Episode 48

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Published on:

5th Mar 2026

Zombie Richard Pryor, Burning Pretzel Birthday Cake, & More with Austin Grey

This week on 5 Random Questions, comedian and podcaster Austin Grey talks about bringing back Richard Pryor from the dead to save the world, a burning pretzel for a birthday cake, why irony maybe bypasses Americans, and more.

Answering the questions this week: Austin Grey

An Austin based comedian and writer who can’t help but laugh at the little things. Loves to write self indicting essays that use comedy as a shield, and also a spotlight.

Austin's Website

@Ramblerlive on Instagram

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All questions provided by ConversationStarters.

Transcript
Speaker:

Austin: I think the main takeaway is I should not be given a wish because I will use it very frivolously.

Speaker:

Austin: So maybe give a better thought leader the wish.

Speaker:

Austin: Maybe that's what I'll be. I'll wish that somebody else can make this wish that

Speaker:

Austin: has a better perspective on the world. I want no responsibility.

Speaker:

Danny: Hi, and welcome to 5 Random Questions, the show with unexpected questions

Speaker:

Danny: and unfiltered answers.

Speaker:

Danny: I'm your host, Danny Brown. and each week I'll be asking my guests five questions

Speaker:

Danny: created by a random question generator.

Speaker:

Danny: The guest has no idea what the questions are and neither do I,

Speaker:

Danny: which means this could go either way.

Speaker:

Danny: So sit back, relax and let's dive into this week's episode.

Speaker:

Danny: Today's guest is Austin Grey. An Austin-based comedian and writer who can't

Speaker:

Danny: help but laugh at the little things, Austin loves to write self-indicting essays

Speaker:

Danny: that use comedy as a shield and also a spotlight.

Speaker:

Danny: He's also the host of Rambler, Live from the City That Never Works,

Speaker:

Danny: a podcast audio diary from inside a city addicted to being addicted.

Speaker:

Danny: So, Austin, welcome to 5 Random Questions.

Speaker:

Austin: Thanks, Danny. It's great to be here. I'm excited. Excited to see where we go

Speaker:

Austin: and what questions are about to pop up for us.

Speaker:

Danny: Well, this is always the fun little part as well, because it's like the gentle

Speaker:

Danny: easing into whatever lies ahead.

Speaker:

Danny: So this is always a nice, gentle start as well. So good to have you here.

Speaker:

Danny: I appreciate you being on the show today, mate.

Speaker:

Austin: Right. Thank you. Thanks for having me.

Speaker:

Danny: And as I mentioned in the introduction, you're a comedian who's also got the podcast.

Speaker:

Danny: Do you take inspiration from some of the audience interactions for your podcast

Speaker:

Danny: and vice versa, or are they two separate things?

Speaker:

Austin: Yeah, I would say they're mainly two separate things, but I'd be lying if this

Speaker:

Austin: podcast just wasn't influenced by every single thing in my life.

Speaker:

Austin: It's very much so me just rambling about what I've seen recently and what's

Speaker:

Austin: inspired me, what's influenced me.

Speaker:

Austin: And interestingly enough, as I've written for the podcast and started sharing,

Speaker:

Austin: smaller things are more noticeable in their larger impact.

Speaker:

Austin: So definitely audiences influence what I find funny and what I want to share.

Speaker:

Danny: And instead of crowd work, how do you find crowd work? Because I've spoken to

Speaker:

Danny: a couple of comedians before on the podcast, well enough.

Speaker:

Danny: And one of the chaps I work with does improv.

Speaker:

Danny: And it's always interesting to hear each one's, you know, take on audience work

Speaker:

Danny: and do they like it, do they not like it. So what's yours take on it?

Speaker:

Austin: Yeah, it's definitely a learned art, for sure.

Speaker:

Austin: It's not something I think a

Speaker:

Austin: lot of people like to go up and do crowd work and just like to chit chat.

Speaker:

Austin: It's a learned art. I think when it's on, it's perfect.

Speaker:

Austin: Sometimes the audience doesn't realize it's a joke and that can be brutal.

Speaker:

Austin: It can go sideways quickly.

Speaker:

Austin: But as long as the audience is an engaged audience and they're there to have

Speaker:

Austin: fun, it's really my favorite thing to do when the audience is there to be the comedian themselves.

Speaker:

Austin: Sometimes it's not quite as fun.

Speaker:

Danny: I hear you. I could imagine if you're up there on a stage in the spotlight and

Speaker:

Danny: you're not getting a reaction, I can imagine what that could be like for sure.

Speaker:

Danny: And as I mentioned, you've got your podcast.

Speaker:

Danny: And what I found interesting before we get into your random questions is your

Speaker:

Danny: podcast description mentions, we're not interested in answers,

Speaker:

Danny: but I'm going to ask you a lot of questions.

Speaker:

Danny: So how do you feel you'll do on 5 Random Questions that's all about your answers?

Speaker:

Austin: I think you'll find my answers to your questions may not be complete answers either.

Speaker:

Austin: So we'll see if there's other questions that come up as I'm answering.

Speaker:

Austin: It's the old political move, you know, answer a question with a question.

Speaker:

Austin: That's the best way to avoid an answer. So I'll try my best to give complete

Speaker:

Austin: answers and take through it.

Speaker:

Austin: But I never know where it's about to head. So fair warning.

Speaker:

Danny: That's good enough for me. Good enough for me. So without further ado,

Speaker:

Danny: then, are you ready to jump into the 5 Random Questions hot seat?

Speaker:

Austin: Absolutely. Let's get into it.

Speaker:

Danny: All right. Let's bring up the random question generator. Okay, Austin.

Speaker:

Danny: Nice, easy one, I feel, too, to jump into for question number one.

Speaker:

Danny: How have you changed since you were younger?

Speaker:

Austin: That's a good, that's a reminiscent question that I don't think I was ready

Speaker:

Austin: for that deep of a question. Yeah.

Speaker:

Austin: It's interesting what has changed and what hasn't changed.

Speaker:

Austin: Funnily enough, as a child, I would probably say I was more introverted.

Speaker:

Austin: I got a lot of energy from books, a lot of energy in my academics.

Speaker:

Austin: But I think that energy came from a place of being someone who likes to please

Speaker:

Austin: and likes to have people please with my performance and what I'm doing.

Speaker:

Austin: And funnily enough, as I get older, I find the easiest way to please people

Speaker:

Austin: and get them happy with me is to entertain them.

Speaker:

Austin: And so it kind of has evolved from this place of being a very expert student

Speaker:

Austin: to being a bit more of a entertainer out in the wild, kind of doing random things,

Speaker:

Austin: doing things that people will react to and people will interact to.

Speaker:

Austin: Still with the end result of trying to make them happy and trying to bring a

Speaker:

Austin: smile to their face. It just went from getting A's on your report card,

Speaker:

Austin: bringing a smile to your family, your parents' face, to telling a good joke

Speaker:

Austin: that lands is what brings a smile to your friend's face.

Speaker:

Austin: So definitely same motive, but I guess different result, interestingly enough.

Speaker:

Danny: And you mentioned there about wanting to make people happy. Is that something

Speaker:

Danny: that's just always been like a natural thing?

Speaker:

Danny: And this isn't an indictment on parents,

Speaker:

Danny: family, etc or teachers or whatever or friends was it looking for approval from

Speaker:

Danny: your circle whoever that circle may have looked like or was it just natural

Speaker:

Danny: to you that you wanted to please people?

Speaker:

Austin: That's a fantastic question and,

Speaker:

Austin: As far as I can remember, I've always wanted to be somebody who pleases my circle

Speaker:

Austin: and is, you know, a good student, a good child, a good son, a good friend.

Speaker:

Austin: But, you know, is it nature or nurture?

Speaker:

Austin: My family definitely has all the similar tendencies across my family.

Speaker:

Austin: We're all people who, you know, like to be engaged and I like to make people

Speaker:

Austin: around us comfortable and like to make people around us have a good time and enjoy themselves.

Speaker:

Austin: And was I born like that genetically?

Speaker:

Austin: Possibly. I mean, it almost seems like it. But then again, we all had the same

Speaker:

Austin: upbringing and the same environment.

Speaker:

Austin: My dad is a coach or was a sports coach. And so it's definitely very much so

Speaker:

Austin: like, I want to tell you what I want you to do and you're going to go execute it.

Speaker:

Austin: And I can't help but say I'm sure that had something to do with my desire to

Speaker:

Austin: do what I'm asked to do in a positive way.

Speaker:

Danny: Yeah, and I think that's a good thing. I think that the world needs more people

Speaker:

Danny: that want to please and help others, you know, and make others happy.

Speaker:

Danny: I think that certainly in the last 10 years, whatever you want to look at it,

Speaker:

Danny: it just seems that we've kind of moved away from serve to self, if you like.

Speaker:

Danny: And I feel it's a good thing to want to, you know, make other lives enjoyable.

Speaker:

Danny: So, you know, like I say, no critique on anybody there. I just wanted to make

Speaker:

Danny: that clear, I just wanted to, you know, but it's great to see that.

Speaker:

Austin: There's plenty to critique Perinzion, but we'll give them a pass on that one.

Speaker:

Austin: There's definitely a selfishness to society these days. Maybe it's always been

Speaker:

Austin: there, we just haven't noticed it.

Speaker:

Austin: Maybe less opportunity to be selfless. So I definitely think in any way you

Speaker:

Austin: can be and serve the people around you.

Speaker:

Austin: In my opinion, it's what we're here for, to make everybody's life more enjoyable

Speaker:

Austin: and to have a collective, enjoyable experience.

Speaker:

Danny: Well, I like that. And as I say, I like that a lot. I think it's a really nice outlook to have.

Speaker:

Danny: So I'm all for that and kudos to you for that. And I feel that's a great way

Speaker:

Danny: to end your time on question one. and let's have a look at what question number two brings up.

Speaker:

Danny: All right. Question number two, Austin. And because of your background as a

Speaker:

Danny: comedian, writer, et cetera, and also a podcaster, I like this one from a question point of view.

Speaker:

Danny: So question two, what are your favorite topics to talk about?

Speaker:

Austin: This is a this is a loaded one so i'm

Speaker:

Austin: a contrarian at heart and i'm going to be honest i would never tell that

Speaker:

Austin: to uh in the middle of a conversation but uh i'm a

Speaker:

Austin: contrarian and i i like to take the opposite side

Speaker:

Austin: of something that someone else is passionate about um

Speaker:

Austin: so basically all the things that you're not supposed to talk about at

Speaker:

Austin: the dinner table are my favorite topics to hit on you

Speaker:

Austin: know politics um being being a being

Speaker:

Austin: a good one um and challenging the status quo

Speaker:

Austin: um but also sports you know getting into someone's against

Speaker:

Austin: someone's favorite sports team and telling them why they're kind of

Speaker:

Austin: a little trash talk is always a good time but it kind

Speaker:

Austin: of goes back to the first question where it's about people for

Speaker:

Austin: me and i want to talk about something that the other person

Speaker:

Austin: is passionate about um conversations get rather dull if it's me talking the

Speaker:

Austin: entire time so i don't know how this is gonna go but uh it will be fine but

Speaker:

Austin: uh i uh i definitely like uh to have the other person passing it and engaged

Speaker:

Austin: and poking holes in their point of view and getting them going.

Speaker:

Danny: And you mentioned there about being contrarian and you love to offer the counterpoint

Speaker:

Danny: to someone else's beliefs, topics, understanding of a certain topic, for example.

Speaker:

Danny: So you mentioned family, close family, and you like to make each other happy.

Speaker:

Danny: So based on that, if you're going to get a Thanksgiving get together,

Speaker:

Danny: everybody's around the table and you're talking Maybe politics,

Speaker:

Danny: maybe religion, maybe sports, anything that you always get to very much opposing sides generally.

Speaker:

Danny: With your mindset of also wanting to, you know, please and make people happy,

Speaker:

Danny: is there any topic that you tend to or conversation you've found in the past

Speaker:

Danny: where you've had this back and forth and you've realised, oh,

Speaker:

Danny: this is going down a path I shouldn't go any longer?

Speaker:

Danny: And you've pulled back

Speaker:

Austin: Oh many many times um i

Speaker:

Austin: have a i have a rule i think every comedian should live by is

Speaker:

Austin: um it's too far when it's not funny um if

Speaker:

Austin: if people are laughing and engaged you're you're right on the knot if it's no

Speaker:

Austin: longer funny you went too far and i know that's uh not really a fair rule because

Speaker:

Austin: you never you normally don't know it's not funny until you present it but um

Speaker:

Austin: a large part of cancel culture i feel like is people getting offended by these jokes

Speaker:

Austin: and in my opinion it's because the jokes are malicious they're not

Speaker:

Austin: funny but they're coming they're saying things that are

Speaker:

Austin: just shock humor um to get people surprised to

Speaker:

Austin: get people riled up there's no real innovation no real thought

Speaker:

Austin: behind the joke and i think when people know that intent behind what you're

Speaker:

Austin: saying is to be ironic or be funny and honestly a huge part of humor is irony

Speaker:

Austin: so you got to know if i say one thing that i'm really kind of meaning the other

Speaker:

Austin: and highlighting how crazy what I'm saying actually is.

Speaker:

Austin: But, oh my gosh, it goes too far.

Speaker:

Austin: More than once in my life, and it's always a beet red moment in my life because,

Speaker:

Austin: like you said, I don't want to offend somebody.

Speaker:

Austin: I find an argument and discussion stimulating, and I like to think that other people do as well.

Speaker:

Austin: But I don't want it to be a negative thing. And it shouldn't be.

Speaker:

Austin: Arguing doesn't necessarily have to always be negative.

Speaker:

Austin: It can be a civil discourse that can bring about good new ideas.

Speaker:

Danny: Well, that's a really good point you made about the difference between comedy

Speaker:

Danny: stroke satire and just pure maliciousness.

Speaker:

Danny: One of my favorite comedians, George Carlin, always, you know,

Speaker:

Danny: his mantra was you can basically make humor out of anything, but never punch down.

Speaker:

Danny: Punch straight ahead and make sure that you're at a level playing field.

Speaker:

Danny: If you're giving someone, you can take it back. Never punch down because that's an easy cop out.

Speaker:

Danny: What what's your sort of like get out of jail free card if you like if you realize

Speaker:

Danny: if you're on stage and you realize oh this isn't going i'm i'm now upsetting

Speaker:

Danny: someone have you got like a a process you now do or do you stop and say i apologize

Speaker:

Danny: we'll move on what's your what's your take there but how do you do yeah

Speaker:

Austin: I try to move on um as as quick as possible i i don't i i would like to apologize

Speaker:

Austin: after the show um if i try like i truly offended someone um because like i said

Speaker:

Austin: That's never, ever my intent.

Speaker:

Austin: My intent was to bring happiness, to bring laughter.

Speaker:

Austin: And in fact, that's quite the opposite thing. Sometimes you offend someone and

Speaker:

Austin: they may leave, which is the biggest gut punch because you get no opportunity

Speaker:

Austin: to remedy it. But I normally don't address it on stage.

Speaker:

Austin: Like I said, it makes me really beet red and awkward.

Speaker:

Austin: And so, unfortunately, it shuts off my creative spirit.

Speaker:

Austin: I try to get away from it and run as fast as I can in the other direction.

Speaker:

Austin: It um maybe someday i'll be uh comfortable

Speaker:

Austin: enough to uh you know loop back around and

Speaker:

Austin: and ad lib off of it and maybe do some crowd work off of it with that person

Speaker:

Austin: make fun of myself um would probably be my preferred route there and uh and

Speaker:

Austin: probably lean into like an archetype of uh some you know redneck or some uh

Speaker:

Austin: extreme liberal uh it go from there so yeah.

Speaker:

Danny: Well i always wonder as well and this is just me stereotyping so i apologize

Speaker:

Danny: if this is completely off off cuff sorry off you know

Speaker:

Danny: off base but um there's a stereotype that um a lot of americans don't understand

Speaker:

Danny: irony whereas it's more like a european kind of humor kind of thing do you think

Speaker:

Danny: that's true and if so is that maybe where misunderstandings can happen on your

Speaker:

Danny: you know your comedy stage for example

Speaker:

Austin: I think Americans don't have as developed of a sense of irony as many Europeans do.

Speaker:

Austin: I think the best example is The Office, where the UK version was a lot more

Speaker:

Austin: subtle and quiet than the American version,

Speaker:

Austin: which is very in-your-face with Steve Carell doing insane tactics.

Speaker:

Austin: There's still some of the ironic portions. And what's funny is a lot of people

Speaker:

Austin: will tell me they don't like The Office.

Speaker:

Austin: Um well not a lot of people don't like the office but a lot of people that don't

Speaker:

Austin: like the office will tell me they don't like it because um it's uncomfortable

Speaker:

Austin: i think that uncomfortableness is the irony and kind of the the lack of grasping

Speaker:

Austin: what's ironic there uh will you remind me that the name of who is the the boss

Speaker:

Austin: in the office in the uk version i can see his face but yeah so.

Speaker:

Danny: It's david brent um who's uh played by ricky jivey

Speaker:

Austin: Yes and and ricky has this sense of humor that's very much so ironic.

Speaker:

Austin: And he did, I believe, the Oscars or Grammys a few years ago.

Speaker:

Austin: And he did a pretty brutal,

Speaker:

Austin: opening monologue. And I don't think it went as well in the U.S.

Speaker:

Austin: As it might have gone in Europe. Just because...

Speaker:

Austin: Uh we're a group that takes ourselves so serious um we don't we don't love not

Speaker:

Austin: they don't love being the punch the run the joke um because we fail to realize

Speaker:

Austin: that it's ironic so um i uh i do think europeans maybe have a better grasp on

Speaker:

Austin: irony than the americans well.

Speaker:

Danny: I mean they did invite him back four times i think he did it five times in a

Speaker:

Danny: row right what was it the golden globes maybe

Speaker:

Austin: Yeah the golden globes that's what it is yeah um.

Speaker:

Danny: So maybe who knows maybe

Speaker:

Austin: Somebody understood Yeah.

Speaker:

Danny: Exactly. I saw the audience and the dollars coming. I thought,

Speaker:

Danny: yeah, let's get this guy booked back on.

Speaker:

Danny: Yeah, no, it's like you say, I mean, stereotypes are hard because sometimes

Speaker:

Danny: they're proper stereotypes, other times they're not.

Speaker:

Danny: And I've obviously had many, I've got many American friends and had many American guests on the show.

Speaker:

Danny: And it's always nice to sort of break down, well, that's not quite true.

Speaker:

Danny: This is maybe true, et cetera.

Speaker:

Danny: But yeah, I think Irene is one of these ones as well. Even as someone from the

Speaker:

Danny: UK that now lives in Canada, I find Canadians have got very much a similar sense

Speaker:

Danny: of humour as the Brits or us.

Speaker:

Danny: From the uk but there's still that fine line at times between irony and satire

Speaker:

Danny: and knowing the exact you know where that's where that's being crossed

Speaker:

Austin: Yeah i think uh every region every audience has a different sense of humor um

Speaker:

Austin: so to say you know a full audience america you know has always prided itself

Speaker:

Austin: on being a melting pot so surely there's somebody here who gets irony um but

Speaker:

Austin: um in general you know it probably is a little,

Speaker:

Austin: A little more towards sensationalism and shock humor in America than maybe the

Speaker:

Austin: little ironic tidbits here and there in the dry comedy.

Speaker:

Danny: Well, I think what we'll do, and I appreciate it, I think we'll work together

Speaker:

Danny: to break these barriers down. And we'll continue to do that as we look at more questions.

Speaker:

Danny: So are you ready for question number three,

Speaker:

Austin: Austin? Absolutely.

Speaker:

Danny: All right. Let's see what comes up on question number three.

Speaker:

Danny: Okay. What's your ideal, question three, what's your ideal way to celebrate your birthday?

Speaker:

Austin: Uh this past birthday was probably my

Speaker:

Austin: favorite birthday i've had of all time so i probably can just describe um

Speaker:

Austin: this one i recently moved into a house which

Speaker:

Austin: is a big upgrade for me in my condo life it did come with roommates which has

Speaker:

Austin: been an adjustment but uh it's nice to have the uh square footage um to be able

Speaker:

Austin: to host and entertain i'm a big entertainer like i said and so uh i invited

Speaker:

Austin: probably 30 30 close friends um to uh my birthday this year at my house um for

Speaker:

Austin: a halloween i'm a i'm a october i'm a scorpio

Speaker:

Austin: if any of your listeners are into astrology so uh

Speaker:

Austin: had a nice scorpio halloween party in

Speaker:

Austin: october and everybody came dressed up there was

Speaker:

Austin: some really insane outfits um and

Speaker:

Austin: then a couple of people brought you know the gift of alcohol which was quickly

Speaker:

Austin: shared with the whole group um and it went very late um my guitar was brought

Speaker:

Austin: out around uh two in the morning which is a terrible terrible sign which means

Speaker:

Austin: go home So that's the final call for everyone to leave.

Speaker:

Austin: But it was a great time because I was with the people I like the most,

Speaker:

Austin: with the friends I like the most that care about me and that I care about.

Speaker:

Austin: Somebody brought a cookie cake and didn't have a candle.

Speaker:

Austin: So they took a pretzel I bought and put a piece of tissue on top of the pretzel

Speaker:

Austin: and lit it on fire so they could sing me happy birthday and have me blow it out.

Speaker:

Austin: Just spontaneous stuff like that that show you care about each other and you're

Speaker:

Austin: going to do whatever and have a good time with each other.

Speaker:

Danny: That sounds awesome. Like, A, there's so many good things there because you've

Speaker:

Danny: just moved into the new house.

Speaker:

Danny: You're surrounded by friends. There's nothing for fans. It's all fun.

Speaker:

Danny: You've got the guitar out. It's funny, you mentioned David Brent from The Office in the UK.

Speaker:

Danny: His favourite, or one of his favourite lines was in an episode where he was

Speaker:

Danny: having like a team meeting. He says, Gareth, go get the guitar.

Speaker:

Danny: So he got his guitar status thing, etc. It's just reminding me of that.

Speaker:

Danny: And I feel, is that generally how you would prefer to have, if you could have

Speaker:

Danny: any birthday celebration you want, no budget limitations, no location limitations.

Speaker:

Danny: Would you always want to go for that kind of close friends only?

Speaker:

Danny: Or would you ever want to have a big kind of bash?

Speaker:

Austin: No, I would always want it to be close friends only. I was thinking about that, actually.

Speaker:

Austin: I can't remember what TV show, but somebody threw a big birthday party every year. It was a big event.

Speaker:

Austin: It wouldn't be as fun. Like I said, I find the purpose in life sharing love

Speaker:

Austin: with each other and making everybody have an enjoyable experience.

Speaker:

Austin: And I feel like you lose that the bigger the audience.

Speaker:

Austin: Even in comedy, some venues are so unintimate that there's no way you can do crowd work.

Speaker:

Austin: I don't know how some of these comedians who are doing these specials are able

Speaker:

Austin: to do crowd work like they do.

Speaker:

Austin: It just seems so disconnected from the audience.

Speaker:

Austin: But I'm a person that craves intimacy in not a romantic way,

Speaker:

Austin: but in just a platonic way with your friends.

Speaker:

Austin: It's a fun thing for me and it's what I enjoy the most Yeah.

Speaker:

Danny: It's interesting you mention that about the crowd working, the comedians I've

Speaker:

Danny: seen some of my favourite comedians

Speaker:

Danny: now get more successful and play in massive venues so Jimmy Carr for example

Speaker:

Danny: UK comedian, started off fairly small stand-up TV shows and now he's doing these big stadiums.

Speaker:

Danny: He still seems to be good but I feel like to your point it's like when you watch

Speaker:

Danny: your favourite indie band and they're playing little dive bars and then all

Speaker:

Danny: of a sudden get a massive record deal and they're playing Wembley Stadium Jets Stadium etc

Speaker:

Danny: Something disappears, you know, when you have that.

Speaker:

Danny: But yeah, I like the intimacy. And I guess with birthdays especially,

Speaker:

Danny: if you're having a big birthday each year, now you're trying to top the previous year.

Speaker:

Danny: And it gets to some stage where it's a diminishing return that you cannot top it.

Speaker:

Austin: Absolutely. I can just imagine like sparklers and go-go girls coming through

Speaker:

Austin: the door with a birthday cake.

Speaker:

Austin: And the morning show, there's a Steve Carell

Speaker:

Austin: at his birthday and steve martin pops i mean martin short pops out of a cake

Speaker:

Austin: with uh with rocket dancers behind him i don't think i'll ever have the wealth

Speaker:

Austin: to be able to do a birthday party at that level and i'm very comfortable where

Speaker:

Austin: i'm at trying to out beat the next year so well.

Speaker:

Danny: As an introvert i'm not about crowds i i you know i i feel comfortable if i

Speaker:

Danny: know people as you mentioned and you've got that comfort level i wouldn't feel

Speaker:

Danny: comfortable at a big party i'd be in the corner eating the cake or the pretzel

Speaker:

Danny: stick with the candle light on and just stand there that would be me in the corner there

Speaker:

Austin: It's funny but i think most uh comedians are uh introspective people and they

Speaker:

Austin: are very perceptive and parties can probably be a little overwhelming a lot

Speaker:

Austin: of times and uh it's too much to take in all at once so absolutely.

Speaker:

Danny: Well, I like that. And as an October birthday person myself,

Speaker:

Danny: I'm just beyond you, though. I'm a Libra. So I must be, you must be early October.

Speaker:

Danny: I'm like smack in the middle.

Speaker:

Austin: Yeah.

Speaker:

Danny: But yeah, it's a good time of year to have a birthday as well,

Speaker:

Danny: because you're in that sort of fall, autumn period.

Speaker:

Danny: So you can, you know, have colors in that. If you have an outdoor party,

Speaker:

Danny: you've still got a nice temperature to have an outdoor party.

Speaker:

Danny: It's a nice time of year to have, I feel.

Speaker:

Austin: Absolutely. I live in Austin, Texas. So the summer it's like,

Speaker:

Austin: you don't go outside unless there's a body of water that you can get in so that

Speaker:

Austin: you don't have heat exhaustion.

Speaker:

Austin: So it was an indoor outdoor party and it actually rained torrentially during the party.

Speaker:

Austin: And I had some people get stuck in a little tent outside and I was trying to

Speaker:

Austin: throw them drinks so that they could have something to stay hydrated while they're

Speaker:

Austin: in the tent but it was definitely an event and it was a good time.

Speaker:

Danny: You wake up in the morning and the tent's no longer there. It's halfway to another

Speaker:

Danny: state floating down the river.

Speaker:

Austin: The chairs in the tent were just stuck in the mud. It was like,

Speaker:

Austin: so it's definitely an event pulling those out of the mud.

Speaker:

Danny: I like it. I like it. And I like that answer. So thank you for that.

Speaker:

Danny: Let's have a look at what question number four brings up.

Speaker:

Danny: Question four. What accomplishment are you most proud of?

Speaker:

Austin: That's a...

Speaker:

Austin: That's a hard one. There's definitely a recency bias.

Speaker:

Austin: The first thing that pops in my head is I recently lost around 65 pounds in

Speaker:

Austin: the last, I guess, two years.

Speaker:

Austin: And I am pretty proud of that accomplishment because I did it for health to

Speaker:

Austin: make sure I have a long life, a long mobile life where I can get around and do things.

Speaker:

Austin: So I would be remiss to say that I'm not very proud of that.

Speaker:

Austin: And that's probably what I'm most proud of at the moment.

Speaker:

Austin: You know, it's funny how things that you're most proud of when you're younger

Speaker:

Austin: and doing other things kind of disappear.

Speaker:

Austin: They don't disappear necessarily, but the farther away they get,

Speaker:

Austin: the less proud you are of them.

Speaker:

Austin: Like I think in high school, how important it was that I got into a good college.

Speaker:

Austin: And then you get into the good college and you go to the great college.

Speaker:

Austin: And suddenly all your friends also got into the good college.

Speaker:

Austin: And the accomplishment that getting into that good college once was is not as

Speaker:

Austin: big of a deal because everybody that you know also did it.

Speaker:

Austin: So, yeah, I'm going to stick with it. I'm going to stick with losing that weight,

Speaker:

Austin: and hopefully keeping it off here in the future.

Speaker:

Danny: Well, that's amazing. Hey, congratulations for that. That's kudos.

Speaker:

Danny: What brought the, if you don't make me ask, what brought the weight on earlier? Was it just like...

Speaker:

Danny: Like lack of movement were you in a rut what was the cause there are

Speaker:

Austin: Yeah it's a great question and um i was always

Speaker:

Austin: a heavier child um i grew up

Speaker:

Austin: playing uh football there's a term for women or used

Speaker:

Austin: to be for women that's not for men but you'd be in a pretty plus sizing um unfortunately

Speaker:

Austin: it's just husky for men which is not as as nice of a sound but uh i was a bigger

Speaker:

Austin: child uh struggled with uh i guess just being born that way most of my family

Speaker:

Austin: it's on the on the bigger side my dad I was a football player.

Speaker:

Austin: I was a football player, and weight is an important aspect.

Speaker:

Austin: Football as in American football.

Speaker:

Danny: Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. Not the proper football.

Speaker:

Austin: Not the one with the ball that you roll around. But so it was important to be

Speaker:

Austin: of size so that you can mass, moves, mass.

Speaker:

Austin: I got done playing football and lost a little bit of weight, actually.

Speaker:

Austin: But then college and COVID happened, and I ballooned up during COVID.

Speaker:

Austin: I actually spent some time at home. and my dad's 6'4", like I said,

Speaker:

Austin: played college football was a large fella and, uh,

Speaker:

Austin: I went and stepped on the scale at my hometown house, and it was like 265,

Speaker:

Austin: and he comes behind me, and he steps on the scale, and he's 255.

Speaker:

Austin: I was like, oh, absolutely not. I'm not going to weigh more than my dad.

Speaker:

Austin: My dad, I call Biggin because of his stature. I'm not going to be weighing more than Biggin.

Speaker:

Austin: So after that, I was like, I have to do something. We have to get this weight down.

Speaker:

Austin: So those lifestyle changes, activity was definitely one, walking more, eating healthier.

Speaker:

Austin: It was it wasn't it was more so not eating too much but eating unhealthy is

Speaker:

Austin: so much fast food and options you can go to canes or in and out burger and get

Speaker:

Austin: a 1200 calorie meal and and not and still be hungry afterwards so that's what it was.

Speaker:

Danny: Yeah no and it's funny you know it's like healthy food is so expensive whereas

Speaker:

Danny: cheap you know like the fast food is bad for you is real cheap and i feel i

Speaker:

Danny: know like there's been so many documentaries etc and studies etc about that do you feel like

Speaker:

Danny: and I don't know who'd be responsible retailers probably

Speaker:

Danny: markets that are selling food etc companies that

Speaker:

Danny: make them do you feel there needs to be a sort of change in mindset where we

Speaker:

Danny: have to make healthy food and healthy choices and healthy education at schools

Speaker:

Danny: I guess more easily accessible as opposed to just going down a block on one

Speaker:

Danny: main street and you've got five fast food places but only one salad bar is that

Speaker:

Danny: a really basic example right

Speaker:

Austin: No it's a great example it's a result of what I would say capitalism and that the salad bar,

Speaker:

Austin: the greens wilt relatively quickly and this frozen patty at McDonald's is going

Speaker:

Austin: to be good for my entire life. I don't know if it expires.

Speaker:

Austin: So there definitely should be an effort, I think, in the U.S.

Speaker:

Austin: To make sure that what we're eating is up to standards of health.

Speaker:

Austin: But ultimately, I don't think a regulation...

Speaker:

Austin: It's what fixes that. It has to be a lifestyle, complete lifestyle change.

Speaker:

Austin: If you look at the diets of some of the European countries, they don't have

Speaker:

Austin: particularly healthy diets, but they have active lifestyles.

Speaker:

Austin: They don't sit at a desk for eight hours a day and work away.

Speaker:

Austin: So it's a whole cultural change, in my opinion, more so than just saying,

Speaker:

Austin: oh, we're going to have more healthy options to eat. Yeah.

Speaker:

Austin: It's so hard for me to pick a salad bar over Cane's any day of the week.

Speaker:

Austin: So unless I have some sort of internal motivation, even if Cane's was $20 and

Speaker:

Austin: the salad was $10, I'd probably still find myself at Cane's every once in a while.

Speaker:

Austin: So it's a mixture. It's a whole mixture, and it's a case-by-case,

Speaker:

Austin: person-by-person war that you kind of have to fight in your own head, in my opinion.

Speaker:

Danny: No, that's a good point about the COVID when the pandemic hit,

Speaker:

Danny: and obviously everybody was at home,

Speaker:

Danny: which i feel could also helps maybe um

Speaker:

Danny: like when you when you think of remote working for example

Speaker:

Danny: um and obviously it gives you a much better work-life

Speaker:

Danny: balance much healthier work-life balance but i found i

Speaker:

Danny: used to work in toronto um before i moved where we are

Speaker:

Danny: now which is like a really small village about three hours north so i'd

Speaker:

Danny: commute two hours each way every day then i'd sit under a desk

Speaker:

Danny: for eight hours um so i put on weight

Speaker:

Danny: um as well over the pandemic uh so i

Speaker:

Danny: put on weight because of all that commute but during pandemic because i was

Speaker:

Danny: at home i could finish and get outside and go for a walk etc much like you did

Speaker:

Danny: and i found that helped a lot whereas now there's a lot of mandates to get people

Speaker:

Danny: back into the office and i wonder that to your point you know all the cultural

Speaker:

Danny: side if that's going to make it harder for people to continue i

Speaker:

Austin: I can't imagine it not it's just you give up so much of your life and the frustrating

Speaker:

Austin: part is you give up so much of your life in a commute, sitting in a car,

Speaker:

Austin: going to in front of an office, and you could spend so much of that time productively in your own life.

Speaker:

Austin: You're giving that to the company in reality. You're not giving it to yourself,

Speaker:

Austin: but even though it's your own personal time.

Speaker:

Austin: So I can't imagine it helping. I think I lost 10 pounds when I used to work

Speaker:

Austin: in person, moved to remote.

Speaker:

Austin: And that first six months I moved to remote, I lost like 10 pounds because suddenly

Speaker:

Austin: I had time to actually go to a gym and enjoy the gym. So,

Speaker:

Austin: Although I do still hate the gym with everything in my being.

Speaker:

Austin: But it's a lot easier when you're not brain dead from driving in traffic for

Speaker:

Austin: an hour to go get back in the traffic and go to the gym.

Speaker:

Danny: Yeah, exactly. The last thing you want to do, you finish the day's work, you're tired.

Speaker:

Danny: You know you want to work out, but your brain's saying you should and your body's saying no.

Speaker:

Austin: Yeah, exactly. I'm tired. I'm done. Let me go to sleep.

Speaker:

Danny: Exactly. Well, hopefully. And again, like I say, kudos to you for that lifestyle

Speaker:

Danny: change. Hopefully, you know, more people can have the opportunity to do that

Speaker:

Danny: if culture allows for that. So fingers crossed.

Speaker:

Austin: Fingers crossed. Absolutely. Fingers crossed.

Speaker:

Danny: And on that note, let's have a look at what question number five is.

Speaker:

Danny: And I feel this is a good one, actually, to finish off your time in the hot seat here, Austin.

Speaker:

Danny: Question five. Would you rather be granted three wishes of your choice 10 years

Speaker:

Danny: from today or be granted one wish today?

Speaker:

Austin: It's complex because I have to think about what my wishes, three wishes and

Speaker:

Austin: one wish would be I'm a finance person so there's a time value of money too if you get a scientific.

Speaker:

Danny: About it I

Speaker:

Austin: Guess I could wish for any amount of money so maybe not that maybe no need to

Speaker:

Austin: get that scientific I'm gonna go,

Speaker:

Austin: I'm gonna go with one wish today because who knows in 10 years I don't know

Speaker:

Austin: if do I get to make a wish from the grave so you never know You never know what's going to go.

Speaker:

Austin: So I go one wish today, which kind of starts to beg the question of what that wish would be.

Speaker:

Austin: The give me answer that makes me look like a hero is I'd wish that the culture

Speaker:

Austin: in America allowed for everyone to live a healthy lifestyle.

Speaker:

Austin: That is not what I would use the wish on, to be clear. But that would be a good one.

Speaker:

Austin: So it'd probably be something like some skill or something that I could instantly have.

Speaker:

Austin: I find enjoyment in. But as I think through that, part of the enjoyment comes

Speaker:

Austin: from learning the skill. So probably not that.

Speaker:

Austin: I don't know. I mean, I think about it.

Speaker:

Danny: Well, I think that's what I like about it as well. It's like,

Speaker:

Danny: say, I mean, you've got the easy choices. All right, make me super rich.

Speaker:

Danny: Make me super, a beautiful partner, for example.

Speaker:

Danny: You know, any of the sort of the typical, you know, materialistic things that,

Speaker:

Danny: yeah, would bring happiness, but I guess maybe long term might not.

Speaker:

Danny: You know, so, and then, let's see, because you've got one wish,

Speaker:

Danny: is it something that can do more for many or is it more for you that allows

Speaker:

Danny: you to do more for many, et cetera?

Speaker:

Danny: And I totally agree with your point about you may be dead in 10 years.

Speaker:

Danny: Hopefully you're not. Hopefully you're not putting it out there right now.

Speaker:

Danny: But you may be dead. So that's a wasted three wishes.

Speaker:

Danny: I guess your first wish could be, no, it couldn't be because it's 10 years from

Speaker:

Danny: now. Your first wish could have been, keep me alive for 10 years,

Speaker:

Danny: but you can't do that. That's not allowed.

Speaker:

Austin: You know three other years alive at that point with no wishes i

Speaker:

Austin: think uh i think it would have to be something for to help the many

Speaker:

Austin: um because something as i was thinking through it you know a large part of like

Speaker:

Austin: where you get happiness from life in my opinion is from the process of getting

Speaker:

Austin: there if i wish for anything i really really wanted right now um and instantly

Speaker:

Austin: got it i wouldn't i don't think i'd really want it anymore it kind of goes back

Speaker:

Austin: to those accomplishments that you have earlier in life.

Speaker:

Austin: You want that accomplishment and you're working so hard to get there.

Speaker:

Austin: And that's what's bringing you purpose and bringing you joy.

Speaker:

Austin: And then once you get it, it's an accomplishment and it's great and you're super

Speaker:

Austin: proud of yourself, but it's not where you get the joy from, in my opinion.

Speaker:

Austin: You get the joy from all the hard work and doing something hard and proving

Speaker:

Austin: to yourself that you can do something hard.

Speaker:

Austin: So I don't know if I would want money. it's not my money I don't know if I want

Speaker:

Austin: love I didn't earn love I was given love I think I want something for the group to benefit from,

Speaker:

Austin: Maybe we could bring Richard Pryor back from the dead or something like that

Speaker:

Austin: so that everybody could get one more show or something.

Speaker:

Danny: Now we're talking about Richard Pryor and George Carlin double bill for one night only.

Speaker:

Austin: There we go. Now that's a wish I could get behind.

Speaker:

Danny: I'm there 100%. I like the fact that it's about, and again, and there's nothing

Speaker:

Danny: wrong with it, it could be super easy to say, well, end world hunger.

Speaker:

Danny: But that also brings other issues that

Speaker:

Danny: you that you know we don't even think about when it comes to what'd

Speaker:

Danny: be easy to do but then you've got these issues you know um if you make it easy

Speaker:

Danny: for people to eat does that take away skills of farming you know culture cultivating

Speaker:

Danny: etc so yeah it's i like that answer where it's for the many bit that'd be super

Speaker:

Danny: cool to get like richard prior back on stage what a what a just what a legend he was i

Speaker:

Austin: Think the main takeaway is uh i should not be given a wish because i will use

Speaker:

Austin: it very frivolously so maybe give a better thought leader the wish uh we could

Speaker:

Austin: we could maybe i'll just be i'll wish that somebody else can make this wish

Speaker:

Austin: that has a better perspective on the world.

Speaker:

Danny: That is very matter of you and again you know kudos for taking you know away

Speaker:

Danny: the responsibility to put it on your shoulders and like put on someone else's

Speaker:

Danny: shoulders that doesn't want that responsibility either yeah

Speaker:

Austin: You do it i don't on it.

Speaker:

Danny: Awesome well i i love that answer and i i appreciate your time and the random

Speaker:

Danny: question hot seat austin as is only fair i've had you on the hot seat for about

Speaker:

Danny: 35 minutes now so it's now time to hand over the question asking baton to you yeah

Speaker:

Austin: And so i think i have a good one uh but i do this a lot and i wanted to get

Speaker:

Austin: see if you do it as well um but i will state things that i am confident are

Speaker:

Austin: true to later find out that I was in fact lying,

Speaker:

Austin: but didn't know I was lying. It was, I was just misguided.

Speaker:

Austin: So I wanted to know what was the dumbest thing, if you've done it,

Speaker:

Austin: and if you have, what's the dumbest thing you stated as a fact that you later found out to be false.

Speaker:

Danny: So, funnily enough, my wife says I'd be really good at Balderdash, the game Balderdash.

Speaker:

Danny: I don't know if you guys have got it in the States. Is Balderdash a thing in the States?

Speaker:

Austin: I don't think I've seen it.

Speaker:

Danny: Okay, so basically you tell what you're stating a fact, but it's actually a lie.

Speaker:

Danny: So you tell something and then the audience has got to guess,

Speaker:

Danny: like the people playing the game, I've got to guess, is that an actual fact

Speaker:

Danny: or is it a lie that you've made up?

Speaker:

Austin: We call that politics.

Speaker:

Danny: There you go. I hear you on that one. because I tend to make crap up but I say

Speaker:

Danny: it with such conviction so it's a little bit slightly different from your question

Speaker:

Danny: I will make stuff up just for fun with such belief and stubbornness that's correct that my wife,

Speaker:

Danny: especially my kids my kids just hate me for it are trying to work out is that true or not

Speaker:

Danny: and I'm trying to work out I'm trying to remember an example recently um

Speaker:

Danny: where I'd say something known for a fact that's a lie.

Speaker:

Danny: And it's not true. And not a malicious lie, but I'd just be so steadfast in

Speaker:

Danny: my belief that, and I'd just continue to make it up as I go along with little facts.

Speaker:

Danny: So I guess for one example would be, and this is like a really crappy one from

Speaker:

Danny: a few years back, but How Friday Got Its Name.

Speaker:

Danny: I'd talk about days of the week and how they got their names.

Speaker:

Danny: I'd say, do you know How Friday Got Its Name?

Speaker:

Danny: And you go, yeah, it's to do with the Latin Gregorian calendar or whatever that

Speaker:

Danny: used to be, would be the answer back. But I say, no, no, no, no, no.

Speaker:

Danny: Friday got its name from my ancestors in Scotland, the Celts.

Speaker:

Danny: And it's basically back in the day when, you know, the Highlanders and that

Speaker:

Danny: were living off the land to get their proteins, have to go out and hunt,

Speaker:

Danny: you know, Highland cows and bulls and stuff like that and bring it back.

Speaker:

Danny: And normally they just bring it back and maybe, you know, eat it raw and a lot

Speaker:

Danny: of them would get upset stomachs and they'd die because there's no doctors, et cetera.

Speaker:

Danny: So a lot of people were dying and the big chiefs always say,

Speaker:

Danny: well we have to do something better than this so what they decided to

Speaker:

Danny: do then was get the animal fat and put it over the fire

Speaker:

Danny: in a big melting pot and that got really hot then

Speaker:

Danny: they could put the meat on fry it so every

Speaker:

Danny: day would become a fry day so but

Speaker:

Danny: they don't do that once a week because that's when they go out hunting so friday

Speaker:

Danny: became friday so i stuck with that for years um and i had to come clean with

Speaker:

Danny: my wife and she was so yeah every time i come out with a statement now she'll

Speaker:

Danny: double check me because she knows that I could be going down a different path.

Speaker:

Austin: It was your wife that was going around telling this. She thought was for a fact

Speaker:

Austin: true was that Friday came from frying a cow.

Speaker:

Danny: Yeah, exactly. She was the

Speaker:

Austin: Way it was actually like.

Speaker:

Danny: Yeah, exactly. She was telling her friends at work and her mom and stuff.

Speaker:

Danny: So when I told her, nope, that was not a good... She was fine, but she was pissed.

Speaker:

Austin: Whoops. Oh, that's a good one.

Speaker:

Danny: Yeah, so I hope... I think that kind of answers your question,

Speaker:

Danny: but that's a good one, I like that.

Speaker:

Austin: It absolutely does, thank you. Yeah, I find myself,

Speaker:

Austin: I'm not dumb, but it's just sometimes, you know, somebody tells you something

Speaker:

Austin: that cows are fried on Friday and that's why it's called Friday.

Speaker:

Austin: You're excited to share.

Speaker:

Austin: And it turns out you're wrong. It's always the most embarrassing thing.

Speaker:

Danny: And that's, I think, as long as you're so convicted in your belief, you can fool people.

Speaker:

Danny: You know, it's when it starts getting super ridiculous and you can start to

Speaker:

Danny: feel yourself break. You think, OK.

Speaker:

Danny: It goes back to your, maybe your first question, your first answer,

Speaker:

Danny: where you realize you're going too far. So you need to move on a step back and

Speaker:

Danny: say, okay, come and clean.

Speaker:

Austin: It's a balancing act. Everything in life is a balancing act. It goes to lying as well.

Speaker:

Danny: 100%. 100%. Well, Austin, I have really, really enjoyed having you in the random

Speaker:

Danny: question hot seat today.

Speaker:

Danny: For our listeners that want to know more about you, your podcast,

Speaker:

Danny: maybe where to catch a live show, a stand-up, if they're in your vicinity, etc.

Speaker:

Danny: Where's the best place to connect with you online and listen to your podcast, all that good stuff?

Speaker:

Austin: Yeah. Yeah, ramblerlive.com, R-A-M-B-L-E-R live.com is where I host my podcast

Speaker:

Austin: and post everything that I'm doing.

Speaker:

Austin: So if you go check out that website, it'll be fantastic. Got my emails on there.

Speaker:

Austin: Feel free to shoot me an email.

Speaker:

Austin: I'm not very popular, so I will actually reply to it.

Speaker:

Austin: So yeah, look forward to it.

Speaker:

Danny: Awesome. And as always, I will leave that link in the show notes.

Speaker:

Danny: So whatever app you're listening on or you're listening to this on the website,

Speaker:

Danny: just check the show notes out for the episode and the link to Austin's website

Speaker:

Danny: will be there and you can hop on over and do all that good stuff that you just mentioned.

Speaker:

Danny: So again, Austin, I really appreciate appearing on today's 5 Random Questions.

Speaker:

Austin: Awesome. Thank you. It was a good time. I had a great time.

Speaker:

Danny: Thanks for listening to 5 Random Questions. And if this was your first time

Speaker:

Danny: here, feel free to hit follow and check out past episodes.

Speaker:

Danny: If you enjoyed this week's episode, I'd love for you to leave a review on the

Speaker:

Danny: app you're currently listening on, or if you know someone else that would enjoy

Speaker:

Danny: the show, be sure to send them this way. It's very much appreciated.

Speaker:

Danny: Until the next time, keep asking those questions.

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About the Podcast

5 Random Questions
Unexpected questions. Unfiltered answers.
What do you get when you ask smart, curious people five completely random questions? You get real stories, weird tangents, and conversations they’ve never had before.

On the award-winning 5 Random Questions, host Danny Brown invites creators, entrepreneurs, and fascinating humans to skip the pitches and ditch the talking points - and just show up as themselves.

There’s no script. Just five surprising prompts dropped throughout a relaxed, unpredictable conversation. Think laughter, awkward hypotheticals, personal confessions, and the kind of answers that can only come from being caught completely off-guard.

Every guest also flips the mic and asks Danny a random question of their own - because fair’s fair.

If Hot Ones and WTF with Marc Maron had a podcast baby, this would be it - minus the hot sauce, but with all the spice.

New episodes weekly. Always real. Sometimes ridiculous. Never boring.

> Winner of the Best Interview Podcast at the 2025 Ear Worthy Podcast Awards
> Featured by Apple Podcasts and Forbes
> Recognized as one of the Five Best Independent Podcasts of 2024
> Part of the Mercury Podcast Network - for more Mercury podcasts, head to www.mercurypodcasts.com
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About your host

Profile picture for Danny Brown

Danny Brown

Danny Brown is the host of the award-winning 5 Random Questions, the show with unexpected questions and unfiltered answers. He's also hosted, and co-hosted, several other podcasts - if you called him a serial podcaster, you wouldn't be wrong! He's been in the podcasting space for over 10 years, and has the scars to prove it.

He's the Head of Podcaster Support and Experience at Captivate.fm, the world's only growth-oriented podcast hosting, distribution, analytics, and monetization platform for the serious indie podcaster.

He lives in beautiful Muskoka, Ontario, Canada with his wife and two kids, where he spends winters in front of a cozy fire and summers by the lake. Well, when he finds time away from podcasting, of course...