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00:00:00
The Joe Rogan Experience
00:00:02
work that I've done in the past,
00:00:04
particularly with the Urban Explorers,
00:00:05
has got me into a lot of trouble. I I
00:00:07
mean, I got arrested. Um, my all of the
00:00:11
people that I worked with ended up
00:00:12
getting arrested because the police got
00:00:13
my [ __ ] notes
00:00:15
and uh I mean, it was a it was a
00:00:17
terrible How' the police get your notes?
00:00:19
It was a terrible situation. Well, I So,
00:00:21
we I was I was going out with these
00:00:23
urban explorers into all of this
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subterranean infrastructure underneath
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London. And after we went into those
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sewer systems, then we got into
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electricity tunnels. Then we started
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getting into bunkers. So these are
00:00:35
how illegal is this?
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These are like layers under the city. So
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you know, imagine there's like, you
00:00:39
know, five layers under the city, right?
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So we we go from those sewers to the
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electricity totals to the
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uh infrastructural systems to the
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bunkers. And then we started getting
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into what are called deep level systems,
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right? Right. And they're kind they're
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they're very similar to uh the bunkers
00:00:55
that the US government is building here
00:00:57
that they called they call dums deep
00:00:59
underground military bases. Right. We
00:01:01
started getting into like serious
00:01:03
critical infrastructure. Like at some
00:01:06
point how easy was it to get into those?
00:01:08
It it took us years. It took us years.
00:01:11
It was quite a lot of research. Wow.
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But I mean at some point we got into uh
00:01:16
what are called the the the BT deeple
00:01:18
tunnels, the British telecommunications
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deep level tunnels. And we were like
00:01:21
inside the telecommunications trunk for
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all of the United Kingdom, you know. Um
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and at this point we're like, you know,
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100 ft underground, 120 ft underground.
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We were actually we were walking through
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uh this tunnel about you know about 100
00:01:40
feet underground and and one of the
00:01:42
explorers I was with is like there's a
00:01:44
there's a manhole above us. I was like
00:01:45
what do what do you mean there's a
00:01:46
manhole above us you know we're like
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we're in the deepest level right now. Um
00:01:51
and we pop this manhole and and a camera
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swivels you know and stares at us like
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oh god you know and then we realized we
00:01:59
were into some some critical [ __ ] So
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what was it? What we it it was just it
00:02:04
was just telecommunication hubs, right?
00:02:06
It's just like the trunk of all of the
00:02:08
the the the infrastructure for fiber
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optics and phone lines.
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And they just have an exposed manhole
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cover and a tunnel that you can get to.
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Dude, we wiggled through like we wiggled
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from tunnel to tunnel like through tiny
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crevices. We were getting into like the
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deep underbelly of the city. I mean, it
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was not it was not easy to get to. But
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but here's the thing. At the same time,
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we had been cracking all of the the
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abandoned tube stations, metro stations
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in London, right? So, we took a we took
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a map of the tube from 1932 and we set a
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map from uh 2008 on top of it and what
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you see are a bunch of stations that are
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no longer on the map, right? That's your
00:02:47
first clue. So, there were like 40ome.
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Then we then we started doing research
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and we figured out that there there's
00:02:53
got to be at least 14 stations that
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still have like ticket offices or
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platforms or there like there's
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something there that you could find. So
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we started sneaking into the tube to go
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and find these places. Like we would
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wait till the train stopped at 2 in the
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morning and then we would like climb up
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a bridge and get onto the tracks and
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we'd run through the tunnels and we and
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we were finding these stations one after
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another. incredible time capsules, you
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know, where there were artifacts left
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behind, posters, like we'd find tickets
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on the ground that were 40 40 years old,
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you know, I mean, really cool stuff.
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Some of a lot of these stations were
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were bombed out
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during World War II.
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Um, but uh finding these is like again
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this kind of like like here's the
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archaeologist, right? Like we were
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having this visceral connection to
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history. We were finding the stuff that
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was giving us like a real sense of being
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inside history in material terms.
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So, we're we're posting every time we
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crack one of these stations, we post it
00:03:52
on our blogs. We're like, "Oh, we've you
00:03:54
know, we've cracked Mark Lane, we've
00:03:56
cracked Down Street, we've cracked
00:03:58
whatever." And we're all excited about
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it. and we and like the windows
00:04:02
narrowing and we we get we get towards
00:04:05
the end of the 14 stations and we're
00:04:08
starting to think, you know,
00:04:11
like the cops are surely watching what
00:04:14
we're doing, right? The British
00:04:15
Transport Police and kind of know where
00:04:18
we're going to go next because there's
00:04:19
only a few stations left. So, we stop
00:04:22
posting stuff. And on Christmas of 2012,
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we cracked the last station underneath
00:04:26
the British Museum. Uh, which like
00:04:29
there's all sorts of cool stories about
00:04:31
like there was a there was a ghost in
00:04:32
here. It's a haunted station or
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whatever. But we did it. We never got
00:04:36
caught. So for me, this is the end of
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the research project.
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Is there a fear of being like
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retroactively
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prosecuted for this stuff?
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We'll get we'll get there.
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Oh,
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so I'm done with my research project.
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I've written my PhD. I published my
00:04:54
first book, Explore Everything about all
00:04:56
of our our uh or I hadn't published the
00:04:58
book yet, actually. And I I fly to
00:05:01
Cambodia to work on a totally different
00:05:02
research project, right? Like I'm
00:05:04
switching gears. I'm going to go do
00:05:06
something else. And I fly back from
00:05:09
Cambodia via Singapore and the plane
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lands at Heathrow. And you know, the
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thing goes ding and you stand up and you
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get your bags and then nothing's
00:05:18
happening. And they say, "Can everyone
00:05:20
please sit down again?" I sit down. I
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look out the plane and there's cop cars
00:05:24
everywhere. And I'm like, "Oh shit." You
00:05:27
know, I came from Singapore. Someone
00:05:28
brought drugs. I don't know. There's a
00:05:30
terrorist on the pl. Like, who? I have
00:05:32
no idea what's going on. And the cops
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get on the plane and they're like, "42K,
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42K, Dr. Garrett. Yeah, you're coming
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with us."
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Okay. So, they cuff me.
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They they have me like retrieve my bag
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from the baggage claim and they take me
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through through passport control in
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handcuffs and obviously the UK
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government's like, "Yeah, we we'll go
00:05:54
ahead and keep that passport. Thank
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you." So they eventually charge me with
00:05:59
um conspiracy to commit criminal damage.
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Now, what's weird about England is that
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trespass isn't a criminal offense. So
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you can't you can't charge people with
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trespass unless you're in very specific
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circumstances. So, they tried out this
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charge of conspiracy to commit criminal
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damage because it's it's about
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intention. It's a thought crime. Like,
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if I text you and I'm like, "Hey, dude.
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Uh, you know, the bar is closed right
00:06:25
now because of COVID. You want to break
00:06:26
in and just like pour ourselves a beer?"
00:06:28
And you're like, "Yeah, let's do it."
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Like, we've committed conspiracy to
00:06:32
commit criminal damage.
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Like, we've committed to the crime.
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So, uh, anyway, we for years were
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dragged through the British legal system
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and I got trapped in the UK for three
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years.
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Yeah, I was they kept my passport, dude.
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I was trapped there.
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And here's where it gets really weird is
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that when the plane landed at Singapore,
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there was a a journalist from GQ who was
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supposed to meet us because we were
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going to take him into some of this
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subterranean infrastructure and show him
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all these spaces. And he's like, you
00:07:05
know, by the time I got out of jail,
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like 48 hours later, um I had I had all
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these messages from like, you [ __ ] I
00:07:11
came I showed up at the airport and you
00:07:13
weren't there and whatever, you know,
00:07:15
and I finally find this guy, Matthew
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Power, and and he's like, "Are you
00:07:20
serious? Like you got cuz we had timed
00:07:22
it to land at the same time." Yeah. And
00:07:24
he's like, "You serious? You got
00:07:25
arrested at that moment?"
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And he said, "What about your house?" I
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said, "I have no idea." So, we go to my
00:07:30
house and we unlock the door with these
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keys that the police had given me
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because they took down my door with a
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battering ram,
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right? And then, you know, like put some
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padlocks on there that they drilled into
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the the door and the door frame. And I
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open it up and my apartment has just
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been ravaged, right? Like stuff
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everywhere. The mattress is flipped
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over, all the cupboards are torn apart,
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there's like pieces of the door all over
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the floor. And underneath all of it,
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there was a a job contract from the
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University of Oxford to do a posttock
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after I because I just finished my PhD.
00:08:01
And the journalist from GQ is like,
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"Dude, I can go home right now. I've got
00:08:04
this story. I don't need to explore
00:08:06
anything. I'm done."
00:08:08
And how did it resolve?
00:08:09
Well, the um by the time we got to
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court, I mean, the the the prosecution
00:08:14
was just in shambles. I mean, it was a
00:08:17
total debacle because there was no
00:08:18
evidence that we had broken anything,
00:08:21
you know, or their laws. You had just
00:08:23
trespassed, which isn't the law.
00:08:24
We just trespassed. Yeah. But they
00:08:26
spent, you know, £300,000,
00:08:28
I don't know, $400,000 of taxpayer money
00:08:31
to run this prosecution. So, they were
00:08:32
going to see it to the end. And
00:08:35
essentially, um, you know, they got they
00:08:37
they confiscated my computers, my hard
00:08:40
drives, my notebooks, and u that was
00:08:43
that was a central component of the
00:08:44
evidence that was used to prosecute
00:08:47
everyone. So, essentially like I just
00:08:49
made a deal with them. I was like,
00:08:50
"Look, I'll I'll take a hit, you know,
00:08:54
if you just like if everyone else can
00:08:56
just get off, you know, I'll I'll take
00:08:57
the hit for it." So, I plead guilty to
00:09:00
uh uh I think it was four counts of
00:09:02
criminal damage, which included damage
00:09:05
to a screw from a board that I had taken
00:09:08
off and put back on to a vent shaft.
00:09:11
I know. Sliding sliding open a window.
00:09:14
Oh, that was aiding in a bedding. So, I
00:09:15
had opened a window for someone to crawl
00:09:17
through. I mean, it was just like a list
00:09:18
of ridiculous things, but they didn't
00:09:20
care because they just they needed their
00:09:22
they needed a win.
00:09:23
They needed a win, you know. So, I gave
00:09:25
them that. But now I've got now I've got
00:09:27
this criminal record in England.
00:09:28
So, when you land, you get pulled aside
00:09:31
if you go to England.
00:09:32
I I used to I actually filed a complaint
00:09:34
with the government and I you know, they
00:09:35
would like severely harass me. And then
00:09:38
when I moved to Australia, I had the
00:09:39
same problem. Like they had put flags on
00:09:41
my passport.
00:09:42
Um,
00:09:43
and you filed a complaint and did it go
00:09:44
through
00:09:45
and I filed a complaint and they fixed
00:09:46
it. They took the flags off the
00:09:47
passport. Yeah.
00:09:48
Essentially saying like, you know,
00:09:51
I did my thing, you know. Yeah. Like why
00:09:53
do I have to keep paying for this over
00:09:55
and over again?
00:09:56
But it was really funny when I tried
00:09:58
when they when they originally gave me
00:09:59
my passport back. So like I go to court
00:10:01
and then there, you know, the judge is
00:10:03
like, "Dr. Garrett, you're very naughty
00:10:04
or whatever." You know, here's your
00:10:06
here. Take your passport back.
00:10:07
Do they have wigs on?
00:10:08
Yes. Yeah. The wigs are fantastic.
00:10:11
Really? Yeah. They still do that?
00:10:12
Yeah, they still do that. They're really
00:10:14
good. Wow. That's real.
00:10:15
Yeah. Yeah. The barristers all have
00:10:17
their wigs and they they carry them
00:10:19
around like a like a cat, you know,
00:10:21
and then they have to put it on when
00:10:22
they're put on to do [ __ ] bonkers.
00:10:25
But so I so they gave me my passport
00:10:26
back and I and I the next day I was
00:10:29
supposed to fly to Sydney to go speak at
00:10:31
the the Festival of Dangerous Ideas. I
00:10:34
was the obvious speaker, right? I was
00:10:35
going and I go to the airport and the
00:10:38
the guy swipes it and he's like,
00:10:40
"Oh yeah, you don't want to use this."
00:10:43
I was like, "What what does it say? What
00:10:45
does the screen say? And he said, I I
00:10:47
can't I can't relay that, but you should
00:10:49
probably go. And gives me my passport
00:10:52
back. And then I
00:10:53
You should probably leave the country.
00:10:55
No, like you should not get on a plane
00:10:57
with this. Like you're going to have a
00:10:58
problem on the other side, you know,
00:11:00
whatever he says. Well, how else can you travel?
00:11:02
Well, exactly. So then, so then I I
00:11:04
missed my flight and I had to go back. I
00:11:06
had to go to the US embassy and I'm
00:11:08
like, you know, I've just tried to fly
00:11:10
with my passport and it doesn't work.
00:11:13
And the guy at the embassy swipes it and
00:11:14
he says, 'Oh, wow. And then he and then
00:11:17
he gets out a hole puncher and he goes
00:11:18
dunk dunk dunk right through my passport
00:11:21
and he says, "I you shouldn't use that."
00:11:23
And then like 3 hours later they gave me
00:11:25
another passport and I flew out the next
00:11:26
day.
00:11:27
And the passport's good. The new one's
00:11:28
good. It's fine. Yeah.
00:11:29
Wow.
00:11:30
But then I but then I started getting
00:11:31
stopped again. So they like I don't know
00:11:33
tack the flags on there later.
00:11:35
God. I mean it was a real ordeal. But the you
00:11:37
know the thing
00:11:39
I mean it was it was it was traumatic
00:11:41
for me of course. I was like stuck in a
00:11:42
foreign country and you know like you
00:11:44
get worried about your income. I get was
00:11:46
worried about being they did try to
00:11:47
deport me at some point because once you
00:11:50
have a criminal offense they try and
00:11:51
deport. So anyway I beat that down.
00:11:54
Did they find you? Like what was the
00:11:56
ultimate judgment?
00:11:57
Yeah it was I think it was two 2,000
00:12:00
about $3,000 I got fined. Um not
00:12:04
not too bad. It's not a big deal.
00:12:05
Sure you made some money off the book.
00:12:07
If not you're going to make some now.
00:12:08
You know what dude? I I made I made uh
00:12:11
all the money that I made on my first
00:12:13
book, Explore Everything, went to my
00:12:14
lawyers, who I have to say were
00:12:16
phenomenal. Like they did a great job.
00:12:18
But it was like every time I get a
00:12:19
royalty check, I just sign it over to
00:12:21
them, you know. And it did seem like
00:12:23
karma. It was like, well, I broke into
00:12:24
all this [ __ ] and then I wrote a book
00:12:26
and then the money went to the lawyers
00:12:27
and the lawyers got me off and it all
00:12:29
kind of worked out.
00:12:34
[Applause]

Description:

Taken from JRE #1515 w/Dr. Bradley Garrett: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_kDKAOncclU

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