字幕表 動画を再生する
Okay, stand up straight Andrew, get that posture right,
it's "Vanity Fair."
Hello, my name is Andrew Rea,
I make a YouTube series called Binging with Babish,
and this is everything I do in a day.
I set an alarm every morning for 7:30 in the am
and then another alarm at 7:45,
and then another one at 8:00, 8:05, 8:07, 8:08, 8:09, 8:10.
The song that I wake up to every morning
is called "Off Center" by Emily King.
It starts really low key
and then it builds, and builds, and builds,
and by the end of it it's this rockin' anthem.
You're like, "I'm gonna start the day!"
Even though it generally takes me
like another hour and a half solid to get out of bed.
The first thing I do once I get out of bed
is make myself some coffee.
I'm kind of a pour over nut.
I drink my coffee black.
I drink it on my Chesterfield couch
'cause it makes me feel like a grownup of some kind.
And I listen to NPR because really NPR brings me
up to date in 13 minutes, can't go wrong.
So I'd say it's around 9:30
that I'm sort of awake and cognizant,
aware, coffeed up, gears are turning
and that's the time that I begin my morning workout.
It only takes about 45 minutes, hour,
a lot of calisthenics, lot of body movement.
And then I begin my morning care routine.
I have to shower every day.
I'm not one of those people that can skip a shower.
I feel so gross if I don't shower.
I feel slick, I feel oily.
You didn't wanna know that.
Beard routine, every day, trim, shampoo,
condition, oil, brush, 100 strokes, every day.
Don't skip it gentlemen.
I shaved my head, the whole dome gets shaved.
I use a razor.
I don't use a trimmer no more.
I brush my teeth for two minutes.
I floss using both string floss and brush picks.
I've never had a cavity, and I never will.
I moisturize from head to toe,
positively saturated with moisture.
I'd say that takes about 30, 45 minutes.
I'm pretty quick for all the things that I have to do
to make myself not look disgusting.
I wear one of two outfits.
I have two uniforms.
One is for the show, which is a button-up shirt,
a black apron, and the other is this.
It's a black or blue Henley with jeans.
That's all I wear unless I'm going to a funeral
or my high-school prom.
The only fashion statement that I make is with my watch.
I have six watches that I choose from,
so that's how I express myself
is with a glint of happenin' on my wrist.
Once I'm clothed and coffeed,
I commence the consumption of breakfast.
For the most part, I'm eating a fried, over-easy egg
on a piece of sprouted wheat toast.
I wanna little fiber, I wanna little protein,
I wanna little hot sauce.
It's the three parts of a balanced breakfast.
So after I'm breakfasted,
I start my day by commuting to work, which is my kitchen.
Work for me is a few different things.
It's either editing footage
from something I shot the day before,
or it's grocery shopping for an upcoming episode,
or it's shooting which is done right here.
I'm in the Binging with Babish kitchen.
And primarily I'm recreating foods
from movies and television,
so typically it's pretty goofy stuff,
fantastical foods or gross-out foods or whatever.
Or me trying to make a good version
of something gross from movies or tv.
Or my other show Basics with Babish is just basic cookery,
so just showin' you how to make quesadillas,
showin' you how to make bread.
I'll break for lunch
hopefully eating something that I just made for the show.
If it didn't come out right
or if it's something intentionally gross,
then I'll be making something really quick
like a chicken salad,
a little sandwich here or there, a little frittata,
or I'm ordering in lunch
from one of my favorite sort of
like healthy protein and two vegetables kind of places,
your Dig Inn, your Sweetgreen, you know,
salads and stuff like that.
I'm tryin' to be healthy, I'm tryin' to be good.
So then I'll begin filming for one of my YouTube series,
and depending on the complexity of what's going on,
depending on how many tries it takes me to get it right,
that could take 20 minutes, that could take two hours,
that could take two days.
I fly by the seat of my pants on a regular basis.
Come dinner time, I've generally been cookin' all day,
so cooking, generally not something
that I wanna get into at that point.
I'm tryin' to keep it healthy,
so I'm either eating leftovers from that day's shoot,
if it's not too unreasonably healthy,
or I'm ordering in something relatively vegetarian
or nice clean proteins and vegetables.
And then on the weekend, all bets are off.
I'm ordering chicken parmesan, I'm drinking whisky.
I do so much moving during the week,
let me sit still on the weekend.
Please, let me sit still.
After dinner, if I'm being good, is a mug of tea,
kava tea or green tea or something like that
with honey and lemon.
If I'm being bad,
it's several glasses of whisky
and something deep fried and covered in cheese.
So, I can't stand it when anybody does my dishes for me.
I feel terrible, so I'm always doin',
every dish you ever see me make on the show,
and I make a mess makin' this show,
every single dish I'm doin' myself.
Then, once I'm done with the dishes,
it's into the editing room.
If it's Monday or Tuesday, I'm in there editing until,
I don't even wanna think about it,
I'm in there editing until the next day.
Sometimes I'm stuck in there for 12 hours
just doing voice-over and cutting and recutting
and color correcting and doing graphics.
It's where I find my flow state.
It's where I focus in, and nothing else in the world exists
is when I'm toiling away at the computer
just cutting and editing and coloring
and doing finishing and all that good stuff, sound mixing.
That's what gets me out of bed in the morning.
So I'm done shooting, I'm done editing, it's evening time.
Depending on how much I have to do,
it's either 6:00 pm or 2:00 am,
and let's call it 10:00 pm average.
I'm digging into one of my leisure activities.
That's gonna be readin' a book,
usually something that I can brag about
or something really trashy that I actually enjoy.
I'm playing some video game
that makes me feel like I have superpowers
or where I'm killin' bad guys
or I'm rewatching one of the four or five shows
that I rewatch endlessly like Frasier or The West Wing
or Star Trek: Next Generation or Parks and Rec.
Just rewatching it the way most people
listen to music over and over and over.
It's also a time for me to catch up socially a little bit,
so I'm hittin' the Binging with Babish subreddit.
I'm going on YouTube Comments
and seeing what people wanna see
on future episodes of Binging with Babish,
checking my emails,
and signing whatever paperwork needs to be signed,
and reading through new brand deals,
and talking with my co-workers.
And then, once all that stuff is done,
I talk with my family and friends for like five minutes.
For the most part, we're saying, "
Hey, what's up, nothin' workin', what's up with you?"
"Nothin', workin'."
"All right dude, see you this weekend."
So generally in the hour or two before bed,
let's say like midnight, 1:00 am,
that's when I'm on my laptop
tryin' to figure out recipes for the next day,
figuring out what groceries I need,
anything else that I need for the next day,
gettin' it all ready,
dottin' all my ts and crossing all my is.
Sometimes before I go to sleep,
a very meditative activity for me is sharpening my knives.
It probably takes 15, 20 minutes.
It's just a great little unwinding activity
at the end of the day.
Something mindless I can do
and just makes a very relaxing beautiful sound
Whick, I can't do a very good impression of it.
Immediately before bed, I just brush and floss my teeth.
I mean, like I said I take good care of the toofers.
Then going into bed, I sleep in my skivvies.
I sleep in a veritable icebox.
I have the AC cranked up high,
and I have all different kinds of fans going
and the tv going 'cause I have tinnitus
so I just hear ringing if it's too quiet.
And it's pretty chaotic.
It's a pretty wild scene my going to sleep in bed.
Takes me anywhere from I'd say 30 minutes
to three hours to fall asleep.
I'm terrible at falling asleep.
I function best on like five, six hours of sleep.
It cannot be good for me.
All I know is that when I wake up in the morning,
and I didn't wake up a few times throughout the night,
I'm like huh, I got a good night's sleep last night.
[laughs]
That's the routine I'm in.
What are you gonna do?
Change, I don't think so.
Well, I'm Andrew Rea, and that's everything I do in a day.
Thank you "Vanity Fair" for helping me realize
that I need to make some positive changes
in my schedule [laughs].