Michael. Peter. What do you know about the four-hour work week? All I know is that the only reason I'm letting you do another productivity book is so I can get an update on your household chores. You know, as we've sort of progressed through the first year of the podcast, I feel like the books we cover have sort of started to divide themselves into some distinct categories. And there's only a few, right? There's like the relationship books, the politics books, the social science books, and then
And then finally, the financial self-help books. The guru books. The rise and grind shit. Yes. This is one of the most influential rise and grind books of the last 20 years. If he brings it back to birth rates, we're really going to have some synergy for this podcast. I thought like...
Who better to review this than a podcaster? You want to teach me about four-hour work weeks, buddy? I'm the world's foremost expert. The Peter story, yes.
So Timothy Ferris, the author, he publishes this in 2007 when he is a 29-year-old tech entrepreneur. This is the mid-aughts. So we are experiencing a bit of a tech boom. Like Facebook and Twitter are just getting off the ground. There's sort of a rush of capital into tech for the first time since the dot-com crash. Ferris...
himself was an employee at a digital storage company for a bit and then he had launched a startup hawking some scammy neurotropic supplements that he called brain quicken. laughter
So it's also an accounting software when you want to stay up all night typing in your expenses. The original title for this book that he had pitched was Drug Dealing for Fun and Profit. Wait, really? Yeah. Okay. You can sort of tell that Tim is annoyed that he didn't name the book that because he has brought that up in like so many interviews. Oh, yeah. He just wants to get it out there. Like I had a cool title for the book, by the way. Yeah. It's like the guy who directed The Professional who just calls it Leon for the next like three decades. Yeah.
That's right. Still mad about it. Still mad about it. So he's doing like the right wing podcast supplement grift, but in the mid aughts. So he's he's a pioneer, you know? Yeah. None of this pans out quite like he had hoped. He's sort of doing well, but he's.
worn out and he sets out to restructure his life entirely so that he can make as much money as possible while working as little as possible or at the very least start prioritizing the things in his life that he wants to prioritize. It is funny how all of these books start with like someone who doesn't have a normal job. They're always like an entrepreneur
Entrepreneur or like some sort of innovator or something, something basically somebody who like can disappear for days on end. Yeah, I think it's important to understand this book as the product of a guy who basically has everything he thought he wanted, but is still disillusioned. Right. He's an entrepreneur. He says that his supplement company was making him about 70 grand a month. But he still feels trapped. Right. He's sort of worn down by the grind. He's overworked. He's miserable. Right.
And he plans a big trip, a sabbatical year traveling the world. Okay. And he has all of these apprehensions about it, but he does it anyway. And as a result, he sort of has a variety of revelations about how to optimize his life. Wait, so is this eat, pray, love for like San Francisco tech bros? There's a long section about carbs. So the...
Subtitle of this book is Escape the 9 to 5, Live Anywhere, and Join the New Rich. Okay. So I'm going to send you his little definition of the new rich. Like you say his little definition. His little definition. It's actually quite a lengthy definition and I've cut out parts. The new rich are those who abandon the deferred life plan and create luxury lifestyles in the present using the currency of the new rich, time and mobility.
This is an art and a science we will refer to as lifestyle design. My journey from grossly overworked and severely underpaid office worker to member of the new rich is at once stranger than fiction and, now that I've deciphered the code, simple to duplicate. There's a recipe. From leveraging currency differences to outsourcing your life and disappearing, I'll show you how a small underground uses everything
economic sleight of hand to do what most consider impossible. He is making it seem as if anyone can do this. And in fact, it's something that a 29-year-old tech millionaire can probably do relatively easily. This is like the rich dad, poor dad guy being like, okay, step one, buy an apartment building in the city. Yeah, right, right, right.
Experiencing a housing boom. I also want to point out that you read The New Rich and Lifestyle Design, but he immediately starts using acronyms for these things. Yeah, that was something I was going to mention. So it's N-R and L-D. It's so fucking annoying. This is something that we come across in academic articles all the time. It's like you're making up acronyms and then by the time you get to the end of the abstract—
It's like the TMLR doesn't match the ADT. Right. Right. Now, I bring that up because the entire book is also built around a dumb acronym deal. And this is his step by step process for becoming a member of the new rich D deal.
Definition. This is the section where he defines the new rich and explains how they operate. E, elimination, where he shows you how to eliminate the notion of time management and all of the other things that are extraneous to your success. A, automation, where he teaches you tricks to automate your work and income. And L, liberation, where he explains how to liberate yourself
from a single location and travel the globe while maintaining your lifestyle. He will not, however, liberate all of the slaves that he's going to hire over the internet to do his work for him. Oh, you've read the book? That's book two. That's the sequel book.
OK, so let's start off with D, the D and deal for definition, where he sort of talks about the new rich versus who he calls deferrers. A big theme of the book is that you can live like the exceedingly wealthy without being exceedingly wealthy. Yeah. He says, quote, I've chartered private planes over the Andes.
Enjoyed many of the best wines in the world in between world-class ski runs, and lived like a king lounging by the infinity pool of a private villa. Here's the little secret I rarely tell. It all costs less than rent in the U.S. If you can free your time and location, your money is automatically worth three to ten times as much.
This has nothing to do with currency rates. Being financially rich and having the ability to live like a millionaire are fundamentally two very different things. Wait, is he just talking about like going to Costa Rica and getting like a cheaper hotel room or something? Because it sounds like he's explicitly saying that's not what he's saying. He is explicitly saying that that's not what he's saying, but it is what he's saying.
Now, I'm not talking about going to a cheaper country, but if you go to a cheaper country, it's cheaper. I feel like we're also adding to our sort of like glossary of things that show up in all these airport books. And I feel like one of them is dressing up something totally unexotic and…
Yeah, I got sort of intrigued here because I was like, oh, is he going to like, is there going to be some kind of cool trick here?
Yeah. But no, there won't be. So don't get excited. A lot of the opening sections of the book are just him sort of setting the table, providing guidelines and themes that he hits throughout. Many of them are sensible and inoffensive. Like a big one is to stop using the excuse of
the timing isn't right to put off big moves in your life from like business decisions to vacations because he says the timing never feels right and you'll never make the big moves if you think that way. That actually sounds like reasonable advice to me, honestly. Totally. Do stuff. He also says that people tend...
to want to increase their income when they think about becoming more successful. But it's just as valuable or can be just as valuable to just reduce the number of hours you work. OK, there is some weirder stuff. He says ask for forgiveness, not permission, which is, of course, like a common saying. But in this case, he's talking about like making large life decisions without telling your boss or life partner.
Oh, wait, like he explicitly says this? Quote, people, whether parents, partners or bosses, deny things on an emotional basis that they can learn to accept after the fact. Oh, so we're at another major theme of all these airport books, toxic masculinity. That's right. Don't tell her what you're thinking and doing. So one of the big things.
underlying ideas behind the book is that people are scared of change and will choose unhappiness over uncertainty. That's actually kind of wise. Yeah. No, I agree. And it's, you know, sort of it's on theme with the, you know, the timing is never right idea. Yeah. But it's also, you know, this is where you start to realize that.
That he's about to give you a lot of advice that is very applicable to a 28-year-old with seven figures in the bank. Right. You know, like when he is considering his big year-long sabbatical, he's weighing the downsides. And he's like, look, even if everything goes wrong and my business collapses—
what's my worst case scenario? And he's like, look, I have the experience and the resume to get a job and get back on my feet and it won't be great, but it'll be fine. Yeah, he's like, what's the worst that could happen? I'm already earning $70,000 a year in interest from my accounts that I have. Right, right, right. Yes, people, that does in fact give you a lot more options, true. So yes, many people do choose unhappiness over instability. I agree with that, but that's because the risks of instability for many people
Yeah.
Right. You can go teach people to surf in Costa Rica for a living, but that requires some level of comfort with poverty. Right. Yeah. And this book is fundamentally about not wanting to make that trade off. Right. Because, yeah, the ordinary advice would be like, yeah, go bum around Southeast Asia for a while. And like you're just going to be broke and sleep in like youth hostels and stuff. Right. Which is great and like a super formative and awesome experience. But also you're not going to like earn money doing that.
That's not a path to riches necessarily. It's just like a nice thing to do when you're young. Right. And so what we're getting, what we're building towards is that he's going to show you how you can do all that while still being a little bit rich, right? While being part of this new rich club. Yeah. The last part of the opening section is about the practice of dreamlining. Oh.
This is where you create a clear outline of what your dream is. Okay. And he provides like worksheets and shit. Okay. Those worksheets have examples and I'm going to read off some of those examples to you. He says, let's say in six months I want to have an Aston Martin, a personal assistant, and be a best-selling author. Mm-hmm.
And then he lays out the costs. For the Aston Martin, it's $2,000 a month. Okay. He prices the personal assistant at $400 based on 80 hours a month at $5 an hour. Wait. A rate that was below the federal minimum wage. Yeah.
At every point after 1997, he prices becoming a bestselling author at zero dollars because the only costs are A, your time, which is free, and B, three unpaid interns to handle promoting the book. Okay. This is a turning point in the book because it's the first peek at the actual secret behind the book.
the four hour work week. Child slaves. We're back to child slaves. Well, we are. This is the first time he touches on a significant, maybe the most significant material component of the strategy, which is identifying sources of cheap labor to do the work
Hell yeah. Again, not exotic advice. This is this is pretty standard advice of like if you want to be rich, like find people willing to work for you for like almost nothing. Yeah. And it's interesting because it's like, OK, yeah. Four hour work week for you. Yeah. Full time job for your slave wage team. Right. Right.
All right. E, elimination. He says to forget about time management. He thinks that people focus on busying themselves too much without thinking about being effective with their time. Okay. He talks about identifying and eliminating time-wasting or time-consuming habits. He suggests limiting your email use so that you have a dedicated email answering hour every day, thus avoiding
avoiding constant email interruptions. That honestly seems like very good advice. Yeah, I agree. He says have a second phone number so that you can have one dedicated to urgent matters. That's what Hillary Clinton did and the country never forgave her. Yeah.
Interesting. Interesting. He goes there. He also gives advice for being effective on phone calls. And I'm going to send you some templates. Read the read the intro and I'll be John and Jane. If someone does call your cell phone, it's presumably urgent and should be treated as such. Do not allow them to consume time otherwise. It's all in the greeting.
Compare the following. And then I'm Jane receiving a call. Hello. Hi, is this Jane? This is Jane. Hi, Jane. It's John. Oh, hi, John. How are you? John will now digress and lead you into a conversation about nothing from which you will have to recover and then fish out the ultimate purpose of the call. There's a better approach. This is Jane speaking. Hi, it's John. Hi, John. I'm right in the middle of something. How can I help you out? Uh, uh, uh. That's a good one.
That's not in the screen grab you sent. That's you. We're now in full improv. That's me, John, panicking. Jane's got me in the spotlight. I better act fast. This seems like reasonable advice. Get to the point of phone calls, I guess. This is one of my favorite parts of the book because he's basically advising you on how to save four seconds off of every phone call. And it's like, okay, I guess that's part of the 36 hours that I will gain every week during this. But...
It seems like we're going to need to do a lot more work. It's funny to me that usually we try to be meticulously fair to these books. And like we we dove right in on like roasting this fucking guy. We didn't. It's very hard not to. You know, the one thing I will say in defense of this book is he gives the full scheme like he lays out the full vision. So we'll give him credit for being kind of upfront about this deranged plan. But the plan is still deranged. Next section is a.
And the first chapter of it is called Outsourcing Life. Okay. It begins with an account that's not written by Ferris. It's written by A.J. Jacobs at the time, an editor at Esquire. Okay. One second. I'll send it to you. Oh, my fucking God. He says it began a month ago.
Burned.
Why can't I outsource my low-end tasks?
I actually remember this, Peter. There was like a brief period of hype around like ordinary people outsourcing aspects of their lives to like personal assistance. Because whenever whenever something is like great for giant corporations.
There's always a giant PR push to be like, this will be good for you too. Yeah, this is going to change life for everyone. But then my understanding is that it completely fizzled out because once you actually get down to it, there's not that many tasks in your life that you can outsource. Like it would be kind of nice to be like, hey, can you call a restaurant and like make a reservation for seven for me and my friends? Great. But then by the time you tell someone, okay,
in India to do that. And then you probably have to clarify with them like, wait, which restaurant? Oh, yeah. Oh, here's the number. It's not saving you that much time. And then how many tasks...
Can you really outsource to someone who like doesn't know your life very well? You know, like respond to my Tinder messages for me. And a lot of tasks are also in person. A lot of the things that take up people's time are stuff like, you know, getting your kids ready for school or whatever. I do want to say that this builds toward my theory that there will eventually only be one book. Right. And we are working toward the single book. Yeah.
So the basic principle is that you use assistance to free up your time to do work, which gives you more money for assistance, which gives you more time. You know, it's the cycle of glory. This is when the vision of the book sort of came fully into focus for me because it starts off with this very relatable disillusionment with the workplace grind and a desire to escape it and focus on the more important things in life.
But then you get to the core of the book and you realize it's not really about escaping the grind per se. It's about offloading the grind onto someone poorer than you. Right. It's basically I want to escape the rat race by no longer being a rat but becoming like the rat master. Like I'm the one building the maze. Transition from exploited to exploiter. Yeah.
So Ferris gives a bunch of tips about managing your assistants. Like he says to be specific when you're delegating. Otherwise, you lose time later trying to clarify. Oh, don't you hate that? He also talks about like the limits of delegation. And I'm going to send you a bit. First, I
I try to delegate my therapy. My plan is to give Asha a list of my neuroses and a childhood anecdote or two, have her talk to my shrink for 50 minutes, then relay the advice. Smart, right? My shrink refused. Ethics or something. Fine. Instead, I have Asha send me a meticulously researched memo on stress relief. It had a nice Indian flavor to it.
With a couple of yogic postures and some visualization. Oh, my God. Bro. This honestly reads like satire. Like, this reads like an argument against being able to outsource this stuff. Like, this seems like a description of, like, why this would never fucking work. I mean, look, there might not be a better summation of this book than Tim identifying therapy as the least important use of his time. Yeah.
And then trying to offload it onto an outsourced wage slave personal assistant. Who's Indian. So, of course, the recommendation is yoga. Obviously, that's what they do there. But then, yeah, this is this weird, like, capitalistic understanding of, like, your own personality and relationships. Because at this point, you're like, oh, I'm going to catch up with a high school friend of mine. Well, why don't I outsource that? And, like, Asha can go and she can give me, like, points. So, like, what's Greg up to these days? Yeah, right, right, right. But, like, that's...
This is the point of life. It's as if the dream is just being plugged into the matrix and you're just like a twitching little corpse while your personal assistants handle everything for you. It's bizarre.
He also goes through the concerns that you might have about this sort of arrangement, not the moral concerns. He says that the number one fear is that someone within your army of personal assistants might decide that it would be more profitable to just steal from you. But does he talk about how hard it is to find people now that quiet quitting is such a big problem in our society?
Ferris gives some tips for suppressing these wage slave rebellions. He talks about like background checks and NDAs and like encryption and VPN. Oh my God. And he's like, I only provide sensitive information to my most trusted assistants.
I don't know, man. When I when I worked in human rights at one point, I had a team of like five people that I was managing. And it was so much fucking work to manage people. I mean, all you're doing is you're basically turning yourself into like a middle manager. Right. Of your own life. I mean, look, by the time you're getting someone to sign an NDA for four dollars an hour. Yeah. What are you fucking doing here? You know, the next few chapters.
We move away from the indentured servitude and toward income autopilot, which...
is about creating streams of passive income by starting a business. Another theme for the show. This is all these books promise passive income. Now, he says the ultimate goal is to have a business where you can remove yourself from the org chart and put yourself in a position where you're essentially in an oversight role. He does this primarily by relying on trusted contractors and giving them leeway to make decisions as they deem fit.
Oh, I'm going to send you a little bit. He says, I'm more like a police officer on the side of the road who can step in if need be. I check reports from fulfillment each Monday and monthly reports from the same the first of each month. The latter reports include orders received from the call center, which I can compare to the call center bills to gauge profit.
Otherwise, I just check bank accounts online on the 1st and 15th of each month to look for odd deductions. If I find something, one email will fix it. And if not, it's back to kendo, painting, hiking, or whatever I happen to be doing at the time.
Okay, so he's working. This is like just being a boss. Just being a boss. Yeah. Although I... This is another one of those things where I... This is the second time I've said this on this podcast, but this is another place where I would pay a million dollars to watch Karl Marx read this. Just like...
How do I maximize my rent seeking? Like, how can I maximize my lecherousness vis-a-vis labor? Right. There's something deeply disturbing about being like, I still get the money, but I try to do as little as possible.
I like, I don't know. I hear that. I read this and I hear the international. I also feel like, look, man, if these books are going to recycle their little lessons, we're going to recycle jokes. We're just going to keep doing it every episode. We're going to make the same Mark's joke. If they're building towards one book, we're building towards one episode.
Also, the rich dad, poor dad guy also said this of like, be the head of a company and like just receive passive income. But like, that's hard. It's hard. It's easy to start your own successful company that you can then completely bow out of. More people would fucking do it. Like the whole point is that it's not easy to do this and often requires massive startup capital and like some sort of specialization and all kinds of luck and shit. Well, Mike, not to cut you off.
But Tim Ferriss has a plan for you. Oh. There are steps towards starting a functional business that provides you passive income in this book. He got a little ahead of himself talking about the org chart, but he's like, all right, so what's the real question, right? You want to know how to create a product that you can sell passively without handling much of the day-to-day. It's 2007, so is it just bubble tea?
It's going to be bubble tea. No. He says you don't want to provide a service because that means you get paid by the hour. Yeah. Right? You want to provide a downloadable or shippable product. Okay. So he says think about markets that you know, industry groups that you associate with, for example, social groups you associate with.
Figure out which of those groups have magazines with large circulations that you can advertise in. Again, this is like almost 20 years ago, right? Yeah, fair enough. He says, one, pick an affordably reachable niche market. Two, brainstorm a product to sell to that market. Step one, come up with a great business idea. Step one. Step two, sell.
He says, look, you can try to sell a physical product, but the simpler route is to sell an informational product like an instructional DVD course. Oh, no. Oh, so he's turning you into a fucking self-help guru like all these guys do eventually. That's right. He's saying, look, these are harder for competitors to replicate. Oh, my God.
They have lower upfront costs, higher margins, all the good stuff that you want in a business. Right. And then he's like, eventually write a book giving some fake plan and sell it to a bunch of fucking suckers. You know, I was about to say this. This is not the first time that we've seen one of our authors advise readers to do scams.
But this is, I think, the first time we've had one explain the scam that he's running on you right now. Yeah, you are now the product being sold. Like, you are the sucker. Right. It is so fascinating to me how many of these guys...
are basically just like training you how to become a guru because they're like, well, I can make up all this shit. Why don't you start making up a bunch of shit and then sell it to other people? Our listener at home is like, but Peter, how can I sell an informational DVD when I am not an expert in anything at all?
And Tim's got you covered. So I'm going to send you something. He says, if you aren't an expert, don't sweat it. Expert in the context of selling a product means that you know more about the topic than the purchaser. It is not necessary to be the best, just better than a small target number of your prospective customers. Let's suppose that your current dream line to compete in the 1150 mile Iditarod dog sledding race in Alaska requires $5,000 to realize.
If there are 15,000 readers and even 50 or 0.33% can be convinced of your superior expertise in skill X and spend $100 for a program that teaches it, that's $5,000. Bring on the Huskies. Oh, so is this just like bullshit?
your way. That is absolutely the point. I mean, first of all, he says, look, expert doesn't mean that you are an expert. It means that you know more about the topic than the other guy. And it's like, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. Does it? This is also the career of numerous national political pundits. They don't have any actual expertise. But you know what? Just talk like you do. It's fine. He also suggests just like finding several books on a topic and then paraphrasing them. Yeah.
Or using content from the public domain. That's what Rich Dad Poor Dad does too. He's just like, yeah, just repackage stuff that other gurus are saying. This is a great like giant national game of telephone that happens with these fucking self-help books. Is there all just repackaging shit from other self-help books? There is an incredible insert in this book.
titled How to Become an Expert in Four Weeks. Fuck yes. He says, quote, there is a difference between being perceived as an expert and being one, and that all that matters in this context is being perceived as one. He outlines some steps. He says, one,
Join a few trade organizations in the field. Two, read the three top-selling books on the topic. Three, give one free seminar at the closest well-known university using posters to advertise, then leverage that to give some seminars for large corporations with campuses nearby if you can. Four, optional, write an article for a trade magazine and if they decline, offer to interview someone more established in the field.
And this one's slightly outdated, but join ProfNet, which is a service that connects journalists and experts for articles. My immediate gut reaction to this was...
this would work. This would work. Yes, it's crazy. 100%. Yeah. It felt a little bit like looking into the abyss, reading this section. It's really wild how he's just saying it. Right. This is the most openly I've ever seen someone like this talk about this sort of thing. It's sort of perfect that he comes out of this like health grifting sector because like the public knows so little about health stuff. I don't know if you're getting these in your inbox yet, Peter, but like somehow I've ended up on all these fucking PR lists for like health influencers. And so I get probably like
30 to 50 emails a day from these atrocious PR firms that are like, this guru says like kidney health is the key to longevity. And it's some random fucking guy. Right. And they want to be a guest on our podcast.
And like a lot of podcasts fall for this. And a lot of journalists also don't know shit about kidneys because most people don't. And so like, okay, I'll interview the fucking kidney guy. And then you start getting this like earned media. You start showing up in media reports. And before you know it, like a large number of people think that you're an expert on whatever thing you've called yourself an expert on.
If you want to do an informational DVD that sells, you're probably doing some general wellness bullshit. Yeah. It's either wellness or financial advice. Yeah, financial stuff. Yeah. You know, this is one of the most rich dad, poor dad parts of the book. And Tim Ferriss has been on Robert Kiyosaki's podcast. Perfection. And I tried to do a full Hobbes and listen to it. And...
Kiyosaki might be the worst host in history. Yes, he's tough to listen to. It's real tough. His questions are terrible. He was completely unfamiliar with Tim's work going in. And I made it five minutes and I was like, this has me feeling bad for Tim Ferriss and I can't tolerate that. So I have to leave.
All right. We're we are now past the A in deal, which is the slave labor and fraud business portion. And we are on to liberation. Freeing myself to employ others in exploitative conditions. Yes. What's interesting about this section is that for much of it, he actually pivots away from like this basic framework of.
And a lot of it is geared towards employees rather than like self-employed entrepreneurs. Okay. The practical advice here is primarily about how to convince your employer to let you work remotely. Okay. Which means we get to witness how a guy in 2007 thought employers would react to an employee request for remote work. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's a little unfair to shit on him for this because like, of course, this was the framework at the time and this has all become normalized, but...
It's also very funny to shit on him for this. So maybe we should continue. So he offers up some fake dialogue between you and your boss to sort of, you know, give you a template for how to discuss with your manager your desire to do remote work. I love it when we do scripts. I will be the boss, Bill. Okay. Okay.
Okay, you're Bill. And you can be Sherwood, the employee. Okay. This is Tim writing out the dialogue that he believes will happen when you ask your manager for remote work. Hi, Bill. Do you have a quick second? Sure, what's up? I just wanted to bounce an idea off of you that's been on my mind. Two minutes should be plenty. Okay, shoot. Last week, as you know, I was sick. Long story short, I decided to work at home despite feeling terrible. So here's the funny part. I thought I would get nothing done, but ended up finishing three more designs than usual on both days.
Plus, I put in three more billable hours than usual without the commute, office noise, distractions, etc. Okay, so here's where I'm going. Just as a trial, I'd like to propose working from home Mondays and Tuesdays for just two weeks. You can veto it whenever you want, and I'll come in if we need to do meetings. But I'd like to try it for just two weeks and review the results. I'm 100% confident that I'll get twice as much done. Does that seem reasonable? Hmm.
What if we need to share client designs? There's a program called GoToMyPC that I used to access the office computer when I was sick. I can view everything remotely and I'll have my cell phone on me 24-7.
So what do you think? Test it out starting next Monday and see how much more I get done? Um, okay, fine. But it's just a test. I have a meeting in five and have to run, but let's talk soon. Great. Thanks for the time. I'll keep you posted on it all. I'm sure you'll be pleasantly surprised. Thumbs up. Yay. I fucking nailed it, Peter. I just want some acknowledgement of how good my line readings were. No, you did great. That was classic Sherwood. Interesting.
Is there like a lower form of like argument than just writing fake dialogue? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. This is how it'll go. Tim, have you ever had a boss? You know, like even in 2007, the idea that you just be like, can I not come in Monday and Tuesday and I promise I'll be working?
And your boss would be like, absolutely. Yeah, they're not going to impose like arbitrary rules on you. This is work. Like, come on, man. I also love that he's like promising to like do more work and be more productive. Yeah.
Which just sounds like to prove that you're productive, you're going to be like constantly on the hustle. Right. But then the whole point of this framework is to slack off and do less work. Well, one thing that he makes it clear that like if you go nuts during a trial session, that'll buy you a lot of leeway to slack off later. Yeah. Then, OK, you set it up. And then once he's used to it, then you hit him with the four hours a week. Right. All right.
I already did something last week. Sherwood, who, by the way, I believe is just a fictional character he's using to illustrate his points, proceeds to go to work from Oktoberfest in Munich. And it's like, how long do you think a manager is going to let you work from impromptu vacations before you're fired? You know? It is very funny how he's like toggling back and forth between perspectives. Like in this section, he's speaking as an employee. And
And he's like, here's how to trick your boss into giving you leeway. But then it sounds like in the rest of the book, he's speaking as an employer. Yeah. And he's like, here's how to impose controls on your employees so they don't take any leeway. Yeah, right, right, right. Like, I want him to run the dialogue again, but instead of Sherwood, it's Asha. Like, do you let her to a trial period, Tim? I actually don't really understand this process.
Portion of the book and it feels like someone was just like can you put in something for regular office workers? Yeah, because the next section is
is when he sort of says, you know, I realize this isn't really realistic for most people, but that's okay because you can just quit. And also getting fired is not actually a very big deal if you've done what I've suggested so far and started a fraudulent business. Yeah, just fall back on your supplement money, which you have. So here is his bit about...
He says,
Carpool or take the bus until you find the next gig. Rack up some more credit card debt and cook instead of eating out. Sell all the crap that you spent hundreds or thousands on and never use. Okay, so we're back to like stop eating avocado toast. Look, just...
Stop going out to fancy meals. Also cancel your health insurance, second mortgage. Go into severe credit card debt, guys. It's not that hard. Rent out the home that you own. Instead of sailing on your yacht, lease it.
So most of the rest of this book is dedicated to advice about how to do cool shit with your newfound free time. Oh, fuck yes. Okay. Which centers around what he calls mini retirements. Okay. He says that people have retirement backwards. You should be looking for income that can fund adventures now rather than delaying it all until retirement. Ooh.
He says retirement, quote, should be viewed as nothing more than a hedge against the absolute worst case scenario. In this case, becoming physically incapable of working and needing a reservoir of capital to survive.
He goes on like a long trip to Spain and then he's like, why not take the usual 20 to 30 year retirement and redistribute it throughout life instead of saving it all for the end? God, nothing is more annoying than someone who just came back from Spain. The thing is that what he describes as the absolute worst case scenario of being physically unable to work is
is sort of just an inevitability for many people. And it's weird to be like, well, let's take the money away from that.
and put it towards vacations now. Right. What he actually means is like make a million dollars a year and then you'll have enough to survive retirement when you're old anyway. Yeah. He's trying to hedge by saying, well, look, definitely save for retirement in case something unexpected happens, but also take your retirement in little chunks now. But what that basically amounts to is just like save for retirement now.
And go on a bunch of vacations now, which is sort of already what everybody wants to do. Like the reason why people don't go on vacations now isn't because they don't know that that would be awesome. He says that you should occasionally just relocate to somewhere you want to visit for one to six months. And that's what he considers a mini retirement. Even if you have his fraud scheme working in the background, right?
You hear that and you're like, how is this feasible for most people, right? The first concern is obviously money. Yeah. And he says you can actually make this affordable. Okay. So he lists out his costs from his extended stays in Buenos Aires and Berlin. And I'm going to send you the pages from the book. Okay. I thought it might be something...
Mike Hobbs would have insight into because you lived in Berlin. Yes. So I'm going to send you his monthly expenses for these trips. Okay. So he's got a list of categories. So airfare free courtesy of Amex gold card, enormous apartment in the trendy Soho like Prince Lauerberg district of Berlin, including phone and energy, $300 us per month. And then meals. He just says, uh,
Berlin, $18. He says four or five star restaurant meals twice daily. Yeah. In Buenos Aires, $10. In Berlin, $18. No. That's like three shawarmas a day. I also don't understand like two, four or five star restaurant meals a day. Like what's the price of the treatment for gout? Because that's what's going to happen. But then I will sort of defend and attack him here. I feel like
Yeah, he's fudging the numbers like these numbers are small. But then on some level, the numbers don't super duper matter because like, yeah, could you get an apartment in Prince Lauerberg for 300 euros in 2007? Probably not. But it was significantly cheaper to live in Berlin back then than it was in a lot of other global cities, kind of like surprisingly cheap. Right. I'm sort of willing to forgive him on like the specifics of the numbers.
But on the other hand, all he's really saying here is that like some cities in the world are cheaper than other cities. And remember that earlier he said, quote, this has nothing to do with currency rates. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
This is also an area of the book where his practical advice starts to flounder out. He has like an insert about saving on airfare and his advice is just to use like kayak.com and break very far in advance. Okay. He goes on to list education costs, which are like language lessons and then private tango lessons, which are quite expensive. He starts off this book with,
with an anecdote about being in a high profile tango competition. He's like, just one year ago, I had no experience, but here I was. And here's how I did it. And it was so stupid that I was like, I was like, I'm not going to include this. It's too mean to read out the whole book. And then in like Berlin, he's taking MMA training, which I have to say,
He was ahead of the game here. This is like 2006, 2007, presumably. MMA is something that tech assholes are into now. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. He totals up his monthly costs as $1,500 a month in Buenos Aires, nearly a third of which is the advanced tango lessons, and just under $1,200 in Berlin. And then he says, how do these numbers compare to your current domestic monthly expenses, including rent, car insurance, utilities, weekend expenditures, partying?
Public transportation, gas, memberships, subscriptions, food, and all the rest. Add it all up and you may well realize, like I did, that traveling around the world and having the time of your life can save you serious money. So a few things that I wanted to say about that are...
one, you probably have a lot of those domestic expenses while you're abroad. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Right? Presumably you're keeping your apartment somewhere so you can, when you go back to the States, you're not living in a rented place. Right. Or if like, if you have a house, you're paying your mortgage. Yeah. Not to mention that a lot of these expenses are stuff that he does not add in.
into his Berlin and Argentina expenses. Right. The other thing that came to my mind when I was thinking about his mini retirement scheme is like, OK, what if you have children? Yeah. And he seems to be loosely aware that people are concerned about this. And so I'm going to send you
His attempt to lay the concerns of parents to rest. He says,
Oh, so it's like your kids aren't going to die. Right. So he seems to think that the primary concern of parents is like that your kid might get lost or kidnapped or shot or something. Yeah. And it's like, bro, I don't even have a kid. But I know that what every parent is thinking when hearing this scheme is my kid has to go to school. Yeah. Not like, oh, what if they get taken? You know?
This is like how everyone says that when we were kids, we were worried about quicksand. Yeah. It's like a child's idea of what a parent would be worried about. He's like, now I know what you're going to say. What about parents? But I do address it in the book. Actually, I've got you covered. Yeah. I feel like, okay, this is like coming into focus for me now. Like he's writing this as if it's advice, but what it basically is, is just like,
look how awesome my life is book. If you're this guy, your life rocks. You're fucking rich. You don't have any like deep ties to any particular place. You can like jet around the world and write some emails and the money keeps coming in and you're like kind of sort of running this scammy company, but you don't really need to do that much. Like it seems like you just wanted to write a book about how awesome your life is, but you're not like,
kind of capable of doing that as a form of public reason of like, hey, everybody, look how great my shit is. But like you are allowed to act as if your awesome life is in some way replicable. Right. And it just isn't. So you just you're just telling me how awesome your life is and pretending that the reason other people don't do this is because like they don't know some secret. Right. And I think you're right that he's just sort of bragging. And the main reason I think you're right is because in his next book,
there's a digression about how he's like an expert at giving women orgasms. Oh, wait, seriously? Oh, my God. Oh, my God. Oh, my God. Yeah, it's like, yeah, my next book, The 4-Hour Nut. LAUGHTER
All of these guys eventually just become like dating gurus. Don't say there's like a weird it's like animals evolving into crabs. One of his last chapters is about how like once you've freed up all of your time to do what you want, you might find yourself searching for meaning in life. And he calls the chapter filling the void, which I mentioned because Tim Ferriss now has talked openly about how he's had like bouts of depression and struggled with mental health and stuff. But
that he didn't recognize it at the time he wrote this book. Oh, that's so interesting. You see it like peek through with like the title of the chapter where he's like, okay, you freed up your time. Now you're going to hear the abyss calling. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You're going to wonder what to do about it. And it's like, oh, Tim, you've got to do the therapy, bro. Let's circle back to the therapy. This is the I need therapy advice book.
holy shit that's that's honestly the first interesting thing I've heard in this episode a lot of this stuff that he was doing in his 20s was him either chasing something or running away from something which as somebody who lived abroad for a long time like you do really see this it makes sense in general right that if you did find yourself with 36 hours of free time a week you might
Start thinking about what the point of it all is, right? Like, yeah, there are mental and emotional challenges that come with having the freedom to do what you want. This is why I always listen to podcasts, even if I'm like just brushing my teeth or something. So I don't have to be alone with my thoughts. Never let the thoughts in. Don't do it. There's also a bit where he provides his own view on the meaning of life. He says that, quote, I believe that life exists to be enjoyed and that the most important thing is to feel good about yourself. OK, which is both trite and stupid. But I mostly wanted to include it because I
Only a 28-year-old Silicon Valley guy would think that he should just throw in his view on the meaning of life. Yeah. I've also got thoughts on the meaning of life, FYI, now that I've taught you about how to do a fake, fraudulent, instructional DVD. The funny thing is I feel like the actual...
like low key advice the book is giving without realizing it is to try to form like meaningful relationships and that chasing money is not going to make you happy. Right. And this thing of like, I'm sitting by an infinity pool is like, yeah, it's really cool. But like that, that's not it. Right. Yeah. You should do as much of this stuff in your twenties as possible. I honestly like think fucking off to other countries. And like, if you're able to do it is like great. And like, don't make excuses. Fuck off. It whips.
But also like you need to be able to form deeper relationships and like have something to come home to. Well, that's what you have Asha for. She's sending you yoga poses. My best friend Asha. Yeah.
God, now I feel so mean about the book because it sounds like he's writing this as a way of like struggling out of some sort of darkness. Don't worry. Okay. I got you covered. Make me feel better. Tell me something problematic he said or did. I will not let empathy for Tim Ferriss grab a hold of you. Fix me, Peter. So the book's a hit, of course, right? Yes.
It spawns various spinoffs because they can't resist. Yeah. A couple years later, he publishes The 4-Hour Body. Oh.
An uncommon guide to rapid fat loss, incredible sex, and becoming superhuman. It's very funny that he's like, in this book, he's like, just bullshit your way and make people think that you're an expert. And then his next book, he's like, I'm an expert. It's the scam. It's the same scam, bro. He fucking told you. If you read The 4-Hour Workweek where he explains the scam that he's running on you, and then you see the next book and you buy that...
I'm sorry, but like you just shouldn't be allowed to be alone. It's funny. Maybe in the first book he deliberately said sell DVDs as opposed to sell books to make it like less obvious what he was doing. Like this is what he's doing. I would love it if that was an editor suggestion. Tim, can you delete books and just put DVDs in? We're scamming people into buying the book, Tim. So anyway, yeah, you were having empathy for Tim Ferriss and I was like, don't worry. His next book has rapid fat loss in the title. Yeah.
Did you look at it? Is it just like, whatever, do a bunch of sit-ups or some shit? Yeah, so I skimmed this one a little bit. He recommends what he calls a slow-carb diet. Oh, yeah. He claims he interviewed hundreds of experts for the book, which, again, is just a component of that same fake expertise scam that he outlined for us. Remember, his advice was like—
Interview experts read a couple of the best-selling books and then bang, you are the fake expert. It's what he's doing. As you're walking me through the book, I do...
actually think that this is like significantly more poisonous than Atomic Habits, for example? I mean, we said this during the episode, but Atomic Habits is just like a set of tips. And it's like, the stakes are very low in that book. You know, I think it's sort of silly and it's emblematic of a certain type of bullshit, but it's nothing like this. Yeah. If someone tried this, like your chance of dying on a boat in the middle of the Atlantic is skyrocketing.
And also it's like, it's not even that the tips in this book are useless. It's like many of them are like actively harmful. Yeah. Not only to yourself because they're not going to work, but also to society. You're just like, oh, telling lies about shit and becoming yet another fucking wellness guru. And then also the epilogue is that like none of this made him happy. Right. Right. So. Right. Right.
The fact that right now he's like in the last couple of years, he's like sort of re-envisioning how he conceives of his life just goes to show how hollow this shit is. Yeah, exactly. Like what I've dedicated my whole career to and like the way that I made my millions is basically just like bullshit. He also publishes The Four Hour Chef, The Simple Path to Cooking Like a Pro, Learning Anything and Living the Good Life.
Couldn't even skim this one, to be honest. He's obviously building around the four-hour brand, but it's also funny because you can see the allure of it decreasing. Like, four-hour work week, incredible. 90% reduction in my work hours, right? Four-hour body, and it's like, okay, that's... Are we talking about working out four times a week for an hour? That's just sort of like a standard recommended exercise regimen. Yeah.
And then it's like four hour chef. And it's like, that's kind of a lot of cooking, Tim. I don't. Also, wasn't he an early pioneer of podcasting? This is like mostly how I know him is that his podcast was like wildly successful. His podcast was very, very successful. He's also like the book made him a hit in Silicon Valley. And so like his company gets bought by a private equity firm in 2010 and
He's sitting on a small fortune and becomes a seed investor and has like struck it huge with various massive companies. He's now extraordinarily wealthy. And all of it sort of underscores even he was not doing this. Right. Right. He's just working 70 hour weeks, writing books and doing TED talk and taking meetings with Silicon Valley assholes. And what he would say to that is like, well, look, the whole point is
Right. Right.
I think that his change of heart over the last few years sort of bears this out. Like he says now that he's less focused on material success and productivity and is more focused on psychological well-being. And he's gotten very into psychedelics and meditation and spiritual retreats and shit like that. The full Silicon Valley dipshit life cycle, right? Like how every time you look at Jack Dorsey, he looks like he's living deeper in a sewer.
But then it's not even like the Silicon Valley life cycle. It's just like the aging life cycle. Like as you become older, you start to think about like what is meaningful to me in my life and what do I want to leave behind, which is totally fine. I don't think it's just that. I think what makes it particularly Silicon Valley is that at every stage you are incredibly confident that you have found it. Yeah, exactly. This is the thing is that you're immediately selling back.
Meditation and spiritual retreats are changing my life. And it's like, bro, you're having a midlife crisis.
Yeah, it's fine. Like you're in your 40s. Yeah, it's cool. You've attained what you've defined as success and it hasn't made you happy. Right. And like, yeah, that's a lot of people when they're in their 40s, man. Yeah. And a lot of other people don't get to like nope out of the structures that they're in and just like take a break and go do ayahuasca in Arizona. Not everybody gets to do that, but you're just again repackaging this shit as like, no, no, I've got it figured out. You know, not to brag, but I was doing shrooms when I was 22. Okay. Yeah.
So I'm ahead of the game, Tim. And also, I had like a black abyss in my heart when I was like 17. Yeah. Tim, join me. That's right. Some of us knew that it didn't mean anything. You rented the dark. I was born in it. In 10 years, he's going to... Like in 20 years, he's going to be writing a book about like the joy of grandkids or some shit like that. 100% prostate health with Tim. It's very interesting how this book starts versus how it finishes because like...
It starts off fairly relatable. It's a common experience to feel like you're doing okay, doing what you're supposed to be doing, but you're just working a lot and sort of looking around and wondering, like, is this the rest of my fucking life? Yeah. Maybe the existence of this book...
Speaks to how beaten down the spirit of the American worker is because like this is a structural problem Yeah, right like the problem that he sees but can't really identify is Probably that America is the only industrialized country on earth without mandatory paid vacation for workers, right? Yeah, how bleak is it that to Americans structural change
is so unthinkable that Timothy Ferris thought it would be simpler to employ a small army of third world wage slaves in order to like loosely replicate what people in Spain get as a matter of legal right. And he's like, all you have to do to avoid all these like structural disadvantages of working in the United States is just like be fabulously wealthy. It's like, yeah, great. Be the 1%. Awesome. Try to step atop the structure of oppression and,
Using fraud to employ people so that you can do more fraud and then travel. The sequel to this is going to be called The 80 Hour Workweek by Asha. Ooh, Asha. Ooh, Asha.