Transform Pain & Trauma Into Creative Expression | David Choe
6245 segments
I'm a severe gambling addict. Every
single addiction is gambling addiction.
If you drink and drive, you're gambling.
Addiction is one of those things you
can't apply logic to. People, what are
you running from, Dave? It's like, well,
I'ming running from myself, dude. I
don't want to look in the mirror. I
don't want to see myself. I I hate
myself. So, I'm just running. So, as
long as I'm like doing graffiti, running
from the police, you know, just just
just hopping on a train like like
literal running like literally running
to make sure I'm never
sit still for one second like
what are you doing Dave? I'm playing
drums in a band. I'm you know at a
casino. I'm traveling doing the news for
Vice. I'm painting at this like I I
can't I can't sit still because that
means I have to sit with myself and I I
can't do that. I can't do that.
[clears throat]
I couldn't do that. I couldn't do that.
I can now. Welcome to the Hubberman Lab
podcast where we discuss science [music]
and science-based tools for everyday
life.
[music]
I'm Andrew Huberman and I'm a professor
of neurobiology and opthalmology at
Stanford School of Medicine. My guest
today is David Cho. David Cho is an
artist. He's a highly accomplished
painter, graffiti, and street artist,
writer, podcaster, and television host.
Many of you are perhaps familiar with
David as the guy who famously painted
the original Facebook offices, took
equity for the job, and got rich. Now,
that's a wild story, but David's whole
life journey, what he did prior to and
after that, and what he has overcome
along the way, is a million times
wilder. As he shares today, David grew
up hearing and thinking that he was
destined for greatness, but also hearing
and thinking that he was a total
disgrace. Today, he talks with complete
openness and vulnerability about
addiction, about cycles of success and
failure, and about channeling and
overcoming deep shame. Today's podcast
is unlike any other that I've hosted.
David is wide open about his childhood
abuse, his massive success, then career
setbacks, relapses, and transmuting
every possible emotion into art along
the way. So, no matter who you are,
David's story, and just as importantly,
how he's living right now, how he shows
up on this podcast will change what you
think is possible for you in life. It
will force you to look inward and to use
whatever joy and pain you have inside of
you to be the best human being you can
possibly be. David Cho is, as we say in
science, an N of one, meaning there is
no other like him. Yes, because of his
incredible art, but also for his
willingness to share so openly and
honestly so that others can benefit and
grow. I consider it a true honor and
privilege to host David on this podcast,
and frankly, it's impossible not to love
him. This one is incredibly raw and
honest. It's also full of surprises,
many of which are fun surprises. So,
buckle up. Before we begin, I'd like to
emphasize that this podcast is separate
from my teaching and research roles at
Stanford. It is however part of my
desire and effort to bring zero cost to
consumer information about science and
science related tools to the general
public. In keeping with that theme,
today's episode does include sponsors.
And now for my discussion with David
Cho. David Cho, welcome.
>> Thank you for having me, man.
>> Man, huge longtime fan.
>> Love your art. I've been super inspired
by your YouTube channel. I watch it
sometimes before I do my drawing or I
prepare for a podcast.
>> What are you drawing?
>> Uh, I draw a lot of anatomy on top of
some paintings. So, I do neuroanatomy on
top of some paintings that my friend Tim
Armstrong's been doing.
>> Musician lead.
>> Is it anatomically correct or is it like
exaggerated or is it
>> This is a really good question. So,
>> in essence, it's anatomically correct.
>> Yeah. But around the turn of the last
century, two guys, Kahal and Golgi, won
the Nobel Prize.
>> Yeah.
>> For drawing the nervous system and
showing these things no one had seen
before. And they stripped away
everything except
>> I'm going to paint.
>> I'm going to complain with you.
>> Yeah.
>> I don't like what's happening in your
painting studio.
>> Okay.
>> I'm I'm just from what you said so far,
it's
>> it's not good.
>> Okay.
>> But it's it's good because you did that
and then now we have to we have to strip
that away. We have to get at the core of
it because painting is
um Wait, weren't you in the middle of
complimenting me? Like, keep going.
>> I mean, I I I love your YouTube channel.
I watch it before I prepare podcast and
before I uh paint or draw and I'm back
to drawing a lot now, and I live I
converted an art gallery into a living
space. And somehow I thought that that
would make me uh more inspired, but it
turns out um it does. [laughter]
Um, a lot of things do, but I think the
key with anatomy and trying to teach
science with drawings is can't be too
much detail, can't be too little detail.
Otherwise, people are overwhelmed.
>> It's the best thing for I think
everyone, but for someone like you who
spends a lot of time in your head. I
always say the longest journey you'll
ever take in your life is from your head
to your heart. And to be uh an
intellectual person, you you just live a
lot a lot. you like you try to
rationalize and apply logic to
everything. So painting is not that,
music is not that, creating is not that.
It's just to get to this and so for for
but it sounds just in the little that
you've explained that your painting is
very methodical and which
>> super meticulous. I want to include
every cell type. Yeah.
>> What's your threshold for positive
affirmations? Can I go now? Like you
>> I mean I like to think I have a thick
skin, but
>> All right, let's go. Who knows?
>> No, it's it's all it's all love. Okay.
Um, for anyone who's watching or
listening, this is my first time meeting
Adam.
>> Andrew.
>> All good. [laughter]
>> Yeah. All good. All good. You knew my
last name.
>> You know what? I was thinking about my
friend Adam.
>> All good.
>> That you know that used to skate with. I
think Adam Cone.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. That's I was just thinking like
Yeah. Upper Playground.
>> Yeah. He worked he his dad owns Cone
Shoes
>> in Palto. He wants to reconnect with
you,
>> man. Adam Cron and I grew up together.
>> He had a mini ramp in his backyard. We
hung out. We skateboarded. And then he
started Upper Playground, the Walrus.
>> That's that's that's it, right?
>> He's your homie.
>> I used to work for I did tons of
giraffics for Upper Playground. So
>> Wow.
>> Does anyone call you Andy?
>> Uh my skateboard friends call me Andy.
So yeah,
>> but that's it. Like no one in the
medical like science.
>> Uh not anymore. No, not really.
>> That would have like you you start your
podcast and you do your like I'm Andrew.
Yep. Like I'm going to be all over the
place because I'm nervous being here
right now. I hardly do podcasts anymore.
So, um I'm I'm going to be all over the
place if that it's going to be me. It's
going to be sloppy.
>> This is your canvas, man. Have fun.
>> Well, I'm just meeting you. I already
called you the wrong name, which is
horrible. Um I hate the black. I hate
it. Like
>> the studio. this you with the black
t-shirt, the black mugs, the black like
I don't like it for you, you know, cuz I
used to I used to only wear black
because I was like, ah, I'm a painter.
I'm always dirty. I don't want to like,
you know, you could see the ketchup
stains on my sweater. And it's like,
okay, that's that's fine. But I just um
colors are very important in not just
painting but like the palette for your
house or
you know like um
most people talk about
in the modern age modern man is you know
and I and I I just make [ __ ] up so you
could correct you're like the facts guy
but I I feel like most people human
beings alive today are going to die a
very
uh it's mean to say boring but just the
same death, right? You'll most likely
die laying down in a bed or hospice or
in a hospital bed, you know? It's just
like no one's dying like I know there's
other countries where there's war and
famine, but I'm saying modern cities,
you know, like there's not like a hero's
death, right? So, it's just it's all the
same. And then you just, you know, the
drive here in traffic, it's like
everyone either has a black car or a
white car or a gray car. And then you
get to their house and their house is a
beige or a white and you're just like,
"We only got one of these." You know,
whatever your views on the afterlife
are, but this is it. This is it. Like
this is it. And it's just like people
get mad of like, "Oh, I spilled paint on
the floor. Like I got to scratch." I'm
like, "Paint everything. Paint your
[ __ ] car. Paint Make your My My kids
drew my sweater. It's my favorite, you
know, like
>> I like that sweater
>> you know. So I walk in here and I go,
"Fuck, dude." Like, and I'm projecting
on you now. Like when I wore all black,
it said a lot about where I was at in my
life. And I don't know where you're at
because I'm just meeting you, but it's
like everything is black on black. Like
black on this, black t-shirt, black mug,
black, and it's like white t-shirt. for
my dream my my uh selfishly my dream is
like this podcast would start instead of
saying hey I'm Andrew Huberman like
Stanford scientist that it's just hi I'm
Andy and then like you can you photoshop
like a white t-shirt on
>> I'd wear a white t-shirt
>> I don't know I don't like black for me I
I have hardly ever black clothes anymore
I I want to add as much color because I
I just uh maybe that's the season I am
in my for the the time I'm in. But um
yeah, I I appreciate you saying the nice
stuff. I I never thought I would be a
YouTuber, but that's providing a lot of
joy in my life. And so I want to say to
you, um I'm meeting you for the first
time. I've never seen you clean shaven,
>> but I imagine I mean your beard and
facial hair to me look very cute. You're
very handsome. your voice when I hear
your voice immediately is soothing and I
feel like this is a very kind person
like I once again without having like
now I've met you for like 5 minutes I'm
like oh this guy's super awesome but you
know like these kind of parasocial
relationships where
I could go even I don't know how hard
you want to go today but like it's like
I meet people all the time and then I
meet them and it's like I've already met
you like we've already talked. I don't
know what your views on telepathy and
spirituality and it's like
>> it's just everyone will meet
everything's going to happen the way
it's going to happen and everyone's
going to meet who they need to meet.
It's like all energy, right? You put
this like what you know I could sit
there and go why does Andrew Hubin want
to meet me right now? And it's like well
what am I putting out in the universe
and what is he putting out in the
universe and are do the souls connect in
that way? you know, so I just want I
said if I ever meet him, I just want to
tell him how cute he is, how soothing
and relaxing and like there's something
very um this is the invisible ingredient
in like everything in art is did the
person care, right? Like I don't care
how skilled and crafted whatever like
did the person care and like when you do
stuff in your voice the tone the
frequency that's hitting my my soul is
like oh I don't know everything that
guyy's saying he's using some big words
but I feel like he cares and so I I said
if I ever meet you and um I I know a
little bit from us talking on the phone
but I don't know your whole backstory
but I'm like
also I I project a lot and I I make a
lot of assumptions which I'm that's a
defect that I'm working on. But I just
wanted to say like even though you had a
horrific traumatic childhood, like the
fact that you're here, you're alive, and
that you're doing all this good stuff,
it like it makes me emotional cuz I'm
like I I don't even know you, and I
appreciate what you're doing, and uh
you're still a little bit immature, but
progress, not perfection, right? So, um
I think that's it for now, but I just
wanted to tell you all that because I I
feel that way about you and I I you
know, I like I I'm a big sometimes you
feel stuff and you're like I'll text it
to them or or maybe you know and I just
go no if I feel that I just want to
especially if it's love and positivity.
I know I started by telling you how much
I hate your decor and your interior
decorating but it's because I like you.
Like I wouldn't if I didn't if I like if
I'm like I don't give a [ __ ] about this
guy and I don't want a relationship with
I would never say anything. But I'm like
this I don't know what the science
behind it but being surrounded by this
much black cannot be good, right? It
can't like just you walk you we're
walking into a black hole right now like
I don't know. Anyways, that's that's
what I wanted to say.
>> Oh [snorts and clears throat] man. Well,
I'll take that in. Thank [laughter] you.
Uh lot there. Thank you.
>> Were you able to take it in? Yeah, I was
able to take in some of that. I uh it's
interesting when you call me Andy, it's
it's a different part of my persona
>> just because that names carry a lot and
>> thank you for that. I'm going to take
that in. And um
>> you know the I got this little voice in
my head that's saying uh want to be very
clear. You know, my I had some rough
>> rough aspects in my childhood. I've made
good amends with my parents, so we're
good now. I say that to uh you know uh
for all the the reasons people can
assume. But here's the thing. I knew
somehow that we'd eventually cross
paths. I just didn't know when.
>> Uh so you say the telepathy thing for
me, I was a posttock at Stanford. That
comes after PhD. You do like 5 years.
It's kind of like a residency and uh and
I'm from the South Bay.
>> Mhm.
>> And I didn't want to go back to the
South Bay because as you know, no
disrespect to the South Bay. A lot of
interesting things come out of there,
but it was pretty devoid of the things
that I like. Yeah. Which normally are in
cities like art, live music. It used to
be like that. Grateful Dead were in Palo
Alto. I saw Fugazi play at the at the
edge on California Avenue. There was a
lot of interesting things about Palto,
but it became very uh right angles uh
when the tech industry really exploded
there. And in 2007 when I was a posttock
>> Mhm.
>> was when you were muraling at Facebook.
I learned that later.
>> Yeah.
>> But that was a time when I was back
there for my science career and I was
pretty miserable
>> being close to home again. Honestly, I
didn't want to ever go back there for a
while. It was not healing. It was uh But
when I learned your story
>> about muraling at Facebook and some of
that, I was like, "Oh, there was at
least one other
>> person here who was like in the in the
kind of uh spiritual emotional fight
with what the South Bay is." And then I
realized that I heard an interview with
Ian Mai from Myer Threat
>> and turns out he had been in Palo Alto
because his dad was an academic or
something like that
>> of course
>> and he had skated some of the same
ditches we had. And so there's a history
of
>> people being really frustrated with
being there.
>> Um
>> really good Vietnamese food
>> and is there really?
>> Yeah.
>> Oh the South Bay.
>> Yeah. South Bay.
>> Oh yeah. Castro Street Mountain View.
Yeah. And it's changed a lot. But
>> uh take me back to 2007. I don't know
how you feel about historical stuff.
We're definitely I'm definitely down to
time travel and time jump and all that,
but because
>> my I'm older. I'm 49 and my attention
span is just completely fried.
>> I'm going to I'll just say right now I'm
going to get a lot of dates wrong. Like
I'm not like two, you know, things
people are like that, you know, like
>> 2007 was when the Facebook offices were
what kids from the South Bay call the
the neck of University Avenue right
before it goes under the train tracks.
As soon as you're on the other side of
the train tracks, Cal Train,
>> it becomes Palm Drive and it's up to
Stanford. And so those offices now are
Palunteer.
>> Yeah.
>> Which catches a lot of heat for other
reasons, but those offices right as you
go under the train tracks for us
>> there was a curb cut right there and
there was a board slide thing. And so
for the skateboarders, it was one thing,
but then that was Facebook offices.
>> And years later, I heard
David Cho was muring at Facebook. So how
did that come to I'm going to I'm going
to be uh like very sloppy like I said
and it's maybe some of the stuff cuz
sometimes um it's the way I treat
talking in journalism and podcast is
like it's like a story in my own head.
Someone else is like just shut the [ __ ]
up and answer the question, right? But
like for me when I paint I I don't
sketch. I go straight to finish and I So
sometimes I'm figuring out what I'm
trying to tell you cuz you ask me a
question that's very direct, but I the
way it went into my head was very
abstract cuz I'm So um if you let me do
a little paint mixing, I I I hope I'll
answer your question. But do you um do
you know Peewee Pew? Like I'm wearing it
today. Do you know uh Peewee's
Playhouse?
>> I knew Oh, yeah. I mean Yeah. I met him
actually once.
>> Paul Ruben.
>> Yeah. at a at a photo show of Mike
Mueller and Sage who draws butterflies
on Mike Mueller's sharks and animals.
Oh.
>> And Peeweee Herman in his thing in his
suit, the whole thing walked up. Lared
Hamilton was there.
>> Nice.
>> And he walks up to Lar Hamilton. There
are a bunch of people around. Everyone's
trying to get to Larried to Lar. Lar's
like a This was 2017
>> and uh was in West Hollywood.
>> And Peeweee Herman walks up and he goes,
"I have to meet you." And Lar's like,
and the best thing is Lar just goes,
"Oh, hello. What's your name?" Like
typical Larard. Like Lar's a real
gentleman always, you know, and uh
>> he didn't know who Kiwi Her I couldn't
tell if he knew or not. And he's like,
"I really wanted to meet you." This kind
of thing. And uh and I was like, "No
way." And he had the whole thing like
the the shiny lips and the the thing.
And I was like,
>> "That's Peewee Herman."
>> Oh, that's amazing. I love that. All
right. Well, I mean, I'm definitely
going to have to tell you my Peewee
Herman story at some point.
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>> For me, art as a kid growing up, like
the trifecta, my holy trinity of
children's education, art, entertainment
is Mr. Rogers, Bob Ross, and then of
course Peewee Herman. I mean, Peewee
Herman had Lawrence Fishburn, uh, Gary
Panter, Mark Mothersba, like Danny
Elfman. Like, he just he was like the
ring leader of all this creativity. And
he had like Mecca, Mecca Ho. And do you
remember the do you remember the secret
word?
>> The secret word was like, if anyone's
our age that's watching people's
playoffs, it was like
>> Today's secret word is
I don't know what's our secret word
today, Rob.
>> Microphone.
>> Microphone. And if if someone says
microphone, scream real loud. So, can we
do that today?
>> Sure.
>> All right. I'm counting on you. I want
you to scream the loudest.
>> Um, and you don't take a pee until we
take a pee. We got a agreement on that.
Okay.
>> All right. Um,
I hated the South Bay. I I hate like I
just
I'm um I have all the um typical art
artist traits. I'm clinically depressed.
I'm bipolar.
Uh I have all the process addictions,
food, sex, gambling, shopping,
workcoholism. Like I don't have Thank
God I don't have any of the chemical
addictions cuz I'm allergic to
everything. But
um severe OCD, severe antisocial traits
um you know I I just
highly sensitive you know so I I just
coming here today like you asked me and
I kept text like I don't know we did
this like dance for a few months and I
uh if I'm just being honest with you
like
I I don't I don't know how to not be me,
you know, and sometimes like I put a
mask on and I I I'm like, I think this
is what Andrew wants me to be today, but
I, you know, I didn't even meet you yet.
And so
every time I've done Joe Rogan or any
other podcast, like
um I don't know, I just feel comfortable
doing my own YouTube or my own podcast,
but anytime anyone else asks me, it's
such a I know who I am and sometimes I
don't and sometimes I figure that out.
And it's sometimes you meet people on
the street at pavilions or at the
supermarket and they're like I and it's
like this parasocial thing where it's
like I know you, I relate to you, I and
there's something about that where
you know the intimacy of meeting another
human being and then just showing them
your heart and then telling them
everything. And my parents aren't going
to listen to this. my brothers don't
listen to like so in a weird way like
you're going to know more about me today
than my own family so the parasocial
thing is even it's real right like
placebo effect is real like all these
things so
I you know I got here early I went for a
walk down the to those that street and
then it's like just this beautiful view
of the ocean and I I it it happens every
time it's like
it it it. I know what it makes me sound
like. It's like, "Oh, this guy's like
very unstable and unhinged." And I'm I'd
be the first to admit it. It's like I
cry all the time now. [laughter] Like I
don't know what it it was just like
maybe just seeing all the burned houses
on the way here, just knowing that I
haven't talked in a long time and
there's no upside for me. And I told you
that I was like I go on these podcasts
and I think um
uh Howard Stern like 15 20 years ago and
Joe Rogan the multip multiple times I've
been on a show I think are the only two
p radio shows podcasts that have ever
just aired it without editing. everyone
else. Every time you've ever heard me on
any other podcast, it's either severely
edited or they cut out huge chunks of it
or they didn't even air it at all. So, I
know that, you know, and I know the
world we live in today. And so, there's
something that
went, you know, in the the narcissistic
traits where like I'm the [ __ ]
greatest artist in the world to like, oh
my god, I'm a piece of [ __ ] Like, it
just, you know, it's just like this
thing. And before when I was younger, it
was like everyone has to see everything.
Everyone has like I think I'm so
important that everyone has to see
everything that I create. Painting,
podcast, book, like whatever it is. And
then it went like my problem with my
[ __ ] is it's all or nothing. So it's
hard for me to find the middle.
And so at this point now I'm like 49. I
I live a very quiet dad life. You know,
I'm a family guy. And there's just
thousands of paintings no one's ever
seen. There's hundreds of hours, if not
thousands of hours of podcasts I've
never put out. There's books I've
written. There's TV shows, movies that
I've made that it's just I don't before
the ego and the narcissist like you need
to put this out because you're important
and everyone needs to see how important
you are. And now the flip side to that
is and maybe maybe it's not healthy
either is like I know who I am. I'm
comfortable with myself and I don't I
don't need you know I'm artificially
blocked from everything like I I'm I
don't have my own password to my social
media. I don't I have blocks on my phone
so I can't access the internet. So it's
like I do put all these things into
place to like protect myself because I'm
a sensitive person. So, um, you know, as
an artist,
there's certain isms and and stories.
It's like, oh, starving artist, you're
not going to make any money. Like,
struggling artist, there's these stories
that people say and then you buy into
them. Um,
but I had um I had a few teachers along
the way that
um influenced me that like you know
there's like just certain moments happen
in your life that live in your your head
rentree. And uh I have a lot of those.
And so one of the stories is you know
I'm 49. It's like you have to live in
New York City. If you make it in New
York you make it anywhere. What the [ __ ]
am I doing in the 408? Like this is what
am I doing in certain like like in my
head the story's written that you're a
[ __ ] you know and I hadn't done [ __ ]
right but in my head I'm like you're a
greatest artist ever in Gilroy you know
like what you know what I mean
>> sorry no disrespect to Gilroy
>> like the garlic capital of garlic fest
garlic ice Ice cream you know so
>> there's a story in my head that's like I
got to get to New York City right like I
gotta like
>> I [snorts] couldn't I couldn't get any
like leeway in Los Angeles. I'm born and
raised in LA and I just I couldn't, you
know,
and um
and so I I and now I look back if I do a
inventory of the most creative
explosions and the most periods of
creativity in my life, it's always found
in the mundane. It's always found in
cold temperatures. It's always found
when there's no Wi-Fi. It's always f
found in a suburb of it's it's like this
story like and when I get to [ __ ] New
York and I'm going to be part of this
move. It's never that like it's nice to
romanticize that but it's these moments
of brilliance like someone whoever's
listening right now they're like I got
this and then I'm there's like a and
then I'm going to get to this and then
I'm going to meet this person and I'm
going to do and it's like bro I was
[ __ ] living in San Jose for seven
years. I met this wonderful lady. She
was my girlfriend for 7 years. But like
at that prime I was 23 and I was like
and um
for me the stakes are so high because I
so one of the teachers was my mother
right my mother is hardcore born again
Christian.
So science does not enter the picture,
right? It's like blinders on and through
her I learned blind faith, right? Jesus
Christ. That's it. There's no there's no
So wait, you're telling me there was an
actual ark with two animals and all the
the two animals didn't kill the other
and like you know and there was an atom
and there was a snake that talked and
like yeah like no hesitation. So she
gave me that gift of like
like hey science like facts no blind
like just holy [ __ ] like there nothing
could fault her and you're like you're
[ __ ] stupid you're ignorant like and
she's but she's not she's a bright woman
and now I look back and like I just met
you you're a brilliant guy and I and I
sit here and I go I know some of the
smartest people on the planet. You know
some of the smartest people on the
planet and they're all dumb. They're all
like idiots. You're like, "Wait, you're
a genius. You have photographic memory.
You created this company and you made
some of the dumbest decisions I've ever
seen
or you don't know." [snorts] So,
so my mom taught me through just not
anything but just watching her of just
this absolute belief and and one of her
beliefs was
you're my son. You know, this is some
Jesus [ __ ] like me who was like how I
explained this is [ __ ] neurotic mess
like growing up in an unstable family
and all that. Got [ __ ] molested phys
every abuse, physical abuse, emotional
abuse, like just chaotic cuz they were
working and then I was just like left
out in the wild, abandoned, spiritual
abuse, all this [ __ ] And she's just
like, in the same way
she believed in God and Jesus, she's
like, "You're the one. You're the
greatest artist." And I'm like 5 years
old. I'm like, "What the [ __ ] are you
talking about?" She's like, "No one's
better than you. No one's better than
you. You're the be You're going to be
the great, you know, your name's David."
Like a lot of Koreans named after Bible.
She's like, "I named you after King
David. You're going to be a king." And I
go, "But now in hindsight, I'm like, and
yes, King David beat Goliath, but he
also was a sex addict and had a lot of
mental illness and like failed a lot,
you know. She didn't tell me all that
[ __ ] you know." Um, so she's she's
raising me. She's brainwashing me. It's
like, "You're the best. You're the
greatest." And then you, you know, I've
met other artists where it's like
everyone had this has their own paths.
Some become great because the parents
are like, "You're nothing. You're a
piece of [ __ ] You're the worst. You
know, who the [ __ ] do you think you
are?" I had the opposite. I had a mom
just it didn't matter. It didn't matter
like, "But mom, look at how horrible."
It's like, "You're the greatest." And so
it's like at some point I I hate myself.
I have like a so such a low self-
opinion of myself. I'm I'm just down on
myself. Just this kid just constantly
getting bullied and like the world just
using me. And [sighs]
um and I [snorts]
and I'm like, "Of course she says that.
She's my mom, you know, like, but she
just brainwashed me into believing that
I'm the best. And I I would, as a as a
trickster and a shape shifter,
I would, you know, what most artists
lack is like an ability to communicate
with words. That's why they're such
brilliant artists and that's why they
they can make great music and all this
because they can't I can't, you know,
like I'm gonna probably talk to you for
you few hours today and I'm gonna leave
here feeling misunderstood. I'm gonna be
like, "Fuck, did I?" because I'm not in
the same way I can like translate what I
feel in a painting. It's very like it's
like when people describe like Iawaska
or something. They're like try to
describe it and they're like the words
that you're trying to look for don't
exist for what you just went through. So
that's kind of the why why I get really
self-judgmental, but I'm like this woman
and then you know my dad he loves me but
he's like he's all right, he's okay, you
know. And I'd watched my mom who was
just like a brutal businesswoman, you
know, and um she would transform, you
know, we we we we you know, I I spent
most of my life either poor or middle
class, you know, like being wealthy came
later. But so, you know, we were on
welfare a lot, our businesses burned
down in the LA Riots. Like I saw my
parents struggle a lot, you know, but
then they would do good and they had the
gamblers mentality, which a lot of
Asians do. And I I have that too,
>> which is
>> just I don't know if this is true, but I
heard that uh Asians have the gambling
gene more than other races, especially
the women. Like most women don't have
the gambling gene the same way men do.
So my mom would gamble like flipping
houses or like not in a casino but like
just huge like huge swings which you're
like
I grew up in with a a fearless woman you
know
>> but so we wouldn't have stuff but then I
would watch my mom open the trunk of her
car and put on like fake jewelry cubic
zirconium cuz she's about to go into a
meeting and ask for a lot of money and
just just insane lying saying and but
hardcore Christian. So like the
hypocrisy there like I'm definitely I'm
trying to work on my own breaking out.
So it's like I'm going to be
hypocritical in this interview and at
the end hopefully I'll be able to
correct any exaggerations or lies. But
that's a new tool that I have. I used to
just you know whatever for the story you
know I lie to tell the truth you know
all those things. Um so I would watch my
mom transform from like a poor woman.
The mentality was she's like my my son
is the greatest artist in the world and
like I'm you know I'm coming out of my
Toyota hatchback with the broken window
you know but I when I go into this
meeting right now you're not going to
see that. So she transformed herself
into this rich powerful woman and just
like get like I'm I'm just sitting there
a kid in the corner watching this woman
get what she wants. I'm like holy [ __ ]
what the [ __ ] was that performance? And
then just coming out and I'm like, "But
mom, that's not like those things you
said. That wasn't real. That's not
true." And she's like, "Yeah, they don't
need to know that." And I'm like, "But
we just went to church and we learned
the Ten Commandments and you're not
supposed to lie." And it's like all this
like confusion.
[snorts]
And then I meet uh Sean Parker who uh
you know just the sweetest kid you know
just
he started emailing me right when he
started
Napster. He goes, "I wish I have all the
emails. I keep I keep certain emails and
voice messages and I just I just that's
my own nostalgia, but like I have a I
have a voicemail and a handwritten
letter from Howard Stern saying, "Thank
you for getting me into watercolors."
And I was like, "Dude, my [ __ ] hero."
Like, "Yes." Like, it's such a good
feeling. Um, I have a voice message from
Peewee Herman, which I'll share later.
And all my early emails with Sean Parker
I kept just cuz it was he's such an
interesting like wonderful I know like
the image of him but like I I we don't
talk like as like we used to but I still
consider him a friend and I'm over
forever grateful to him.
So he I met him at a time when like
I mean I don't even know how to des I
mean like
just complete disgrace and shame to my
family. You know it's like the immigrant
story. Talk to any immigrant. Why the
[ __ ] did you leave your home to come to
another country? Because it was shitty
there. That's it. You're not born in a
country and you're like, "Dude, let's
leave." Right? The only reason why
anyone's here is because it was shitty
where you were at, right? So then they
all, it doesn't matter if you're Asian
or Mexican, whatever. You came here for
a better life. And what does that mean?
Work your ass off. So we we're in a
nation of workaholics, right? This is an
entire country of workaholics. So my
parents, you know, I didn't go through
it, but they're like Japanese tanks
rolled down the street and you know,
they have the typical like [ __ ] war,
famine, all that stuff. So they get over
here and like born and raised in Los
Angeles, you know, it's like
don't know who I am, don't know where I
belong, just bullied, abandoned, abused
over and over and just
I didn't even really know the concept of
suicide, but I hated myself. Like I I
couldn't live in my like it felt like I
was burning inside my own body. And so,
um, even made fun of like, like I listen
to, we we have the same taste of music.
I listen to Minutemen, Minor Threat, you
know, I'm blasting,
uh, Downset, Inside Out, Sound Garden,
Slaves and Bull. I used to put on Sound
Garden, Slaves and Bulldozers,
punch myself as like just like I'm in my
room, a teenager, just punching myself
as hard as I can just to like go into
like a berserker rage. Um, and I and I
just back then the like I found
pornography and it was just so soothing.
Like it was like getting high. Like I
would just masturbate like over and over
again. So I'm I'm like master but I I
would do like weird self harm. I guess
the kids call it edging, but like I'd
masturbate but then not come and then
beat myself up. and I'm going through
puberty and I would go out and I'd
shoplift uh spray cans like just at you
know hardware stores and I'm listening
to uh you know I would get like a faith
no more like in living colors just like
some some song and I would just like an
OCD just repeat like some lyric in it. I
am a patient boy and I would just like
go into like a trance and I would just
go out and I would just [ __ ] spray
paint and I'm living at home so I'm not
hiding this [ __ ] I come home, my hands
covered in black paint.
TH THIS IS WHAT WE [ __ ] came to this
country for. This is what why we we
[ __ ] left another country so you
could come here and not be an artist but
do graff like you're a disgrace. You're
a disgrace to our race. You're you know,
and my dad would just like [ __ ] throw
me against the wall. And I'm like,
I don't care, dude. I don't care what
you're like, do you understand? Like I
wasn't like actively trying to kill
myself, but I didn't. Like, do you
understand that everything you care
about I don't care. Do you get that? And
like, you know, you start the show and I
I I was laughing cuz it's like, hey, I'm
Andrew Hub Huberman, scientist Stanford,
this and I'm like, I don't care. Like, I
I like I like Andy. Like, I like that,
you know? And then I was like, you know
what? This is like a stolen valor. Um
Sean Parker starting Facebook with Mark
Zuckerberg. You know, I'm there at the
beginning and uh so he brings me in and
at the time when I first this is years
the emails back and forth. He's like, "I
need cuz the energy I was putting out at
the time was what I'm telling you right
now. Just I don't give a [ __ ] I don't
care what you care about. Like I don't
like it's just complete. I don't care if
I go to jail. I don't care. Like, I'm
just painting on everything. And it's
like graffiti. Graffiti is vandal. It's
not an art. It's not graffiti artist or
street art. It's [ __ ] vandalism. It's
a crime. And people are telling me
anyone out there doing street art. Like,
there's so many rules. There's so many
like What did you write? Did you used to
tag or anything?
>> No, but from uh
>> if you skated, you definitely had like a
>> There were some kids in our crew that
>> cubes. No.
>> What did you tag? Come on.
>> No, cuz I had friends who were like
graphers and they were they like boxed
us out, you know, the the Under Shadows
kids.
>> You never did graffiti?
>> No, but we can talk about this later. I
want to I want to hear from you now, but
later we should talk about Orphan and
the Under Shadows crew, which is a which
is a kind of a thing in the Bay Area.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. He was a good friend
of mine. But anyway, I didn't graffiti.
>> Okay. So, I'm
>> But I g I drew all my grip tape.
>> All right. That's good.
>> But no, I wasn't a tagger. Wasn't a
graffiti guy.
>> Yeah. So, I'm out doing like that and
you know like
you know we could have like a
conversation about creativity and this
and that and it's like I can't it's it's
very hard to talk about create it's
because it's like can you teach a craft?
Can you teach a skill? Can I teach you
to paint the Mona Lisa? Yeah, I know how
to do all that. I know how to like I
went to school like I taught myself. I
watched videos like you could teach
yourself how to paint something to make
it look like something. That's a
teachable skill. But creativity, where
does that come from? Are you just born
with it? Is it from deprivation? Is like
it's like a you know I could I can only
share what my path my my path is. And
it's like
the embarrassment like you're Asian, you
need to get a 4.0. You need to get into
UCLA. You need to be a doctor or a
lawyer. And it's like me, my I'm on the
middle child, me and my two brothers,
like long hair, listening to heavy metal
and punk.
Why you doing that white [ __ ] you know?
Like, and then he's got Asian kids that
are into heavy, you know, like there's
no identity, right? And then it's just
like lost. Just like what the [ __ ] is,
you know, like we don't belong anywhere.
Just like the Asian depictions uh in
media is like long duck dong. Asians
have small dicks. They can't drive.
they're good at math. It's just
nothing's good, right? And I'm like I,
you know, I'm just trying to figure out
my way in this world and I and I
remember
um Sean just was attracted to like
whatever whatever little art I'd start
getting some noticed and juxtapose and I
was starting to do graffiti everywhere
and and uh he's like I [clears throat]
want that whatever that is. I want that
like I want to be part of that. And I
said, and I I forgot what my painting it
was. It was like right when I couldn't
sell a painting and then all of a sudden
they were selling for a couple thousand.
And he's like, and he was a teenager
still. And he goes, "My
my I I I want your art, but the problem
is I'm being sued right now for a
trillion dollars because every single
song is a is a lawsuit, you know? I
mean, whatever." He it ended up the way
it ended up, but I remember he goes,
"I'm getting" He showed me a screenshot
or whatever. He's like, "I'm being sued
for $1 trillion right now, so I can't
really afford your art, but like I'm
going to get it, you know." So, we we
started this relationship, and he would
send me these crazy like abstract texts
of emails of what he wanted me to paint.
And then and then uh he started another
company called Plaxo. And he's like,
"No, no." And then finally,
you're catching me in the South Bay. You
know, I I met this girl, we fell in
love, and I moved to San Jose, just the
most culturally dead place, and
everyone's like rollerblading, working
at Apple or MySpace or eBay or, you
know, some some tech startup, and
they're like, "We're cool because we
have a trampoline and a, you know, we
have a like a kitchen area where you can
have all the Red Bull and snacks you
want, and we have bunk beds, so we" And
like that's also you could just keep
working, you know, and So, I meet Sean
and he's like, "Dude, we're starting
this company called Facebook and
like we finally have some money and
like, dude, this is" and he's like,
"Where are you at?" And he didn't know
all this, but I had just gotten out of
prison. I was in jail in Japan because I
had beaten up undercover security guard.
I was 27 when I got and I owed everyone
money. I owed my girlfriend money. I
owed And so I needed money bad. And um I
was in like a lot of trouble. I like was
I didn't know how how I was going to pay
everyone back cuz it's really hard to
sell a painting, you know, but my
paintings did sell once in a while and
they were starting to get pretty
expensive. And then uh all the art that
I did in jail um I used to work for Vice
magazine. I say work cuz but I never got
paid but you know I I
>> they didn't pay you. No, I I I think
people, if anyone's listening, this is a
little side tangent, is
um and it's going to definitely sound
like OCD, like I'm keeping a list, and
maybe I am because I don't think about
it, but
I I was sitting the other day and I go,
they all owe me money. Everyone I've
ever worked for, like people like, I got
to get paid. like someone develops a
skill like I'm good at songwriting or or
this or that and and then they go well I
got to like the young people's men well
that's my craft I got to get paid I go I
never got paid I work for Nike Levis
Ruka Giant Robot Vice
[ __ ] even my friends Steve Aayoki and
like just all every like 88 Rising if I
sit here I'll name everyone but like
either they didn't pay me my what they
said or I had to threaten to kill them
for them to send me or or they just
never paid me, you know. And I met Gavin
McKinnis when he started Vice and he had
seen some of the art that I did in Giant
Robot. He saw that I went to the Congo.
He saw like and he's like, "Hey." And it
was all punk rock. Vice when it was like
the big format and he's like, "Dude,"
and he just believed in me. I don't know
what he saw. He's like, "Dude, send me a
um a drawing of cops beating up this and
and I and I did it fast. I did." He's
like, "I need it by tomorrow." And I was
like, "I can do it." And then he's like,
he just was like, "Hey, uh, write me a
story about some shooting in LA, Korea
Town, gangster shit." And I go, "But I'm
not." He's like, "Just just do it." And
at one point,
that was another figure that was
resonated my mom of like the rules don't
reality doesn't apply. I'm sitting there
going, "Wait, but I'm not a journalist.
I didn't fact check anything." And there
was some issues of vice where I wrote
five different articles under a woman's
name, a black guy's name, you know, like
just made up names, articles just to
fill up pages. And I would have done the
comic section, illustrations, music
review,
uh, street, you know, fashion, you know,
the dos and don'ts. And I'm just like,
you can do that? And like I I had
already been groomed for that because of
my mom. like no rule reality doesn't
apply. just my mom thinks I'm the best
artist and now here's you know so Sean's
like okay and and so I'm I'm in what I
feel is like purgatory the 408 San Jose
Militus you know I'm just like what the
[ __ ] is this like and I'm telling I got
to get to when I get to New York it's
like this golden gate like end of the
golden road like Wizard of Oz like when
I get there then someone's I'm going to
get discovered and then someone's going
to be like and and Um
cuz what is it you know like what like
people like what is and I go
I am a I can be a hater. I can be a
loving sweet selfless person. I could be
like a very hard judgmental hater to
myself and and so I take this so
seriously like what we're doing here
today is talking. I mean it's mostly me
talking. I could see that. But it's like
we're having a conversation, but I think
without sounding it's like I I think
it's important. That's why I'm here.
Like I
like I said, like I'm like why? I I feel
like I trust you even though I just met
you, but like yeah, I [ __ ] puked down
the street because I get I go, "What's
the upside?" Like I'm going to talk and
then maybe I say something that I didn't
mean or I say it the wrong way or it
gets clipped weird or edited and I go
and I go, "I think it's important. I I
want to come. I want to talk to you."
And I and that's how I feel about my
art. So what is that? What is art? What
is creativity? And and for me it's like
I think sports are very gay, especially
skateboarding. Like I if I never played
sports, I would have never seen another
man's penis, you know, like and then in
my time in sports, it was very rough
because I wasn't I tell I told myself
any athlete that I paint with, they
always start saying the same thing. I
suck at drawing. And I go, why did you
do that? Why did you immediately shoot
yourself in like who who said that? Did
someone else say that or did you say
that? They they start with saying
something negative. And I go and and
then I go that's exactly what I say if
they try to teach me how to throw a free
throw. I go, "Ah, this is going to
suck." And they go, "Why did you do
that?" And so for me growing up, I grew
up with in a lot of black neighborhoods
where the second, you know, I don't know
how to play basketball, but the second I
try and I [ __ ] up, it's like, "Look at
Chinese kid [ __ ] try." You know, it's
like, "All right, you know what? I'm not
even gonna try it." you know, and it's
like, well, you should have just come at
like 5 in the morning when no one was
there, you know, but like I was so
sensitive. I was like, I don't want to.
So, I did things in the, you know, it's
art is a solitary sport for the most
part, you know. I'm not there's no Rob
there. There's it's just me
like like even in the thing it's like
this like don't look at my sketchbook
and but in here I can [ __ ] up and fix
erase whatever.
But so like in sports, you know, it's
like you're slapping guys asses, you're
taking showers with them, you're doing
all this like male bonding stuff. You're
just spending a lot of time with other
men, right? Like
and I'm [clears throat] like, "Oh god,
like
what is the feeling? I'm trying to
isolate the feeling. What like what?"
And I remember
because I I don't like I tell this stuff
not to be like feel sorry for me or I'm
a victim. I don't feel like that. I mean
this I'm just
>> telling I'm telling you what happened.
And part of it is
>> you do like a what what would you rather
would you rather someone beat you up for
five minutes or have the whole world
read your diary? You know like these
kind of and and luckily I had both. You
know I've been beaten to an inch of my
life. I've had like I've had broken
bones. I've been stabbed. I've been
burned. I've been like everything
physically you can think of and and I'm
still here, right? So there's not much
like I I in like because I have my mom's
delusion like when I talk to Joe and
he's shorter than me, but I I I know he
could probably like logically I know he
could probably kick my ass. I have no
fighting background, but in my head I'm
like, I'm pretty sure I could kick his
ass. And he would [ __ ] and and I
that's just the way I walk through life.
Like
like I still believe in Santa Claus.
People go, I can't believe I just said
that. I don't I think that's the first
time publicly I've ever said that.
>> We're coming up on uh
>> No, I know.
>> You know, Christmas.
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to get started. I just remember
there's I don't know it's changed now,
but I I remember when I was a kid, it
was around six or seven when they start
going there's no [ __ ] Santa. But I
was eight and I was like and they're
like how dumb are you? And I I
understand this reflects back to my mom
and Jesus. I go and they go, "But you've
literally never got any presents from
Santa. How?" And and and I'd go to
shame. I go, "Cuz I'm a bad kid. I
cussed. I was like I stole stuff from
the supermarket, you know, like." And um
they're like, "Hey, [ __ ] face. Santa's
not real." And I just was like, "But he
is. I believe that he is." And and I I
believe
I go there's there's him not giving me a
present is like cuz I put him in this
God category. Maybe he's not God, but
maybe he's a a god, like a demigod or
something. And they go, "How is he how
does he know if you're naughty or nice?"
I go telepath. How does he how does he
get every [ __ ] present to every kid
in that time? I'm like, oh, he's he's a
mutant. He can multiply. He can make
copies of himself. How does he get
through that tiny chimney and go
teleport? Like, I just It's not even a
question. I just know I I believe it.
And I don't care how stupid you think.
Like, I guess this is me coming out with
my Santa Claus, but it's just like I
just believe that. And you can't say
anything to make me not believe that.
That's my blind faith that I got from my
mom. So like every Christmas I'm aif I'm
almost 50. I'm a [ __ ] middle-aged man
that and I go maybe maybe this is the
year I'm going to but now I look back
and I go the gift he gave me of giving
me nothing gave me everything. Right? So
I I'm I'm sitting there and
I I I'm drawing
but I have that story in my head too.
Like I suck. Oh [ __ ] that doesn't look
like Batman. Oh, his arm looks weird,
you know. And then at some point
to this day, all the physical and
emotional pain uh uh sorry, just the
physical pain like it passes. I've
broken bones. I've I've I've had my face
just pummeled like just where you
wouldn't rec disfigured and but it
passes. And I and if I think back, I
don't remember it. But the pain that
stays is like heartbreak, you know,
betrayal, abandonment. And I just
remember my dad would make us keep a
journal.
Um cuz he just wanted us to start
learning how to write. And it start it
started with if I take you guys to the
movies, you have to write a movie
review. And it was like we were eight
years old, seven years old. Just, you
know, today we saw Karate Kid. Johnny
got chased by skeletons.
The end. You know, it was like that like
a little kid, you know. But he's like,
you have to do it. Goonies was cool, you
know. So, we kept the thing, but then
he never asked to read it. He just
wanted us to do it. And I was like,
"Oh." So, I I started like getting more
brave. I was like, "I I really like this
girl at school." And like, and I would
just start getting really vulnerable and
open and just knowing because my
brothers don't give a [ __ ] Like, but
then the thought of like, "What if
someone ever read this?" So, I was like
opening myself up and just letting and I
was like, "Oh my god, like it felt so
good." Like like I can't tell anyone
like I'm having these kind of feelings
or like you know, like I [ __ ] hate
dad, you know, like so, you know,
whatever. And I I would take the bottom
drawer out of my desk out and I would
hide it under there. And I shared a room
with my brother, so I always did it when
he, you know, I thought I was being
secretive. And I was somewhere between 7
8 n I it just you know as you get better
at writing and I I got more once I got
more comfortable knowing that no one I
just started writing everything like my
brother [ __ ] fart smell like I wish
you know just like everything I would
write just just completely
and I came one day and I saw both of my
brothers on the bed reading it and it I
remember my face just like it felt so
hot like like I felt like someone had
just like ultimate betrayal
and and it was like being naked. That's
why I bring up the like I felt more
naked than being in a room full of naked
guys showering like slapping like it was
the most vulnerable like they were being
so merciles. H you like her and you did
that. I can't believe you've you know
because I wrote everything in that
journal and I I thought I I was going to
die from shame and embarrassment.
And they, you know, like the way kids
are, brothers can be, it was merciless.
And they made fun of me for years for
that. And in the same way, my face was
disfigured. And I've had physical abuse
and all that. I lived through it. And I
was like, I'm still here. And so, why
the [ __ ] am I going to be a [ __ ] when I
draw? When I draw. No more like, I'm
going to draw Batman like this artist or
that artist. Oh, I'm gonna draw like,
you know, like, okay, that's fine.
You're like trying to figure out how to
work with tools and but and that's fine.
Skill craft. Great. But like this like
showing you like so there's I had been
trained now
for heartbreak, right? Like a lot of
artists spend their whole life being not
validated, bullied, rejected, and then
finally they figure out how to draw
something where people are like, "Yes,
we like that." And so they never grow.
They do that same verse, that same flow
forever. And then you got people like
Andre 3000, they're like, "I don't care.
I'm going to I don't care what, you
know, I'm going to do flute shit." It's
like, "Well, we don't like that." He's
like, "I I don't care. I'm an artist.
I'm going to You got someone like Flee
who's like, "I'm going to just do
performance art." And I'm like, I don't
even like half that [ __ ] But I just
love them cuz they're and I go, how
[ __ ] brave is that? How brave is
that? But I remember
just to this day, right, I am a very
successful established artist. And yet
today there's people like, "That's
[laughter] the [ __ ] worst art I've
ever seen. That's the that's" and I and
I and I go, "Cool." Like but but if you
don't have that background of just
having your heart ripped out, it is the
most painful thing to put yourself out
on a c like to pour your that's you.
That's your soul and someone's like and
then especially if you're trying to sell
it like no thanks, you know. Um, so to
have a guy like Sean Parker who's
younger than me, but just not even the
art, he's just like, I like you, like
whatever that is, and then I want to
change the world with this kid that I
met, Mark Zuckerberg. And so I meet him
with his flip-flops and, you know, I
meet the whole crew
and
I and I go, "What do you want me to do?"
He's like, "I want you to [ __ ] paint
everything. I want people to be scared.
I want investors to be scared when I
want everyone to just be like, "We're
not MySpace. We're not eBay. We're not I
want them to be horrified when they come
in here. I want you to just [ __ ]
paint the microwave, like everything."
And I go, "In indoors, right?" And he
goes, "Yeah." And I go, "All right, so
just like cover up your computers and
then, no, we're going to we're going to
be working here." And I'm like, "You
know how toxic these chemical like I
work in spray paint. Like I have brain
damage because of this [ __ ] Like I I
have like memory issues. They're like,
"We don't care." You know, they were
like young. They're like, "Fuck the
world. Hack the world." Like all that
[ __ ]
>> Hack the world.
>> They love say, you know, [laughter]
>> so I was there and they would be like,
>> "Let's [ __ ] blast Da Punk." Like I I
don't this is a world I'm not you know I
like going into different worlds and
they're like we're gonna blast da punk
because I guess it's like something with
the repetitiveness and the coding and
we're going to do these hackathons where
we just [ __ ] hack into [ __ ] and
[ __ ]
>> it was punk rock. It was like a very
nerdy punk rock but they're like we we
don't give a [ __ ] Like and I I like
that spirit but they were such nerds and
they were so earnest. There they there
was a you've never heard people talk
like that where they're talking they're
like and we're going to change the world
and I'm like I'm into that whatever that
is and they thought they were so cool
when they thought they were giving me a
Stanford email. I go I I I because I'm
not on social media like I never I'm a
lite I don't I'm the last to
whatever new technology I'm like all
right like I've never touched AI any of
that and and so I was like
you guys are trying to be like MySpace
but MySpace is it's already here like
for the young people listening like
there was no Facebook there was no
Instagram it was MySpace it was just
dominated and they're like yeah but
we're we're [ __ ] MySpace for Ivy
league, you know,
>> that's right in 2007. That's right. Cuz
that was a post in order to get
Facebook, you had to have an Ivy League
or a Stanford email technically in the
You're not the only one, [ __ ]
Stolen Valor. So,
>> I love it.
>> So, I forgot what it was. It was like
Choy Stanford. .edu and But like I
remember he gave it
>> still exists.
>> I don't know. He's he I remember him
giving it to me like it's something I
wanted. I was just painting. He's like,
"Dave, you don't have to go. I I'll I'll
get you a Stanford email and then you
could be part of Facebook. I'm like I
don't want to be I don't I
[clears throat] don't care. I don't care
what you like you want to be you and
Mark and all these guys want to be in
this like and they're like he was like
confused cuz he's like you don't want
the
whatever like respect and whatever comes
with be having a Stanford. I go no I I
hate education. I hate learning. I hate
teachers. I hate like what the [ __ ] are
you talking about? And he he he was like
I go why don't you just make it for
everybody? And he's like oh like you
know I the thing is like it was so funny
when the David Fincher movie came out
cuz it's just an awesome movie but it's
just I was there for all of it and it
just did not like some of the facts are
right but it it just didn't go down that
way you know. But so so Mark is like a
genius and and and Sean I mean
similar to my mother.
It's like I think Naomi is still there.
It was like Naomi, Mark, Sean, Dustin,
and me just like gassing them out.
They're just trying to code like and I'm
like listening to all their
conversations and I'm like telling them
how nerdy they are. I'm like, "Bro, make
it for everybody. don't you know like
and they're like
and I would listen [clears throat] in on
all their conversations like so [ __ ]
cool Dave Joe's painting our office and
I was like oh they like me you know like
I'm I'm being validated not just by my
mother you know um and so you know I I
do everything backwards and we start to
discuss payment you know and at that
time I had once in my life sold a
painting for like 10 grand and it was
like a fluke and that's another story
that I could tell about rejection and
all that But um so I just I just did
some dumb ignorant math. I was like,
"Well, that painting was this big and I
I was like 60 grand, you know, and I
needed that. I needed that to pay off
everyone." And then at the time
up until going to jail, like I had been
a thief. I was doing a lot of stealing
to support my like I was like I'm
graffiti doesn't pay the bills, you
know?
>> Stealing your paint.
>> Stealing everything. Was Facebook office
painted with stolen cans?
>> Probably. Probably. Um, yes. Yes.
>> Yeah. [laughter]
>> Um,
>> my my graph friends graph graffiti for
those that don't the graffiti, but they
were like world class crooks.
>> Yeah. Yeah.
>> Cuz they were always stealing pens and
paint and, you know, I mean, they
>> Exactly. I mean, it's like you like it
doesn't pay the bills, you know.
>> Yeah. So uh what had transferred uh you
know you know the nature of addiction is
if you don't get to the root of it it
just keeps jumping right like uh
whack-a-ole. So it whack-a-mole
um into
my my background which is watching my
parents take huge. So I got into
gambling. So I was just g like it there
was every paycheck anything it was
always
I gotta figure out a way because
gambling feels like stealing and it's
you know and I sat there and and people
were just like you work at Facebook like
that's you know my friends that aren't
in that academia they're just like
that's like the the the shitty MySpace
you know like look at the font look at
the you know all the artsy crit like
look at the designs [ __ ] you know
what is that the the name Facebook. Come
on. Like that's the most creative, you
know. [snorts]
And I said, I think uh I'm gonna ask
them if I could get shares in the
company, you know. Um
>> you did you understand equity in that
whole thing?
>> I don't understand anything. And it's
like I have shares in other companies
that are all worthless, right? Like it
was just it was growing up with my mom
watching her that if I didn't have that
like I just and I don't even understand
that [ __ ] just
I remember being with uh having lunch
with Zuck's uh parents and like you know
he doesn't he comes from a nice family
and I think Yahoo or Micros someone had
offered him right in the beginning a
billion dollars for it and he's like no
thanks and he's still sleeping on a
[ __ ] mattress on the ground eating
Doritos and I'm like like you know I'm
trying to like pay my [ __ ] uh all my
friends back and I'm like oh he doesn't
give a [ __ ] he doesn't care about money.
Like he cares about like what he cares
about. It's like such a singular focus.
He's like, I want to [ __ ] disrupt the
I want to bring the whole world
together. It was, you know, youthful
idealism.
And I remember uh uh going to work uh
one day.
I just loved working there cuz I don't
get jobs like that where they're like,
"Paint everything like like you're
you're here like doing this and I'm
painting around like I'm painting on
everything." And and the best part is
they didn't even like what I was
painting. Like Mark would come and he's
like, "What? What is that, dude?" And
like Sean's like, "Dave, you know that
other thing you did I saw at the art
show? Can you?" And I was like, "You
didn't ask for that. You said [ __ ]
destroy like you said scare people when
they walk, you know." Um,
>> as I recall, there's like a there was
like a big primate like monkey with
jagged teeth and some crazy.
>> I was I was, you know, and I was gassing
myself out, you know, like
>> I'm like doing all that [ __ ] without a
mask on. It's all going right into my
brain. Um, I'm like whoever know
whatever spray toxic spray paint fumes
does to your brain and there's no fresh
air coming in. And I remember
Sean Parker just bronze just bronze skin
like $200 haircut custom suit and I go,
"Who are you, man?" And he was doing
what my mom was doing. I was he was just
[ __ ] doing push-ups and like and I
was like this skinny little nerd like
just is like handsome. And I go, "Oh,
this is what my mom used to do before
she went into a bit. She used to [ __ ]
And he's like, "Oh, we're we're going to
get we're going to [ __ ] raise some
money." Like he was And I go, "Holy
[ __ ] this guy's so sick." You know, and
he transformed his physical appearance
because he was about to go into like
serious fundraising. And that's when I
met the PayPal guy and Peter Theo and
like just I was like this guy's [ __ ]
you know like people give all the credit
to Mark but I'm like Sean guy was he was
an artist in you know and also like out
of control which like [snorts] that
attracted each other [gasps] and he was
there when they got when he got fired
and all that stuff but
I remember
like the impact that had on me like
Wow. Like
you heard you've heard the fake it till
you make it, right? It's like I I know
I'm not the best artist in the world,
but my mom thinks so, but Sean Parker
like other people think so. And I'm but
I'm like but that's whatever. They're
just kissing my ass or whatever. And
then there can be a switch. And and I
think
it's like
sick and tired of being sick and tired
or enough is enough. Like I just can't
take it anymore. It's like, well, I I I
can't live like this anymore. I I I feel
like I'm trapped. I feel like And so
then it's like, oh, you can't travel.
You need money for that. Well, I'm going
to hitchhike then. I'm going to hop on a
freight train. I saw the entire world
with nothing. No money. like, "Well, it
must be nice to be rich." I go, "I'm
rich now. I've had nothing my whole life
and I just had to [ __ ] fight for it."
And like, would I recommend it? Like, a
lot of it was illegal. I spent a lot of
time in jail. But also, jail didn't hurt
me. I lived and I spent some time there.
I got to learn who I am. And and so it's
just to piece out the skills you learn
for what's creativity, what's business,
what what what aided me and helped me at
this time in my life that which no
longer aids me now and how to like cuz
my the other thing I learned from my mom
is just just adapt. Oh, our business
just burned down in the LA Riots. And
instead of like sitting there, he's
like, "Okay, now we're doing this. Now
we're doing this. Now we're doing this."
And I'm like, I remember getting a job
in uh Beverly Hills right after high
school. I was 18, 1994.
And it was at this weird comic book,
like a high-end comic book store called
Comics Top Hits. I'm not a comic book
guy. I love comics.
And I remember I beg the guy for a job.
I'm like, "Please, please." And he's
like, "All right, fine. The customers
seem because I would just hang out there
and talk to the customers anyways." And
I remember one day Stan Lee showed up
and I'm like [ __ ] Stan Lee like my hero,
you know, and he and he sat there and um
people were bringing him Darkwing Duck,
Batman, Archie, like all the things he
he he didn't work on. Hey, Marvel fans.
And he just signed everything. And I'm
like I was like the guy managing the
line that day and I'm looking at his
hair plugs and I go, "You [ __ ] f like
you didn't [ __ ] invent Batman.
You're, you know," and at the end of the
day, I built up enough confidence to,
you know, as everyone left and we're
packing up, I'm like, "Stan, dude, you
didn't invent Batman. Why the [ __ ] you
signed that guy's book?" And he's like,
"Did you see their faces? Did you see
like they were so happy? Like
why would I why would I get in the way
of their happiness?" And I'm like, "Holy
[ __ ] dude." It's like, "Yeah, don't
correct people." And I thought about
that like everywhere I go in the world
and there's like
Ching Chong, China. This I I remember
being in Africa and these kids were just
chasing us everywhere going ching chong.
And our translator was a French
Vietnamese guy and he was like, "Dave's
Korean. I'm Vietnam." It's like, you're
just they don't give a [ __ ] dude. They
don't give a [ __ ] And I remember just
the things I'm talking about is like
watching Sean Parker shapeshift,
watching my mom shapeshift, watching
um act as if you belong. Act as if you
have a seat at the table. It's like the
[ __ ] It's like I know that's part of
being artist is being like shy, nerdy,
self-conscious. It's like just pretend
like you're the best artist in the
world. Like you just show up and you're
like put like
this is the journey from their head to
heart. You're this is a I I like when
you talk because you you make sense, but
there there's that and that's why the
smartest people in the world are the
dumbest [ __ ] idiots I've met because
they try to apply logic to everything
and you're applying logic to spiritual
problems. You're applying logic to
emotional problems and it's like how's
that working out for you? It's not it's
not you're never going to outthink a
feeling. You're never going to outsmart
a feeling. like you're like wait the the
these people are act like why who would
do that? Why why would you do that? I'm
like because it's not logical. It's it's
an emotional thing. It's a it's a it's a
mentally ill whatever it is. It's uh
it's not logic based. It's emotion
based. It's mentally ill based. It's
spiritual based. Like you can't [ __ ]
with people's religion or what they have
faith in or and and all this stuff. So,
I'm watching I I remember going
Stefan correcting the black kids that
he's Vietnamese is making them feel
stupid and they're getting angrier. The
kids that think I'm Bruce Lee and I just
confirm that I'm Bruce Lee are getting
happy, right? It's like people are dumb
out there. That's fine. I don't care.
I'm dumb. I'm stupid. It's like when
someone corrects me or it makes me feel
shame and dumber, but then if no one
corrects me, it's like then it's my own
[ __ ] to figure that out or not. Right?
So watching these people like very
successful people in my life,
my mom, she's like unstoppable, right?
Anything the world throws at her, she
just goes, "Okay, I guess we're doing
this now." Like she doesn't hang on.
She's like, "Hang on tightly. Let go
lightly." Right? It's just like, "Okay,
we were real estate people. Now we're
doing herbal life." Oh, the that
happened. Mark Hughes died. Okay, now
we're doing this. Like she just goes
like that. Like like adapts to any
situation. And like right now I get a
call a week from
all artists, creative types that there
it's, you know, we don't have AI talk. I
don't I would rather not have an AI
talk, but it's Armageddon, right?
Everyone's like, I spent my life doing
sound engineering and now it's gone.
Just like the guy who would do the like
hand letter this and then Photoshop.
Boom, your job's gone. The Carl Zeiss
lens go on the iPhone and now
photographer like it's just it's gone.
Like you could sit there and start
complaining or you could just keep
adapting. And so I think true creativity
you can't contain. If you're if you're
open and you're ready to get naked and
you're ready to, you know, people like,
oh, do you have to suffer to be a great
artist? Absolutely. But you've already
suffered enough. It's already done. Like
whatever happened to you in your
childhood, that's enough fuel for the
rest of you don't have to continually.
But I see myself and others at times
like I I hopefully I'm better now, but I
see people continually putting
themselves in a this situation to like
suffer more and more and more and and I
and I just I just remember the the shame
of
my my like it's just these things.
They're they're they're you know decades
ago, but they're still like my dad just
like throwing me ac like we left another
country so you could be a criminal
event. Like just he was like I'll just
kill us all now. We were in the car
leaving the police station. He's like
I'm going to crash the car. And I was
like I was in the back like kind of
disassociating, numb, crying, like
feeling mixed emotions going from like
victim to sorry to like well [ __ ] you
then. And you know all everything in
between.
And then um this going I accept now.
>> Oops.
>> I accept. Sorry. Am I close enough to
the microphone?
>> You're good.
>> Am I close to the microphone?
[screaming]
>> Um just going I I'm I'm going to choose
to believe what my mom believes in me.
I'm the greatest artist on the planet. I
was in my 20s. I was like, "Fuck it."
like going into galleries, looking at
comic books and
um can I tell you one quick [ __ ] you
Sean Parker story? So at at the at the
time I was doing Facebook like things
were happening like I had a Vice show
selling my jail art which gave me a
little bit of cash. I was starting to
work for Heidi Fice to do a a erotic
mural for her sex shop in Hollywood. And
I had just gotten a job to do Jay-Z
Lincoln Parks mashup album cover. And
it's like I needed the money and I need
and it was just like it things were I
was like it's starting to happen like
things are you know and and this is
while I was doing the Facebook thing so
they hadn't blown up yet, you know. And
uh they gave me the job and I'm like the
biggest rock band in the world and the
biggest rapper in the world are doing an
album together and they want me little
old me to do the I felt so I mean they
[ __ ] butchered the art. The I gave
[snorts] them the art and they just made
it look shitty. They put a shitty font
on it. They put a like they did fake
graffiti spray. I was like what the [ __ ]
did you whatever. Anyways, that's a
whole other thing. But um
I you know I'm like cool like what's
that gonna pay like you know like and
they're like two grand. I'm like
wait you know it's like this one day I'm
going to make it and my name is going to
be in lights and and I and I knew other
artists so like Mir did uh the Limp
Biscuit cover Shepherd Ferry did. So I I
knew them well enough where I was like,
"Hey guys, am I getting [ __ ] right
now?" Or and they're like, "No, that's
typical." I go, "That's what they pay
artists for." I mean, cuz back in the
day when I was doing art paintings,
whatever, galleries,
uh, or illustrations, that was the
range, 200 to like 2,000 at the most if
you're doing like a cover or something.
But I'm like, "An album cover for" And
they're like, "No, that's what they
pay." And I was like, "Damn, dude. I
thought this was this is big time, you
know, and so I negotiated for that. At
the same time, I'm working at Facebook
and I drew this crazy cover and they're
like, "Yeah, that's for the rights for
the album cover, right?" So then, I
don't know, the album comes out and then
they use the art everywhere. They use it
on billboards. My friend's reading comic
books. He's like, "Oh, they did a full
page ad." And I go like, "For
illustration, that's a separate fee,
right? It's like here's the rights to
use on the album cover. Here's for
advertising, right?" And so I'm talking
to I don't know anything, right? I'm a
[ __ ] horrible street artist running.
Oh, I call myself a street artist. Uh,
delete that from the microphone.
[screaming]
Sorry. Um, so I I'm, you know, and you
you could like bleep the names or
whatever because I I clearly remember.
So I call Warner Brothers and I go,
"Hey, uh, can I talk to whoever's in
legal or whatever?" And I go, "Yeah, I
talked to my friends who are also
artists that are more successful and
they said there's a separate fee I
should be getting for billboards, you
know, bus bench usage, magazine,
editorial, you know, you know, magazines
used to be big, you know, Tower Records,
Virgin Records." And
>> I remember the arrogance on this guy,
Chip. He was like their head legal. He
doesn't work there anymore. And he's
like, and I I remember the way he talked
to me felt like my child like just made
me feel so he's like, "You're some
shitty graffiti." Like, "Who the [ __ ]
are you?" You know, like why am I
wasting my time talking to you? And I
go, "Well," and he started like just
hitting me with legal ease. And I go,
"Hey, I'm raising my hand right now. You
can't see." I'm raising my hand saying,
"I don't understand what you're saying.
Can can you please talk to me?" And like
can you dumb dumb down like you're
trying you're like trying to beat me up
with words right now. I'm just saying I,
you know, it should be an additional 10
grand, 15 grand for what you guys did.
I'll be happy with another five or you
know, just like trying to talk and he's
like,
I don't know who the [ __ ] you think you
are. And it was like very condescending.
And I and I I remember the arrogance of
I was like, I could be recording this
call or you know, but he was just and I
was like, for a guy named Chip, that's
such a weird, you know, um,
you could come at us with lawyers. You
could like and you may be even right but
guess what you're [ __ ] with Warner
like you'll never win like you will
never get another dime out of us. I was
like, "Holy [ __ ] that what a [ __ ]
And like I said, like if you're gonna be
like people are like, "Oh, I love
painting." Then just paint. Like, "Oh, I
want to be." It's like, you know how
[ __ ] hard it is to make money as a
creat. It's like you got to fight. You
got to get a thick skin and you better
be ready to like I had to threaten Nike
with blowing up their entire parking lot
before they paid me. I was like, "You
asked me for these drawings. I did them.
I delivered them on time and you're
giving me the checks in the mail." And I
called like Widen and Kent, you know,
whatever the Oregon and I was like, I
live in LA. It's gonna take me this many
hours to drive and I'm gonna I don't
know which car is yours. I'm gonna blow
up every car. Check was in the mail the
next day. I'm like, why did I have to do
that? Why did I have to turn into my mom
to get the but most artists go and then
they just get [ __ ] over, right? So
that's part of being an artist is
getting [ __ ] over, not getting paid
what you deserve, blah blah blah.
So, I'm like obviously sensitive and
painting like in a bad mood. And Sean's
like, "What, dude? What's up, Dave? Why
you?" And I told him what I just told
you. And he's like, you know, and
Facebook has like big money behind it
now. It's growing. He's like, "Oh, we
got a multi-million dollar deal with
Warner Brothers tomorrow and the
meeting." And I was like, he goes,
"Check this out." So he has the meeting
with Warner Brothers and they're like
full like you know everyone's at the
long table and they're like oh we want
to advertise with Facebook and this is
the new this is the new world and and
they're like okay cool and it's like you
know it's like millions of dollars or
whatever hundreds of thousands of
dollars and he's like yeah but that guy
Chip [ __ ] with my friend Dave Cho so
we're not doing [ __ ] with you guys and
he just and I was like
this guy's my dog forever like like what
how like like just does not no [ __ ]
given, right? I was like I cried. I gave
him a hug. I was like, "Don't [ __ ] with
me. Don't [ __ ] with me." Like [laughter]
it felt so good. It felt so [ __ ]
good. I was like, and then I found out
he got fired and all that [ __ ] Like I
was like, "Yes, sometimes the little guy
wins, you know?" Like it felt so good.
>> I'd like to take a quick break and
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to get early access to Function. So, I
got all the typical shame and all that.
And and and to be fair,
if you're my dad and you [ __ ] escaped
the war and famine to raise your family
in America and you see your kid stealing
paint at Home Depot to graffiti dicks on
walls, like you're going to you're not
going to. So, I give him that, you know.
But I I just I was I felt I didn't know
where I belonged, you know? I I'm like I
I I couldn't process. Maybe I have
dyslexia. I I was in school and it just
I couldn't none of the information I was
like this is so hard like people
like I would try really hard to get a C
right where other people were like oh
okay you know X I was like why is there
an X in math and they were like Dave and
they they'd dumb it down and dumb it
down I'm like I'm I'm [ __ ] I think I
need to go to that class like I'm like I
felt
like I felt because both my brothers
have like really high IQ's and I'm like
I'm I'm stupid like I you know so I felt
really small in that area and and I and
I and I made up the story like I suck at
sports. I go so this this is it. This is
all I'll ever be good at. So I and and
now I'm going to fully buy in to what my
mom's saying. And because I grew up with
the Asian work ethic like I'm like
it's not a f I am I it wasn't like I am
going to be the best. I was like I just
adopted I am the best artist in the
world. and to that power of thought.
Like I sat down and I'd go to museum. I
studied everything. I studied comic book
art, cereal boxes, museums, fine art.
Why does this I just got into the
business side of art, the creativity,
[ __ ] loose watercolors, like tiny
detailed pen draw, like everything. And
I was like, and I was like over I'm like
I'm going to be good at all of it. Oil
painting like there. So people go what
what kind of artist I'm an artist
everything. when I talk, when I make
music, like I am going from I'm a piece
of [ __ ] I suck to like like, you know,
not healthy, but you know, it's like I
am art god, you know, like. And so I was
like in my 20s
just like brainw like waking up and then
like that's not how I naturally woke up.
I woke up like, "Oh, fuck." You know,
and I'd wake up and I'd have to put that
on like you're the greatest. You're the,
you know, like um hypnotizing myself.
You're the best. do the [ __ ] best.
You're the You're the greatest. You
know,
>> were you doing any like reading books?
Cuz at the time when you and I are
basically the same age.
>> Um back then [clears throat]
wasn't a lot about like neuroscience and
this and that and like actualization. It
was all kind of,
>> you know, hidden away, but there was
this there were, you know, there was
like the Tony Robbins type stuff and
there was the there was this idea and
infomercials and stuff that like that
you could program your mind. Sounds like
you just basically took all that on
without any of that.
>> Yeah, I didn't read any of that stuff. I
I stole lots of books and I would read a
lot of pornography. I guess this kind of
can I could uh
fit my Pee-Wee Herman story. If we're
talking about publishing, it's hard to
talk about this cuz kids ask me all the
time like, "How'd you make it in art?"
And like nothing I did applies to today.
You know, it's like I went to Kinko's. I
would have to spend my money or figure
out how to do that copy thing, that
trick to make more copy because color
copies are 99 cents. It's like who has
So I'd have to pick which one of my
paintings were the best. Make these like
mini color copy packets. So that's $10.
And then I would go to the news stand
and write the address like Rolling Stone
like all the magazines that had prestige
and like CF Payne, Kent Williams, Baron
Story, like all these amazing
illustrators that would would work for
Time magazine, Rolling Stone, Playboy,
like they would all use. So I would open
the the front page where it had the
heading of art direct and I would write
write it down and the news stand guys
like I sound like a boomer right now.
like, you know, it's like, who the [ __ ]
Like, there's kids listening right now.
There's a magazine. What's that? You
know, but that's what I had to do. And I
would be like, which magazine do I want
to send this $10 packet that I just And
then I have to mail it to and hopefully
like they get that letter and not some
other department, you know, and then you
I just rejection letter after, you know,
like sorry, sorry, sorry. And um so I'm
I'm I'm
sitting down and I'm
I'm I'm like I'm I'm ingesting all this
and and I have the p I have the fire and
I'm like sitting down and I go that like
what why is that drawing successful? Why
do you know? And of course there's tons
of insider trading and corruption in the
art world, but I didn't know that at the
time, right? It's like, "Oh, that guy's
dad owns [ __ ] water." [laughter] Like
that guy, you know? So, I would just sit
there and I I would be like, "That guy
drew this much. I'm going to draw 10."
Like, "That guy did this and I'm going
to draw, you know, and I and I just some
of my paintings, all my paintings back
then had like at least seven layers, if
not more. Just layering and layering and
dancing. It was me. It's like a musician
that's like I have to like I I saw a
thing with Rick Rubin and and uh Flee
doing give it away now. And he was just
like just you know he can do but he was
like just do like just play less. And
back then it wasn't it was like I need
to show everyone what I'm capable of
which is I can draw better than you. I
can paint. I have to show you that. Now
I don't care. But back then it was and
and it isn't that art is a it's not who
can put the most lines down or you know
and so I'm
I'm I'm trying to I'm trying to like and
it was just everyone has their own path
but I remember year 2000
I'm doing graffiti I'm getting some gigs
to do murals you know it's just slowly
starting and someone contacted me at
Marvel Comics and I was like man I
didn't even cry and like this is this is
it. This is my dream and they we want
you to draw the X-Men but like a cool
cool X-Men. I'm like [ __ ] I didn't even
have to go to portfolio day. I didn't
have to, you know, and I go, "Oh, I knew
if I just kept putting my [ __ ] out
there, you know, but I'm, you know, I'm
what, 23 at the time, you know,
and uh I start drawing it and I guess
they fired me or they didn't fire me.
They just decided to use a different
artist, but they never told me. So, I'm
still drawing it and I'm, you know, I'm
a passive aggressive angry kid already.
And I didn't email. Some people had
emails, but a lot like a lot of artists
hadn't. This is the beginning of the
internet. Like people weren't using it
the way they do now. And I remember it
was like the first message board where
my friends were like, "Hey Dave, you got
fired off the X-Men book." And I go,
"What? How did you know?" And they go,
"You don't use the internet." I go,
"What is that?" And they showed us. And
I felt shame again. I was like, "Oh my
god." Like I was so excited to
like there's little things in my head
like if I do a comic book that means I
made it and I wrote the most scathing
homophobic
racist like just I was mad. I thought it
was funny. I was 23 at the time and it
was like 10 pages long but I didn't know
the editor of Marvel. It's probably not
even him. It was just and I didn't know
how to get it to him. So, I just went to
Marvel's website and I just sent it to
every single person that works at
Marvel. Like, copy paste and the next
day was my first experience in the year,
you know, Y2K 1999 2000 of going viral.
They're like, every artist I look up to,
every writer I look up to in comics was
like, we don't know who the [ __ ] this
kid is, but he just committed career
suicide. And then once again,
shame. And so like if I go back to all
my shame stories, I go, "What's the
what's the through line?" And we should
have made the secret word shame, but um
oh, I'm a shame chaser. Like I get high
off shame. Like what's my drug? Oh,
workcoholism. It's like my my drug that
I've chased my whole life is shame and
anger. Like [ __ ] powerful drug, you
know? And so
I I couldn't believe it. I was like, I'm
never going to get to draw the Hulk,
Spider-Man, Wolverine. And I have and I
have at this point and I went through
the back door which I always do. It's
true true vandal. But I just remember
going holy [ __ ] this is the worst day of
my life. Like people that I look up to
they're like they there was like a whole
thing of like I don't know who this Dave
Cho I've never heard of him but he's a
horrible human being. Listen, you know
and I was like but there was context
like like you should have heard how I
saw heard it in my head like I was
[laughter] you know and they're like oh
it looks different and I was like holy
[ __ ] And that that was my first
experience of like of just feeling
like me following a pattern of trying to
replicate hatred towards me like like if
it's but not knowing it. I'm just like I
don't know what the [ __ ] I'm doing. And
and like some ignorance, some playing
dumb, some like repeating patterns like
a monkey without knowing. And and and so
I had a friend in comics at the time cuz
I was just like I don't I I was just
making art. I was going out doing
graffiti every [ __ ] night just doing
that OCD playing music in my head and
just tagging up everything. Like the the
kind of graffiti you're not supposed to
do. People's cars, houses. Like I wanted
someone to kill me. Like I didn't care.
Like I wanted someone to be like, "Dude,
I worked hard for that car and you just
ruined it." And and in my head, I'm
like, "But I'm a famous artist." Which I
wasn't. I'm 23. And they're like, "I
just made your car more valuable. That's
how I'm thinking." But I was out of my
mind.
>> You probably did make their car more
valuable in retrospect. Can I ask you a
question about the shame?
>> Absolutely.
>> I have a friend. He's a addiction trauma
counselor guy. Amazing guy. Uh he's been
on this podcast named Ryan Suave. Uh he
um he he has a gift for helping people
understand trauma and addiction and this
kind of thing. We haven't talked a lot
about addiction yet today, but um you
said you got addicted to the shame. And
do you think I who knows here? I'm using
my intellectual brain, but
>> do you think that the that these
oscillations of like your your mindset
like I'm I'm a great artist. I'm the
greatest artist sets it up so the shame
is that much deeper. Like it's like
loading a spring or uh because he told
me once, Ryan once told me he was worked
with addict, heroin addicts, drug
addicts of all kinds, sex addiction,
everything. And he just said uh you know
he goes gambling addiction is the worst
because the next time really could
change it all. And he said but there's
something really interesting and that
happens to gambling addicts. He goes,
"Eventually they get tired of winning
and they get addicted to losing."
>> Happens really quick. So,
um, I have my own feelings about this
subject. I'm I'm a severe gambling
addict. Like, um, I told you I'm going
to time jump. So, I'm at at the create,
you know, I'm at that point, but I'll
jump to current, which is
which is a very shameful thing for me to
admit or talk about, but you know, I'm
here, so I'll just go there. Um,
shame is is so powerful because
at this point, I've been to all the
12step meetings. I've been to debtors
anonymous, business owners, dentist
debtors anonymous, overeaters anonymous,
workaholics, you know, sex and love
addicts, sex addicts, uh gambling, like
all every single And so what's the
through line? Every single one is
gambling. Every single addiction is
gambling addiction. If you drink and
drive, you're gambling. your life could
be over and you're, you know, if you
overeat and you're diabetic. It's just
every [ __ ] addiction is.
So, it's addiction is one of those
things you can't apply logic to. And
your your scientist friend nailed it.
It's
as I explore my feelings, you know, cuz
the the people, what are you running
from, Dave? I'm like, well, I'm [ __ ]
running from myself, dude. I don't want
to look in the mirror. I don't want to
see myself. I I hate myself. So, I'm
just running. So, as long as I'm like
doing graffiti, running from the police,
you know, just just just hopping on a
train like like literal running like
literally running to make sure I'm never
sit still for one second. Like,
what are you doing, Dave? I'm playing
drums in a band. I'm [ __ ] you know,
uh, at a casino. I'm traveling, doing
the news for Vice. I'm painting at this.
Like, I I can't I can't sit still
because that means I have to sit with
myself and I I can't do that. I can't do
that.
[cough]
[clears throat]
I couldn't do that. I couldn't do that.
I can now.
[snorts]
So,
you know what feels good? winning a lot
of money, not working for it, and
sitting down at a casino and them
knowing who you are and upping the
limits and you literally making enough
money off Bakarat or Blackjack what
people don't make in a lifetime. That's
a [ __ ]
That's an insane feeling.
How many shits do you think I took today
before I came here, Rob? How many?
>> Two.
>> Two. One big one and one little one.
Like
scientists don't know what causes IBS.
I do. It's stress.
When I was gambling, when when I was at
the height of any of my addictions,
seven shits a day at least. Just like,
okay, like just like and and you would
never see it on my face, or maybe you
would, but I felt like I could gamble
with [snorts] a fortune in front of me.
and lose it and win it and like nothing.
Nothing. Like I I was, you know,
disassociated, dead inside, whatever you
want to say. I didn't feel anymore,
right? Like the highs were so high. I
had already been chased by the cops. I'd
already been beaten the [ __ ] out of.
I've already been molested before. I
already Whatever you could do to me,
you've already done to me and I'm still
here. What can you do to me that I like
I'm my worst enemy. Like I beat myself
up, right?
When the gambling stopped, when I got
into recovery, when like I take one [ __ ]
a day now when this [ __ ] [ __ ]
asked me to do the podcast,
I start stressing. I've taken When was
that like a few weeks ago? It's It Oh
[ __ ] dude. I just took three [ __ ] It
started again because I don't have
stress in my life anymore. or like I
have whatever normal family stress, but
I don't have, oh, you're going to say
something on some guy's show and then
your life's going to be ruined again,
you know? Like that's I've done that so
many times. It's like,
so I'm like, [ __ ] I just woke up. I
just already took a [ __ ] Why do I take
another one? I'm like, oh, the IBS is
coming back because
there's a part of me that's like, I hope
I say something horrible today because
then I could feel that again. And so
what people when they're listening to
this and I don't know if I'm making when
I talk sometimes I make sense to myself
and sometimes I don't but if you're an
addict it will make sense to you if
you're if like everyone listening to
this is either an addict or or someone
in their life is like their family
member or their friend but at this point
with social media and their phones
everyone's an addict right they you
can't you can't stop it's just
impossible you you will never you will
never find anything more addictive than
a phone right so in the time that like I
haven't been in an actual casino in 10
years. I've banned from all these
casinos. The whole world became a
casino. You can't go anywhere without
gambling. [ __ ] lottery. You can go on
your phone. You could bet on,
you know, anything, right? So,
so at first in every addiction, you want
to win. Oh, [ __ ] that. You know, I I I
can't I can relate to drugs and alcohol
even though I don't do that. But like
that must feel good to like get a little
drunk and then be the funniest guy at
the party or
so eating the most delicious foods that
I ever ate that I never thought I would
eat in my life. And then okay, that's
good. Your body feels good. Why do you
need to eat until you're puking and you
become like binging and purging like
what? Because what you don't understand
because you're applying logic to it is I
want to [ __ ] hurt. I want the sh like
winning a million dollars feels [ __ ]
great. Losing $10 million
feels even better. Well, that doesn't
make any sense. Like getting married
feels awesome. I mean, I'm just making
[ __ ] up, but like put put like greatest
day of my life, right? Like greatest day
of my life. And this I could get dark.
I'll try not to use dark examples, but
when when something awesome, marriage,
having a child, winning a lot of money,
doing drugs, and having one of the best
days of your like just when it's on the
good side, it feels that's why you do
it. Heroin [ __ ] feels good. I've
never done it, but the description of it
is like that sounds awesome. Why would
you not do it again?
But then when you're [ __ ] scratching
your skin and sucking dick for [ __ ]
crack, like that's another high
where you're at the bottom and that's a
repetition of the pattern of whatever
your childhood was. And so I don't
[ __ ] know Andrew besides his online
persona, right? Like we're this this is
our first time meeting in person. It's
like
I this is not me being a know-it-all.
Like humans are not that difficult to
understand. were very simple. Like
I I called him immature a little bit
before, not to be insulting. It's just
like part of me is like
this is me being a hater. Like I I love
everybody, but I'm just like what what
[ __ ] adult gets tattoos? Like what
kind of [ __ ] adult get and I know you
got [ __ ] tattoos. Like who [ __ ]
just like throws their [ __ ] away to
become a skater and then
like like are you okay with me asking
you question? Like
>> were you sexually abused? Were you
>> No, I was I mean I knew I had friends
that were I I looked out. I had one guy
come at me that um I worked at a
skateboard shop in Palto. Maybe you saw
it Palto Twin Sport. It was like down on
Waverly Street. Guy that worked there
did that. Uh I responded differently. I
flipped the desk over on him. I made him
apologize to me in front of everybody.
And my biggest fear at that point was my
mom, even though we had our tentions, my
mom's from New Jersey.
>> Yeah.
>> She's old school. She knew something
happened. And my fear was that if I told
her Yeah.
>> that she would actually kill him.
>> Oh.
>> Like actually kill him. Like And you
know, because despite you know, whatever
challenges she and I have had over the
year.
>> Yeah. She like that maternal aggression,
that protectiveness,
>> she would have killed him.
>> So I remember being
like not worried about me, worried that
she was going to kill him,
>> you know. And then um but no, I I I
locked out there. I perceive you as a
brilliant man and this is this is me
gathering data and facts in my life. Not
I don't know what the the but you know,
you know, very smart. I know geniuses.
You know, geniuses. The smarter the
person, the more intellectual they are,
the more on the spectrum they are, the
greater the trauma they experienced.
Because whether that was always in them
and the trauma unlocked it or you
learned that as mental jiu-jitsu to like
these people I know in my life that are
just brilliant. Like they're just they
can comprehend things that most people
can't they could create. Their childhood
was so [ __ ] unsafe. abandonment, you
know, and usually that's why I asked you
about the it's usually sexual trauma
because that's has carries the most
shame that they're like, I was small. I
couldn't defend myself that unless I
become like like a jiu-jitsu master or
fighter, how can I protect myself? And
it's with this. So then something gets
unlocked here and they become the
smartest person in the room and they can
just destroy you verbally. They can
destroy you in a courtroom. they can
just they can just and and and
so yeah to answer the you become a shame
chaser. You get high off shame and it's
like a that's even shameful to admit out
loud. And so like I could sit here and
like if I'm being present with current
with up to- date like I have a great
life. Like I'm telling you a lot of
stories from the past, feelings that I
felt in the past. And I I have uh you
know I tell on myself all the time when
old patterns come up I you know I have a
therapist. I got a men's group. I got
friends who love me. I I I I raise my
hand. I go I I need help which I never
did before. My grew up with shut the
[ __ ] up and figure it out. That's my
whole my whole childhood was a question
mark. Where are we going? What are we
doing? Nothing was explained to me. And
so there was a lot of violent, a lot of
abandonment. I just like and so I just
everything and and that's I pro probably
why I'm really curious and ask a lot of
questions cuz I I didn't know what was
happening and my parents were just like
working all the time. They're like I
don't know stay at this house or this
and I was just like who are these
people? Like what's happening? What's
why is this guy baptizing me for the
10th, you know, like why am I getting on
a plane? It's like it was just like just
shut up just just go along to get along.
And so part of part of my story is if
I'm a nice boy, if I'm a nice Asian boy
and I do then then the world shits on
me. Then everything horrible the second
I [ __ ] speak up, scream, get the [ __ ]
off, like just do graffiti, break the
law, then I get to do the Lincoln Park
album cover, then I get Sean Parker.
It's like, and you know, I talked to all
the jackass guys about this. It's like
you're rewarded for bad behavior. You
get to be the president. You get to, you
know, like the more I act. And it's so
in one way, okay, that's for career,
right? But like what about it just runs
hell on your personal life. And that's
why when I when I'm in my addiction and
I'm chasing shame, I drag everyone who
loves me down with them. So I go I I
need to
and I don't need my wife or anyone to be
my mom. Like I'm like I I'll I'll handle
it. That's how I grow myself up. And it
doesn't need to be like like I said,
brilliance is found in Militus and Palo
Alto and Gilroy. Brilliance is f found
in the mundane sitting in the waiting
room. Brilliance is found in these like
quiet moments. And so it's like I don't
need to go to rehab and have like this
[ __ ] movie roll kind of. It's just
like it's a phone call. It's like let me
do this. And so, um,
the feelings, the the chemistry that
it's like when when you lose all the
money you've ever made in your life in a
coin flip and you're just sitting there
like,
>> no worries.
>> Um, hope hopefully I didn't get any on
the microphone.
>> Um,
>> what's that line from that 80s movie?
It's not a party till something's
broken. I always like that line cuz it
excuses it immediately. Some breaks,
folks. You just say,
>> "Yeah, in this case,
>> until something's broke."
>> In this case, it was my soul, you know.
So So I was very
reckless
with with my heart. I treated myself
very poorly. I I didn't care for I
didn't care what happened to me. And so
as I jump from addiction to addiction,
it's like, well, which is the one I
could hide in plain sight? the one that
you're in right now, workcoholism. As
long as you work all the time, as long
as you're providing people, like as long
as you're helping people and being of
service, then that's good, right? But
what is being neglected in that this
like I mean I I don't tell this to
everyone, but like someone in your
situation that you know you have life
changes coming up and I already know
your answer, but I would I would ask why
not take one year off like why? and he's
like, "Well, I got my this and I'm this
important Stanford guy and I got Yeah,
but that will like
you only got one life and you know it
there's something about it
that feels
like when I'm in my workahcoolism like
that's the one where I get in this
society a pat on the back. Good. Good
job, Dave."
And um
you know the the Sean Parker story with
the with the Warner Brothers that was a
win. I was like [ __ ] yeah. You know um
but it was it was so much
Can I tell my Peewee Herman story?
There's some shame in that. I I'll I'll
I'll bring it around.
I'm I I just don't you know part of my
character defects is entitlement and
impatience. Like I just once I accepted
what my mom is saying true I am the
greatest artist in the world according
to Jane Cho and now I'm going to start
you know not at first but like I'll
start to believe that too cuz you got to
it's it's so scary doing graffiti you
know not in a crew not in a gang to just
go out and it's like it's something so
comforting to draw in a tiny sketchbook
and no one's gonna see it right you [ __ ]
up whatever but to draw something big on
a all and everyone going down the 101
freeway is like thousands of people will
see it before 8:00 like that sucks that
guy has no can control that guy you're
just like you're you're naked you're
like this is what's inside me and I did
it 40 feet long and here it is and
they're like it sucks
shame I'm chasing shame like it's like
what would it feel like if everyone's
like dude that's the [ __ ] masterpiece
not as cool not as cool so I I'm just
I'm doing the thing. I'm sending my art
out. And
uh Labraa used to have a lot of
galleries and I and I and in my head I
thought my art was better than every
artist that was in those. I would be
like and I'd go down the street and I'm
like, "Oh, they show that." I would keep
a record of what kind of art they show
that I'd skate back to my house and
paint like that style but better in my
mind. Better. And then I'd make a new
portfolio and I'd go down like and
they're like who who the [ __ ] like like
it's like a d like you have to be shown
first before they'll even take and I go
but you know so just anger more
frustration coming out sideways coming
out doing more graffiti
shoplifting food to like you know
so then I finally get to Labraa and
Melrose where there was a ice cream shop
called Double Rainbow and there's this
wonderful lady named Candace there and I
was saying how I'm talking now frustr
like out loud and my art's just right
here. And she's like, "Let me see." And
I show it to her. And she's like, "This
is amazing." I go, "I [ __ ] KNOW,
DUDE. I'm the best." And she's like,
"All right, chill the [ __ ] out." All
right. She's like, "Put it up on the
wall." And then my ego goes in a [ __ ]
ice cream shop. And I go, "Well, I guess
no one else is offering." Okay. So, it
was like not this. It wasn't like
minimalist. It was floor to ceiling,
hundreds of paintings, some that I spent
months on. like this was singular just
I'm the best and I need to show you. It
wasn't like tasteful like here's one
painting and let that breathe and it was
just like here's you know and people are
coming in there buying like mint
chocolate chip going that's pretty cool
you know and so every day I would get a
call love your art want to buy it I'm
like [ __ ] yeah here we go like $2 I'm
like
you know how long I spend on that art
you know and I just was like 50 bucks
this you know I'm 23 this is early
2000s. I'm like, that's that's less than
the art supplies that I stole to be
fair, but still I'm like, can you cover
the cost of materials? And they're like,
yeah, it's good, but you know, can you
just like haggling like five 10? I'm
like, that's what a [ __ ] print or
sticker costs. Like, this is an original
painting, you know? And I remember I got
a call one day and uh it's this these
these things that I keep the stories
that I keep editing in my mind to make
me the hero, you know, and the guy's
like, "I'll trade you a car for like
that giant painting, the one that I
spent months on." And of course, it's
like 1972 Plymouth Fury, no brakes, like
cracked wind, you know, just a complete
[ __ ] beater, like piece of [ __ ] But
then the story in my head that I go
around telling, you know, part of my PR
marketing is like I traded my art for a
car for an, you know, oh yeah, and like
you don't need to know the details of
the car, you know. And the guy in the,
you know, recycler was trying to sell it
for like $2, $300, you know. He's like,
just get this [ __ ] off my lawn, you
know. And I remember this is how I drove
it. I would drive it and there was no
brakes. So I had to there was like fuel
and I had to pump it like a a block
before or and then I would always hit
the car like ding like that's what and
the guy would say hey what the [ __ ] and
I'd be like sorry and I had no money to
fix it but I was just in my head I I did
it. I [ __ ] I did it. I you know like
small victories, little victories
and then my friends like
uh like in like I knew all like the
indie zen like make your own [ __ ]
punk rock like and I would just get
rejection letter after just just a
continuation of you're not enough your
art's not that good. you suck just and
maybe they wouldn't say that but that's
how I took every you know not at this
time not for us
rejection [clears throat] letter from
Playboy from Rolling Stone and and I
just remember one of my friends he just
always had like nice sketchbooks and I
go what where are you getting that money
like you do you're a full-time artist
and he was like a dirty punk rock guy
and he's like you know the skin rags pay
just as much it's like they have none of
the prestige and like you know I went to
the Tower Records warehouse house once
where uh they distributed a calendar I
made and it's like here's here like this
whole table is the warehouse this is
like
you know Sports Illustrated Rolling
Stone this and all of this is porn right
so you know you don't want to brag about
that but that's just they're like they
pay literally the same amount as Rolling
Stone but it's not Rolling Stone. So I
go okay I guess I'm doing that. So then
I go to the part of the magazine stand
where you know there's a curtain and I
go back and I start you know butthole
fever just start writing down the art
director's name
and uh that was the thing is like I
cared I cared so much about it it was
important to me it saved me art saved me
so it didn't matter if I was doing a
logo for Nike or Toyota or like you know
I just was like this is you're still
looking at me even though if I'm doing a
corporate job. Like, I'm I'm in there
and I need you to see me and I am I'm
even though if I hate the job and you're
not even paying me, I'm still going to
do my best no matter what. Like, it's I
have pride in my work, you know, and I
and I I get that from my parents also.
And I and I love that. I I I'll go to
restaurants where I don't even like the
food because I know the waiter is like
running to bring me water and he cares.
Like anytime, that's the secret
ingredient to anything. Anytime I feel
like the person cares, it just it's such
a warm feeling, you know, and I cared. I
care and I still do. I care a lot. Like
I sit here go, I don't give a [ __ ] I I
do. I care maybe too much. [snorts]
So I write the number for, you know, I
try the legit ones first. Penthouse and
Playboy and they're like, nope, nope.
I'm like, I I guess I go to a Hustler
and Butt Man and, you know, Asian Fever.
And
[sighs] I get a call from Butt Man, you
know, they're like, "These butthole
paintings you did, they're they're just
they're so good." And I'm like, "I
worked really hard on it, you know, it's
not like what I want to be doing, but
and uh they're like, can you can you
come in?" And it's just true to their
title. That's all it is. It's just all
anal. There's no stories about anal p
there's page after page. And they go,
"Can you do like
this?" But like every week I'm like,
"What do you need?" They're like, "You
know, Superman [ __ ] Lois Lane anal
Spider-Man [ __ ] you know, midgets, like
whatever." Like just all anal. And I go,
"I can do that. I would I would love to
do that." And like we pay, you know,
couple hundred bucks. I was like, and I
took it serious. It wasn't like a it was
like this is my and a lot of actually
famous artists would do that but under
fake names and they didn't want to be
associated their real art with that. I
was like, and I and
[clears throat] so I did I did all this
art for uh Butt Man. Once again, if you
want to cut out any names, I I remember
everyone's name. It was uh art director
was Heidi. She was so sweet. She's like,
it's just like I was only used to my mom
saying she likes my art. So, anytime
someone not in my family said they liked
it, it was oh, it's not just my mom.
Like other people like it, you know? But
in a also this massive narcissist like
I'm the best and like no, I'm not that
good, you know? But like it's like both,
you know. And um
I don't know why this always kept
happening, but all these places I always
worked at, they would always go, "You
got such funny story?" Like, "Do you got
any, you know," and I was like, I think
I had been with one girl. They're like,
"You have any like butthole stories?"
And and I and I had been trained by, you
know, black belt in lying, my mom, you
know. She's like, "Yeah, of course."
Like I don't even It was so easy for me.
They're like, "Oh, because these these
depictions of anal sex are so they're so
graphic and fantastic and every time you
come in, you have some weird story like
do do you know any women in your life
that have experiences like this?" And I
go, "Oh yeah, like super racist against
Asians." I go, "Oh yeah, like Susie
Suzuki." Like just making up fake names.
They're like, "You know someone named
Susie Suzuki?" I go, "Oh yeah, yeah."
She goes, "Do you think she would write
about her experiences?"
And I'm like, "How dumb is this lady?
Like, I don't [ __ ] know anyone named
Sue. Like, what the fuck?" And she goes,
"It's 40 bucks a story." And I'm like,
"Cool." Like, they're paying me 150, 200
bucks for this. I'll So, I'd go home and
I would just write the most ridiculous,
"Hi, I don't speak English." You know,
this is the voice I hear in my head. I
come to America, need a job, and just
writing like every like ridiculous male
fantasy like and then he put in the
wrong hole and
pornography. I became a pornographer.
Like I'm not It's not like the proudest
moment of my life, but I'm like, "Oh
god,
you know, if God's looking down on me,
probably, you know, but once again,
shame. I'm cool with it. I I've made
I've made myself at home like most
people they changed their name. But I
was like this is what I do. I'm a
[ __ ] you know. So here we go again.
My [ __ ] poor parents you know. So I'm
living at home right? So I can't hide I
could have done a better job hiding the
graffiti. I didn't. They see the spray
paint. They see the [ __ ] paint on all
my clothes.
>> Was it good? Were you happy with the
graffiti?
>> No. I hated it.
>> Okay. I just uh it's so I have so much
respect for that. Like it's it's
everything. It's physicality. You're
>> you're climbing. You're you're a ninja.
It's like [ __ ] Navy Seal. Like it's
crazy. Like you need to do a detail of a
nose while you're balancing on barb
wire. I mean it's
>> Yeah, those kids are crazy.
>> It's insane. I'm like [ __ ] dude. These
people if if [laughter] they had a
little bit of guidance, they could have
been like Navy Seals, Green Berets,
whatever. Um, so my dad of course find
you know my once again like and then I
sit here now as I tell the story and
it's coming. Why didn't I hide it
better? Oh like maybe I wanted to get
caught. You know my dad [ __ ] throws
he's like sex
you know just like once again it's like
this like think about my dad. It's like
his friends are like going you know his
friends kids are like getting the
highest SAT scores. they're getting
accepted into Stanford and and they're
like, "My son has hair covering his
eyes. He, you know, I think I was
starting to get into like shitty uh '8s
like Warrant and Winger and Cherry, you
know, like that kind of like I listen to
everything." Um, [snorts] and I just
shame I like literally like not feeling
it, but like having another human your
father tell you, "I'm so embarrassed of
my son. I'm so embarrass like like anger
tears like just breaking like why why
why did I come to this country? Why did
you know just like and I I
like I just it's h like now I could feel
more when I tell but like before I just
like like I just pretended like it was
happening to someone else, you know? I
just disassociated. I'm like whatever,
bro. Like but it wasn't whatever. It was
like my dad disappointed in me. My mom
disappointed in me.
And I'm like, "Fuck, man. It's still not
really working out for me." Like just
rejection after rejection. And I just
remember uh the shipping like it was in
the Larry Flint building, Wilshire in
Los. And I was like, "Fuck, I live like
a like I could skate there. Like I'd
rather" and I was scared to like send
Oh, so this is what happened. So I got
busted. The lady I don't know if she was
a lesbian or something. She's like, like
I I need to meet Susie Suzuki. It wasn't
Suzuk. It was a name like that. It was
like Trisha Toyota or something. And I
go, "Heidi, are are you serious right
now?" It's like like there's that's I
wrote that story. That story is
ridiculous. Like in my head I'm like
that's so obvious a guy wrote that, you
know? And she's like, "Hey, we might be
Butt Man magazine, but we print the
truth." And I was like, "What the [ __ ]
You're telling me the penthouse letters
are real? Like, shut the [ __ ] up." up
and she's like she's like took all my
art, threw it at me. She's like you will
never be publishing butt man anymore.
Like she just you're done here. And I
was like I spent a long time on those
paintings. Like I all the folds of the
butthole and like I like I really tried
hard like you know it's like rejection
reject like I I had gotten so used to
my parents being disappointed in me.
Gallery art like it was just it was like
cool. I don't All right. Didn't feel I I
mean, I'm sure it didn't feel good, but
I had figured out a way to internalize
it and just All right. And then and then
do my mom's delusional thing, but but
I'm still the best. Even though the
world's telling me like you're you're a
loser. And I go,
okay, who's the uh art director at
Hustler? WT Nelson. Okay, I'm going to
So, I call them. I go, hey, I I live,
you know, I can skate there. you know,
take me like an hour to get there, but I
I have these paintings and I don't want
to send them in the mail. I never sent
pale paintings in the mail before and
I'd rather save on the shipping. And
he's like,
I don't know you, dude. And I don't
really, but I had already sent the color
copies and the the the pages that they
had print in Butt Man. And he's like,
but all right, I guess you could come.
And I'm like like yes, I'm going to go
to the Larry Flint building. This is
going to be so cool. you know, and I and
I go there and he's just like, "Yeah, if
you just tweak all these paintings you
already did, we'll use those." And Asian
Fever, we'll use these in, you know,
like different, you know, there was
Hustler had like 20 different other
magazines. And he's like, "Yeah, like
that story is awesome. We'll print that
story." And I was like, "Okay, cool." So
I'm like, "Am I am I a writer?"
[laughter] You know, am I part of me was
like, "I'm a writer. I'm a published
writer." Technically, you're a
professional writer at this point.
>> And at the time, I was also writing for
Vice. I was writing for Giant Robot.
Also not getting paid. Like, this was
the first time I got paid. So, it felt
like, oh,
>> did [ __ ] pay you?
>> No, they didn't because they we had that
fight and they never sent the, you know,
>> apparently they quote only print the
truth, but they also don't pay their
bills. [laughter] So,
>> yeah.
>> The truth only goes so far for them.
>> So, I It was me. It was like
I can see a lot of my mom in that now of
how
the reality is I'm not successful. I'm a
pornographer, but in my head I'm like
I'm published. I'm a real artist like
and I'm a writer. I'm a scholar, you
know, like I and then he I remember uh
WT Nelson paid me and then it wasn't
that much money and like and now it's
just like that awkward like Yeah, we
usually don't have the artists come to
the it's all like through mail and
I don't know you you want some porn?
>> This was before Facebook?
>> Yes. Yes.
>> Okay. because you the reason I ask is uh
and and I don't want to take you off
track because I was wondering when
Facebook eventually paid out when the
equity popped basically.
>> I I'll get to all of it and I'm gonna
time jump but like it's just uh I want
to stay I want to stay in the feeling.
>> Please
>> I'm trying to cuz these are all stories
I've told before but like I've never
told them from like
>> an emotional perspective. It's always
just been like almost bragging like I go
like like I'm trying to for the first
time like sit sit in it and cuz I want
to uh focus a little bit on the shame
part, you know, and and part of, you
know, part of being an artist is just
constant rejection. It's like asking a
girl out like over and over again. It's
like you're fat, you're ugly, no thanks,
you're not, you know, it's like and and
and for art it's art is different, you
know? like what you think is cool, I
might think it's cheesy. And it's like
now I can see that, but before I was
like, you're in the presence of
greatness and you're saying no to me.
Like I'm like, okay, okay, all right. I
guess it's not good. You know, so it's
what I present and what I feel inside.
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>> So they I mean part of it is they just
started sending me boxes and porn porn
was expensive. Now, these spoiled kids
today, it's, you know, you could see
anything, right? It's just free
internet. But back in the day, if you
wanted to buy a video cassette or a DVD
or or a magazine, those things were like
$20. Like, it was expensive. And now I'm
getting these care packages from
Hustler, just [ __ ] that I'm not even
into, like bodybuilder, chicks with CL,
you know, like just just a lot of [ __ ]
And I'm like, it looked crazy at my at
my apartment. Like, it was just I had
finally moved out of the house. I was
dating this girl, this crazy actress,
and I just it was floor to like every
room in the house had some kind of it
was like kind of my identity. They're
[snorts] like, Dave the, you know, and
she was starting to get disgusted. She's
like, who who am I who am I dating? You
know, and I I've always like at the core
of all my addictions is codependence.
It's I don't know what's happening. The
world is scary. I don't feel safe. And I
need to go along to get along. And I
need to do I need to make myself small
so that everyone around me feels okay.
And at at the cost of me, that's what I
need. And so, oh, you like that kind of
art? Then I'll I'm a chameleon. I'll
switch to that. Oh, you like Oh, you
like uh Fugazi? Okay, I'll listen to
Fug, you know. And there's like it's not
black and white. Some of it's true and
some of it's like a a mask. And I'm
sitting there just just really
struggling like stealing fish down my
pants so I could eat dinner at like I'm
not getting paid. Like there's no money
coming in. It's like graffiti doesn't
pay. Like the pornography like getting
paid in porn is cool, but it's not
money, you know? Um they're like, "Hey,
you want and and I and I have a you know
I have a sickness. I have I have a sex
addiction." So, it's like, "Hey, do you
want 200 bucks or do you want $1,000 in
porn?" Which is nothing to them. It's
just, you know,
so I'm having a I'm just having a hard
time. And I I get to my 72 Plymouth Fury
who like every time I get in, I could
kill myself or something, you know. And
there's a note on the door and it says,
"Uh, doing a period piece movie in Los
Angeles. Your car 1970 fits the time.
Uh, can we dress it up to make it look
like an undercover, you know, pays
something ridiculous like a thousand
bucks a day or something? I'm like,
[ __ ] Like, hell, like these small
victories, you know? Oh, [ __ ] Yeah. I
show up the next day, it's on the
street, everything in the street. They
made it look like 1970s. There's all
these other 1972 and they made it they
put the the sirens on the top. They took
the license plate off. And the guy
that's like dressing my car, one of the,
you know, the the union guys looks in
the back and he's like, "Yo, this guy
has so much porn in the back of his
car." And I was like, "Yes." You know,
like, and [snorts] I go, "What's this
movie?" And I see uh Johnny Depp come
out of the house and he's got a blonde
hair in a ponytail and it's Blow, that
movie Blow with Peewee Herman, right?
But he wasn't in that scene. And I'm
like, "Holy [ __ ] I love Johnny Depp."
I'm like, "Oh, [ __ ] That's Johnny
Depp." And um this guy's being really
loud. He's like, "This guy's a lot of
porn." Not just like and I and I'm like,
"Oh, yeah. I work for Hustler." You work
for Hustler? So, I remember just that
was the first time I saw like a
celebrity on that level in real life.
And I was like, "Oh, he's kind of short,
but like he was like signing autographs
and talking to everyone. And I was like,
"This guy looks he seems very friendly,
you know, like he had that whatever
charisma riz the kids say and star
quality." So then it's uh you know,
craft service, lunch, you know, I'm I'm
I'm I've never been on a movie set
before and I'm just like I'm getting
paid to do nothing and just
and I was like between all the the
background guys, I was the the man
because I had so much porn, you know? So
I just had I grabbed a sampling of it.
that I had some of the some of the ones
that I had drawings in and I put some
like bookmark like I you know I don't
know it's like maybe Johnny Depp's going
to see my butthole paintings and be like
hey paint me you know like I don't know
that's my delusion right so I'm like is
he going to eat in his own trailer or is
he going to be down with the crew and he
was down with the crew so it's like
lunch and it was just a scene like with
I think Ray Leotaa and like all this and
I'm just sitting there and I'm like I
want Johnny Depp to see like I want to
like I don't So, and I'm I'm like, who
the [ __ ] I have? I'm like 23. I've you
know, I'm like
I do graffiti. Like, I got a car that
doesn't work for, you know, it's like,
but I I was like, "Ah, it's it's it's
it's going to happen." So, he's sitting
down with the crew. He's like telling
stories. And
I didn't have to do it. Another guy was
like, "Hey, Johnny. This guy has all
this porn in this car." He's like, "Oh,
really?" You like, "I can't do a Johnny
Deb impression." And I go and I was
like, "My cue I was like, "Hey, Johnny.
Like, see this is this is my art and and
you know I had some butt man in there. I
had hust I I I grabbed the sampling of
my you know maybe I had some color
copies of my my art and and he and he
and he flips through it and he's in his
wig and he's like he's like it's it's a
lot of butts, you know, it's like a
[laughter]
it's pretty singular vision. I go,
"Yeah, I I could do other stuff." And
and you know, he just hands it back to
me. I'm like, "Oh, fuck." I was like,
"Oh, thanks, Johnny." You know, and I
was like, "No, that was cool." And then
I'm like trying to spin that in my head
of like
immediately goes to he [ __ ] hates
you. What? Like what? Stupid St. Like
why did you you know like why did you do
that and then um
I yeah I don't know the movie like you
know when they do a Hollywood movie they
change the name I didn't know it was
going to be blow like that movie's
awesome and I feel like defeated and
they're like hey you know we were going
to pay you for two days but we finished
the scene so you're only going to get
paid for one day and I'm like I'm going
to get as much chicken as possible. So,
I start getting the Tupperware and you
I'm like, I'm going to eat for like a
week off this craft service food. And
I'm I'm walking out and I see all the
Star Wagons and I see on the door Paul
Rubin's
male
ho. I'm like, here we go. Like [ __ ]
my childhood. I'm like, and he had
gotten caught in jerking off in a movie
theater or something. I didn't give like
I always maybe I can verbalize it better
with the shame but like when Winona
Ryder got caught shoplifting or like all
of that always made sense to me and it
endeared me to it made me it made them
look human like I was like that's weird
my hero my childhood hero that did
Peewee's Big Adventure Peewee's
Playhouse getting caught jerking off and
why did he do that? why didn't he do it
at home or but I even those things I
didn't understand I was like now I'm
like I love that guy like I like I have
nothing but compassion for like and
that's
like a lot of stuff that I had to work
out with myself because a lot of things
I do now is I work with you know
murderers and and at risk youth and ch
like I I'll work with anybody because my
old self is like [ __ ] [ __ ] this dude.
[ __ ] this person. [ __ ] you. You hurt me.
Revenge. Revenge. Very Korean, you know.
And now I go,
if you know, and I work with people in
prisons. I go, if you're willing to be a
better version of yourself. I I can I'm
not a scientist. I don't But I can use
art and creativity to work with you to
be a better person or try at least if
you're willing. Only if you're willing.
If you're not willing, then I don't want
to waste my time. And you know, you
know, great. So,
[ __ ] it. I'm going to do it. So, Johnny
don't want the porn here. And I write a
little I don't remember exactly what I
wrote. And I was like, biggest fan, love
you. I I I think I wrote like I don't
care what they say about you. Like, I'm
still love you and I can draw other
stuff, but here's stuff I've done for.
And I left it on his thing and knocked
and I I was too embarrassed to like and
I ran away. And [sighs]
I mean it just there was so many
there was so many moments
I remember
you know and then so like it's it's
gradual right like it's like okay and
then this little thing happens and this
but and uh you know it was like I don't
know a decade before the Facebook and
also I don't pay attention to that
stuff. So, as the Facebook stuff was
rising, Sean would text me and he's
like, "Hey, you know, those shares are
worth a quarter million now." Or, but
then at the time, I was gambling and I
was making that much gambling, so I was
like, "All right, whatever. I don't
care." And he's like, "Oh, you know,
they're worth a million now." And I had
quietly become a millionaire. Uh, by the
time I was 30, I had a huge art show
with uh Steve Lazerites, who's Banksy's
art guy, and I was like, I hit at the
right time that [ __ ] you know, like,
"Oh, [ __ ] you, Dad. Look, I [ __ ]
made, you know, like the art that he
hated me for. I was like, look, there it
is. You know, um, and there was always a
lot of anger at that. It's like, you
[ __ ] live in a house that was paid
for by like spray painted dicks,
[ __ ] [ __ ] you. Who, you know,
like, you know, and and it's like, I
love my parents. It's a lovehate
relationship. It's complicated. or maybe
it's not that complicated, but it's like
um
you know hearing I know how proud of
even though it's not very Asian for a
parent from another country to say I'm
proud of you like he he tell you know he
he's like we like kiss on the lips he's
like I and he rubs my face like I
[ __ ] love you dude he doesn't cuss
but he's like I love you I'm proud of
you and it's like all that [ __ ] I just
it's like you know so I have a lot of
compassion for for my my family. Um,
so like I remember
uh and then things like
I started working for Vice, you know, I
had this relationship with Gavin
McKinnis and Shane Smith and they just
they're like, "Hey, you you went to
Africa to look for a dinosaur. You
hitchhike."
And this was as print is dying and
things are they were the first early
adopters of tech and you know they're
like we're vice is going to move to
online. I like who I'm always the guy
that's like who the [ __ ] you [laughter]
know and it's like I'm like Korean force
gump. I'm like just in the room with
like the most important things in life
happening and I go all right cool and
they're like what can you film for
nothing? [laughter]
you know, cuz it was and like Spike
Jones was there in the beginning. Johnny
Knoxville like, you know, it was like
the beginning of of that of Vice, you
know, and end it all [ __ ] up because
of greed and all that [ __ ] But I was
like, every time I hitchhike, something
crazy happens. I like, okay, cool. Film
that. So then I start filming thumbs up.
I think the first, this is what I was
saying with time. I think it was 20
years ago.
And I do all that [ __ ] And then it's
like all the things like I was saying
that I was arrested for, I got shamed
for, embarrassed for, now people are
giving me money and jobs and they're
like, "Yeah, all that [ __ ] up [ __ ]
Can you do it on camera? Can you, you
know," and I was like, "Oh, they like
me. My mother was right." you [laughter]
know, and uh
so one day um
uh my friend Dave Chang, who also is,
you know, has severe gambling issues,
you know, I didn't want to meet that guy
cuz I was like looking in a mirror. was
like everyone's like he's you but of
cooking and I was like I don't need to
meet like I need to meet with people
that lift me out of my [ __ ] not that's
why I hate meeting other addicts cuz
then it's like you know [snorts]
like you never know how it like right
now I'm sitting here telling if I'm
getting if I'm being if I started this
show telling you what I least want to
share it's like now I'm addicted to
Pokemon right like you go oh you haven't
gambled in a casino in 10 years you
haven't you and you pat yourself on the
back and then the worst thing happens.
My kid gets into Pokemon. I go into a
shop. I had no idea that packs cost $20.
I open a pack and the worst possible
thing could happen. I get the hit card.
It's like, "You got the the Sun Bion,
the $1,000." And I'm like, "Wait, wait,
wait, hold on. Wait, what?" And I go,
"Oh, this is gambling." And in six
months I I've gone from like maybe I'll
spend a hundred bucks which which at the
time I was like for [ __ ] cards and
now I spend thousands of dollars a day
on it and it's and now and and I always
I always turn my addictions which I'm
always open about into my job but it's
for work. The buttholes that was for
work that you know everything's for
work. It's like oh now I'm drawing on
the I got one for you. I'll give it to
you later. I drew on Mike Tyson for you
because I know you like sent me I should
get context Dave sent me a text
yesterday. He said, "Oh, what's your
favorite Pokemon?" And I don't know
because I don't all Pokemon. He goes,
"What's your favorite athlete?" I said,
"Mike Tyson."
>> That's a Pikachu painted on top of uh
Mike Tyson for you.
>> So dope.
>> So,
[laughter]
so I mean it's it's like
>> Thank you. You're welcome. you know, the
addictions, the things they say about
addiction is it's it's baffling,
cunning, seductive. And so you I I'm
like, "Oh, I'm not the gambling comes up
in other ways, you know, it's like
trading cards, you know, like little
things." And it's like I don't I'm not
as a middle-aged man, and I'm shaming
myself. It it doesn't feel good
to be,
you know, like like I'm friends with
guys that are like like Money Mark who's
in the Beasty Boys. Like he's 65. And my
friend Bill Pune, who I used to do a
podcast, he's 62. So like I'm I'm a
middle-aged man hanging out with other
middle-aged men in the middle of the
night talking about Predator Badlands,
talking about like childish arrested
development type of [ __ ] I I go and and
the thing is like I've been to c
countries and cultures where there like
even being a Mormon and like when you
turn 18 there there is a a ritual that
happens that says now you're a man and
we don't have that in our culture. So
that's why you have grown men wearing
Pokemon t-shirts and talking about
fantasy. It's all the same fantasy
football. It's all fantasy. It's all
immature [ __ ] and you just have grown
men collecting toys and comic books and
talking about cards and and it's like
okay if it makes you happy cool I guess.
But there's always there's always a part
of me that's like dissatisfied like like
I I do like my daily affirmations of
like I I don't I don't need to do
anything today for Andrew to like me.
Like I'm enough. like I just I have to
sit in that and I was like no I gota and
and then I I got it from you know it's
like we talked once on the phone before
I showed up today and you've sent me a
mountain of this yerba mate this
delicious matina and I'm like that's I
[ __ ] like this like crack to me now
and I'm like oh this guy I don't know is
sending hey can I get some more of that
and I told you I was starting to get
sick and you're like oh I'm going to
send you some peptides and I go what a
sweetie and cute and like awesome and
very handsome And like the your shirts,
the way they fit every time. I'm like,
"Dude, you got some guns and like the
clothes look good. I'm jealous of your
posture." Um, and I just go, "Oh, this
guy's a caretaker." Like I haven't I
don't even [ __ ] know the guy. And
he's sending me like I don't know if
peptides a drug, but he's like, "I'll
help you, Dave. I'll send you these
experimental medicines and this." And I
go, "Thank you. But also, you don't need
to do any of that. You like I just
wanted to meet you." And
>> but to be clear, I I know I don't have
to. It's in my nature to want to care
for people that I I I feel loved
towards.
>> I I know, but like
we just met. And I'm like, those things
take time. And then you're like, "No, I
got people to do that or whatever." And
I go, "The cost I'll speak for myself.
The cost of that at some point is you,
right? When you spend so much time
thinking of others, you know, and so and
it feels like against how I was raised.
[ __ ] this feels selfish for me to, you
know, like I never took a, you know, at
at at the height of my workcoholism. I
was touring with my band. My podcast was
was DVDA was, you know, which I did with
Asa, Porn Star, and Bobby Lee and Steve
Lee. It it was becoming like the
biggest, you know, it was there was no
one doing podcast back then. It was Joe,
um, Adam Corolla.
I'm trying to remember. It wasn't that
it wasn't what it is now, you know? And
so it was
it was insane like because I grew up on
Howard Stern and I'm like
just hearing him fight like you couldn't
say a certain thing and and then he'd
get punished by the FCC and then someone
was like, "Hey Dave, you know what a
podcast?" I sounds weird. What's a
podcast? And they
and talking about terrestrial radio and
the FCC and rules and and I was like
it's a new canvas. I was like, you could
you can say anything. You can [laughter]
[ __ ] say like you could [ __ ] cuss
and tell like the worst story like and
I I just I couldn't believe that it
existed. I couldn't believe and so you
know and I didn't like come in with a
mission statement and I know intention
is huge and part of it was I was just
running and running but now in hindsight
I go what was that? And I was oh shame
chasing. I was like, how can I be as how
can I record
the downfall of me? Like like like
how how much can I go over the edge? How
much can I push up against this boundary
and see cuz let me see if you care.
Right? First of all, I was like no one's
listening. Turns out it was a lot of
people listening. But I didn't know that
at the you know we started I was like
let's just let's just go let's record
our downfall. Let's record our bottom
like as an addict like being being how
like I'm chasing shame like I'm like in
a way it's like this like someone who's
like a flasher. They're like what kind
of person gets off on like running down
the street. I was like that's what I'm
doing. I'm trying to
I'm not a mentally well person that I'm
dealing with demons inside me that I
don't know how to articulate. So I'm
going into workcoholism. I'm going and
I'm trying to find myself and find out
what I'm trying like I don't and it's
just so painful and I I I feel
misunderstood and I go let's just
[ __ ] say the worst possible things
every episode
and and make fun of it like a joke and
it's just like I mean it
once again if I look back and I go
what's the worst things that ever
happened to me? Jail like getting
cancelled multiple times. It's like all
of it led to the best moments of my
life. So I don't sit here and judge, oh,
this was good, this was bad, cuz good
moments lead to. It's just life, right?
It's fluid and it's there's a spectrum
of good and bad.
So, I remember
just there was so many
I'm like doing this podcast and in my
mind I was like like and and like having
Howard Stern write me that going on his
show and him telling me afterwards in
private, dude, you're out of control was
the greatest compliment. You know,
Howard Stern, the the despite, you know,
the king of all media telling me and I
asked him on the show if he can adopt me
and I'm like, I'm the prince of all
media. I [ __ ] do comics and I do fine
art, I do graffiti, I do I can do
anything, you know, and to have that
validation and and you know, we don't
talk regularly, but you know, I started
sending him watercolor stuff and then he
got into water and he's [ __ ] really
good. Like he like everything he went
into it and so that was and then at at
one point I was talking to his producers
about being on on Sirius like right
after him and I was like there's like
Jane Cho was right. I am the greatest.
Like, I can do anything. And then, you
know, people started listening and
they're like, "These people are saying
the worst [ __ ] ever." And I was like, "I
know, but I'm just I like don't they
know I'm a comedian? Like, you never
told anyone like and that's not funny,
but whatever." I mean, it
I shouldn't have said like a lot of the
things I said. And I never gave I don't
like as an artist I don't like expl like
like here's my black penis I painted on
the wall like I I don't I paint and I do
stuff but the the mistake that I made
was words like in the spectrum of
entertainment and art everyone watches
movies and video like that's up here so
that's has the most eyeballs on it. Then
you go all the way down to at the time
podcast
art gallery. Nobody you do whatever you
want. No one cares. And so that's how
was I I was approaching it. And people
go when you paint the most [ __ ] vile,
obscene, disgusting [ __ ] It's still a
painting, right? But when you say stuff,
people take it literally. Like you're
coming at a microphone like um like it's
an ABSOL [screaming]
Oh [ __ ] I scared myself. Um, that was
so good. I love that. Oh my god, that
was felt good. Uh, that was a good
scream. That was like your punk rock.
Someone sampled that, turned that into a
punk rock song. Um, but I I treated it
like it was just another, you know, I I
was it was Sean Parker. I'm not blaming
it was these people in my life that I
witnessed as successful. They didn't
take reality seriously, right? I'm like,
I don't care what I'm going to say. I'm
gonna push it as far as I can because I
don't care because I don't respect
reality. I've never have like you saw
you [ __ ] believe in Yes. Yes, I
believe. Look into my eyes. I believe in
Santa Claus 100%. There's no part of me
that doubts that. That's who you're
talking to. A mentally ill pe person
working on himself trying to express
himself as you know like
a perfectly imperfect unre repeatable
miracle of the universe. That's how I I
I'm trying my best. That's it. That's
it, you know. So, I meet uh David Chang.
I become friends with him. He's like,
"Let's go to dinner. I'm going to bring
my friend." And his friend happens to be
Anthony Bourdain. Immediately,
like I've met my my brother. Like, I
mean, he's older than me, but it was
just, you know, ex-h heroin addict. Got
through it through workcoholism.
And
I could see that he was tired, you know?
And he had a he had a thing that he kept
saying. He's like,
"What what's your life? You just [ __ ]
watch TV and watch the Simpsons." And
you know, he had this story like, "I
have to live an interesting life." And
he's like, "Oh, I'm doing," you know. So
I I I developed a friendship with him
because it was just organic. like it
wasn't like oh I want to he he was in a
way grooming either Chang or me or Roy
Troy I don't know he liked Asians but he
was grooming us to take over basically
and
um and that that that once again fed my
ego of like oh he's he can see what my
mom he thinks I'm special like the guy
that is the most interesting person on
the planet wants me to take over like oh
my god this is great you know so he's
like my you know, it's like you're
doing, you know, his his show changes.
No reservations. It's it's it kept
changing. And so, uh,
you know, every time I ate with him, it
was insane. I mean, I don't know if he
had eating disorders or what, but it's
Anthony Bourdain. So, you go in a
restaurant and they bring out every
[ __ ] food, right? Like everything.
And I go,
I'm watching him. He takes a sip of
water.
Thank you. Can you wrap this up? I'm
like, you're not going to eat, you know,
because everywhere he went, every chef
wanted to. And he's like, Dave, if I ate
all this [ __ ] like, I'd be like 300
pounds, you know? So, I'm like, can I
can I take it home? He's like, yeah, you
could have it. And then as I got to know
him a little better, every time he came
to LA to stay at Chateau, Mormont, I'd
be like, "Is your life just eating at
restaurants?" And he's like, "Yeah." I
go, "Hey, from now on, just come to my
house." My mom's like, he's like, "I
would [ __ ] love that." you know, he
closed his eyes like so whenever he'd
come to LA, he would go to my mom's
house. My mom would my mom loved him.
Like Tony and my mom were she he I don't
know what his rel relationship with his
mom was like, but he loved my mom and
he'd always he knew culture. So he'd
always bring the Asian pairs, you know,
he knew like, oh, I'm going to a
Korean's house. And then after a while,
like when I meet people that I love and
I respect, I I value the friendship. So,
I don't go and that doesn't mean I don't
value you. I was like, I would love to
be friends with you first before doing
your podcast, but I was like, [ __ ] it.
Like, let's just jump into it. But,
>> we'll do it in reverse.
>> Yeah, we'll do it in reverse. And same
thing, like I never asked to be on a
show. I never But after a while, he just
was like, Dave, I'm doing LA. And I go,
but haven't you done LA? He goes, yeah,
but this specifically Korea Town. And I
go, okay. I mean, I grew up in Korea. I
was born and raised in Korea Town. But
um so then his producer, his production
company 0.0. I loved it because when I
did Thumbs Up, I'm everything. I'm the
director. I'm the production. It's just
like Thumbs Up is me, my friend Harry, a
camera guy, and like a chase van. That's
it. It's four people. But you know, I
was like, "Oh, this is like what a real
TV show is like." He had guys setting up
shots and it was like a lot of people.
And I go, "Oh, [ __ ] This seems cool."
Like you don't have to.
So
he go so his producer calls me and goes,
"Okay, we're going to set this show up
for like two months from now and um it's
Korea Town centric like and I go okay
but do you want to do fake?" Like I'm
I'm down like what what do you guys
need? Like do you like I know every all
the restaurants and stuff in Korea Town
now, but I grew Koreans don't eat Korean
food. Like from my era we didn't have
any money. So when we go out we eat at
Sizzler, we eat at Denny's. We don't
eat, we get Korean food at home, you
know, like. So if he's trying to do a
authentic story about where I eat in
Korea, it's in Korea Town, it's Sizzler.
And like everyone, every Korean-American
I know eats at Sizzler. And so she's
like, "So you're telling me we're going
to bring Anthony Bourdain to, you know,
spend all this money to take him to?" I
go, "Hey, I just told you like I'll fake
it. Like I'll I know all the new spots.
I know all the chefs. Like we couldn't
but I didn't eat that [ __ ] growing up."
He goes, "No, Tony loves authenticity."
I'm like, "We're going to [ __ ]
Sizzler then." So, we do this whole
episode. He comes to my warehouse and
he's
like
I mean pitfall after pitfall like it's I
remember at the time Channing Tatum came
to my like he's like uh his agent this
guy Bill Korean guy Channing Tatum's
agent's Korean and he calls me and he
goes, "My client Channing Tatum loves
you." And like it's like after all these
things and getting cancelled over and
over again in comics and whatever field
I went in, there was always you're not
supposed to do that. You're not supposed
to paint on a Mike Tyson card. You're
not supposed to paint over this
graffiti. You're not supposed to there's
rules that you're not following. And I'm
like it was this my my whole life. So I
remember Channing Tatum was also
attracted to that. and he showed up with
with uh his agent and he's like he had
just done he was a pretty boy he's one
of the hands most handsome guys but he's
so talented and I'm like I don't [ __ ]
want to meet Channing I don't care about
Channing Tatum and then he came to the
warehouse and he's like don't think of
me as just like the pretty boy dancing
step up from the streets guy like I'm
about to do GI Joe but like I'm like and
I I'd put out zenes and like
self-published books and I write the way
I talk right now and need read that and
I was like Channing Tatum read you know
he goes you're a great writer and I'm
like there it is again I'm like I write
porn he's like no no no you have a way
of talking and writing that I need to be
a part of that like whatever I go but
I've never written a script he goes
whatever you write I'm going to produce
it and I go holy [ __ ] dude this is
amazing and then like I don't know I'm
time jumping but at some at some point I
got a little cocky and he put out uh 21
Jump Street which Johnny Depp again you
And I said, "Uh, there's a Ice Cubes
talking to Korean Jesus during that
movie. Do you guys still have that
Korean Jesus?" He's like, "Oh, yeah. We
made that for the I go, if you guys want
to work with me, I need that Korean
Jesus." So, they sent me the Korean
Jesus and I I put it in my warehouse and
I pray I prayed to it every night. I
prayed to Korean Jesus. And
what else? I mean,
uh, because of all the cancelling, it's
like if I get canceled at Marvel, then
DC wants to work with me. So, it's like
once again being rewarded rewarded for
the bad behavior. So, there's this
editor at DC Comics. Oh, cool. I can't
draw Hulk and Wolverine, but Batman,
Superman. And he, this guy, Axel
Allonzo, who worked at uh Vertigo, which
was like the more adult like do Sandman
and stuff like that. He contacts me and
he's like, I've been reading your
[ __ ] [ __ ] up articles and Vice.
He's like, you're a writer. I go, that's
the thing I have the most respect for is
writing. Like, I have a book in me. I've
never I haven't sat down, but it's like
it's in here. I'm too scared to to to
get it out. But he's like he's like,
"Yeah, your art's okay." Okay. And he
goes, "I want you to write a book about,
you know, I it was like Korea Town
Gangsters or And it was [ __ ] that I
didn't know about." I was like, "Fuck
it. I'll I'll make it up." And I was
like, "Yeah, I'm going to write it like
this." And he's like, "No, you're going
to write it and someone else is going to
draw it." I was like, "Oh, okay." But he
was like, "And then I I started writing
it and and uh I I start writing him
emails like it's it's it's done." And
you know, email bounced back. He quit
and like moved to Marvel and I'm like,
"Ah, oh [ __ ] it was almost about to
happen again, you know, and then um and
then uh my podcast starts getting bigger
and bigger and I'm so I'm I'm in my full
workaholism. Um, I I I've I'm I'm aware
that I'm an addict. I'm like I'm in my
full addiction. I'm gambling with my
life and life savings every single day
while touring with my band Mangi, doing
the news for Vice, doing art shows like
legally around the world and doing
illegal like just and people are like,
"Are you on Coke?" I'm like, "I don't
have chem. I don't do I get high off
like I and each thing is like I have to
do the I
I'm not enough.
That's what I believe about that's what
I did believe about myself and still
sometimes today is I was everything the
world had shown me is that besides from
my mother is that you're not and that
was also confusing because she sent me
away and abandoned me. So it was like
you're telling me I'm the best but then
you threw me out like trash. So, a lot
of mixed messages and and and and the
messaging that I heard growing up that I
received was you're not enough. You're
women don't date Asians.
Your art looks like [ __ ] It's you're
not following the graffiti rules. Your
art's a little too aggressive to be
refined for. It's just everything is
just so everything had to be I need to
be it's not it's not like I can kind of
be in this field like I have to have the
best podcast and in my mind that was
Howard Stern. So I was like however
extreme he is I have to go like Howard's
the ring leader but I need to be the guy
that's the you know and I I don't care
what happens to me because I've had
third degrees burns all over my foot.
Like my brother's read my diary. I've
been stabbed in my like I don't care
what you do to me because it'll never be
what I can do to myself. I've hurt
myself. So So
then uh I'm in
Russia or the North Pole interviewing.
It's my first time doing the serious
news and I remember at the time Shane
and Eddie and everyone at Vice we sat
down and they're like, "Dave, your
podcast is out of control." It's like
and they and like they all know me.
They're like, "You you can't say those
things." I go, I can say what the [ __ ] I
want. I'm like, this is Vice, baby.
Like, we did. They're like, Dave. And
and it was like second season of Vice
News on HBO. The first season was Dennis
Rodman in North Korea. Getting a lot of
attention. We start getting Emmy
nominations. And the year that we did
it, I won the Emmy for the news. I'm
like, you know, my ego is like, "Oh, the
first time doing the news. [ __ ]
nailed it." And I'm like, "I'm God,
dude. I can do serious news and I could
do weird butthole talk on this show and
I could do serious [ __ ] delicate
watercolors that could be in a museum
and I could do the most craziest like
you can't [ __ ] put me in a box and if
you try to I'm like I am better than
you. I'm better than you as a human
being. I'm better than you as an art.
And it was like my friends just like cuz
it's easier when you're an alcoholic or
drug addict. You're like bro you're
unhinged. You're out of control. But it
was just
narcissism, hating myself,
self-destructive behavior, just and the
g the people would come up to come with
me. I'd bring them to because I
controlled my addiction. Like I would I
knew that I had a problem. And I know
the nature of addiction is you can't
stop. So I did something that I've never
heard another addict do, which is I
would hire people, close friends, being
like, I'm an addict. I cannot be
trusted. I'm a liar. I'm a thief. And so
when I'm in my gambling gambling state,
I don't hold my money. So as soon as I'm
win, the number I told you I'm win, need
you to punch me in the face, I need you
to drag me away from the table because
now I'm going to say anything to keep
going. So I can never touch my own
money. If I if I if you see me falling
in love with the girl and going into my
love addiction, I need you to come and
punch me in my face. And like I gave
permission for people to hurt me
physically and to physically remove me.
It's like like if I was an if I was an
alcoholic it would be I'm at a bar and
after two drinks if you see me take a
third boom and drag me out of the bar.
So in that way
very sto masochistic but successful like
I never cuz I had someone and I and they
would only get paid if I they got me to
stop right but then I would pay these
people to stop me and then try to figure
out ways to you know so at the height of
my workcoholism is the height of my
addiction. Like I got every I I don't
sleep. There's days and then I had a
heart attack when I was 35. An angina
attack. I collapsed. I went blind. I
collapsed. And of course, like a lot of
stories, as soon as I I didn't go to the
hospital. As soon as I woke up, I was
like, "What the [ __ ] was that?" Like I
woke up 30 hours later, another day, and
I just went back to gambling. But it was
like, you know, I I could go into
euphoric recall and just start telling
like, but I I I don't want to like
glamour because it's like I figured out
how to how to be in the world.
>> If I have sex with lots of women and win
lots of money and work really hard at
all these jobs, then I will be validated
and and congratulated and held up high
in this culture. Even though if I'm
dying inside, I need to go. I I've spent
so much time in shame. I need to go that
I want to see what it feels like to be
like a winner, you know? But then that's
when I got there, I go, what do you do
when you get to the heavy is the crown?
It's lonely at the like I got to the top
and I was like kind of boring. Let's the
kid in the village with the match. Let's
burn it down. We got here. It's like and
that was my childhood literally. I would
spend a lot of time building giant Legos
with all the loot. Like we had like all
mismatched Legos that was like, you
know, handme-downs and I would build a
giant starship and my brother would come
in cool and just smash it. I was like, I
worked so long on that. But that was me
doing my brother is somewhere around
about to destroy my career. Let me just
do it myself. Let me self-sabotage
myself. Self-sabotage. It was like mini
suicides, you know. And so it's all I'm
like here here I am. It's all it's f I'm
finally gonna be, you know, validated as
a human being, you know, and then I get
uh, you know, I get Vice telling me,
"Hey, you you can't do your podcast and
the news." I go, "Then go [ __ ] yourself,
you know, and then we win the Emmy, but
I'm not part of that anymore." And then
and then uh I can't keep track cuz I
keep they're like, "Did you know this
artist got caught on saying I go, "It's
on my podcast. IT WAS MY PODCAST." YOU
don't [ __ ] It's not like I I did it
on purpose. Uh, you know, anyways,
it just kept happening and I
I'm at the sickest I've been mentally
and I'm trying to make sense of my
situation while the world is also has
its own issues. And I and I I just I
like I I hit my bottom. I just went so
off the deep end. And my friends were
all like, "You're going to die." Like
it's not like a to normal OD with drugs,
but you you like literally had a heart
attack from like not sleeping and
gambling for like a week straight.
Like masturbating non-stop to
pornography. Um just like video games.
Like I couldn't stop playing Angry
Birds, which like everything's like so I
can make a joke out of it. And they're
like that's your safety thing is to like
make a joke out of it. And so I walk in
to, you know, a meeting and and and uh
Channing Tatum's dude is like, "Channing
ain't [ __ ] working with you." And it
was it wasn't him. It was like, "Hey,
I've spent all it was the agency." He
was like, "We've spent all this time
building up a heartthrob teen idol
thing. He's not going to be [ __ ] seen
with a scumbag like you." I go, "Oh
[ __ ] it's happening again. Shame." I
walk into 0.0. Bourdain's like, "When
I'm done, it's you. You're gonna here's
a book deal with my publishing company.
It your show is going to be on CNN. It's
going to be exactly like mine but with
art. Like you're going to travel around
the art and it's like authentic to you
because you already do that.
Um I'm just like, "Holy [ __ ] dude. This
is it paid off. All the bad behav like I
met my kindred spirit and and I knew he
wasn't happy. That's one of my I can't
watch like it's been years since since
all that happened and I still I can't I
can't
like I felt I felt like
I met someone who finally understood me.
So I know it wasn't him but you know I
don't remember the guy's name. I
remember them and they could have told
me over the phone. They're like Dave. It
was like getting caught at the
principal's office. [snorts] It's like
and I'm and I'm pumped. I'm like
my mom was right. Jane Joe was right.
Like the the most interesting man on the
planet like my friend Tony is like
handing you know handing me the baton
like and I'm I'm going to do like I'm
going to go for it. Like I wasn't
married. I didn't have kids. I'm like
I'm going to [ __ ] really really like
I took it so seriously. went to Nat Geio
went like took all the meetings and
uh you know I remember sitting at a
table just like this and the the whole
0.0 production team is like we love Tony
like he goes but we are not working with
you and I go you couldn't [ __ ] send
an email like like what are you shaming
and and all of this is fuel for me like
they don't know this. I'm like, the more
you [ __ ]
do this to me, the more I you're giving
me my drug, which I'm chasing, which is
anger and shame. It's a [ __ ] powerful
drug, right? And I go, "Oh, okay." Just
another on the list that I got to prove
wrong. Like, I will make you regret the
same way Chip regrets [ __ ] talking.
Like, I will make you feel you come at
me, you better [ __ ] kill me cuz I'm
going to [ __ ] destroy you now. like I
am gonna make the most awesome show
ever. And you know, Tony called me an
apology. He's like, "Dude, I don't like
they're their own company. Like we work
together, but they, you know, they the
optics aren't good." And I go, "All
right." You know, and I was like missed
it by that much. Like,
[snorts] so it and and and I I had grown
accustomed to it. like this was is not a
news. It's if if I I could just keep
telling another
like oh and then Marvel rejected me,
then DC, then
the episode I did with Tony, I take him
to Sizzler. I show him how I [ __ ] did
a fusion with a meatball and a taco.
It was true to me, right? You know, I
hammed it up a little bit for the
camera. I rode my wore my like shiny red
sizzler suit, but that was me. That was
how my family and it resonated. It was
the most watched episode. Like I
introduced him to Estavon Oriel and Mr.
Cartoon. He loved all the low rider
cars. It was a [ __ ] LA episode and it
was like my friends and it was like
>> it was awesome. I felt so good and I
just started getting like Sizzler asked
me to be their spokesperson
>> like and the the episode is me talking
[ __ ] about how horrible their food is,
but it has this I'll do it guys. I'll do
it.
>> And so they're they're you know they're
they're like it's the most watched
episode of that. And then we won a Emmy
for that season and I'm just like and
then that happens and I'm like holy sh
like and then you go on Netflix or
whatever it was on and that episode's
just missing. I mean it's back now but
they took it off and I was like
just keep striking you know and I'm like
what did I do? You know like me playing
Vic like what did I do? I did I do that?
Like I'm like like you're a [ __ ]
idiot dude. You do dumb [ __ ] that you
shouldn't do. you should shut the [ __ ]
up and just and um
when I meet uh the most powerful
intellectually like just these
powerhouse humans
once again doesn't always have to be
sexual abuse but it usually is with men
right I mean women I don't know that
experience because I'm not a woman but
for a man to take your humanity like
that then I see cuz it's uh PTSD it's
right post-traumatic stress disorder but
And every now and then, like I don't
know what the exact stats are, you get
PT, I'm making this up, PTGD,
post-traumatic growth disorder. It's
like that should have turned me into a
drug addict, homeless person. But
instead, I took all that pain and I was
like, K rage, I'll show you. I'll
[ __ ] show you. You should have never
done that to me.
>> [snorts]
>> You should have never
you should have never minimized me
and put me down and disregarded. And now
I have to teach you a lesson. Now I have
to show you who you're [ __ ] with.
[laughter]
And it's such a horrible
>> [laughter]
[sighs]
[snorts]
>> It's such a [ __ ] It's such a painful
way to live life and I I I can't live
with that pain. So, I have to just keep
doing more. It's never I have to just
keep showing you
that I'm enough.
>> [crying]
>> So then I'm just I I I'm living in like
a very I know I'm telling a very named
dropppy like
douchy LA story, but you know I have
Anthony Bourdain who's I consider a
friend and my hero and my idol. Like I
was in a gang called Koreans God Bad.
That was two people, me and my friend
Harry Kim. But we wrote it everywhere.
KGB everywhere. And then I remember the
episode came out and he wrote KGB
forever or something like that. Korean
SC. I was like [ __ ] my gang is Harry
Kim and Anthony Bourdain. Like I just I
was like it just it made me so happy
that it's like
Tony Bourdain is repping my set, you
know? Like like I'm a [ __ ] G, you
know? was like it was two [ __ ] dumb
asses just riding drawing dumb bucktooth
tooth whales and I mean I miss that guy
so much [snorts]
>> the people that were close to him like
you and Joe besides the same response
>> always [clears throat]
>> so then I I'm you know I'm like lost I'm
I'm I'm getting closer and closer to
hitting my version of a bottom and I get
uh
I get a call from David Arquette, like
the actor, you know, and I I love all
the Arette, you know, but uh David, you
know, this is LA [ __ ] right? He just
reaches out and he's like, "Hey, I am
watching TV right now with my I think
fiance at the time and we just saw your
Anthony Bourne." And he's like, "That's
the most [ __ ] LA shit." He's like, "I
wrote I was in a a crew called KGB, Kids
Gone Bad." And I was like, "No, Karine's
gone bad." You know? Um, and he goes,
"It's crazy. Like, I'm in I used to do
graffiti and tag. I used to write KGB
and I grew up eating at Sizzler with my
family." And he goes, "And I'm turning I
forgot." He was like, "I'm turning 45 or
50. I forgot how old he was, but it was
like a big one, like 40, and [snorts]
I'm having it at like the, you know,
Sizzler's almost out of business. I
think there's like three left in LA."
And he's like, "And it's at the Sizzler
that I grew up, and I would love for you
to be here." And uh
all all that stuff always all like weird
celebrity stuff always makes me nervous
because I'm like I don't know if they're
going to be fake or you know and I'm a
sensitive person. Like if I'm meeting
new per people and they don't like me
I'm like oh I'm a piece of you know I
I'm sensitive.
I'm a sensitive artist. Um so I go to
Sizzler with my friend Critter. I was
like hey can you come with me? and and
we get to Sizzler and it's packed and
it's there's the buffet bar with the
cheese toast and [snorts] he's like,
"Dave, Dave, I want I want you to meet
some friends here. Come sit at this
table." And I sit down and it's Sasha
Baron Cohen, like my [ __ ] hero and
Peewee Herman. And I'm like, "Holy [ __ ]
dude." And
you know, both of them are just huge art
fans. So like they don't know my art,
but you know, David Art talked. He's
like, "This guy's an awesome artist."
And they're like, "Oh, cool. we want to
check it out. And
um so you know Sasha Baron Cohen like
collects a lot of Banksy and this and he
he's like [ __ ] dude I got to come to
your studio. I got to you know so then
I'm like oh cool like once again like
this oh people like me and if people
like me then maybe I like myself you
know like [snorts] and it's it's nice
it's nice to be liked. It feels good to
be validated and liked by people that
you look up to, right? So especially
Peewee Herman's my art god. Like I said,
Bob Ross, Mr. Rogers, dope. But for me,
that's what I grew up on.
That [ __ ] car, the full commitment to
that character, the voice, the king of
cartoon, Penny, the stopotion animation.
[snorts]
I just he's it spoke to me, you know? Uh
all the Gary Paner art.
So, um I go, [ __ ] I don't know how when
am I going to meet this guy again. I go,
"Hey, uh, I don't know, 20 years ago, 15
years ago, you did a movie called Blow."
And he's like, "Oh, yeah, Blow." You
know? I go, "Hey, uh, did you ever
remember like getting a porn package on
your step?" And he's like, and like I'm
trying to read his eyes. He's like, "No,
I don't remember that." And I was like,
"Ah, I guess someone, you know, uh, but
I did get his number that night." And
then um you know as I get I hit like
like I wouldn't be here today without my
friends just all who love me came and
they're like Dave you're not like it it
went too far this way you know you used
to be this sweet nice humble guy and
just you just you need a lot of help. So
I like everything else I just dedic I
stop I obviously it was the hardest
thing I ever did in my life but
including plant medicine therapy rehabs
men's groups 12step meetings just I
whatever if someone said it was going to
help you I'm like you're just breaking
like generations of
all [ __ ] Asians hit their kids all
you know everyone got sent away every
you know just like I I know but I I want
it to stop it's either I [ __ ] kill
myself or I need I needed to stop
and enough people caring about me made
me care about myself enough
and I and I did what I got to the
podcast the band like the people and
they go they'll be fine everyone's going
to figure it out
and I and I got help and um
you know as soon as I was out of the
first rehab like 45 days I was like I'm
going to do a podcast about this and
they're like Matt out there he's just
like hey uh why don't you live this life
before you start telling he's like but I
learned so many go yeah but why don't
you implement it in your life and so I'm
49 now
I rarely do podcasts I still do
something creative every single day I
like to do it with other people I I've
I've re you know I'd like to thank the
sponsor today for this God you know I
know people are like oh you're all
you're religious I
I don't, you know, I don't believe in
God, but I still pray to him. And like
God, whatever you want to call it, the
like whatever that is, whatever that
thing that controls telepathy and Santa
and connection and all this,
he doesn't care if I believe in him.
He's still there, right? It's like such
an ego thing like I don't who cares what
you the thing. It's like saying you
don't believe in the ocean. The ocean is
still there. So I want to thank that guy
and um and so as I live this life and
then I start to be like what is my
purpose? Why am I here? What is you know
before your art was about like
disgustingness and offending people and
it's it was just a [ __ ] you. Just
showing people hey Asian people aren't
all quiet like you're a rebel. Like show
like you're supposed to shut the [ __ ] up
and become a lawyer or a doctor.
Um, and it just like
I I always tell people they go, "Oh, how
do I make it? I want to be I go I'm an
expert in disappointing my parents. You
must disappoint your parents." Like my
dad is so disappointed at me over and
over again until he's not. But I'm like,
what would have happened if I didn't
disappoint him? I would have got a
pretty high SAT. I would have, you know,
probably been on my second marriage,
lawyer, golf, like, and he would be
like, "Ah, I don't know. I I don't know.
I But I I know that he's proud of me
now." And it was like a long hard path
to get there. And so, um, I go I and
part of me, you know, if you can't tell
by now, it goes like this. The pendulum
swings very hard. So I I said to myself,
I'm going to
like everything up until now has been
about look at me, let me show you. And
it's like and I go, it's it's I got to
take some space for me now. And and and
you know, I work with all these youth
groups and stuff and people go, "Hey,
you know, you did a lot of media and you
did a lot of [ __ ] where you put yourself
out there, showing the worst part of
yourself and sh and like trying to prove
to people that you're not a good
person." like, you know, it would it
would like touch people and help people
to see like your journey and your path.
And I go, "Fuck that. I I'm not going to
put myself through that." Like, I'm
taking space. And they're like, "Yeah,
but like at some point, are you going to
share your story?" And I go, "No, that's
too literal. I hate words. Words can be
confused. Words can be misconstrued. I'm
not doing that. I'm just I'm just doing
this and this is enough." Like your ego
goes, "Oh, I'm working with 12 kids
today." but if it was filmed, it could
reach millions of people and it's like,
no, you're working with 12 kids today
and that's it and that's enough, right?
Um, but then at some point after year,
this is years, a decade of recovery. Um,
I thought, well, part of the reason why
I hate working with not and like
Netflix, Hulu, HB, it doesn't matter
like they're all corporations. they
could be cool or whatever, but
um and even podcast, which was that's
the conversation we had. I'm like, it's
all gets edited. It's like as soon as
anything gets a little and so I go, I'll
just make my own show cuz I have money
to do that and it's not going to cost
that much. And then if someone wants to
buy it, they will or they won't. So, I
started making my version of Peewee's
Playhouse, which was um The Cho Show.
and it came out on FX on Hulu and and I
got to learn what taking notes and
having, you know, corporate feedback and
whatever. I'm grateful that it happened,
but they killed a lot of the episodes
and
um and then everyone's like, "What's
your who's your dream guest?" And I was
like, "It doesn't matter. I'll talk to
anybody. I'll talk to like the garbage
man. I'll talk, you know, but they're
like, "It's for TV, so you should try to
get some celebrities or well-known
people." I was like, I I want Peewee
Herman, you know, and uh I had his
number still from Sizzler. So, I called
him and I, you know, and Peewee Herman's
like,
I don't know if he's just one of those
people that once he gets your contact
info, you get a birthday message from
him every year or a Christmas card. I
was like, it just every time I got it, I
would send show all my friends. I'm
like, it just made me feel so good. Um,
so yeah, I have those emails that Sean
Parker said about like what he wanted
for my art to disrupt the world. I have
the nice message from Howard Stern and I
have the the voice. So I I called Pew
and he's like, "Dave, I got some stuff
some health stuff going on." And and uh
and he's like, "I feel honored. Thank
you." Like, you know, I I love your art.
You know, now he got to learn a little
bit about me and he's like, "And I would
love to be on your show, but I just I
don't I don't want to be on camera
anymore. And and he's like, you could
send the episodes and I'll I I'll give
you some like if you're open to it. I
was like, of course I you know, and um
and it was just it just like I couldn't
I couldn't believe that I was talking to
him and he like was talking back to me
as a equal. And then uh I mean but I got
it right away. He's he's not going to do
it, you know. And then at the end, right
before I hung up, he goes, "You paint
butts really good." [laughter]
Oh man,
he got it. He got it. And I,
[sighs]
you know, he's like,
I'm I'm old. I don't want to talk on the
microphone.
[screaming]
>> [laughter]
[clears throat]
>> Um,
so I don't know if that as answered your
question about um the South Bay. I know
that was a long answer for the one
question you asked me, but [laughter]
I don't know like when people like I
feel like you're an open person. So if
you ask me something I'm like and you're
ready to go into my head space and and
we can go there together then I feel
like cared for listened to and like I'm
like cuz you know you listen and they're
not present they're looking at their
phone they're like okay this show's two
hour and I'm like I got lo you know and
that's also how I write very long runon
sentences no punctuation
um so there's no like creativity is such
a hard thing to have a conversation
about because
it's not like my my path is not someone
else's path. And um and today it's just
every day I wake up which with what I
didn't have before which is gratitude. I
just wake up and it's like I I had a
horrible day today. Like it was not
good. like
the [ __ ] like flat tire, uh,
appointment cancelled, moved back,
[ __ ] crazy family [ __ ] happening with
my dad. And I was just like I I wasn't
going to cancel, but the feeling was
like that's not this not the right
headsp space to go. And then I said, you
know what?
every
like I could sit there and like self uh
analyze, oh, you have depression, you
have this, and it's like almost some
weird OCD like and you're a horrible
person and you and you you have
antisocial traits and and they go, okay,
and then what are you going to do about
it, you know? And so I I sit back now
and if I examine my life like a
scientist, I go, "Hey, uh what was
What was what was was all that [ __ ]
about on your Why did you say that stuff
on your podcast? Why Why did you
like do that thing that's against your
value system? Why did you What was about
the [ __ ] like all the suicidal
ideiation, all the times you try to like
what was that about? you know, and not
just like I said, like logically, I know
if I sound hypocritical, not just trying
to like analyze it like but just an
examination of my my own heart, like
doing an X-ray of my heart. It's like
what what were you feeling then? And
what why like what is the shame hitting
and why did you do that? And like so I
sit there and I go
we live in a soc I'll use eye
statements. I live in the way the
culture I was grown was
the when someone asks you how you're
doing it's just good okay which aren't
emotions that's all you say you don't go
oh let me tell you like I'm feeling
shame today and you know so we live I
live in I lived I was raised in a
culture of everything's fine
everything's okay get along to go along
you know I was a lot of like Asian only
Asian family in like a white
neighborhood or black neighborhoods was
like Don't. It's a lot of immigrant
story, right? Like don't rock the boat.
Don't do anything to stand out. We're
guests in this country. We're lucky to
be here. Don't do basically everything I
did, you know, like, you know, keep
clear up the campground. Leave it nice.
And so I sit here and if I'm being
introspective
um this is all this stuff is like this
is why I say this would be intimate
because this is just private stuff that
I don't like I'm trying to just
you know know my own heart.
So, it's like what?
Why? What is
the insane opening Pokemon packs about?
Like, right, you could turn that into a
joke or like what is what is the unmet
need? Like, what is your depression
telling you right now? What is your
anger tell? If your anger is like
unmatched with like, oh, there was like
a little flare up at school. Some kid
said something to your kid and then like
your response is like like what's that
about? So instead of shaming myself and
going, "I'm a piece of [ __ ] Oh, I did
all this work and I and I'm still this."
It's just and I think if I can get quiet
and right-sized in that moment instead
of, "Oh, I need to like make a story in
my head to be like and just just sit in
that ugliness and uncomfortable like if
I can do that. I couldn't do that
before. I can't
like you have to either look at me like
I'm nothing or I'm the greatest. I can't
just, oh, Dave's kind of boring today or
he's kind of not making sense or he
feels like I couldn't. It had to be all
or nothing. It was very black and white,
very Christian the way I was raised,
OCD, like God's way or Satan's way. And
so now I just go that's [snorts]
that's PaloAlto. If I could find the
PaloAlto in my heart, just like the
mundane culturally, like if I could sit
in the boring mundane space and I dare
to be mediocre, dare dare to be moderate
and and just
like like I'm like I said, the feeling
is like, oh, what's what's the
sensations? And I could then that's
where the brilliance is. Then I could
find my inner spark. I could find and
and and and then in that is when I feel
the closest to you and other like if I'm
with another person who's close is like
just like banging my head against the
wall but if I can meet another spirit or
soul and you're it doesn't have to I
don't have to agree with you but it's
like you're I don't like I've been
talking my ass off. I understand that
like we could we could go all night,
right? And if you share with me your
heart, then it's [snorts] a shared
brokenness. You don't get to where
Andrew Huberman doesn't get to this
with a smooth like [ __ ] went down. I
don't know, but it's on your face. And
it's like a vibrational thing, right?
Like you don't you don't [ __ ] tattoo
your whole body if everything was cool,
right? You don't just become as smart as
you are without like if you want to
destroy me intellectually, you can. Like
I wouldn't I wouldn't I would be like
like right. So if I can sit in and be
vulnerable and sit like hey I'm not
perfect but I'm not a piece of [ __ ] I'm
enough like I don't need to do anything
today. And and that's for me that that
was like like these cultural moments of
watching Outcast be inducted into the
Hall of Fa fame and Andre 3000 going I'm
not gonna rap but everyone wants you to.
That's not where I'm at right now. I'm
just going to I was like [ __ ] amazing
you know or uh Tarantino saying Paul do
this like the worst part of there Will
Be Blood. I was like wow that's the best
thing that ever happened. You saw like
everyone come out to say how brilliant
he is. I mean, what if Tarantino just
said Paul Dano is amazing? Then that
would just So I just I just find these
like what is um without trying to like
psychoanalyze or overanalyze every
moment of my life, just go
the space, right? Because I I've done
the brain mapping and they're like the
way it was explained to me, they dumbed
it down. And they're like, "You're not a
psychopath because you do psych you do
psychopathic things, but you actually
care about people.
>> You're not a psychopath."
>> And they say the the space in your
brain, there's like a bridge like here's
reality, you know? It's like it's like
should I jump off this cliff? And like
most people will executive function
like, "Oh, okay. Maybe I'm gonna get
hurt." And like that that bridge is
smaller for people like you. They saw
like a little they go. So you don't
really think you just do and then that's
how you you're like how did I end up in
jail? How did I [ __ ] like and and and
that makes her a great story. That makes
for a great [ __ ] life or like a
storybook crazy life that makes for and
and that's a a story that's just told
like you need to be a [ __ ] psychotic
insane crazy person to be the greatest
artist, right? If you're just like a,
you know, boring person living at home
with like air conditioning and Wi-Fi and
your warm cup of Earl Grey and you could
do good art. You could even do great
art, but you won't ever be the best cuz
you're not you're not facing your
shadow. You're not looking at yourself.
You're just that's just technique.
That's just craft. That's just skill.
Like I'm ripping my [ __ ] heart out
and showing to you and like what do you
think? I'm not saying what do you think?
I'm like [ __ ] what do you you know?
No, I I feel it the I mean I feel it.
>> Okay.
>> You know, I mean I I um
>> Sorry, there's like spit all over the
table. [laughter]
>> Please don't apologize. Don't apologize.
I No, please don't.
>> I'm slobbering right into your
microphone.
>> No apology. [screaming]
>> YOU guys [laughter] almost got me there.
No apology. Um I feel it. I mean I I um
I feel it and and everybody feels it.
And um if they don't,
they should take a look inside. Like
we're we're we're
>> it's going to sound like I'm name
dropping now, but go ahead. Go for it.
>> I'm very I feel very blessed
>> to have Rick Rubin as my close friend,
right?
>> Not cuz he's Rick Rubin who produced all
this music. That's super cool, too.
>> But because he has antenna
>> and he can feel [ __ ]
>> Yeah.
>> And he can feel it, but he doesn't get
absorbed in it. It's very interesting. I
don't have that.
>> Yeah.
>> I feel stuff and it it like the the it
just
>> Yeah.
>> And um
I I am certain people feel your heart in
what you do. The self-sacrifice part is
hard to hear about. I can relate.
>> Well, I I I
talked to Rob a little bit because he's
like a PR dude before
>> was a PR. He's like a producer.
>> I mean, he's out of it. That smile hides
a lot of pain right there. Look at that
smile. But uh
yeah, I
Yeah, it's hard. Like,
you know, they say these all these like
dumb quot like no is a complete sentence
and it is right. I go no and then I have
to make up some fake like oh but like I
got you know I I my car did get a flat
tire but that was a that used to be a
thing I would make up and then people
would be like let me see the metadata
metadata on your phone and make sure
that's not a screenshot from like two
years you know like um so I would lie
and and make up excuses but the the
ability to
it goes against how I was raised. It
goes against my culture to just say no
to my parents, no to
jobs, no to think like leaving money on
the table, saying so that I could put
myself first for the first time and and
nurture my own heart and take care of
myself is like it just sounded like
that's I I'd already written my story.
And like you know and then when you have
heroes like Bourdain like I think a lot
of people also killed themselves after
Bourdain did that cuz they're like if
the most interesting man on the planet
the guy that's a role model a guy I look
up to like he's not he can't [ __ ]
figure it out then [ __ ] what's there and
and then almost validates it like it's
so you can do it too like anyone like uh
so I it was just it just
I had it written out like everyone I
look to look up to and it's so [ __ ]
boring and cliche when I think about it
makes me so angry. It's like you know
live fast, die young and then just have
people say nice [ __ ] about you and it's
like or just be a little bit more boring
and have wonderful relationships like I
you you call me and you go you're
probably busy. I'm like I'm not that
busy, dude. I'm not a busy person. I
make a lot of space for myself now. I
don't like
I I and I deserve it. Like I I I owe
that to myself.
>> Yeah. I was about to say you've earned
it, but you never needed to earn it,
>> you know? Yeah.
>> I'm glad to hear it because um
>> Will you commit to taking a year off?
>> I could use some time off.
>> That sounds like I'll start the
negotiations at a year and then if I can
get you anywhere close to that
>> cuz people will be like, "Oh shit." You
know, like the American vacation is like
a week or two weeks, right? That's
nothing. That's like barely enough time
to
>> Yeah. I have all these war stories. I
don't want to make this about me, but I
have all these war stories like, you
know, my girlfriend at the time, she'll
validate these as, you know, being, you
know, diarrhea and vomiting while
writing a grant back when. And, you
know, I mean, if I I've had so many
wonderful opportunities, but I've been
going pretty hard into the paint since I
was 19. Like, that means non-stop. That
means like 50 to 100 hour week since
then.
>> Like what's the longest vacation you've
ever taken in your life?
>> 4 days.
>> I mean,
this isn't me deflecting. It's just like
I I just met you and like I'm I'm so
happy that like I was like if I can if
he gives me the space to speak what you
did and you can feel what I like what I
was trying to say and like to me like
that's all I want is connection, right?
like that's I I want to be seen now.
Before I was hiding and wearing masks,
but in that I felt you. And I go I I
didn't know what you were going to say,
but I was like it's going to be less
than a week because you don't get cuz I
know you don't get to where nobody does.
Everyone pays the price. You don't get
to where you are right now by taking
time off. You just don't. But
like you just said to me, I'll say it
back to you. You deserve it. And
I I and to speak to the workaholic part
of you and I say this to people that are
like you and me,
you will have more ideas, more
inspiration, more like you you can't
think now because you you're thinking
about how's Rob going to get paid. How's
the because you take care of a lot of
people, right? But in that time, I could
come I could get rid of all this black.
I could make add some color here. I
could get you some white t-shirts. You
could spend time with your family. just
the [ __ ] that you're running from, you
know, and I feel like,
okay, a year is unrealistic. You're
like, I'm running a, you know, but it's
it will like people, oh, go do plant
medicine. And I was like just taking a
year off and first weeks or months will
just be you unlearning the workcoholism
of just I got to do something to have
value and it's just um and I feel like
it will when you come back you'll be
like
like a thousand you know like and
sometimes in our culture we get knocked
down not by our choice and then but I'm
like this would be by your choice you I
I
taking care of Andy today. Love you,
Rob. Love you all you guys out there.
But you know, you know what? I'll run
your podcast while you're gone.
>> That would be
>> I'll do all the science. I'll You could
feed me some big words to use.
>> But um
>> and I'll go paint.
>> Oh my god. I'm going to Yeah, I feel
more comfortable with you now, but it's
like like I think I would lie to you.
Like whatever whatever you showed me, I
would be like, "Oh, that's cool." But
like I think it's cool that anyone who's
a egghehead who spends time up here. I
think every
thinker needs to spend time playing
music or painting because it's just it's
the opposite of that, right? You're
using the other side of your brain. But
it sounds like the way you're painting
is very in your head and I would just
rip you out of that. And I it it would
be very uncomfortable. But then you
could see the kind of like life, right?
You just see throw [ __ ] at the wall and
see what sticks and and and through
that.
It's about control, right?
I
had I had to, you know, and part of
being in 12step in recovery is like and
you know, and and the wisdom to know the
difference, you know, the thing the
serenity prayer is I had to
like you can't control mother nature.
You can't control a fire. You can't
control what other people are going to
think about you or say about you. You
just can't. You could try to let me
write a paper and like so that and and
and yeah, you could do that for a little
bit, but it's tiring and it's exhausting
to try to get all these people to
believe what you know, like
and and and
so I
Yeah, I just it it it it's anti it goes
it's anti it goes against to to the word
winning and the win surrender, right?
Like the I win every day because I
surrender constantly now. And part of
that I got to still fight because it's
like you sound like a loser. Why you
giving up, right? It's going [ __ ]
shut the [ __ ] up. Pick yourself up by
your, you know, bootstraps and get back
in, you know? Like that's how you become
the best. Like all the other artists,
they're like dealing with like you don't
have kids. You don't get married. You
[ __ ] paint. You go to the art store,
you buy all the paint up. You [ __ ]
keep painting. You steal all the paint.
It's like just keep painting. Never
stop. And it's all going to be worth it
because
one day you're going to die and then
legacy. But now we see legacy is
nothing, right? I get I get in an Uber,
get in the car, [ __ ] smells like Teen
Spirit, right? One of the greatest
anthems ever. Guy in the car, 27 years.
What's this?
>> Well, I'll tell you.
>> You don't you don't know [ __ ]
Nirvana? Okay. Have you seen Good Fell?
Like whatever. Whatever. Who's the
Godfather? Like go down the list. the
greatest.
>> Nobody cares,
>> right? The great it's over.
>> The greatest sign.
>> So, it's just this. It's just this. This
is all you have. So, you've done enough.
People [ __ ] love you. They You've
helped so many people. And I want you to
take one year off. And I don't care if
people are like, "Fuck that guy. That
guy helps me every day. I want to hear
his soothing voice every night." But I'm
like, "AI, bro. Just use AI." No, I'm
kidding. I'm just saying I would love
whatever you've been running from.
whatever you've been doing to
like you help a lot of people but do you
help yourself on that level and it's
like yeah um starting painting that's
taking care of your like it's not
complete all or nothing but
someone like you and other people like
you are not going to outsmart the
feeling right you're not going to outrun
the pain and it's like like I don't know
what your father was like I don't know
what your mom was like but they're proud
of you like you don't need to do more.
Like they're proud of you. And and like
if you go to what I said, the only way
to really make them proud is to
disappoint them. You just got to [ __ ]
Andrew, I'm really disappointed in you.
Then you know you're doing something
right. You know, um sorry for talking
over you.
>> No, I was interrupting.
>> What What are What? Like your face says
a lot. So, I just want to know what
you're try to um
>> Well, the part about legacy is where I
was interrupting, but it's not I let
let's let it pass because it Yes. And
yes, the legacy thing it it um
>> it's nothing.
>> It's nothing. Um and
>> like I've done I feel like I've done so
much in
acting like I've done all these things
and people are like, "Who's that Chinese
kid?" I'm like, "It it doesn't matter."
Like,
>> well, they don't say
>> it doesn't matter. Like, you do all this
stuff so that you have something to
leave behind. And I go, "You just have
this. You just have like right now today
and that's it. And like we're gonna we
did this today and then and then it's
off to the universe. I I can't control
what people are going to think about me.
And it's like I came here today with my
intention of meeting you, telling you
how you make me feel and how like how
much I appreciate you. And I did that.
So that's it. And that like I have no
ill will. I'm not trying to like Yeah, I
probably talk [ __ ] about a lot of people
right now, but it's like fine. Okay.
That's that's my
and I I should probably just let all
that stuff go. But to tell someone who's
used to winning, who's fought like tooth
and nail for everything they had to
fight and like prove people wrong over
and over again to tell someone like
that, hey, just surrender. It's like
[ __ ] you, dude. You don't like you don't
tell me that. Like um so yeah, that
journey from head to heart is it's a big
one. And that's why the like you can't
say that to everyone, right? because
they're like, I got to [ __ ] But I'm
like, I I don't know your financial
situation, but I'm like, I think you
could take a year off. Like, um, it's
not for But but that's the other thing,
right? Like, it must be nice, Dave, from
your perspect. And I go,
>> I was homeless. Like, I've lived the
worst. Like,
>> like people for like I know I sound
defensive, but like I've I wasn't born
rich. Like, I worked for this. So, it's
like must sound nice from a rich guy's
perspective. And I go, if if I think
back to my happiest moments or even just
my most creative moments, it was always
less. It was never more. Right? So, when
I lived in a tiny house, that means less
doors to open, less walls to we're
living together in a, you know, and it's
[ __ ] cold, but at least we got body,
you know, I'm making it sound like, uh,
you know, like we're we were okay, but
I'm like, we didn't have that much. And
it was it was great cuz we had each
other and
and I think back and I go, "Okay,
creative output. Let's go to work." You
know, let's go back into my head. I go,
"Oh, every time I had like a Renaissance
level creative explosion, there was no
Wi-Fi and there was no heater. It was
always freezing. There was cold." Like,
you're talking about deprivation? Yeah.
like and then now
like it's just it would be with my uh
attention sp it would be impossible for
me to get anything done if I didn't go
out of my way to block all my electronic
devices. I I couldn't do it.
>> My social media is on a separate phone.
It goes into a lock box that can't be
coded out
>> to get work done.
>> I mean what I hear Well, first of all, I
I want to be clear that um
>> I don't need an answer from you. I'm
just throwing the the challenge of the
gauntlet down. All right.
>> I would love for you to take one year
off as someone who I just met who I care
about. And I like um we're humans,
right? Can't just run forever. Like
there needs to be a recharge, a refresh.
Like there's just things that I I that
you get offered. I guess you're like,
"I'm never going to do that.
>> Why don't you Why don't you go to this
retreat and just work on this part of
your heart or this part of your uh
journey for a month?" you're like, I'm
not going to [snorts] [ __ ] do that.
And it's like, but why not? You deserve
it. And it's going to be hard. It's not
like a fun vacation. And like for me,
the way I think about it is
part of
part of like what because I take
podcasting so like I'm it does I I try
to manicure how I look and sound and I
do a lot of re people and I try to make
it look like I didn't, right? Like
before I go on Joe Rogan or Howard
Stern, I like I I call up people and I
[ __ ] do like I talk for 12. I go, "Is
this work? Is like and then I come on
and I try and and that's fake." And it's
been years since I did a podcast. I was
like I I I'm getting like a very genuine
feeling from you and so I don't want to
do that today. And I was [ __ ] that's
why I was puking. I was scared. I was
like, I'm just going to come in and I
might say something that like [ __ ] me
up cuz it has so many times, but I'm
just going to be the truest version of I
guess I could
that was scary to me. That was like
really being naked. Like I I like to be
prepared and I like last night it was
late. I couldn't sleep and I was like,
"Oh, [ __ ] I can't believe cuz it's like
I live a quiet p like I don't and I was
like, "Oh, man." Like
It was like, "Let me like like not like
you're the enemy." I was like, "Oh, I'm
going into enemy territory. What if he
has like a gotcha question like I have
to have a, you know, like it was it was
like I was at Vice again. You know, Vice
was so much riffing and witty comebacks
and I was like, "This is exhausting."
And I was like, "But can you just go and
just,
you know, and I realize it took me like
two hours to answer like one question,
but
that's I also accept that about myself,
you know. Um, but yeah, I started like I
started I Andrew Hub and then it was
like you're it finishes your name and
all and I was like I'm not going to do
this. I don't want to do this. I don't
want to just [ __ ] read about you all
night and then like have come in like
prepared.
>> Great. [laughter]
>> Great.
>> I was like I just
>> I'm so glad I'm so glad you abandoned
that.
>> I did. I did. I said just [ __ ] told
>> Dude.
>> Yeah,
>> man. I'm so grateful you showed up here
that in that frame, that no frame frame.
>> Yeah.
>> Um [clears throat] I know as soon as I
start talking, if I say anything kind
about you, you're going to get that
thing. But I'm just going to tell you it
I'll tell you.
>> Um I'll prepare. I'll say there are a
couple reasons you're here. Some of them
I touched on earlier. You're amazing
artist.
You're amazing person. But the main
reason you're here is because a long
time ago I saw you at a meeting
>> and I learned from you there.
>> Oh.
>> And I was like, you know, I would like
to be his friend.
>> Oh wow.
>> And I know I can learn a lot from him.
>> Oh my god.
>> Uh so without getting into any details
about that.
>> Yeah. I mean you can. I don't care.
>> Well, maybe another time. Um
>> I told you,
>> you know, you've helped me. You've
helped me a ton. I also um
like I have this model in my head, maybe
this is the the scientist in me where
but I feel like you've made yourself
like the anvil, the hammer and the metal
like all you like you and it's like this
cycle of the the opportunity to do
something to feel something and then you
know I guess my friend Ryan Suave was
right. He said, you know, people get
addicted to shame.
>> But to me, it's the whole cycle, right?
But the thing that I
>> I really want you to take in is that
people learn from what comes out of your
mouth.
>> They don't they like yes, the stories
are interesting, infinitely interesting
and entertaining also. And yes, you have
a gift for storytelling just like you
have a gift for art. But it's, you know,
people learn. And you know, we touched
on Bourdain, who I didn't know. I know
you and Joe were both close to him.
>> I know a couple other people were close
to him. And you know, I'm not here well
on a public service campaign. That's not
how I do this podcast. I'm only here
with you right now. But you know, there
are a lot of people offing themselves. A
close friend do that recently. A very
famous scientist that appeared to have
everything this kind of thing. And it's
happening more and more. And I think
that when people hear you, when I hear
you, I know what people hear. They feel
you
>> and they hear the extent to which yeah,
there a lot of hard stuff and great
stuff happened, but
>> you're still here and you're still
going. And that example is really,
really important. Well, I don't want to
I don't want to be a surviv, you know?
It's like I'm a survivor because I
survived all this stuff, but so did
everybody. And I'm not trying to like
And but you're still going,
>> but I don't want to survive. I want to
thrive.
>> Right. You're a th That's why I think of
like u Korean Jesus or Peewee Herman and
I go, it was like I try to keep things
light and entertaining. It was a lot. It
was really painful, right? If if if you
get it, it wasn't easy and it wasn't
easy for everyone. But so
then you go, well, will you work on
yourself? Will you do this work? Will
you go to a meeting? And it's like, are
we having fun yet? Right? It's like
>> it's a lot of [ __ ] pain and work to
just be, you know, and the question is
like I want to put is like, are we
having fun yet? Like isn't aren't we
supposed to have fun? Like, you know, my
son wakes up every morning laughing. I
go, "What the [ __ ] is happening up
there? What is like I I can't remember
the last time I woke up smiling." It's
like, [groaning]
and I'm like, "Oh, if we can remember
like I like it was dumb doing the secret
word, but I I loved it." Like, are you
guys scared the [ __ ] Like I I
you know, and it's people
uh you know, trigger warning they did
like there's a lot of people killing
themselves like on an epidemic. men.
Like I don't know that many women but a
lot of men
>> and mostly men and so powerful
[clears throat] tool
>> cuz because I've done so much reckless
[ __ ] I It's I'm a miracle that I'm here
right now and I'm not saying that to be
like oh I just I could have been dead a
lot of times.
>> No, I think God's been looking out for
you.
>> So I say to myself without a grandizing
myself or being on like some guru
messiah type [ __ ] It's like so I I made
it through that. I am having fun despite
how much uh I cry and stuff, but even
that like I I wouldn't I would be called
a [ __ ] and all that if I did that. And
I go I just allowing myself to feel
everything and
and and so I I I learned this tool
called just play the tape out, right? So
you go,
if you're an idiot, you're an idiot. But
if you're have any level of
intelligence, you go, "Well, how do you
think this ends for you? How do you
think this drug problem ends for you?
How do you think cheating on your wife
ends for you? How do you think non-stop
g like it doesn't end well?" Right?
That's one of my favorite things to tell
my friend. Ah, it's okay right now. It's
mad. I go, but addiction and and it just
it just escalates. It doesn't stay. You
don't just kind of get like and then
someone like me, it escalates very
quickly. So, it's dangerous and and and
an addiction loves novelty, right? So,
if if someone's sucking dick for crack
in an alley right now, that little boy,
he never he wasn't a little boy when
they go, I hope I do that one day. That
happened. Started with weed, then it
went to coke, and it just escalated,
right? He wasn't like, I want to do
degrading acts that I don't want to do
for drugs. But it escalated and that's
on the addict side, but I just found
myself having a lot of I sw like weird
broken promise. I swear I'll never do
that. But then I'm like here I am in
this weird place doing weird [ __ ] that
that's going against my value system.
Here I am. Oh, I'm chasing the shame
again. So, I know this is kind of
hypocritical cuz I'm I'm applying logic
again, but if you just talk to someone
and you use this tool of, hey, you're
not an idiot. Play the tape out. Your
your behavior that's like chasing a
bottom or destructive or not that
destructive yet, but it's on the path
and you're like, yeah, I'll be all
right. It's like just play it out. Like,
how do you think this ends for you?
Right? I go, I need to go back to
podcasting. Right? And I and then I go
on these podcasts and I go, "Are we
having fun yet? Are is it like you seem
like you got the weight of the world on
your shoulders. You seem miserable. You
seem like you can find like I'm not It's
just like in general I don't find
podcasters like happy people. It's just
it's just like a it's just like I go so
when are like when like you know and oh
cut let's go. is like a [ __ ] sponsors
like I got to [ __ ] the numbers are
going down this and I'm like can we have
fun like is it only about making money
and just
it's enough like if if and it's it's
it's because we live in a society
especially if you live in a city where
the messaging from billboards to social
everything is telling you from the
second you wake up it's not hundreds
it's thousands of messages telling you
you're not enough Right. And so I do the
brain mapping. I do all and it's like,
"Wow, Dave, you're really hard on
yourself. You say so much. It's it's
it's it's like if someone said that to
my friend, I would
I would do something." So it's like a
lot of punishing like selft talk and
then it feels gay to say I'm enough. I'm
you know it's like that's that again.
Why why do you have to say it like that?
It's like, oh, I'm worthy. I am a good
person. I am a good father. I am a good
friend. I am a good brother. You know,
it's like this sounds like just
self-help, but I'm I was able to
brainwash myself into believing I'm the
best artist in the world till so why
can't I brainwash myself into thinking
I'm a good person? So then I I go when I
meet people, I want to say nice stuff,
like real stuff, not like that's how I
feel. And it's like that's weird. I
don't want to just tell someone whose
shirt fits good on him. But it does. I
mean, even for black it does. Um, so, so
the tools is like,
>> you know, riding with deodorant, like a
thick white chunky deodorant, just so I
see it. So, it's in my psyche cuz it's
every day it's billboards of
good-looking people and I don't look
like that. And so, the messaging is all
[ __ ] up. And unless I'm just going to
say, "Fuck all internet and just move to
the African wilderness," which I might
do. Yeah. Just write on the wall, "I am
worthy. I'm enough." And I see it every
morning when I wash my face. And it's
just like I'm starting to brainwash
myself. It's like that's one tool is
like telling people I love and I care
about how I feel about them. Not till
they're dead, not till it's like they're
in their bottom. And I'm like, "Hey."
It's like I tell them every day cuz
that's that's that's all we have. And
then I say that about myself and then I
can catch myself like that bridge that
was like basically like a suicide
bridge. It's like reckless behavior,
reckless irresponsible behavior,
immature behavior. But all of this [ __ ]
is hard because I'm coming at it with
generations of a story that says you
need to stay sick. Like when you hear
Kanye say bipolar is my superpower. Like
there's a part of me that's like of
course. And I I like my artist [ __ ]
up. The more [ __ ] up you are, that's
true genius. That's, you know, and I go,
you know, I have friends close to me
that go, as someone who's as creative as
you, as so you're so like boring and
small thinking when you just buy into
those things. It's like like is there
anyone who lives a moderate life, just a
regular does everything doesn't have to
be jumping on a train and like that is
doing great art? And I go, show me an
example. There's and I go, but couldn't
you be the first? Well, there's ego and
narcissist. And it's just like just and
then okay fine let's just go let's go
with let's play that tape out. Let's
just say for you to make the choice to
be a normal person you're never going to
have the best podcast or the best art.
You're just going to be kind of like
right there 70%.
What's wrong with that? You know but
that's not that's going against
everything right. So, I have to
It's hard, you know, and it and
especially something with art where it's
in there's just people that are like,
"You're literally doing the worst art
I've ever seen in my life, you know? I
wish, you know, it's like, oh, their
first album was good type [ __ ] you
know?" And there's part of me that's
like, "Yeah, this earlier stuff had more
angst and way more detail and more
labored over and the stuff now is way
more looser." And but I love it now.
like I like I like myself how I feel and
it's it's very rare that you have
it's you know the whole lonely at the
top that you have the these champions
people that are like the best at what
they do the top 1% of
the world champion of this this that you
meet them and they're just like a
content satisfied happy they're just
miserable and you're like what
was the point why why and and it's
either where
you you have the courage through
yourself and friends to to make that
change. Like I I'll if you take a year
off like we're going to hang out a lot
like we're going to paint. We're awesome
incentive.
>> Like we're going to do all that but it's
like like it's always like you got to do
it alone. That was my message.
>> Like sh like shut the [ __ ] up. Don't
complain. Like very Asian, very Korean.
Like don't say anything like someone
[ __ ] treats you like [ __ ] Keep your
head down and just it's all revenge is a
dish best served coal, you know? Just
[ __ ] shut. Don't ever let them know,
see what you coming, see how you feel,
and just your your your revenge is
success. Like just like that guy treated
you [ __ ] at work, then just become the
guy that owns that business and then
fire him, you know? Like um Oh, I'm so
[ __ ] glad that guy Chip got fired.
That felt so good. [laughter]
>> Chip sounds like an [ __ ]
>> He was such an [ __ ] But I So you
just I I have and those things all these
tools are like, "Okay, cool." They're
all simple. Okay, wake up every day and
say I'm a good person. Yeah, it's
simple, but it's hard. It's not easy.
You have to like work at it.
>> Yeah. Like, oh, get up every day and do
100 push-ups. I could do that, but I
don't. But you could. It's like, but you
care about
>> your physical health, but why wouldn't
you do that for your mental health? What
your spiritual health, you know? Oh, I'm
not religious. is like spirituality is
it's the ocean. It's the universe. It's
it's a power greater than you, right? So
um
so I yeah that that
playing the tape out is a very valuable
powerful like I
I need to take
action in this way and and sometimes the
action is to do less and it's to do
nothing where everything growing up was
do more and
I was going to say am I making any sense
but through your face I could see that I
I feel like I I feel heard and I feel
understood in this moment which is very
special to me. So, thank you.
>> Thank you. You are absolutely heard and
you're absolutely understood and I'm
very grateful to you and um
I know everyone listening is too. The um
permission to tell oneself and feel that
they are enough is
that's oddly the hardest thing. But the
encouragement is is heard. It lands.
>> I think also cuz I talk so much about
shame and I and I'll I'll end it with
this. It feels like a
is uh hope and faith is also a very
powerful drug. And sometimes like like I
said with my mom or me believing in
Santa like there's no logic in that. But
um you know entire wars and nations are
fought over faith and you know and um
I I feel like because I'm sensitive and
I'm empathetic to everybody that I meet
that it feels like a really hopeless
time and I feel like that's why there's
a lot of self harm and depression and um
so it's like weird. was like, "How would
you be hopeful in a city like LA where
there's like 70,000 homeless people,
like natural disasters, drug epidemics,
you know, just all this shit?" And it's
like
then to
to you know, to to to brainwash yourself
like if cuz it's that that's what the
connection is like if I don't believe it
to find to go out there and meet someone
in real life and say, "Hey, I'm having
it was like the hardest thing to do. I
was like, I need help right now. I can't
It's like weird to admit to someone that
I can't
do like I can't I can't even come up
with one nice thing to say about myself.
Can I Can you say something nice about
me? Well, that sounds very egotistic,
but I I need that right now. I really
don't like myself right now. And to have
someone say something nice and you go,
"Okay, maybe tomorrow I'll be able to
say something nice about myself."
And then you're building [clears throat]
something called hope and faith. And so
I I don't know. Um I told a long Peewee
Herman story, but
at the end of that I was like, what was
that? It's like, okay, that's
resilience, that's taking chance, that's
believing in yourself.
But but I never gave up hope, you know?
It's like
and it's just and that's delusional in a
way, but
that's
like how like if you take facts and
numbers and it's like this is the end of
the world. This is like AI is going to
kill like all this [ __ ] doomsday
post-apocalyptic. It's like I don't need
that [ __ ] dude. I don't watch horror
movies. I don't surround myself with
like that's fine. Like that's everyone
do your own thing. And like I said, you
know, we were both like, "We like punk,
but we don't like hardcore." Like, I
used to love hardcore because it's I
needed that. I needed to hear that
message
vibrationally and spiritually and
sonically to go like, "Oh, that guy's
singing at a frequency that's resonating
with me." It doesn't now. And I [ __ ]
hated Ree my whole life because those
people were happy. And now I listen to
Reae, you know? I go reae on the river,
whatever, you know, like. And I'm just
like, you know, and I immediately judge.
What the [ __ ] Can't believe you're
[ __ ] listening to reae. This is like
stoner music, but it's res the frequency
is hitting me now. So, I can be
appreciative of hardcore music.
But um
yeah, I I if I look back and I go, what
what was that? What the [ __ ] was that?
It was just
screaming for help,
lost and hopeless. And I just go, hope
is a hard thing to have in a time like
this, but not if you ask for help, not
if you reach out, not if you connect
with other people. And that is going to
be impossible to do if you don't.
You need to, now I sound like I'm a
[ __ ] know-it-all, but it's like you
need to deprive yourself of electronics.
Like it has to happen. Like you can't
have real emotion if you're watching TV
or your phone. Like it's the only way.
Like anytime it's like a secret
language. Anytime I'm out and someone
has a clamshell phone or a flip phone, a
dumb phone, whatever, a brick phone.
They have whatever you call it. I give a
wink. I go, "Yeah, cuz I know I'm like
this guy, he's he cares about himself."
Cuz you can't I got to [ __ ] like No,
you don't. You don't need to know who's
being murdered on every country and what
are you going to do about it? Nothing.
So,
I believe I have faith
that we're all here for a reason. And
and uh and to anyone listening and I
don't I don't know when this is coming
out and I didn't know I honestly didn't
know I was going to publicly come out
about my belief in Santa Claus, but it
is the season. Is this going to come out
soon or after Christmas? Okay, just try
it on. Just just like I know it's
stupid, but just believe in Santa. Like
all the I know kids already do, but any
grown-ups, bitter jaded adults
listening, just just try it on this this
year. Just and if you need, you know, he
can teleport. He's a mutant. He has
special abilities and he knows if you've
been naughty or nice. So yeah, I don't I
don't know. We could I could like this
is the problem because where we're at
now is when I would start like I'm this
was like the pre like when I used to do
my podcast DVD I say we this be like oh
it wasn't a podcast because it wasn't a
conversation it was you talking the
whole time and we're 3 hours in and then
and be like okay now let's now let's
start let's get ugly and real and be
like nobody likes to talk for nine hours
dude I'm like I do so I'm gonna Uh, I
feel like you'd be down if we wanted to
go six more hours.
>> Easy.
>> And we could maybe do that one day. Um,
>> we should.
>> But I feel like I don't know. Am I Am I
You know what? I'm surrendering.
I feel like Unless you have more [ __ ] to
ask me, then I'm down.
>> Oh, man. I uh in the uh language of uh
meetings and other things, I I think uh
for now,
>> yeah,
>> we're complete.
>> Thank you so much, man. Thank you.
>> Thank you. That was so I mean
I I feel good.
>> I feel good too. Very grateful. Thank
you.
>> Thank you.
>> Thank you for joining me for today's
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>> [music]
Ask follow-up questions or revisit key timestamps.
David Cho, a renowned artist, discusses his journey through addiction, cycles of success and failure, and overcoming shame. He shares his experiences with gambling addiction, emphasizing that addiction is a complex issue that defies logic. Cho describes his tendency to constantly run from himself, seeking distractions through activities like graffiti, playing music, and traveling to avoid confronting his inner struggles. He explains how he transmutes emotions into art and discusses the importance of embracing both joy and pain to become a better human being. The conversation also touches upon his childhood abuse, career setbacks, relapses, and the profound impact of his mother's unwavering belief in him, despite his challenges. Cho highlights the creative process, the struggles of being an artist, and the importance of authenticity and resilience in navigating life's adversities. He reflects on his experiences with social media, technology, and the modern pursuit of success, ultimately emphasizing the value of self-acceptance and living in the present moment.
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