Sterling K. Brown
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
It's been out for a really long time.
It's been out for a really long time.
Well, you know, to be the adult son of more white people, I think would be going to the well. It's definitely not that. I usually just try to talk about the things that I can. The president dies in the pilot. But most folks, and you see that in the preview. Right, right, yeah, yeah. And I say that that's the tip of the iceberg.
Well, you know, to be the adult son of more white people, I think would be going to the well. It's definitely not that. I usually just try to talk about the things that I can. The president dies in the pilot. But most folks, and you see that in the preview. Right, right, yeah, yeah. And I say that that's the tip of the iceberg.
Well, you know, to be the adult son of more white people, I think would be going to the well. It's definitely not that. I usually just try to talk about the things that I can. The president dies in the pilot. But most folks, and you see that in the preview. Right, right, yeah, yeah. And I say that that's the tip of the iceberg.
I do indeed. My wife and I, Ryan and Michelle BathΓ©, we do a podcast called We Don't Always Agree. Spoiler alert. Yeah, it describes most marriages, but we've been married. We just celebrated 19 years in March. Mazel tov.
I do indeed. My wife and I, Ryan and Michelle BathΓ©, we do a podcast called We Don't Always Agree. Spoiler alert. Yeah, it describes most marriages, but we've been married. We just celebrated 19 years in March. Mazel tov.
I do indeed. My wife and I, Ryan and Michelle BathΓ©, we do a podcast called We Don't Always Agree. Spoiler alert. Yeah, it describes most marriages, but we've been married. We just celebrated 19 years in March. Mazel tov.
You know, the podcast is my wife's idea. Ayahuasca was my idea. We're both what we like to call crunchy granola black people. So we don't really fit in the box of, like, typical sort of things. Like, we like to do what they call white people stuff.
You know, the podcast is my wife's idea. Ayahuasca was my idea. We're both what we like to call crunchy granola black people. So we don't really fit in the box of, like, typical sort of things. Like, we like to do what they call white people stuff.
You know, the podcast is my wife's idea. Ayahuasca was my idea. We're both what we like to call crunchy granola black people. So we don't really fit in the box of, like, typical sort of things. Like, we like to do what they call white people stuff.
That's good. That was really good. But the ayahuasca, we went to Costa Rica. It's one of the few licensed dispensaries of the medicine in the world. And I think we were interested in seeing... A friend of mine described it to me as it unlocks blind spots that you weren't aware that you had.
That's good. That was really good. But the ayahuasca, we went to Costa Rica. It's one of the few licensed dispensaries of the medicine in the world. And I think we were interested in seeing... A friend of mine described it to me as it unlocks blind spots that you weren't aware that you had.
That's good. That was really good. But the ayahuasca, we went to Costa Rica. It's one of the few licensed dispensaries of the medicine in the world. And I think we were interested in seeing... A friend of mine described it to me as it unlocks blind spots that you weren't aware that you had.
The biggest blind spot is that we all sort of delude ourselves into thinking that we have some degree of control over what happens next. And really, all we have control over is our response to what happens next. That's probably the biggest takeaway.
The biggest blind spot is that we all sort of delude ourselves into thinking that we have some degree of control over what happens next. And really, all we have control over is our response to what happens next. That's probably the biggest takeaway.
The biggest blind spot is that we all sort of delude ourselves into thinking that we have some degree of control over what happens next. And really, all we have control over is our response to what happens next. That's probably the biggest takeaway.
Yeah, that's right. That's correct. I was an economics major when I was in undergrad, and I thought that being an intern at the Fed was going to be something that led to me doing some sort of investment banking thing or what have you. And really what it led me to, Pete, was knowing that I was bored to tears working at the Federal Reserve Bank. Really? Something else, yeah.
Yeah, that's right. That's correct. I was an economics major when I was in undergrad, and I thought that being an intern at the Fed was going to be something that led to me doing some sort of investment banking thing or what have you. And really what it led me to, Pete, was knowing that I was bored to tears working at the Federal Reserve Bank. Really? Something else, yeah.
Yeah, that's right. That's correct. I was an economics major when I was in undergrad, and I thought that being an intern at the Fed was going to be something that led to me doing some sort of investment banking thing or what have you. And really what it led me to, Pete, was knowing that I was bored to tears working at the Federal Reserve Bank. Really? Something else, yeah.