The "Dirty Jobs" crew and I were called to a little town
in Colorado, called Craig. It's only a couple dozen square miles. It's in the Rockies. And the job in question was sheep rancher. My role on the show, for those of you
who haven't seen it -- it's pretty simple. I'm an apprentice, and I work with the people
who do the jobs in question. And my responsibilities
are to simply try and keep up, and give an honest account
of what it's like to be these people for one day in their life. The job in question: herding sheep. Great. We go to Craig and we check into a hotel, and I realize the next day that castration is going to be
an absolute part of this work. Normally, I never do any research at all. But this is a touchy subject,
and I work for the Discovery Channel, and we want to portray accurately
whatever it is we do. And we certainly want to do it
with a lot of respect for the animals. So I call the Humane Society and I say, "Look, I'm going to be castrating
some lambs. Can you tell me the deal?" And they're like, "Yeah,
it's pretty straightforward." They use a band, basically, a rubber band,
like this, only a little smaller. This one was actually
around the playing cards I got yesterday -- (Laughter) But it had a certain familiarity to it. And I said, "Well, what exactly
is the process?" And they said, "The band
is applied to the tail, tightly. And then another band is applied
to the scrotum, tightly. Blood flow is slowly retarded; a week later the parts
in question fall off. "Great -- got it." OK, I call the SPCA to confirm this. They confirm it. I also call PETA just for fun, and they don't like it,
but they confirm it. OK, that's basically how you do it. So the next day I go out. And I'm given a horse
and we go get the lambs and we take them to a pen that we built, and we go about the business
of animal husbandry. Melanie is the wife of Albert. Albert is the shepherd in question. Melanie picks up the lamb,
one hand on both legs on the right, likewise on the left. Lamb goes on the post, she opens it up. Alright. Great. Albert goes in, I follow Albert,
the crew is around. I always watch the process done
the first time before I try it. Being an apprentice,
you know, you do that. Albert reaches in his pocket to pull out,
you know, this black rubber band, but what comes out instead is a knife. And I'm like, "Hmm, that's not
rubber at all," you know? (Laughter) And he kind of flicked it open
in a way that caught the sun that was just coming
over the Rockies, it was very -- (Laughter) It was ... it was impressive. In the space of about two seconds, Albert had the knife
between the cartilage of the tail, right next to the butt of the lamb, and very quickly, the tail was gone
and in the bucket that I was holding. A second later, with a big thumb
and a well-calloused forefinger, he had the scrotum firmly in his grasp. And he pulled it toward him, like so, and he took the knife
and he put it on the tip. "Now, you think you know
what's coming, Michael, You don't, OK?" (Laughter) He snips it, throws the tip
over his shoulder, and then grabs the scrotum
and pushes it upward, and then his head dips down,
obscuring my view. But what I hear is a slurping sound, and a noise that sounds like Velcro
being yanked off a sticky wall, and I am not even kidding. Can we roll the video? No, I'm kidding, we don't -- (Laughter) I thought it best to talk in pictures. I do something now I've never, ever done
on a "Dirty Jobs" shoot, ever. I say, "Time out. Stop." You guys know the show, we use take one;
we don't do take two. There's no writing, there's no scripting,
there's no nonsense. We don't fool around, we don't rehearse -- we shoot what we get! I said, "Stop. This is nuts." I mean -- (Laughter) "This is crazy. We can't do this." And Albert's like, "What?" And I'm like, "I don't know
what just happened, but there are testicles in this bucket, and that's not how we do it." He said "Well, that's how we do it." I said, "Why would you do it this way?" And before I even let him explain, I said, "I want to do it the right way,
with the rubber bands." And he says, "Like the Humane Society?" I said, "Yes, like the Humane Society. Let's do something that doesn't make
the lamb squeal and bleed. We're on in five continents, dude! We're on twice a day
on the Discovery -- we can't do this." He says, "OK." He goes to his box and pulls out
a bag of these little rubber bands. Melanie picks up another lamb,
puts it on the post, band goes on the tail,
band goes on the scrotum. Lamb goes on the ground,
lamb takes two steps, falls down, gets up, shakes a little, takes another couple steps, falls down. I'm like, this is not a good sign
for this lamb, at all. Gets up, walks to the corner. It's quivering, and it lies
down and it's in obvious distress. And I'm looking at the lamb
and I say, "Albert, how long? When does he get up?" He's like, "A day?" I said, "A day! How long does
it take them to fall off?" "A week." Meanwhile, the lamb that he had just done
his little procedure on is, you know, he's just prancing
around, bleeding stopped. He's, you know, nibbling
on some grass, frolicking. And I was just so blown away
at how completely wrong I was, in that second. And I was reminded how utterly wrong
I am, so much of the time. (Laughter) And I was especially reminded of what a ridiculously
short straw I had that day, because now I had to do
what Albert had just done, and there are like 100
of these lambs in the pen. And suddenly, this whole thing's starting
to feel like a German porno, and I'm like -- (Laughter) Melanie picks up the lamb,
puts it on the post, opens it up. Albert hands me the knife. I go in, tail comes off. I go in, I grab the scrotum,
tip comes off. Albert instructs, "Push it way up there." I do. "Push it further." I do. The testicles emerge. They look
like thumbs, coming right at you. And he says, "Bite 'em. Just bite 'em off." (Laughter) And I heard him, I heard all the words -- (Laughter) Like, how did I get here? How did -- I mean -- how did I get here? It's just -- it's one of those moments
where the brain goes off on its own, and suddenly, I'm standing
there in the Rockies, and all I can think of is the Aristotelian
definition of a tragedy. You know, Aristotle says
a tragedy is that moment when the hero comes face to face
with his true identity. (Laughter) And I'm like, "What is this
jacked-up metaphor? I don't like what I'm thinking right now." And I can't get this thought
out of my head, and I can't get that vision
out of my sight, so I did what I had to do. I went in and I took them. I took them like this, and I yanked my head back. And I'm standing there
with two testicles on my chin. (Laughter) And now I can't get --
I can't shake the metaphor. I'm still in "Poetics," in Aristotle,
and I'm thinking -- out of nowhere, two terms come crashing
into my head, that I hadn't heard since my classics professor in college
drilled them there. And they are "anagnorisis"
and "peripeteia." Anagnorisis and peripeteia. Anagnorisis is the Greek
word for discovery. Literally, the transition from ignorance
to knowledge is anagnorisis. It's what our network does;
it's what "Dirty Jobs" is. And I'm up to my neck
in anagnorises every single day. Great. The other word, peripeteia, that's the moment
in the great tragedies -- Euripides and Sophocles. That's the moment where Oedipus has
his moment, where he suddenly realizes that hot chick he's been sleeping with
and having babies with is his mother. That's peripety, or peripeteia. And this metaphor in my head -- I've got anagnorisis
and peripeteia on my chin -- (Laughter) I've got to tell you,
it's such a great device, though. When you start to look for peripeteia, you find it everywhere. I mean, Bruce Willis
in "The Sixth Sense," right? Spends the whole movie trying to help
the little kid who sees dead people, and then -- boom! -- "Oh, I'm dead." Peripeteia. You know? It's crushing when the audience
sees it the right way. Neo in "The Matrix," you know? "Oh, I'm living in a computer program. That's weird." These discoveries
that lead to sudden realizations. And I've been having them,
over 200 dirty jobs, I have them all the time, but that one -- that one drilled something home
in a way that I just wasn't prepared for. And, as I stood there, looking at the happy lamb
that I had just defiled -- but it looked OK; looking at that poor other little thing
that I'd done it the right way on, and I just was struck by -- if I'm wrong about that, and if I'm wrong so often,
in a literal way, what other peripatetic misconceptions
might I be able to comment upon? Because, look --
I'm not a social anthropologist, but I have a friend who is. And I talk to him. (Laughter) And he says, "Hey Mike, look. I don't know if your brain is interested
in this sort of thing or not, but do you realize
you've shot in every state? You've worked in mining,
you've worked in fishing, you've worked in steel,
you've worked in every major industry. You've had your back
shoulder to shoulder with these guys that our politicians are desperate
to relate to every four years, right?" I can still see Hillary
doing the shots of rye, dribbling down her chin,
with the steel workers. I mean, these are the people
that I work with every single day. "And if you have something to say
about their thoughts, collectively, it might be time to think about it. Because, dude, you know, four years." So, that's in my head,
testicles are on my chin, thoughts are bouncing around. And, after that shoot,
"Dirty Jobs" really didn't change, in terms of what the show is,
but it changed for me, personally. And now, when I talk about the show, I no longer just tell the story
you heard and 190 like it. I do, but I also start to talk
about some of the other things I got wrong; some of the other notions of work that I've just been assuming
are sacrosanct, and they're not. People with dirty jobs
are happier than you think. As a group, they're
the happiest people I know. And I don't want to start whistling
"Look for the Union Label," and all that happy-worker crap. I'm just telling you
that these are balanced people who do unthinkable work. Roadkill picker-uppers whistle
while they work, I swear to God -- I did it with them. They've got this amazing
sort of symmetry to their life. And I see it over and over and over again. So I started to wonder what would happen if we challenged
some of these sacred cows? Follow your passion -- we've been talking about it
here for the last 36 hours. Follow your passion -- what could
possibly be wrong with that? It's probably the worst advice I ever got. (Laughter) Follow your dreams and go broke, right? I mean, that's all I heard growing up. I didn't know what to do with my life, but I was told if you follow your passion,
it's going to work out. I can give you 30 examples right now. Bob Combs, the pig farmer in Las Vegas who collects the uneaten scraps
of food from the casinos and feeds them to his swine. Why? Because there's so much protein
in the stuff we don't eat, his pigs grow at twice the normal speed,
and he's one rich pig farmer. He's good for the environment, he spends his days
doing this incredible service, and he smells like hell,
but God bless him. He's making a great living. You ask him, "Did you follow
your passion here?" and he'd laugh at you. The guy's worth -- he just got offered
like 60 million dollars for his farm and turned it down, outside of Vegas. He didn't follow his passion. He stepped back and he watched
where everybody was going, and he went the other way. And I hear that story over and over. Matt Freund, a dairy farmer
in New Canaan, Connecticut, who woke up one day and realized the crap from his cows
was worth more than their milk, if he could use it to make
these biodegradable flowerpots. Now he's selling them to Walmart, right? Follow his passion? The guy's -- come on. So I started to look at passion, I started to look
at efficiency vs. effectiveness. As Tim talked about earlier,
that's a huge distinction. I started to look at teamwork
and determination. And basically, all those platitudes
they call "successories" that hang with that schmaltzy art
in boardrooms around the world right now, that stuff -- it's suddenly
all been turned on its head. Safety. Safety first is ... Going back to OSHA and PETA
and the Humane Society: What if OSHA got it wrong? I mean -- this is heresy,
what I'm about to say -- but what if it's really safety third? Right? (Laughter) No, I mean, really. What I mean to say is: I value my safety on these crazy jobs as much as the people
that I'm working with, but the ones who really get it done -- they're not out there
talking about safety first. They know that other things come first -- the business of doing
the work comes first, the business of getting it done. And I'll never forget,
up in the Bering Sea, I was on a crab boat
with the "Deadliest Catch" guys -- which I also work on in the first season. We were about 100 miles
off the coast of Russia: 50-foot seas, big waves, green water
coming over the wheelhouse, right? Most hazardous environment I'd ever seen, and I was back with a guy,
lashing the pots down. So I'm 40 feet off the deck, which is like looking down
at the top of your shoe, you know, and it's doing this in the ocean. Unspeakably dangerous. I scamper down, I go into the wheelhouse and I say, with some level of incredulity, "Captain -- OSHA?" And he says, "OSHA? Ocean." And he points out there. (Laughter) But in that moment, what he said next
can't be repeated in the Lower 48. It can't be repeated on any factory floor
or any construction site. But he looked at me and said, "Son," -- he's my age, by the way,
he calls me "son," I love that -- he says, "Son, I'm the captain
of a crab boat. My responsibility
is not to get you home alive. My responsibility
is to get you home rich." (Laughter) You want to get home alive,
that's on you." And for the rest
of that day -- safety first. I mean, I was like -- So, the idea that we create
this sense of complacency when all we do is talk
about somebody else's responsibility as though it's our own, and vice versa. Anyhow, a whole lot of things. I could talk at length
about the many little distinctions we made and the endless list of ways
that I got it wrong. But what it all comes down to is this: I've formed a theory, and I'm going to share it now
in my remaining 2 minutes and 30 seconds. It goes like this: we've declared war on work,
as a society -- all of us. It's a civil war. It's a cold war, really. We didn't set out to do it and we didn't twist our mustache
in some Machiavellian way, but we've done it. And we've waged this war
on at least four fronts, certainly in Hollywood. The way we portray working people on TV -- it's laughable. If there's a plumber, he's 300 pounds and he's got a giant butt crack, admit it. You see him all the time. That's what plumbers look like, right? We turn them into heroes,
or we turn them into punch lines. That's what TV does. We try hard on "Dirty Jobs"
not to do that, which is why I do the work
and I don't cheat. But, we've waged this war
on Madison Avenue. So many of the commercials that come out
there in the way of a message -- what's really being said? "Your life would be better
if you could work a little less, didn't have to work so hard,
got home a little earlier, could retire a little faster,
punch out a little sooner." It's all in there,
over and over, again and again. Washington? I can't even begin to talk
about the deals and policies in place that affect the bottom-line reality
of the available jobs, because I don't really know; I just know
that that's a front in this war. And right here, guys -- Silicon Valley. I mean -- how many people have
an iPhone on them right now? How many people have their BlackBerry? We're plugged in; we're connected. I would never suggest for a second that something bad
has come out of the tech revolution. Good grief, not to this crowd. (Laughter) But I would suggest that innovation without imitation
is a complete waste of time. And nobody celebrates imitation the way "Dirty Jobs" guys
know it has to be done. Your iPhone without those people
making the same interface, the same circuitry,
the same board, over and over -- all of that -- that's what makes
it equally as possible as the genius that goes inside of it. So, we've got this new toolbox. You know? Our tools today don't look
like shovels and picks. They look like the stuff
we walk around with. And so the collective
effect of all of that has been this marginalization
of lots and lots of jobs. And I realized, probably
too late in this game -- I hope not, because I don't know
if I can do 200 more of these things -- but we're going to do as many as we can. And to me, the most
important thing to know and to really come face to face with, is that fact that I got it wrong
about a lot of things, not just the testicles on my chin. I got a lot wrong. So, we're thinking --
by "we," I mean me -- (Laughter) that the thing to do is to talk
about a PR campaign for work -- manual labor, skilled labor. Somebody needs to be out there,
talking about the forgotten benefits. I'm talking about grandfather stuff, the stuff a lot us probably grew up with but we've kind of --
you know, kind of lost a little. Barack wants to create
two and a half million jobs. The infrastructure is a huge deal. This war on work that I suppose exists,
has casualties like any other war. The infrastructure is the first one, declining trade school enrollments
are the second one. Every single year, fewer electricians,
fewer carpenters, fewer plumbers, fewer welders, fewer pipe fitters,
fewer steam fitters. The infrastructure jobs that everybody
is talking about creating are those guys -- the ones
that have been in decline, over and over. Meanwhile, we've got
two trillion dollars, at a minimum, according to the American Society
of Civil Engineers, that we need to expend
to even make a dent in the infrastructure, which is currently rated at a D minus. So, if I were running
for anything -- and I'm not -- I would simply say
that the jobs we hope to make and the jobs we hope to create aren't going to stick unless
they're jobs that people want. And I know the point of this conference is to celebrate things
that are near and dear to us, but I also know that clean
and dirty aren't opposites. They're two sides of the same coin,
just like innovation and imitation, like risk and responsibility,
like peripeteia and anagnorisis, like that poor little lamb,
who I hope isn't quivering anymore, and like my time that's gone. It's been great talking to you. And get back to work, will you? (Applause)
I saw this quite a while ago, I love TED talks, and this is one of the better ones. =3
How can you not love this guy. I have the chance to go to pretty much any universe on the planet but I'm gonna apply to be a electrician instead. Mike Rowe made me feel better about that decision.
I want to vote for him for public office.
Mike Rowe. The guy who visits the BSA Jamboree while the president does not. One of our favorite Eagles.
As someone who has sat behind a desk, and worked endless hours on a farm, A person can have no greater satisfaction than working a long hard day of manual labor and being able to say, "Yea I did that."
I love this guy. Thanks for posting!
A natural speaker... I'm off to catch a few episodes of his show.
Amazing talk!
And that "safety first" is the most annoying sentence I've heard from american folks over and over and over again. If safety was first while I was working in Iraq 2003-2005, job would not be done. I had a guy from Arkansas complaining about safety when I asked him nicely to climb on the table and then on the chair on top of the table to hook up one piece of equipment - he refused with this sentence. No need to mention that no ladder is in near sight, not even close, and job needs to be done - and it IS TRIVIAL. I had to do it, and did it in, like, 40 seconds. Move on, fuck safety, use brain.
Came to watch a couple minutes, stayed for the whole video.