Stay Free - Russel Brand - January 13, 2023


Creating Through Questioning With Rick Rubin - #058 - Stay Free With Russell Brand


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 2 minutes

Words per Minute

145.16591

Word Count

9,039

Sentence Count

531

Misogynist Sentences

2

Hate Speech Sentences

2


Summary

From Jay-Z to Johnny Cash, every letter of the alphabet to Run DMC, to the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Rick Rubin is the sonic shaman that people turn to to get the best out of their own creativity. He'll be talking to Russell Brand about his new book, The Creative Act: A Way of Being, and we do a guided meditation together, Stay Free with Russell Brand. See it first on Rumble, where you'll get a sneak peek at the guided meditation. Stay Free With Russell Brand is out now on all of the major podcast directories, if you search for Stay Free, you'll find us. To find a list of our sponsors and show-related promo codes, go to gimlet.fm/OurAdvertisers and use the promo code: "RUMBLE" at checkout to receive 10% off your first month with code RUMBLE at checkout. This episode was produced and edited by Roxy Striar. Our theme song is See the Future by The Weakerthans, courtesy of Lotus Records. We are a proud affiliate of Native Creative. and our ad music is produced and mixed by Native Creative, which is produced in partnership with Native Creative and produced in collaboration with . Our ad music comes out on all major radio stations across the country, including Sirius XM, CBS Radio, NPR, and NPR. , and is available everywhere else. Thanks to Native Creative and Native Creative for producing this episode of Stay Freeze. Music is produced, edited, mixed and mixed, produced, mixed, and produced, and mixed in colorblind, and produced by Native creative in collaboration. by , produced, produced and produced, produced and produced by , edited, edited and produced by New York City, and in association with is with New York, New York s own and New York's own , New England s own marketing agency, New York Magazine, and our located in Los Angeles, in addition to New York and Nashville, PA and Toronto, PA's & in the United States, . . and all other offices across the world. in Baltimore, Canada, , in Toronto, Canada and Toronto, also in Boston, Canada. is a proud member of the APA, Toronto's .


Transcript

00:00:00.000 So, so
00:00:20.000 so brought to you by
00:00:50.000 in this video we're going to see the future Oh
00:00:56.000 In this video, you're going to see the future.
00:01:04.000 Ooh!
00:01:05.000 On Stay Free with Russell Brand this week, we have got the legendary record producer, Rick Rubin.
00:01:11.000 From Jay-Z to Johnny Cash, every letter of the alphabet actually, run DMC, it's free right there, to the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Rick Rubin is the sonic shaman that people turn to to get the best out of their own creativity.
00:01:24.000 He'll be talking to me about his new book, The Creative Act, A Way of Being.
00:01:28.000 Plus, we do a guided meditation together.
00:01:31.000 Stay free with Russell Brand.
00:01:32.000 See it first on Rumble.
00:01:34.000 Rick, thank you so much for joining us.
00:01:38.000 Oh wow, you actually are there.
00:01:40.000 My god.
00:01:42.000 I didn't know you'd actually be there.
00:01:44.000 How's it going, Rick?
00:01:44.000 I can hear you.
00:01:46.000 Can you hear me? Can you... Hello? Hello?
00:01:49.000 I can hear you.
00:01:50.000 How's it going?
00:01:51.000 I can appreciate you.
00:01:52.000 What's going in and out?
00:01:53.000 Like, well, my sound is perfect.
00:01:58.000 I'm going to say something a little longer so you can get a sense of whether or not it's working.
00:02:03.000 Do you have any experience operating audio equipment and recording vocals, Rick?
00:02:09.000 You think you'll be able to handle this?
00:02:10.000 No, sir.
00:02:11.000 Right.
00:02:11.000 Well, what it does is the vibrations, as I understand, are travelling down a little pipe.
00:02:15.000 Now, within there are these signifiers formulated in a pre-agreed set of semantic terms that you and I can use to convey complex and simple ideas.
00:02:26.000 But we will never know for sure that the intended image that I'm trying to convey is accurately recreated in your mind, Rick.
00:02:35.000 That is one of the risks of communication.
00:02:39.000 Understood.
00:02:40.000 I'm with you on that.
00:02:41.000 How do we ever know that we're not merely islands adrift in this cosmos?
00:02:47.000 Do we brush against one another occasionally?
00:02:51.000 Yes, we are islands adrift in this cosmos.
00:02:53.000 On occasion, something resonates.
00:02:55.000 You might say something and it lights up something in me and I think I know what that means and it may have nothing to do with what you said and that's the closest we get to any real communication.
00:03:06.000 Language doesn't do it justice.
00:03:08.000 So do you think that music is sort of Super semantic, it's an opportunity to communicate beyond the limitations of language, and perhaps dance and movement.
00:03:22.000 You know, I was watching something about Chaplin the other day, and he was saying that when talkies came in, he said it's a less perfect form of communication than what he was able to achieve through the body.
00:03:34.000 And I suppose that really what we're looking for is connection.
00:03:38.000 The point of communication is to create common unity, to create connection.
00:03:43.000 And I suppose through your life you've found ways of enabling artists who by their nature are complex people to deal with.
00:03:52.000 To generate and curate the best version of themselves.
00:03:59.000 With this incredible array of people you've worked with, is it something that was sort of intuitive to you?
00:04:04.000 The kind of sensitivity that must be required?
00:04:08.000 And this is something that's altered from when you first started producing your legendary work,
00:04:14.000 Def Jam, right to the sort of, you know, like right to present day.
00:04:20.000 Like, you know, we communicated when you were doing that thing with Paul McCartney.
00:04:23.000 And I thought it was the, I think I said to you at the time, it's the most I've ever understood Paul McCartney.
00:04:31.000 Like, I've always been drawn to like George Harrison because I thought, oh, he was spiritual.
00:04:35.000 And John Lennon because I thought, oh, like he's radical and anti-establishment.
00:04:38.000 And then I thought the reason that Paul McCartney doesn't have a kind of a cultural flavor in the same way as those
00:04:45.000 two Beatles is because he's purely a conduit, a vessel for music.
00:04:48.000 He is the music come to life. He's music personified.
00:04:53.000 And I got that from watching the joy between the two of you.
00:04:56.000 So like, are you able to chronicle your increasing, enhancing sensitivity in dealing with artists?
00:05:03.000 Is it able, is it something you're able to articulate, given that we're somewhat discussing the ineffable by its
00:05:09.000 nature?
00:05:09.000 I think it's, it's every, it's individual case by case.
00:05:16.000 It's not any method that works for everybody.
00:05:19.000 Everything is tuned to who the artist is.
00:05:22.000 And I really listen.
00:05:24.000 Like when you were just speaking, I was really listening to everything you were saying.
00:05:27.000 And I look at you, I listen to you, I pay attention to what you're saying.
00:05:32.000 And it's rare in our world for somebody to really listen.
00:05:38.000 And just through truly listening and wanting to understand, I want to know what you're thinking.
00:05:44.000 I want to know what you're feeling.
00:05:46.000 I want to know how you see it.
00:05:49.000 I don't want to tell you how I see it.
00:05:51.000 I don't want to put my ideas on you.
00:05:53.000 I want to I'm as close as I can, and I may ask questions to draw you out, to understand who you are.
00:06:01.000 And through that process, I get to learn who the person is.
00:06:05.000 And then when we're making something together, there's a sense of, is this true to the person that I'm coming in contact with?
00:06:15.000 Is this true to who they are?
00:06:17.000 Because in our minds, We create an idea of what we think we're supposed to do, or what's right to do, and it undermines who we really are.
00:06:32.000 And to get closer to that true spirit of who we are, and how we see the world, and sharing that, it's the most beautiful thing.
00:06:42.000 It's the reason we're here on the planet, is to get to share Who we are and how we see it.
00:06:48.000 And between all of these different points of view of people sharing who they are and how they see it, we make some sense of what's going on.
00:06:58.000 It's the best we can do.
00:07:00.000 To get a grasp on what's happening through talking to people, hearing how they see it, discussing it, open mind, you know, being open minded and going in, not wanting to change somebody's mind so much as really understand if someone thinks something differently than we do, really understand why do they think that?
00:07:22.000 What can I learn from this person who thinks something so different than me?
00:07:28.000 That's so beautiful, Rick, and such an invitation to being creative and acknowledging spontaneity.
00:07:37.000 And it seems as well that embedded in what you just said is the acknowledgement of the possibility
00:07:45.000 that all of us live with a self-generated system, the persona, that I bring so much to the world,
00:07:55.000 that I map my reality onto every experience that I have, that I have a tendency to recreate conditions of the past,
00:08:04.000 like that I can re-experience the traumas that I've already experienced,
00:08:08.000 because in effect, I am projecting reality onto apparently external experience.
00:08:16.000 And it's only through this sort of genuine commitment to presence that you can experience a kind of actual transcendent reality.
00:08:24.000 I know that every conversation that I have, if I'm not careful, I'll I'll just replicate conversations that I've seen you have or imagine that you might be pleasing to you.
00:08:38.000 I've seen you on Joe Rogan.
00:08:39.000 I know about your career.
00:08:41.000 I've seen you, like, you know, speaking to McCartney.
00:08:45.000 And, you know, like, I suppose it's because of the conversations that we've previously had and the communications that we've previously had that I feel that I can talk to you with a A degree of confidence.
00:08:57.000 You know, I was struck when you were speaking that in the space of global communication, where we have the potential now for...
00:09:08.000 For almost universal communication.
00:09:11.000 People can communicate continually now.
00:09:14.000 We're experiencing censorship to an unprecedented degree.
00:09:18.000 We're experiencing polemicism and polarity.
00:09:22.000 People aren't willing to listen to an alternative perspective.
00:09:27.000 We're siloed into our particular echo chambers and at a time where there could be more communication, More unification and more acknowledgement of the likely unitary force that underwrites all consciousness that we are each an individual expression of.
00:09:45.000 People are more and more infatuated with individualism.
00:09:50.000 So in this work, The Creative Act, A Way of Being, I know from the part I read that you said that the more we are willing to become our personal selves, our authentic selves, the more we will discover The universal, and that there's a kind of a fractal, there's an implication of a fractal reality inferred there, that by becoming who you truly are, you will make universal connections.
00:10:19.000 How's that going to be possible when we live at a time that's defined by surveillance and censorship and conflagration and the amplification of our differences?
00:10:29.000 I'm referring to the cultural war and the actual war that's taking place now.
00:10:35.000 And may I ask, Rick, how do you interface with those, let's face it, somewhat political and cultural arguments as an artist and a creator?
00:10:44.000 Well, it's always been an issue that's been around.
00:10:49.000 The first time I came in contact with this was in the 80s, living in New York and starting to make music.
00:11:00.000 Whatever the mainstream forces were trying to censor the type of music I was working in and wanted it not to exist.
00:11:10.000 They didn't understand what it was and that was hip-hop.
00:11:12.000 So hip-hop was originally uh verboten and it was not played on any radio stations and it was uh it was people who did it were unpeopled and it was un-music and whatever it was it was bad and it was evil and um And now it's the most popular form of music in the world.
00:11:34.000 So that gives me some sense of assurance.
00:11:41.000 That when people come together to do something good with a positive, you know, the people who are making hip-hop are doing it out of love for this art form and having something to say.
00:11:54.000 And maybe these are people who never went to a musical academy or were great virtuoso musicians, but they had something to say and they had an experience of life that was different from others and they wanted to express it.
00:12:08.000 And they expressed it in a very A very elegant, beautiful way that, if you weren't part of it, you didn't understand.
00:12:18.000 Now, over time, people have come to understand it, and now it has taken over the world.
00:12:24.000 And it's fascinating to see, and at the time, in the early days, I could have never predicted that rap music would be what it is today, or that it would ever have even been popular, because it was so It was such an underground form of music and reviled.
00:12:43.000 To see it live where it lives today is, again, reassuring that something good, it comes around like the forces that are trying to hold down goodness.
00:13:01.000 They're not strong enough to do it.
00:13:03.000 They're not strong enough to do it.
00:13:06.000 Whilst I am excited by your perspective that something that was esoteric, particular, literally ghettoized has become powerful and ubiquitous, my concern is that it became that through a process of commodification and commerce.
00:13:28.000 When you're dealing in the alchemic realm of creativity, Do you, what do you feel about the necessity for commodification?
00:13:41.000 Like, you know, that something's only really regarded, or am I right in assuming, that do you regard things only as a success once they become commercialized and commodified?
00:13:50.000 And do you think the original art form loses something as a result of that process?
00:13:55.000 Do you think it becomes sterilized?
00:13:56.000 Because, you know, like the history of rap and hip-hop is one that Its origin felt like a transgressive and dangerous movement that provided a voice to the voiceless, that mobilized a kind of movement that was previously oppressed and invisible, exactly as you say.
00:14:20.000 But that acceptance is achieved only through financial success, which it seems to me comes with a degree of nullification and neutralization.
00:14:32.000 It concerns me.
00:14:33.000 What do you feel about that?
00:14:34.000 Am I off track, Rich?
00:14:37.000 I don't think that's the case at all.
00:14:38.000 I think it's true what you're saying, that as things grow, they become commodified.
00:14:45.000 But both you and I are practitioners of Transcendental Meditation.
00:14:50.000 And Transcendental Meditation is something that could be taught for free.
00:14:55.000 But you pay for it if you want to learn it.
00:14:57.000 And Maharishi made a point of saying If we want someone to take this seriously and to honor it, it has to have more value than free.
00:15:09.000 And he said, if someone's not willing to pay to learn meditation what they're willing to pay for a refrigerator, then they're not going to treat it in the same way and with the same degree of commitment as they do to using a refrigerator every day.
00:15:26.000 So there's something about it.
00:15:27.000 Now, it doesn't have to always be the case.
00:15:30.000 And yes, when we're focused on commodification, it can undermine everything.
00:15:35.000 And so much of what the book talks about is ignoring commodification, essentially, in the making of art.
00:15:41.000 So in terms of in the making of art, we cannot think about commodification.
00:15:46.000 We cannot think about commercial aspects.
00:15:49.000 Once the art is made, my interest is for the most amount of people to be able to experience it, and if they're willing to pay for it, and if they feel good about paying for something that they want, I support that.
00:16:02.000 But that's it.
00:16:03.000 That's the nature of the... The commodification doesn't come before.
00:16:08.000 We're not making things to sell.
00:16:11.000 We're making things to be beautiful, and then if it turns out there's a market where people want them, It's fine to sell them.
00:16:17.000 I'm not anti-capitalism in that way.
00:16:21.000 It's just when the cart comes before the horse and it only becomes about commodification that, you know, you turn on the TV and there's a bunch of terrible stuff on.
00:16:31.000 It's because people who are making it are making it with this business idea.
00:16:34.000 They're not making it with this artistic content.
00:16:38.000 We want to make the most beautiful thing we can make and nothing else matters.
00:16:42.000 It's made by committee, what people think will work.
00:16:47.000 All things that undermine the potential beauty of the art that's being made.
00:16:53.000 Throughout my whole career, I've only tried to make the best thing that I can make that moves me.
00:17:01.000 And then in the hopes that if it moves me, maybe it'll move someone else.
00:17:04.000 But I don't think I'm smart enough to project I'm going to make something I don't really like, but this seems like the kind of thing someone else would like.
00:17:12.000 It's insane!
00:17:13.000 And it seems like that's the majority of the output of the mainstream commercial artistic output is just what somebody thinks somebody wants to see.
00:17:27.000 Yes, I think it becomes inorganic at that point because, as you say, it's a project of commodification.
00:17:37.000 I suppose I'm speaking about this in particular in an environment that it seems to have been completely immersed in an ideology, not just in music, but in culture and in sport that All of our creative endeavors might be regarded as invisibly undergirded by commercial imperatives that, as you have explained, the artist cannot engage with and consider themselves still to be an artist rather than a kind of trader.
00:18:09.000 But you used the example of transcendental meditation and that makes sense, the idea of exchange, the idea of valuing, that those ideas, those tools are not necessarily of themselves bad.
00:18:26.000 But I have concerns about the commodification of spirituality, and specifically this, Rick,
00:18:33.000 that in a sense contemporary spirituality, new age spirituality, which is the sort of
00:18:39.000 area both you and I, if we're not cautious, could be categorized as operating within,
00:18:47.000 is a spirituality that in my view is guided implicitly by the principle of meditate, you
00:18:57.000 will be a better unit in the system.
00:19:01.000 Meditate, you will become a better, you know, in order that you, there's a telos, there's the presumed telos that you should meditate, do yoga, take ayahuasca, do whatever it is, so that you can function better in this system.
00:19:16.000 And this system Isn't, it seems to me, you know, like some of the things we've touched upon the moment, the inability to communicate authentically, the ongoing censorship, polemicism, a stoked conflagration between different groups, the needless cultural war, the constant posing of traditional ideology against progressive, you know, socially and culturally progressive ideologies in order to create hate because of the way that social media has evolved.
00:19:40.000 You know, that spirituality in a sense, you know, like this is the quote I think that helps, We've been taught that freedom is the freedom to pursue our petty, trivial desires, but real freedom is freedom from our petty, trivial desires.
00:19:54.000 And that for me, as a person that, you know, I'm governed by appetite so much.
00:19:59.000 I am all mouth.
00:20:00.000 All mouth.
00:20:01.000 I want, I want, I want.
00:20:03.000 You know, I become spiritual because otherwise I'm not gonna live.
00:20:08.000 You know, I'm gonna kill myself, I'm gonna take drugs.
00:20:10.000 If I don't awaken, I'm finished.
00:20:13.000 So, like, you know, for me, when it becomes about, you know, learn to meditate ultimately so you can fit within a system better, it concerns me.
00:20:22.000 So, I wonder if there is something necessarily that creates compromise, you know, whether it's in music or spirituality or anywhere.
00:20:31.000 And I wonder what your thoughts are, perhaps, with spirituality.
00:20:35.000 You just said something very interesting, which is your reason for getting into spirituality for yourself had to do with controlling of your appetites.
00:20:48.000 And I imagine, so that's what got you in.
00:20:52.000 Now that you're in, is that all that it's about?
00:20:55.000 I'm guessing not.
00:20:56.000 I'm guessing you found something that Resonates with you on a deeper level and it's not just about that and I'll tell you I've had a friend who Originally used to go to yoga classes because there were a lot of girls in yoga classes And he thought if I go to yoga classes, I'll meet girls at the yoga class and then he started doing yoga every day to meet girls and then he became a yogi and He may have even become celibate because he it didn't matter what got him in it's like the seed was planted in him
00:21:30.000 And once the seed is planted, I think when we're young, we think about, I want to be a rock star, I want to be famous, or I want to do this, and then it gets you to start.
00:21:40.000 But once you start, you realize it's about something completely different.
00:21:44.000 You realize it's about, one of the things I talk about in the book is when we're making art, it's not even about the end product, that we think it's Most artists think it's about the song I'm recording, or it's about the movie I'm making.
00:21:59.000 But really, it's a connection to something outside of ourselves, a greater source of creativity that we're tapping into, that we get to feel part of.
00:22:13.000 And we're part of this, like, universal communication that's going on.
00:22:18.000 When you really get deep into creativity, It's not really us.
00:22:23.000 We're just vehicles through which it happens.
00:22:26.000 And in the early days, you don't know that.
00:22:29.000 It's something that comes over time and mastery.
00:22:33.000 The more you do it, the more you see, ah, this isn't really me.
00:22:36.000 This is not really me.
00:22:38.000 This is not by my hand.
00:22:40.000 My hand's involved, but only as a vehicle for something bigger than myself.
00:22:45.000 And there was something else that you said earlier about About worrying about the commodification of things.
00:22:52.000 And I think about your show.
00:22:54.000 So your show has gotten very popular now.
00:22:57.000 I have no fear that you're going to change your show based on what would, in terms of commodification, benefit the message.
00:23:08.000 In other words, if someone got you to change your message, Because you could make more money doing that.
00:23:15.000 I don't have fear in you that that's going to be the case.
00:23:19.000 The movie Network is about that.
00:23:21.000 I was thinking about that as you were saying it.
00:23:23.000 You know, the movie Network, Howard Beale has these incredible revelations and he's this wild character and then basically the corporation tells him that's not how the world works.
00:23:35.000 It doesn't work the way you think it works.
00:23:37.000 Corporations run everything and you're part of that.
00:23:40.000 And he went along with it.
00:23:43.000 He didn't stick to his original guns.
00:23:48.000 In some ways, he was undermined by the corporate interests.
00:23:53.000 So I don't have that fear with you.
00:23:56.000 Thank you.
00:23:57.000 I mean, that's a high praise from you because you are regarded in this culture as almost authenticity personified.
00:24:06.000 I think you are like a cauldron for it.
00:24:09.000 You are where people go to be healed.
00:24:11.000 And this is just like as a voyeur, it seems that that's the relationship that artists have with you.
00:24:17.000 So I'm honored that you would say that about me because there are times when I Because I talk about subjects on this show, about, like, corruption, about the military-industrial complex's possible incentives in a war that's being portrayed as humanitarian, and of course there is a humanitarian aspect because people are suffering and dying, and the simplification of the narratives around war, and what happened in the last couple of years, the pandemic, and trying to stop short of stuff that's conspiratorial and not underwritten by good information and good data.
00:24:50.000 Sometimes I, um, you know, because I'm dealing with these things and I recognize I have to convey them in a way that's consumable and accessible and scintillating, I every so often forget this is actually bloody real!
00:25:02.000 You're actually talking about things that are real!
00:25:05.000 And there's a sort of necessity for a kind of spiritual hygiene when dealing with these matters, Rick, and it's so challenging because, and I must say, because I'm a person in recovery and because I believe in God, I have to, I keep this at the forefront, I'm I'm fallible.
00:25:20.000 I'm a fallible, flawed individual.
00:25:23.000 And I never let that stray too far from the forefront of what I'm dealing with.
00:25:30.000 I try never to be didactic.
00:25:32.000 I try never to... because I know that I don't like people talking to me like they think they're cleverer than I am.
00:25:38.000 And I try to remember that.
00:25:40.000 And I've learned because of the touring aspect of what I do for a living that most people
00:25:44.000 want to be left alone.
00:25:46.000 Like people want guidance, people want instruction, but people don't want to be told what to do.
00:25:51.000 We want to be free.
00:25:52.000 People want to be free.
00:25:54.000 Absolutely.
00:25:55.000 Yeah.
00:25:56.000 Thank you for the beautiful compliment.
00:25:58.000 A moment ago, when you talked about this feeling of grace in your work, of knowing that there is something moving through you, can you tell me a few examples that come to you in your working life where you have felt the evidence of that, the bliss, the joy, the playfulness of being touched by Krishna or Christ Consciousness or however you feel it and describe it, particularly in your work?
00:26:23.000 It happens all the time and an example would be a band will be playing a piece of music and it sounds Uh, ordinary.
00:26:34.000 And it's ordinary for a period of time.
00:26:35.000 They play it over and over and over again, and try little changes, try little differences, and nothing, and it doesn't really change.
00:26:43.000 Ordinary.
00:26:44.000 And then sometimes, something happens.
00:26:47.000 And when I say something happens, not because we had a great idea, or changed something radical, where it, all of a sudden, what's happening goes from Pretty good to extraordinary.
00:27:06.000 And nobody involved knows what's different.
00:27:09.000 And none of us have any control over it.
00:27:11.000 It's miraculous when it happens.
00:27:14.000 And there are certain artists who are able to tap into it more easily.
00:27:20.000 Red Hot Chili Peppers are an example of when they play, it's usually good But they can reach these levels of musical transcendence on a very regular basis.
00:27:31.000 Like, not every time, but a lot, a lot.
00:27:35.000 And it's wild being in the room for everyone.
00:27:39.000 We're just kind of looking at each other like kind of dumbfounded because you can't believe what's happening.
00:27:45.000 I've had it happen in the studio with Carlos Santana where he's playing and It just seems like it's not coming from him.
00:27:55.000 It's this beam of music that's happening in the room, and the people there aren't even playing it.
00:28:06.000 I've had it happen with Nusrat Fatali Khan, where when he's singing, His mouth isn't moving in the same way that what you're hearing.
00:28:15.000 Do you know what I'm saying?
00:28:16.000 Like, it's like an out of sync movie, where you're hearing these sounds, and his mouth is not making those sounds.
00:28:24.000 And it's just this otherworldly presence in the room.
00:28:28.000 I can't explain it.
00:28:29.000 It's just, it's stunning.
00:28:31.000 Neil Young can go into these states of just, Disappears in the music where he's gone and it's I don't know what to say about it.
00:28:42.000 So I get to see it on a regular basis and it's magic.
00:28:46.000 And all we can do is recognize it when it happens, be respectful of it, be thankful, and do anything we can to set the stage, to allow it to happen, but never be arrogant enough to think that we can ever make it happen, because we can't.
00:29:04.000 It's some other energy happening.
00:29:10.000 You're describing, it seems to me, Rick, shamanism.
00:29:13.000 And there are some arguments that the entire profession of show business is fueled by our kind's need for an experience of the divine.
00:29:27.000 And this somewhat loops back to my earlier point.
00:29:31.000 And believe me, I'm going to be asking what you had in that bottle, because you can't have shit floating around in a bottle like that and not have people inquire about it.
00:29:40.000 Just a tea bag.
00:29:42.000 Just simple life.
00:29:44.000 Spring dragon longevity tea.
00:29:47.000 Mushroom tea.
00:29:48.000 Longevity.
00:29:51.000 Glory unto him that would afford you this long life, Rick Rubin.
00:29:56.000 When we talk about shamanism and perhaps when we talk about interfacing with divinity, it seems that the individual charged with conveying that power needs mostly to get out of the way, to get out of the way.
00:30:14.000 I read a beautiful book, and I'll send it you actually, called The Death and Resurrection Show, which talks about the sort of The transition from... it posits that when there were settled cultures and there were still nomadic cultures, that the relationship between the nomadic cultures and the settled cultures would be the nomads would turn up
00:30:36.000 And perform their shamanic rites and rituals.
00:30:39.000 And it talked about how many archetypal components of these rituals are found in show business.
00:30:45.000 And it talked about great examples of ambiguity and self-annihilation and self-destruction that are to be found.
00:30:53.000 These tropes are found throughout show business.
00:30:56.000 The weary idea of the self-destructive artist being little more than the inability to hold the flame, to hold the power of what is coming through.
00:31:06.000 And so, you know, the thing you describe casts a shadow, of course, Rick.
00:31:10.000 You describe the sort of benign aspect of the shamanic performer revealing the transcendent, the universe in young Krishna's mouth.
00:31:21.000 But the flip side of that is that it Burns them and destroys, destroys to have that power.
00:31:31.000 I suppose you must have experienced that as well.
00:31:35.000 Absolutely.
00:31:35.000 It's, uh, I, the way I would interpret it as there's a sensitivity that the great artists have that they feel everything much more than other people.
00:31:45.000 And it's, um, when you feel something, you're with other people and you feel something strongly and no one else can feel it.
00:31:54.000 You start feeling a little crazy, you feel disconnected, and it's difficult.
00:31:58.000 So when you're constantly saying, hey, no, but look, this is happening, and this is happening, and this is happening, and people are like, you're crazy.
00:32:04.000 What are you talking about?
00:32:08.000 This level of pain that comes up from either being not heard, being misunderstood, not being seen, And feeling things much stronger than other people.
00:32:22.000 And people don't, they look at you funny, you know, they look at you funny and they treat you poorly.
00:32:29.000 And then when, then in success, it's a reversion because you go from this sort of person who nobody wants to be around to a person who everybody wants to be around because you're successful or famous.
00:32:45.000 But they still don't understand you, and they still don't treat you for who you actually are.
00:32:51.000 You know, that's why Kurt Cobain's not here anymore.
00:32:54.000 It's the pain of being totally misunderstood and not being seen for who we are.
00:33:04.000 And it's why so many artists, you know, die young from drug overdoses.
00:33:10.000 Our mutual friend, the publisher, Jamie Bing, I love that guy.
00:33:16.000 He's a great guy.
00:33:16.000 I imagine he might watch this.
00:33:19.000 It was him that first said to me, I think I was writing a self-help book, I guess.
00:33:25.000 And I'm pretty sure that I'm correctly crediting Jamie with this.
00:33:29.000 He said all books are self-help books.
00:33:31.000 All literature is self-help.
00:33:34.000 Why would you read Crime and Punishment or Dickens?
00:33:40.000 It's to illuminate you.
00:33:42.000 And it seems that what you're saying is that art in and of itself is therapeutic in that it is a connector to the divine power, that it is relational between others, that in collaborative art forms you get to feel the transcendent and the imminent simultaneously, that God is within us.
00:34:00.000 And beyond us God is all things.
00:34:02.000 This cannot be instantiated with mere words.
00:34:06.000 It has to be experiential.
00:34:07.000 And it comes close to that thing that is the inaccessible subjectivity of my me-ness and your you-ness can be somehow webbed together by great art beyond the facility of simple language.
00:34:27.000 And it seems to me somehow Intuitively, somehow, intuitively as well as being learned, of course, I'm sure, you've found yourself operating in this space and I feel like when there is a success like yours, not that there is much success comparable to your own, that it is an indication that something like that is happening, that the divine is at work.
00:34:49.000 Well, it's not something we must access.
00:34:50.000 that it isn't always just salt and sugar and synthesis that drives popularity,
00:34:56.000 that there can be magic too.
00:34:58.000 And it seems like this magic is what you're working in.
00:35:01.000 And is this, the creative act, a way of being?
00:35:04.000 Are you talking about how personal creativity is something that we must access
00:35:09.000 in order to be healed, in order to be whole, in order to be who we are?
00:35:14.000 Well, it's not something we must access. It's something that's available to us to access.
00:35:22.000 I mean, we're creative every day of our lives, whether we're artists, whether we think of ourselves as artists or not.
00:35:28.000 We see a traffic jam and we find a new route home that we never took before.
00:35:31.000 That's creative.
00:35:33.000 We're creatively solving a problem.
00:35:35.000 We do it every day.
00:35:36.000 All of us do it every day.
00:35:38.000 When being an artist is living in the world, it's not just about the making thing.
00:35:45.000 The subtitle of the book is A Way of Being.
00:35:48.000 Living as an artist in the world is...
00:35:51.000 A way of looking at everything and basically an awareness practice.
00:35:57.000 That artists are always in an awareness practice at all times.
00:36:02.000 Taking it, noticing things that others don't notice.
00:36:06.000 Noticing what's beautiful in the ordinary.
00:36:09.000 And then maybe finding some way to re-present that into the world in a way that other people can see the beauty that we see.
00:36:19.000 That's the goal of what we're doing.
00:36:21.000 We recognize something beautiful.
00:36:24.000 It's usually right there in plain sight.
00:36:27.000 Other people don't notice it.
00:36:29.000 We try to present it in such a way that others can say, oh yeah, wow, that is... I see it every day, but I never thought of it that way.
00:36:39.000 I never thought of it in that beautiful way.
00:36:42.000 That's cool, Rick.
00:36:43.000 It reminds me of two things.
00:36:45.000 One, something I read about Francis Bacon, the artist.
00:36:48.000 He... I read in an interview that the journalist that was interviewing him said that Bacon would not allow people to be neutral and switched off.
00:36:57.000 He said like that when the waiter brought over their coffee or their drink and people are just...
00:37:02.000 Prescriptive.
00:37:03.000 You know, we are on rails.
00:37:04.000 Most people are on rails.
00:37:05.000 You think the thoughts you thought yesterday.
00:37:07.000 You say the things you thought.
00:37:08.000 Where did these opinions come from?
00:37:10.000 How did this information get in there?
00:37:12.000 What is this pain?
00:37:13.000 You know, that Bacon, like if someone was just switched off, he would...
00:37:17.000 Vitalize them through his interaction.
00:37:19.000 He wouldn't accept normal interaction in that way.
00:37:23.000 Beautiful.
00:37:24.000 Yeah, it's glorious, isn't it?
00:37:25.000 And the British artist Damien Hirst said a similar thing to what you just said, you know, and of course he's a famous sort of like post-modernist and almost situationist artist, most famous for his works like where, you know, the bisected animals, like the shark in Formaldehyde and all that stuff.
00:37:43.000 He said that, you know, you will walk past the same tree every day, but if that tree falls over in a storm and crashes across the sidewalk and across the road, you'll be like, oh my God, this tree!
00:37:56.000 It's amazing!
00:37:58.000 And a little like, you know, hallucinogenic drugs, that suddenly you realize that we have curated the wonder and awe Beautiful.
00:38:06.000 of our experience. When I speak to Vandana Shiva, she talks about re-sacralising the
00:38:12.000 world. We have lost the sacred is all around us. We are living in glory and we have been
00:38:19.000 tuned down to the sort of dour, glum, greyness that happens to us when we are deactivated,
00:38:28.000 when we lose that vitality.
00:38:30.000 And so I see that what you're saying is that it's an invitation to be awake, to be human.
00:38:35.000 What is it that separates us from the, you know, instinctual but presumably not self-conscious behavior of most animals?
00:38:44.000 It's this ability to be creatively aware and present.
00:38:47.000 Yes, and interestingly, The real work of the artist is to be closer to an animal and to be more instinctual.
00:39:01.000 Animals don't make mistakes.
00:39:05.000 Animals do what they do.
00:39:08.000 And they don't later regret a decision that they made.
00:39:12.000 They enter a situation and they do what they do.
00:39:19.000 And that is, and I imagine, I mean, you have experience acting.
00:39:25.000 I imagine the best acting is like that.
00:39:27.000 It's like you're not doing something.
00:39:29.000 You're completely in it and being natural in the moment and reacting.
00:39:34.000 Not it's not intellectual.
00:39:37.000 It's something else.
00:39:38.000 So much of art is not intellectual.
00:39:40.000 The intellectual part comes after after the thing is made.
00:39:44.000 Then you may wonder why this is.
00:39:47.000 Why is this thing interesting to me?
00:39:48.000 But when you're making it, it's not an Body-centered, emotional, feeling process.
00:39:58.000 And we want to make things that make us feel excitement, peace, love, curiosity.
00:40:08.000 The most interesting things are the things that we can't believe we're seeing.
00:40:12.000 You know, when something happens and, like, you lean forward, is that really happening?
00:40:15.000 Is that true?
00:40:16.000 Is that what's happening?
00:40:18.000 That's the excitement.
00:40:21.000 You can't believe it.
00:40:23.000 And the best art tends to have that.
00:40:26.000 And we don't get there through, it's being clever.
00:40:33.000 It's not clever.
00:40:35.000 It's something else.
00:40:36.000 It's bigger than clever.
00:40:39.000 It's really this animalistic, true reaction What's before us?
00:40:54.000 Yes.
00:40:55.000 Gary Shandling said that the entire endeavor of creativity is to capture, create a moment that is real.
00:41:03.000 You know, we're so used to consuming mediocre art.
00:41:09.000 It just passes before the eyes.
00:41:12.000 The junk food, like gum.
00:41:14.000 And then sometimes, often inadvertently, you capture something that is real, that is authentic.
00:41:20.000 And the fact is that these are states, so they are ever-present, and perhaps it is the genius or the great artist that
00:41:28.000 accesses it with more regularity and apparently with more ease.
00:41:33.000 But as if those invisible threads, as if the living archetype is present and able to be vivified, vitalized, that some
00:41:42.000 incantation, some ceremony or rite will bring it forth.
00:41:47.000 For me, because, like, you know, obviously you are a master in the domain of music, and for me I've always had to be,
00:41:53.000 had music brought to me.
00:41:54.000 I'd like all human beings to enjoy and love music and have heroes, you know, throughout the pantheon of music.
00:42:01.000 But for me, as an artist, it's always been in the tunes of comedy.
00:42:06.000 That's where I experience it more, more viscerally, I suppose, Rick.
00:42:13.000 That is, like, the tunes that are in language in comedy, the ongoing revelation of truth that comedy can provide people with.
00:42:21.000 That's where I find it.
00:42:23.000 And I suppose that, you know, when you live in, like, a homogenized and sanitized cultural space that denies us that, it's like we're losing something.
00:42:33.000 We're losing something.
00:42:35.000 I feel that all of these great tools that we're being offered, that could be bringing about a utopia, have been negatively charged that are robbing us of that potential.
00:42:46.000 And I suppose I enjoy speaking to you because it seems so local and personal and possible to awaken.
00:42:54.000 It doesn't seem esoteric and Himalayan and impossible.
00:42:59.000 It seems it's here now.
00:43:01.000 This is where it is.
00:43:02.000 This is where it is.
00:43:03.000 And so much of it has to do with trust.
00:43:06.000 It's like not second guessing, trusting the moment, trusting your instincts, knowing it can be very simple.
00:43:16.000 If you taste two different dishes of food and we're asked, which one do you like better?
00:43:21.000 It's not hard to say which one you like better.
00:43:24.000 That's all we're doing.
00:43:26.000 We're just really Tuning into our own taste.
00:43:32.000 Which one tastes better to us?
00:43:34.000 And trusting the one that tastes better to us is the one that tastes better to us.
00:43:40.000 Because that's all it is.
00:43:41.000 It's like everything I make is, this is the one that tastes good to me.
00:43:49.000 That's all it is.
00:43:50.000 Yes, it's beautiful that it's discerning as opposed to judgmental, you know, and this quality you described of feeling as opposed to thinking, I love analysis, you know, I like to look at things and work out why, I enjoy that process, I always have, but when I Consider what appear to be some of the shortcomings we're experiencing culturally right now.
00:44:19.000 Much of it seems, and I spoke to the beautiful Duncan Trussell on this show recently, and he talked about how Ram Dass said to him, we need you to move from here, indicating the head, to here, the heart.
00:44:31.000 I'm reminded of a time I was told that the Australian Aboriginal culture, the word that they have They say they have three brains, the brain of the stomach, the brain of the heart and the cognitive mind.
00:44:46.000 The word they use for the cognitive mind is the same word they use for a tangled fishing net.
00:44:53.000 Our culture lives entirely in this tangled, synaptic, neurotic network of the mind with all of its great capacities.
00:45:03.000 Our solutions, in short, in my opinion, are not going to come from the intellect.
00:45:07.000 They're not going to come from the rationale.
00:45:10.000 It's taken us science, progressivism, with all of its wonder, technology with all of its glories, you know, surely they will provide more solutions medically.
00:45:18.000 But these false markers of technology and medicine, are obscuring the fact that we have become almost neanderthal when it comes to feeling and heart, that we've forgotten how, at least behaviorally, we are not practicing the intuitive connections that are available to us through what used to be called a love of God.
00:45:36.000 And the Lord alone knows the problems of religion, organized religion, are evident and manifest, and the traumas and travesties they have practiced are hardly need reiterating here.
00:45:46.000 But with this loss of a realized and radical God, we are starting to create something somewhat threadbare.
00:45:56.000 And I suppose, Rick, another concern of mine is that if it's only available to us in commercial spaces, if art is only available to us in commercial spaces rather than explicitly sacred and spiritual places, I wonder if we're losing something there.
00:46:10.000 And are you attempting here in this book to Once again, conflate or reintegrate spirituality and creativity.
00:46:21.000 I think it's just part of the process.
00:46:24.000 You can't pull them apart.
00:46:28.000 Creation is a spiritual act.
00:46:33.000 It's not separate.
00:46:35.000 I understand.
00:46:36.000 There's no way.
00:46:38.000 If you separate them, you're working at a tremendous disadvantage.
00:46:43.000 Tremendous disadvantage.
00:46:46.000 If you're working without the sacred as part of your process, you're working alone and small.
00:46:58.000 And, you know, we can only do so much.
00:47:01.000 But if we allow in what's possible, and if we're open, and also, none of it's us even forgetting the sacred, none of it's us, because all we are is a compilation of the experiences we've had over our lives.
00:47:18.000 You've seen the things that you've seen over your life, and that formed your opinions of how you see the world today.
00:47:24.000 And if you came into a situation, it might trigger something that happened to you 20 years ago, and then you would react based on something that happened 20 years ago.
00:47:33.000 That's all we are.
00:47:35.000 We're machines that have collected all of this data, and then somehow think that the data we collected is ours.
00:47:45.000 None of it's ours.
00:47:48.000 I feel funny about saying that the ideas in the book are mine.
00:47:52.000 They're not really mine.
00:47:53.000 They're mine in that if it were raining outside and I point to the rain and I say, look, it's raining, that doesn't mean the rain is mine.
00:48:03.000 Do you know what I mean?
00:48:04.000 I wrote the rain.
00:48:06.000 The things in the book are things I've noticed that just are.
00:48:15.000 In the man that you've become, can you see threads back to the boy you were, the child that you were?
00:48:21.000 Can you see, do you feel like that you could, the seed, was it identifiable?
00:48:27.000 Do you feel that it was there, that there was a sort of a spiritual inquiry that was present in you that has become, that has been unfolding over your life?
00:48:35.000 Absolutely.
00:48:36.000 Always.
00:48:37.000 Always.
00:48:37.000 I remember I would burn incense in my room as a nine-year-old and I became a magician as a child because I didn't really know where the line was.
00:48:50.000 I was always interested in the unseen world.
00:48:54.000 And whether that was doing card tricks, or whether that was a seance, or a Ouija board, or hypnotism, that's all part of this, the things that we can't explain.
00:49:07.000 And I always felt like there was more going on behind the scenes.
00:49:11.000 And when you learn magic from an early age, you learn very quickly that there are always things going on.
00:49:19.000 When you learn magic, you learn that there are several principles at work And that's how most tricks work.
00:49:27.000 And misdirection is a big part of it.
00:49:31.000 And that there's something else.
00:49:33.000 Everyone's looking here, so I could do something down here.
00:49:38.000 And once your eyes are open to that, then you start seeing that when you watch the news.
00:49:48.000 Everywhere.
00:49:48.000 You start seeing it everywhere.
00:49:50.000 When a politician talks, you start seeing, oh, this is all just a magic show.
00:49:55.000 None of this is real.
00:49:56.000 You know, this is all... I've said before that...
00:50:00.000 That professional wrestling is the closest thing to reality that we have.
00:50:05.000 You know, people say it's fake.
00:50:07.000 It's like, it's the only legitimate sport.
00:50:09.000 And it's the only legitimate... The way that that is a combination of performance and scripted, and sometimes the real world works its way into the script, and you never know what's really happening.
00:50:25.000 That's our life.
00:50:27.000 That's what it is.
00:50:29.000 That the self becomes a kind of... the persona becomes a kind of performance, that you find yourself saying the things that you would say.
00:50:38.000 And the people that I encounter, that are awakened, what defines them is presence.
00:50:46.000 That's the idea that they are with you now.
00:50:49.000 They're with you now.
00:50:50.000 They're not going to make that decision because that's what's been coded.
00:50:55.000 That's what's been encoded in them.
00:50:58.000 The idea that you have taken the time to put some practices in here, some directive practices, as you say, accumulated over the course of your life is fantastic.
00:51:07.000 opportunity for some of you, if you wanna, to win a couple of copies of Rick's new book.
00:51:13.000 Rick, you have a question, I believe, so that people that are in our chat right now, if they answer this question, can win a copy of The Creative Act, A Way of Being, by Rick Rubin.
00:51:24.000 What's the question, Rick?
00:51:26.000 The question is, what was the address of the dormitory where Def Jam was founded?
00:51:33.000 Let us know, you can answer that in the chat and Rick's signing a couple of copies of this book kindly for us.
00:51:39.000 Rick, do you think we can do a meditation together and that maybe you'll guide the meditation for us?
00:51:49.000 Sure, how about we do a breathing meditation?
00:51:53.000 We'll do Let's do five slow, deep breaths with our eyes closed.
00:52:02.000 They don't have to be in unison.
00:52:04.000 And then when we finish our slow, deep breaths, we'll check in with each other again.
00:52:07.000 again.
00:52:08.000 Okay.
00:53:38.000 Next time we do this, let's start that way.
00:53:43.000 When we stopped, or at least altered the manner of our communication, I became aware that it is raining here, and I could hear the rain on the window.
00:53:54.000 That was the first sensory experience, the rain.
00:53:58.000 And of course, with the example you gave, you talked about the rain as being the methods that you have iterated in your book.
00:54:08.000 After the rain, then my thoughts come, and the feeling of sadness, you know, the feeling of sadness that I have been carrying lately.
00:54:19.000 And then, feelings about the body.
00:54:23.000 You know, What I notice is, lately someone who helps me, and most of my, as we've discussed before, my personal spirituality is formatted through the folk technology of the Twelve Steps, which I believe to be sort of an American religion, really, of personal awakening.
00:54:43.000 Someone told me to observe for a day, like, any time you're in a situation and you start to think about doing something else, like you want to change reality, just observe it.
00:54:54.000 And, like, that day I happened to have been, like, eating with some people, and I was just happily eating with the people, and then, like, I noticed I was eating with the people, and I thought, yeah, I'd like to leave now, right?
00:55:05.000 And when I observed all of the thoughts, the thing I went back to him and said is, every time I think, it's sort of, I'm not good.
00:55:15.000 Like it's not good.
00:55:16.000 I usually think about sort of like some kind of control or assertion you know and like with the rain and with the five breaths we just took and with my meditative practice generally you know Bob Roth who taught me TM for the David Lynch Foundation Bob Roth always says, notice how easily the thoughts come, but you don't have to ask the thoughts to come.
00:55:42.000 In the same way like the rain, and Bob Roth always says, in this way we think the mantra, in this way we think the mantra, or observe the breath if it was vipassana.
00:55:52.000 And yeah, it's nice to experience that while I may experience sadness, I am not that sadness.
00:56:00.000 While I may experience my thoughts, I am not those thoughts, so I don't need to be governed by them, you know.
00:56:09.000 What was the title of your last audiobook?
00:56:16.000 It was Revelation.
00:56:18.000 I absolutely love that book.
00:56:22.000 That was a beautiful book, and it reminded me of something you just said, which was being somewhere that you didn't want to be.
00:56:30.000 And I think you told a story in the book about being invited to a party or To a dinner something and then weeks late, you know weeks in advance you think of this sounds great I'll go and then weeks later it comes and you're dreading it and it's the last thing you want to do and I just thought I Know that experience as well
00:56:52.000 That is because of the technique, Rick, you may be referring to.
00:56:55.000 If someone asks you to do something, always imagine that you had to do it now.
00:57:00.000 And then you might recognize whether or not you want to do it.
00:57:05.000 Because normally for me, I want to be at ease.
00:57:09.000 I want to be in peace.
00:57:10.000 I want to be in peace.
00:57:13.000 Rick, what is your relationship with addiction?
00:57:16.000 Do you have that tendency?
00:57:19.000 Do you have obsession?
00:57:20.000 Do you have addiction?
00:57:24.000 I don't really know how to answer it.
00:57:26.000 I've never taken drugs or drank, so as far as the traditional addictions go, I've never participated in any of those.
00:57:35.000 I probably have somewhat imbalanced relationship to food and was very overweight for
00:57:44.000 most of my life and that was a big hurdle you know at one point I weighed as
00:57:49.000 much as 318 pounds which was very big. How was it to change that behavior and
00:57:55.000 to change your relationship to food? It was radical
00:58:00.000 And my intentions were always good in changing my... I was never lazy about doing the work to change my diet to lose weight.
00:58:11.000 I just wasn't successful at doing it because I had so much poor information.
00:58:16.000 So I was a vegan for 22 years, during which time is when I got my biggest.
00:58:22.000 And I thought I was doing that both for my health and the health of the planet, and it turned out that that was not correct.
00:58:28.000 And my body thrives with animal protein and I didn't know that.
00:58:32.000 So I made myself very sick in trying to be healthy and lose weight and do the right thing.
00:58:39.000 Yeah, there is some complexity and some bespoke decisions that need to be made around... I'm vegan, and where I've tried... I try and stay away with... from judging people, is what I try to, you know, like with my kids who are vegetarian.
00:58:56.000 So, like, I always say, you know, like, I do explain to them, we don't eat these animals, like, although what that is, is that is a piece of an animal, and I've kind of made the decision that you guys are vegetarian, I'm vegan, I've not pushed them that far.
00:59:10.000 But I also say people do eat meat and we try not to judge people on that basis.
00:59:16.000 But there's kind of an expectation that if you're a vegan person that you've got to have this very militant and judgmental attitude towards other people.
00:59:23.000 And I don't feel that's very helpful with any ideal.
00:59:26.000 I don't think that's a good manner to deal with people from, you know?
00:59:32.000 Agreed.
00:59:32.000 I was there as well when I was a judgmental vegan.
00:59:35.000 I was that person.
00:59:38.000 An unhealthy, an unhealthy judgmental being.
00:59:43.000 Yeah.
00:59:44.000 But I was, I was, I was saved.
00:59:47.000 Saved, Rick.
00:59:48.000 You look like the living embodiment of salvation today.
00:59:51.000 I hope we get to spend some time together in person soon.
00:59:54.000 I really do.
00:59:55.000 I find it, what do I find it?
00:59:56.000 I feel warm and emotional when I, when I communicate with you.
01:00:02.000 It's, and enriched.
01:00:03.000 Thank you so much for taking the time and for your kindness.
01:00:08.000 My pleasure.
01:00:08.000 I feel a deep connection with you always and one that I honestly would say, while we don't know each other well, I don't have the connection I have with you with very many people.
01:00:18.000 That's beautiful.
01:00:19.000 I'm honoured.
01:00:20.000 I'm honoured.
01:00:21.000 Thank you, Rick.
01:00:22.000 Thank you.
01:00:22.000 I'm going to send you a message after this, because there's loads of things I feel like I want to tell you.
01:00:30.000 You're really beautiful.
01:00:31.000 I love you.
01:00:31.000 Thank you.
01:00:32.000 Thank you so much.
01:00:33.000 I love you too, and I can't wait to see you in person.
01:00:36.000 Thanks, man.
01:00:36.000 I'll see you soon.
01:00:37.000 I'll see you soon.
01:00:39.000 Thank you.
01:00:40.000 On Monday, I'll be doing a WEF special.
01:00:44.000 Can you imagine that?
01:00:44.000 We're doing a special show.
01:00:45.000 It's an extended live show where we will be providing you an alternative take from Davos.
01:00:51.000 And it's interesting, isn't it?
01:00:51.000 Because Rick just said that stuff about the wrestling and the authenticity of the wrestling.
01:00:56.000 But when it comes to the globalist agendas constructed at Davos, are we talking about authenticity?
01:01:02.000 Are we talking about the centralizing hub of these powers?
01:01:06.000 Please join us next week.
01:01:08.000 Not for more of the same, but for more of the different.
01:01:11.000 Until then stay free January the 16th is round again
01:01:31.000 It's the WEF Davos Convention and that is why we are presenting the WEF Royal Rumble.
01:01:38.000 Join us for an extended stream where we'll be looking at Klaus Schwab and all of his pals from around the world.
01:01:44.000 Tech giants, politicians, former WEF stooges.
01:01:48.000 They include All of these world leaders!
01:01:51.000 Who will be representing Pfizer?
01:01:52.000 Who will be representing Big Tech?
01:01:54.000 What's Rishi Sunak gonna do there?
01:01:56.000 Will we get to see Mark Zuckerberg?
01:01:58.000 Who will be The Undertaker?
01:01:59.000 Who will be Hulk Hogan?
01:02:00.000 Who will be The Ultimate Warrior?
01:02:02.000 And who will be The Ultimate Victims?
01:02:03.000 We already know who that is!
01:02:05.000 Join us for an extended stream!
01:02:07.000 7am PT, 10am ET, and 3pm GMT!
01:02:11.000 W-E-W-E- I can't think of a sign for it.
01:02:14.000 You get the idea!
01:02:14.000 WF Royal Rumble!
01:02:16.000 See you there!