We're sunsetting PodQuest on 2025-07-28. Thank you for your support!
Export Podcast Subscriptions
cover of episode Curtis Duffy (chef and restaurateur)

Curtis Duffy (chef and restaurateur)

2025/6/25
logo of podcast Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard

Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard

AI Deep Dive AI Chapters Transcript
People
C
Curtis Duffy
D
Dax Shepard
Topics
Curtis Duffy: 我六个月大时被亲生母亲遗弃,由15岁的继母抚养长大。我的继母虽然也打我,但她全心全意地爱我,努力承担起母亲的责任。我的父亲喜怒无常,家庭环境充满暴力,我不得不小心翼翼地生活。我小时候最喜欢去外祖父的轮胎翻新店,在那里我感到快乐和安全。后来,我们搬进了一个两居室的公寓,我只能住在壁橱里,但我也喜欢在那里逃避现实,做白日梦。 Dax Shepard: 你的童年经历令人震惊,你和继母的关系也很特别。你父亲的行为对你产生了很大的影响,你能够克服这些困难,真是了不起。

Deep Dive

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

Wondery Plus subscribers can listen to Armchair Expert early and ad-free right now. Join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts, or you can listen for free wherever you get your podcasts. Welcome, welcome, welcome to Armchair Expert, experts on expert. I'm Dan Shepard. I'm joined by Monica Padman and Aaron Michael Weakley. Today's guest is Curtis Duffy.

Any foodie in the world will recognize Curtis's name immediately. He's a Michelin-starred chef and restaurateur known for the Chicago-based restaurants Ever and Grace. He has a new memoir out that is hair-raising. He has really lived a life. My God, did he go through it all. The book is called Fireproof, Memoir of a Chef.

Was it you that was just making fun of how I say memoir? Yes, it was. Yeah. What do you, because sometimes they say memoir. That is what you normally say. I want to say memoir. Yeah. And I correct myself to memoir. Yeah, which is correct. That's correct? Yeah, memoir. How would you say it? Memoir. Memoir. Yeah. The memoir is up on the road. Maybe it's a Michigan thing. We just don't know how to talk. Please enjoy Curtis Duffy.

We are supported by Allstate. Some people just know they could save hundreds on car insurance by checking Allstate first. Like you know to check your flights on time first before heading to the airport. Like you know to check your presentation is saved first before closing your laptop.

That's one mistake I'll never make again. Checking first is smart. So check Allstate first for a quote that could save you hundreds. You're in good hands with Allstate. Savings vary subject to terms, conditions, and availability. Allstate Fire and Casualty Insurance Company and affiliates, Northbrook, Illinois. We are supported by Domino's. You know, I have the app. Me too. It's not talked about in this ad spot, but I do got to give a shout out to the lava cakes. Mmm.

They're outrageous. I want it right now. At long last, Domino's finally, finally has stuffed crust pizza and not just stuffed crust, Parmesan stuffed crust. Oh, man. What are you waiting for? Who doesn't love a little Parmesan? Nobody. That's who. It's hard to believe it's taken them this long to make a stuffed crust pizza, but let me tell you, this was worth the wait. They've taken their buttery-flavored handmade pan pizza dough and stuffed it with melty cheese. Wow.

And if that wasn't enough, they topped it with garlic seasoning and, yes, real Parmesan. I can taste it. I love mine smothered with pepperoni. Oh. The more the better. Okay, all this talk about Domino's has got me hungry, and I think I've got tonight's dinner plans all figured out. Order Domino's new Parmesan stuffed crust pizza on the Domino's app and use code DAX to get any three-topping Parmesan stuffed crust pizza for $11.99. That's code DAX on the Domino's app to try it today.

Prices higher in some locations, you must ask for this limited-time offer. Prices, participation, delivery area, and charges may vary. Delivery orders subject to local stores. Delivery charge. ♪♪♪

You have two sleeves. You guys are matching. Oh, wait till you hear about his book. I think we have very... Yeah. That's exciting. So I'm going to show you one thing right away. Yeah. Is that what's I did sign? Yeah. J-2-C. Yeah. No way.

July 2nd. Oh, no shit. 1975. Wow. July 2nd, Cancer. Yeah, you're July 2nd? January 2nd, Capricorn. My very best friend is July 2nd, Cancer. So in junior high, we came up with J2C. Very exclusive club. No one could be in it. Now we have matching tattoos. But I already that you always make fun of me for astrology and you have it tattooed on you. I do. It means nothing to me other than the letters and the fact that Aaron has them too. But yeah, when I read your birthday, I was excited.

Wow, that's very rare. It's a rare club. Congratulations. I had a guess that was J2C. I know a lot of people with July 2nd birthdays. You do? Which is bizarre to me. Maybe six or seven of them. Huh, weird. July 2nd, July 3rd, and July 4th.

And would you always just do a full birthday party into 4th of July like Aaron did? I try never to celebrate birthdays. I'm turning 50 this year. Yeah, yeah. I just did it. How'd it go? It's okay. It's all right, right? It's all right. Just a number. I feel better than I did when I was in my early 40s. Same for me. Physically, I think I'm doing my best. Mentally, in a better place professionally. Some people are like, where would you go back in time? I'm perfectly fine. So you start in Ohio. Yeah.

And mom and dad are very young. You're 18 when they have you? Somewhere around that age. I don't know the exact date my father was, but pretty young. How much older is your brother than you? Just one year. He's a January. Second? J2C? No, he's a little bit later, but in January. What if he just looked at me and said, brother? Oh my God, weird.

Mom lost. But yeah, what was the scene that your brother arrived into and the scene that you arrived into? I've remembered most of my time in Colorado. But as a child in Ohio, I would imagine it was terrible. Yeah, your biological mother and your father Bear were already in a violent, messy situation when you arrived. Yeah, I was six months old when they separated. But your dad initially caught your mom with another...

guy, physical altercation ensues, and then he leaves with your older brother and goes to Colorado. And leaves you. And leaves me. Yeah, six months old. And how long did that last? From what my aunt has told me, some of the stories, not long after I arrived on my...

Stepmom's doorstep. For me, that was my mother. That's all I knew from six months on to current state. So yeah, six months old. And your biological mom just showed up at this woman's house. Jan? Yeah, Jan. And she was 15? She was 15, still in high school. And dad's 19 or 20 or something? Yeah, somewhere around that time. But they're together. A couple years. They're together. So she's dropping you off to him, ostensibly.

Yeah. The words were something like, you have my ex-husband or my husband, you might as well have all of my children. And my brother was already there, but then dropped me off as well. Yes. Trying to deal with that at 15 years old would be just mind-blowing for me. She's a kid. Just trying to be a kid. Yeah. She probably loved being in high school. When she got to be in class and not dealing with

two little kids. She was probably like, oh my God, I hope the school day goes on. I know. You know, I remember having conversations with my mom later in life saying how much...

She'd never got to be a part of that. Growing up to experience those things as you do as a child, like going through prom, experiencing graduation, because it was all of a sudden, here we have two children in our life that were not hers. Yeah. And felt incredibly responsible to take care of us all of a sudden. Yeah. And what kind of guy was your dad? He would give his shirt off his back to you in a second, but he was incredibly intense.

Angry, gentle. He was all over the place. Mercurial. Yeah, he was just a lover of fast cars and motorcycles. And he was a huge biker. I mean, just a ball of energy full time all the time. And violent as hell. Anything would piss him off. So you had to walk on eggshells a lot. That's what it felt like a lot. Just constantly wondering what the hell is going to set him off all the time. And when he went to Colorado, it was some attempt to...

be normal. He joined the army. And so in some ways, it seems like he was declaring he wanted to have some kind of a stable, better existence than he had. Yeah. A big part of what he was searching through life was just trying to be stable and have that family structure. I think he went through a lot of bad times as a child himself. So what you know is what you've

pass on and teach. His dad, your grandfather, wasn't too dissimilar to him. Correct. And that's what he's learned. So I think he probably craved that a lot was to try to have a loving family, but obviously didn't know how to do it. Yeah, I was a little shocked when I learned of his kind of relationship with partying because he reeks of an addict, but he wasn't very addict-y, huh? He wasn't a constant drinker. I remember as a kid having that smell of marijuana in the house, but it was only when his buddies were over. And it was one of the

Smells that I love to this day. I don't smoke weed, but I can tell you I love the smell of it. And I want to smoke weed. I want to enjoy it. Yeah. I don't enjoy it, but I love the smell. So Jan, though, she really kind of rose to the occasion. She stepped in and was a mom. She stepped in and really never let the foot off the gas. There's notes that I've read from her in the past that said she really thought that these two kids could be hers. That's how much...

She loved us at such a very young age. But she's violent too. To some degree. Absolutely. Just beating the shit out of the kids was totally fine and normal. It was back then. To varying degrees. You were on the wrong side even in 84. Yeah. I felt it was in a way that she was trying to show...

that she was able to do it as well. I never felt it from like an intentional place. An anger. Yeah. When we screwed up, we knew, I mean, come on, you're a kid, you know you're getting your ass beat one way or another. But the strap they hit you with is like hanging on the wall from the stairs. That's like a real declaration. Like this is how we parent. We're not hiding it.

No, you see that over there? If you don't act straight, that shit's coming real quick. What would have been then your dad's father-in-law or your step-grandpa, Jan's dad, he owned a retreading tire place? Correct. And he took your dad in. I would guess it seems like it's all going to kind of work for a minute. Some of my favorite times as a child was being at that retread tire shop. Maybe it was the tire smell and maybe it was just watching these guys work

incredibly hard. Yeah. I don't know what I loved about it, but I loved being there. The tires would produce these little warm rubber pieces. And if you caught them in time, you picked them off the ground, you can roll them into balls. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. Everybody would collect those things and then they would have a rubber ball fight at the end of the day. All the employees would be just

throwing them at each other. Oh, I love that. That was a blast. Do you think any part of the appeal of that place was that your dad had to be somewhat in check of himself because he was at work? Was he more consistent and more predictable while he was there? Yeah, I think he'd get away with a lot more there because he was in front of peers or he was the guy who was running the shop. So he was the boss there. Certainly not going to

backhand one of us in front of all of them. Did it make you really close with your brother? Growing up, yeah. We were pretty close until we got about 12, 13 years old. And then we kind of just separated. What age do you start skateboarding? Right around that time, 12, 13. Sixth grade for me is when it's time to skateboard. Right there is the time we moved back to Ohio and yeah, started skateboarding. My brother stayed in Colorado with my grandmother, which was my dad's mom. That's

probably why we separated. He wanted away from your dad, yeah? Yeah, at that point, he never really got along with Jan, my mom. There was something there. I don't know what it was. At five, my dad and mom sat us down and said that Jan is really not your real mother. She's out there somewhere. Oh, we didn't know that. We didn't know that until then. Wow.

And I think around that point is when they were just always butting heads, always fighting, my mom and my brother. And if it was an opportunity for him to stay away from them, he stayed with my grandma. Yeah, grandpa sells the tire shop and you guys moved to Ohio. And it's a pretty radical adjustment, right? Yeah, then we moved into a two-bedroom apartment. And that's where it was like, all right, you're going to live in the closet. Yeah.

In your parents' closet. In my parents' closet. That was my house. No bed. That was my room. No. Oh, my God. That was the floor. And shortly after, my brother had moved back to Ohio because my grandmother had passed away. The hitches keep on coming. So it wasn't long before my brother and sister shared that second bedroom, my mom and dad, and myself now in the closet on the floor. And you talk about actually loving that closet and loving the escape. It

It was an escape. You know, it wasn't that big of a space. I don't know if you kind of relate it to a dog enjoying the doghouse. They love that cozy. Probably for me, it was the same feeling. I was able to throw some posters on the ceiling and it was a daydreaming moment. I can escape everything else that was happening and just go in there and think about a lot of stuff. A hide, I would suggest. Yeah, probably hide. Yeah, your imagination works overtime when you're in areas like that. Yeah. I can relate to being the middle child. So my brother's five years older than me. So he was at like apex age.

adolescent insanity, and my little sister was still a baby, like a toddler. So one of them always...

needed a lot of attention right and yeah I just kind of went and hid and was happy to be out of it all yeah kind of unseen that's why kids make forts and stuff they're trying to create a little world they can control yeah interesting thought okay so another place that you kind of found comforting was home ec place to feel loved and I wasn't excited to be there but I was thankful to be there well

Also, I imagine you're getting validated there because you're kind of good at all the stuff. Your teacher's impressed with the pillow you made. Yeah. Impressed with this and that. I'm sure you were in deep need of that. Were you getting a lot of affirmation at home? I can't imagine. No, and you know, with Ruth Snyder, she was the teacher there. That's where it came from. I was able to cook some things and one, have...

a nourishing meal that felt great for me because it wasn't like we were eating great at home. What were you eating? Chef Boyardee. TV dinners. Yeah, absolutely. Swanson's was really shitty. Aluminum tins. Salisbury steak. Boy, Swanson's. Good for them. I love Salisbury steak. It didn't take shit to be a leader in that space back then. No, I think

You just need to be like digestible. It's true. Other brands came in after like Stouffer's. I loved it. The microwave had just come out when we were kids. Yeah, these moments, you were still putting Swanson's in the oven. Yeah, the aluminum foil ones. The aluminum foil ones, yeah. I think the main ingredient was salt. No matter if you got like a steak or whatever, if you looked in the back, it was going to be salt. It's all sodium.

Isn't it funny, though, when you walk by those aisles? I have so many memories tied to those items. And, like, I crave it. Oh, me too. They were my favorite items. Yeah. You just grab one every once in a while just to throw back and put yourself in check. Yeah, we did another show called Flightless Bird, and it was about learning about America, basically. And so we did a frozen foods episode, and I was just throwing so much in the cart. I was like, we have to get the Swedish meatballs.

oh, we have to get the Salisbury steak. And then we made it all. And yeah, it's so bad. It's bad. Yeah. I have so many memories. You know what I still crave like crazy? I swear it's good. When you look at the back of the can, you just can't go forward. But Dinty Moore beef stew. Do you ever fuck with the Dinty Moore beef stew? I remember that.

That's a powerful can of soup right there. I remember that. I remember. Wow. Aaron and I, we would splurge when we got paid and we'd get six cans of Dinty Moore. Did you cook it or did you just eat it? You dump it in a saucepan, warm it up, and then white bread with butter. Just like dipping. Man, the struggles are real. Do you see this thing that, who's our guy, Rob?

Voltaggio? Voltaggio. Where he does these things where he takes a stab at these things he liked as a kid. These kind of shitty meals. He does some of these famous dishes that are like... I haven't seen that episode or any of those yet. Spaghetti-o. Okay. Then he's trying to make it like professional level. Like the high-end version of all these things. Like it'd be fun for you to tackle the Pop-Tart at your restaurant. Oh, yeah. A lot of that's been done. Some of those nostalgic pastries people will bring back.

My staff, they used to make every Saturday for family meal, we would do no-bake cookies. And I lived on those damn things in junior high and high school. They were 25 cents. They were peanut butter. There were no chocolate in them. It became such a thing for me. I had to search out a recipe and then adjust the recipe how I liked it. And then I would give it to my staff and see if they could make it. Oh, yeah.

And did it deliver? And they were always wrong. Almost 90% of the time, they're wrong. You don't have to bake them. You have to do a certain thing with the sugar. You got to bring it to a temperature and cook it for a certain amount of time. Let's see how good you can follow directions. And they're always fucked up. They're not good. I wonder if that's similar to my mother all growing up. Still my favorite dessert she would make is called Chocnobakes. That's what they were called in my family. And it's chocolatey. It's got oatmeal in it. That's it. Those are

Phenomenal. Yeah. What a treat. Most of the time they have chocolate in them. But the ones that I remember had no chocolate. Cocoa powder. Yeah, cocoa powder, peanut butter, oats. Sugar, oats. My mom still makes these every Christmas. They're so good. I bet she gets them right too. Yeah. By my account she does. Unlike yourself.

Unlike my staff who are professionals. How are you doing in high school? How are you handling all of the chaos at home? How are you compartmentalizing? What's it doing to you socially? Certainly don't want to have a friend over for a sleepover. No, you know, when I was 14 is when I really stepped into...

The restaurant, not a professional kitchen, of course, but it was a diner in my small town that I was living in. A Big Boy's? Similar, yeah. I did work at a Frisch's Big Boy. We had Elias Brothers and I worked there up in Michigan. Yes, same concept. Oh, real quick, did you eat the food off the plates of the tables you cleared? Oh, no. Oh, wow. Good for you. I did. God, no. It started slow. And my best friend, J2C, he also worked there at a different time. One time, years later, we were talking about it. I'm like, do you ever eat the food?

He goes, yeah, you know, it started with someone leave a half of a grilled cheese untouched. So yeah, I'd eat that. Or they'd make the milkshake and they'd give you the steel container that they mixed it in. So if someone didn't touch that, I'd have that. Okay. But that grew into, I would just grab a big boy, bite directly into the previous bite. Like that's what it just unraveled to that. But they were paying $2.35 an hour and you only got half off on the meal. So I broke even. Oh, yeah.

I'm going to eat for free. Yeah, I had to do that. Okay, sorry. So you got a job at a diner. Washing dishes and I was able to cook what would have been my family meal, my staff meal. I was able to have a meal a night there working. Plus he'd pay me $15 cash every night. So I thought I was like the richest guy in the world. Free meal, $15 cash in my pocket, 14 years old, was loving life.

And I wanted to work. I wanted to make money. I was poor as shit. So I was smart enough that I started putting that money away. And over time, it built up enough to where when I was 16, I was able to buy a car. Then I could get a job further away. And then that spiraled into working in another restaurant, not in my hometown, but further away because I could drive. And that just all expanded into better opportunities for me.

And I already knew at that point, I want something greater than what I could possibly have here. Living in that closet couldn't be the end of the world for me. There's got to be something else out there. So through high school, I didn't have a lot of time at home. I was always get up, go to school, go directly from school to work. And I worked five, six nights a week. At that point, my parents were already on shaky ground. And if I wasn't home, I didn't have to deal with any of the shit. Yeah. Yes. I would get home at 11, 12 o'clock at night.

do some homework, go to bed, hit repeat. But I was loving it so much that exhaustion didn't even factor in my brain. Yeah. Again, you're like Jan probably loving high school. Yeah. You're just happy to be away. Exactly. So where are you at when you get the phone call? So I just got home from school. What college were you going to? Ohio State. Which is in Columbus? Columbus, yeah. At the time, my girlfriend...

was a senior in high school. So she had just got out of school and I was on the second floor. She came by and honked her horn. I looked out the window and she's like, "Hey, something's going on with your family. Your sister got picked up about an hour ago from school from the cops." And I'm like, "What? What's going on?" She told me that something happened when your dad kidnapped your mom or something. And I'm like, "What the hell?" - What? - And ironically, my father kept messaging me that morning or trying to get ahold of me saying, "Come and see me today at the house."

I was so involved with school, so involved with work and trying to deal with my parents. I was stuck in the middle a lot. And I didn't want to be manipulating to my mom and telling my dad and telling my mom one thing because of my dad saying, hey, go tell her this. Yeah. I hated those moments. And that happened quite a lot. So I just decided I'm not going to go to the house today and just talk to you later in the week. 20 minutes later or so, knock on the door from one of the local police department.

and asked me to come with him out to my dad's house, which was about 20 minutes away from where I was living. In the house that he inherited when your grandfather went to jail. Correct. And so what happens when you arrive? So ironically, I'm sitting in the back of a cruiser, completely innocent for the first time, driving out there, and I'm just trying to process what is going on. The cop was telling me, you know, your father took your mother,

At gunpoint, kidnapped her in the car and is now holding her hostage. What? Out of your house. And I'm like, trying to process this for what felt like an eternity drive to where we were going. We couldn't get there fast enough. Turn on the siren, step on it. Yeah, let's go. So we finally got there. They took me to a house next door. It was in the middle of the country. So next door was down the street, a half mile or so, to what they called a safe house. And there was my brother, my sister, my

My uncle, who was also a police officer at the time. But a terrible dude. A terrible man, yeah. Beat you unconscious while they were out of town once. Oh, all the time. Just a piece of shit of a man. Thank God he had a badge. Yeah, exactly. Oh my God. It justified everything in his mind. So yeah, we stayed there as the standoff continued for 10 plus hours, I think it was. So it went in through the middle of the afternoon until...

well into the night, 10 o'clock, 11 o'clock at night. So she wasn't living there with him? No, at this point, she had moved out. She had got her own place. And one of the conversations I had with her was like, I need to live on my own. I need to experience all these things I didn't get to experience when I was younger. One of them was

How do I survive on my own, living on my own, having my own apartment, having my own bills, fending for myself and making it through life by myself? She had moved out six months prior to that. So I was in and out of the house a little bit with my father staying there. But he eventually would come home to a place where we had everybody living there to the now nobody except for him. So I think it was very difficult for him to grasp that feeling of no one.

wanting to be there. Nobody wanted to be around him. Yeah. At this point, he's off the rocker a little bit, trying to stay on the meds of antidepressants. And that was a whole roller coaster as well. Some nights I would decide to stay there instead of staying at my house closer to school. And I would come home to him unconscious, couldn't even wake him up, just out of it, out of it. No alcohol involved, no drugs involved other than just the stuff he was taking. I don't know if it was overtaking it

Or if he decided to stop taking it at that time. But brought down with depression. Yeah, yeah, just didn't want to move, just didn't want to do anything. So he shot Jan. Yeah. And then he shot himself. Oh, boy. Did Jan, like... Everyone's dead. And you're 19? 19, yeah. This is... And in a unique and cruel twist, for whatever reason, the police who hated his father...

ask him to identify the body and they're showing him a stack of pictures and they're showing both of them killed dead and he's like yeah that's them the guy just continues to show him pictures shows them the autopsy yeah all autopsy pictures not just a picture of the face or anything god you've met the worst people on earth yeah i mean really an abundance of terrible

fucking people. It was so bizarre. Oh man, I'm sorry. Yeah, because a few days later they asked me to come and grab all of their personal belongings, the bed sheets that they were laying on, anything they used for evidence, come and get it.

the clothes the jackets all their personal belongings and then as i sat down and grabbed all that stuff they sat me in that room and just started dropping pictures polaroids of my parents and one or two is enough yeah i get it guys yeah yeah it's so twisted well when you see the pattern of erratic decisions we're moving to colorado we're moving back we're going to be a cop we're going to join the army these are all from the outside they seem like attempts

to fix what's going on mentally. Running from something. Yes, hoping that this big reset will somehow change him. Yeah, you're right. What's clear in the book, you still have a lot of love for your dad, though. I do. It is bizarre because I did go through a long time of hatred towards him. He's disrupted, interrupted, fucked up my life to some degree, our lives, our family, the whole thing. There was a lot of hatred going on.

Stuff I had to work through personally to overcome that. But I try to see who he is. I try to understand the position and the things that he went through, where his mind was at that age. I mean, I'm well older than he was at that time. He's 40 years old.

So I've outlived him. My mom never saw 40. Yeah. Did you ever reconnect with your biological mom? You know, speaking of Frisha's big boy. Yeah. My brother, when I was working one day, he's like, hey, I got a friend outside who wants to meet you. He's dying to meet you. I'm like, all right, cool. I think I'm 16 or 17. I go outside. Hey, this is your mom.

Sue is her name. And I'm just in complete shot. I'm thinking I'm going to meet one of his buddies. Yes. And I'm here, this lady is standing and she tries to hand me $50. I'm like, what the hell am I going to do with that? I don't need your money. I didn't take it. $50 doesn't capture the last 17 years. So I never really reconnected with her. My brother has a relationship with her to this day. I just chose not to. Meeting her, it hurt me because I

I didn't want to upset my mother. I felt disloyal. I told her right away. I had to tell her it was killing me. I was so worried about breaking her heart. I didn't put myself in that position. I was forced into that position. To this day, I probably would have never met her. Yeah, and it's weird because if you don't see her, you can kind of compartmentalize it like she doesn't really exist, maybe. But seeing her, you have to face this person dropped you off at six months old, made a choice.

Your life is tough. And part of it's because she put you in that situation. And never looked back. Well, yeah. As far as the compartmentalization, there's layers to it. It's like, A, it's best to just ignore she even exists. And then if she does exist, it's actually a lot easier if she doesn't want to meet you. Yeah. It's very complicated if, wait, she's gone. No, she isn't gone. And...

I don't know if I can handle that she actually wants to have a relationship with me. Yeah. That's kind of overwhelming. It is. There's a lot of things that I want to know from her medically, you know, the lineage of her father and all the things that maybe could affect me and my family. But...

Not so much that I want to have that relationship because I'm sure if I reach out, it's going to open a can of worms. You're not in the market for that. I'm not. I'm good. My life is great. What do you major in at Ohio State? It was a culinary degree in applied science. It was a three-year program for culinary. You knew from that first restaurant job you got, this is what I want to do? Yeah, once I got into high school and I started working like in a professional kitchen, this is all I want to do. When do you decide to go from, for lack of...

better terminology, like a pedestrian cook to, oh, I actually want to be an artist. My last two years of high school was in a vocational school or a tech school. Luckily, they had a culinary program there. So I spent the last two years of high school in that culinary program.

And I met a lady named Kathy Zay, who was the teacher and the instructor there. She was very well connected to a lot of professional chefs in the Columbus area. And she would take students every year, once a year, to a place called Mearfield Village Golf Club. It was owned by Jack Nicklaus. It held one of the PGA stops of the tour. And I went out there consecutively for two years.

and that's where I really wanted to work. So she was able to connect me with the chef, and I just went there to work that week. But then I started going there on the weekends to work for free because I just wanted to be there. What was he doing that was so intriguing? Because I think it's important for context. Anyone that's 25 years old right now

They've grown up in an era where there were many, many cooking shows on. There are Instagram accounts where you follow this. There's knowledge of Jose Andres' teachers in Spain. Like, you could really know everything. Celebrity chef culture. Yes. Pre-Bourdain's book.

But for you and I, I don't know, what would you see in a magazine, like a travel magazine? How would you even be exposed to this kind of far end of cooking? For me, it was the environment that was there. Being able to go there and the houses around the golf courses. This one has an elevator and this one has eight rooms. And it's just a massive eye-opening moment for me that I wanted to be a part of. And the only way to be a part of it is if I was working there. Yes. Not only that, the chef, John Souza, was special.

so great with the young cooks and was a very educational and a great hands-on teacher. So any opportunity I got, I went there to work for free or whatever. They didn't hire me just

let me spend my time that I wasn't working somewhere else here. So he agreed to take me on as an apprentice as I went into college. I spent a total of about six years there. Everybody would leave at night and I would stay there and I would start creating. I would leave at three o'clock, four o'clock in the morning where everybody else is out drinking and partying. I'm still in the kitchen working for free, doing my thing, trying to create, just trying to learn and learn and learn. That's where I put the blinders on and just was like,

like total focus. And would you ever be experimenting and discover something and then pitch the chef? Yeah. As a young cook, that's the greatest thing is like to try to have something on the menu. It's like seeing your name in the credits of a movie when you're an actor. It's the greatest thing for a young cook was most of the time there was always like, no, it's the chef's restaurants, his ideas, it's his everything. Yes. In 2008,

You're now 25. You are working at Charlie Trotter in Chicago. That was the draw to come to Illinois. The internet was around a little bit at that time. So it wasn't a lot of communication through there. It was just like sending resumes, sending a cover letter, just trying to get in the door. And finally they called and said I could come there and do what we call a stage, which is

basically work for a short amount of time for free. It's a way to interview you, if you will. How standardized are the cultures in these higher end restaurants? So like the golf course that you were coming from, what was the culture in there versus what it was like at Charlie Trotter? I'm presuming some of these are more dictatorial. Yeah, there is a brigade system that you follow by. You have chef, you have the executive chef, chef de cuisine, sous chef. There's a banquet chef in there somewhere, depending on

how large the operation is, pastry chef, and then what we call chef de parties, which are all the cooks. So the hierarchy there is very interesting and something that's pretty standard across most high-end restaurants. But culturally, huge difference. Going from Muirfield, which was more laid back, although there's a lot of great standards there, and culturally, there was a great time and place. But when I got to Charlie Trotter's, it was completely different. Just really intense culture.

Work environment. A lot of panic and yelling. Not so much yelling. It was just very demanding physically, mentally. Like you had to be on point all the time. Charlie was relentless for putting you in positions of uncomfortableness. Because of the perfectionism? Yeah. And he think he wanted everybody in that restaurant to be great. I imagine myself in some of these kitchens, at least that I hear about. And I'm like, that would be too much for me. You'd punch them. For me, I think it was welcoming.

To some degree. I guess you admired the people. That's the key, right? You probably did admire this chef. Yes, you're right. And want their skills enough to tolerate it all. Yeah, and I think even dating back to John Susan, also a good friend of mine who was the banquet chef, Regan Coivisto, I admired these chefs so much that they could have told me to jump off a building. I probably would have done it. Right. You wanted what they had. Yeah, and that was the structure I was craving. It was right at the time my parents passed away. And now I'm like, all of a sudden this...

teenager that needs structure. I need it, but I don't have it. Yeah. So I could have went any direction in life I wanted to had I not had these structural pillars in my life. You know, Regan was a huge asset for me. Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare. This message is brought to you by Apple Card. Each Apple product last

like the iPhone 16, is thoughtfully designed by skilled designers. The titanium Apple Card is no different. It's laser-etched, has no numbers, and earns you daily cash on everything you buy, including 3% back on everything at Apple. Apply for Apple Card on your iPhone in minutes. Subject to credit approval, Apple Card is issued by Goldman Sachs Bank USA Salt Lake City branch. Terms and more at applecard.com.

We are supported by BetterHelp. You know, there's still a bit of surrounding stigma for men's health. I think it can still be challenging for men to admit they're struggling and seek help. I have a friend who just started therapy, a male friend, and he loves it so much. But yes, I think it's taken a little...

extra long because you're right, there is a stigma, but there really shouldn't be. Yeah, men today face immense pressure to perform, to provide, and keep it all together. So it's no wonder that six million men in the U.S. suffer from depression every year, and it's often undiagnosed. If you're a man and you're feeling the weight of the world, talk to someone, a friend, a

a loved one, a therapist. I'm a man. I've benefited greatly from therapy. And BetterHelp is a great option if you're looking to start therapy. As the largest online therapy provider in the world, BetterHelp can provide access to mental health professionals with a diverse variety of expertise. Talk it out with BetterHelp. Armchairs get 10% off their first month at betterhelp.com slash dax. That's betterhelp, H-E-L-P dot com slash dax.

We are supported by the Farmer's Dog. How do you pick the right food for your dog when there are hundreds of brands out there? Let's start here. Kibble isn't the only option. Yes, it's dog food, but it's also ultra-processed dog food. The Farmer's Dog takes a different approach.

They make real, fresh food for dogs. And their recipes go beyond quality ingredients. It's really about how they're using them. Unlike most pet food, they take real meat and vegetables and gently cook them to retain vital nutrients.

The food is developed by their team of on-staff, board-certified vet nutritionists, and it's portioned out specifically for your dog, making weight management easy. Can I say something really important and gross? Yeah. Sometimes I see it and I'm like, I could eat it. Yeah, yeah. I think that's the sign of a good dog food that you consider eating it yourself. Yeah. Which we're not advising you to do, but we do get that impulse.

Plus, the Farmer's Dog provides 24-7 customer support from real people who really love dogs. You can get 50% off your first box of fresh, healthy food at thefarmersdog.com slash dax. Plus, you get free shipping. Just go to thefarmersdog.com slash dax. This offer is for new customers only.

We are supported by Audible. From Scott Z. Burns, the writer of Contagion, with special guest appearances from directors Steven Soderbergh, Lawrence Fishburne, and Jennifer L., don't miss What Could Go Wrong? A deeply thoughtful, occasionally frightening, and often hilarious Audible original podcast that delves head and heart first into today's burning question.

Can humankind and AI actually work hand in hand? Follow Scott and an ever-expanding cast of AI-generated partners, including Lexter, an extraordinarily gifted, sharp-tongued AI, as they co-write and pitch Hollywood execs the Contagion sequel. Listen to What Could Go Wrong now on Audible. Go to audible.com slash whatcouldgorong. ♪

You end up in 2003 as the pastry chef at Trio? Correct, yes. Again, I'm stupid. I know nothing about this. But I would imagine a pastry chef is solely going to be a pastry... I just think of someone as cooking dessert. That feels like a specialty unto itself that that would be the end goal. For some people, right? For most people in the pastry world, it is a completely different discipline. And that is exactly what they do. They are set on pastry. And this is what I do. I don't really...

Screw around with the savory world. Like I want pastry, sweet world's my thing. I need shit to rise perfectly. That's all I want to think about. Restaurant trio back in 2003, it was a different mindset. Like sweet and savory could intermix. So I never really looked at myself as a pastry chef. I spent a lot of time in the pastry department in every job that I was at because I felt like it was important to be well-rounded. And when the opportunity came,

When Grant had said, hey, you want to take over the pastry position, I jumped at it because I felt like I had base knowledge of it. And it was a way for me to express some creativity. Because the pastry chef I'm imagining is a little more empowered to create. 100%. They're basically the chef of the whole sweet side. The head chef's going to leave them to that kind. Yeah. But I felt so obligated as a younger cook to understand that side of it because the language barrier...

talking to a pastry chef and someone who doesn't understand the pastry world can get blurred really quickly. But if you can have that conversation about pastries as a savory cook, how much greater could you be? You can now...

conceptualized together. Yeah, it's like at other businesses when you should have worked every single piece of it, even when you're at the top, so you can then speak the language. So you understand it, yeah. You understand where everybody's at. And so you're two years there, and then in 2005, you go to Alinea. Alinea. Alinea. And Rob, that's where you ate. Yep, a couple times. How long had Alinea been a prominent restaurant in Chicago at that time? So we actually opened Alinea. So Grant...

who is the chef at Trio, where I was the pastry chef. We closed Trio with the idea that Grant is now going to open Alinea. And he asked me to be one of the chefs that would help him open it. So then we spent the next year and a half in an office building

creating what would be Alinea. We were working in one of the investors' home to create dishes. For a year and a half. These are not normal dishes. You should watch The Chef's Table. It's incredible. I watched several different videos of what happens at your restaurant ever. It's mind-boggling.

You take this amachi, you cut it up, then you freeze it in little blocks. Then you put it on a meat slicer to make it crazy thin. And then you let that curl up and you put that in liquid.

Liquid nitrogen. Liquid nitrogen. And now it's this little curly tail. And then it's going to basically thaw at the perfect time that it's on the plate. Yes, it's science and art. Yeah, it's a little bit of everything. I only remember this from interviewing Jose, but a lot of that was pioneered in Spain there. Well, the liquid nitrogen aspect was certainly pioneered there. The science side of cooking was really implemented there in El Bulli.

in Spain there. And a lot of the great restaurants in Spain now still practice that modern gastronomy. So how are you guys becoming adept and educated on it? Back in the day, it was just about the internet. Everybody was on the race to post new and creative and interesting things to be the first one to kind of say we did it. That was a huge race back then. That was early 2000s. And you know, at that time, Spain was so far ahead. Everybody's eye

eyes were on what they were doing over there and just trying to not really compete but stay up to speed with everything not be embarrassed by what they're doing basically because they were so far ahead and they are always forward thinking even in their architecture they're so far ahead i'm imagining there was a huge reward for you with alinea just having been a part of creating the whole thing did you have a sense of pride and ownership over all that 100 they're celebrating their 20 years right now grants traveling a couple cities to celebrate the 20 years i think it's

It's incredible because restaurants of that nature, they don't stick around that long. Most restaurants don't stick around 20 years. Certainly one that's super progressive and forward thinking like that. After Alinea, you go four years later to Avenues in the Peninsula Hotel and there you're a head chef. So this is your first time on your own. Yeah. And was it hard to leave Alinea? Did you feel the loyalty you felt towards Jan? Was it hard for you to break out and finally do your own thing and not

be with anyone? - Well, funny story is if we back up to me leaving Charlie Trotters, I interviewed with Grant at Trio and Grant didn't wanna hire me 'cause he's like, "You need to do your own damn thing. I'm getting ready to do my own thing."

He's like, you need to go find your own kitchen and kind of like have your own voice. I didn't feel like I was ready for it. So I convinced him somehow to hire me. And that's where we made that connection. We started working together. So when it was my time to leave Alinea, for me, it was, you know, you're in the shadows, you're doing other people's food, which is great because it's still a huge learning thing. But at some point, if you know you have that entrepreneurial spirit and you know you want to do your own thing, you have a voice, you can't stand in those shadows forever.

So I left and spent some time just figuring out what I wanted to do. And then Avenues came available for me to, I don't want to say audition, but I cooked for certain people in the hotel. And it was a restaurant that was already very successful with the chef that was there. And they needed to carry on what was going on in that restaurant space. So they allowed...

a chef to come in there and have really their own voice. The restaurant didn't have an identity. So, you know, they would just hire the right chef to run it for as long as they would want to run it. It just needed to be great food. It didn't need to have a personality. Right. It wasn't like, oh, it needs to be a steakhouse. It needs to be an Italian place. They're like, it's a chef-driven restaurant. What did you make for your audition? Do you remember? I don't remember. Oh.

That's a great question. Yeah, dying to know. Chocolate no-bakes for everyone. But I think mostly with my resume and my time at Alinea and just who I was in the city, I had already started to develop a name a little bit and it was an easy sell for the hotel. And so the year after you took that job,

you earned two Michelin stars. Correct. All right, so help me understand. I'll see like Michelin star restaurant and then I notice you got like three stars. How does this Michelin star thing work? Yeah. I didn't realize there's multiple. I just thought either you get one or you don't. It's an earned...

every single year. So it is not yours to keep and it's theirs to take away whenever they decide you're not holding the standard properly. It is not a permanent thing. Oh, I didn't know that either. So you could be a one Michelin star restaurant for a couple years and then be a zero Michelin star? Absolutely. Lose it. Oh, God.

Are you allowed to say previous Mr. Lister? I know. I would still want that. There is plenty of restaurants out there that have lost it. And how's it earned? They just drop in at some point and they eat there? So, yeah, they shop you throughout the year, unannounced. They could be buried in a six-top. They could be buried in a large party. They could be a single diner, two-top. I want to be on so bad. They could be really anywhere. Male, female. I think you and I would be bad. Old, young. We like things so much. I don't think we'd be discerning enough. Oh.

I know personally we would have given out like 50 of them by now. Like we had a sticky toffee pudding at a pretty medium level hotel. And we were like, this is the best thing ever. We got to plan a trip back there just to get that sticky. It's true. We would have given them two or three for that. I'd give eight. Eight Michelin stars for that. I could give them eight. How does it work? What's the max you can get? Three is the highest. And that's so rare yet? Worldwide, there's less than 150. So you can imagine...

At the time when we received the third Michelin star, we were one of 12 in the country. Wow, that's amazing. What's the celebration like when that's announced? Because it's got to be so good for your business. It does make the restaurant busier, certainly. It changes clientele immediately from people, not just locally, but now they're flying in from all over the place just to eat at your restaurant. Because there's diehard Michelin fans that just travel the world to eat at restaurants. That's all they do.

I know we were maybe going to do a podcast. We lightly suggested it. We suggested we would go to all the Michelin star restaurants and record while we ate it. But misophonia, people don't like the sounds of eating while people talk. But we just kind of casually mentioned it. And then we get a bunch of emails, Rob. Yeah, we got like four or five. I think maybe we should pick that up. We should have does that all. Yeah.

Okay, so why do you only stay there for a few years before opening Grace? As a young cook, I didn't get in the business to earn accolades. It was not even a thought to be a chef and to win awards. For me, it was about...

feeding people making them happy creating memories and this was a way for me to make a living and i get to be creative and do what i love to do so that's the reason why i started cooking michelin was not in the u.s until recently we're less than 20 years since michelin's been in the u.s it's always been in europe and they're still expanding from different countries still you know i think they saw a huge potential in north america started in new york then the california vegas

And then Chicago, I think was the fourth city. So as young cooks, as young chefs, you always look at three Michelin stars as like the pinnacle of some chef's career.

That's the highest accolade you can get. Yeah, where do you go from there? Where do you go from there? When we received two stars, blown away. Like, what could we do? Immediately start thinking like, with what I'm surrounded with and the tools that I have and the people that I have and everything here, I have control over it, but I don't have control over it. It's not mine. It's in a hotel and there's guidelines and there's certain things that you got to play by, the certain rules. What if I didn't have any of that? What does that look like?

Now, all of a sudden, it's like I could possibly obtain that third star on my own because I have full control over everything at that point. Yeah. So that's where the mind went. That's where I started searching for investors and starting to build what I thought would be my restaurant. Okay. So now here's where I get really confused because you start, Grace, in 2012. 2013, the Rob reports named you the best restaurant in the world.

You earned three Michelin stars four years in a row. Oh, my God. What? And then closed in 2017. I'm like, I'm reading this and I'm like, wait, why did you close? You can only go down from there. Imagine anything in the world. What we've now discovered is it's perfect. Let's shut it down. Like, what is that? That is called a shitty business deal. Oh.

Oh, okay. That's where it came from. You were in an arrangement that didn't work for you. Yeah. When you're young and hungry and you want your own thing, you just go. And we did. And we signed an agreement that wasn't looked over through a professional lawyer to say, don't sign that. Are you fucking crazy? But we signed it because we were hungry and we...

knew this guy was going to give us money to build this restaurant. And this guy was so bullheaded that in 2016, if you had gone to him and said, look, you're going to have either nothing or you're going to give me my fair share. He said, great, I'll take nothing. If you would have been part of that story or behind the scenes, that's exactly what I said. What happened was, so we had gone into a place where we knew we were going to leave, but we were trying to buy the restaurant from him. All of a sudden we find out we're not really owners. We're just employees of...

this guy's restaurant. He is not a restaurateur. He's never been. He's a guy who does real estate on the super, super low end, bottom feeder. Slumlord-y type stuff. Slumlord to the max, right? So we start to see all these red flags as we're building it. We should have paid attention to the red flags. We just said, ah, that'll never be us. And we just move forward. But if I can defend you for one second.

You have a crazy skill. You're a crazy artist. Right. You cannot be expected to also be the savviest. A businessman. To expect that out of one person is kind of ludicrous. I know. But the idea is you're supposed to surround yourself with great people, right? It takes time to build a route up. We build the restaurant and we get to a place where it's paid back.

And then some, and then some, and then some. We're at a place where we're supposed to be making now money from this restaurant. We had a ton of sweat equity into it. Fucking three stars four years in a row. Yeah, exactly. We earned everything we set out to do. The restaurant was busier than could ever possibly think of. I mean, we had, you know, wait lists for months and months at a time. It was everything that we wanted it to be. So...

We get to a place where it's like, look, this is not working out. If I leave, the restaurant closes. This guy was like, no. Okay, then walk. So I walked. But when I walked, I didn't announce it to the public because we were also still negotiating trying to buy this restaurant from him, which he was never going to sell to us. He was just putting a carrot in.

and a carrot, and a carrot to buy more time, make more money. So he was never going to sell it. And the buyback number was so atrocious. You would just fall off your seat. No, we're not buying it for $10 million. It took us a million and a half to build it. What are you talking about? I left and I left for like four months, but I was still managing everything from the outside. I wasn't physically there, but I was having Zoom with my chef de cuisine.

who was creating dishes from me at home and going, no, put this here, change that, make sure the puree is this and then taste it. How does it taste? And we were just doing things like that. It was so bizarre. And this was all behind this guy's back because I wanted the restaurant to succeed. Because I had your name. It's your child. I had everything. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And restaurants of that caliber just don't close for no reason. That was the pinnacle. And it was running like a damn Olympian. It was an amazing thing. It was just carrot after carrot after carrot.

And I'm like, all right, we're done. So my business partner and I, we were in California here riding motorcycles with Keanu Reeves and a few other buddies. The Archer folks. Through Joshua Tree and yeah, with Arch Motorcycles. It was an amazing time. And we both looked at each other and said, this is the day. We already drafted the story with New York Times. So Monday morning, New York Times drop. Grace announces chef leaving. The restaurant never reopens. Wow.

But this was a conversation I had with this guy. I said, you don't understand. The moment I announced it to the public, it's done. They're not coming here because you. Yeah, exactly. They're coming here because of my name and what I do. And I'm like the fucking goose laying the golden egg. Yes. And you're just willing to throw it all away. So short-sighted. He was just ready to burn it down. So he did. Yeah, he thought he was being a shrewd businessman. And he has 100% of nothing. Pride, exactly. Ego. I'm delighted there was a good explanation. Yeah, that makes sense.

I would have really been scratching my head. Also, I'm sad, though, because I want to go there. Go to Ever. I will. Yeah, we have a better restaurant now called Ever. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Had any other restaurant gotten three stars four years in a row? There's restaurants that have been three stars for 30, 40 years. A lot of great French restaurants. But here in the U.S.? In the U.S., no, but the ones that had three stars were consecutive.

Alinea's three stars since day one. They're 20 years now. French Laundry? Maybe they're 15 years deep, however long Michelin has been in the U.S. French Laundry, they've all held those accolades since they achieved them. Boy, I bet it's a blessing and a curse. So much stress to maintain, to know you have to keep getting it. That's a lot. I think you get to a point where it's like,

What did we do to obtain the three stars? What are we doing every day? The mentality has to switch to just be better every day on every little thing. Small details is what pushes the whole operation forward. And that's always been kind of my mentality anyways. It's like, we don't have to be great at everything, but we have to be great at something every single day, even a little bit. And that little bit will push us in that direction. And if we got the three stars doing what we were doing, we don't need to change much. Just continue doing great things. In ways it's harder to,

to maintain something that's great than it is to make something that's great. Yeah. The fire burns out. There's more distraction at the top, right? There's a lot greater opportunities coming your way. There's more restaurant deals. Maybe there's TV, maybe there's books, maybe there's other things that pull you out of the kitchen. And that's something I'm experiencing. Well, you know, the last five years is I don't get to spend as much time in the kitchen as I really, really want to. That's my heart and soul is being in the kitchen. But

I have all these other things that also need me to help grow the business and to expand and create other opportunities for my younger cooks that work for me. That's my responsibility now. This is a topic I can never get tired of. And I think it's very rare that people in life accomplish the exact thing they were set out to. And I just think the mindset of trying to get something versus trying not to lose something is,

Trying not to lose something is just a very tricky and dangerous headspace mentally. And everyone roots for an underdog, but nobody roots for a top dog. So you go from being like, oh, this guy is so great. Have you ever heard of him? To like, oh, well, let's see how good it is. It starts shifting and that

It's tough. Yeah, it's much more fun to say like, do you hear about this great new chef at X, Y, or Z versus he's been doing this for 15 years. I hope it's still as good as it was. It's like a whole different animal. It's tough. The expectations are constant, at least in our business, at our level. Yeah, I was like, I'm watching you cook in some of these videos.

For so many reasons, I'm like, oh, yeah, I could never do any of this. Like, first of all, you're so meticulous. Yeah. And I am not meticulous. Well, you are with like mechanics. Kenny, who, you know, when we work on stuff together, he's furious. My shit runs, but I didn't label all the hoses the way he did. You know, like I want to be on the road, whereas he's like very anal meticulous. You know, some people are built that way and some aren't. My dad was that way on all of the.

parts in the garage. He knew if we screwed with one tool in the toolbox. Well, he'd position his drumstick, make sure. Exactly. Exactly right. Yeah. Like, don't even look at it. It's like you can clean it, but

He's the guy that says, go clean my motorcycle, but don't fucking touch it. Thank you. But yeah, you're just very meticulous and it's very tedious. Oh, yeah. The kind of food you're making. It is. And does that bleed over into your whole life? Is your wife like, oh, my God, it doesn't matter how the bed's fucking made. Just throw the sheet up. No, I mean, my kitchen at home is pretty meticulous. You're not that way across the whole spectrum. No, I wish I was.

It does require a level of perfectionism at that level of, I can't even call it cooking. That level of being a chef is so detailed. Like you said, the shaving of the thing. The main instrument I'm seeing is tweezers more than knives. It's crazy. It's so awesome. A lot of it is the team too. I'll set a standard obviously with,

how I do things, but their job is to really exceed those standards. So the camaraderie between all of them and the fun playfulness of trying to be better against each other is what also takes it to the next level, which makes my

game a little bit better every day too okay so you win the James Beard in 2016 and then you start ever in 2020 and you've won two Michelin stars 2021 2022 2023 one thing I really liked about your kitchen and knowing your backstory I'm not surprised but your kitchen's dead quiet yeah oh that's like a big rule for you for me it is yeah I love silence I love quietness

Is that novel to have it that quiet? Normally, like you said earlier, it's like screaming and yelling and fire and people yawning at each other and over-talking each other. For me, it needs to be that way because it demands a certain amount of

attention to detail. Not a certain amount, a tremendous amount. So if I can take away all the distractions, such as the noise, the white noise particularly. Do you guys blend in a like room off the kitchen? Yeah, blending stops. So like once the front doors open, there's no more blender use. Actually, there's no prepping at all once the front doors open up. But the sound for me is nonverbal communication, especially during service time. Everybody knows what they're supposed to do. They know the next step. They can look at somebody and know exactly what's going to

happen next how are the employees flirting and stuff they're

How are you going to fuck? You can't talk. You can't flirt with each other. Sometimes that's fun. Okay. I see where you're going. You know, it's not so overt. Yeah. You really got to have a good nonverbal game, I guess. Yeah, maybe so. We just had a sex expert on teach us about a look. Yeah, the triangle look or something. Like a triangle or something. She hit Monica with it and she was powerful. It was intense. Yeah, it was intense. Oh, really? Yeah. I'm going to try that on my wife.

Is there a dish that you're the most proud of? It could even be at home. I've been a guy who's always said, I don't want to be known for something. I don't want to be known for a particular dish. I don't want to be the guy that's serving the same dish 20 years from now. Oh, interesting. I force myself not to repeat dishes because I think that's the easy way of cooking is just fall back on something, you know, is a really solid dish.

And then you start to execute it every day and fine tune it, fine tune it, fine tune it. And there's something great about that too. There's a lot of chefs out there that do that. And there's something magical about that as well. It's just really trying to perfect that dish. But I think it takes away the creative side and you hit that comfort mode, complacency mode. That's why I fear a lot of times with a tasting style menu with our cooks,

it becomes a very mundane moment where it's like, all right, well, tonight, Dex, you're going to do 60 hamachi dishes. And then tomorrow, you're going to do 60 more. And then fast forward three months, you're still doing 60 a night. You hit a mode where it's like, you're just going through the motions. The subconscious will take over at some point. Yeah, and it's not exciting for them anymore. But...

You really have to think about it. Like, that's the first time the guest is going to see that dish. Yeah, exactly. So it needs to be the same way tonight as it was four months ago. Well, that's the part I'd imagine if I were a regular customer of yours, I'd be pissed at you. Like, if Emily changes their cheeseburger, fuck you. Yeah, we're upset. Yeah, there's something about that, too. Do you have to hear the complaints of people? Like, you take away their favorite. Yeah, so we have a crab dish, Alaskan king crab dish tonight.

It's a very beautiful dish. It was kind of in the moment for a Valentine's Day dinner at Avenues. So we're dating back 15 plus years. And then I took that dish and just started refining it into a place where it is today. But it is a crab dish. It's Alaskan king crab that has different elements of citrus, cucumber. But the way it sits is in a stemless martini glass without the stem. So it's a V-tapered glass. And...

We build everything inside along the side so you can see through it. And we create this sugar twill on top of it. So it's a clear glass pane that sits on top. So it separates everything almost kind of like a lid to it. And then we're able to build very gently on top of that lid. So from the side view, it looks like all these elements on top are floating. And it's become one of these dishes that people just like, is the crab dish on the menu? Right. No. No.

no, because we can't get good crab right now. So we take it off. But you might put it back on. Yeah, every once in a while, we'll make our debut again. Yeah. You will call us before then. Yeah, for sure. It's a very fun, interactive dish and people love it. It's simple, it's clean, it's sweet, savory, salty. He's got a little bit of spice from togarashi. Oh, kind of hits everything on the palate. Yeah, you said your kink is having customers who come in who say, I don't like peas or I don't like this. And it's like, okay, well, let me see if you're going to like

Yeah, because you don't have a choice. You're forced to eat what we serve. And sorry, you don't like peas, but ironically, you love peas. Turns out you do like peas. I love that experience. I've only been to a few of these restaurants, French Laundry being the most famous of those. And their most famous dish is diamonds and pearls or something. Yeah, oysters and pearls. Oysters and pearls. I'm like, I hate all those things. I hate everything that's on that. Yeah.

And it came and I was immediately furious that was the only one I was going to get to have. Oh, really? That's incredible. I hate these things. And I would eat six of those. I went to San Sebastian with some friends a couple years ago. And my friend's a big food guy. So we went to all these Michelin restaurants there because they have so many. And by the end of that trip, I was like, I can't eat food again.

Like I'm done eating food for two or three months. It was so intense and rich because they're experiences. You're not there to just eat food. You're there to take in the environment and putting on a show. How many days could you go to Disneyland in a row? Or how many days could you see Taylor Swift in a row? Yes, or every amusement park. But it was such a cool experience. Yeah, San Sebastian's got the highest population of Michelin star restaurants. We've been there many times in...

Phenomenal restaurants there. Do you find that you generally get on with other chefs? Yeah, our level, absolutely. I just had a great meal last night at Vespertine here in Culver City. Jordan used to be a chef with us at Alinea. So it's so nice to see these young guys that work beside or underneath you

go on to do amazing things. His restaurant, Vespertine, he also has Destroyer, which is right across the street. Great experience. It's incredibly forward-thinking food and looks at food and art a different way. How do you think your sous chefs and the people under you, how would they describe you? Intense, very demanding, fair, psychotic a little bit. That's fair. I think it's fair. I think you have to be a little crazy to want it.

something great. And it only comes from a place that I want greatness for them too. I want them to leave any of my establishments that they're working for me and know that they got the best knowledge from me or from anybody else that was working there. I want them to go on and do great things. That's all I want. That's where I'm at in my career is, you know, it's not so much about me anymore. It's about...

creating either restaurants with the guys that work for me or creating opportunities for them. Because I think that's more satisfying for me right now. I cannot help but see the parallel between fine dining and art to some degree. Sure. A good deal of art's driven by the story of the artist. It's definitely part of the appeal. Are you sometimes seeing a very popular chef and then you eat at the restaurant and you're like, yeah, this is bullshit. He's just an interesting guy.

dude or she's an interesting yeah does that exist in this new world of tons of famous chefs absolutely there's plenty of chefs out there that are more interesting than the food that they're serving or the restaurants that they operate yeah how does the bear the show tie into all this

A lot of people will say that the bear was storied after my life. Inspired by? It is not. I'm there to say it for the 12,000th time. At least they never said that to me, so I can't own it. I think there's a lot of similarities. The irony that the guy's name is Bear and he's a chef. Maybe that's how a lot of people make that connection with my father and me. And so the storyline, the Chicago, yeah. There's a lot of pieces if you really wanted to

go down that road of connecting the dots sure there's some dots that you can connect were you consulted when they were formulating the show i consulted with them a lot i did a lot of their food for some of the seasons the fork season shot in the restaurant they spent a couple weeks with us in the restaurant both restaurants has been an incredible experience i mean everybody working there has been top-notch from the actors all the way to

and people setting up. They're all incredible people. In the very beginning, I spent a lot of time just teaching people how to cannell ice cream. Oh, I've tried to do it. I can't do it. And just, there's a certain touch to certain things that if it's not done right, it comes off like bullshit. Yeah, exactly. Him excluded, what's the best cooking by an actor you've seen? There's also not that many.

There's a good amount. Bradley Cooper in that movie. Oh, yeah, that's actually a good one. I love that movie. Favreau and Shatt. Oh, yeah, but he cooks. He's like really into cooking. Well, let's hear it from the pro. Yeah, I think Bradley Cooper was a great one. Was it Burn, right? Yeah, Burn, yeah. I love that movie. Well, and Kitchen Confidential. Did you read that book? I did. Yeah, I did too. I loved it, but I'm an addict.

So I like any addict. But he was the first guy who didn't sugarcoat anything. And I love that. He was very blunt. And that time for me was like, yeah, that is exactly what is happening in our world right now. That's what I've been surrounded by. The drugs and the alcohol and the promiscuous shit that goes on behind the scenes when all the lights are off. Yeah, very appealing. Your favorite. My favorite. Yeah, yeah. I guess my last question is what motivated you to write the book?

I love it. By the way, it's very kitchen confidential. Like it reads as like you're going to read a book about the Hells Angels. Like it's not a lofty French cooking. It's my kind of book immediately. What prompted you to write it? 2016, we released a documentary called For Grace. It was a documentary about building the restaurant and building grace for grace. And that's kind of where I let my guard down for the first time in my world with my parents. Not a lot of people, even close people around me didn't really know the story of

My parents, I was super embarrassed by it. I was embarrassed that

My father did that to the family. And I think at that time, I was also looking at it like he was a coward. I didn't really process a lot of it at that point. They caught me in a very vulnerable time filming that documentary. They spent hours and hours with me every single day for months on end. And it was at the end of a workday. We got back to the house and the cameras were still going. And we just started talking about my parents somehow got on the subject. I

I told them the whole story of what happened. And they got all that on camera. Yeah. And then they left. And then I realized the next day they had drove to Ohio to get actual footage from the TV studio. Because they're like, we have a story now. Yeah. So that was released in 2016 on Netflix. Spent a few years on there. Did you feel a...

lightning of your spirit, having that finally out and realizing people didn't look at you as a piece of shit, but rather a strong survivor. Did any of that happen? You know, it reached people that I never thought it would reach before. We saw an influx in the restaurant of just teachers coming through because of Ruth Snyder and how much she was a huge part of my life and how she helped me navigate through a lot of things. And teacher side of it was just

huge. And any teacher would come to the restaurant, we'd give a free meal to and just take care of them because it was so special. It was pretty amazing to watch that moment. But that documentary, it just skimmed the surface of who I was and where I really come from. I decided one day that I just wanted to let it all out. I needed to just get it the hell off my chest, everything that I could remember and get it on paper. And, you know, I asked my good friend Jeremy if he would

be interested in writing the book for me because he had already written a few other books that were published and i know he's an incredible writer and he said absolutely and i said okay i got one thing for you and he's like i got one thing for you and i said okay what

And he says, it has to be brutally honest. I'm like, dude, that's exactly what I said. That's exactly what I want. I said, it has to be brutally honest. It can't be sugarcoated. I don't want a fluff piece. I need it to be real. I need a platform that I can emotionally let out my stories so I can be done with it. So it was very, very, very therapeutic for me to get these demons off my chest and onto the paper. Did you feel reluctant to have children? No.

knowing sometimes these things are past. You said like your dad had a bad dad and I feel like that would scare me. You're right. It does. It did. I was worried about having that continuization of that type of behavior. I was scared to have kids in the beginning, but I couldn't even imagine doing what was done to me to anyone around me, any person, especially my two daughters or my two stepchildren. I couldn't even imagine like

Laying a finger. I mean, I get emotional yelling at them when I have to yell at them. And that's maybe once a year. Yeah. I'm like the biggest sissy. Well, that's kind of nice then. Then you broke that cycle. Yeah. It's very important that I was able to do that. Well, the book is aptly named Fireproof.

Memoir of a chef. I think it's great, man. You guys knocked it out of the park. It's so interesting. Thank you. It's a page turner. Curtis, it's been a delight. I really hope I get to eat. I'm dying to. We're going to exploit this relationship if we're in Chicago next time. Yeah, well, I'd love to have you guys come to the restaurant when you get there next. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Love to have you. Wonderful. Oh, yeah. After watching those videos, I'm like, oh, I got to try all this. I know, the crab. Smoke pouring out of things and steam. I know.

Yeah. Yeah, it'll be fun. It's incredible. Well, congrats on a great book. Thank you. And the many awards, and I'm glad that you found your way through it all in such an amazing way. It's been great. All right, take care. Stay tuned for more Armchair Expert, if you dare.

We are supported by Square. Your favorite neighborhood spots run on Square. We looked into the local businesses in our area that use Square, and it turns out some of our favorite places are Square users. The Wiltern, La Cologne Coffee in Frogtown. Yeah, that's a yummy spot.

I'll be on my bike ride and I'll slide in there and they're using Square. Square is more than just the point of sale for local businesses like these. They know that local business can be big business, but with growth comes more complexity. And as things get more complex, Square meets you at every opportunity, whether it's expanding to new locations, building a loyal following or covering cash flow gaps.

What started as a little white card reader is now powering things behind the scenes. Square knocks out today's to-dos and unlocks tomorrow's what-ifs. Go to square.com slash go slash DAX to learn more. That's S-Q-U-A-R-E dot com slash G-O slash DAX. Square. Meet you there.

We are supported by Quince. You know when you look back at photos of yourself in your all-black punk stage in high school or wearing head-to-toe 90s neon and you wonder, what was I thinking? Sometimes trends just don't stand the test of time. If you want an outfit that you're going to feel great about both

now and later, check out the wardrobe staples from Quince. They're classic and elevated, so you're going to love the way you look now and years from now. And they're made with high quality materials, so they'll hold up for years to come too. I love Quince. I love their cashmere so much. Yeah. If you want to revamp your wardrobe, which I suggest per season, add some pieces in,

that are fun kind of just for the season. There's some really good summer pieces, some great button downs that you can also wear by the pool. They have European linen beach shorts, you know, organic silk polos.

Stick to staples that last with elevated essentials from Quince. Go to quince.com slash DAX for free shipping on your order and 365-day returns. That's Q-U-I-N-C-E dot com slash DAX to get free shipping and 365-day returns. quince.com slash DAX

We are supported by Skims. Yes, let's talk about Skims. I have been raving about their ultimate bra collection. They sent me some new items, which was very nice of them. I pretty much live in this bra. It's so comfortable, but it's also cute. You never know when your bra is going to need to be showing. Yeah, you got to be prepared for the best case scenario. And actually, I really do believe this, that

You kind of have to work from the outside in confidence wise. And so when you get dressed in the morning, you want to put on a cute pair of underwear and bra. And the ultimate bra is the move. It is. Skims does it again. Check it out for yourself. Shop Skims Ultimate Bra Collection and more at Skims.com. After you place your order, be sure to let them know we sent you. Select podcasts in the survey and select our show in the drop down menu that follows.

Hi there, this is Hermium Permium. If you like that, you're going to love the fact check with Miss Monica. You have, um, let me turn. Powder? Yeah, powder. Rub it in a little bit right here. Just rub it in. You know, when I hit my face with the brush, it exploded. I had put too much on. You can keep it. That'll happen. We've heard these stories of David Crusoe. I've heard these incredible stories for people, but people have worked on set with him.

Do you know what I'm talking about? Not really. He was on one of these CSIs or one of these procedurals, you know, and he famously wore sunglasses. Yes. I mean, I know of him. I know the lore. You know the lore and like we all know the fun stuff. But I definitely worry with some reputable people that have either been actors who come from the show or are also crew members. And the one I found to be, I just hope it's true, which is so incredible, is that the

Well, I heard he would rewrite his side of the scene, but not the other side. Oh, yeah. Yeah. So like the actor, the day player, rarely the stuff didn't make sense anymore. That's tough. And then he would self edit. And I guess he had the glasses on and he would like, let's say his line was like, no, the no, the results just came back in and they're negative.

He would not like one part of it. And then he'd go, results in negative. And he'd go, boom. And he'd look down one of the cameras and go, boom. Oh. Telling them that's the take. Oh. So he was kind of self-directing and editing. And he would just hit chunks. Oh. This is what I heard. Look, he knew his biz. He knew his show. I'm so sad I didn't ever get to just be on set and watch it all.

Yeah, that sounds fun. You can't argue with the results. It was a huge hit and everyone loved it. It's too bad he missed meta AI glasses because he could have been like, he could have done a lot. Directing the whole show, maybe. Yeah, and he could just touch one side and that would mean something and then the other side would mean something. Yeah, he could probably edit real time. He'd just be cutting right now. Yeah, I would. I'd just be holding it and like, just like, you didn't even notice, right?

I just did it again. No, I would know. You must admit I know exactly when you're editing in your head because I catch you every time. You catch me every other time. Okay. All right.

Well, because I'm also paying attention to the guests pretty hard. But if I were to only watch you, I would know exactly when you're editing. In this case, if it's just us two, we'll practice, okay? So throughout this- Well, I watch this great doc about the turning point of the, it's happening. No, it's not. Yes, yes, yes. No, it's not. I knew you were trying to trick me and so I didn't do it. I didn't edit it. You used your ear as the clicker to edit. Huh.

You had a story you were going to tell me that you didn't tell me on the last fact check. Yes. This is a gross fact check, okay? Because we have two gross things to talk about. You sent me an article that Topo Chico said.

A brand we love. Oh, I sent that to you. Yeah, you did. Okay, great. Because today I was like, I got to bring that up to you. Yeah. Trusted brand. We love Topo Chico. Yeah, we love. Yeah. Still do. I don't care what they say. Same. I do too. But there, I guess, was a recall. And we've been drinking it. And I had a tummy bug. Oh, you went there. Yeah. Of course I did. Like, oh, I probably, and guess who else I'm worried had some. Who?

I should ask him if he's had an ass. We maybe gave him a Tommy Bob.

It's kind of cute. It's kind of cool. By the way, that would be a plant for you and your sickness where you got, you made him sick. Oh my God. Yeah. This is where we find out your moon child's any, you're poisoning us. I haven't done it. I haven't crossed the line. But that was a, you would call that a happy accident. Yeah. If he had Hannes. Like he can't really make it home. So I have to help him home. Yeah. And. How would you help him home? Well, I get him in my car.

Okay, he can't drive. With the baggy, with the bag. His Hannes is so bad he can't drive. Yeah. Ideally, it's coming out both ends. Yeah. Anyway, I still have Hannes, so. You still have it? Yeah, it was gone for a day, but it's back. It's interesting. I saw that recall. I sent it to you, and I have since drank Topo Chico.

Rob, did we get ours from Costco? Because I want to say Costco was in that article. No, Lazy Acres. I've been drinking like two or three a day the last two months. In no harness? No, I've been fine. Okay, we should just be checking in with Rob, I guess. No, because it could be like some are rancid. I doubt every single one is. We're drinking from the same package. Yeah, but it could be each bottle. I'm still going to drink it. Isn't that wild? Wow. I am too. Yeah.

I guess you guys want me to take you home. That's what it seems like. Drive us home. Get you home. I can't imagine turning over the wheel. What? That's more crazy to me than... Although we've driven in the car where you drive and I like it. You've let me drive you. Yeah, yeah, I like it. But I like it because I decide I like it. You know what I'm saying? It's unnatural for me. Mm-hmm.

And I decide to enjoy the notion that we might get in an accident. No. Well, that's what I do. I just go, well, that'll be fun. We'll survive in these accidents around. Do you think I'm a bad driver? No, not at all. Okay. I'm just such a control freak. I hate not having control of the car. Yeah. I mean, look, let's just say this. I think my story is I avoid several accidents a month that I tell myself your average person wouldn't have.

Found their way out of that. Yeah. So I mean, they don't even have to be a bad driver. I just go like, will they be able to get out of this weird situation where there's an oncoming car? But you have to quickly go, it's okay to drive on the grass at this point because that's less bad than a head-on.

It's so funny because the reason you are avoiding accidents is because of the way you drive. That's part of it. You drive wildly. So then there's almost accidents and then you get out of it. Be careful what you're saying because I got a really cryptic email. I shouldn't even say this, but it's been in my head since he sent it.

What happened? Someone on our business manager team sent a random email to me and saying like, hey, we're renewing all your insurance on your cars. They will go through your social media. And I'm like, oh, he's telling me. I have like one video of Aaron and I not even going that fast. We're on Los Feliz Boulevard. We go first through third gear in the Z-Wagon.

Are they going to go through the podcast? Can they do that? I don't know. But I was like, oh, my God, wait, I've only like I've had one accident in 30 years of living in L.A. I feel like I'm a pretty good bet. Yeah. I got zero tickets for the last. I have no speeding. Like my record is nice. And he sent me this and I was like, well, he's telling me the truth. Yeah, no, it's good. He's telling you. But it really made me mad at him. I felt like I was in trouble.

He's telling you so you can clean up some stuff on there. I know, but I don't know why. It's funny. I keep thinking about reading the email and it makes me angry. And then I'm like, why? What is why am I angry about this? I know why. Because it's like it feels like a teacher called me. What? Like don't have. No, you got caught.

You feel like you got caught and you don't like it. And no one likes getting caught. Yeah, maybe it's like I want to have all things be true. You think I'm, oh, well, I am a very safe driver. Yeah. A very good record. And I want you to ignore my fun I'm having on Top Gear and on my Instagram. But it's not his fault. No, I know. No, he's a blessing. Yeah. But I'm mad at him.

I felt like he was shaming me about my Instagram. Oh, my God. This is wild. None of it makes sense. But I'm just being honest with you that I keep thinking about. And then I go, why are you thinking about this over and over again? Like, what's actually been triggered? And I still haven't figured that out. But something deep has been activated. Well, I do think. I think you feel you got...

You feel caught. You feel judged. And my shame of having had the accident. I think I'm still dealing with the shame of having that accident. That was a long time ago. I know. It was like four years ago. But he brought it up in the email. Oh, he did? That was kind of like, that was three years ago. Okay.

Maybe he's trying to help you get over your identity marker of being a good driver. He's trying to help me have good rates, which is what he's there to do. And I'm very appreciative of it. And I'm mad at him. And I don't know why, because I know he doesn't deserve it. I love him. I love him.

And we even have cars in common. Like when I get a new car, he's the only one there that's excited. He's like, oh, that's a cool year. Oh, man. And then he sent me this email. Shame me. He's going to come off your team now. No, no, no, no. He's looking out for me, but it's funny how much it's bothered me.

You know, like when you read a comment and it sticks around way too long in your head. Yeah, this is wild. It is. Although that's funny because I also have a comment that is in my head that I can't get out. Yeah. That also doesn't make much sense of why it's like bothering me so much. Yeah. I just think people are like, really? Really?

There's certain areas where we're so fragile. We're sensitive. We are. We're really sensitive. And I do think the common thread, maybe in both, is judgment. Like, I feel judged by this comment. Yeah, yeah. And I think you feel judged by yours. Yeah, then I'm like reckless and irresponsible. Even though Jacob is always...

only trying to protect you. I couldn't be clear about that. We're dead clear on his intentions and the goodwill he wishes for me. And he's doing the right thing. Yeah. And still, I didn't, I felt like I got slapped on the wrist. Sometimes it's, we all do make mistakes sometimes.

But you don't think it's a mistake. No, me getting in an accident was a mistake. Okay, no, an accident, that's not, he's telling you, don't talk about doing illegal stuff. That's what he's saying. And literally, we just did it on the fact check, like tomorrow's fact check, you and Aaron talk about doing some illegal stuff. Well, we wanted to. No, but then you raced that guy. Oh, that was all in the speed limit. Ah!

I was thinking about, Jacob, when that was happening. And I was really mad that that was in my mind. Well, it needs to be in your- I've been having fawning cars since I was 16. That's the name of the game. Why don't you do this then? Just come to terms with the fact that your insurance is going to be astronomical. You're right. That's the solution. And I've been working towards that, but it's hard. Okay. Yeah.

Wow. All right. I want to talk about pinworms. Okay, great. What's your favorite topic? Would you want to nurse a boy back to health who is suffering from pinworms? Okay. I think I'll draw the line there. That's where it ends. People don't know about pinworms. They're tiny bugs in your butthole. They'd be better. They'd be more accurately called shitworms. We were just discussing them in the house.

A couple days ago. They're in your butt. They're in your poop. They come out your butt into your poop. They make it itchy. Yeah, they make your butt itch a lot and then you have to take the medicine. And when you do it, there are insects in the doodoo. I find it so horrific.

And when the kids were little, your kids, they got it a couple times. So we all had to take the medicine. The preschool. Yeah. I think it's a preschool thing. It's like every few months there's a pinworm outbreak. All these kids are eating their butts and their fingers. Oh, my God. It's so horrible. But you just drink this like chalky powder basically and it's kind of done.

So we've done that a few times in the past, and I thought those days were over. You haven't heard this? No. They're back in our rotation. Someone in our circle has pinworms. She said I could talk about it. Oh, who? But I feel unethical. Oh. Anna. Oh, okay.

Where has she been? Exactly. Preschool? For me, it would be like the Topo Chico. I know she's infected. I'll still hang with her. Yeah, that's what it is. But also every 10 minutes or so, I think about them.

They don't bother me like they bother you. I know. I wonder. I don't think I've ever had them, even though my family's had them and I've drank that liquid. Yeah. I don't have any memory of a scratchy. Well, Aaron and I were laughing about it because when we were talking about pinworms, we were like, if the symptoms scratchy anus, how on earth would either of us think there's something new going on? And also if that's the outcome, like, yeah, that's standard. You have a scratchy anus. Never. Your anus is never itchy?

I mean, no. What a gift. What does it mean? Mine is like moist. No, I think clean, I would imagine. Oh, you're itching because it's dirty? No, because I'm cleaning like crazy. In fact, Eric and I just had a sidebar about, we don't think people are being honest to have bidet toilets.

Oh, I don't have one. Right. And we're not saying people are not honest about owning one or not owning one, but when they own one and they can spray the water on their butthole, do they not use their finger to clean their butthole? Oh. Which is a polarizing topic. It is. And Eric and I are like, you use your finger to clean your butthole in the shower?

I don't. How are you cleaning your butthole? I'm so nervous about your butthole. If you're not cleaning in a bidet or you're not cleaning in the shower. Of course I'm cleaning it, but I'm not sticking my finger up my butt. No one's asking you to put your finger in your butt. What are you asking? You're cleaning your anus. Oh, the outside. Yes, of course. With your fingers. With so...

with soap and fingers, but often I- When people go like, no, I use soap as if that's a great thing. Oh, great. So now your soap has your asshole on it and then you're rubbing your soap on your face. Soap is self-cleaning and you don't use your butt soap for your face. It's not more sanitary. When people think they're saying that is like a virtue that they use their bar of soap, I'm like, great. Then you have shit on your bar of soap. No, you don't. Ew, why isn't, you have so much shit everywhere. Ew.

The water cleans the shit off for the most part. If you wipe with your fingers, you need friction. Why? Is your butthole like so high up or something? Like, I feel like the water's mostly cleaning it. And then you use the bar. Oh, you think just the water that triggers rolls past your anus is cleaning it? No, you like. You already said it. You use a bar of soap in your fingers. Right. But mainly the bar of soap is the main thing.

Instrument. Instrument. And then once it's clean, then I put it on my face. I use soap on my hands and just do like a little extra. Yeah, your hands on your butthole in the shower. Yes, everyone and everyone should. But I thought you meant up your butt. And the bidet is up your butt, right? No, it's cleaning the outside of your anus. Oh, okay. Unless you're somehow...

dilating your butthole and letting it all spray up there, which would be the dream. That would be the dream. Yeah. And I have some success in that realm. But at any rate, it's really funny. People are like, oh, gross. You use your finger with the bidet and say, I don't get it. You use your finger in the shower and then you wash your hand after. What are we talking about? This is pageantry. I have a question about the bidet. So are you wiping first

With your tissue. You're not? Of course not. Why? Because why would you want to take dry paper and smear in dry poop and just rub it into your skin and then add water? No, you spray the water. The debris is freed. Then you go in with the finger and really clean. Then more rinsing. Then toilet paper for drying. And there's nothing. I'm telling you this. Okay.

There's nothing on the toilet paper. When I wipe my fanny. Yeah, same. No, if you're not using water, are you saying there's not poop on your toilet paper? No, no, sorry. By the time I'm done. With what? Wiping. By the time I'm done wiping, there's no poop. Oh my God. Of course. But with the bidet, if you do the rinse first and a cleanse with your finger, when you wipe, it's spotless. Okay, that's fine. And then you're just looking at like,

clean toilet paper. Okay, but you're, you are making a, a harness. Like, so you have like poop particles on your butt after you've pooped. Yeah. And then you're putting water on that poop immediately. Spraying it and then it falls down into the toilet. Drips. Yeah. And,

And then it's still going to be on there a little bit. No, it's not. You get in there and you clean with your finger. So you're getting poop on your hands for sure, right? No, because I've sprayed the debris. Now I'm cleansing with my finger, my anus. And then I'm grabbing tissue and drying all off. And then I wash my hands and I'm spotless. And I've not wiped my butt 300 times till it's bleeding as I do when I'm not on a bidet. Okay.

Anyways. Okay. My butt doesn't itch and yours does. Occasionally. And Aaron's more.

What if you guys are the ones that have had pinworms this whole time and just... You would like that one. No, I don't. I don't. I draw the line at pinworms. I don't like bugs. No, I'm saying you would like if we were guilty of spreading that. Oh, yeah. Well, it just makes the most sense, really. I couldn't even have pinworms. They'd drown because I'm flushing that area with water. That's not how they work. Apparently, they don't like light and...

That's it. And that chalky substance.

Well, I wonder if you could put a LED light bulb in your butt. But they go up. So Kristen knows a lot about pinworms. Yeah, she's spoken in the press a lot about it. I applaud her willingness because she'll talk about her own pinworms a lot freely. Yeah, she was educating Anna about the pinworms. And she said the way to find them is you have your kid bend over, spread their butt out, and then in the dark.

And then all of a sudden you turn on the light super quickly and then you have to like get it, get it. Get it? Yeah. Use some sort of thing to get up. She keeps calling it the mother. That sounds like the SCOBY or whatever. I know. It sounds like from apple cider vinegar because it does have a mother. Yeah. Or kombucha.

Yeah. I don't know about the retrieval and everything. I don't know if she's embellishing, but we generally give them the drink and then it's over. No, she uses like some sort of thing to get the mother out according to her. Oh, wow. Okay. I told you this. Ew! That's the mother. Wait. That's just Dune. That's from Dune. That is a pinworm though. That is. That is.

disgusting anyway i just really there's so many gross things in the world topo chico no don't say it please don't say it's gross it or no no no don't exclude topo chico all right well well that's those are the my main things do you want to make it cute again and talk about aaron and delta and you riding your motorcycles

I mean, just we had a lot of time we had. We went out on the electric motorcycles and we really, really explored. We got into Griffith Park. We got onto some closed roads. Just watching my little one negotiate mountain turns with cliffs on the side with total confidence. Yeah. It's just so fun. We had so much fun. That's great. Yeah.

We'd make the best husbands, like if we had a little girl. Sure. It's a great little team. That's cute. Yeah. Now, would you rather have pinworms forever? Okay.

And as you said, you don't actually think you've had them. Or great insurance rates. And neither do I. But apparently it's really like... Itchy. Yeah. Yeah. And really bad. Are you scoping his Ana in her butt every five seconds? Scratch, scratch, scratch? She said it. She thought she had cancer. Oh my God. Wow. Extreme. That's why this happened. She was looking really upset. Yeah. And then she said, I have to talk to someone about this.

I'm really worried. Yeah. My butt is so itchy. Oh, wow. And then Carly said, oh, you have pinworms. I guess I don't. I don't think I've had it then. Exactly. The way she was saying it, it felt extreme. Yeah. And Carly said, oh, you have pinworms. And she was like,

Are you sure? Like, I'm worried it's something serious. And she was like, I think I really I feel like I woke up today and I was like, I definitely have cancer. I need to talk to an adult about this. And then she took the medicine and it's been fine ever since. Okay, would you rather have pinworms or penis worms?

How do penis worms work? I guess let's just say they work the same. There are worms coming out of my penis. Those aren't real, are they? Then definitely my butt. Yeah. That's a good answer. Or like crabs. Crabs? Yeah. Isn't that the same thing? That's a venereal disease. Yeah. That's itchy, but it's your... I've never had it, shockingly. Yeah. I'm going to be honest. It's shocking how little diseases I got.

I deserved a lot more. Yeah. I have a very close friend who got them when we were in our 20s, and it was insane. He showed me his mom's pubis. It was like a quadrillion mosquito bites. It looked insane.

It looked terrible. And you weren't afraid of getting close? Well, he'd already shaved his pubic hair and applied the cream and everything. But it was major. Are crabs scabies or no? They're separate. I think they're separate, but scabies is also a thing. And that's got the worst name ever. I have a scabies story, but I don't know. I don't think I'm allowed to share it. It's not me, so I don't think I can. Yeah, but you know someone that had scabies? Yes, and...

My father's girlfriend had scabies. Maybe he gave them to her. I don't know. He's passed. Maybe we should put that on him. Okay. But I know there was a scabies outbreak in my father's bedroom when I lived with him. And I remember being nervous that I knew scabies were in the house. Yes. See? It is nerve-wracking.

I knew scabies were a dial. You could have for real gotten it. I know. But it's an onomatopoeia. Like they sound exactly like I think what they are. Anyway, would you rather have scabies slash crabs or pinworms? Pinworm for sure. Okay. Well, with no, there's no medicine. The thing with pinworm is you drink this thing. They all live inside your body and you shit out a bunch of dead pinworms and it's over. Scabies.

Scabies and crabbies and dinghies and chomp chomps. Stop. They all, I think, can live on your sheets and in your carpet. So do the pinworms, though. They're in your carpet. That's why you have to bleach it all and stuff. I don't even have carpet, but continue. Anyway, wait. The would you rather is there's no medicine. So these are permanent conditions. Oh, pinworms. For sure. Scabies. Yeah, yeah. I know. I know. Same. Yeah. Yeah.

Okay. I hope we get a scabies medication sponsor because obviously we are against scabies. And pinworms. And pinworms. Pinworm medication. Yeah. And I think we're bringing awareness to pinworms, which is good.

If you have a suspiciously itchy anus. Well, that's what Ana said. She said, I do. People need to be talking about it. They call it SIA in the medical world. Spreading information. Suspiciously itchy anus. The patient is SIA. That's like maybe on season two of the pit. Uh-huh. Whole thing. Um,

All right. Well, that was disgusting. That was. It was unnecessary. Can you, without saying which ones, say the number of STIs you've had for awareness? I think one. Oh, wow. That's not a lot at all. Yeah. What's it mean? You go without saying which one, and then you're like, which one? Is it gonorrhea?

I'll tell you that if I was your age, it wouldn't have been an issue because there's a vaccine. HPV. HPV. Human pap. Although, I'm not even sure I had it. It's too messy of a story, but I got a call from a girlfriend. She had it, and then I...

Did you? What'd you do? I don't remember. Did you get checked? Yeah, yeah. I got checked. A ton of people have HPV. It's very common. Oh, they say like 80% of the sexually active public has it. And then they even went further, which is they started having cases where there was no sexual activity. So like, oh, this is being spread without sexual activity. Oh my God.

Yeah, HPV is like common cold. But there's a vaccine. Yes. You had it, right? I had the vaccine. And Kristen had it. Did you have it, Rob? I think so, yeah. Okay. Kristen had it? Had the vaccine. Really? Yeah. That's the five-year gap. Like that came out when, you know, that was the crucial gap.

I got the vaccine early. It was really early, almost in a sense of like, is it too early? Is it tested enough? But I got it. Yeah. I wonder if these people that are anti-vaccine still get the HPV vaccine because there's a lot of times where the rubber meets the we all are contradictions. I don't think this is unique to vaxxers, but certainly there's ones that they must make exceptions for. Like, yeah, I don't want fucking HPV. I'll get that.

But they're like not getting measles. Oh, I guess because they think it's not an issue. Yeah, it's such a lower percentage. Right. Yeah. Well, I think if you can get that vaccine, let's do it, y'all. I want everyone. I don't want shingles. I know. I don't want anything. I don't either. Another onomatopoeia, shingles. Shingles, yeah. Okay, let's do some facts. Let's do some facts. Stay tuned for more Armchair Experts.

If you dare.

But you can use it to pay for things like vet care for your dog or dental and vision care for yourself at over 270,000 locations nationwide. CareCredit offers flexible financing for health and wellness for pets and people, which actually makes it better than a dog because dogs don't even have flexible financing. Take that, dogs. Visit CareCredit.com to apply and find a location near you subject to credit approval.

Facts for Curtis. Facts for Curtis. What a life story. Yes. To bring you up to speed, Aaron, his father killed his mother and then killed himself. Holy shit. Yeah. That seems very when we were growing up. Yes. Yeah. And he's our age. Okay. There you have it. Yeah.

I can't wait to get to that Michelin star in Chicago. This son of a bitch got three stars three years in a row or something crazy. No, he's like one of the most decorated American chefs. And they say...

Bears a little bit based on the bear. Okay. But he says no, but it seems like maybe. He says no, but I believe them. I don't believe them. Yeah, I don't either. I don't believe them. First fact, we don't believe them. I'm going to inform you guys a little bit. Okay. So one of my facts is current restaurants with three Michelin stars. Okay. In the U.S. I'm going to do in the U.S. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Okay. Atelier Crenn.

That's in San Francisco. Triggering. Atelier. You can't be triggered. I am. We can't use that word. But go ahead. Atelier, what was it called? You can use it for a three Michelin star restaurant. Okay. Atelier Crenn, San Francisco. Known for its contemporary American cuisine and innovative tasting menus. Now.

French laundry. Lovely. Yachtville, California. Haven't been. I've been. You've been. It is a worthwhile experience. Is it wine country? Yeah. It's in wine country. Yeah. It's so good. And you eat for like three hours. Ooh, I like that. And you're so full, but you keep going. Yeah, that's how most of these restaurants are. It's like paperback.

Tasting menus. You go, you don't pick what you're eating. Right. And you're there for hours and hours and hours. Okay. 11 Madison Park, New York City. That's a big one. There's like a book on, I think the chef or somebody wrote a book about that restaurant. Masa, also in New York. That's Japanese. La Bernardin, New York.

Very, very... Trusted brand? Very trusted brand. Yes. The Inn at Little Washington. That's in Washington, Virginia. Oh. Historic Inn. Ooh. American cuisine. That sounds like our alley, up our alley. I like that. We can get a nice porridge. I immediately was like, ooh. I don't think you're going to be getting porridge. I think there's a really robust and hearty stew. Yeah, right. And a real nice thick piece of bread. Yeah. Yeah.

Yeah. Party. You guys go and you report back what was on the menu. Warm mug of hot cocoa. Okay. Smith. That's S-M-Y-T-H. Chicago. Alinea. Ding, ding, ding. Chicago. Ooh. I'm going to say Youngsik. That's a Korean restaurant in New York City. Yeah.

Or it might be Jung-sick. Probably Jung. Yeah, I think so. And then we have single thread, Healdsburg, California. What's your favorite restaurant, Aaron? Of all time. That's hard. Like, are we talking real good food? Like, I don't know. It's just your favorite. Just my favorite. Yeah, your favorite. It doesn't have to be best food. Yeah. I mean, I think...

Lafayette Coney Island is my favorite. That's great. That's a great answer. I was almost going to guess that for you. Yeah. And that might be mine too. I understand. I was a little disappointed they shut down for a second time recently. They have so many rats. These rats are just... It's their favorite restaurant too. Yeah, they love that restaurant. And the poor restaurant next door has to make pleas that...

The rats aren't there. They're like, you can still come here. And everyone's like, I'm not going anywhere near that. Some of these videos of the rats are kind of insane. The rats are like, looks like they're mixing the coney sauce. Like they're in the action. Oh, my gratitude.

And they're not shy. Like one jumped like on a table, right on someone's table. And then they went into the trash can. There's videos of that. They're like coming in and out of the trash. Yeah. What are they going to do? I mean, so they're open now. By the way, I don't care. I don't either. It doesn't faze me. I mean, I hate why I said I hate it is because.

They were closed last time I was like attempting to go in. Yeah. And I was like, fuck. You know what would be great is if they just had like a liability waiver you sign. Yeah. And it's like, I don't give a fuck that there's rats. And like, stop even trying to kill them. Let's just deal with the rats. You just got to wear like leather boots when you go. You know, it's always been going on. It's just the city is getting a little too hoity-toity for their own good.

Now it's like you can't have a bunch of rats running around. Oh, now there's people down here. Right. Yeah. The only thing is the droppings kind of look like...

Coney sauce? Yeah. So you wouldn't be able to tell. And they do spread a lot of diseases. They do. They do. Yeah, they're cute. It'd be great if you went to grab, because you get a little tray and you've ordered a few. It'd be great if you, like, went to grab your Coney and the rat had it. You went like a tug of war with the rat. Or you ate it like Lady and the Tramp with the rat. You became great friends with one of the rats.

All right, well, that's three Michelin stars for the United States currently. Okay, so that's not a long list. No. I think, you know, I don't think Michigan at all has a Michelin restaurant. No. Maybe they have a one-star Michelin. Not even. Not even. We'll save that for the next fact check. Well, if you can clean up that infestation, they might get up. Sure. Now, it's good you're here. Really good you're here. Because...

J2C comes up because Curtis is a J2C. No doubt. Yes. July 2nd. He's July 2nd. Yeah. Shit. That's common to Wilson. He shares with Aaron. And he had an internal sweetness that was very J2C. Yeah. This J2C. Little boner boy. You're July, yeah. Yeah. He's going to be 50 in five seconds. Oh, yeah. I'm 50. How do you feel? You're not kicking us, Rich. I'm 50 years old.

Wait, you're going to be 50 in next month? Yeah. Wait, so then you are exactly Curtis's age. You guys were born on the exact same day. Oh, he's going to be 50. Yeah. Oh, how about that? So we're both exactly six months younger than Dad here. Yeah. Yes. He could be Curtis's dad, too. I wanted to be. Oh, my gosh. How do you feel? What are you going to do? Well, I'm...

I'm going to take a little ride down to Nashville, Tennessee and celebrate with my fellow J2C. Nice. Nice. Maybe I'll make you a steak in the woods. Yeah, well, you sure didn't get one from me. That's my fault. I was down in Mexico throwing up violently. That's...

rights itself. Love it. Maybe some donuts in the Corvette, some boat rides. I mean, come on. Yeah. You only turn 50 once. That's right. If you're lucky. You could turn 150.

Once we have those drugs. Well, that's coming soon. I'm most excited about the dog drugs that are coming. I know you two probably aren't as into it. What is it? They're going to keep dogs alive now. Really? Yeah. For a long time. That's my nightmare. That is your nightmare? I literally was just thinking this morning, like, what's going to happen when they go away to school and

And I'm trying to be in Nashville and Kristen's in New York City. Those dogs are probably going to be around forever. And they're still going to be alive. Do you think they are in nine years?

Yeah. Really? Yeah. Whiskey is unfortunately quite young. He's like aging in reverse. He's like seven. That's an old dog. He's going to go until 18 or 19 because he's so tiny and angry. Yeah, he might. So, yeah. So, we'll all be 150. You'll still have Frank and Whiskey. Maybe I won't take the medicine if they're going to go the distance. Yeah.

Wow. Okay. So there's a drug that's going to keep them alive for how much longer? Not forever, but it's close to it. Yeah. It sounds like it sounds like that. They're going to have it start seeing it on the market next year. That would be just like Americans to have a

a pill for our dogs to keep them alive forever. And then we're dying. Yeah, exactly. Because I think when you're in the rest of the world and you see, like we had, I don't want to shame anyone because actually we met her and she was a lovely woman, but we were delivering food two days ago. There's a dog restaurant. We went to a dog restaurant so the dog could get delivery food. It was called the Pesterant. Wait, not Pesterant. Yeah, Pesterant. Pesterant. Pesterant.

Pet-steront. Pet-steront. Yeah, when we got it, we were like, could this possibly... Well, it would have to be a restaurant for pets because no one would eat at a restaurant called Pet-steront. No, not me. And sure enough, it was a huge smorgasbord for this dog. It was a humongous bag of... I thought it was ice cream when I went in and grabbed it because it was like...

but it was really cold the bag and i go is this and there was like a dozen containers yeah i go is this ice cream for the dog do you doggie blizzard like no it's not ice cream but it's it is food that was like weird oh my god yeah but if you're like in a country and you're starving and you hear that dogs in america have food delivery like whatever they're in the mood for is pretty wild and now that our dogs are going to live longer than us

Take that with a grain of salt of where I get my facts from. Your feed. That might have been a dream. That's your algorithm different than mine.

Okay, now, because of the birthdays, I wanted to look up most popular birthdays. We do this once in a while. We do, and I think it's not always the same. It's always end of August, right? September 9th. September 9th is the most common birthday, according to AI. Makes so much sense. When the coitus takes place? Yeah, you're at Christmas, and you're like, we want a family next Christmas. Yeah.

Yeah. Yeah, it does make sense. Daifu. Yeah, we got September 9th, September 19th, September 12th, September 17th, September 10th, July 7th. Oh. September 20th, September 15th. Basically all of September. Oh, my. To your point. Yeah.

I know the most August. I'm shocked. Well, that's okay. Now it says, what is the most common birth month? Despite the fact that September is so heavily represented in the top 10 most common birthdays, there are actually more births reported in August. All but one August birthday made the list of 100 most common birthdays. The exception being August 3rd, which lands 116th.

If you do the math, the conception time for August babies lines up with the approach of cooler weather and the holidays, maybe making cuddling up extra appealing. Oh. This is from happiestbaby.com. Oh, February 29th. My daughter has that. Your daughter has the least common birthday. Of course. Yeah. Not surprisingly, but that's fun. Leapers are leaplings. That took some special planning to get her excited. Yeah, when did you get horny?

The last snowstorm of May. May. Well, that makes sense. Spring weather, spring fever. Spring fling. I always get very, I get the most romantic around fall.

Yeah. Balls cozy. Beginning of school is romantic. It's a new class, new people. New clothes. New clothes. New opportunities. Yeah, you're feeling kind of good in one of your outfits. Mm-hmm. Yeah. Least popular birthdays, February 29th, December 25th, January 1st, December 24th, July 4th.

January 2nd. Oh, thank God. I really felt like mine was a top 10. There you go. You mean bottom. Well, top 10 least. Least. Yep. Number one. Bottom 10. Number one, none. Now, no bake cookies. He told an interesting story that he used to eat no bake cookies. And then in his kitchen, he would give a recipe to his staff and see if they could follow directions and make it. And they never could.

Laura would have passed. Exactly. According to this, this is not his recipe. Right. He's probably, you know. I think this was made famous on the oatmeal. What's the most trusted brand in oatmeal?

I use Bob's. Quaker Oats? Quaker Oats. Quaker Oats. Quaker Oats. Yeah. Try some Chocnobakes this year for Christmas time. It's on the box. Be conservative about your treats. Mostly eat protein and baked potatoes and pray a lot. But on that rare occasion you deserve a treat, make it a Chocnobake with Quaker Oats. God, I can taste those. One bite will do.

Pass it around. Two bites will get the devil knocking at your back door. It's too much sweets. Too indulgent. Okay. And don't masturbate. Oh, my God. Again. Okay.

Okay, I'm going to read the recipe. Two cups white sugar, a half cup butter or margarine, a half cup milk, three tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder, one pinch salt, three cups quick cooking oats, a half cup peanut butter, one teaspoon vanilla extract.

And then you do have to, like, do some stuff. You have to bring stuff to a boil. Yeah, it's a mud. And then my mom would spread it out on a McDonald's tray that she stole from McDonald's. Oh. And then it would harden in the fridge. Yeah. In the McDonald's tray. Mm-hmm.

Smart. That's very savvy instead of getting a baking sheet using a McDonald's. Just steal it from McDonald's. You're a single mom. You're allowed to do a lot of things. Yeah, good for her. Did you guys have McDonald's trays at home? I think. But it's hard to get out of there holding that. Not if you run. If you got the car running, send your kids out to the car to get it running. Put it in drive, pull the e-brake. Wow. Someone come flying out with three trays.

We used to steal salt and pepper shakers as well. Yeah, that makes more sense to me. That can just go right in a purse. Yeah, yeah. I used to steal cups a lot. Cups. Glasses, like from bars and stuff. You've always had that. As a trinket, as like a souvenir. Sure. There was more about this. Nothing wrong with that. There was a brewery in Athens called Terrapin, and it was a thing to like steal those glasses. We had so many. And they were like nice. Pine glasses. Yeah. Yeah.

Probably put them on a business. They probably use plastic. The whole college put them and kept them. Yeah. Put them out and kept them in. Okay. Now, we also refer to you, both of you, eating the food off of big boys plates, which we've discussed.

I was explaining to Curtis the progression of how it starts with, oh, there's a full half of a Slim Jim there untouched. Sure. Yeah, I'll eat that. Of course. Yeah, of course. And then by the end, I'm just biting directly into the whole bite marks. That part is so tough. I don't care at all. You just stop caring. So then, you know, you guys answered the, then that's the answer to the question. Spit.

Spit is the one that you don't care about. I care about it. Obviously not. I care about it, but not as much as I cared about having some good food. Well, dried spit.

Yeah. Well, I mean, I'm sorry, but I think that's evidence to the question. Hair, spit. What's the other one? Skin. Skin. Nails. And then we added nails. We added nails. I want to remove nails because everyone just gets so hung up on the nails. Yeah, yeah. But I just like it as a model of...

human nature, which is like everyone always moves the line. It's like if you're, no affair starts with sex. It starts with like a hug or some hand holding and that's it. Not according to my sexy show. Okay. They go straight at it. They're just jumping right in. Or,

Or your drug use. You know, it starts one and you got a rule and then you go just 5% beyond it and you just inch yourself closer until you're eating direct, like half-eaten French fries. Sure. Licking the plate. Last sip of a Diet Coke. It is true. Ew! Ew! That was disgusting. Last sip. Yeah. Coffee. Would you rather last sip...

Or. Yeah. Last sip of a Diet Coke is rough because it's already melted ice. It's backwash. Yeah. Yeah. It's terrible. You didn't drink that. You're hungry. I didn't need to. I think you could manage free soda. Thank God. You could sneak them at least. Yeah. You would definitely have AIDS. Sure. Sure. Definitely. According to ER. Yeah.

That's it for Curtis. Okay, well, I loved him. I thought he was a very sweet human being. He was. He was. And he has really overcome so much. I was very moved by his story. Yeah, me too. All right, love you. Love you. Love you. Love you.

Follow Armchair Expert on the Wondery app, Amazon Music, or wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen to every episode of Armchair Expert early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts. Before you go, tell us about yourself by completing a short survey at wondery.com slash survey. Today is the worst day of Abby's life.

The 17-year-old cradles her newborn son in her arms. They all saw how much I loved him. They didn't have to take him from me. Between 1945 and the early 1970s, families shipped their pregnant teenage daughters to maternity homes.

and force them to secretly place their babies for adoption. In hidden corners across America, it's still happening. My parents had me locked up in the godparent home against my will. They worked with them to manipulate me and to steal my son away from me. The godparent home is the brainchild of controversial preacher Jerry Falwell,

the father of the modern evangelical right and the founder of Liberty University, where powerful men emboldened by their faith determine who gets to be a parent and who must give their child away. Follow Liberty Lost on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.