Pyro Toys, Food As Seen on Screen, Gourmet Makes Fast Food, and the Emoji Kids Communicator
Ep. 42

Pyro Toys, Food As Seen on Screen, Gourmet Makes Fast Food, and the Emoji Kids Communicator

Episode description

Special thanks to TooXChilly for joining us on this episode!

00:00:00 - Intro
00:01:39 - Intramurals
00:13:02 - Pyro Toys
00:21:30 - Gourmet Makes Fast Food
00:31:51 - Food Cooked with Space
00:38:40 - The Emoji Kids Communicator
00:49:03 - Outro

Download transcript (.srt)
0:04

I'm Scott, I'm Russell, and I'm Leo.

0:06

This is Spitball.

0:16

Welcome to Spitball.

0:18

Where three code crusaders and a guest empty their heads of startup and tech

0:22

product ideas that we have stuck up in there.

0:23

So you can all have them for free.

0:25

Anything that we say is yours to keep.

0:27

Russell, I believe you brought our guests this week.

0:29

Who'd you bring?

0:30

Yeah, TwoXChilly is one of the coolest TikTok Twitch

0:36

streamers I've ever seen.

0:37

He's very innovative.

0:39

He's been playing Valorant, Eldering, all these games

0:44

while walking basically miles on a treadmill.

0:47

You do like marathons almost, right?

0:49

Half marathons every time?

0:51

Half marathons every time.

0:53

I've only done one marathon so far.

0:56

Yep.

0:56

That's amazing.

0:57

walking a

0:58

marathon.

0:59

- This is like almost every day, and I think, right?

1:02

- Almost every day.

1:03

- And I-- - Wow.

1:04

- And I've lost 90 pounds about

1:07

since I started a year ago.

1:09

- Whoa! - So, helping

1:09

the

1:09

kids going.

1:10

Ready to keep trying and doing my best, so.

1:13

- That's sick, welcome to Spitball.

1:15

- Thank you, glad to be here.

1:17

- Do you wanna plug your, let's

1:18

let you plug

1:19

your handles

1:20

and stuff right now.

1:21

- Chilly, where

1:21

do we find you?

1:22

How do I learn more about what it is that you do?

1:24

- Yes, so you can find me on TikTok, Twitch, Instagram.

1:28

All of my handles are TwoXChilly, that's T-double-O-X-Chilly,

1:32

and that's cold Chilly, not the

1:34

hot dog chili.

1:36

(laughing)

1:38

- Too Chilly For You, love it.

1:39

Often we have a guest who comes on and says,

1:41

"I don't know, we have two ideas, three ideas, four ideas.

1:44

"I don't really know which one I should pick."

1:46

And when that happens, sometimes it makes sense

1:47

for us to do a round of intermurals.

1:49

So that's how we're gonna get warmed up this week.

1:50

Who wants to kick us off with a half idea

1:53

that they don't feel deserves a full pitch,

1:55

but has some legs and someone can take it and run with it.

1:59

- I have a fantastic

2:00

little intramural.

2:02

- Kick us on

2:02

the back.

2:03

- I was watching my dad clean for my kid's birthday party

2:09

and we use Clorox wipes, like I think it's a family.

2:13

We just use the Clorox wipes to clean

2:14

in every surface of our home.

2:16

And

2:16

I'm like, why?

2:17

- And what were you doing while he was cleaning

2:18

your house for you?

2:21

- Let's just take care of the kids.

2:23

- Yeah.

2:23

- I think, I don't even know,

2:25

but yeah.

2:26

(laughing)

2:26

And I have a ton of those at home,

2:29

but I started to think about this.

2:30

I'm like, it's basically a more expensive,

2:33

it's a wet paper towel, more expensive paper towel.

2:35

Why don't I create a little paper towel holder,

2:40

(laughing)

2:40

add chemicals.

2:43

- A little Clorox basin.

2:45

(laughing)

2:45

- Little, little, yeah.

2:47

It doesn't, but here's the thing.

2:49

I don't need it to be like the bleach one, right?

2:51

Like if I wanted to be more safe about it,

2:54

like every Clorox wipe's like a disinfectant one.

2:55

I just want a set of wet wipes that aren't baby wipes,

2:59

that are like

3:00

cleaning wipes,

3:01

to clean the surfaces of my home.

3:04

I don't know, I just, the whole spray bottle, paper towel,

3:07

just seems like a two-step process

3:09

that's been consolidated into one.

3:11

Why pay a premium for smaller sheets of paper?

3:15

It just is crazy

3:16

to me.

3:17

I could just throw a paper towel roll into a plastic bin,

3:20

Pour a little water, shake a roo, ready to go.

3:23

That's good.

3:24

Your product, the second you launch this,

3:26

is gonna be at the end of the meme that's,

3:28

mom, can I have Clorox wipes?

3:31

We've got

3:31

Clorox wipes at home.

3:34

(laughing)

3:36

And that's the name of my brand.

3:37

We have Clorox wipes at home.

3:39

(laughing)

3:41

Do you guys use those wipes?

3:43

Like, do you know what I'm talking about?

3:43

Yeah, we get

3:44

'em at Costco,

3:45

'cause we get the

3:45

multi-pack.

3:46

We go through 'em too.

3:47

I just pictured a Keurig solution for this, Russell.

3:49

like just a recurring like a ketchup packet or something

3:52

full of the powdered chemical that you dump

3:54

into your shaker thing so it has all the ready to go goodness

3:57

of the disinfectant.

3:59

- I feel like that material is different.

4:01

Like, would paper towels just disintegrate?

4:04

I don't know.

4:05

- You can't flush paper towels, right?

4:07

Because it

4:07

doesn't--

4:08

- That's true, that's true.

4:09

- I'm banking on that technology.

4:11

(laughing)

4:12

My entire intramural idea.

4:14

- What about

4:14

instead, if it's a thing

4:16

where the dry paper towel stays outside of a box,

4:20

and then as you pull it through,

4:21

it goes through something that wets it on the way out.

4:23

That way you don't have it just sitting there

4:25

dissolving overnight.

4:27

- That's actually so much better.

4:28

I guess like dip it.

4:30

Or I guess, no, it would be a special device

4:32

that would run it and make it

4:34

damp as

4:35

it goes through.

4:35

- Yeah, I'm thinking like a laminator, right?

4:38

You'd like push the paper towel through it

4:39

and it comes out the other end soaked.

4:42

- Honestly, not bad.

4:44

- That'd be cool. - Not bad.

4:45

That actually might be more approachable than having a giant paper towel roll stuck in your underneath your sink.

4:51

You know,

4:52

it could be a machine that's under a cabinet or something.

4:54

Yeah, there you go.

4:56

I guess you could do this for like other things,

4:57

like what?

4:58

Like instead of a bidet

4:59

papers and then you just put your

5:02

paper

5:03

towel,

5:04

paper

5:05

towel.

5:06

I've not used that.

5:08

Yeah.

5:12

I didn't want to go the toilet paper route because you had brought up this

5:15

integration thing, but

5:16

this is so interior

5:16

mural.

5:17

But like, if I could get like, like, it'd be nice to have a wet toilet paper

5:21

every once in a while when you're not in your bidet friendly home, you know,

5:25

you're visiting family or friends and you're like, hmm, if only I had my...

5:29

So you

5:29

just pull out your briefcase sized paper

5:34

towel, wedding machine.

5:39

I don't know about this, man.

5:40

I think

5:40

you had me until

5:41

this pivot to the debate.

5:43

I just think there's other use cases, but I don't even know yet.

5:45

That's why it's still in intramurals.

5:48

Can't make it to

5:48

pass varsity.

5:49

Okay.

5:50

All right.

5:50

All right.

5:51

This is a awful idea that I think a lot about.

5:54

I don't drink enough water.

5:56

I need to make myself drink enough water.

5:57

We've talked about this on the show before.

5:59

Yes, indeed.

5:59

Can we just make, like, nicotine infused water and just get addicted

6:03

to drinking water?

6:06

(laughing)

6:07

- Maybe not nicotine, like MSG or something,

6:10

but just something infused in water

6:12

that triggers

6:12

something in my

6:13

brain

6:13

that's like, I need more water.

6:15

- You just reminded Chilly

6:16

to take the first drink of the day, I think.

6:18

(laughing)

6:20

- Thank you,

6:20

I appreciate it.

6:22

I wouldn't need that reminder

6:23

if I had the nicotine patches, I imagine.

6:26

- How do you make it addicting?

6:28

- I mean, you could

6:28

do classic things like sugar or whatnot,

6:30

but nicotine just seems to work.

6:32

- Cocaine?

6:33

- Cocaine, there

6:34

it is.

6:35

- Go straight for the

6:35

hard

6:36

coke.

6:37

- Coca-Cola.

6:38

- Make water addicting, huh?

6:40

- I'm coming up empty.

6:41

I'm trying to like gamify this or something.

6:43

- We don't need to spit more.

6:44

- I feel like

6:45

water's already been made addicting.

6:47

We're already past that point, other than drugs.

6:50

But it used to have cocaine in it too, right?

6:51

Isn't that what Coca-Cola used to be?

6:54

Maybe we just have to bring it back.

6:56

- Bring back our OG coke.

6:58

- Oh man, what if you could trick your body

7:00

into thinking it's dehydrated, like needs to be,

7:02

You know that thirst craving?

7:05

Like how can

7:05

you create that craving?

7:07

- That dry throat.

7:09

- Maybe you put a dehumidifier or something.

7:12

- I was just gonna say, what if there's

7:13

like a little fan

7:14

that kicks on and blows on you?

7:16

You're like, ah, ugh.

7:17

- Ew,

7:17

I need water.

7:18

- You're

7:18

drying

7:18

yourself out.

7:20

- Have a salt lick next to your desk.

7:23

- Yeah, I mean.

7:25

- This is getting pretty abstract.

7:25

- A pretzel, a bowl of pretzels, just.

7:29

- A bowl of pretzels solves this.

7:31

within arm's reach everywhere you go.

7:33

- Yeah, maybe that would be the idea.

7:35

Whenever something good happens,

7:36

when you're gaming or you finish a task,

7:38

you get rewarded like a pachinko slot,

7:41

a pretzel pops out, you eat the pretzel,

7:43

you get thirsty, you drink the water,

7:46

you get rewarded with a treat, and now you're hydrated.

7:50

- Whoa, what if you like, yeah,

7:52

gambling's an addiction, just make,

7:55

in order to pull a slot machine.

7:56

- If you're a

7:57

toggle or something,

7:58

you've got your like work time tracker,

8:00

every time that you've done out a work ticket or work order

8:03

and your whatever job it is that you do,

8:04

every time you complete that paragraph you're writing.

8:06

You get a treat.

8:08

Just a little treat.

8:08

I'll pull the slot machine, but oh,

8:10

I gotta drink a shot of water before I pull it.

8:14

Oh.

8:15

What's something that you need to do,

8:17

like every time you move your hand

8:18

from the keyboard to the mouse,

8:20

or every time you pick up your soldering iron,

8:22

I don't know, whatever it is that you do for a living,

8:24

you need to like have the water to unlock it

8:27

like a person taking a breathalyzer to start their car.

8:29

That's it.

8:30

Yeah.

8:32

Just stand up.

8:33

Yeah.

8:34

I guess your, your USB port could disconnect while you're at work.

8:38

Your

8:38

screen turns off.

8:41

Just blanks it until you disconnect the bottle.

8:44

There you go.

8:44

Lift up the water bottle, drink it.

8:46

Yeah.

8:46

We can just have like a 30 minute taser go off and synchronizes to the taser.

8:52

You're like, wait, I don't want to get shocked.

8:53

Or you could reset the clock.

8:55

And like every time you increase the timer over time,

8:58

so that you start

8:58

drinking 10 minute intervals, five minute intervals.

9:01

- We've gone from treat to punishment, I like it.

9:04

- I mean, we started with nicotine,

9:05

so

9:05

I think we're doing better.

9:09

Yeah, negative reinforcement, shoot, yeah.

9:12

- It's positive reinforcement

9:13

'cause we're adding a stimulus.

9:15

But

9:15

it's a

9:15

negative thing,

9:16

yes, yes.

9:18

But I wanna jump in an idea that Russell said,

9:21

the gambling slot idea, if you don't mind,

9:23

if this is the intermural part of the show.

9:25

Gambling for kids, that sounds horrible.

9:28

It's already there

9:30

You know how I said a pretzel

9:32

coming out of the slot. What if it's candy that's randomized and depending on what you pull

9:39

You can get you know a nice healthy snack or something that might give you health issues later in

9:45

life

9:49

As

9:49

I think I mean

9:51

That's what those candies are now you put this coin in the slot you push it in and outcomes the candy

9:57

Why not gamify it by having a crazy selection

10:00

you just saw you should feed them dinner

10:04

You're gonna eat your carrots and broccoli every time you pull the slot machine there is a chance

10:11

Full of ice cream, yeah,

10:13

they would be on the table the whole time.

10:15

It sounds unethical

10:18

Kid I just I just one more carrot. There's a chance

10:23

Maybe that would give them the chance to eat more more vegetables if they know they have a chance a 10% chance of candy

10:30

Yeah, maybe but then they get you know, 20 pieces of vegetables beforehand

10:35

Is that is that truly a loss there?

10:37

They say that intermittent rewards are more powerful

10:39

of a dopamine rush than like constant rewards

10:41

So you could even use this for like we're doing potty training where you did your chores today

10:47

You got one one pole on the the random snack machine

10:52

Oh, I got a handful of peanuts. Sorry better luck next time go do some more vacuuming son. See

10:57

if you get it

10:57

again

10:59

Yes, so much therapy

11:08

It gamblings gonna be all over this and they don't even have to lobby to make this legal I

11:15

Read a thing on hacker. This is a pivot a bit. We're gonna go away from child abuse now

11:18

I read a thing on Hacker News that it's kind of hard to find a co-founder and

11:23

find like partners for starting a business and find

11:28

vendors that align with your interests and partnerships for companies and stuff. So I want to pitch you

11:33

Omegle business edition or chat roulette business edition you hop on

11:38

Everyone who's going through there is maybe you have certain times where people are coordinating to go on

11:42

But this is press the button speed dating boom boom boom right through but you have like

11:47

You're doing what we're doing now, but with each other. Here's our business. Here's yours

11:51

We're not really compatible or in the same industry or anything next boom three minutes. You're out. Okay, shoot

11:58

Oh, I actually am in a manufacturing and you are a distributor. Wow. It's cool that we met

12:02

I would

12:03

love for like boom Kevin O'Leary or like Jeff Bezos

12:06

It's just someone to just casually jump into one of these sessions and you just you're flicking through people and you get one of them

12:13

I'm Mark Zuckerberg. What? Hello. Would you like meta to buy my startup? Mr. Zuckerberg?

12:19

I mean that could be a good way for the big the bigger names in this industry to like

12:24

Learn about what things are getting off the ground.

12:26

Maybe we could do this with spit ballers our listeners

12:30

Come on board and their Oh Meggle

12:34

Servers Russell, I don't know if we can

12:35

handle that

12:37

All right listeners

12:38

all you got to do is just go to regular Omegle and start pitching the people who are on there

12:42

already about your business. We're going to take it over. You might have

12:49

to wait

12:49

through some uncensored

12:50

nudity, but on the other side...

12:54

You could find your next multi-million dollar idea.

12:57

It's like

12:58

gambling.

12:58

Tell

12:58

me about how you got acquired.

13:02

All right, Razzle, you're up first this week. What do you got for us?

13:04

All right, so this is a weird one. This almost is intramurals, but I'm good.

13:10

Just

13:10

above the threshold.

13:11

I love it.

13:12

I am, you know, a secretly, let's say a pyro at times.

13:17

So I love making bonfires, love fires in general, fireworks, whatever.

13:24

This is not

13:25

an admission of guilt.

13:25

But I thought

13:25

I

13:26

was, we were, yeah, I was doing a bonfire and I was like,

13:30

"Man, you know what'd be fun right now?

13:32

"If there were just some like pyro toys

13:36

"for a bonfire that are a little dangerous,

13:41

"but kind of fun, but not too dangerous, okay?"

13:45

Like, I mean, fireworks were basically shooting bombs

13:50

into the

13:50

air and they're exploding.

13:52

So

13:52

let's

13:53

start there and then come back to my pyro toys idea

14:00

product line, you got the can melter as a pyro toy.

14:06

It's a little device, you stick it in the bottom

14:08

and when the thing gets hot enough,

14:09

you can throw cans in there, cool.

14:11

It may not be great, but it's a fricking pyro toy.

14:14

You're not expecting that.

14:15

- It made a forge.

14:16

- A little forge, right?

14:18

A paper incinerator, a chimney top, a fire tube.

14:22

Okay,

14:22

you literally take

14:23

a

14:24

tube

14:24

and you can move

14:25

the fire around or something.

14:29

Like, you know how you can make the fire shoot out of a tube?

14:32

You could totally come up with a bunch of different tubes.

14:36

And--

14:36

You've been coming up with this idea

14:37

since you were six years old,

14:38

haven't

14:38

you?

14:39

Call that

14:39

one the Prometheus.

14:41

[LAUGHTER]

14:42

We need some toy designers.

14:45

I'm going to find a co-founder that's a toy designer.

14:49

On Omegle Business Edition?

14:51

Exactly.

14:52

Great.

14:52

They sell, like, what, the color-changing things?

14:55

Yeah,

14:56

like the powders

14:56

you throw in.

14:58

Right.

14:58

Pretty cool.

14:59

The closest thing to a pyro toy you can find,

15:02

but it's not dangerous, it's not fun enough.

15:05

You're not actually playing with the fire.

15:07

So I'm just trying to find,

15:09

s'mores, marshmallows are a way that you do that,

15:11

but they're all a little too, well PG, we'll say.

15:15

Come on, we don't want something that's a little more

15:16

rated R, PG-13 when it comes to my bonfire experience.

15:22

You know, maybe we throw in a little isopropyl alcohol,

15:25

right, make it a little fun with that.

15:28

- A small water balloon full of alcohol.

15:30

- Oh, jeez.

15:31

- I mean, every kid dangerously has played

15:34

with a lighter and an ax can.

15:36

I'm saying there's probably a way to do that more safely

15:40

with a Pyro toys.

15:41

That's kind of the idea is,

15:43

there's a whole market out there for Pyro.

15:46

I think toys sounds weird though.

15:48

We need to make it more like adults.

15:50

- Pyro gadgets.

15:51

- There we go.

15:52

- Pyro gadgets.

15:53

- Pyro gadgets.

15:55

- I like your Prometheus.

15:56

That was a good idea.

15:57

gadgets are fire.

15:59

That's a great name! Prometheus first found fire, right?

16:03

Leo, I know you're a pyro at heart.

16:05

Very much so, very much so, but I'm having

16:08

trouble conceptualizing things like tube and I'm not saying no, but I'm not

16:18

in yet.

16:19

I'm saying like a fire slide. How's that?

16:22

A fire slide. Tell me more about the

16:24

fire slide.

16:25

Okay. It's a metal tube or a metal like device. Okay. That I bet you could bend

16:33

the flames in a certain way to make the, I don't know, like a fire slide. Like

16:38

a marble

16:39

run, but upside down.

16:41

Dude, there we go. Something like that, right?

16:44

You

16:44

put a

16:45

little coal, fire

16:46

coal on the top and maybe it'll spin down the fire slide. I've got one.

16:50

Have you ever

16:51

seen people take like an oil can and then a bunch of box fans and make a

16:54

little tornado?

16:55

That's

16:55

what you need. You need a

16:56

couple of

16:57

those little fan guys

16:58

that you put

16:58

around. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's a solo stove official attachment or

17:02

something. Fire tornado!

17:04

Any outdoor fire.

17:05

Yes! Very cool. Imagine making s'mores in a fire tornado.

17:09

You know, the backyard bonfires.

17:11

Freaking jet turbine. I want to go from your PG-13 to your R

17:16

version. You know those airzookas? You just like you're

17:18

pulling back and it just

17:20

shoots air forward, just fill it with some hairspray and a little igniter on the end.

17:25

A little circular ring of fire

17:27

shoots out.

17:28

Can you take an airzooka with hairspray and just shoot it through

17:31

a fire?

17:32

That's a good idea.

17:33

Boy, this is going to be a bad thing to put into the world.

17:37

This is not a net good for society this episode.

17:41

It's chaotic, yes, but you know, good, bad, evil, it's one of... neutral.

17:47

I

17:47

was thinking similar to Scott's idea where I don't know if you guys played with powdered

17:52

sugar with flames but if you throw it it makes like a mist of fire because they're highly flammable

17:58

instead of those salt shooters that destroy flies you put powdered sugar and it makes a

18:03

kind of

18:04

explosion.

18:05

I bet that'd be a fun toy and you can have a little snack on the

18:08

other side

18:09

in case you don't you know. It probably smells good

18:11

the caramel okay.

18:14

You want freckles for life?

18:16

Brand new.

18:19

Molten sugar at your face.

18:21

Do you ever see those instant food cannons

18:24

some YouTuber made where you're shooting

18:26

like shrimp horizontal forward and it goes through--

18:30

like jets of flames come up as it's traveling through the air

18:33

and cooks it instantly and then

18:34

salt

18:35

and other seasonings

18:37

go through and hit it in the air as it's still flying.

18:39

And in like the

18:39

two seconds since you launched it,

18:41

it comes out fully cooked and like--

18:43

That can't work.

18:44

It must

18:45

work horribly.

18:46

But I would love to play with that.

18:48

Completely raw on the inside and charred to a crisp

18:50

on the outside.

18:52

I haven't heard of this.

18:53

It's fun.

18:54

Like a Rube Goldberg machine.

18:56

A fire.

18:56

Yeah.

18:56

Speed run.

18:58

You know how, like on How It's Made,

19:00

they'll have like the long conveyor belt of something getting

19:02

cooked in an oven for 20 minutes.

19:03

It's like spiraling through.

19:04

You almost want to make like a hot dog marble

19:07

run that goes through the fire over a couple of minutes

19:09

and comes out the bottom like perfectly cooked.

19:12

That's fun.

19:15

It reminds me of those gumball machines that super-sized giant ones where you put the coin in and then you see the fun

19:21

route

19:21

your gumball takes

19:22

but instead it's just a glizzy warming up

19:25

over various flames

19:27

and

19:27

hoops and fires

19:28

A hot pocket

19:30

Instant fast food

19:31

You probably could do something like that with a marshmallow. Yeah, or it's like it's got the cylindrical shape. Maybe it would work

19:37

I don't know fire dot toys. I think there's a dot toys deal, dude. There you go. Yeah, that's a fun idea Russell

19:43

All right. All you got to do is slap slap a sticker on it that says

19:48

Warning never attempt or something and absolve yourself of all legal liability and you're good to go

19:55

Yeah

19:55

for indoor use only

19:57

A

19:58

lot of legal disclaimers on that one

19:59

not for use for fire, but all the

20:02

videos

20:04

Fire all over the packaging is do not use near flames

20:09

We said it's

20:10

just a powder sugar gun. I don't know why you're shooting it through the fire

20:13

There's like a kid shooting it through the fire on the baggage

20:16

Warning do not attempt

20:20

This

20:20

might be a different pitch but have some covert marketing where you take a product that's totally not intended

20:26

It doesn't look like it's intended for your actual use and then you subtly

20:30

Market how it could be used in a much more fun dangerous way

20:33

Did you know nerf gun commercials do not show them shooting the thing at any other children?

20:39

They're only

20:40

close-ups of them shooting like off into the middle distance and at targets and stuff

20:44

It's like that like nerf never says this is a gun only it's only ever a blaster and they never say or show it being

20:50

Shot at anyone. It's just

20:52

it's clever.

20:53

Yeah, but then there you are, you know

20:55

Obviously the first thing you do is you shoot your little brother's eye out. Yeah, exactly

20:59

Yeah, the trebuchet something that we could

21:02

Would love to see a flaming log fly through the air

21:07

You live in the suburbs

21:10

Okay, here

21:11

we are

21:11

if anyone has a pond or something you live anywhere near a lake and you're just launching flaming logs into water

21:17

That would be amazing. It's a good

21:18

night.

21:19

This episode has

21:20

boy energy

21:24

We just lost our last female listener we did it well done everybody

21:34

Alrighty, Scotty, what do you got for us this week?

21:37

I think I'm just hungry, and based on our shrimp and fire conversations, I'm changing

21:42

this to...

21:43

Okay, you ever see the movie, The Menu, recent?

21:45

Yes, great movie.

21:46

Comedy,

21:47

horror film.

21:48

It's like a super fancy five-star chef goes crazy and ends up killing his last group of

21:53

customers because they didn't appreciate him during his life.

21:56

Is that with Anna Taylor-Joy?

21:57

Yes, yep.

21:59

Okay, I did see that.

22:00

Okay, perfect.

22:01

You guys appreciate it.

22:01

That's crazy.

22:03

case, spoilers, the last scene of this movie is the main character escaping by

22:09

convincing this chef to make a non-fancy meal which just ends up being like a

22:14

classic American McDonald's cheeseburger but I don't know I think it just was

22:19

super hungry when I saw this but that was on screen that was the most

22:23

delicious looking cheeseburger I've ever seen in my life like you see all these

22:26

McDonald's commercials where they have like the you know these like Elmer's

22:29

glue and cardboard if they try to make it look really good this was like real

22:33

and good and you could tell that this was just like exactly what it was. If Gordon Ramsay made

22:39

a cheeseburger this is what it would look like. And so my pitch is can we just make a fast food

22:44

restaurant made of strictly gourmet top highest end quality ingredients and do the same classic

22:52

things the McDouble, the McChicken, whatever but just made it the highest as possible. I will pay

22:57

the premium for whatever it takes to get that because of how freaking good that looked on this

23:02

smoothie song. And that is the entire pitch.

23:06

Is the thing that differentiates it from normal, you still want it to be like a

23:09

fast casual like

23:11

quick drive

23:12

-thru-y type thing?

23:13

No I don't even... Are you just pitching

23:14

a

23:14

fancy restaurant at me? I think I'm just pitching

23:16

a fancy restaurant. You could

23:18

have the same themes of like it feels like a McDonald's in some form or

23:21

another but just I want the food to be highest quality possible.

23:25

Yeah the best

23:26

cheeseburger.

23:27

How, I'm still stuck on how is this different than a five-star

23:30

restaurant. It's just a

23:33

branding exercise of taking a super fancy five-star

23:36

restaurant making it look more like fast food and then you would get that

23:40

attraction and that virality of people being like I want to try what KFC would

23:45

be like by the best

23:47

way. You're like you're leaning hard into the this is

23:51

exactly that thing next door but

23:53

good. And you'll use that as your branding and

23:55

- Oh, okay.

23:58

- Fast food is always fast and cheap.

24:01

This is just--

24:02

- Well,

24:02

not anymore.

24:03

- Well, I'm the opposite.

24:04

- Well,

24:04

right.

24:05

See, everybody, fast food's never cheap, right?

24:09

It's increasing in price, but this is like--

24:11

- Used to be, yeah.

24:11

- Nah, we get rid of the cheap part

24:14

of the

24:14

fast food element,

24:15

and now you have top food, right?

24:18

Like, I want the best burger.

24:20

Like, how different is getting the worst ground beef

24:23

to the best ground beef,

24:25

right?

24:26

The logistics system is still the same,

24:28

right?

24:28

- Ground

24:29

Wagyu.

24:30

- Seriously though,

24:30

Russell and I, during COVID,

24:32

we purchased like a quarter cow and we just split the meat.

24:35

And we had a group of

24:36

guys that did

24:37

that.

24:37

And the ground beef that we had from that

24:39

was just night and day better

24:41

than anything I've ever had before.

24:43

They were just organic dairy cows

24:45

and the meat was incredible.

24:47

All ingredients like that.

24:49

- I think that your secret to success here in Virality

24:51

be leaning into it being literally like without the word McDouble

24:55

it is exactly

24:56

the same you have to make it obvious to the customer yep this is a KFC

25:01

whatever chicken bowl but our version

25:05

that goes back to the underground viral

25:07

marketing on Instagram right this is

25:08

a queso rito from Taco Bell but we've made

25:12

it fun and good right Taco Bell would be good

25:14

the McCrown you

25:16

know have the

25:18

branding colors and everything

25:19

surrounding the

25:20

product when you're showing it but never say the name

25:23

exactly you could

25:24

go viral with that so this is a sit-down restaurant?

25:27

no I'm

25:27

thinking this is fast food because if you made a drive-thru that'd be pretty sweet

25:30

yeah honestly

25:30

if you have like good ingredients

25:31

you only have

25:32

like five options on the menu and

25:34

you're just making a bunch of them back people would go for that you still get it just as quick

25:38

have it rotate

25:38

yeah this

25:39

week is

25:39

Wendy's

25:41

week or whatever but you don't actually say it red-haired

25:45

- Hard girls chain week.

25:48

(laughing)

25:49

- Take out from a rest, like would you,

25:50

I don't know, would you pay premium price?

25:53

I guess it's like, it's the same idea and concept

25:55

of ordering from a restaurant for pickup, right?

25:58

But this would be, I don't know,

25:59

I'm thinking like a drive-thru experience

26:01

or a rotation kind of experience, right?

26:04

Like, why make a whole restaurant?

26:06

Just make, I mean, I think the--

26:08

- Fair.

26:09

- Why does all the, like if you take the same logistics

26:12

and machinery that McDonald's and these other chains use,

26:16

but replace it with top ingredients.

26:19

Like,

26:20

you're gonna have way better.

26:20

- Keep everything the same, but just change things.

26:22

- Yeah, like that's what every, yeah, it's fresh.

26:25

Like what if we just bought a McDonald's franchise,

26:29

renamed it to, you know, what is it, Nathan Fielder?

26:32

Didn't he do something with

26:33

Starbucks or whatever?

26:34

- Dumb Starbucks, yeah.

26:35

- Dumb Starbucks.

26:37

You literally like, the same, everything.

26:39

And then you just pull a stunt like that

26:41

and see, all right, but we get, you know,

26:43

you have top chickens, top cows,

26:45

we use the same equipment, but it makes it better.

26:48

It's just overall,

26:49

right?

26:49

- Immediately got a cease and desist from Starbucks,

26:52

but you may name it like McDornald's or something,

26:55

see how far you get.

26:57

- We

26:57

just, yeah, we work with a guy named McDonald.

27:01

(laughing)

27:02

It's his name.

27:03

We're not doing anything illegal.

27:06

- Robert McDonald's.

27:08

You just add that on top, his full legal name.

27:11

I don't think that works.

27:12

I don't think that's how trademark law works.

27:15

- Maybe make it the name McDonald's

27:17

and then you're gonna make it double, make it single,

27:20

make it quarter pounder.

27:22

- Big make it Donald's.

27:25

Licensed Donald Duck, there you go.

27:27

- I'm just trying to picture that highest end burger

27:29

that you can possibly do ingredient wise, cooking wise,

27:32

and then put it into like a classic McDouble box

27:37

whatever the cardboard that it comes in with like the wrapper on it of course I

27:40

wonder if that would make it taste worse how much of it is presentation but no

27:43

that's just not true based upon the beef that we had that one yeah

27:47

no I think

27:48

that's part of the the novelty it might be like a psychological thing where you

27:53

know like you're buying this for the experience at first

27:56

right

27:57

you're paying

27:57

25 bucks for a McDumble all of a sudden with fries but you know like the

28:03

The potatoes are fresh.

28:04

The

28:04

bread has cooked this morning.

28:06

Bread's cooked this morning.

28:07

Yes.

28:08

Onions are down the street.

28:10

Rare.

28:11

Whatever.

28:12

I don't know.

28:12

Microgreens, of course.

28:14

Microgreens, yep.

28:15

It's like Claire Saffitz's old Bon Appetit show at the Gourmet Makes where she'd make

28:19

like the gourmet version of Pop-Tarts or whatever.

28:22

You almost have like

28:23

that but

28:23

full restaurant.

28:24

Exactly.

28:24

Fast food.

28:25

Perfect.

28:26

Perfect example.

28:27

Yeah.

28:28

I could see that working.

28:29

Make it like a pop-up that happens every month or so.

28:32

Location different food rotation and love the patient and have it in limited quantity have people lined out the door so that people are like

28:40

Hey, I got the special McDonald's. I got the fast food dot period

28:45

Who knows what it's called and then just keep it going with the highest and

28:50

quality air city is a great idea

28:52

I

28:52

heard next week is Arby's week and that they're gonna be over in San Diego or whatever. Yeah

28:57

This could

28:57

be a cloud kitchen, you know those cloud kitchens that are only existed on like grubhub and or

29:02

- Like the ghost kitchens?

29:03

It just appears

29:04

in

29:04

your neighborhood

29:05

and everyone freaks out?

29:07

- Yup. - It's

29:07

risky.

29:08

- Well,

29:08

they just take, they just work with like,

29:11

you know, your local restaurant to,

29:13

and then they, yeah, the door dash driver will go to like,

29:16

New Holland Brewery or whatever

29:17

and just pick up a chicken sandwich there

29:20

and call it the, you know, the hot and fire sandwich

29:23

with this whole new brand

29:25

and they mark it up two or three bucks.

29:27

Or Mr. Beast, Mr. Beast did this.

29:29

All of Beast's burgers were coming out of like,

29:31

a big boy chain

29:32

or whatever.

29:33

And you're

29:33

like, you know,

29:34

they probably supply some extra ingredients,

29:36

but maybe you work, you do that with like a,

29:38

a high-end restaurant or a restaurant

29:41

next to a high-end restaurant.

29:43

(laughing)

29:44

You know, work that out.

29:45

But what is it, Binging with Babish?

29:47

You guys watch that guy

29:48

on

29:48

YouTube?

29:50

He does TV food.

29:53

Like he'll take like the turkey sandwich from Friends

29:56

and recreate that in his kitchen.

29:58

You could totally do something like that.

30:00

Like you could, I mean, this could evolve into like,

30:03

instead of just duplicating existing fast food places and elevating them,

30:07

you could take TV franchise foods, like the one you saw on the menu,

30:11

the menu burger, right. And

30:13

cloud kitchen that,

30:15

right.

30:16

That's

30:16

like the Minecraft burger,

30:17

like the Minecraft movies all over the place, right?

30:20

Like you just just create a cloud kitchen for.

30:22

So you go to entertainers, the Hollywood studios,

30:27

game publishers and stuff and you say,

30:29

what are some food items in your thing?

30:31

We will make a recipe and

30:33

distribute it to Cloud

30:34

Kitchens

30:35

and do all the work to facilitate that as a middleman.

30:38

We will license

30:39

your IP and you get a cut or whatever.

30:42

That's fun.

30:42

Have you ever wanted to eat the cake from Portal?

30:45

(laughing)

30:46

- Oh yeah. - We'll make

30:47

it, you know?

30:48

We'll decorate it, we'll do all that

30:50

and then send that out to your local

30:53

distributed Cloud Kitchens to make it on DoorDash, yeah.

30:56

That's a great example of helping out a mom and pop shop.

31:00

They follow a recipe that's the portal cake,

31:03

and it's literally their same bakery.

31:05

They're making the cake.

31:05

They just put icing in a different way.

31:08

OK, I want two things from this.

31:10

I want the final dish at the end of Ratatouille,

31:13

exactly how it looks like when they serve it,

31:16

and Emperor New Groove Kronk makes those spinach something

31:22

right

31:22

before they--

31:22

No, what does he call them?

31:24

Yes, I know what you're talking about.

31:25

the greek things yeah i want those

31:26

i want the krabby patty from yeah

31:29

that's a great

31:30

one that's

31:31

a fantastic one can they trademark these things like yes i

31:35

want the blue pet

31:36

krabby patty though what was the one that he made the the competing store that changed

31:40

colors the pretty patties i want a pretty patty

31:44

i'm gonna take a krabby patty and

31:48

a

31:56

Can I jump in for a food related item here?

31:58

Do it, yeah!

31:59

Do

31:59

it!

32:00

Okay, okay.

32:00

Alright, Chilly, what do you have this week?

32:03

So Scott talking about fast food, Russell talking about campfires with his pyro toys.

32:08

For some reason I was thinking about space food.

32:11

I feel like a huge event's going on, Jeff Bezos' ships are going around, Katy Perry

32:16

drama, right?

32:18

What if we create a very high end, very bougie space food where it's literally food attached

32:25

Spaceships fitted in its way so that it re-enters orbit and heats this food up

32:32

Tell me there isn't someone rich enough who would want the experience of true space food

32:37

And I think it mimics back to you know space-dated food dried food

32:42

You know space candy space ice cream where everyone it was all the rage

32:46

And I think it's crazy how commoditized all of these new space races are and we're not diving in on space food

32:54

How do we not have Katy Perry's fine steak meal or something like that? You know, I mean

32:59

I think

33:00

I think there'd be a market there very limited

33:04

Tom Scott famous youtuber put a piece of garlic bread in space by a very high altitude balloon system and then brought it back

33:11

Down, but if we could instead release the steak raw and then have it gain

33:15

heat

33:16

It's gonna be on

33:17

the earth

33:17

cook on re-entry not to naysay here

33:20

I think you'd have the same raw in the inside and charcoal on the outside problem unless you've made some sort of special

33:27

Oh sure

33:29

Have it

33:30

re-enter orbit at a certain angle properly

33:32

so that it

33:33

cooks. You know, medium rare

33:35

You can have different launch options. You can have the rare raw blue blue origin

33:41

Zero G sous vide.

33:42

Well, like you could like candy or whatever

33:45

you can cook sugar really at high temperatures,

33:48

you send it through space,

33:49

and now you literally have candy

33:51

that was made through space.

33:55

And this could be a big bag of sugar or something, right?

33:58

- This is the least sustainable thing

34:00

we've ever come up with,

34:00

I think.

34:01

This is great.

34:02

(laughing)

34:03

- Yeah, gasoline--

34:03

- You spend a few trillion

34:04

dollars

34:05

and then you get a handful of candy, I love it.

34:08

- All right, all right.

34:08

No, no, here's how it'll be sustainable.

34:10

We piggyback off of all these rocket launchers,

34:13

you know, that are sending millions,

34:14

Yeah, it's just you put you attach one bag on there on its way up that it releases halfway through to go green

34:23

Literally, we're gonna make money and then donate to the planet. Yeah, it's so

34:26

easy. They don't have to know

34:27

We can just magnet to it right as it's launching boom.

34:30

Yes

34:31

But I think it's a math problem

34:32

I think it's a math problem to heat up the food at a certain temperature for a certain time and get back into reentry

34:39

I don't know how much it do you have to make it go really fast in order for that to happen?

34:43

Scott do you know?

34:45

I think it's

34:46

just the atmosphere

34:47

Balloon going up and then coming back down. I don't think that's gonna cook it on there. You got to be going like

34:53

Obscenely fast orbit fast in order to get the heat to do it

34:57

So it costs a lot of energy to get the rocket moving that fast slowing it down is what heats it

35:02

Yeah,

35:02

but could you start out with the balloon have the balloon lift the rocket launch it sideways?

35:08

Right.

35:09

Could we invent a space elevator on our way to cooking garlic bread better?

35:14

You could use the Sun

35:22

Sun is the ultimate slow cooker if you think about it

35:28

Okay, this is kind of crazy but

35:30

Kinda like can food go bad out in space.

35:35

I said the ultimate vacuum isn't it? Super very cold

35:37

Yes, it's very very cold.

35:39

So if you have a stick hanging out in space for a few weeks, I mean it'd be fine.

35:47

It dry-aged in space.

35:50

It does have a ring to it.

35:51

It just seems like one of those luxury things that, you know, Salt Bay's restaurant or something,

35:57

or high-end restaurants would want to have a crazy technique that brings people in,

36:02

and that would be the thing.

36:04

- I think the gods describe

36:34

Like pyro toys and this are like perfect little gift ideas for 20 bucks that you need to fill out your stockings

36:49

Space skittle,

36:50

okay space X literally tells you how much you can send into space and how much it costs, right?

36:56

Let's do a P&L real quick get

36:58

the cogs

37:00

Okay, Falcon heavy. All right, you can send a Falcon heavy for like I think it's like yeah, it costs per kilogram

37:08

Now we would we talk to Elon obviously we just on Twitter

37:12

Because that's how you reach them

37:14

And we just tell him about

37:17

He's not doing anything I

37:18

don't know I just that would be fun

37:20

I think that'd be

37:21

something

37:21

different and fun.

37:23

We could attach them to satellites. I know we have

37:27

Thousands of satellites out in orbit right now. They get commissioned decommissioned all the time some micro sats

37:33

But they're just boxes of cereal.

37:34

Could you create a device?

37:36

That uses the air or the as it's falling out of the sky

37:41

It still went to space but it's cooking on its way down. Does that make sense?

37:45

No,

37:46

so, okay

37:47

Imagine you create a propeller

37:50

All right, generating energy in order to heat the steak somehow as

37:54

it yes on its way

37:55

down

37:55

So

37:56

you've got

37:56

now yeah,

37:57

not only you're setting up the stake you're setting up a griddle and a battery

38:01

on the way down

38:06

It's a propeller that generates enough friction on its way down on a metal plate no

38:14

You know who would be able to make this I think ninja would they have the ninja air fryer the ninja creamy

38:20

They got the ninja

38:20

slushy

38:22

If it

38:23

was one company, I would put my stocks in in the ninja

38:26

You're

38:26

pretty I fan that's blowing on the stake as it's falling to earth that is adding more air

38:33

It's that that's what we call a air fryer

38:44

All right, well that's my idea Leo what have you brought us this week

38:49

Okay, so my

38:51

kids enjoy

38:53

Borrowing our phones and sending emoji messages to my parents and loved ones. It's very cute

39:00

They just sit there with the emoji keyboard and swipe and peck at it and something that even my now three-year-old can do

39:07

trouble they quit out of the app they

39:11

Accidentally the screen turns off they and text message comes in and takes over and then they lose where they're at

39:16

There's a bunch of reasons why using our phones for it is kind of inconvenient.

39:21

I would love to build some sort of hardware that is the emoji sending

39:28

BlackBerry, but for kids where they have a predefined list of

39:33

recipients that the parent is in control of and some sort of hardware keyboard or

39:39

MacBook Touch Bar style interface or something where it's just a dedicated

39:44

emoji sender like the Facebook poke but a little bit more robust or remember

39:49

Yo that kind of app or something

39:51

Just like maybe this could be a totally software product and it takes over the phone full screen and can't be quit out

39:56

Unless the parent does some sort of special swipe or something or maybe this is a hardware thing

40:01

I don't know yet

40:02

But I need to productify this thing because it's driving me nuts that they're like

40:06

Can I send an emoji message and I lose my phone for a half hour while they get frustrated

40:10

nice

40:11

How

40:11

would you how would you build this? Here are your requirements easy to use for kid they type in emojis

40:18

There's hundreds of emoji to pick from which is a problem

40:20

Maybe you have a narrow set or not

40:22

I don't know and then it connects to Wi-Fi and sends it it can even send it over like

40:27

What's app or Facebook messenger or something?

40:28

So you don't have to worry about having phone numbers and cell phone connections and all that, right?

40:31

So then how do you what's the user interface for someone like that?

40:34

I think it's just a very

40:37

Specific designed let's say tablet for now. Sure a tablet with a specific set of

40:44

Screens and features. I love this because I think there is a use for

40:49

Like a mounted tablet kind of thing for kids to call FaceTime

40:55

Yes,

40:56

yes as

40:56

well as send messages voice messages

40:59

Like

40:59

yeah,

41:00

my kids started getting into sending

41:02

like he

41:03

wanted to not send a voice message

41:04

she wanted to press the microphone

41:06

so that the thing would type out the words for sometimes,

41:10

you know, and then--

41:11

- Okay. - Yeah, you

41:12

can do voice attacks,

41:13

that's the

41:13

word. - Yeah, yeah.

41:14

- Yeah, and so you just jump between the three.

41:17

But the interface for a kid, like, it's really hard to,

41:19

it'd be really

41:20

cool if you

41:20

saw a screen

41:21

of all the people you know, right?

41:23

And they can swipe left and right, select the person, call.

41:27

- It's a safe, and I think that's a win for like,

41:29

if you're a mom or you're alone as a parent in a house,

41:33

Yes.

41:34

And something happens

41:35

to you.

41:36

You fall.

41:36

You can't get up.

41:38

Life alert.

41:39

You go

41:39

to-- no, that's--

41:40

oh, sorry.

41:41

That's not the tablet I named.

41:41

In just emojis.

41:44

Hey, Grandma.

41:45

Mama fell on the ground.

41:48

Totally.

41:49

Can she call?

41:50

We've trained our kids that they can go to the Google Smart

41:52

Speakers and press this and swipe here.

41:54

And now you'll be able to do a video call with Dad or Mom.

41:57

If something ever happens, you can do that, right?

41:59

But having that be easier would be great.

42:01

Well, there you go.

42:02

- It sounds like what, like a smart speaker.

42:04

- It's not great though.

42:05

Like we need to build our own smart speaker here.

42:08

- So

42:08

you

42:09

do want dedicated hardware for this,

42:10

you're thinking?

42:11

- I think so, or just like you said,

42:13

an iPad with the tape to the wall

42:15

that has the app floating full screen

42:16

that we're designing this UI for sure,

42:19

hardware or software.

42:20

- My idea about the interface,

42:23

it mimics PowerPuff Girls,

42:24

if you guys remember the phone that would come online

42:26

and it's rotary.

42:27

Each rotary hole would have a different emoji

42:30

with two different buttons underneath.

42:32

scroll pages and

42:34

on top would have you know your list of contacts if you want to go there you can choose your contacts from

42:39

There maybe one through nine on the rotary phone

42:42

That's fun. That's novel. Yeah having something tactile would be great and then take the phone up you can leave their voice messages

42:48

Maybe have a small display screen to have what Russell said which is like a text-to-speech

42:53

I think that'd be really fun a little tactile whether it's

42:56

Something that is touchscreen itself in the rotary phone or just you know a tactile screen and then something behind it

43:03

I could see that being

43:04

done with like yeah

43:06

Yeah,

43:06

I am NOT inspired by an iPad with my app on it that probably honestly

43:10

I haven't searched for this that probably exists

43:12

I love like

43:14

Imagine

43:14

like

43:14

an old-timey cash register and you're walking up to it and pressing grandma's picture and then like pulling down the lever that could clunk

43:21

And then like different buttons are popping up and stuff make it fun

43:25

Absolutely.

43:26

Just put ESP32 in it that sends out the message.

43:29

That's what I

43:30

was thinking.

43:30

ESP32,

43:31

yes, yes, yes.

43:32

Put in Arduino, ESP, yeah, exactly.

43:34

Have it Bluetooth to your own phone or

43:36

iPad.

43:37

Sure, I love this.

43:39

Connects to Wi-Fi and sends it on Telegram, Signal, Facebook, whatever.

43:44

Totally.

43:45

Grandparents, we don't have to build the whole messaging and auth stack from scratch.

43:49

This can be something that sends a little ifs, then that hook or something.

43:53

but the interface is the core issue for sure.

43:58

- I'm just picturing two of these typewriters,

44:00

but they're, even if you did create the stack in yourself,

44:03

you have one typewriter, you type on one,

44:05

and then it

44:05

auto types on the other one,

44:07

like old school Morris or something,

44:09

and you're just

44:09

communicating back

44:10

and forth

44:11

through emojis on a

44:12

typewriter.

44:13

- Two typewriters, emoji keyboard,

44:16

you press the button on one and the other one clicks,

44:19

is amazing!

44:21

It's a fax machine, but analog.

44:23

And

44:23

oh, I love that.

44:25

- Yeah, Leo's geeking out.

44:27

It's just totally Leo.

44:28

- Oh shoot.

44:29

That's so me, yeah.

44:31

- We're hitting so many different decades

44:32

or centuries with this one

44:34

device.

44:35

- My old school typewriter doesn't have enough wifi.

44:37

- Could be a small one, right?

44:39

Like I could get a small one

44:40

that would be like a little receipt printer

44:43

type of thing size, but you'd hear it going, right?

44:46

(imitates

44:46

typing)

44:46

In the other room while you're there.

44:48

You're like, oh

44:48

shit.

44:48

- I sent a message to mom, yeah.

44:50

You know those smart mirror displays with the screen behind it?

44:54

I was thinking something like that, but maybe using old Android smartphones

44:57

decommissioned screens where it's a mirror for your kid and has a camera

45:02

So if your kid makes a certain face

45:04

It would predict what kind of emoji you would want to send display it and then have them choose it

45:09

So then your kids stuck it behind the camera going

45:13

Big smiley face tap brownie face tap

45:17

- Face,

45:17

heart.

45:18

- I can imagine they would be in front of that thing

45:20

for hours.

45:21

- Oh, that's a great idea.

45:23

A user interface where the user is putting in the emoji

45:26

by acting it out.

45:27

That's great.

45:28

- Wow, Keith.

45:29

- Someone's probably done that.

45:30

That's the interface.

45:30

It doesn't even have to be the smart mirror.

45:32

Well, I guess that you'd have, you know,

45:33

if you have the iPad on the wall or something,

45:35

that's one way to type it in or something.

45:37

Man, that rules.

45:38

- I feel like people would do that.

45:40

And then you could, it would send the message

45:42

and the recording of like the video recording

45:44

too.

45:45

- Right.

45:46

Like the heads up, you know the heads up game,

45:48

right?

45:48

Where you're like,

45:49

where it's recording,

45:50

you could do that, something like

45:51

that.

45:51

- Remember there was a keyboard that was something

45:55

that I wanted so badly in like the mid 2000s

45:58

where every key cap was a, an OLED screen.

46:05

And yeah,

46:06

it was like an array of them.

46:07

It was too heavy and it didn't feel good to type on

46:10

and it was glass and it wasn't great.

46:11

But yeah, you would like hit shift

46:13

and all of the lowercase things would turn to uppercase

46:16

or you'd hit control and it would say cut, copy, paste,

46:19

whatever, instead of the letters and things like that.

46:22

I almost want something like that, where I've got a row of,

46:24

say,

46:25

I don't know,

46:25

15, 20 little keys with screens on them.

46:28

And they're categories.

46:31

And when my kid presses the first button that is faces,

46:35

then the rest of them all change to happy, sad, laughing,

46:38

whatever.

46:39

And then they press that or something.

46:41

You know what I mean?

46:41

I've been trying to think of the different ways

46:43

that this interface could manifest, because once we get

46:46

Input down. I don't think it's very hard to plumb it up to getting to the recipient, you know

46:52

But I think the camera is probably the best one and then the grandparents get the cute kid video

46:57

What if we just design a singular key switch and they tap it in a rhythmic order to send the emoji over?

47:04

Has that been invented yet?

47:06

Beep beep beep beep beep

47:08

Old Morse code?

47:09

They

47:09

said smile

47:12

It could be a giant wheel that they click, you know, like a giant you like a your bike locks, right?

47:19

It's got zero one two, three, four, five six, seven eight nine, but

47:22

just one giant wheel of emojis

47:24

I mean, this is a little weird and different

47:27

You turn

47:28

it you hit send turn it hit send turn it hit send just

47:33

okay

47:34

Completely

47:34

out there like a fishing rod

47:36

We'll say on one side that gets you your emoji to the right arrow

47:40

Once the arrow lines up with the emoji

47:42

you want to send or something

47:43

push a button

47:44

Yep,

47:44

and the thing is like little tiny emojis and it's the size of a frisbee and they're just yep

47:50

Going through 50 60 70 of them as they spin through it. That's fun

47:55

I feel like the customized keyboard the closest thing I could think of as an existing product would be one of those alligator stream decks

48:02

Yeah, it's customizable

48:03

screens and then having it go to you or whatever

48:08

ASCII key

48:10

Whatever, etc

48:11

to the emoji biggest Elgato stream deck is like 8 by 8 or something. We need like 50 by 50

48:19

They

48:19

make

48:19

a studio. I think

48:20

it's like two

48:21

rows. It's super long for those server racks or

48:24

like a

48:25

roll desk that people

48:26

Yeah, they have large ones on Aliexpress.

48:29

Really? There's like a really long

48:31

Stream, you know, the stream deck is just a giant screen with like key clear key caps in the yeah

48:36

I've got that's the cheap way to do it. Yeah, I just didn't know that like I figured it would be lots of little screens behind

48:42

There right, but the cheaper way to build something like that was just one LCD panel

48:47

Makes a lot of sense.

48:49

That's what I was thinking of with the rotary screen phone.

48:51

Mm-hmm. Yeah

48:52

Yeah

48:53

There's some sort of opportunity for a Facebook portal or smart display or something for kids out there

48:59

And if someone wants to take it and run with it, I would be your first customer. Well to your listener

49:05

Thank you very much for listening. We hope you enjoyed yourself. And

49:08

thank you very much Chilly for joining us

49:10

This is really fun. Thank you guys for having me. I appreciate Russell reaching out

49:13

I've been a fan of your show for a few months now. So thank you guys for bringing me

49:17

on great

49:18

Thanks for following man. That's great. Thanks the rest of you

49:21

guys

49:21

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49:27

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