Tom Hears More VoicesTom pulled down his seat tray, turned on his MacBook, and inserted his Inside Out DVD. That same gruff voice from Sunset Blvd. chastised him for buying another bootleg, but he ignored it once more as he flew back to New Jersey. Tom had always listened to that voice, and had a certain contempt for those who didn't, but there was something about Los Angeles that made his inner voice a little easier to ignore.
When the movie ended, Tom had an epiphany: for a long time, he had only been listening to one voice in his head: disgust. Disgust at all the creeps and jerks in the world, disgust at the people who didn't get his jokes, and disgust at the podcasters standing on his shoulders.
Disgust had served him well. But those four other emotions - joy, sadness, fear, and anger - too often took a back seat. Well, anger had his time in the driver's seat, and sadness too, but Tom's joy, as Patton Oswalt put it, tended to just rollerblade away.
Tom got off the plane determined to give equal driving time to each of his emotions.
Terre was waiting for him by the luggage carousel.
"What are you wearing?" she asked.
"A bowler," said Tom joyfully. "Patton gave it to me."
Terre pulled the bowler off.
Tom grabbed the hat and put it back on angrily.
"How long since you've shaved?" she asked, taking his bowler off again.
"Five days," he said fearfully.
"Well, you're not going six. Give me that."
The voices in his head were in pandemonium. So what if he wanted a new look?
"Okay," he said sadly, handing over his bowler.
"And that," she said.
Tom gave her his umbrella in disgust.
Despite his brief, belittling call after Mike's text message meltdown last week, Tom was really looking forward to seeing his associate producer, soothing any hurt feelings, and then zinging him again. So he was a little surprised when Mike didn't show up on time at the studio on Tuesday.
So Tom texted him.
HEY MIKE, GET OVER HERE
I MEANT THE SHOW GET A LIFE SORRY IF I WASNT CLEAR
SERIOUSLY MIKE I CANT DO THE SHOW WITHOUT YOU!!!
IVE GOT COORS LIGHT
YOU BETTER HAVE A GOOD EXCUSE OR I NEVER WANT TO SEE YOU AGAIN!!!!*^&@#%&!!!@! 
The voice of joy was telling Tom to take a deep breath, relax, and not assume the worst.
"Shut the fuck up," he said to himself.
Just as he was about to fire off a volley of disgusted texts, Mike walked in.
"You're late," Tom said, pointing to the clock. It was five after.
"Oh, sorry," Mike said. "I was hanging out with some Best Show fans I met at Massa's Sunday morning."
"That's a little braggy," said Tom. "Wait: morning?"
"Yeah. I heard you were there Sunday night. Sorry I missed you."
Tom was confused. If Mike worked mornings, who was that holding court on Sunday night?
"Double shift," Mike explained.
"Well, that still doesn't explain why you sent me all those texts," Tom said.
"What texts?"
Tom showed him his phone.
"I didn't send those," Mike said. "And I didn't get the ones you just sent. Let me look at your contacts. Hmm. It looks like someone switched my number with..."
"Dudio!" Dudio said, waltzing into the studio.
Now, anyone who knows Dudio knows what a prankster he is. And while most of us can appreciate a good practical joke, sometimes Dudio takes it a little too far. This was one such case.
"I'm really not happy about this," Tom said sadly, realizing that he had suddenly lost all leverage he thought he had over Mike.
"Where are the cashew clusters?" Mike asked.
"I'll get them!" Tom screamed angrily.
Tom went to his car, and when he came back, there was something wrong with the studio.
"Who moved all the furniture?" Tom said, disgusted.
Dudio smirked.
"Can we hold off on the jokes until the show starts," Tom said, trying to sound joyful.
"I doubt it," said Dudio, and began working on getting the stream ready.
"Play this on the show tonight," said Mike, handing Tom a CD with the words Blood Trail scrawled across it.
Tom felt a growing sense of fear. Mike was re-emboldened, if he'd even been de-emboldened in the first place, and Dudio was getting very lippy. If they teamed up - worst case scenario - they might be able overthrow the Best Show. Mike had the motive, Dudio had the means, and every Tuesday was another opportunity.
Was it too much to ask that they just pushed the right buttons and didn't push his buttons? To do his bidding without a bunch of back talk? Apparently so. His underlings were restless.
The show started off a little rocky, with some technical issues Dudio swore were not pranks. Tom had his doubts, but decided the best course was abject flattery.
"We've got Dudio in the house...painting with technology," Tom said joyfully and a little fearfully. "And if the stream isn't back up soon, you'll be Screwedio," he thought angrily, disgustedly, and sadly.
Soon enough, the stream was up, the show was rolling, and Tom's negative emotions evaporated, or at least melted.
Then Jon called. There was something uncanny about Jon's calls - some alchemy between their two personas - which still sometimes amazed Tom. As Bryce's Grateful Dead story unfolded into further and further absurdity, Tom forgot about the voices in his head and played along with the voice on the line, half-believing in the world they were creating. It was gold.
Then it was back to the calls. Someone suggested the Phillie Phanatic as one of the worst characters of all time.
"There's something joyous about the Phillie Phanatic," Tom said meditatively.
"What about Cathy?"
"Cathy...just makes me sad," he said.
Tom had really taken Inside Out to heart.
Then Charley Morgan called, and soon enough, the Best Show's status as a place for wholesome entertainment was thoroughly deflowered. To be fair, it was already missing quite a few petals, and Tom knew that Mike was loving it. All that was left was for Tom to acknowledge his Waterloo, play Blood Trail, and say good night. And then take unscreened calls for half an hour.
After the Half Hour of Power, Tom was in a reverie, slowly poring over the "menu of his mind," as he put it. Dudio had gone home after making some ominous comments about "next week's biiiiiiiiig echo problem," and Mike was savoring the cashew clusters.
"Do you ever hear voices in your head?" Tom asked.
Mike looked a little disturbed.
"Telling you what to do?"
"Yeah," Tom said.
"Well, Socrates talked about his
dæmon - this mystical voice which told him--"
"Not a demon, you weirdo."
Mike pulled his worn copy of the Apology from his satchel.
"No, I mean--"
"No apology necessary," Tom said. "I mean, like the five voices from Inside Out. I've been hearing them all week."
"Ah," said Mike. "I guess I saw it as a metaphor for how our emotions get more complicated as we grow up. And all those memory balls represent--"
"Can you please not use that expression?"
Mike was tired of being cut off.
"I bet you've got a lot of green memory balls, Tom. And some really red memory balls. And as for this Goofball Island of a--"
Tom was tired of not cutting Mike off.
"Get out!" he yelled.
Mike grabbed his things, and the remaining cashew clusters, and slinked out.
Tom noticed a small, faint smudge on the coffee table. It had been several days since he had let his disgust do the driving.
"Eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuugggghhhhh," he said, feeling like himself again.
When he got home, he and Terre talked about going to a movie on Friday.
"What do you feel like seeing?" Terre asked.
After the rollercoaster of emotions he had gone through this week, and all the trouble at the studio, Tom knew exactly what he wanted to see. Something to remind him of how things could be, if he just played his cards right and stopped listening to every little voice. Something to help him deal with Mike and Dudio.
"Minions," said Tom.