Mav And Joey 🔥 Validated
For Mav, the kid represents something he lost: spontaneity. "I spent thirty years optimizing my life until there was no life left in it," Mav admits. "Joey forgets to buy toothpaste, but he remembers to pull over for a sunset. I used to think that was irresponsible. Now I think it's a superpower." Currently, the duo is on a meandering journey from the red rocks of Sedona to the foggy forests of the Olympic Peninsula. They have no deadline. They are collecting something intangible: stories.
They are currently parked on the edge of the Great Basin, watching the stars bleed across a sky with no light pollution. Mav is sipping his thermos. Joey is strumming a chord that hangs in the cold air like a question. mav and joey
Joey nods. "Also, we hate the same things. People who speed up at yellow lights. Celery. And anyone who says 'it is what it is.'" For Mav, the kid represents something he lost: spontaneity
If you enjoyed this article, check out our other profiles on modern-day platonic odysseys. I used to think that was irresponsible
Joey grins at the memory. "I thought he was a cop for a second. But then he offered me a sandwich. Never say no to a free sandwich."
They pushed the Blazer to a gravel shoulder. Mav diagnosed a faulty alternator. Joey held the flashlight. By the time the tow truck arrived three hours later, they had discovered two things: a shared obsession with the obscure B-sides of 1970s rock, and a mutual distrust of the interstate highway system. What makes "Mav and Joey" work is the friction.
Mav was stranded. His prized 1972 Chevrolet Blazer, affectionately named "The Rust Bucket," had died just outside of Moab, Utah. Joey was hitchhiking west, trying to outrun a lease he couldn’t afford and a breakup he couldn’t articulate.