Making the film, the assault on El Capitan, it's kind of just exploded a little bit as
far as where it's gone.
It's always been a really, really big idea of mine to get to the bottom of the wings
of still the buckle.
I've always heard from various people that that routes this and that routes that, and
I've just got to a point where I'm like, well, I just need to climb it and make up my own
decision.
Yeah, I approached my buddy Jeff Vargin and was like, hey, afterwards, I'm like, dude,
this is going to make a pretty interesting film.
I know you're in the film industry, and what do you think about this?
This is like a really kind of a crazy story, and Jeff just picked that up and ran with
it.
Yeah, it's just amazing how it's exploded.
I didn't see that coming.
I didn't know it was going to be as big as it is.
Yeah, it's a little weird being the center of attention and the subject of the film,
but it's really just kind of a story of what happened.
I think that's kind of the coolest aspect of the film, in my opinion, is it just answers
a lot of questions of what did happen back then and why people felt the way they did.
It answers a lot of questions, but then it brings up a lot of questions at the same time.
Going and doing the question and answer with Jeff, it's one of the premieres, and just
kind of getting up on stage and answering questions, trying to let people know what
I found up there.
That was kind of the key for me to unlock the secret of what they really did up there,
because people believe in one hand this and one hand that, but nobody really knew until
I went up there and saw exactly what it was.
It's just kind of been this amazing journey of a lot of different things, of figuring
out what they did and actually learning some of the stuff in the past, what they went through.
So yeah, we're all still kind of learning.
