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You, Me, and Tuscany is a brand new rom-com from Will Packer,
the guy who produced Girl's Trip.
The movie stars Hallie Bailey and Reggae Jean Page
and has all the ingredients of your favorite rom-coms.
Heart, huge labs, and sizzling chemistry,
set in the enchanting vineyards of Tuscany.
It's the movie escape we've been waiting for,
and the perfect film for date night
or a night out with the girls.
Get your rom-com on with You, Me, and Tuscany,
directed by Cat Coro, only in theaters April 10th.
Hello and good morning everybody, how's everybody doing?
I'm excellent.
This is Mysterion calling from Toronto.
Mysterion, how are you doing today?
I'm doing amazingly.
Oh, dude, when you speak a language like that,
people who say that were amazing,
they've lived it, and they want to share it.
That means that you are on that path.
Absolutely.
No question about it.
I live every day making sure that
the day that I'm living in is just even a micro particle
better than the day before.
I love that.
That's just the way that I roll.
When did you realize that it was time to make that investment
in such a thought?
Because that's a power from mantra right there.
Yes.
It's been a long time since I was able to really accept it.
That's the only way that people should be going about their life.
I lived a long time essentially grasping at straws
and hoping for the best.
And I realized, neighbor in life,
that you can't grow in that headspace.
You have to be appreciative.
You have to be accepting of whatever comes your way.
You have to be able to accept both the good and the bad.
And sometimes even when the bad happens,
you have to accept that mistakes and, you know,
curves in the road are just there to build upon.
You know, yesterday, for example,
I mean, it's a micro task,
but I was learning on Duolingo.
And I was getting frustrated.
I was not able to, you know,
remember four or five words.
And they kept coming up.
And I was just ready to throw the app down.
And literally the app said,
hey, getting it wrong is still learning.
Yeah.
And I went, yeah, it's absolutely correct.
Don't you love moments like that?
Because you can take that to a live audience
and share it with somebody who wants to receive it.
Yeah, absolutely.
And, you know, with my line of work,
people see it and they, you know,
they can come in as just for entertainment,
which is my purpose.
But you would not believe how many people at the end of the night
will text me or email me or, you know,
post something on social media where they say,
you know, you said something that really resonated
or when you spoke to me on stage,
it felt there was a connection or,
and it's not something psychic or something,
you know, esoteric.
It's just that moment where they go,
oh my god, my point of view has been changed.
Or my perspective is now a little bit more positive.
Whatever that outcome is, you know,
it's needed for them.
See, I love it that you say that way because,
you know, you know how it is in this everyday world.
There's been a lot of non-believers.
And my answer is, you haven't seen Mysterion then.
Until you see Mysterion,
keep your comments to yourself because,
when you go in there and you experience the moment,
now you, whatever opinion you've got, trust me,
it's not going to be, I don't believe in that stuff.
You will.
You will.
But they don't have to.
They don't have to.
Yeah.
You know, I had somebody say to me about,
I don't know, maybe three, four weeks ago,
they said, what do you do when somebody comes to a show
or, you know, says to you,
I don't believe you.
And I say, that's great.
You don't have to.
And I think that that disarms them.
And it's alarming because I'm not here to pull the wool
over anyone's eyes.
I'm not here to start a religion.
But definitely here to create a moment
where the impossible is possible.
And I'm not talking about bending spoons.
That's just representative.
I'm talking about making a minor change
that can lead to a huge result.
And that could be done through so many different avenues.
And you can't, you can't hate on that.
You know, you can say, well, you know, I don't believe you.
You know, in some people, they're going to live their life.
They're going to be stuck in a little box.
They're not going to want to get out of it.
There's nothing more than I can say to them
is all the best than I'm here when you're ready.
But all it takes is just one little movement,
one little motion, and the outcome is unbelievable.
You know, one guy I know who has been looking for employment
and getting down on himself.
I just said to him, look, take it outside the box.
Employ yourself.
Find what you love to do.
You're not going to be rich overnight,
but do what you need to do.
And you know, within a couple of months of him,
self-promoting, he's dog walking,
he's doing things like that.
And he has a little bit of income coming in.
But it's that head space.
Yeah, yeah.
See, this is the reason why that in talking with my wife,
I said that this, you help people find their needle
in a haystack.
And you do it in a way that it's their discovery.
All you do on that stage, which by the way,
I call an open door.
I mean, inside your open door,
you allow them to step in,
but then you give them the ingredients
and how to find that needle in a haystack.
Absolutely, absolutely.
And most people do.
Most people want to.
And you know, even if somebody comes in,
all bravado guns are blazing,
ready to do these things.
And they get sidetracked,
or they stop.
That's okay.
But all they took a few stages and a few steps,
they're going to see that those few things do have an outcome.
Now, of course, for maximum outcome and maximum result,
if you constantly feed that beast,
and you're constantly reinventing and changing
and criticizing your own, you know,
I keep the word fault,
but your own nuances that you don't feel are working for you.
You're going to get more results.
I do it every day.
I'm never happy with what I am.
I'm still going to be,
or I'm happy.
But I've never satisfied with what my results are,
because then it becomes stagnant.
You know, even recently,
about two years ago,
I had a duo act.
And we did exceptionally well.
We were doing amazingly on television
on America's Got Talent,
and having talent and all these incredible things.
And then the act split.
And for the first time in over a decade,
things just kind of came to a grinding call.
And I said,
oh, no, they wanted the duo.
They didn't want me.
And then I realized that's just ego.
That's just ego.
And all I have to do is repackage a little bit,
and send a different message out.
And it takes time.
It takes a lot of, you know,
every step has a million moving parts.
But I just put my boots to the ground,
and, you know,
with the help of my wife,
and we really reestablished what it is
that I want to deliver,
what it is I want to do,
how I want to say it,
and the path I want to take,
I took a few steps back.
I said,
you know what, I'm not going to go touring.
Good for you.
But, you know,
to bury my head in the sand
and avoid the elephant room.
I would focus on what I need to do
in the moment right now,
and every day,
build on that.
And I'll tell you something,
in those 18 months,
since that happened,
it's been night and day.
I look like a different person.
I present as a different person.
I saw somebody last night,
that I haven't seen in almost a year,
who looked right at me,
and went, oh my god,
I barely even wrecked that.
Yeah.
Because it's not just a physical thing,
it's a mental thing,
and it's what you're putting out.
I always call that you're wearing your energy,
and you do.
You wear your energy,
which is so fascinating,
because a lot of people
would like to tuck it up underneath their sleeve,
but no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Not Mysterion.
Mysterion's going to come out there
and be Mysterion.
Yeah.
I have to be my own true
of sometimes itself.
Yeah.
You know,
and that, you know,
in any industry,
you know, you have to be.
You know, people would say to me,
you know,
how is it such a silly question?
How is it that you're getting a corporate gig
and you have tattoos all over your arms?
That's because they're highly for my tattoos.
They're not hiring me for my tattoos.
You know what I mean?
People want to find whatever excuse it is
to validate their own insecurity,
and that never works.
It doesn't kibosh the first
when they're trying to bury,
and it only isolates them.
Yeah.
And it's a weird headspace
when you shift to being accepting
and you're loving and supporting the doors open.
And once that happens,
you can see everyone's going to have a,
I hate this word,
but everyone's going to have an adversary.
Yeah.
You don't have to worry about your adversary.
Just not to worry about what you do.
And the minute you do that,
and you just only focus on that,
your adversary can be Lex Luthor
for all of that.
They're not going to have it all over the place.
The journey from the green room
to that open door,
which we call the stage,
to the actual performance.
I can't imagine the evolution
of mental changes that you go through,
and is it a walk of receiving
as you take each step forward?
That's a good question.
I think the answer you're going to get
made disappoint you.
I think first off,
there's a lot of gratitude.
Yes.
But then the minute I go into a green room,
and I know I'm going on stage
and let's say half an hour.
I go kind of blank
and go on automatic in a weird way
because no two audiences are alike.
So I can replay something in my mind
over and over again,
and then I go out on stage
and it is nothing like I assumed
it was going to be.
Never is.
You're going to have a totally different outcome.
I am always prepared,
but as for scripting,
as for cloud work,
these things,
there is a very loose scripting.
There is a very natural ability
that I have with the audience
and being able to know who to talk to
and how to interact with them,
if there's God forbid somebody
who's maybe intoxicated,
which can happen.
I know how to handle that.
That just comes from the years of experience.
But when I go on stage,
it's more like,
here it goes,
I'm Superman in action.
Superman, he's flying.
He notices somebody in distress.
He doesn't think about it.
He just goes down and deals with it in the moment.
That's kind of the way I approach it as well, you know?
And so,
there is obviously gratitude.
There's obviously excitement.
There's obviously the lead up to an event.
If I have a,
I have an event coming,
two of three events coming up in Canada
that I'm very much looking forward to.
I have corporate events.
I have a week leave that I do
and a residency.
You know,
I'm always, you know,
tomorrow night, I'm back at my residency
and I did it last night
for the first time in a few weeks
and I was very excited to go back in.
So there's, of course,
that natural, you know, Christmas morning feeling
that I didn't want to get through.
You can't really open up the gift
of being able to perform.
But I don't overthink it.
I don't say,
well, today I'm going to do this
and this and that.
And it never worked.
It never,
it,
it,
that can lead to disappointment
because if I go in there
and it's not the way
that I perceive it's going to be
a control you offer to me,
especially if you're not used to it.
So yeah,
that's my answer to that.
Please do not move.
There's more
with Mysterion coming up next.
You, me and Tuscany
is a brand new rom-com
from Will Packer,
the guy who produced Girl's Trip.
The movie stars,
Hallie Bailey
and Reggae Jean Page
and has all the ingredients
of your favorite rom-coms.
Heart,
huge laughs
and sizzling chemistry.
Set in the enchanting vineyards
of Tuscany.
It's the movie escape
we've been waiting for.
And the perfect film
for date night
or a night out with the girls.
Get your rom-com on
with You, Me, and Tuscany.
Directed by Cat Coro,
only in theaters April 10th.
The man who sees tomorrow
we are back with Mysterion.
I,
I'm really into animal totems
and things.
And I'm very excited to find out
if you do have a totem animal
because the way that you speak
with us,
you don't talk to us,
you don't talk at us,
you talk with us.
And that, to me,
is communication
from somewhere
that you have learned how to master.
I think that comes from
being spoken out.
Ooh.
And I think that that comes
from not being heard.
Oh, boy.
For many years,
many, many years,
a lot of the times I would have
an I creative idea,
or just an I.D. in general,
and it was overlooked.
And I don't know where the
death connect was from.
And it frustrated,
as it was frustrated,
and anybody frustrated me,
and it made me angry.
Because I never felt heard.
I always knew that I had more
to offer than was being allowed.
When I was really young,
I was in culinary school.
And, you know, I had very
loud hair.
This was the early 90s,
and very crazy hair.
And I loved it.
Every minute of it.
If my hair grew back,
I'd put it back the way it was.
But, you know,
there were bets.
When I went into day one,
you know, the first week in,
there were bets.
How long I would last.
You know, that guy with the green hair.
How long could he use?
I would give him a week
and a half.
I ended up on the heat list.
And, you know,
it wasn't until later in the year
when I'd be finding everybody,
they said,
you know, we had bets.
You cost me a lot of money.
It said, how?
You said,
I lost the bet on you instead of bet.
No, no, no, no, no.
You lost your own bet.
You shouldn't have bet against me.
You should have bet for me.
Yeah.
So, there was a lot of instances
where these things would happen.
Where I saw other people,
they were heard,
or their ideas were picked,
or their concepts were used,
and maybe as a consultant,
who knows.
But I often would say,
I wonder why I'm not being put
on the same level.
I think it came from a couple of places.
I think one,
I don't compliment people easily.
So, I don't,
at lack of a better term,
I don't care for that.
Yeah.
So, I think that people are afraid of that.
You know,
and I think that there's a real mess
and a truth,
and I don't think people want to hear the truth a lot
of the time.
I think they want their own idea.
They want to expedite their own idea,
and they want a lot of yes men.
And because I'm not one of them,
then I'm,
and that's what,
then I'm avoiding the people
I don't want to be in their circle anyway.
So,
my solution to that,
and being heard,
and being able to
come up with a way to communicate,
was by navigating
in circles of people that
appreciate what I'm doing,
respect what I'm doing,
and can work in tandem
with what I'm doing.
And there's been so many people
who have met where,
you know,
you may say,
they're not A-List,
or they're not
the top tier,
or they're, you know,
it doesn't matter.
Everyone's A-List.
Everyone's top tier.
I'm succeeding
because I've surrounded myself with people
who are like,
righted.
Your Instagram account,
my God,
you do a great job
with that,
with the videos and things.
You talking about,
you know,
an addiction there,
where it's like,
you just go to the next one,
go to the next one,
I mean,
but, I mean, to me,
that's like,
I realize it's selling tickets,
but the fact of the matter is,
you're still moving people
through your videos
on Instagram.
Yeah, absolutely.
And you know what?
That.
I'm not even
reaching my potential
with that's because I haven't
been waiting for my team
to come together.
I have other,
so many moving parts.
Once the team gets back
together,
in Toronto,
in the summertime.
I've got a plan
to hit the city hard,
city hard and create a lot of really amazing content and then put that out and have it
kind of ready.
You know what?
I'm not going to get on my city, but in the winter, you can't film.
It's cold.
It's ugly.
Yes.
You know, it's not the right framing for you're not going to stop somebody and do something
in the middle of the winter.
So I'm very limited to a four or five month gap.
But now that I have the formula down and I have the ideas down and they're all ready to
go.
So wait and see what happens in the summer.
It's going to be mind boggling.
Your mantra is the man who sees tomorrow.
In reality, don't we all have this gift?
It's just that you've learned how to listen as well as hone your gift.
Yeah, absolutely.
I feel that everyone has the ability to do what I do.
I mean, I make a joke at a child to do it with 30 years back.
But we do it every day.
You know, I was talking to my wife and I said, I have an idea.
I'm going to go on stage and I'm going to put on a wrist support, you know, like if
you injured your wrist, I think.
And I'm going to say, just wear one.
I'm going to put one on and I'm going to say to the audience, I'm going to have it done
this yet.
But I know it's going to work.
I'm going to say, you know something about me that I haven't even communicated.
How many people have noticed my rest and everyone will put their hand up and I'll say,
automatically without me telling you anything, you know I hurt myself.
And because you know, I hurt myself, you could then assume because I'm middle aged that
I'm probably not playing a sport.
I probably fell and landed on my rod.
And you would be correct.
Of course, of course.
You see where I'm going and I say, now you have to look for those nuances and clues
in me.
And I'm actually communicating something to you.
And then I take the wristband off and I go, but it was just for show.
I've really, this, this is no injury, but my point is, is we all wear our thoughts
on ourselves.
Yeah.
What we do, how we speak, how we stand, what we wear, if there's a rep in, you know,
not, I'm not saying judging, I'm saying observing, if you look at somebody on the public transit
and they're covered in paint spatter, you can make an assumption, they're a house painter,
or an artist, you can look at their hands, you can look at little things about people.
There are lots of nuances that we, as people, give off, there's tells, and we all do it every day.
Some people call it judging, you can be that way, if you so wish, you can look at someone
and judge them.
I'm not using that word, but it is a way to do it.
Or you can look at it from a positive perspective.
And then you can look at patterns.
You can start looking at patterns in different age demographics.
You can start looking at patterns in different income demographics.
And after you do this for a while, you can start predicting the deadly accuracy things that are going to happen.
So the whole concept to be able to see tomorrow is that there are only so many outcomes.
There are only so many.
And nothing is going to so drastically change in one day.
Everything is a microchase.
So guess what?
You can predict what's going to happen.
At least you can come close to it.
And I'm not asking people to make a bet on the stocks.
I'm asking you to make a bet on yourself.
That's right.
And make a new one.
Make a small change and get to the next stage.
And I package it as entertainment, of course.
There's a big aspect of it that is a show.
But of course the underlying message is that everyone can do this with the right Friday.
Wow.
Where can people go to find out more about you?
And as you hit that road this coming summer, I want people to come and experience you.
Absolutely.
You're in North Carolina, is that correct?
Yes, sir.
Yes, sir.
So I may be in North Carolina.
I will let you know if that comes to fruition.
I'm also a toy collector.
And I'm going to be at a toy.
Yes, I'm a massive toy collector.
I've won the biggest action figure in toy collections in Canada.
So, you know, everything from original Johnny Wefts and GI Joe and Ninja Turtles and star everything.
I complete stats of this stuff.
I mean, I buy them every day.
So there's a toy convention happening in the summer.
And I'm talking to them about getting me on a panel.
And doing my act at the convention.
So if that happens, I will, I will let you know.
But generally speaking, if you go on my Instagram, the Siri on the Mine Reader or on my website,
the Siri on the Mine Reader.com, the current website, completely being overhauled.
Like I said, lots of things going on in many, many moving parts.
But it's about to relaunch.
I have a site ready to launch in about two weeks.
It's ready.
And it's going to have all my listings where I'm going to be in the States.
I have some dates in the States and across Canada and even in Europe coming up.
I love it.
You got to come back to this show.
I mean, even if we sit there and we break down toys, because I mean, that would be a subject all its own that deserves all the attention.
Absolutely.
I'm because I have a question for you.
Yes, sir.
What was your toy growing up?
What was your favorite toy?
It's sitting right here in front of me right now.
I have nine of them and I will continue to buy them because I want to I want to take them from the world and protect them.
It is a mumbo jumbo, which is a blue plastic elephant that does aerobics and it does acrobatics.
And so when I saw a city Brady on the Brady bunch with one of these, I do it.
I still collect these darn things.
And by you saying that I've already been able to deduct your age.
I've been able to deduct what era you're from.
If you were to go and that's where I am, I totally know the toys are amazing.
They're amazing.
Yeah, I absolutely adore toys.
And if you go online and you type the stereo on the mind reader toy collection, you'll see photos of me in the media with my toy house.
I have a house literally filled with toys.
I mean, I was buying last night.
I was at my residency.
And so we do how it works out the residency is I have my own little room.
Yes.
I'm currently bringing groups.
It's a speed-easy themed venue.
So people command they set up a bar they have dinner and then they buy a ticket to come and see me.
And so I get small groups of seven or eight, ten people that come in the room and I do 10, 15 minutes and then every 20 minutes another group comes in.
And it's quite a fun little ability for me to workshops or meet people very intimately.
But when I'm down time like laughing with slow is, you know, it's Toronto. It's still cold out of not too many shows
It probably been four or five that night. So I was just sitting in there on my phone for a bit of the night
Which is rare there? So what did I do? I went on a toy auction and I'm sitting there
And I'm watching all the stuff coming up and I'm buying
Heartland cowboys from the 60s. I bought a Johnny last
You know, I bought I bought a
Like a knockoff stretch monster from Mexico, and it's so old that the plastic is dry
Yeah, you can't even it's now it's not even a stretched monster. It's a block, you know, like you can't do anything with it
But it's vintage and I bought a bottle and I don't even know what I spent but I bought like the
Seven pieces last night and this is so not uncommon. I mean I buy toys almost every other day tomorrow
There's a big
I'm just a toy shop and draw a called tree house toys and collectables and they literally have a warehouse and they're like they went through it
And they're just having a garage sale a spring cleaning garage sale tomorrow
So you bet that I'm there first thing in the morning with a pocket full of silver
Because I'm gonna clean them out, you know, and and there's no room
That's the thing that's over
But you know what it brings me great joy and if anything brings you joy and it isn't hurting you why not you know
Why not to love people like to vacation. I think vacation. I really do. I travel all the time my vacation is at home
That's it. So I saw my home with things I love I love it
Man, you got to come back to this show anytime in the future that door is always gonna be open for a mystery
You'd be brilliant today, okay?
You too you might not be able to drop everything and book a ticket to Italy
But you can go to the theater on April 10th for you me and Tuscany
Will Packer the guy who produced girl's trip brings us a brand new rom com with all the ingredients of your favorite classics
Heart huge labs and sizzling chemistry set in the enchanting vineyards of Tuscany
You me and Tuscany is the escape we've all been waiting for the movie stars
Hallie Bailey and Reggae Jean Paige and it's the perfect crowd-pleasing film for date night or a night out with the girls
Get your rom com on with you me and Tuscany
Directed by Cat Coro only in theaters April 10th
Arroe Collins Like It's Live
