Conan O’Brien Needs A Friend XX
[0] Conan O 'Brien needs a fan.
[1] Want to talk to Conan?
[2] Visit teamcoco .com slash call Conan.
[3] Okay, let's get started.
[4] Hi, Wallison.
[5] Welcome to Conan O 'Brien needs a fan.
[6] Great to see you, Walson.
[7] Where are you coming from?
[8] I am in Brazil, Sao Paulo.
[9] Oh, you're in South Paulo, Brazil.
[10] Oh, fantastic.
[11] That's incredible.
[12] Well, welcome to our podcast.
[13] It's very nice to see you.
[14] you're what's going on?
[15] Are you are you in a chalk mine?
[16] What's happening?
[17] Completely You look like you're in a vacuum.
[18] I think he's in the Matrix.
[19] Yeah, you're in the You're in beautiful Brazil.
[20] Why would you waste time in the Matrix?
[21] They told me not to reveal.
[22] Not to reveal.
[23] I'm sorry.
[24] Very good.
[25] Very good.
[26] Wallason, tell us a little bit about yourself.
[27] I know.
[28] that you have no furniture and you live in middle earth somewhere.
[29] At least they are giving me water.
[30] Oh, good, good.
[31] Tell us about yourself, Walson.
[32] I am Brazilian.
[33] I am a translator now.
[34] I have lived in Germany for some time.
[35] I am married to a Russian woman.
[36] Oh, my God.
[37] You have a very international flair.
[38] I like that about you, Welson.
[39] So you are Brazilian, you're native of Brazil, but you have married a woman who is Russian, and you've spent a lot of time in Germany, okay?
[40] So you have a rich background, and you say you're a translator.
[41] Yeah.
[42] Which languages can you translate?
[43] I work with English and German.
[44] Oh, English and German.
[45] Yeah, I'm trying to learn Russian, but it's too hard for me. Yeah, screw that.
[46] You just niet, nch, and it's just a lot of nett, and you can be fine.
[47] And what about, how did you, why did you decide that you wanted to learn German?
[48] When I was 16 or 17, I was playing a game called Medal of Honor.
[49] Yeah.
[50] You are the American hero.
[51] and you need to kill the Nazis.
[52] And then instead of killing the Nazis, I heard them talking and I thought, wow, it's beautiful.
[53] So instead of killing them right away.
[54] This is kind of how Hitler got started.
[55] People heard a guy yelling in German and thought, hey, wait a minute, this is kind of compelling.
[56] What does he want to do?
[57] Did you mean the things that they were saying or the sound of the language?
[58] No, the sound of the language.
[59] Yeah, people don't understand German as a like beautiful sounding language.
[60] Yeah, I don't understand that.
[61] So, well, I have to tell you, I mean, German doesn't sound people, I think Italian sounds beautiful.
[62] I think Spanish sounds very beautiful.
[63] There are a lot of languages that sound very French is gorgeous.
[64] But German, no, it sounds like someone's.
[65] throwing cans down a staircase.
[66] You know, it's a lot of...
[67] I'm...
[68] I'm shlaude, I'm going to be schlaught -leutte -leutte -leutton.
[69] I mean, that's...
[70] Basically, wasn't that fluent German, what I just said?
[71] Yeah, I understood every word you said.
[72] Yeah.
[73] It was perfect.
[74] Yeah.
[75] I said, onions mustard hamburger, submarine.
[76] Dive, dive, dive.
[77] Yavol.
[78] So you...
[79] Yeah, but if you say this same...
[80] Without shouting, it's going to sound beautiful.
[81] No, no, it has to be shouting.
[82] That's the only German I know.
[83] That's, that's, that's me whispering sweet nothings into my, into my lover's ear in German.
[84] That's the only way I know how to do it.
[85] Let me ask you a question.
[86] So you heard German soldiers in a video game speaking and you thought this language is beautiful.
[87] I need to learn it.
[88] It's exactly what happened.
[89] Then I killed them in the video game, obviously, but after that, I started to learn German.
[90] I just wanted to learn the sounds, but I couldn't stop, and now I speak German.
[91] That's cool.
[92] Very good.
[93] I don't think they had that in mind.
[94] And when I went to Germany, I was afraid of telling this story because in a way, you can say that I speak German because of Hitler.
[95] Yeah, well, I thought they would find it terrible.
[96] Yeah, Wallace, and I think you were wise not to bring up.
[97] I love your language.
[98] I learned it while I was killing Nazis in a video game.
[99] I think you made the right call by keeping that to yourself.
[100] Yeah, but actually a friend of mine really wanted to know the story.
[101] I told her and she found it hilarious.
[102] and she asked me to tell every German I knew the same story.
[103] And all of them liked it.
[104] Okay.
[105] I don't know.
[106] Avoid, like, if there was a German you ran into who was like in his late 90s, maybe don't tell him.
[107] Yeah.
[108] You know what I mean?
[109] Stick with the young, cool kids.
[110] Okay.
[111] They'll have a little bit of an ironic chuckle over the whole thing.
[112] But when you see a guy wearing a lot of medals, she's about 98 and has what looks to be a little brush mustache maybe keep it to yourself Walson now you must but you said your wife is Russian so you speak German but you don't speak Russian the same language as your wife?
[113] Yeah unfortunately are you a spot?
[114] People say German is hard but actually Russian is much much harder so what do you speak to each other?
[115] English when we met we spoke English but now she speaks Portuguese.
[116] So we try to speak English, but we are too lazy, so we usually speak Portuguese.
[117] Wow.
[118] So she learned your native tongue and you didn't for her.
[119] Yeah, but she came to Brazil.
[120] She loved Brazil before meeting me. So she already liked Portuguese before me. I'm telling you something right now, Wallace, you owe it to your, what's your wife's name?
[121] Alicia.
[122] You can call her Alicia.
[123] Okay.
[124] You owe it to Alicia to become fluent in Russian.
[125] You must.
[126] I know.
[127] No, listen to me. Look at me as you say, and I, you know I'm speaking the truth here.
[128] You owe it to her to become fluent.
[129] You need to memorize whole pages of Tolstoy.
[130] No, I think you need to play some video games or you kill some Russians.
[131] Yeah, it's usually the best way, video games and music.
[132] Well, I think, uh, I don't know.
[133] I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm concerned.
[134] I want for the future of, I mean, someday down the road, do you have kids?
[135] Yeah, we have a daughter.
[136] Okay.
[137] Does your wife ever speak Russian to your daughter?
[138] Yeah, sometimes.
[139] Okay.
[140] But she's only one and a half, so she has time.
[141] Right, right.
[142] So she's just saying goo -go -gaga in Russian.
[143] Which is Google -Gagga.
[144] No, it's actually, goo -go -gaga.
[145] It's a little different.
[146] But it's, sorry.
[147] This is degenerating quickly.
[148] And I'm just curious.
[149] Do you have a question for me, Wollison?
[150] Yeah.
[151] I know you are a history buff.
[152] So I would like to know.
[153] Yeah.
[154] What is your favorite controversial historical figure?
[155] Genghis Khan, Mussolini, I don't know.
[156] And if you were to become a dictator with limitless power, what would you do?
[157] Well, first of all, I'm going to take the second question first.
[158] I know what it's like to be a dictator with limitless power because I'm the host of a podcast with my name on it.
[159] There's pictures of me all over this building.
[160] Everyone has to do exactly as I say.
[161] It's fantastic.
[162] And everyone around me will tell you that I would abuse my power.
[163] I would make people laugh at my jokes, I think.
[164] I would pretty much, I think I'd become unhinged immediately.
[165] You know the way they say power corrupts, but it takes a little time with me. It would happen immediately.
[166] I would completely lose.
[167] You would become unhinged.
[168] Do you are?
[169] You beat some of the people who work for you.
[170] I don't beat any way.
[171] I don't beat them.
[172] You punch Blay on a regular basis.
[173] He's a big guy.
[174] He can take it.
[175] And they're not allowed to punch back.
[176] No, no, they just take it.
[177] Yeah.
[178] No, really that's character building for them, I think.
[179] So, yeah, I think I would lose it.
[180] Favorite, I mean, I don't know, controversial historical figures.
[181] Every historical figure eventually is controversial because over time, anything they've done.
[182] So you could say Churchill, Winston Churchill in 19, you know, you could say that answer in 1950 and no one's going to have a problem with you.
[183] He means, you know, the big guys.
[184] like your Stalin's, your Hitler's, and things like that.
[185] Well, I am not on this podcast going to swear fealty to any of those guys.
[186] But you are pretty interested in Stalin.
[187] I've heard you.
[188] Stalin's an interesting guy.
[189] Yeah, maybe interest is more the way.
[190] Yeah, he's more interesting to me because he was a seminary student, you know.
[191] And he's also from Georgia, which is a very, I mean, to think that he climbed to the very top when he came from a very, a part that many Russians don't even consider to be Russia.
[192] and was briefly a seminary student.
[193] And I don't know, I find him to be kind of wacky.
[194] But he did...
[195] Wacky.
[196] Never been used to describe Joseph Stoller.
[197] Wacky.
[198] Yeah.
[199] But, I mean, you know, a lot of problems with that guy.
[200] A lot of problems.
[201] And I know that's a controversial thing to say, but I find Stalin to be a little problematic.
[202] Someone finally had the balls.
[203] Someone finally had the balls to say, Stalin a little problematic.
[204] And I don't care.
[205] We're taking your calls right now.
[206] Call in right now if you agree.
[207] Wow, this board is lighting up.
[208] How dare you?
[209] How dare you?
[210] I knew Stalin.
[211] Someone was my friend.
[212] You sir, I knew Stalin.
[213] Well, Walson, you've made me a promise that you're going to learn fluent Russian and you have to begin immediately.
[214] Okay?
[215] Okay.
[216] I'm going to do it.
[217] Yeah.
[218] And you're right.
[219] I mean, Matt brings up a good point.
[220] If you know, if you're, fluent in Russian and you're also fluent in Portuguese and you're fluent in German, you could become an international spy.
[221] Or maybe you already are, are you?
[222] Are you a spy?
[223] Would you tell us if you're a spy?
[224] Let's just let it go.
[225] Let's just let it go.
[226] He's a spy.
[227] Yeah, he's a spy with a Stalin obsession.
[228] Oh, wait.
[229] Everything you can know is behind me. Yeah, very good.
[230] Very mysterious.
[231] Anybody of anything else?
[232] Gosh.
[233] Sona, I feel like you should ask him something.
[234] Okay.
[235] So you're a translator.
[236] Who do you translate for?
[237] Like politicians or just random people who come to Brazil?
[238] No. I just translate texts.
[239] So it's kind of boring.
[240] Oh.
[241] Oh, that's fun.
[242] No, that's cool.
[243] I'm not an interpreter.
[244] I'm just a translator.
[245] Oh, cool.
[246] Oh, cool.
[247] What about don't you have a YouTube channel where you translate song lyrics and things like that?
[248] Yeah, I have.
[249] When I said that the best way to learn languages is video games or music, it's because I learned English by translating Iron Maiden songs.
[250] Wait a minute.
[251] When I was, when you were a child, you learned English by translating Iron Maiden songs?
[252] I was 12, not a child.
[253] I'm sorry.
[254] I'm, I'm, wow, you took a, you took a fence at something very strange.
[255] I considered myself a child until that was like 37.
[256] He already had two kids at 12.
[257] Yeah.
[258] No, you were judging me for listening to Iron Maiden when I was a child, but I wasn't so small.
[259] Okay.
[260] What language were you translating Iron Maiden into Portuguese?
[261] Yeah, Portuguese.
[262] is my native language.
[263] And so...
[264] I had no internet, so I took a dictionary.
[265] So I was translating the lyrics word by word.
[266] At the end, they made no sense, obviously.
[267] But I learned English.
[268] Yeah, I don't really...
[269] I'm not familiar with the work of Iron Maiden.
[270] I am.
[271] You are?
[272] My first CD was Iron Maiden's CD.
[273] Really?
[274] So give me some Iron Maiden lyrics.
[275] Oh, well, so understand.
[276] We're living in this wasted land.
[277] Aces High.
[278] there's a lot of World War II imagery.
[279] They had that Eddie, that creature that would be on all their album covers.
[280] Yeah, yeah, remember that.
[281] Yeah, ACE's high, waste of years.
[282] As Conan likes history, they talk a lot about history.
[283] Yeah.
[284] Because one of them is a studied history, so they talk a lot about it.
[285] Well, you know, this is inspiring me to learn more about world history by listening to Iron Maiden and then translating it into another language.
[286] Yeah.
[287] How would it sound in German?
[288] That'd be rough.
[289] Yeah.
[290] Interesting.
[291] I took German in high school because I loved World War II movies so much so I kind of understand what you're saying.
[292] But it still felt, it feels like a coarse language kind of, you know.
[293] Yeah, and you exclusively learned how to say, you know, dive, Ubo, dive.
[294] Yeah, like, Schnell, Akhtung, Achdung, Schnell, Schnell, Schnell.
[295] Nice.
[296] The boating.
[297] Schweinehound!
[298] The schweiner!
[299] Okay.
[300] And because of that, I had a huge interest in lyrics and poetry.
[301] That's why I studied literature at the university, and I created a YouTube channel to talk about lyrics.
[302] Cool.
[303] Because no one was doing it.
[304] So to answer your question.
[305] Cool.
[306] Well, very good.
[307] Well, it was very nice talking to you, Well, Allison.
[308] I wish I could say to you right now in German, off Wiedersain.
[309] I think that's really one of the only words I know.
[310] Yeah.
[311] Of Wiedersen.
[312] Of Wiedersen.
[313] And I promise me that you are going to learn Russian, okay?
[314] Okay, I will.
[315] You will?
[316] I don't think you're lying to me. I think you're lying to me right now.
[317] I think you're, I don't trust you.
[318] You have no background.
[319] We don't know where you are.
[320] We don't know where you are.
[321] I think you're in the next room.
[322] They told me to agree with you.
[323] Yeah.
[324] Oh, you must work for me then.
[325] All right, well, Wollison, thank you very much.
[326] Take care.
[327] Okay.
[328] Thanks, nice talking to you.
[329] Bye.
[330] Conan O 'Brien needs a fan with Conan O 'Brien, Sonam of Sessian, and Matt Goreley.
[331] Produced by me, Matt Goreley.
[332] Executive produced by Adam Sacks, Joanna Solitaireoff, and Jeff Ross at Team Coco, and Colin Anderson at Earwolf.
[333] Music by Jimmy Vivino Supervising producer Aaron Blair Associate talent producer Jennifer Samples Associate producers Sean Doherty and Lisa Burm Engineering by Eduardo Perez Please rate, review, and subscribe to Conan O 'Brien Needs a Friend on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, or wherever fine podcasts are downloaded.
[334] This has been a team Coco production in association with Stitcher.