cover of episode What CboysTV Hates While Filming Youtube Videos

What CboysTV Hates While Filming Youtube Videos

Publish Date: 2022/12/20
logo of podcast Life Wide Open with CboysTV

Life Wide Open with CboysTV

Chapters

Shownotes Transcript

Today's episode is brought to you by Angie. Angie has made it easier than ever to connect with skilled professionals to get all your jobs and projects done well. Let me tell you, there's the version of it where you try to do something at home and then there's a version of it where you have someone help you, you watch them do it the right way and you go, thank God I didn't try to do that myself.

I have fully done things around the home that I think look good and then a bang in the night and I wake up to a shelf collapsing, a painting falling off the wall. Like it, I've seen it all go south. I own a home and I can tell you, I know how much work it can take. Whether it's everyday maintenance and repairs or making dream projects a reality, it can be hard just to know where to start. But now all you need to do is Angie that and find a skilled local pro who will deliver the quality and expertise you need.

Whatever your home project, big or small, indoor or outdoor, you can Angie that and connect with skilled professionals to get the project done well. Right now, one of my wishlists is I want a bike for my condo in Milwaukee and I would love to rig it up on a pulley in the ceiling because I have one of those like lofted ceilings.

but I'm so scared to try that on my own. Angie has 20 years of home experience and they've combined it with new tools to simplify the whole process. Bring them your project online or with the Angie app. Answer a few questions and Angie can handle the rest from start to finish or help you compare quotes from multiple pros and connect instantly, which means you can take care of any home project in just a few taps.

Because when it comes to getting the most out of your home, you can do this when you Angie that. Download the free Angie mobile app today or visit Angie.com. That's A-N-G-I dot com. This might actually be the best invention I have ever seen. Don't say ever, but go on. Ever? Snowplow, but for your hitch.

And you just drive in reverse. And the person doing it right now is in a Ford Explorer. And they look kind of goofy. It does. It does. But their driveway isn't super big. And it's actually working. But what is the benefit to having it on the rear and then having to drive in reverse? Because you don't. It's on a Ford Explorer right now.

I can't see this car with a front snowplow, so it's like making the best of having a hitch. Oh, it's a hitch. Yeah. So no cutting or installing really needed. You just pop it in. That's crazy, actually. Wow, us Minnesotan Midwesterners are pumped about that. Man, the future is here, and we just had a snow day.

You want to know what I'm pumped about? Yeah. Starting a podcast number 58. Not only that, but getting an official Jamie cam. Cut to Jamie. Oh, yeah. Wave to the people. A little thumbs up.

Big Ken's got his own mic, his own camera. Ken. Now officially a part of the podcast. We've been reading you guys' comments. And, I mean, we've been wanting to do it for a while, but the budget was really tight with all the ads that Ryan was doing. So they finally paid off for you guys. They finally paid off, yeah. No, we put the money to use and got a mic and a camera. We finally read enough Bluetooth ads. Yep. Speaking of. Dude, that scared me.

I'm just kidding. You want to know what's crazy? The other day, I was actually just sitting with Ryan. It was just me and him on the couch watching TV. He tried getting you to take one? Well, he goes like, hey. And look, next thing I know, he's hitting me with an ad. Yeah, that's what I was thinking. No camera, nothing. Just reading them right to me. I was like, bro, dude, it's just me and you. You don't have to do this right now. The dude's an autopilot. That's so funny. I mean, yeah, look over there.

Have you played fishing clash yet? And then you're like, no, why? And then just full 60 second spiel. Bro, Ryan, um,

Can we be honest here? Yeah. So you keep wearing these shirts. Yeah. And I know you go out of your way. No, you don't think they're funny. That's okay. Let me finish. Okay. I don't understand any of them. Oh, come on. Like the last one, the Illinois, like basically. I have mental Illinois. That's what it was. I never even saw that one. Oh, wow. Technically, I think you say it's Illinois, but. Okay. So what is this? Can we get a read on that?

Every single podcast, Ryan wears a different shirt, and each shirt is kind of a meme shirt or is supposed to be funny. Supposed to be. You would download a crappy JPEG of a monkey some dork paid $2 million for. Oh, it's a hit on NFTs and stuff like that. But this is the font and setup of in the early 2000s, mid-2000s, when they were trying to say you wouldn't steal...

It was a pirating DVD. Yeah, it was for pirating DVDs. And it was basically saying like, you wouldn't steal a pair of shoes. And it was like copyright infringement is stealing. And it was just kind of like the whole thing trying to tell the internet that copyright infringement

Which everyone took as a total joke. Yeah, it just turned into a big meme, but apparently not big enough for you to understand it. I guess I was just too young for it. Honestly, this one takes a little bit of thought. I have another one down there that's a dog locked in a car and it says, I love hot dogs.

Everyone's pretty spicy. That's pretty easy to understand too. Have you guys ever seen the Spotify show on Netflix? It's like the start of Spotify, basically. Well, the show is like basically the whole story of how Spotify started and then where they are now. Before Spotify came into the market, it was basically all pirating. Yeah. And this guy was like,

basically just pirating all of his music and stuff. And he was like, I think there's like a market for this. And then it just shows like the legal music. Yeah. For legal music, a market for like having songs on your phone at all times or access to, I don't know. Do you guys remember having to buy songs for like a dollar 25? Like new ones would be a dollar. Well, they used to be 99 and then they got sent. No, it was a dollar 29. Yeah. 29. But I remember when they added that extra technically 30 cents onto it,

As a kid, I was like, ah, that hurts. That's too much. Yeah, that's kind of when you stop. That is too much. And then you had to find alternative ways. Like LimeWire. You had to resort to stealing. No, no, LimeWire was long gone. Yeah, it was a little... I used it a bit. That was long gone prior to them changing the rate of buying a song on Apple Music. But dude, listening to iTunes or just music in general, and when you had to pay individually for the song, it was like...

you would really put a lot of thought into it. At least I was like, do I really like this song? Yeah. Well, I like this song in a week, like a year. You put a lot of thought and you're like 99 cents for the song. And now things are different.

the best they've ever been. The most balanced with obviously you pay a subscription. Do you think it's more lucrative now? Like the artists are making more money now? I don't know. I don't know. They have to be. Because I'm downloading a lot more than 10 songs a month. And like that'd be technically $10 back in the day of 99 cent songs. They aren't. But...

No, there's no way. They're not making money streaming. They should be. They are, but... They used to do CDs prior to that, and that had to have been lucrative. CDs? Yeah. CDs, records. Before that, Ben, there was records. Yep. Somewhere in between that, there was like... There was tapes. I guess with CD sales, you've got to buy the whole... It was like, otherwise, you just had to listen to the radio, and you hope for that song to come on, but...

I mean, realistically, I would imagine that you're in there still probably making a shit ton of money, probably less money a day. Don't quote me because I really don't know. But that's what I would imagine. So back in 1980, artists were making around like $15 billion off of the eight track vinyl and cassettes. Wow. It goes through a dip up until about the 1990s when cassette comes in and takes it over and

brings it back up. Then CD kind of starts filling this chart and then Napster peaks it in like 1999 at $22.7 billion of revenue. And this is not adjusted for inflation. I don't believe so. And then after that, it stopped.

declines to 2015 where streaming starts to pull a little bit of money back, but they're still not even close to where they were prior. Dude, so I actually had Napster as a kid prior to having iTunes because I didn't have a...

iPod or a Zoom. So Zoom was Microsoft's version of an iPod. Zoom. Zoom. Zoom. Zoom. Oh, it was a Zoon? It's Zoon, like Dune with a Z. Okay, well it was a Zoon. So I didn't have one, so I didn't know how to even pronounce it. But anyways, I'm pretty sure Napster went with Zoom, but you could also use LimeWire, which was like a pretty iconic illegal downloading website for music. It was all free, but it would...

poison your computer with viruses. Napster wouldn't do that and it was free. So you could listen to the music and download songs to your computer and all this stuff and even music videos for free. But if you wanted to put them onto your Zune or your iPod or whatever the hell you were going to connect it to, then you had to pay like, I think it was 15 bucks a month, which is quite a bit of money back in like the early 2000s.

Yeah, like I remember. But it was unlimited. It was unlimited. So as a kid that didn't have either of them, I would go skateboard in the morning. I remember this as a kid. I'd go skateboard out in my driveway, and then I would go downstairs, and I would hop on the computer, and I would watch music videos and listen to music and play RuneScape. RuneScape was so lit. That's awesome. Okay, how were companies like Napster operating? They got sued. They got sued.

Okay, so it did catch up to them. So it did. And then I believe that same guy who created Napster teamed up with Mark Zuckerberg on Facebook. Am I wrong? I'm not 100% certain. I think they had some kind of running. Maybe we got to double check that. Ken, is that true? I'm actually looking at something else. Ken, was the guy that created Napster and...

Mark Zuckerberg, the creator of Facebook. Did they have some... There was an interaction. I thought even in the movie on Mark Zuckerberg, they meet and I thought they did some kind of business together. I'm not the person to ask. Or does he pass up on it? You are the person to ask. Well, you're Jamie, so look it up. He just asked you not to call him Jamie, though. You're Kenny. Oh.

I'll look it up then. My mom listens to this podcast, unfortunately, and she's going to actually probably call me immediately and freak out at this. I was going to tell that story. That's really funny. No, this is a different story. Up until November. You've only been a part of the family for a couple months, buddy. You can't just be hopping on Ryan's stories like this. This is a story about Ryan. It's been going on for years. It's not even a story. Basically, I just remember when Ryan was like, dude, I've been like been trying

charging 10 bucks a month to my mom's Napster for like for like for

three four five years the most recent it has to be a lot more than five years bro 1999 or 19 999 a month every month and the last one that i have on my phone is uh 2020 but they've been coming through more than that can't figure out how to cancel it you go on your bill yeah you go on your bill and it's like not there and then we go can we cancel this and then every week or every month we'd get a napster i'm pretty sure the guy was a con artist dude some guy probably somewhere is his

Like picked up that bank account number and it was just getting to my 10 bucks a month. You've had that since you were in high school. Yeah. Like ringtones. It's still going. Uh, no, it looks like it ended last year. Wow. And I'm okay. Fell off. When do you think you started that? Let's just say it was going for at least 10 to 15 years. I would say like, no, I mean probably when I was like 14. So I'd say, yeah, good. Like seven years of Napster. And I don't remember using it really ever.

That's insane. So I still, I mean, they clearly were getting their monthly rate, but like, I don't get how they, like that was the peak of paying music artists. Yeah. Like Napster. So Napster did pay the people though? I guess. That seems like Napster came, that chart looks like Napster came in and then took it all down. Yeah. Cause I think a lot of the artists sued him because they were like, you stole our music and,

- Give away for free or whatever. - Napster, this is in present tense, but Napster pays an average of 1.9 cents per stream. - Shit, figure out what it is now. I bet you 1.9 cents. - So that's what they were making. - Dated February 22. - I don't think they were paying them. - How much is a stream per Spotify? - That's what I feel like. It's gotta be way less than a penny. - Yeah. - Napster was giving it to them good, dude. - Even if they're paying 10 bucks a month,

at 1.9 cents a song, how do they still make money? That's what I'm saying is like, how does Apple iTunes make money? Cause I'm downloading like a hundred songs a month.

And I'm paying $7.99. I'm sure it's just like anything. Like, you probably lose money on the people that download a bunch, and then you make money on the people. Like, the average consumption of music, you're probably not downloading that much music. So you're still, like, downloading it to your phone. Or it's just worth it to keep up with the other...

brands or sites or apps. It is. And you keep people buying iPhones, whatever. But say, think about it, dude. If they were paying one cent and think how many streams did like Lil Baby have this year? He had, you know, like 20 billion streams. Do the math on that. That's still what? Like a couple hundred million dollars off of just streaming. Yeah. Or it's their stock price. Like when Spotify picked up Joe Rogan's podcast for a hundred million dollars, their stock price went up

Don't quote me on this, but I think it was like $2 billion worth. Like their overall worth. So maybe it's just that, like where it's kind of a wash on the actual streaming side of things. I bet they're still making money on the streaming. This website's actually saying Napster pays the most out of all the platforms. It says they pay $16.82 per 1,000 streams.

$16 CPM. That's pretty damn good. Apple Music pays $7.83. Spotify is $3.97. YouTube is $0.60.

YouTube is 60 cents per thousand views, I guess. Man, that's messed up. Dang, 16 bucks per thousand views. And if you had a song, keep in mind, it'd have to blow up on freaking Napster. 16 bucks. What up, guys? Go listen to this podcast on Napster. You just gave Napster a hell of a plug there. Ryan, you just gave me PTSD. I thought you were going in an advertising mode. I put on my podcast or my advertising voice. It sounded just like it. I was like, what the hell? Is there an ad?

placed within my headphones we're about running up to that point so let's just run it here today's episode is brought to you by Angie Angie has made it easier than ever to connect with skilled professionals to get all your jobs and projects done well let me tell you there's the version of it where you try to do something at home and then there's a version of it where you have someone help you you watch them do it the right way and you go thank god I didn't try to do that myself

I have fully done things around the home that I think look good and then a bang in the night and I wake up to a shelf collapsing, a painting falling off the wall. Like it, I've seen it all go south. I own a home and I can tell you, I know how much work it can take. Whether it's everyday maintenance and repairs or making dream projects a reality, it can be hard just to know where to start. But now all you need to do is Angie that and find a skilled local pro who will deliver the quality and expertise you need.

Whatever your home project, big or small, indoor or outdoor, you can Angie that and connect with skilled professionals to get the project done well. Right now, one of my wish lists is I want a bike for my condo in Milwaukee and I would love to rig it up on a pulley in the ceiling because I have one of those like lofted ceilings.

but I'm so scared to try that on my own. Angie has 20 years of home experience and they've combined it with new tools to simplify the whole process. Bring them your project online or with the Angie app. Answer a few questions and Angie can handle the rest from start to finish or help you compare quotes from multiple pros and connect instantly, which means you can take care of any home project in just a few taps.

Because when it comes to getting the most out of your home, you can do this when you Angie that. Download the free Angie mobile app today or visit Angie.com. That's A-N-G-I dot com. Hi, I'm Angie Hicks, co-founder of Angie. And one thing I've learned is that you buy a house, but you make it a home. Because with every fix, update, and renovation, it becomes a little more your own. So you need all your jobs done well. For nearly 30 years, Angie has helped millions of homeowners hire skilled pros for the projects that matter. From

From plumbing to electrical, roof repair to deck upgrades. So leave it to the pros who will get your jobs done well. Hire high-quality certified pros at Angie.com. Ryan starts running ads in our headphones. This is just like, I mean, I know we don't really care too much about this, but Megan Thee Stallion just came out and said that

Basically that Tory Lanez shot at her. This happened in 2020, but it blew my mind. They came home from the club. Because Megan Thee Stallion is a pretty big deal. No, I think he shot her. He shot her foot. There were bullet fragments in her foot. There's no bullet holes in her foot. There's a big difference. It's still bad. They got home from the club and she was insulting him and wanted him to open the door up and maybe being a bitch and then just

And then, but then he just like, you know, goes crazy. Shot a gun through the door? No, and just said, dance, bitch, and shot five times.

And yeah, he said dance bitch. And then like insane. And then he apparently he paid her a million dollars or offered her a million dollars to not say anything. I think in the latest Drake song, he says something about Magda Stallion, like capping. What's the line exactly? Drake raps this bitch lie about getting shots, but she's still a stallion.

Ooh. Wow. Drake is so weird. Thank you, Ken. He's so awesome, but... Did you see his thing that he bought a diamond necklace that has like 42 engagement diamonds? And it's for the 42 times he wanted to propose? 42 times? Yeah, it seems oddly specific. Just oddly high. He kept track of all that? Yeah, that's what I'm wondering. You think after 10, you'd be like, yeah, you know, I was...

Felt like I was in love, but it just... And bought different rings every single time. I think he probably just wanted a really expensive necklace. Yeah, and wanted some reasoning behind it. Wanted a good story so people would talk about it. Makes a little bit more sense. You guys think Drake is overhyped? I think that his songs are slightly...

At least for my taste in music, they're a little slow and kind of just too lovey-dovey and just a little bit soft. You're trying to get in your feels almost, which I don't really want to do. But I do think that he's a legend in the fact that everyone else loves him. And clearly, I think he's got to be one of the highest earning artists. Have you guys seen Drake's Plane? I was just going to bring that up. It's a charter, like full-on...

Boeing. Yeah. Commercial plane for like 300 passengers probably. Outfitted in

into a personal jet. And I was going to bring it up because now he's not... He was the only musical artist to have a plane that size. I'm pretty sure they gave it to him. Yeah, I think Boeing gave that to him, which at the time, I remember when I saw that, I was like, man, why would they do that? But now, every time I think of Blake... Drake? I don't even remember his name. Blake? Now, every time I think of Drake, I'm like, man, I know that he's like big deal, but then I think of his plane, I'm like...

Who else just gets gifted a Boeing 747 that isn't like the greatest of all times in the eyes of like the masses? Because nobody else has that. Nobody else has been gifted something like that. So maybe it's just like me conforming to the rest of society thinking that way. But I'm like...

Yeah, no. He is probably a goat because of that. It was a gift from the Canadian Air Cargo Carrier Cargo Jet. It was used. It's still worth like $100 million. It's a 767. They just gave it to him. Yeah, I forgot that it was a gift. That's insane. Because I was just going to say DJ Khaled just posted a video of him plane shopping for basically the same size plane as Drake. I'm like, yeah, that's crazy.

Now someone else did it. However, he's got to buy that shit. Dude, I saw that video and I thought to myself, and I'm not even throwing shade, that plane has to cost so much money. So much freaking money. How does he have money to pay for that on top of all the other useless shit he's probably paying for? It's...

If there's anybody who's got streaming money, it's got to be DJ Khaled because he just slapped the DJ Khaled on that. Slapped the DJ Khaled on that. When I saw that, all I'm saying is I was like,

wow, I had no idea these guys were making this type of money. Yeah. Because that kind of money is ridiculous. To buy the jet, let's say that jet is $100 million. That's a fuck ton of money. But you got to pay to maintain it, store it, fuel it, fly it. You got to have people to fly it. Yeah. I mean, it's just... That would be a nightmare in my opinion. I guess it just goes back to, man, these guys got to be making...

So much money where it's so easy to justify it because, yeah, it's a headache. But like when they got that much money, it ain't a headache. Why not just rent it? I think there is something to be said about like DJ Khaled's probably like, I'm the greatest producer of all time. I ain't renting shit. I need myself a hundred million dollar jet. Dude, so speaking of planes and also renting stuff, like we got hit up by this.

Oh, I saw this. I heard you talking about it too, Ryan. Just some dude that was like, hey, I don't know if he owns it or works for it, but this yacht chartering company, basically like renting yachts, and went to the page and looked. They have 114 pages of rentable yachts and sailboats, and there's 24 on each page, so they have like almost 3,000

around the world that you can rent. So what do you say to us? Got to get you guys in for seven days. And I mean, I'm sure... Like for free or we're paying? I don't know. Probably not for free. Okay. Look at the top result. They sort by most expensive to least expensive. This is assuming for seven days. I think they're all kind of just around seven days. What's it going to cost?

Which I already know I have no interest at. $945,000. So basically almost a million. Who's paying for that? Your ads, Ryan. And they ain't paying for even 1% of it. So who is paying for that? We don't even spend a minute on that fucking boat. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Exactly. Not even a minute. We can look at it. Maybe. That one doesn't even look real. You look at it and it looks like...

just it doesn't look real so this dude just hit us up was like hey do you want to basically pay to I mean no I can read you the email it's pretty short-lived and boring but go to the hundred and fourteenth page and then that's probably more of what the ones that yeah it's a pontoon so 21 foot actually not nearly as bad as you think but I went all the way to the last page and then look for the cheapest one it's thirteen hundred and fifty dollars for assuming seven days and

It's a zingy. $1,300 for seven days? It's a Lund fishing boat with a 90 horse on the back. It's like a two...

Like a two little bedroom, like little mini yacht. Yeah. I was like for $1,350. Mini yacht. Hold up. Pull up the photo. Pull up the photo. A mini yacht. It does all say plus expensive. AKA a pontoon with a fishing house on it. But that's what I was wondering. Mini yacht. It's a houseboat on a pontoon. Dude, Evan and I had a great idea when we were...

searching up houseboats this week. I was curious. Do we want to... I was just about to actually say this. Do we want to spoil it? Because some people like to steal our ideas. You can't steal it because it's ours. Okay. Well, Evan and I were talking about how expensive it is. Why are you leaving me out? I was a part of this too. Evan and I and CJ were talking about how expensive it is to live around here. Yeah. And...

Evan said, I should just get like a houseboat type of deal. And I could park that out in front of the boys' house and then live on it. I love that. Genius. And I was like, yeah, we'll have a sandbar. You could move around and be lit. It'd be great. And then he brought up a couple of stories of ones he'd seen up on bigger lakes, all that. And he goes, you know what? We could, we could build one.

for here and then what did you say you go well we could just buy a skid fish house and drag it on and then you could live in that right on a flat pontoon on a flat barrels and i said what about one better you take an rv or like a towable rv and you back it onto the pontoon you build a little deck around it so then from the water you got a houseboat right this is brilliant yeah and then you brilliant you can't believe you guys came up with this you peter on over to the shore no no offense you

You Peter on over to the shore and then you put it up back to truck down, hook up, go out into the woods for the weekend. And,

It's Sunday comes around back right on. You're back on the lake. Is that legal? Maybe. Yeah. Like what if all you had to do is just register as a pontoon? Yeah. Both the tires down or like strap the tires to the pond. Yeah. It's all, it's all part of it. So I guess my tippy. Yeah. It does sound a little tippy, but it does sound pretty lit being right at the sandbar. You're all, you know, doing whatever you do there. It,

You're a little bit trashed and then you're like, I can't go home. I'm going to sleep right there within your own house. Or you are home. We go and park it right on the pond on the track. Evan lives on the motocross track on the water. That doesn't sound 360 waterfront property. We start taxing Evan.

Do I really think we're going to put a trailer home on a pontoon and have Evan live in it? Yes. Maybe. But what I did have an idea for was that we should do like a 24-hour or maybe 48-hour houseboat challenge. So we either rent one or we go somewhere that has one. And we go and park that bitch out on the water in the middle of summer. And it's all of us and...

And I'm sure one of us will leave because they will be so goddamn mad by the end of 10 hours of it.

it that actually kind of sounds nice it'd be like the igloo challenge which no one actually told on that transition well but to date that was my one of my least favorite actually no that was my least favorite video we've ever filmed and made the 24-hour igloo challenge i think that to do it properly that kind of idea you'd have to do it on like straight up the smallest boat possible

Oh, yeah. Like, make this suck. I want room to, like, bring the pinball machine with. I don't doubt that for a second. I know that you guys couldn't bear to leave that game behind. I think it would be awesome. How about we don't try to make it this big suffering thing? How about we just go out and have a good time? But then it's like, what do we put the time limit at? 48 hours. Shit. If we're having a good time, why do you got to leave? We're having fun. Why are you leaving? Girlfriends are like...

The video was over four days ago. We're just trying to challenge ourselves. We're tubing. Yeah. If it had like, you know, if it was like a yacht and has jet skis hanging off the side and shit, like, I mean, I, that would be considered leaving. I'm not going to lie, man. This thing is going to be far from a yacht, far from a yacht. If we have a small window air for air conditioner, uh,

We're going to be living very large. Okay. The video is tied with like surviving 72 hours on a boat. And then the boat is like fricking, it's got jet skis strapped to it. And it's got like a full live in bar and bedroom. Like a full staff. Yeah. Oh, this is terrible. I want to get off. Oh,

Counting down the time. You want to know something, Ben? You said that the 24 hours in the igloo was the worst video that we filmed to date. For one, I thought that was a lot of fun. And for two, you want to know... I mean, this is a pretty bold statement because I'd really have to look through the probably 400 videos. I don't even know where we're at. But...

This R6 quad swap that we're currently working on that we weren't even able to drop this week because everything has been such a headache. This is actually my least favorite video. As of right now, I know we're probably a third through it, is my least favorite video we've made. I was about to say the same thing. Bro, I've been not having fun. The Banshee and this are the worst two videos that I think we've ever made in our YouTube career. It's not...

Our worst video. I say worst time making. Worst time making. It's going to be a legendary video when it's done. But it's like we've just spent so much time. You know, we're all kind of sitting around trying to figure out like how to, oh, how do we make this work? Whatever. And it's just so much time to ultimately be cut down into probably like we spent.

five days filming so far and we probably have four minutes of a video just due to like the slow process of building this thing and it has been extremely boring I told Alex she asked me how my day was I said it was boring she asked me how my day was again the next day I said it was boring she asked me how it was I said boring and honestly I have not had a boring day in a very very I don't even I don't know if I have had a boring day in six seven years yeah like straight up yeah yeah no I I

I know what you're saying. When I think back to filming that video, just like the different emotions that I got from it weren't like I'm bored or

um like this sucks like i was anxious and i'm not an anxious person very rarely do i like tweak on something but the fact of like being underneath that much snow and like on the lake and uh the on ice was a nice new twist but there was just like parts to it where it was like evoking new emotions out of myself that i didn't even know existed right and i was like

I just want this to be over. I'm like thinking of the worst possible options and like I'm in such a negative headspace. You were. I was just like, and I hate being like that person or having that like mentality on something. I was just like, I just need to like start over. This is just not good.

I need to get out of this place. And we couldn't. And that's like, well, you could have laughed. I could have, I could have, but like that wouldn't have been good. I would've got wrapped pink. Right. And it still did. Ridiculous. Still so stupid, but dude, I have so much respect for, uh,

that do these challenges for like 48 hours or 50 hours just to like meet the title and thumbnail to like make it look good. Most of them aren't like life-risking though. Like I will say, if things did go wrong in the Igloo, it would have been bad. I felt like that Igloo challenge was like kind of like life-risking. That was, but most other YouTubers don't have life-risking challenges.

Right. And the whole time I just thought this is not worth it. And it's a waste of our like waste of our time. But mostly like I hate that we're even risking this because like the igloo could have collapsed pretty much at any given point. It would have been bad. It would have been really bad. But it didn't. You're right. It didn't. And alas, it stayed up for another week or two. Yeah. We even drove a fucking razor on top. Afterwards. Afterwards, we knew that. But like in the time I was like, this

This is so stupid. Like just for like a short term gain. I don't know. That's just kind of like my mentality in the moment. So that's why I look back at it and think like the suck wasn't worth it. I can respect your mentality of not looking for a short term gain because I'm the same way. I'm all about just like this, this YouTube game or whatever else kind of career you're doing.

is a marathon, not a sprint. And I feel that and I think about that every day when we're planning and just navigating our path.

But I didn't feel that way in that moment. Yeah, I was thinking like if this shit fell right now, it'd be really bad. But I felt pretty comfortable in there. And it was a little scary and I was cold. But for the most part, it was exhilarating. And I like the camaraderie of it. And I thought it was really fun. I honestly had a good time. I would do it again. But I just know there's really no point in doing it again because it's like we can't make a video doing it again and do it.

better because that was like top of the line we had a fucking nintendo switch a keg we had a bar we had steak like it was pretty awesome it was legendary man it was legendary it was such a fun time but that's why i like it was all built by us yeah that was sick too that's why i love the idea you just had with the the houseboat thing because it's like we can't do the igloo again like we could make it bigger and better and stronger but it's like what's the transition and i love that so how do you feel about instead of being freezing

Being very, very hot. I can deal with that. And mosquitoes. Mosquitoes. Big bugs. And possibly the boat sinking. I can always put on a life jacket. Ben, you're going to life jacket for like 48 hours? I would, dude. Some of those things, honestly, like some things that we do actually kind of tweak me out where like I reflect back on it. I'm like, man.

I was pretty tweaked out on that. Thank God nothing went wrong, but like I tried to play it cool. And then afterwards I was like, yeah, we've talked about that before where it's like certain things trip Ryan out that don't trip you out. Certain things don't trip Evan out that trip me out. And, and just like, it's so funny. Cause we always go, dude, are you seriously tripping out about this right now? And you do this.

You're tripping about this and you do that. No, I'd agree with that. I think it's how much time I have to like really think about it. I feel like the amount of time that you're immersed in the stress is what gets to you. You can deal with like the little bursts of it, but if it's just like a constant looming thing, then that's when like being stuck in an igloo, stuff like that. That's what gets to you. Yeah. Evans is really random. He'll like drive a spiked R6, whatever.

100 miles an hour, lay the thing down, rev limit, do a wheelie. But like if the gas tank doesn't have the right thread bolt in it, he's like, this is ridiculous. I'm out of here. He does his little...

throw them up but it's just that's that's how it goes i have things that stress me out for no reason and i to go back on that would say that making these videos has been the worst for me because i get stressed about one not feeling like we're all utilizing our time and two being worried that it's not going to get done and then three that when it gets done it's not going to work and all those things add up

to me and then come out in a negative way. I'd say very well said. It's like those emotions come out when you have to worry about, okay, the timeframe of it getting done. And then like when you're looking on your phone, kind of like you're Googling shit, but then you like, I don't even know. And I'm on Instagram. No, actually like that happens, but also like, and then maybe there's too many hands in the kitchen at the time and you're just like sitting there staring at it and nothing's getting solved. That happens.

is where that's what just gets like, gets y'all work. It gets me all worked up. Yeah. It's so stressful, dude. When we have off time though, man, I'd love just doing nothing like just chilling, which is nice to see you come around to, because there was many years. I remember we would not like, if we were just chilling, like,

like maybe a year and a half ago you would like stress out you'd be like we should be doing something there's something we could be doing right now I'm like dude it's okay just to be fair we should have been doing something probably you're we should have been doing something but you can't always do something but on like a Sunday when me and Greta are just chilling and she's like let's do this let's do this let's do that let's go for a walk or like uh go and work out I'm like no no no no I've been doing things no I don't

want to do that. I don't want to do any of that. I want to chill. Shit, now that you said that, I think of the opposite still. Really? Yeah. You've always just had a wild amount of energy. Like on a Sunday...

I'm like, yeah, what can we do? Is there something to do? There's got to be something to do. But I still like to chill. You are a ball of energy, Mike. You're up early in the morning. One of those were lies. Two of those might have been lies. No, I feel the same way then with the laundry and I feel so bad because like I'll get home from a day here and I've spent all day talking with you guys. My best friends love it. It's great. But I spent all day talking

and doing things, you know, being in the car, driving, being outside. I'm like active and socially active. And then I get home and I'm like, I cannot wait to just watch TV and just unwind a little bit. But she's been cooped up working at home all day. The only social interaction she gets is with like her coworkers on zoom and

And then I'm just like, she's like, Hey, how was your day? And I asked her all these questions and I'm just like completely burnt out. And I feel really bad. I feel like that's a hard thing for people who live different lifestyles, you know? Yeah. I think both sides are very relatable. It's like a tough balance. Yeah. Totally switching things up. We've been thinking about going into the new year.

changing things up around uh there's the podcast studio here like doing something different either with the desk or completely getting rid of the desk we're thinking about just going with couches just like kind of making the environment the podcast studio just like a little bit more chill yeah a little bit like more open and free less like desky and yeah set up but also more spread

spread out where Evan's sitting on the couch right now, which you guys can't see if you're watching on YouTube, he would be on camera in a sense. I kind of like the spread outness, but obviously we haven't made our mind up yet, but we are going to be changing the set. I don't know what we're going to do with this sweet

like table that we had made. It's really cool, but we definitely got our use worth. 57 podcast, 58. I wouldn't be mad about sitting on a couch while talking to you guys. This is great, but if I can like lean back. Yeah, I think the thing about the podcast table is it is nice, but it does feel like a little...

I don't want to say formal, but if it's in more of like a relaxed setting, like it might be a little bit more like flowing and easygoing almost and like less intimidating if we have like guests or like our friends just sit down. Just because like being up in Minnesota, as you guys have seen, like there's...

very few guests that we can have on here just because like the lack of people to come on but we're like we have so many friends that have like interesting stories or just honestly shoot the shit with us or funny that we're like dude you should come on our podcast and let's just have a good time and like chop it up and then they sit down and it's like feels formal yeah it feels you got the lights you got the cameras and

And, uh, it, it, it's harder to have a conversation versus just sitting on the couch or sitting down in the shop, just shooting the shit. So we're trying to think of like, how do we, you know, continue to make these programs, but bring on just like our friends to just have conversations with. Yeah. It's just like what we were. So before this, we were sitting down eating and me, Ben, Evan,

And our boy, Fast, was downstairs. And we were having this really funny, awesome conversation. We're like, damn, this would have been great on the podcast. But you don't ever get into some... Sometimes you don't get into those. Either way, we need more cameras around the room. You know, like, what do you think, Jamie? Oh, can't even be mad at the guy. Can't even be mad at the guy. Jamie. Snipe. I got a couple more months or weeks of exclusivity. James.

I didn't even realize that. I think technically online I am supposed to be just drinking Coors. Well, good for you. Yo, you drink Coors every day. I do. The only thing you drink is Coors. You don't drink water, milk, pop, nothing. My favorite small call out here is because it just cracked me up. When you reach into the fridge, you grabbed a Mountain Dew, then you kept the door open with your forearm, grabbed a Coors, looked at them both, put the Mountain Dew back, and then you drank Coors.

it's time they both look good you know want to know the actual thing that was going on in my head is uh i recently started drinking uh apple crown and mountain dews and i was like i'm gonna mix up an apple crown and mountain dew and then i was like that might be a little extreme for right now so then i grabbed a beer instead it's darn good it's a lot of sugar

There's a lot of sugar. You know, it is funny though. I will say, uh, with going back to the podcast, the amount of people that listen to it that are actually like, you know,

associates of us or acquaintances is alarming. I'll go places and now they'll be like, yeah, your guys' issue with the mechanic. Did you ever get that solved? I'm like, did I tell you about this? On the last podcast, I'm like,

You listen to the podcast? And they're like, yeah, yeah, I listen to everyone. I'm like, oh my. Okay. Oh my. I got to straighten up on there. I did the same thing. Greta's mom listened to, I don't know if it was a couple of them, but the My Dad podcast. Oh. And I was just thinking back like, oh man. We're good in that one. Don't go back any further. Yeah. So the other day, Greta's brother got...

Held at gunpoint and robbed in the cities. What? Yeah.

Jesus. Yeah, dude. On the U of M campus. Oh, her little brother. That is not cool. No. I was hoping you were going to say like in Mexico or something like. No, dude. In Minneapolis. I'm saying it. Minneapolis is gone to shit. No, but it's a lot more likely to happen. I don't know. Maybe not. Anyway. Yeah, he was walking into his frat house just like literally behind the house. It was the other frat, wasn't it? No. No.

And, yeah, some guy was like... I hope I'm not outnumbered. They're upset that I'm telling the story. I just think it's crazy, and it kind of just shows where everything has kind of gone to shit. But especially close to us, it didn't feel like Minnesota would be like this. But, yeah, he was walking to his frat house, and this guy put down his window and was like, come here. And...

you know, what do you do when you're in an alley? It was like a short, like a tiny little alleyway. And, uh, he like goes up to the window and the guys pulls out a gun, pointed at him and he's like, give me your phone and your wallet. Makes him open up his phone, give the code,

And then go into iCloud and delete his iCloud so, like, the phone is intractable. Oh, my gosh. And then he couldn't remember the code. So he, like, had him tell him, like, five times. It was like, I'm going to sell the phone. Like, I need to know the code. And then, thankfully, let him go. Yeah. Who knew that forgetting your iCloud password, which happens every time, would come in handy? So did he not take his phone? No, he took his phone. Oh, okay.

No, he took his phone. He took his wallet, took everything. Oh, I thought he gave his phone back to him because he couldn't figure out the code. No, no, no, no. The guy couldn't remember his phone code. Oh. So he asked him like five times. What a fucking idiot. You've got to be on top of this type of stuff. You're doing armed robbery in an alley? Something tells me the guys doing armed robberies in alleys aren't the smartest guys to remember codes. But anyway.

Yeah, isn't that crazy? And on campus or just off campus? Yeah, I mean, if our house is right on campus. Yeah. That is so messed up. Was it like someone his age? Our age? No, he said he was like an older guy. And I guess like the cops have been watching him. And there's like video cameras everywhere.

Of the... Incident... And everything... But like... He was in a... Unmarked car... Didn't have license plate... Oh no plates... He was just driving around... And now he's like... At... You know... At large... Technically... Like still... He's probably still doing the same shit... So when that happened... Me and Greta started looking at... Like the crime reports... In the cities... And...

And dude, that's just like one of 50 things that happened that day. Right. Yeah. Probably that hour. Small, I'm sure in the scale of it, which is not to even try to minimize it, but that's crazy. Like that's gotta be pretty scarring. Obviously having a gun pointed at you. You don't know. You don't know if the guy's going to pull the trigger. Right. And, and,

Thank God he didn't, obviously. I guess it's definitely going to make him more careful. I mean, I'm not saying like... Of what? Of walking? No, I'm just saying like, I don't think it's a... It's just your living, like, situation. Yeah, no, it's the worst. But I was like, if that's what it is going to be in Minneapolis, then that's what it's going to be. And I'm just like, hopefully he's got his guard up. I don't want him to ever even walk over to a car that says, come here. I love that.

I love how Mike just told, hopefully he learned his lesson when Mike hasn't fucking thought about it. A guy puts down his window, he points a gun at you and says, come here, what are you going to do, run away? Well, Mike would have been stressed. That's his fault for not being out after dark and wearing those type of clothes. No, it was at 1.30 in the afternoon. Yeah, he shouldn't have been wearing those type of clothes. It was in the middle of the afternoon. Wow, that's actually pretty good. I'm not saying he learned his lesson. I'm just like, damn, I bet he's going to be careful walking around now.

Like, not even, like, just... What do you mean? Like, he's not rolling around without his piece or his boys. Right. What do you mean, careful? It's, like, where you live, I feel like. Right. So he's got to be careful. How could... What would he have done differently? I don't know.

I'm not saying you should have done anything differently. I'm just kidding. See, that's what happens when you go to college. I'm just kidding. I'm not saying you should have done anything differently. Because what you're saying is like being aware of your surroundings more? Yeah, just being aware that the chances of that happening are extremely higher than when he comes home to DL. Yeah.

When he comes home. Oh, yeah, yeah. That's what it's just like a completely different like it actually. Oh, shit. That actually happened to me. I've heard this happening to people in Minneapolis like all the time. That happened to me. What's super annoying. I've talked to certain people that live in the cities that completely deny the living situations being dangerous.

And I don't understand it. What do they live in? Minnetonka? Yes. Yeah. That's why. No, I think it's people that live outside that don't want to recognize what's happening in the city almost. Or...

I think, which is even more delusional or worse, is that it's like a political stance where you don't want to admit that it is dangerous or that things are happening because it looks bad on your politician that you support. I agree with that. Which I'm like, dude, at what point is it just not worth it? Put politics aside. Put pride aside. The pride aside, the safety of...

random civilians in a town just because of like a certain policy. Right. Dude, I agree 100% political agenda. I don't know. It's like they don't care about the integrity of their beloved city. You know, it's like letting it go. Do you remember? I don't think they view it like that, though. They,

They don't. Well, obviously. And I mean, look at politics from either side and they'll both argue. Yeah. They'll both argue against each other. And I don't think either are probably right. But almost putting a sense of like humanity aside and trying to make it something political when it shouldn't be that. No human should be put in that position. Like, dude. Yeah. Can you imagine...

being held at gunpoint. Was he pretty jarred from it? Was he pretty shooken up? I think he's... Or how's he taking it? I mean, having someone point a gun at you and not knowing whether they're going to pull the trigger or not is...

gotta be pretty it was pretty scary you know when it happened to me jarring yeah I guess like I'm like all of us I was in a car no you didn't they didn't really have me like that so I guess oh so him getting a gun pointed at him was different than mine yeah Ryan you're being a little bitch what are you talking about are you talking about in your jeep

He didn't have a gun in his hand. Yes. He had a gun. Did he? What the fuck? Is this dude stupid? Are you fucking kidding me? No, he did. He did. I blacked out. But he didn't point it at you. He pointed it at us and I said he's not going to pull the trigger. I know he won't. No, he didn't lift it up. Jesus Christ. Anyway, it doesn't matter. No, it does. It does. Did he lift it up? No. Yeah, waving it around like

I don't think he ever went like this. Okay, next time when you tell the story and you go, Ryan had a gun pulled on him, the guy was this close to his head, and then I have to go, oh no, remember? He didn't even have a gun in his hand. Was Ben in the same car as everyone else? Yeah, he was in the backseat. He couldn't see. That's why he wasn't freaking out. Anyway.

So I do have something to say about the cities. This reminds me of a story that actually Ryan and I experienced together. It was last year, last fall, and him and I and our girlfriends went to a Vikings game and

and we were staying in a nice hotel just across the street from the stadium, and we go walking out on game day. We're sitting there waiting for our Uber or something, or we were going to go get brunch. It doesn't matter. And this guy comes up that was supposedly homeless, and he goes, like, you know, hey, could I get some money? Like, I'm trying to get back home to see my mama. And he was like,

God, he had to have been in his 50s. And, like, I don't know. I'm actually kind of a sucker. I normally give people money, but it just didn't feel right. He got to me last, and I just was, like, thinking to myself, I'm like, God damn it. Like, I can't keep just doing this. And I just said, sorry, man. All I got is my card. And he literally looked at me like this. He goes, motherfucking white. I just started screaming. Freaking out. Motherfucking white.

I don't know if you can say that word anymore. You have to take that word out, beep it. I haven't heard that word in a long time. He starts calling us it and creates a whole scene and we're all just like this. And he just goes walking away and we're just like,

He was so nice and polite asking for the money, and he switched like this. And I was like, bro. I went from being like, God, I feel so bad telling this guy, like, no, I don't have any cash on me. To like, fuck that guy. I'd imagine that even bigger cities are, you know, dealing with the same thing. But it's like, how do you even fix that? How do you fix that? You can't give money out to people because then you create another problem. It's just like, ultimately, it's just a societal thing.

thing where does minneapolis rank in like the most violent cities yeah honestly god i'd have to admit it's probably not even cracking the top 15 i would imagine not but it just really not as high as you think but yeah i think it is i think like number one detroit or st louis which i've actually heard st louis is really bad memphis

Bunch of rant Milwaukee. That's yeah. Have you ever heard about the Kia boys? Minneapolis? I haven't heard about him. He was part of them for, well, now we don't want to spill the beans, but you guys ever heard about the Kia boys? So it's basically this group of young men in Milwaukee. They're like Wisconsin. I don't even know if I could say young men. They are boys like young teenagers and

And they figured out for some reason how to steal Kia's V8.

very easily. And they steal these Kias. I was wondering how they got their name. Yeah, the Kia boys. They're the Kia boys. We're the C boys. They're the Kia boys. Don't get them mixed up. Don't get them twisted. We're the C boys because we're the boys of Cormont. They're the Kia boys because they steal Kias and drive them recklessly, wreck them, roll them, go like 100 mile an hour through like a 25 mile an hour residential zone. They...

Are so reckless and they have no care in the world. And this YouTuber, Tommy G, actually did a little segment. He did a video with him. I have to check that out. He does like these documentaries where he goes to the hood. He's a really... I actually fuck with him. I've seen a few of his other videos. He's up and coming. He did a video... So anyways, he goes to Milwaukee and he does this video with them. They like fucking start ripping these cars. How do you do a video with them? Aren't they... So like...

His channel? Yeah, they were wearing masks. They had ski masks on, like the kids. And you just would have to go check it out. But he does these... He started doing these documentary type of videos, 15-minute videos, where he'll go and...

be with the Kia boys who are stealing Kias or he'll go and hang around, um, like, uh, a really big drug dealer and like film drug deals and everyone's masked up. And like, it's, it's like a show you would see on vice like vice. Yeah. We're like, and he's, he does a really good job because it just is very real. How does he get that shit approved with like a drug dealer? I, and that's, I don't know. I think you eventually develop a reputation. Like,

He keeps it real. And ultimately, a lot of these people, you know, you've never been on camera. You're into money and making money or whatever. A lot of people want to be like a star. You know, they feel cool. Whether their face is masked or whatever, it's just like... I guess I can understand that. It hits them there. But anyways, he did this video on... I believe it was in New York. And the dirt bikes...

that are running the streets around there. And the guy who was his main form of contact clearly watches our videos because he was wearing a Seaboys TV dirt bike shirt. No way. Dead ass serious. Dead ass serious. The guy that he meets up with and then brings him to go meet with all the other guys that are doing wheelies in the street.

is wearing a Seaboys TV dirt bike shirt. I swear to God. That's so sick. Bro, and I've been watching his videos for like two months, and then that pops. I'm like... That's pretty cool, but also... I don't know. Pop it up. I will send you the link, Ryan. You can put it on the screen. Dude is wearing a dirt bike shirt. Whoever that guy is... Yeah, his name is... I don't know. Can we really plug him? Can we plug him? Is he getting in trouble? I don't know. He's trying to...

I don't know. Whatever. We'll plug it. Fuck it. Yeah. Nice guy. And he's like, yeah, I had to cop that. He copped the quad one too. Let's send him some more shit. Let's send him some shit after this just because he was wearing it in that video. And, uh, that's so cool. I'm gonna actually hit up Tommy G and say, yo, love what you're doing. Also, that'd be sick. Yeah. Do you guys like watch like on that similar form of content? Like real media right now is definitely on YouTube. I would say not the news and, uh, Andrew Callahan, like all gas, no brakes. Um,

He actually got like a company bought that whole channel from him and he lost it. So he can't do. Why did that happen? Basically, he was like just trying to make it. And they came to him and said, we'll fund all of this. We'll pay for you and a filmer, maybe two filmers, and we'll get you an RV and we'll pay for your gas. And I think that's about it. You know, like fronted him.

I don't know, $20,000 to get going and to film for the year. And then like something, I can't, they screwed him over in the contract. It sounds like. And then he basically had to like give up his all gas, no brakes channel, which is just a fun name. That shit happens all the time in contracts. If you don't have someone reading your contracts or if you're not reading them yourself, you're

you're fucking up. Yeah. Straight up. How many stories have you heard of that? He's like just channel five with Andrew Calhan and like dude he he did like a full documentary on Oblock like in Chicago. He did dude like Tommy G did one as well. It's like Oblock is like a

big community of apartments and there's like it's like section 8 housing you know like it's very dangerous and it's just dangerous that's where like Chief Keef came from and like it's just dangerous in general like there's like this building is like against this building not quite like that but like dude people like they're shooting all over and he like went and then he took him to uh

a Cubs baseball game and all that. Like he just does the media covers stuff that like no one's covering, like going in there with like legit gang members.

Wow. It's a little bit ingenious. It's not only going and documenting, but then taking them to a normal societal event. That's some shit we do. He just goes to all the rallies and protests, and he never says anything bad about anyone, about any side, about any certain this or that, but he...

he just ends up clowning like basically everyone he interviews like it's not his main goal but it's like it's very funny i feel like you could do that mike i would love it i he's but i'm not outgoing enough like i feel outgoing but like i'm not quick and witty and he's like he no i guess you're right he doesn't really come he's pretty quiet outgoing yeah i just love it it's very entertaining content i have a lot of respect for people that are able to go into situations that are

gonna be uncomfortable. Yeah. You know? And especially for like the cameraman too. You know, it's like kind of one of those behind the scenes things that do not get the respect that they deserve because it's so awkward when they look at you and they're like, you're fucking filming me. Yeah, you're the one I have the problem with. They normally have a problem with the camera guy and you gotta sit there and hold that shit on them. Yeah. Like if anyone's getting punched first, it's the camera guy. For sure. Either whack the camera or hit the cameraman. A lot of times,

for youtubers that just are like a single youtuber with a cameraman like danny duncan's a great example of it he's probably the biggest example of it they go around and if anyone presses the cameraman they get pissed and they they cover them and like do not touch the cameraman or my camera it's your duty as and i mean you know i don't even know who we're really speaking to but it

If you're a YouTuber and you are hiring a cameraman and you're putting, doing these situational vehicle or videos where you're

the cameraman is in a opportunity to get hit, it is your duty to make sure they don't like, I remember when the goalie, yeah, I remember when Logan Paul was, was with Jake Paul and Jake was hanging around the shady character at the time. And the guy went after Logan Paul's cameraman and Logan Paul grabbed the fucking dude and slammed him to the ground. I've seen that happen. I've seen so many people like,

just defend their camera guys because they respect them because without them it's not I love that it's also a very selfless duty it's a selfless duty you get no fame and you're just you're in the line of fire and it's like easy to you can do a hundred things right and one wrong you know like a hundred things right delete the one clip you shouldn't have like bounce the you know you fumble the shot yeah but I love that I love it's also it's just like I love how you said protect the goalie it's just like the goalie in a sense it's

you can do a hundred things, right? Block a hundred shots. But if you miss the three, man, one that matters. Yeah. That's so funny. Unless you're a cameraman around here, then you get attacked because you're probably also the one playing the prank. When Ken threw that thing at you. No, you were a bystander. No, you were a cameraman. I will admit I slightly, I mean, it was kind of my instigation, but,

It's different for our situation because... We're all friends. Right. Yeah, but I see what you're saying. If you're putting someone in the line of fire... You want to know something I haven't been able to appreciate as much just lately and...

Maybe it might be just due to my coming of age. Soccer. No, it's when people go out and they make videos potentially riling up someone just minding their own business. Let's say they go to Target and this guy is shopping and they're secretly filming them and they very clearly...

They instigate them to get mad and then they make this video on them. But it's like this guy's really witty and he's quick with the comebacks. And it's very obvious that he's joking and the other guy doesn't. And they basically make the other person look bad on video. And it's very easily for me to like watch it and see and be like, they totally just did that guy dirty. They set him up. And I mean, we've maybe done it a couple of times too. I think it's considered punching down in the industry. It's like...

When the joke's not on you, you kind of are punching down and, you know, whatever. But I've had a hard time appreciating that lately. Interesting. You know what I'm saying? And I'm not even going to say, I'm not going to say YouTubers names that do that, but there's so many that have made such a large career off of it. It's like,

I think maybe I don't appreciate it as much because they're like, I know how these people are living. I'm like, wow, dude, like you're a fucking millionaire and you go around to Walmart and pick on these like people that are just trying to get by.

And then you set them up and then you make it big off of it. And it's just like, I don't know. And then you, I used to, I used, yeah, you can edit it and make them look bad, make you look good. And, uh, that used to be my favorite type of content. Right. But now I have grown out of it because I don't know. I just have a different look on it. I don't, I don't appreciate it as much.

I think there's like two truths to that. Like both sides, how you said it is considered punching down in the industry because it is. And then there's also the side of some, it's all subjective. Sometimes it's funny. Sometimes it's not.

Sometimes it is funny. And like how you said, we've maybe done it a few times because sometimes it happens when we're out and about. It's different when you're looking for it or you're out and they come in. But creating a whole career off of it, completely different. Because then it's like they're up. They're way up. They're making money and they're just always like, yeah, another video of punching down. It's different if I'm making fun of you because it's kind of like...

you know, we're in this together kind of thing, but it's like not really that cool if you're like clowning random people. Basically just taking, yeah. Yeah. That's a very grown up thing of you to say, but I mean, it's 100% legit. It's something I've recently realized because there's just people that I've watched for a long time that I have a hard time watching. And it definitely is changing. People on watching on YouTube, it's shifting towards a,

I like how you did this prank on people. No one got hurt. No one got upset. No one, whatever. To be clear, you mentioned Danny Duncan. It's not, I'm not even talking about Danny Duncan. There's just so many other people that do that type of content. Danny Duncan is probably my favorite YouTuber still. I think it's probably the easiest, one of the easiest types of content to make. It's not though, but it just takes a certain type of person. You have to have balls. Yeah, no, for sure. But like if you do,

if you go up to 25 people, odds are that you're going to find one person that's going to give you such a good reaction, you're going to go viral off of it. It's just kind of a numbers game. There's this guy on Instagram that I have followed and I think he's really funny. He does a little bit more where he makes fun of himself and that's

kind of why it's a little funnier still it's interacting with random people but he goes to like a lowes and he's smoking weed and he goes can i smoke this in here and like nobody stops him and he just ends up getting wicked high and he like literally is at he's like can someone please kick me out and they're like nah man you're good to do that in here just totally flipped it on they don't want to even press them yeah they don't even want to probably whatever type of city they live in it's so funny you

Yeah, they're like, we got bigger problems to deal with, man. People are stealing stuff in here. Yeah, they're like, we don't need to stop. I'm going to pull it up. Speaking of stealing stuff, I saw Walmart just dropped a stat that they had a billion dollars worth of stuff stolen last year. I believe it. Yeah, and I heard that they were talking about potentially closing down their stores, which I thought was a major cap. Yeah, man.

Major cap. Certain stores. Dumb question. This feels dumb, but is Walmart worldwide or just U.S.? Worldwide. I don't know about... I know it's America. Not a lot, but there is not allowed. I think they tried and they kind of closed. Can you imagine? Not allowed! Not allowed, not allowed. But if that's just U.S., that's a lot of stolen... What is Walmart's revenue a year?

Like, is a billion bucks for Walmart's revenue a lot, though? Yeah. They said a billion dollars has been stolen? A billion? Dude, there's some cities where they have, like, laws where they don't enforce...

certain type of crimes where like so if it's a if it's like under a certain dollar amount they don't enforce it and i've seen videos of this it'll be like this guy comes in here every week and steals whatever and he's just masked up and like no one can stop him he just walks in takes shit leaves no one does anything they just turn the other cheek and the police don't do anything either yeah because they're like oh this guy just stole a bag of chips and a pop

The guy steals, you know, whatever. But, yeah, he just walks in, walks out. Wow. And I think there's a lot of cities like that. I don't know what exactly it's called. It's like a... It's just like a petty crime. Yeah. They consider under a certain dollar amount, maybe like a thousand bucks. So they could steal like... Wow. I don't... And don't quote me on a thousand. But like a certain amount. It was like the dude had taken very clearly stolen. Mm-hmm.

nothing's going to happen to him. He does it every week. But in fiscal year 2022, they did 572.8 billion. Wow. So how much was stolen? Just a billion? 0.5% of the revenue.

That's not even a 1%. It's like 1% of 1%. Marginal. Sorry, sorry. Not even a full percent. That's very marginal. That's a lot still. That's a ton. Yeah, it's a lot of money. That's a ton of stuff. But yeah. No, I don't... I believe it. Have you ever been in this? A billion dollars. A billion dollars. Never even seen that ever. It's only a billion dollars. Like it would fill up like an arena of just stuff. Yeah. I mean, the bigger you get, that's just part of it. But...

I've been like creating a folder on Instagram like of crazy videos but like actually crazy videos you know people getting smoked at the a bunch of just crazy shit this dude's got some fucked up folder of people getting hit by cars yeah I mean not it's not a folder of people just getting hit by cars or smoked he watches every night before he goes to bed as you will yeah I go through all 24 videos every night okay what's

What's your folder here? It's just crazy videos. There is a lot of explicit. Yeah, obviously. Okay, where are you going with this? I'm just wondering if you guys want me to show them to you. Oh, can we? I feel like this is when you're young and you used to search on YouTube like crazy videos. Yeah, dude. I promise you these will not be what you'd find. Crazy videos. Dude, they are. I promise you if this happened to you, you'd go, that was crazy.

Straight into the top floor patio door and exploded probably in their living room like can you imagine that happening to you? Like it could have started the entire building on fire it do it. I don't really hurt someone Yeah, I don't I I hate to be this guy. I don't think it's real really ah yeah, it could be

How do you not think this is real? It's too far away. It just seems like too real. That seems real to me. Like, can you imagine doing that on whatever kind of tractor that is? He's just like, yeah, I can finesse. How does this only have 4,300 likes? Mike, don't you have a tractor? I do have a tractor. Oh, dude, Mark, you couldn't do that with it. Mark, you're a farm boy. Mark. Mark. Man, shut up.

Goddamn. Dude, God, absolutely. I love the caption. If your shit tore up, I'm going to stay away. Come on, Mike. Dude, the car meat. When you just... No. Did he just run over his leg? Yeah, and then look at him just kind of walk away. All right, I'll restart it. And... Dude, I saw this one. Reverso front wheel drive. Oh!

Hold up. That guy might have a broken neck. So many people get run over by cars and are fine. Hold up. He got run over by a Chevy HHR or whatever the fuck that is. I think it's a model. He broke his back or his neck. Oh, he's back down, yeah. He broke his back or his neck. Oh, his face, dude. No, he broke his back or his neck, 100%. Do you see the way he bended?

His collarbone. His collarbone. Something. There's so many good ones of these. Dude. This is the best one. That's the pants one. Look, he looks up at the guy and the guy on the left is filming him right there. And he's like, oh shit. Is that like a southern thing to do these car meetups and donuts? Oh my god.

Dude I was just telling Vass to watch out and not do this on our scooter. Oh right in front of the cop. Oh he slid on his face. Dude he had the green light too that cop was running a red light. You're trying to warn him she hit him. Oh my gosh. Banshee.

Go figure. Oh. Dude, there's been so many times late at night we've been... I fucking told you. I told you. There's been so many times late at night we'll be buzzing home down the trail after like a long day snowmobiling in the mountains and we'll be just ripping. Like 75...

dark whooped out trail and there'll just be a corner that comes out of nowhere. And I've almost done that. And I always go, man, that really, really suck right now. Yeah. Pile driving to a bunch of trees at the end of the day. Yeah, this is a, this I will end on this one. It's a four wheeler clip that most of you should have seen if you're into what a power sport, but this dude bounces this utility four wheeler. Oh, wait. Oh, it,

It kind of does, but actually the dude ends up being all right. You got to be careful with those actual four-wheelers, not quads, utility. Those things roll on you, you're in trouble. I mean, people die all the time. Especially it's the going up the hill thing. You can climb something and it tips straight back. Or even sideways. It's quite a collection. I promise. That's your bike, Mike. I know, dude. He's on the YZ. Oh, no. He's got a chick on there. I already know what's going to happen. YZ.

And they're having a good time now, but... This poor girl. What is she doing hanging around this guy? Oh, my God. But, yeah, like, right now, he's kind of shredding. Well, clearly, you know what he's doing. Oh, I hate that you say right now. So then they switch positions. She hops on the back. No. He's going crazy right now. He's doing the Evan arm swing.

Oh my gosh. She ever feed on the pegs? Oh, Oh, Oh my gosh. Okay. Honestly, this is insanely impressive. Wait, maybe they don't crash. And I just saved it. Cause I was really impressed. There's going to be Mike and Sydney. I was going to say, they'd be really dumb to post all this and not post. I agree, dude. He's same bike and everything. Absolutely. Throwing down right now, man, this chick.

has got bigger balls than him. I wouldn't want to ride on the back of that thing. I was going to say, I must really like this guy. Well, whenever I think of a ride or die, I just always think of that. It's like, not that everyone wants a ride or die, but whatever that is, that's ride or die. I wouldn't even expect anyone to do that with me. Dude, the bowling sound. Can we get the bowling sound on that?

How do people keep getting hit at these car meets? How do you show up at a street? They just keep happening. Yeah, I know, but how are you so fucking dumb? You're like, I'm going to stand this close to this random amateur dude who just bought a Charger last week. Literally. We should do like a PSA t-shirt or some fundraiser. Stop getting hit at car meets or

What are those called again? A PSA? Street Takeovers. Street Takeovers, Slideshow. I do want to go to one though. I'm not going to lie. It'd be so fun. Is that like a Southern thing? I think it's more of a big city thing because they can get away with it. But yeah, I think Southern, wherever a bunch of dudes have stolen Hellcats, seems to be a common theme. It is.

It is always the Hellcats. You always see a Hellcat doing it. I think it's because you can buy like a 70,000 or 170,000 mile Hellcat with a salvage title for like 35 grand. Yeah. So it's like, how can you not? It's also kind of like the gangster car. Like if you look at like the hood wrappers, they're all ripping around in Hellcats. It doesn't matter if it's a Charger. It's mostly a Challenger. Mostly, most of the time it's a,

It's a charger. A charger or a four-door. It's a four-door. When you see somebody getting smoked in a donut ring like that, it's always a Hellcat charger. But it's like the neighborhood star drug dealer. That's when they feel like they... I don't know. That's when you got it, when you got that kitty. It seems like that's how it is. And it also seems to be that's how it is because of the way they talk about it in the rap songs. But...

I'd say we've probably gone long enough today, wouldn't you guys? Yes, sir. We've gone deep enough. It was a good one. It was a good one. Yeah, this was fun. Subscribe if you're not already. Drop a like, comment, whatever you want. 150,000. We're trying to get to 150,000 subscribers. Grinding for it. And we're also trying to hit 2 million subscribers on YouTube for C-Boys TV, so our main channel. And we will see you guys next week. Peace.

Hi, I'm Angie Hicks, co-founder of Angie. And one thing I've learned is that you buy a house, but you make it a home. Because with every fix, update, and renovation, it becomes a little more your own. So you need all your jobs done well. For nearly 30 years, Angie has helped millions of homeowners hire skilled pros for the projects that matter. From plumbing to electrical, roof repair to deck upgrades. So leave it to the pros who will get your jobs done well.

Hire high quality certified pros at Angie.com. Today's episode is brought to you by Angie. Angie has made it easier than ever to connect with skilled professionals to get all your jobs and projects done well. Let me tell you, there's the version of it where you try to do something at home and then there's a version of it where you have someone help you, you watch them do it the right way and you go, thank God I didn't try to do that myself.

I have fully done things around the home that I think look good and then a bang in the night and I wake up to a shelf collapsing, a painting falling off the wall. Like it, I've seen it all go south. I own a home and I can tell you, I know how much work it can take. Whether it's everyday maintenance and repairs or making dream projects a reality, it can be hard just to know where to start. But now all you need to do is Angie that and find a skilled local pro who will deliver the quality and expertise you need.

Whatever your home project, big or small, indoor or outdoor, you can Angie that and connect with skilled professionals to get the project done well. Right now, one of my wish lists is I want a bike for my condo in Milwaukee and I would love to rig it up on a pulley in the ceiling because I have one of those like lofted ceilings.

but I'm so scared to try that on my own. Angie has 20 years of home experience and they've combined it with new tools to simplify the whole process. Bring them your project online or with the Angie app. Answer a few questions and Angie can handle the rest from start to finish or help you compare quotes from multiple pros and connect instantly, which means you can take care of any home project in just a few taps.

Because when it comes to getting the most out of your home, you can do this when you Angie that. Download the free Angie mobile app today or visit Angie.com. That's A-N-G-I dot com.

Actívate porque llegaron los Powerpenny Days de JCPenney. Con miles de ofertas de $5 a $25 mientras duren. Como camisetas para toda tu familia a solo $5. Y las toallas de baño Home Expressions Quick Dry también están a $5 cada una. Además, se encuentra lo último en electrónicos pequeños de cocina a solo $19. JCPenney, vale la pena. Ofertas válidas del 22 al 25 de agosto en selección de estilos. Las ofertas Powerpenny se excluyen de los cupones. Detalles en la tienda JCP.com.