May 13, 2008

Beauty Is In The Eye Of The Beholder...And Sometimes It Is Covered In Grime.

We Swoon...

This is old news.  You know we adore you.  Truth be told, one of the things we like best about you and the show is your self-deprecating humor and ability to laugh at yourself - that and those blue eyes.  mentallyirregular

Mike_dirty_host_2

   

I've always maintained there's no accounting for taste.  For those of you who find yourselves attracted to a smart-aleck covered in a potpourri of grime, there is little I can do but say thanks, and be grateful that beauty lies in the eye of the beholder.

Mike

May 06, 2008

Is Mike The Leader Of The Dirty Pack?

Mike, Follow The Leader...

QUESTION:

Do you tend to be a leader or a follower?  It depends on the situation for me, sometimes I follow and sometimes I lead.

sanfrangirl74

ANSWER:

Sometimes, it feels as though I'm leading, then I look over my shoulder, and no one is there.  So, if I am first, in a line of one, am I leading or merely lost?  Or am I just alone?

Or, I might look up and see people in front of me, going in the same direction.  Am I then a fellow traveler, or a follower?  Or maybe a stalker?

Leadership I think is a state of mind.  I find that people who know precisely where they want to go often see themselves as leaders.  But aren't those people following something too?  A "plan", a "dream", a "belief", a "passion?"

We have elevated the term "leadership" to the point where its qualities have become automatically postive and noble.  Such platitudes are worthy of a suspicion.  Mao, Hitler, Stalin, Jim Jones - they were all leaders, to the woe of those that followed.  The willingness to lead and the desire to control are impossible to differentiate.  Only the leader can say what drives his actions.  History will sort out the rest.  (As told by the winners, naturally.)

Likewise, the willingness to follow is also a choice, and does not preclude the ability to lead.  In fact, I think the best leaders are those who are happy to follow, but step up when circumstances demand.  The courage to lead is admirable - the ambition to lead is not.  Perhaps, I'm less interested in where a candidate stands on every issue, than I am in understanding why they want the job.  I see difference in the courage to lead fairly, and the decision to follow wisely.

Sometimes I wonder if it takes more courage to lead or follow.  (Ever ride shotgun with a bad driver?)

Mike

April 29, 2008

Foreshadowing

Mike Rowe Answers Your Questions

Where is he?  What's he doing?  Most likely, somewhere dirty, doing something gross.  You may want to bookmark this questions and answers blog so you can stay on top of his latest conversations.

QUESTION:

Barsky stopped by the  Crew board to drop off this little tease:

Originally posted by producerdave: "We were told where (the survival suits) were (on the cod processing boat), and we have had training with them before, so no training this time around.

We did wear them last week on the ice in Canada and it was extremely handy for one of us."

Stay tuned for Shark Week, I guess?

Tazma

ANSWER:

It's entirely possible that a survival suit saved the life of one of my crew last week.  I won't say more, other than the fact that it wasn't me.  However, I can say this, Dutch Harbor is a very cold place.  Pangirtung is colder.

Much, much colder.

Mike

April 22, 2008

Mike Rowe & HP

Mike Rowe Answers Your Questions

Where is he?  What's he doing?  Most likely, somewhere dirty, doing something gross.  You may want to bookmark this questions and answers blog so you can stay on top of his latest conversations.

QUESTION:

I suppose Mac wouldn't give him an endorsement even though he used one.  I have a couple of HP between me and my family, and they are great machines, to the non-tech savvy, at least.

arcysharky

ANSWER:

Mac and I had a falling out a while back.  Some of you might recall I couldn't get on the sight for about a month.  Part of the problem was my computer.  (The larger part was the user.)  No matter. I made a change, and then I made the deal.  I'm looking forward to hearing your feedback when the films debut.  Each one is about 5 minutes long, and features me - free associating - with Dave and Doug in tow, and some very good improv actors.  What HP did, that blew me away, was green light a completely unscripted campaign.  It's unprecedented. I can't say where it will lead, but shooting was a complete blast, and Barsky and Doug were quite brilliant.

As for the shirt, it was grey the day I wore it.  I swear.  I don't own pumpkin.

Mike

April 15, 2008

Narrating The Deadliest Catch

Mike Rowe Answers Your Questions

Where is he?  What's he doing?  Most likely, somewhere dirty, doing something gross.  You may want to bookmark this questions and answers blog so you can stay on top of his latest conversations.

QUESTION:

I know that I have not seen all the episodes of The Deadliest Catch but I have been watching many of them recently.  I heard that you hosted the first season and then did voiceovers after Dirty Jobs started.

Were you actually on one of the fishing boats during the season?

Your narratives are very good.  Do you write them or is there a script written for you?

Your voice shows a lot of passion for this program.  Is this the kind of life or work that gets you excited or are you just very good at putting feeling into your narrative voice? - plantwhisterer1

ANSWER:

My role on Catch began as that of "host".  I agreed to the work because I had failed to sell Jobs, and felt like a little adventure was in order, as well as a little cash.  I flew to Dutch, and walked into chaos.

The show as you know it did not exist.  It was originally structured as a reality show, with a cash prize offered to the boat that brought back the most crab.  This Hollywood contrivance was  conceived in the mind of someone who had no real understanding of the actual risk assumed by the men who do this kind of work.  For the Coast Guard, who were already risking life and limb to rescue fishermen in peril, this notion of a cash prize was worse than was dangerous, and it very nearly killed the series.  Thankfully though, the idea was squashed, and we all went about the business of capturing the work of crab fishing on camera.

My role was not that of a greenhorn, as I am on Jobs.  I was more of an on-camera narrator that popped up in a variety of places, usually a helicopter, on a mountain, a shipwreck, a wheelhouse, etc, to share some insight with the viewer.  I was imbedded in the show, but not the work.  However, I have spent time aboard The Northwestern, Time Bandit, Cornelia Marie, Maverick, and The Bountiful.

In all, I spent 6 weeks in Dutch, shooting Season 1.  Six men died while I was there, and the place got under my skin.  Removing me from the series was painful, but probably the right call.  Like the notion of a cash prize, my presence as host was simply unnecessary, another hallmark of bad reality TV.  Catch is much better than that.

As for the narration, I do not write it.  And frankly, if I were hired today to record it, I would speak the same way I do on Jobs.  The "heavy" read is a throwback to Season 1, when everyone believed the show depended upon a certain production value.  Personally, I think the Bering Sea provides enough drama without any manufactured urgency, but reasonable people can disagree. Besides, no one ever feels comfortable altering a successful formula.  Out of respect to the producers of the show, whom I hold in the very highest regard, I merely follow orders.

Mike

April 08, 2008

COMFORT FOOD

Mike Rowe Answers Your Questions

Where is he?  What's he doing?  Most likely, somewhere dirty, doing something gross.  You may want to bookmark this questions and answers blog so you can stay on top of his latest conversations.

QUESTION:

Do you have a comfort food that you would want your Mom to cook if you were coming home for a visit?  If so, what would it be?

dirtyjobswithmikerowe

ANSWER:

My Mom makes an amazing Maryland Crab Soup.  That, with homemade bread and a cold beer, is hard to beat.

Mike

April 03, 2008

Mike Rowe Answers Your Questions

Where is he?  What's he doing?  Most likely, somewhere dirty, doing something gross.  You may want to bookmark this questions and answers blog so you can stay on top of his latest conversations.



QUESTION:

So the shooting schedule has been thrown off kilter by the remnants of a big snowfall, and you celebrated your birthday sitting in an airport/airplane.

Can you tell us a few snippets of what's in store for the next 24 hours? 2 weeks?  How do you play catch up after something like that?

Did you ever get a birthday toast?

Will the Cubbies win the opener against the Brewers?

Thanks,

kzang


ANSWER:

There's a certain symmetry I guess, to being alone and snowbound on the anniversary of one's birth.  Somehow, the president of the network, a stand-up fellow named John, managed to get a bottle of decent wine to my crappy hotel room.  And my long-suffering girl arranged to get me a chocolate cake.  So it could have been worse.

Next few days are "vo" (voice overs) for the Deadliest Catch, and writing for an upcoming DJ special.  After that, I 'm vanishing for a few days.  Promised an old friend I'd attend her wedding, and a promise made is a debt unpaid.  After  that, something dirty calls in Oklahoma.  Then Maryland.  Then New York.

"Did you ever get a birthday toast?"

Yes.  More than a few, and I'm grateful for all.  I also have some boxes on their way from some of you.  I'll express my gratitude after I open them.

"Will the Cubbies win the opener against the Brewers?"

No.

Sorry.

Mike

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