Loading summary
Ted Nivison
What's the best time of day to get a deal? All day with Jack in the box's all day big deal meal. You get to choose from four entrees like the supreme croissant and five tasty sides, plus a drink starting at $5. So hurry in or take your time. You've got all day at Jack. Every bite's a big deal.
Ryan Seacrest
Ryan Seacrest here. When you have a busy schedule, it's important to maximize your downtime. One of the best ways to do that is by going to Chumba. Casin casino.com. chumba Casino has all your favorite social casino games like spin slots, bingo, and solitaire that you can play for free for a chance to redeem some serious prizes. So hop on to chumbacasino.com now and live the Chumba life. Sponsored by Chumba Casino. No purchase necessary. VGW Group void where prohibited by law. 18/ Terms and Conditions apply.
Schlatt
Juno, this is going to be a really hard episode to make.
Ted Nivison
It's gonna be really hard.
Schlatt
Juno, this is gonna be a real tough one.
Ted Nivison
It's gonna be tough.
Schlatt
Give me the strength to get through this.
Ted Nivison
It's gonna be hard.
Schlatt
I'm gonna start crying. I'm gonna start crying. Here I go.
Ted Nivison
Do it.
Schlatt
Here I go, don't I? I'm genuinely doing it this time. You heard the title, right, Chucklers?
Ted Nivison
You heard it, right, Chucklers.
Schlatt
This is it.
Ted Nivison
This is it. This is the final dance.
Schlatt
The last chuckle, some might say.
Ted Nivison
Tucker's here.
Tucker
I'm here.
Ted Nivison
And he's dancing with us, is he not? I am. I am.
Tucker
It's a sad slow dance.
Ted Nivison
It's a sad slow dance. But we thought, you know, style.
Tucker
Oh, I thought you were riding a horse.
Ted Nivison
Gang style is not a slow dance.
Tucker
Yeah, that. That's fast.
Ted Nivison
That's the guy. The guy part of the music video is in a wind chamber.
Schlatt
Okay. Okay.
Ted Nivison
It's like getting blasted. There's that elevator opens up. That guy's moving his hips and that is not a story.
Schlatt
That was my sexual awakening.
Ted Nivison
Was it really? When did that. When did that come out?
Tucker
Well, Mitt Romney style came out. So is that election.
Ted Nivison
Oh, so 2012. 12. Yeah. Wow. Your sexual relationship. Okay, that lines up actually. 14.
Tucker
What about it woke you up? Yeah.
Ted Nivison
What about it woke you up? Was it the guy in the yellow suit? That was a guy, I think. I mean, I never asked him.
Tucker
This is supposed to be serious.
Ted Nivison
We're serious. Locking in. Yeah. No. Truffle sandwich is ending. And this be our final chuckle Week. Welcome to Chuckle Sandwich.
Schlatt
This is going to be a super hard video to make, Juno. I don't know how I'm gonna do it. It's ending. I don't know what to do. Four years of my life just gone. I don't know how I'm gonna live with myself after this. I don't know what I could possibly do with those other multiple hours of work a week. Oh, you don't care? Oh, you don't care. Great. What a great friend you are. Oh, yeah. Go sit next to Ted. Go sit next to Ted.
Ted Nivison
Come here, Juno. Come here, Juno. Welcome, everybody, to Chuckle Sandwich. This is the first episode of the final Chuckle Week.
Schlatt
Chuckle Week.
Ted Nivison
Chuckle Week. We actually. These episodes are gonna be coming out in sort of a weird order. You're gonna notice. Maybe we're. I have more facial hair than I had before. Maybe I don't have any facial hair. I don't know. We've got more episodes still to film, but this is, in fact, the last Chuckle Week. And this might come as a surprise to some of you. I mean, some people might be not confused, I don't know.
Schlatt
But it's like when Charlie left. Remember that? Yeah, it's that again. Yes, it's that again.
Ted Nivison
Yeah, it is. I have an unmatched stamina to continue making podcasts, and I keep burning out the people that I've brought on.
Schlatt
No, I'm not burnt out. Yeah, no, I could keep going. I just don't want to. And that's really.
Ted Nivison
What's the difference between that and burning out.
Schlatt
Oh, well, I mean, I don't feel burnt out of jerking off right now. I just don't want to at the moment.
Ted Nivison
Okay.
Tucker
Can't go an episode.
Ted Nivison
Can't go an episode. Yeah.
Tucker
Without slipping it in there.
Ted Nivison
Without.
Schlatt
Yeah, no, it's the first one they're seeing, so.
Tucker
And it's funny. He jacks off between every recording.
Schlatt
I have to relieve myself somehow.
Ted Nivison
Juno, don't listen to that.
Schlatt
Ted, this is a stressful job. You and I know it more than anybody.
Ted Nivison
Sorry, Juno.
Schlatt
The amount of. I mean, wow. It's real rough.
Ted Nivison
Yeah.
Schlatt
Gets real rough doing this job. And sometimes I think, you know, is it even worth it? And that's the question I found myself asking.
Ted Nivison
Whether or not it was worth it.
Schlatt
Yeah. Yeah. All of it. Oh, all of it. And I think that's more of a spiritual and religious journey for myself that I'll keep working on chipping away at. But that's not remotely close to what we're here to talk about. We're just we're ending Chuckle.
Ted Nivison
We're ending the podcast. It's been, you know, it's been almost four years. It started in. On January 30th of 2021.
Schlatt
Which means by the time the podcast is over after Chuckle Week. Yeah, it will have been for whole years.
Ted Nivison
Four whole years. We got. We've definitely got the timing figured out. I think we've done the math, which.
Schlatt
Is funny to think about, because when I was starting to make money on YouTube, I didn't think I'd last four years. I thought that's like the average.
Ted Nivison
I swear I heard that the horizon. Somebody was telling me about this phrase, the horizon, line, line, horizon, line. It was like three years.
Schlatt
Most people who do this job don't last four years.
Ted Nivison
Really?
Schlatt
Like. Yeah, yeah. I mean, most people. You don't hear about them at all.
Ted Nivison
Yeah.
Schlatt
But I mean, the relevance is not like. I don't know. I think there's something to be said about being able to end on a note, on your own terms, high note, and not just keep every project going indefinitely and until it eventually peters out and you just kind of left there kind of trying to cling back some of the chutzpah it once had.
Ted Nivison
Yeah. I mean, how many seasons would you say the Chuckle Sandwich occupies in terms of. It would be kind of an interesting project if people tried to. Tried to sort of section out. I mean, a lot of the time we would. I think the general consensus was that we would. We would. Every time a Chuckle Week happened, that was the end of a season, and then the Chuckle then coming back, that was the beginning of the new season. But then we kind of slowed down on the Chuckle weeks a little bit. So it's kind of hard to tell. This whole year, I mean, was an era of just like we were.
Schlatt
Every week we're locked in, dude.
Ted Nivison
We were locked in this year. But, yeah, I mean, I don't know. We've had so many different eras of Chuckle Sandwich. I mean, most of it even, like, the entirety of the time that I was in that apartment. We chuckled. My old apartment was Chuckle Sandwich and I just moved.
Schlatt
I think I moved 10 times.
Ted Nivison
Yeah, you moved like 16 times over the time of Chuckle Sandwich. And there's so many different apartments that Schlatt was in. There was one I was in, and I don't know. We used to have Charlie on the pod.
Schlatt
We did used to have him.
Ted Nivison
We brought Chucker.
Tucker
Chucker, Chuckle Tucker.
Ted Nivison
We brought Tucker onto the pod. We did the game Grump Studio Chuckle Week. We've got A lot of different guests on.
Schlatt
The fact that it made it four years is impressive.
Ted Nivison
Oh, yeah.
Schlatt
Honestly, it is. Most podcasts don't even make it past a year.
Ted Nivison
Yeah.
Schlatt
Did Schlatt win? I think I did six.
Ted Nivison
Yeah. I remember when you were talking about those. You were like, yeah, I'm gonna keep this going for a long time.
Schlatt
Yeah. Yeah. And then I realized, oh, do I.
Ted Nivison
Want to do this? Yeah. It was a good. It was a good concept.
Schlatt
It was a good concept. And those videos, now that I'm looking at them. Holy crap.
Ted Nivison
Yeah. They're all over a million views.
Schlatt
Are they all really?
Ted Nivison
Except for one. No, two.
Schlatt
Wow. So you're telling me that every digital.
Ted Nivison
What, are you gonna bring it back?
Schlatt
I'll have time.
Ted Nivison
I guess that's true. I guess that's true. I remember you saying that the thing you struggled with the most was the scheduling, but you could just get an assistant for that.
Schlatt
I don't want an assistant. That's such bullshit.
Ted Nivison
It's not.
Schlatt
No, it's.
Ted Nivison
Yes, as a concept. I mean, if you're too. If you don't. Usually people hire assistants to do stuff that you don't. People don't want to do.
Schlatt
Here's what will happen. Well, in that case, it would go like, hey, Schlatt, it's time to film. I don't want to. Okay, you do it.
Ted Nivison
They have to have. I don't know, they gotta have a. You get an assistant that has a button and you get. Wear a shock collar. Then you'd be really effective.
Schlatt
That would get me to show up.
Ted Nivison
So. Time to record. I don't want to.
Schlatt
Coming. Coming.
Ted Nivison
Yeah. Pretty good idea, right?
Schlatt
No.
Ted Nivison
What?
Schlatt
You want to know something fun? Oh, sorry. Sit back down. Sit down. Sit, sit.
Ted Nivison
Dude, you're confusing her.
Schlatt
I don't know what to do.
Tucker
Maybe you guys can talk about where you were when it started and where you were at the end of each season, how you've grown and who you got to meet through the process.
Ted Nivison
Ah, well, we met. We met Sark.
Schlatt
We did meet Sark.
Ted Nivison
I mean, at the beginning, when we started the pod. I mean, we were 20, 21. I was inside as I was 22. I think I was 22.
Tucker
I think you just had turned 23.
Ted Nivison
I just turned 23, question mark. Yeah. Yeah, I had just turned 23. I was. I was literally only maybe seven or eight months about out of having graduated from college. And now it's been. It's. It's work. It's been four years since I've been out of college. So, like, I mean, I had just. I was still a college kid at that point when we started Chuckle Sandwich. And now I am a man, an adult with thoughts that are adult thoughts. Like sex.
Schlatt
That's true. I think about sex a lot.
Ted Nivison
I know.
Schlatt
I think I always kind of did, though. Back in the day, I think it was kind of just the same amount of sex topics and such.
Ted Nivison
Now the topics have shifted.
Schlatt
No, I don't think the topics have shifted that much. I think the pod definitely went from more of an improv thing. We're just gonna turn the cameras on and see what happens, into a more kind of calculated, less stressful procedure.
Ted Nivison
Yeah, no, I was definitely stressed at the beginning of Truffle Sandwich. Those. Those days were days defined by my stress.
Schlatt
Every episode you were in school, you had other shit to do, too.
Ted Nivison
I wasn't. I was out of school.
Schlatt
Oh.
Ted Nivison
During Chuckle. It was. It was just that I wanted to make sure it went well. So I was like, if you look at the early episodes, I have like this nervous laugh thing. I would do.
Tucker
You do? I know exactly. I used to listen. Those were. I was an audio listener.
Ted Nivison
Yeah. I used to have a nervous laughing. I would do. And I'd be like. Well, not like that extreme, but like, it was like.
Schlatt
Or you'd start a thought and you'd. You'd enunciate the words so much because you're trying to buy yourself more time because you didn't know what you were going to say.
Ted Nivison
Yeah. I'd be like, schlatt, what in the world do you think is your favorite color?
Schlatt
Blue.
Ted Nivison
Blue.
Schlatt
Or green?
Ted Nivison
Or green.
Schlatt
Maybe like a mix of both.
Ted Nivison
Or green. What do you think of that, Juno? These are the type of old dogs where they don't. They don't hear their name anymore. They only just listen to a person.
Schlatt
This dog freaking loves me.
Ted Nivison
Yeah. Yeah. Juno. Yes. Yes.
Schlatt
You know what I want to talk about for a little bit? This, I. This notion of. Of ending is something that I think doesn't get to happen on most creators own terms.
Ted Nivison
Sure.
Schlatt
Either something will happen with a project which we're familiar with.
Ted Nivison
Yeah.
Schlatt
Or you just keep going until it's old and stale and that's all you know. So you just keep doing it. And eventually, as I've said, like, you try and cling to it in a way that is not healthy and is just, like, not necessary in a lot of cases. And I think there's something. Something to being able to fully close the book and end the story on something in the online world, because it doesn't really happen. I mean, we're doing it on our own terms here. This is it.
Ted Nivison
The more that we talk about it, especially this week, the more excited I get about that. Is that so far this week, with how well Chuckle Week has been going far this week?
Schlatt
It's been phenomenal.
Ted Nivison
It's been really good this week. We have some really exciting episodes coming up as well. Like, I think that we're going to end, and I hope that the people who listen and watch or audio listeners love you to death, believe that as well. Is that we're leaving kind of like a good legacy. And you guys might notice that, you know, I posted about the food, and Connor posted about the fact that, you know, we had done. We're doing Chuckle Week, and you guys are getting these episodes several months later. It's because we didn't want to end Chuckle Sandwich with, like, a series of, like, five remote episodes. Yeah. Yeah.
Schlatt
We have the highest peak. Our most amazing guests.
Ted Nivison
Yeah. And then all of a sudden, we're a lame duck podcast.
Schlatt
The best podcast episodes we've ever filmed on Chuckle Week, in my opinion.
Ted Nivison
Yeah.
Schlatt
And then after that peak, we go back to. Oh, we're back on Discord. And.
Ted Nivison
Yeah.
Schlatt
For four episodes or five, or however.
Ted Nivison
Many it would be like, Chuckle Week is like. I feel like for a lot of Chuckle sandwiches, Chuckle Week is like vacation. Whereas, like, normal Chuckle Remote. Chuckle Remote is like the 9 to 5. It's like school. Yeah. It's like going to school. And it's like, this is like spring break is having one of these. So, like, why, you know, would you rather end school with your adults?
Schlatt
I have unlimited school, but. But no vacation.
Ted Nivison
Or vacation.
Schlatt
Or vacation. But also the podcast. Yeah. After that. For me, the latter.
Ted Nivison
Sure. And it's what they're getting. Yeah, it's what they're getting. Yeah. But we hope that you guys really enjoy this chocolate week we've got. We're gonna order them. Usually with the way that we do a Chocolate Week is that we will have it go in the order that we film them, but I think that it would be more appropriate this time around is that we release them in the order that it would be good to release them, like, in the. In. Not that certain guests are less quality than others, but more in terms of the growing hype that you guys have.
Schlatt
We're edging you for two months straight. This is gonna be the longest edge ever. The strongest Kegel you can imagine, and at the end.
Ted Nivison
Yes.
Schlatt
The best nut ever.
Ted Nivison
Yes. And these Megalopolis bit references we're making so gonna be so old by the time the podcast comes out. Me keep referencing Adam Driver. I haven't even seen Megalopolis yet, so. But that's what I'm referencing. That's what we're referencing.
Tucker
There's a lot of Twitter drama slash politics in these episodes, too.
Ted Nivison
By the time this comes out, election will be over. It's October 8th right now. So, like, we don't know who's gonna win the election. Like, there's, it's gonna be. It's almost like a time capsule of the moment the chuckle sandwich ended and you guys were passed out in a.
Schlatt
Coma and we drew a big dick on your face.
Ted Nivison
We did. And then in red marker, in red permanent marker.
Schlatt
And we edged you for two months straight afterwards. And you had. You came harder than you've ever come before.
Ted Nivison
It was really embarrassing, too.
Schlatt
This is like a. You're like a tech founder going on an ayahuasca trip.
Ted Nivison
Yeah. You're throwing up.
Schlatt
You're going to come back and you're going to leave your investors who believed in you so much, you're going to leave them in the dust. You're going to say, I don't know what it's all about anymore.
Ted Nivison
You're as crazy as Jeremy Fragrance now.
Schlatt
Yeah.
Ryan Reynolds
Hey, I'm Ryan Reynolds. Recently, I asked Mint Mobile's legal team if big wireless companies are allowed to raise prices due to inflation. They said yes. And then when I asked if raising prices technically violates those onerous two year contracts, they said, what the are you talking about, you insane Hollywood? So to recap, we're cutting the price of mint unlimited from $30 a month to just $15 a month. Give it a try@mintmobile.com switch.
Ted Nivison
$45 up front payment equivalent to $15 per month.
Schlatt
New customers on first three month plan only taxes and fees, extra Speed slower above 40GB. Details.
Nolan Sykes
Hey, I'm Nolan Sykes, a host of Past Gas, the number one automotive podcast in the world. Every week, my co host, James Pumphrey, Joe Weber and I bring you some of our favorite stories from the hallowed halls of car history. From Bertha Benz Ferrari to Mario Andretti and his purple underpants, we cover it all. Join us as we take a look at the wild stories and larger than life characters behind legendary cars and car makers. So if you love cars or just like a good story, check out Past Gas by Donut Media, the number one automotive podcast in the world.
Tucker
Do you want to announce the Chuckle Merch that hasn't been decided yet. So you assure yourself that you're going to get it done because now it's in the episode.
Schlatt
We're gonna make merch. We're making merch.
Tucker
We are? Yeah. The final drop.
Ted Nivison
No, we're gonna release merch. It's coming. Chuckle. Final Chuckle Merch is coming. What would you want to put on merch? We haven't figured it out yet. We still have fucking two months until this episode comes out.
Schlatt
More sandwiches probably.
Ted Nivison
I'm thinking that I want a shirt that says Audio Listener on it. Just like simple.
Schlatt
Yeah, that's fun. That's fun.
Ted Nivison
You could. You could help me with the font choice because I feel like a good solid font right there. Just says audio.
Schlatt
Like a good.
Ted Nivison
I'm thinking like, like maybe like a. Like a green shirt. Not a bright green, but like kind of a darker green shirt with white font. Text says audio Lister on it. I don't know why Green will workshop.
Schlatt
That because I would not wear that.
Ted Nivison
Really?
Schlatt
I would wear a black shirt with white text. I don't think I'd wear anything else though. Yeah, I think I only wear black shirts anyways, so maybe I'm not the best person to consider.
Ted Nivison
I mean, a black shirt. You know what we could do? Riddle me this. Multiple colorways.
Schlatt
You kidding me?
Ted Nivison
I'm not. I'm serious.
Schlatt
The more choice you give people, the less decisions they make. That's a fact.
Ted Nivison
Really?
Schlatt
Yes.
Ted Nivison
Yes, yes, yes.
Schlatt
If you go to the club. The club, and you see them selling 50 shirts, you're probably less likely to buy one than if they just had one. One killer shirt.
Ted Nivison
Yeah. It's not even like they can talk about it in the comments. Like the. It's the decisions. We've already made them. Yeah, it's all vague right now, but we got Chuckle Merch coming out and one of the episodes. Probably not this one, but in one of the episodes. Yes, in one of the episodes, we're just gonna pop in. It's gonna be us remote and it's gonna be us current remote. And we will announce the merch. We'll tell you how it is, what it's gonna be. Maybe we'll even be wearing the. The testers that they send us when we make March. And you guys should check that out, cuz it'll be the last we. I don't even know how long it's been since we did a Chuckle Merch drop.
Schlatt
Years.
Ted Nivison
Years. Literally years since the sandwich thing.
Schlatt
That the kid was still on it.
Ted Nivison
The kid? Yeah. Charlie was still on it. Yeah. Yeah. So what? And that will be. Guys, you gotta understand, this will be the last chuckle sandwich merch that will ever exist. Yeah, like, I'm not. We're not fucking around here.
Schlatt
No, it's actually ending like.
Ted Nivison
Like the chuckle sandwich is ending. I know that this is like a lot of your. And. And to be honest, I know that this is like a lot of your guys's daily routines, like, or weekly routines, I suppose. Yeah, like, for a lot of people. For, like, I would say possibly 200,000 people at least, which is multiple stadiums worth of people.
Schlatt
No small feat.
Ted Nivison
Yeah. Maybe even 300,000, depending on how the numbers add up. But a lot of people, I think, listen to this podcast weekly, and we become part of your guys's lives in the way of you listening to us every week while you clean or drive to work. And so.
Schlatt
And we're grateful for that.
Ted Nivison
We are.
Schlatt
And we love you. I mean, we love you. I'll be honest.
Ted Nivison
Yeah, we love you per you, the person that you perceive yourself as. We love you.
Schlatt
I love those comments where it's like, this is the perfect podcast to blank to. And I'm like, ah, dude, we have such a good audience.
Ted Nivison
Yeah, I started that.
Schlatt
Oh, you did?
Ted Nivison
I started it because the first there was like a series of like five or six episodes that I just kept pinning those comments, and now they won't stop doing it. Oh, and they're gonna do it for the rest of time. Yeah, yeah.
Schlatt
I know. For my entire career on YouTube, which has been full time now for five years and is. I mean, since I've been making money, like decent money on it, probably six or seven years at this point, which is crazy in and of itself to even think about that, because when I did start, I was like, we'll see where it goes. I was fully prepared to go back to college after this was over. And like, my best case scenario in my head was like, okay, I'll come back to college in a couple years with like a good amount of savings or something. Yeah, you know, that was the case I had to make to my mom, who was so, so worried about that idea. So what am I gonna tell my friends? I drop out for a son?
Ted Nivison
I don't know if I've talked. I've probably talked about this on the pod. It's funny, whenever I think if I. Whether or not I've talked about something on the pod, I probably have answer.
Schlatt
Is almost certainly yes.
Ted Nivison
Yeah, there was. I remember when I first started working on an SMP live spring of 2019. My parents, they wanted me to work at the same, like, tiki bar that my. It was the tiki bar at Noshobel Valley. That. And they wanted to work there because my sister worked there. And it was just gonna be. I would just. They would just give me a job, and it wasn't gonna be a. And I was like, I really didn't wanna fucking work at the tiki bar. And it was like, April at that point, leading. And this was for the summer they were talking about. And the. You. I think I made, like, $400 or something that month off of SMP Live. And I called up my mom and I was like, it's not like. It's not like one of those things where they could force me to work the job or whatever it was, but it was like their head was in the right place and wanting me to make money. You know.
Schlatt
Everybody here should be making money somehow.
Ted Nivison
Yeah.
Schlatt
Everybody listening to you're not making money, you're. Yeah.
Ted Nivison
So otherwise I would. I don't know what I was gonna do is just a year. Summer out of college. So I was like, let's see how. I just want. Just give me. Give me a chance here. Let me. Let me see how this works for this summer. I think I might be onto something here. Something might be. This might be something big for me. And then, like, that month, I made, like. I made, like, several thousand dollars that month. And it was like, the most money I'd ever seen in my entire fucking life. It was like, what the fuck is going. Is this. This is, like, something that could. Because I had been watching YouTube videos my whole, like, my whole childhood and stuff, and, like, I tried to make gaming videos. I recently someone found a. An old, like comment of mine because it was a period where commenting you would get subscribers for that if you were small. And it was like an old comment of mine from, like, when I was 16 on, like, a Jacksepticeye video. And it was like, man, Jack, this is a really funny video. You did such a good job. I wish I could make as good gaming videos as you.
Schlatt
I wish the gaming videos that I post consistently. Yeah.
Ted Nivison
I wish the gaming videos that I'm posting and like the one I recently posted on my channel the other day, which features. Yeah, here it is. Here. This is truly the badass simulator. Now it's time to eat nails for breakfast without any milk. Oh, that's a Spongebob reference right there. Yeah, no, that's like 10 years ago. It's like, I'm writing I don't know what was wrong with me 10 years ago, but I was writing comments like I was like, a mom.
Schlatt
I remember when I was around this age, too, I was trying to have, like, a Kyr Speedy or Vanoss gaming crew. So in all their comments, I'd be like, man, I wish I had friends as cool as you that I could make videos.
Ted Nivison
Yeah.
Schlatt
And then you would always get, like, the sub for sub guys in the. In the replies.
Ted Nivison
Yeah. And, I mean, that's why it was, like, so cool to, like, that summer was such a wonderful thing, because I was, like. I just. I. I could not believe that, like, this thing that I had thought about, like, was actually. Might actually be happening to me.
Schlatt
Yeah.
Ted Nivison
Like, that. That was, like, unbelievable.
Schlatt
And it's just a snowball effect.
Ted Nivison
Yes.
Schlatt
Once that. Once it starts moving, like, it just gets bigger and bigger.
Ted Nivison
Yeah.
Schlatt
Gets more stressful and more stressful, and it never stops. And eventually, you get depressed and get on medication, and you spend each night drinking yourself to sleep.
Ted Nivison
I'm very happy. I don't drink.
Schlatt
Drug use. A lot of sleepless nights. A lot of crying. Crying.
Ted Nivison
Yeah.
Tucker
This is a bummer.
Schlatt
I think we have done a good job as a podcast. I really think we have. I think it's a good podcast. I think it's one of the best.
Ted Nivison
One of the best.
Schlatt
And I think that the last thing I'd want to see is a slow decline in quality as we both age out of it and maybe even age out of liking each other. I don't think that'll happen.
Ted Nivison
I think that you and I have especially. I would say in the last year, I think you and I have gotten a lot closer.
Schlatt
I think we have.
Ted Nivison
Yeah. Because to be honest, a lot of people online. I'm just gonna say, a lot of people online say. Say that we're, like, best friends, and it's like, that's not, like, entirely like, we are friends, and I would consider slide to be a good friend. But, like, we're not. We're not.
Schlatt
Like, this is, like, me hearing that the mythbusters didn't talk to each other outside the show.
Ted Nivison
Yeah. For some people watch the. The thing.
Schlatt
What?
Ted Nivison
For people who are watching the podcast.
Schlatt
No, for. I don't know, you're hearing about yourself.
Ted Nivison
You hearing about that. You're like. You're finding this out for the first time. No, no. But it's just, like, an interesting thing where it's like. Because that was the point of Chuckle Sandwich originally was because we had our past group and stuff that we were a part of. And I didn't really know you guys, you and Charlie, that well, but I did want to because I knew that you guys were like, you're both funny. And. And that's why I wanted to have chuckle sandwich, because it was like, first of all, good, cool business thing to do together. And then it was like.
Schlatt
Yeah.
Ted Nivison
I don't know. I think I have a tendency to create opportunities to get. I like to create experiences where you get closer to someone.
Tucker
You do?
Ted Nivison
Yeah.
Tucker
Your love language. Yeah, it's like shared experiences.
Ted Nivison
Yeah, that's. That's how I operate is shared. Creating forced family fun is what it's going to turn into as I get older. But that is what it is. That's what it's going to be. It's going to be forced family fun. And that's it. Exactly how my mom operates. So I'm becoming her. But I think that we have gotten closer and I think that. I think we're gonna. For at least the next 10 years, we're gonna know each other and what.
Schlatt
Did we do last night?
Ted Nivison
We had sex. Sorry. Sorry.
Schlatt
Oh, man.
Ted Nivison
Sorry.
Schlatt
Went to fucking boa. We did not. Guess who else was there.
Ted Nivison
But just the way you said it made it seem like that's what you wanted me to say. No, I know. And guess what we did last night. I'm like, we fucking banged.
Schlatt
We did not.
Ted Nivison
Dude.
Schlatt
Dude.
Ted Nivison
Yeah, we didn't. Yeah. No, we didn't have sex.
Schlatt
We had the kagoshima. We had the awate, and we had those snow positions.
Ted Nivison
Those are all positions. Those are all positions from Japanese scripture. Okay. They found. Europeans. Found them when they opened up the country for import in the 1800s when America came over.
Tucker
This is like a reversal you're doing. You're stuck on the sex.
Ted Nivison
Yeah. It's like the.
Schlatt
And you know what? Charlie Slimesicle was our third bimbo. He was our bimbo. We slutted him out last night real good.
Ted Nivison
Oh, yeah.
Schlatt
Oh, he got all the kagoshima.
Ted Nivison
We were getting kagoshima on his Iwate, if you know what I mean.
Schlatt
I don't know what that means.
Ted Nivison
Yeah, we were snowing all over his beef.
Schlatt
Oh, nice. Nice.
Ted Nivison
That one kind of worked.
Schlatt
One did work.
Ted Nivison
Yeah.
Schlatt
Worked a little bit. Or beefing over his. No, that doesn't work.
Ted Nivison
Oh, snowing on his beef.
Schlatt
Yeah. Yep. Jerking off. So we're still buddies. And honestly, here's the thing. I think that for the longest time since I've been doing this professionally, really, I mean, anyone who has followed me, across the 10, 15 different channels I have, would be able to attest to the fact that I have way too many of them, and it often feels like I don't have enough time to give love to them all equally. And something that I'm looking forward to is actually being able to spend a little more time doing these other channels that I have been long neglecting while still being able to give Chuckle Sandwich a fair ending. Like, I think that's a. That's something that's really special, and I'm looking forward to it.
Ted Nivison
Yeah. And we've. And to give context also, we've known that chocolate sandwich is gonna end since the beginning of 2024. Pretty much.
Schlatt
Yeah.
Ted Nivison
I think is when we had that conversation. So we were kind of preparing for a while on, like, how we're gonna do it. How would we break the news to the kids?
Schlatt
And how will we make this Chuckle Week a freaking awesome forest family fun experience?
Ted Nivison
Forest family fun. Yeah.
Schlatt
And so far, we're doing it. We're like, halfway through right now. This is, like, the halfway point. And I think all the podcasts have been a joy to film and will be a joy to listen to, and they're all really long. They're going way over time.
Ted Nivison
Every single. Yeah, no, there was like, it's. It happened at a certain point where we had. We were, like, close to an hour with one of them, and the next one was, like, on 120, and then we did, like, a 151, and then we did a 141, and it's like. Well, I think a lot of people we bring on are just great people to talk to. Very easy to talk to.
Schlatt
Just goes to show you, like, there. We didn't want to stop.
Ted Nivison
Didn't want to stop.
Schlatt
We didn't want to stop. That's often how I feel with you during the awate.
Ted Nivison
And that's how I feel equally during my personal favorite, the kagoshima.
Schlatt
Yeah. Oh, the skin on the kagoshima. Wow. It's so salty and nice. That's a salt lick right there.
Ted Nivison
That's a salt. That's a little bit of a salt leg. Don't you say that. Say salt lick.
Tucker
Salt lick.
Ted Nivison
Yeah. I don't know.
Tucker
Eat Southern twang like you do.
Ted Nivison
Oh, I'm getting over there. I'm. A little bit of my salt.
Schlatt
Salt lick.
Ted Nivison
I don't know why I can't say salt lick. It's just. I can't say it. It's like, I'll try it. Right? Three, two, One salt lick. No, I can't.
Schlatt
Salt, salt, salt.
Ted Nivison
Give me some of that salt lick. Give me some of that salt lick, man. A salt lick, though. We should have one, like a communal.
Schlatt
One on the table.
Ted Nivison
Oh, yeah, yeah, dude. We get a salt lick right in the middle there. And we ask the guests. We're like, hey, get in there and take a lick of that salt.
Schlatt
Take a little lick of. Look at that.
Ted Nivison
Look at that Vice article.
Schlatt
It just looks so good.
Ted Nivison
Emojis next.
Schlatt
You can have it draped around your neck and bring it up for a lick whenever you want.
Ted Nivison
Give me some of that. We ask people why they lick their Himalayan salad. Because it's a salt lick. Vice. This isn't complicated.
Schlatt
They're into it, dude. Standing at attention right now.
Ted Nivison
You guys getting ready with a salt lick? You know it's true. You like the salt lick? These are the studio dogs. These are the studio dogs.
Schlatt
Yeah. And they'll be with us the whole time.
Ted Nivison
They'll be with us. They've been. And they're looking.
Schlatt
This one, Juno, is my new favorite animal.
Ted Nivison
Every episode, Schlatt has put Juno in his arms. Well, no, I covered himself in the white shedded.
Schlatt
I sit down, and then not 10 seconds later, the dog comes up to me and pops up right here.
Ted Nivison
Yeah, this is perfect. I mean, you said you wanted a studio cat.
Schlatt
I did say that, but these dogs are just like cats.
Ted Nivison
They are very similar to cats. Do you. Are you a cat? Yeah. No. I mean, Charlotte sandwiches. Any guys? Sorry.
Schlatt
Yep.
Ted Nivison
Sorry, guys. I mean, I don't know how people are gonna react either. Because. Because they're getting really bratty on Reddit right now.
Schlatt
They'll say, oh, I wonder if they'll.
Ted Nivison
Get mad at us. Do you think they'll get mad at us? You think they're gonna. There's, like, a couple of them that are mad at us and they're really loud.
Schlatt
We could donate all the merch funds to charity and they'd still get upset.
Ted Nivison
Yeah.
Schlatt
So we're not gonna do that. We're gonna keep the money.
Ted Nivison
Mmm.
Schlatt
And, yes, we're gonna keep. We're probably gonna keep cashing checks on this channel for years after. From Adsense, perhaps.
Ted Nivison
Yeah. I don't know. Yeah. I wonder how. How that'll work. I mean. Yeah.
Schlatt
Yeah. I'm knocking on your door every month and saying, hey, buddy, remember me?
Ted Nivison
I'll tell you what it will be. Here's something I'll say. Yeah, here's something I'll say that'll make. That'll dissuade the Chuckle Sandwich listeners who are worried that they won't have something in the future to listen to is that while Schlatt may be leaving and Chuckle Sandwich may be ending, my journey and Tucker's journey in this world is.
Schlatt
Not over is mine. What the fuck?
Ted Nivison
Your road is done.
Schlatt
Are you killing me?
Tucker
Yes.
Ted Nivison
Whoa. What the fuck do you think was gonna happen? You think you were gonna let you live? We'll talk about this later. Just get over it. Anyways, Tucker and I's journey is not over. We haven't said anything yet about that. This is the first time I'm bringing that up. But our journey is not over.
Schlatt
Also. I'm not dying.
Ted Nivison
What else?
Schlatt
I'm not dying. That journey is that definitely not over.
Ted Nivison
That remains to be seen, my friend. That remains to me seen, my friend. And I would appreciate if you don't stop talking over me. You got the Making me a little bit stressed. Anyways.
Schlatt
Wow. Sorry.
Ted Nivison
Wow. Chuckle Sandwiches journey may be over. And so may Schlatt's. No, I'm not gonna do that. Chuckle Sandwich.
Schlatt
Dude, get it the fuck together.
Ted Nivison
I can't.
Schlatt
Why?
Ted Nivison
I'm kind of thirsty. Ah. While Chuckle Sandwich Journey might be coming to a close here, as well as Schlatt's.
Schlatt
Drink the whole fucking bottle.
Ted Nivison
Tucker and I's journey is not. And you guys might be hearing a little bit more of that in the future. That's all I'm gonna say, though. Let that sit in your brain. Let you think about that. Let you think about that and wonder what that means.
Schlatt
For now, we just ask that we have like a week long period of mourning.
Ted Nivison
Yes.
Schlatt
We want you to be a little sad.
Ted Nivison
We want you to be a little sad when it ends. We want you to be like pine pie, Miss American Pie. Draw my chammy to the levy but the lemming was dry them good old boys with drinking whiskey and rye Singing this'll be the day that I die. That's the voice of Schlatt in the distance. This'll be the day that I die.
Schlatt
But I'm not okay. I'm not okay with dying. Fuck you, dude. This is why it's ending. Cause you're so fucking dense. Hi.
Ted Nivison
You're coming over to me. Away from the dead, man.
Schlatt
Let's not forget that your story is coming to an end next October. Okay, buddy? Keep that in the back of your head. I'll be.
Ted Nivison
Honestly, sometimes when I see that and people comment that, I'm like, am I actually gonna die on October 23rd? Like 2025? That would be really bad for. That's not gonna be good for business.
Tucker
No. I could make a really heartfelt memorial video though, that. With a great thumbnail. And I think that it's going on.
Ted Nivison
YouTube, not at the wake.
Tucker
I gotta capitalize.
Schlatt
You gotta pump that out.
Tucker
You taught me this.
Schlatt
You should probably write something now, just in case.
Ted Nivison
Yeah, I raised you from a little mole rat into the. Boy, that's so rude. What?
Tucker
Mole rat? That's like the worst.
Ted Nivison
It's just the sweater you're wearing.
Tucker
This is your merch.
Ted Nivison
What do you think people are wondering, like, like they're probably episodes, is there going to be of Chuckle Week. How much time is there left? How much time is there left? About after this one? About eight, I'm pretty sure. Or seven, eight weeks. So about two months of chocolate sandwiches left. You guys have two months to mourn, two months to enjoy what is left of Chuckle Sandwich. And trust me when I say we're. We're not. We're not fucking around here, okay? We're actually. We actually tried this shit, okay? We're not messing it up like we did with the hundredth episode. I know some of you were a little bit disappointed in how that one went. So we're trying to do our due diligence, do right by our people. My guy, I'm doing a lot of voices today.
Schlatt
You are, you are.
Ted Nivison
But I mean, yeah, no, it's totally Shy's fault that. You'll see what you said.
Schlatt
Yeah, I'm retiring, guys. This is it. This is it.
Ted Nivison
What is that? What does that. What does that mean?
Schlatt
Okay, so more to the point, I was saying earlier where I've always had five too many projects that I would really love and would be very fulfilled by being able to put more time into and treat the way I want them to be treated every single time. I'm having a moment of deep reflection. I think about. I think about the weekly slap and I think how much of an impact I could have if I were to give that channel the time of day that I think it deserves.
Ted Nivison
Right.
Schlatt
And more to the idea of leaving, like a good legacy on the platform. We can have Chuckle Sandwich, and on a fantastic note, that leaves a legacy. And now the weekly slap has a legacy.
Ted Nivison
Yeah, I. I can't get over that concept too. It's like. Yeah, I mean, people are so used to every other form of media sort of ending. I think it is maybe baked into the, like, the sort of conversation around expectation of access that a lot of viewers have online. But I Think that it is something. It's not like Schlatt's gonna stop making content or like I'm gonna stop making content or that Tucker's gonna stop making content or that Tucker and I are gonna stop making content.
Schlatt
I think I'd disintegrate if I wasn't making content. I genuinely don't know what else I'd be doing otherwise.
Ted Nivison
Yeah, it's just like this little project, this little show that we did is just coming to an end and it's like this, this. I'm gonna feel bad about the branding, though. I love the branding for chocolate sandwich.
Schlatt
You can still use it for something.
Ted Nivison
I'll still have the sign.
Schlatt
I still have to sign too.
Ted Nivison
You got a sign too?
Schlatt
I got a sign.
Ted Nivison
You've never. Yeah, you were never.
Schlatt
And I got a shitty. A shitty $1 million subscriber plaque. And you've got the big one. Cause they changed it. Fucking shorts. YouTubers ruined. Ruined. The last good thing about this platform, the fact that subscribers actually meant something. And then two, three years ago, all of a sudden shorts come out, people get 10 million subscribers, and all of.
Ted Nivison
A sudden society awards gotta start saving on metal. Yeah.
Schlatt
They're like, oh man, we're making too many of these because the subscriber feed is being polluted by shorts viewers that we can't. That this basically means nothing. Basically, the hundred thousand subscriber award is now the size of a nickel.
Ted Nivison
Really? Yeah.
Schlatt
And the million one is now the. The million one which used to be big, dude. Yeah, it was bigger size of the hundred thousand one.
Tucker
Is that only for repeats like reprints or is that for the new.
Ted Nivison
Oh, it might be for reprints.
Tucker
Oh yeah. Starting in August 2024, YouTube will introduce new lighter sized creator awards for sub Milestones.
Schlatt
Shorts. YouTubers fucking ruined it. I don't want to hear it. It's probably some of you watching.
Ted Nivison
Yeah, I mean, it was kind of a big deal to hit a million subscribers.
Schlatt
Not a real YouTuber. You're a fucking tiktoker. You always will be, okay? Don't come to my fucking turf and.
Ted Nivison
Act like you belong.
Schlatt
We've been doing this way longer than you, pal. When you can get more than 5,000 views on a video longer than 60 seconds, that's when you can send me a little PM.
Ted Nivison
We're gonna eat your leg. We're gonna kill you and eat your leg. Say it with me, Schlatt. We're gonna kill you and eat your leg.
Schlatt
You'll salt lick.
Ted Nivison
Get a little salt lick on there. I'm gonna take the salt with, start shaving it on your leg right over. While you're alive, motherfucker. I'll kill you and I'll eat your leg. Sorry.
Schlatt
I'm really looking forward, Ted, to having more time to spend with you. That's not just business oriented.
Ted Nivison
I agree. I'll make. I will go out of my way to come out to New York and visit in a proper circumstances. Because I. Yeah, because a lot of time I think one of the issues that we run into is that when we visit each other it's like, oh well, shit, what should we be doing?
Schlatt
Of course, that's the YouTuber mentality for any good thing you try and do for yourself. Oh, I'm in Japan right now. I might as well film all of this and not enjoy it.
Ted Nivison
Yeah, a lot of times I wasn't that way, but now I'm starting to fall.
Schlatt
Yeah. You're carrying that camera around now.
Ted Nivison
Well, yeah, with the second channel thing that maybe. What? Maybe or may not have worked out.
Schlatt
Just react, just react.
Ted Nivison
I want to try to do that a little bit, but I also don't know if I've got like the gumption for it.
Schlatt
The gumption.
Ted Nivison
I am. Well, okay, let me put it this way. Like tell me. You can tell me if this is okay. I'm just 100% generally myself online. I feel like with a little bit of a. A little bit of a kick up and I just don't know if I'm. If I'm not liking something. I don't know if I could. I feel like I would probably wither away after the second reaction video.
Schlatt
So I similarly, I'm completely ingenuine online and I still have to get wasted to react.
Ted Nivison
Really?
Schlatt
Yeah.
Ted Nivison
Wait, that's actually a great idea to get wasted. That's what, that's what you do. Oh, give me some of that. Wait, I'm driving.
Schlatt
More for me.
Ted Nivison
Your chops are looking crisp right now.
Schlatt
I'm looking good. Honestly, I should stop drinking. There something.
Ted Nivison
Did you clean them up? No, I don't do anything really?
Schlatt
I haven't shaved.
Ted Nivison
You know what something you could do though?
Schlatt
What?
Ted Nivison
Come here. Right here, above the chops. Like there's little hairs right there. If you get rid of those, it'll make it seem like the chops are more defined.
Schlatt
I'm just too lazy to shave most of the time.
Ted Nivison
I'll let you borrow my little shaver thing.
Schlatt
I have one, I just don't use it. And I shampoo my hair every day. Oh, Charlie Slimesicle hates to see me coming. We were at BOA last time.
Ted Nivison
Sickle doesn't want to see me around and he was gonna shoot.
Schlatt
Oh no, you gotta use the sea salt spray in the clay.
Ted Nivison
Clay.
Schlatt
He puts fucking ceramic shit in his hair.
Ted Nivison
I don't know if he was. He was introducing those, those topics in that way. Like, I don't know if he was like. I think it was more like he was offering it up like, like a willing little, little elf. Yeah, like he was like, sea salt spray. Try my sea salt spray. Oh, try my ceramic.
Schlatt
Try my ceramic.
Ted Nivison
Try my ceramic.
Schlatt
Clay. Clay. Putting fucking mud in my hair. That's what I glad we got rid of him.
Ted Nivison
Clay I put on my head. This is what Charlie sounds like these days since he's been in L. A.
Schlatt
Yeah, LA changes Charlie. Changes him. He's got a mullet now. He had a mullet.
Ted Nivison
No, he does.
Schlatt
That was a mullet. Yeah. It wasn't a mullet. It was a mullet. Yes, it was.
Ted Nivison
I don't know if you.
Tucker
What, Charlie, what do you think a mullet is?
Schlatt
A mullet.
Ted Nivison
That's a good question.
Schlatt
Comes and then down. His hair was down to his. To. To. To. To his traps, dude.
Ted Nivison
And he's got good traps.
Schlatt
I was sitting next to him.
Ted Nivison
That's him.
Tucker
Like yesterday we were sitting across his.
Schlatt
His hair was. Was blue. We're not arguing about this, man. Cuz now I'm getting pissed off. I was right next to him. I was the closest to him. Last night we did the kagoshima without you. What? Yeah, yeah, two person.
Ted Nivison
What the hell?
Schlatt
Player kagoshima. Imagine.
Ted Nivison
Wait a second. But when you went off, she was a three player game.
Schlatt
When you went off to the bathroom, I split him in two.
Ted Nivison
Oh no.
Schlatt
Yeah. Oh yeah.
Ted Nivison
No, you had it sliced into threes.
Schlatt
Sure did.
Ted Nivison
Damn.
Schlatt
Also, also in the news, one of the mayors in Mexico had his head chopped off and displayed on his own car six days into taking office. Fucked. Crazy fucked.
Ted Nivison
Yeah.
Schlatt
Fucked up shit happening.
Ted Nivison
That's fucked up, dude.
Schlatt
Fucked up shit.
Ted Nivison
Yeah. So, I mean, I don't know, we'll have more words for you guys and we'll bring it up over that we've already talked about a little bit over the. Over in the other episodes that we've filmed, we'll have more to talk about, I guess. And then for the final episode, I'm sure we'll say some stuff too. We're very, very excited for you guys to hear what is coming up for Chuckle Week as we've said. And I don't know, guys, if there's any way that I can explain how to deal with these, these feelings of Chuckle Sandwich ending. Just enjoy the ride that we have here. That's the reason why we wanted to tell you guys that it was ending rather than it just being like, this is the last episode. Bye, fuckers. See ya.
Schlatt
Hey, stop feeling sad that you got a little cigarette in between your fingers. Just enjoy the smoke.
Ted Nivison
Yeah, just enjoy the smoke. Guys, there's gonna be, there's like a full two months left to Chuckle Sandwich and we are trying to make them the most enjoyable episodes that we can. And so that Chuckle Sandwich will end on a wonderful note and that we will have a wonderful, fun, good time and that we have all smiles on our faces and also, like, are like feeling sick. Next week, folks, on Chuckle Sandwich, you guys should be very, very excited because this guest is next and they are very. It's going to be good time. You guys should get really excited and we've got a whole lot in store for you folks. And once again, thank you guys so much for listening to this podcast for these four years. For those of you read the beginning. For those of you who found it late on and caught all the way up. I've seen some posts of those on the Red where someone's like, I just got up with Chuckle Sandwich today. I mean, we've got at, Geez, we've got at this point probably somewhere around like 150 plus episodes. So good job on that and yeah, I don't know. Love you guys. Smooches to you. And let's get.
Schlatt
I don't know. You want me. I don't.
Ted Nivison
You and me. Chocolate. Let's try one.
Schlatt
Let's get. Chuckling.
Chuckle Sandwich: "The End of Chuckle Sandwich" Summary
Release Date: November 6, 2024
In the poignant and humor-filled finale of the Chuckle Sandwich podcast, hosts Ted Nivison and Schlatt announce the end of their beloved series. From the outset, the episode blends comedic elements with genuine emotion, setting the tone for a heartfelt goodbye.
Schlatt opens the episode with a mix of humor and seriousness:
[00:58] Schlatt: "Juno, this is going to be a really hard episode to make."
Ted echoes the sentiment, emphasizing the difficulty of the moment:
[01:05] Ted Nivison: "It's gonna be tough."
Their playful banter immediately signals to listeners that while the podcast is ending, the camaraderie between the hosts remains strong.
The hosts formally announce that Chuckle Sandwich is concluding after nearly four years of entertaining their audience. They acknowledge that this decision may come as a surprise to some listeners.
Ted states:
[05:34] Ted Nivison: "We're ending the podcast. It's been, you know, it's been almost four years. It started on January 30th of 2021."
Schlatt reflects on the longevity of the podcast:
[08:12] Schlatt: "The fact that it made it four years is impressive."
They discuss the challenges of sustaining a podcast, noting that most podcasts don't last beyond a year, making their four-year run a notable achievement.
The hosts delve into their personal and professional growth over the years, sharing anecdotes and memorable moments that defined Chuckle Sandwich.
Ted reminisces about the early days:
[10:07] Ted Nivison: "At the beginning, when we started the pod... I had just turned 23... It was like, I could not believe that this thing that I had thought about was actually happening to me."
Schlatt adds his perspective on the evolving nature of the podcast:
[11:08] Schlatt: "I think the pod definitely went from more of an improv thing... into a more calculated, less stressful procedure."
They discuss the transformation of the podcast from spontaneous sessions to more structured episodes, highlighting the challenges and rewards of such a transition.
Both hosts candidly address the emotional and mental strain associated with maintaining the podcast, leading to their decision to conclude the series.
Schlatt expresses his internal conflict:
[05:02] Schlatt: "I found myself asking whether or not it was worth it. All of it."
Ted acknowledges the burnout:
[04:43] Ted Nivison: "Without slipping it in there... Sometimes I think, is it even worth it?"
They emphasize the importance of ending on a high note rather than allowing the podcast to decline in quality, ensuring a respectful and fulfilling conclusion for both themselves and their audience.
While Chuckle Sandwich is ending, Ted and Tucker indicate that their personal journeys and content creation will continue beyond the podcast.
Ted reassures listeners:
[36:00] Ted Nivison: "Chuckle Sandwich Journey may be coming to a close. But... Tucker and I's journey is not over."
Schlatt shares his excitement about focusing on other projects:
[30:27] Schlatt: "I'm looking forward to actually being able to spend a little more time doing these other channels that I have been long neglecting while still being able to give Chuckle Sandwich a fair ending."
This segment highlights their commitment to evolving as creators and pursuing new opportunities beyond the podcast.
In their closing remarks, Ted and Schlatt express gratitude to their listeners, reflecting on the community they've built over four years.
Schlatt conveys sincere appreciation:
[21:53] Schlatt: "We love you. I mean, we love you."
Ted thanks the audience for their support:
[22:26] Ted Nivison: "Thank you guys so much for listening to this podcast for these four years."
They encourage listeners to cherish the remaining episodes, promising to make the final weeks as enjoyable as ever. The episode concludes with a blend of humor and emotion, leaving a lasting impression on their audience.
Schlatt on Ending the Podcast:
[05:02] "Whether or not it was worth it."
Ted on Podcast Longevity:
[08:12] "The fact that it made it four years is impressive."
Schlatt on Future Projects:
[30:27] "I'm looking forward to actually being able to spend a little more time doing these other channels..."
Ted Reassuring Listeners:
[36:00] "Chuckle Sandwich Journey may be coming to a close. But... Tucker and I's journey is not over."
Schlatt Expressing Love for Listeners:
[21:53] "We love you."
"The End of Chuckle Sandwich" serves as a heartfelt and entertaining farewell from Ted Nivison and Schlatt. Balancing humor with genuine emotion, the hosts offer listeners a reflective look back at their journey, address the challenges of content creation, and express optimism for future endeavors. This final episode not only marks the closure of a successful podcast but also celebrates the enduring bond between the hosts and their dedicated audience.