimes i have to tell them things like don't date people who are mean to you don't troll people online for no reason or don't plagiarize your essays that's all great advice by the way i don't know what you should be on this show dr pickle yeah but even when i give them good reasons for it i can tell they still don't believe me sometimes I hate resorting to you'll understand when you're older or because I said so.

How can I convince them I'm cool and reliable and correct so they don't do stupid stuff that hurts them?

Wow.

This is a really

good

really excellent question, Dr.

Pickle.

And I will say,

we as a group, at least three of us, sorry, Mujan, are qualified because we have three of us have little kids who do very dumb stuff sometimes.

I shouldn't speak for you guys.

My kids do.

And we've had pets.

And

we've had pets who definitely have done dumb stuff.

Yeah, how do you square, like, I want my kids to make their own decisions and to a certain extent make their own mistakes

with don't do that?

Don't ever do that because you're going to ruin your life doing that.

The thing that popped into my head, honestly, about this question is you can't.

Like I think the definition of being that age of a teenager, which is like the transition from being a kid to being an adult, is where you think you know more than you do.

Because you have to operate that way to function if you're going to become an adult.

And I think that some of that stuff, like the one, don't date people who are mean to you, like that is so basic and true.

But when you're in the middle of that as the person who someone's being mean to, like the emotional thicket of that, all the reasons you can give for why that is or how you could have to change, like you have to go through it yourself to actually figure that out.

Don't date people who are mean to you.

You have to do date someone who's mean to you.

Otherwise, you will not learn that.

Yeah.

But it's a dangerous thought to a parent.

Of course.

God, yeah, it's terrifying.

I don't have young kids, but I am a person who was a teenager at some point.

And I have very

Persian parents.

Thank you.

Teen correspondent.

I'm the youngest one here.

But I, you know, I had a very anxious, worried Iranian American parents who were afraid of America.

They thought we're all going to get pregnant as soon as we go outside.

So they tried instilling the things that you're saying through like

very strict parent ways.

But I, you know, the kid brain is anything you say, I want to do the opposite.

And let me say, like, on the heels of that, like my kids are younger still, but I think it is the difference between being like, hey,

don't date people who are mean to you.

And like, oh, here's the thing though.

You're going to end up dating people who are mean to you and it's horrible.

I think it's the casual stuff that gets under the armor a little bit.

Yeah, yeah.

And when you squeeze it and push it, they're like, what's he saying?

Get

I will say this.

My kids are six and four and three months and

one week and two days and one hour.

And negative seven months.

And

what I've realized now is that like, you don't think of the things your parents teach you, but also you see them interact with other people out in the world and you realize like, oh, it has taken effect.

They're just not associating those lessons with you directly because that's just not how kids work.

And that's tough.

You want them to be like, I did the right thing because of what you told me, but they're just never going to do that.

That's not how kids act.

But I think that you,

Dr.

Pickle, have treated your kids.

Esquire.

Dr.

Pickle, Esquire, MD.

You have treated your kids in a way that you are presenting a example for them.

Yeah.

Yeah.

When they realize that they have made a mistake, the moral code that they revert to is going to be the one that you've instilled in them.

And that's what's really important.

Yeah.

That's great.

I do want to reiterate something Mujan said, which is that

you can't get pregnant just by going outside.

No, but you can get pregnant by going inside.

Oh,

Jesus.

Wow.

All right.

Oh, no.

I'm sorry that.

All right.

Part two of Dr.

Pickle's question.

How can I find a decent area rug for a decent price without getting scammed?

Wow.

Dr.

Pickle, what a turn.

I will tell you this, Dr.

Pickle, revivalrugs.com.

This is not an ad.

I recently bought a rug from Revival.

It's good.

They have vintage rugs.

Someone wearing a Revival Rugs shirt just walked into all of this room and gave him $100.

Revival is good.

That would be my answer.

Where'd you guys get your rugs?

I have a solution.

Go online.

Okay.

Well, Mike, you guys kind of agree because you said that.

No, that's part one.

That's part one.

Go online.

Go on, I don't know, kayak.

No, get a travel agent.

Buy a ticket to Tabriz in Iran.

Oh, yeah.

Now we're talking, Mujan.

Okay, go to a village.

Find a woman who can barely see, but she's making a rug.

Okay?

You're saying you're swimming this woman out of the rug.

They're my people, I can say it.

You can get the finest rug you've ever had in your life.

Persian rug.

Muhammad John sent you.

Yeah.

Come back, go into security.

American government will not let you back in.

But, you know, you got your rug.

Tariffs, rug tariffs.

I've never purchased a rug.

Are they expensive items?

You're a rugless house?

I mean, sort of.

We have tiny rugs, and I guess maybe I'm not the main rug purchaser in my household.

Oh, sure.

The thing is, what would I ever choose to be on a rug?

It's hard.

It's hard to pick it.

It's really hard.

I will say, I'm someone who like doesn't, I'm not good at buying things.

I'm not good at like figuring out a thing that would make me happy to have.

I'm not.

So like, like I'm a terrible consumer, but we have this one rug that I look at it and it makes me so happy.

Every time I see it, we've lived, I've lived in this house five years.

And every time I step on this rug, I'm just like, it brings me delight.

I don't know where we got it.

So I can't tell you where it got it.

I've never felt rug joy.

You can also go to a garage sale.

and get some rugs from other people, but no, a dog is probably pissed off.

Step in that rug.

Yes, that's rugs.

Those people have had pets.

Yeah, I'll tell you, I've had pets.

Every person who ever sold a rug.

A pet can become a rug.

It's true, yeah.

Boy, especially with all these ones.

This wasn't going to be our last episode.

It is.

It was going to be now.

All right.

Third part of the question from Dr.

Pickle.

Okay, Dr.

Pickle.

Is shrimps bugs?

Shrimps bugs.

Is shrimps bugs?

I think shrimps bugs.

I've woken up in the dead of night and screamed this out.

I think shrimps is bugs.

I think shrimps is bugs.

I think we can all agree.

They're as much bugs as you can be without technically being bugs.

And I think that's enough of you.

Shrimps is bugs under deceit.

Yeah, that's true.

If mosquitoes were bigger, would we eat them?

Oh,

like a mosquito cocktail.

I ate a live termite.

Live?

When?

Why?

In Costa Rica.

Recently?

Well, a few years ago,

we were in Costa Rica and then doing like a guided rainforest hike.

And the guide turned over this leaf and saw like a termite nest and said, like, these are really good.

And they say they actually put a couple thousand of them in and will like make them into a burger.

Oh my God.

And he was like, who wants to try one?

And my wife and I are both like, okay.

And it tasted like a hazelnut.

And it's because they eat wood.

So they just taste so, they taste really, like,

I don't know.

Woody?

Yeah, it was delicious.

It was like a little weird to kill something with your mouth, but it was, I don't know, it just went popping.

I always, I think,

what is that?

Lion King, the animated version of it, changed my perspective by eating bugs because it made it seem so just like moist and juicy and delicious.

Wait, that scene made you more likely to eat bugs?

Oh, yeah.

I mean,

that scene is disgusting.

The bugs burst.

That's one of the only things I remember about the movie is how awful that scene was.

Yum, yum.

I guess it does look like they're full of custard, but that's guts.

That's just guts.

Also, burgers is a strong, burgers is a strong word.

That's a generous term.

Burgers.

Why?

Oh, just because

you don't think you should be able to call anything a burger, that it's ground up animal.

It's high impact.

You can't put anything in a bun and call it a burger.

It's got to be.

It's going to be a stand on what is a burger.

I'm the advice expert, okay?

We get to decide.

We're the arbiters of what's a burger and what's not.

Right.

Shrimps is bugs, but we don't know if shrimps is burger.

Yeah.

Shrimps not burger, says Arm.

I think that's a classic Dr.

Pickle.

You fixed.

Hashtag you fixed.

Moving on.

This one is from Grand Pappy, the dude who dinners, probably his real name.

Hey, crew, as a seasoned adult, I occasionally think back and realize, I wish someone had told me that years ago.

What's a bit of wisdom or advice that it took you far too long to learn?

Love Grand Pappy.

Grandpa.

That's a good question.

Invest in real estate.

Start early.

Real estate.

Start early, start young.

Wow.

Easier said than done.

Easier said than done.

Well, not now.

I would say not now, but maybe like in 2010,

New York City, Barclay Center area, which didn't exist.

That's always always my greatest regret.

I didn't have the money, but I could have pulled some together with various different sources, and I would have been a bajillionaire by now.

But do I want to be a landlord?

No.

So I take it back.

Never mind.

Oh, that's true.

So the advice is: don't go back in time and invest in real life.

Become a landlord.

Don't.

Yeah.

That took you too far to learn.

Love.

Wow.

I think the biggest piece that I talk to a lot of people, especially like doing a creative field, is don't think

every opportunity or job is going to be the one, right?

Yes, because it sets up such a ping-pong emotionality.

Oh, yeah.

And I think if you can just be like, hey, it's going to be going to take a lot of swings out there, keep swinging rather than putting all your eggs in the first basket.

Wow, that's really good.

Seth,

I have been stunned by how much

going for a walk can change

the right mental vibe in a way that's so basic and is such a useful thing if you're stuck in some sort of like anxiety spiral.

I think the repetition of taking steps, the fact of being outside, literally just seeing farther.

Like is like, it just gives you a perspective of like, there's stuff outside my mind.

It's such a useful thing.

I would throw on top of that, if I'm stuck on a question or problem or creative impasse going for a run or taking a hot shower that works like crazy i can't believe how much that works really oh yeah it's so like basic yeah like blood flow or like temperature or something but man that's that's that's the way the runner's high is real wow

I do have one more to throw on here.

Lock the door you're podcasting in because my wife is actively roasting the things I'm saying right now in the movie.

She's saying just out of frame, just like I mean, basically.

Wow.

So, this is not a legally binding thing, but

you fix

all right.

Uh, the company I work for is in the film industry, but I don't actually watch movies.

How do I pretend to know what's going on with the latest releases and be part of the conversation in the office?

Oh,

uh, great,

great.

I think film podcasts are great because you can get not only information, but

I mean, this is, I'm crossing a moral line here, but you can just hear opinions also because it's not enough to just have the facts about like, yes, in a complete unknown, he is Bob Dylan.

You need to have like a like, well, actually, my favorite scene is when he goes on stage and plugs in or whatever it is.

So you need like not only information, but opinion.

So reading Wikipedia often isn't enough.

Right.

So you're saying that you shouldn't go to Metacritic and just be like, critics agree that it's more style than substance.

I could see that really crushing at the water cooler.

I heard 61 of 67 reviews are positive for that one.

According to Metacritic, that's universal acclaim.

I would say saying according to Metacritic is a real giveaway.

I will say, I understand where you're coming from, Anonymous.

Having three kids has made me very out of touch with pop culture and what's going on.

And probably, if I'm being honest, it'll last for the rest of my life.

Wow.

See, I say crush tape at night.

Watch those movies.

Watch that TV.

You're good at that, Justin.

I love it.

And that's

I can't do it.

Yeah.

I feel like if this person has this job already, just saying I don't watch movies, that's such a crazy thing.

Like, I've never heard anyone say that.

That means you must really actively not have any interest in them.

And I think that's fine.

What if it's just okay that you don't, you're like, that's not my thing.

I do the job here.

Yeah.

I say this to someone who like doesn't really listen to podcasts.

Whoa.

Wow.

Does Ira know that?

Don't tell him that.

I think an honest,

helpful response to this, Anonymous, is

interested is interesting.

I bet you could go a long time without anyone knowing that you don't watch movies if when a movie comes up, you ask what they thought of the movie and just talk about that.

If somebody's like, Did you watch the Brutalist?

You could say, I haven't watched it yet.

How was it?

You know, and then that's just the conversation for the next 10 minutes.

And it doesn't have to actually be BS.

You can actually just get into a conversation about somebody's philosophy on filmmaking.

And that could end up being its own fulfilling conversation without you having to really have watched the thing.

Yeah.

Well, don't I feel like a scumbag now based on my advice?

Yeah.

What I'm saying is, Justin's answer sucks.

Yeah.

You can also be aware of, because, you know, if you work for the film industry, it's always, I think, a good idea to like follow things like Variety, Deadline, Hollywood Reporter, just to know the news about how the business is doing.

And that's also something you can also talk about, because I assume it would affect your work.

So you can talk about the periphery of the film.

That's a good call.

Spoiler alert, the movie industry is not doing great.

No, it's what are you talking about, Seth?

Oh, guys, I just looked at Metacritic.

The critical consensus on the brutalist is haven't watched it yet.

Wow,

okay, there is no answer.

You're in good company.

But I know there's an intermission, so I can bring that up and they don't talk about the intermission.

The intermission.

My favorite part was the intermission.

That's awesome.

The critics have watched the intermission and found it.

The reviews were Sprite, Bathroom, Phone Call,

Realize, Forgot Doctor's Appointment.

Yeah, my review is sprite.

Oh boy, guys, we have a time-sensitive one.

Oh, we got to answer this quick.

Are we late?

Hi, crew.

My dilemma is time-sensitive.

See, it says right there.

I've been transported into my phone a la Tron style, and the evil overlord of my vague, 90-minute-long 80s movie-esque world has given me this such choice.

I love this language: live in my phone forever, or

name the best bad 80s, 90s film and gain my freedom so please zix crew tell me what movies could free me this is from powerline what are the best the best bad 80s or 90s film

poof wow i mean trapped in your phone aren't we all

yeah that's true yeah what is your guilty pleasure 80s movie The thing that popped in my mind is Peter Jackson's first film, Bad Taste.

Wow.

Which is from 1987, which is a just just insane, gory movie.

There is no more bell-curve director than Peter Jackson.

His first movies were so ridiculous and niche and culty.

And then he made, you know, Lord of the Rings, which is like truly three of the most accessible, popular, critically acclaimed movies of all time.

And now he's on the other side where he made the Hobbit trilogy, which everybody's like, what are you doing?

Bad Taste has a scene where someone burrows vertically through another person with a chainsaw.

Vertically.

Yeah, it's like, it's a gross out.

Vertically.

It's like a low-budget, absolute gross out movie, but it's so gross out to the point of absurdity and it has comedic elements.

So if you can tolerate grossness, I very much recommend Bad Taste if you haven't seen it.

It's crazy.

It's a great rag.

The one I went through that straddles the line between those two decades is The Rocketeer.

That movie is awesome.

That's a great movie that just never got.

But is it a bad movie?

Do you actually think it's bad?

I think it's great, but I think the world has decided it is not a good movie.

Uh-huh.

You want a movie that's actively bad?

That you love.

Hmm.

I would throw out

Cocktail.

Oh, man.

That movie has a lot of problems, but that's a great movie to watch, I think.

I would say my choice would be Lady Hawk, which is

which, like a lot of movies from the 80s, you watch it now and and you're like, How did this script and how did this direction get past anyone?

It's ridiculous, but it's also very satisfying in a way.

It's so joyful in like a weird 80s way.

Wow, I'm looking at the cast: Matthew Broderick, Rutger Hauer, and Michelle Pfeiffer.

Wow, stars.

Yeah, you were born to be in

that movie together.

Yeah, it's a it's about a guy who has a hawk who is a woman, I think.

Well,

Jackson.

The plot is that a woman is trapped in the soul of a hawk.

Like mannequin, but for a nice bird.

What's that movie?

I should know the name of it, but Johnny 5 wasn't it?

Oh, short circuit.

Yeah, short circuit.

Short circuit.

I don't know if that's considered a bad movie.

That's a movie as a kid we watched like a million times.

I think it might just be good.

Well, let me say

I think short circuit 2, you could consider a bad movie that would satisfy the parameter.

In that movie, Johnny 5 ends up in New York.

He ends up fighting and then joining a gang, quote unquote,

whose tagline song was Los Lobos kick your ass, Los Lobos kick your face, Los Lobos kick your balls

into outer space.

Nice.

I don't know why that takes up space in my brain.

Me too.

But that maybe is the dumbest thing that's ever been on film.

I think you're absolutely right, Justin.

I think that may be the stupidest fucking movie of all time.

I'm glad we got there together.

We got there.

The fact that that was a thing that was on film that people went to the movie and paid money to see.

It sort of doesn't matter what the rest of the movie is about.

The fact that that was in that movie, people did it and made it with a straight face.

I think of your mother was a snowblower is a line that just like fully is rattling around in my brain permanent also doesn't make sense

not at all

genealogically inaccurate um

Great.

I hope you get out of your phone, Powerline.

Oh, yeah.

I hope that got you out.

Oh, yeah, that part.

Yeah, good luck.

Good luck.

Yeah, good luck.

But Powerline, you have the skills in your name.

It's true.

Yeah, fixed.

Fixed?

I'm at something of an inflection point in life.

For the last 25 years, I've worked for the government, and I'm kind of done with it.

Thanks to my military pension, I have a degree of stability to pursue my interests.

But life experience tells me that the childhood dream of world domination involves a lot more admin work and a lot fewer space lasers than I care for.

What should I do and why should it be international art thief?

Oh boy.

Honestly,

when it's time to make decisions of this magnitude, my brain clocks out and I can only come up with stuff like Vigilante Street Sweeper or amateur arm wrestling contest efficient.

So I guess I'm looking for more achievable dreams.

Ideas?

Signed?

Flux capacitance.

I mean, my advice would be with a pension talk, there sounds like a comfortability there or a safety net.

I I would leave that job when it feels right, chill for a little bit, and decide what you want to do.

Because I think something will present itself in the time when you take space, when you're taking very hot showers and going for jogs, you know,

getting that blood flowing.

Yeah.

Then the next thing will appear for you.

I think that's a good idea.

I also think some other exciting job options could be a scientist who tracks wolves.

Yes.

Whoa.

Or a shark biologist.

Yeah.

A firefighter.

Right.

Are you reading off a list?

Because these are

good.

Yeah.

These are

just very good.

Actually, this person would have the time and the resources to figure out if shrimps is bugs

once and for all.

Smart.

Way to combine what we're talking about.

A treasure hunter.

Someone hires you to do the things like get art.

Yeah, good.

Yeah.

I feel like I've read this critique of modern capitalist society before, but like people talk about how it's tragic that we feel like we need to turn our hobbies into jobs.

Like we feel like we need to monetize the thing that we enjoy doing because it's impossible to just do what you like to do and not care if it pays the bills or not.

But I think flux capacitance is in a place where that might not actually be true.

Like if you're in a position where you really could do something you wanted to do and not really care if it makes money or not,

I think the move there is you should do what you feel is exciting and try to be deliberate about not monetizing it, at least at first.

And then, if you decide it's something that you like so much that you could make it a job, great.

And if not, it's just, then you've got a new hobby.

I have a friend who volunteers at the Natural History Museum.

Oh, as like a docent?

No, as to help remove sediments from possible dinosaur bones.

Whoa.

Possible bones.

Wow.

Oh, this one's a tree root.

We messed up.

This one's an old Coke can.

Sometimes

he sends us photos of like, here's a leg.

And we're like, oh.

That's the title of my Slowburn Erotica fiction is Possible Bone.

Possible bone.

So I got a question for you, not to put you on the spot, Justin, but you were a person who's been very good at monetizing your interests.

If you were to do something that you knew you would never for the rest of your life get paid to do, but you didn't have a choice.

You had to do it.

What would it be?

Oh, like a review five-star hotels.

Yeah, I mean, sure, that's a great, yeah, that's a great example.

It was wonderful.

Five-stars.

Just get continue to make sure that they are five-star.

I guess the problem, Mujan, there, is that it assumes that Justin has limitless money.

Oh, it's for Justin.

I'm talking about like what is something that you find so fulfilling that is an activity or a hobby that you would do it even if you were never able to monetize them.

Hammock reading.

No, that's not specific enough.

It's got to be.

It's not specific.

That's very different.

You're just describing relaxing.

I mean like a hobby.

Reading in a hammock is not a hobby.

Wow.

That's a specific tableau of relaxing.

Tableau.

I mean, that's a tough question because what you just said up about me, like I have taken my hobbies and just squeezed them into

life.

A drop of blood from every stone.

Wait, I want to know the list now.

Like what are the, what's the most weird thing that you've monetized?

Comic books, right?

Yeah,

comedy of some sort.

Okay, so there's not like weird, you don't have like a really like you're talking about my frog racing earnings.

Yeah, I didn't want to say it, but yes, I've earned

millions.

A lot of fast hoppers in the background there.

Fast hoppers is the name of my um squad.

It's your LLC.

Yeah, if you if you got here yourselves, a frog or even a toad that you think has the moves, uh, they could pop up.

Aldo, what's an example?

Like, what would you say?

What do you got?

What's your...

Here's the thing.

I have too many of them, which is a real problem.

I'm the opposite of just.

Name one.

Because cooking.

I was going to say cooking.

I could never in a million years work in a kitchen.

I could never be a professional cook or a professional chef.

And I was going to say cooking, but I would actually one-up that and say, and this is even weirder because this is just a money-based job, is bartending.

Really?

You would bartend for free.

Yeah.

I agree with that.

Knowing what I know about you, I think that's a perfect answer.

Mujan, what is a hobby that you like so much that you would do it if it never made money?

Running.

And I know that I'm not fast enough to ever receive a professional runner to catch the money.

But I just like doing it.

Really?

That's great.

That's great.

I guess I didn't really know that about you, Mujan.

I was very sporty growing up.

I played softball, basketball, soccer.

And then I hated running for a little bit.

And then when I turned, it was in my 20s, I realized running, you can just play music and it's like dancing and nobody knows.

And so I started just running in my 20s.

And I realized the mental healthness of it.

Like, oh, I feel happy whenever I do it.

Yeah.

You know, I don't care about the PR.

Yeah.

The P is a PR.

I don't do it for the PR, babies.

I do it just because it makes me a functional person.

Personal record.

PR stands for personal record, not

public relations.

No.

Okay.

Seth, what about you?

Honestly, if I for some reason did not need to make income, I would descend rapidly into being an obsessive metal detector person.

Wow.

Like, I would, I'm afraid of how much I would metal detect.

The other, the other thing.

How much I would metal detect.

The other thing is snorkeling.

You're chasing gloss gold like nobody I know.

You're detectoring or you know, those two things can be combined, Seth.

One time in Hawaii, I like snorkeled to the point where, like, just a little bit bit off the beach, like, not, not like far out or anything, but to the point where I like came out and I was like, like, wheezing water and fell over because I had this feeling where I was like, I got to see all these fish.

Oh, yeah.

Like, I got to see all of them.

I got to catch them.

I got, and like, there's more, there's some over there.

I got to see those guys.

They're, they have you see, like, I want to look, like, get out of the way and be like, you got to see these fish?

Yeah.

They're beautiful.

And then dive back in.

You love being under the sea.

Oh, it all comes back around.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Being face down looking looking at beautiful fish would never stop.

Wow.

I kind of want to pay you, though, for that.

Yeah, that's the problem, Seth.

You can't not get paid for that.

Yeah, we got to pay you.

I don't totally understand the question because there's so many things that you just can't hope to get paid for.

So it seems like.

See, but that's the thing, Seth.

That reflects a healthy mental attitude that I don't have, Seth.

That's the problem.

Whenever I, here's the thing for me, I remodeled my kitchen last year, and my first thought was, you know, if I started a YouTube cooking show, I could write this off on my taxes.

Like, that's the mental illness that I have.

That I'm like, how can I make this work for me?

And that's not what a hobby should be.

That's not what something you love should be for you.

But you've been a freelancer your whole life.

I'm a W-2 guy.

Sure.

That's the different level.

That's fine.

That's the line.

Bunching into the same office since 2006.

Yeah, exactly.

We sit around being like, what is money?

How can we get it?

But

I mean, to be fair, like, you know, all of us came up at UCB in improv theater where the entire fucking business model is, this will never make you money.

This will always cost you money.

And we figured out a way to do it where more people could listen to it, more people could support.

Like, we made it a thing that at least sustained itself.

Mission is X.

That's

Mission is X, improvised science fiction podcast.

Check it out wherever you get your podcast.

They base the name on the name of our podcast.

Yes.

Fix game for them.

Yeah, exactly.

Obviously, Mission of Fix has been around for decades, but that's a perfect example.

I love sci-fi.

I love comedy.

I always wanted to make this big

sci-fi world.

We figured out a way to make it, but it was something that had to pay for itself.

And so we did that.

I think that Flux Capacitance is also trying to figure out a way.

to do something that is fulfilling to him without it being something that necessitates becoming his job.

Yeah.

Well, Flux Capacitance, I hope you figure it out.

I suggest spending too much money on revamping your kitchen and trying

to write it off with a lie about a YouTube channel.

Yeah.

You fixed.

Yeah, fixed.

We got

one more and then we'll do the lightning round.

I play music and work a boring day job.

I would like to be more productive in my artistic pursuits.

How do you keep motivated and psyched up for side projects that take a lot of time and energy?

Wow.

You're talking our language.

I love Zix.

I love the crew.

And Shane and Justin.

Oh, that's nice.

You're all so talented and amazing.

Love Spathy.

What a great question, Spathy.

I have an answer for this, which is, and I think we did it here at 6, which is to surround yourself with people that you enjoy being with and working with.

And then it doesn't seem like a lot of time or energy, except for Shane, who spends a lot of time and energy.

Don't ask Shane that question.

Yeah, don't ask Shane that question.

But, like, you know,

making community out of it.

You get to do the thing that you love and also get to spend time with people and that feels like it's worth it.

And that is a privilege to be able to have people around you who want to do the same thing as you, who you feel you're at the same level as.

And that's not something that everybody has access to.

But I do think that finding that community of people, I think is, if you don't have that yet, or if you have not enough of that, should be your highest priority.

Yeah.

And I would say from a personal motivation sense, it's less about doing a bunch of complicated things and more about being like, on this day for these two or three hours, I'm going to do the creative thing.

It's literally like a calendar problem.

At least for me, it's like, I'm actually blocking this time off and then it happens.

Yeah.

And I feel like those things can go together where once you're collaborating with people, you're beholden to them.

And if the struggle is sort of motivation where it's like, I'm exhausted from my day job and now this is the only time I have to do this.

I just want to be watching TV.

If you have committed to like jam with this person or write with this person, you just are like, well, I don't really feel like doing this, but I'm going to do it because I committed to this person.

And then you have a great time.

Yeah.

Gets fun fast.

Yes.

Yes.

Also, there's no like

right amount to do it.

If you have some imaginary amount where it's like, I should be doing this at this, and it's like, it's actually not the amount of music you want to make, but you just feel like if I am this, I should be doing it more.

Like you're still a musician, no matter how many hours you're doing it at a given time.

I mean, I think that's what we did with Zix.

We did this big, difficult project that took a long time and a ton of our energy.

And the best thing for us was to take a year or two and decompress and wait until another thing came up that we were as excited to put that amount of work into.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Spathy.

You fixed.

You fixed.

Well, guys, we're nearing the end of our episode here.

I think it might be time to do a quick lightning round of some of our shorter questions.

This one's for Justin.

I've always struggled with something and I was hoping you guys could help me make sense of it.

At what specific time does afternoon turn to evening and why is it four?

From Suss on a Bus?

Great question.

The answer is when you put down the coffee and pick up the beer.

Wow.

Nice.

It's four o'clock somewhere, they might say.

This is one for Seth.

I now have a job that I have little to no actual work for and I'm wanting to write a series of romantic novels.

Wow, I love that word.

Romantic novels, but I'm running out of good mystical creatures for people to get steamy with.

What are some good ones that aren't overdone?

Branded from the fan cast.

Half salamander, half chair.

Not common at all.

Merman and mermaid, but the top half is fish

is good.

Sure.

That one's the logistics of that.

It gets interesting.

And also

Tiny Dragon with a big dragon

is one that I think is, you can't do too much.

Oh, that's cute.

You mean like a tiny dragon fucking a bigger dragon?

Oh, Alden.

Wow, they're in love, Alden.

Yeah, I mean, yes.

I wasn't going to.

No, you can't.

Oh, no.

Oh, boy, I've been doing it wrong this whole time.

All right, this was for Mujan, because you're truly the master of made-up names.

My friend is looking for a stage name for performing stand-up.

What Zick's character would make the best on-stage pseudonym?

I did nearly suggest Nundeloy to him as a surname at one point.

This is from Fanessa.

Well, why don't we think of, because you know, I think Zick's characters would be fine names, but I feel like if your friend is looking for a stage name, it should be something unique.

It should be something that's never been done before.

Why don't we all just come up with a couple of names right now?

Sure.

So this is a stand-up persona.

Yeah, let's go around the horn and really kind of come up with some.

I guess Mike, Mike Crowd Pleaser.

Oh, good.

Yeah.

Chuckles double chest.

Oh, that's good.

Dan Dan the Chapman.

Yeah.

Nice.

Tight Clive.

Scissors Contigo.

Wow.

Wow.

That's really

pronounced that with a U sound.

You really went.

No, honestly, no.

Seth.

Farney Crisscross.

Bart Caltrain.

Bart Caltrain.

Yes, yes, yes.

I'm familiar with Muni Bart Caltrain.

Yes.

Yeah.

Wow.

And Cynthia Plagiarism.

Oh, boy.

If you can't find a good name in there, that's a lot of gold.

Next.

This is for Justin.

What should I do for my birthday?

Especially solo things since I have no set plans with family so far because it's me.

I'm planning a trip to a bookstore from time and relative nerd in space.

What should I do for my birthday?

Outside of the trip to the bookstore?

I mean, that sounds like a pretty good birthday, to be honest.

Yeah, easy to plan.

It's just go to the bookstore.

I think go to another birthday party and blow out their candles.

Yeah, that'll teach them to have a birthday on your birthday.

Make some new friends with people who share a common ground.

You know what I love as a birthday that I did for many years?

You guys know this.

A crawl.

I did a bar crawl.

Oh, right.

You could do an anything crawl.

Do a bookstore crawl.

Say, hey, come to this bookstore.

Then we'll go to another bookstore.

Then we'll go to a third and fourth bookstore.

All of them have different stuff.

Some of them have cafes.

Some of them are in places that are hard to get to or interesting looking.

And you're all set.

Some have gone out of business since the crawl started.

If I know anything about bookstores, they're probably going out of business this very moment.

I love a crawl.

they're an adventure, it's like a little treasure hunt.

Uh, that would be my advice

was Justin's question, but thank you.

No, I'm sorry, Justin.

That's how lightning works, it strikes you at random.

I'm sorry, I just thought your answer wasn't good enough, was the problem.

Oh, no, that's a good reason, yeah.

Uh, Seth, this one's for you, and Justin, if you feel like jumping in, no.

Is it wrong to bribe my DD players with actual candy to have them choose what I think is the most fun outcome for me from thomas r no

great that's lightning

that's lightning what could be more right than that all right guys this has been so much fun we've got one last question from noel

i have a philosophical quandary i personally take a lot of comfort in the idea that given the random chaos of our universe nothing inherently matters

wow okay that's sort of preemptively shitting on whatever answer we're giving uh it means that humanity gives our actions.

It means that humanity gives our actions meaning, not the mechanisms of the universe.

And that the smallest act of kindness between two people holds just as much importance as a supernova exploding galaxies away.

You know?

My question is, what's a piece of philosophy you hold that comforts you?

I mean, let me just say that person should be hosting this podcast.

Yeah, yeah, you're right.

Yeah.

Piece of philosophy that we hold dear?

That comforts you.

Everything that's happened has already happened before.

Whoa.

The pain and experience that you go through in life, other people have also experienced.

So, you know, it may feel lonely sometimes, but there's a shared universal feeling in all of it, too.

Oh, that's really nice.

I like that.

If it's yellow, let it mellow.

So comforting.

That's so comforting.

That's about P, right?

Yeah, there's more to it.

Oh, yeah, continue.

The other part's not as philosophical.

Yeah, the first part's very philosophical.

The second part's just good logistics.

If it's brown, flush it down.

Wow.

Thank you, Justin.

So helpful.

Seth?

This feels like a cop-out, but I actually, this is true.

I think about what Noel thinks about.

I don't feel like I'd have it as a clear philosophical maxim in the way that Noel does, but it does comfort me to just think about

things like

the age of the universe, the distance of planets, the number of stars.

Like it does feel like it can make daily turmoil feel less overwhelming because of just how big and how old everything is.

I like that.

I like that philosophy, although sometimes it has the opposite effect where I think, oh man, the universe has been around for 16 billion years and it's all led up to me saying that dumb thing to my

in-law.

Yeah, Yeah, to Kirsten Duttz.

It all is led up to me saying that dumb thing to that weird person at a party.

But no, you're right.

I actually kind of, for me, the thing I think about is the opposite, like the smaller version of it, where I'm like, everything is atoms and that's that's where it stops.

Like the dumb things that I do or the things that I worry about or the

things that I'm scared of or the things that I regret, those are all in the end, like everything is made up of the same basic building blocks and none of those are going anywhere for trillions of years like those atoms are going to be there just in different forms for the rest of time um i don't know if that really helps me be a better person uh but uh a nihilist

yeah

uh but it does uh it does kind of calm my nerves sometimes beautiful anything else to say about that I feel like there's got to be like a what's a good saying about coffee in the morning like uh drink it Yeah, drink it.

Coffee, drink it.

Coffee, drink it.

It's like a good,

almost a philosophy.

Dough coffee?

No coffee.

Goodbye.

Your job would be kidding me.

Exactly.

But for me, I think sometimes even if it's the hardest of days, the hardest of weeks, I really love my coffee in the morning and it's like a reset.

So I don't know if there's a new philosophical saying.

That's a philosophy.

It should be on a kitchen window.

Like, don't talk to me before I coffee.

Like, you you know, those things, I think I hold true to those.

Wait, if it's yellow, keep it mellow.

If it's brown, drink it down.

Drink it down.

Because it's coffee.

Coffee suggestions.

It's orange juice and coffee.

It's orange juice and coffee.

You got to let that orange juice mellow before you drink it down.

Everyone, this has been maybe your favorite installment of Mission to Fix.

We've changed a lot of lives today.

Yeah.

This has been a lot of fun.

It's fun to kind of dig into stuff with you guys.

This has been a blast.

Yeah.

And don't forget to tune in next week to listen to this same episode.

The last episode of this podcast.

Don't forget to tune in never.

Yes.

And also, another day, another cup of coffee.

Don't speak to me when I've had my coffee.

Espresso yourself.

Yeah.

A good day starts with a great cup of coffee.

Coffee is not a drink.

It's a moment.

Life is short.

Drink good coffee.

Keep calm.

Gasoline.

It's called gasoline.

It's not coffee.

Coffee is the gasoline of life.

Alden here again.

Hope you enjoyed that episode.

Now, if you need more advice immediately, advice that is even worse, if you can imagine that, well, when you support our show at MaxFun, One more perk is that you get access to all of our bonus content, the newest of which came out this week, and we're calling it the Derf Cast.

Not to be confused with the young old Derf Chronicles.

No, this is an in-world podcast hosted by Derf himself.

And in this episode, Derf, you'll never guess this, also answers questions submitted by fans on Discord.

Fans, just like you, if you choose to support, and we really hope you will.

So go to maximumfund.org/slash join and select our show, Mission is X when signing up.

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