Alright, so I decided to figure out which Good Mythical Morning episodes are really the “best.” Sounds simple, right? Well, let me tell you, it’s a bit of a journey, not just a quick search online.

My Initial Dive In
First off, I’ve been watching Rhett & Link for a good while, on and off. But then I thought, let’s get serious. Let’s find the absolute gems. So, I just started watching. A lot. I didn’t have much of a system at first. I’d click on whatever thumbnail looked interesting, or maybe something with a high view count. You know how it is. Some days I’d be laughing my head off, other days I’d be like, “eh, not for me.”
Trying to Make Sense of It All
After a while, just randomly clicking wasn’t cutting it. There are SO MANY episodes. Thousands! It’s a mountain of content. So, I tried to be a bit more methodical. I started thinking about what kinds of episodes I generally liked. Food stuff? Games? Weird experiments? I even tried looking at some fan lists, but honestly, everyone’s got a different opinion, and most of those lists felt pretty generic.
I found myself gravitating towards certain formats. You know, the ones where they’re trying something truly bizarre or pushing their own boundaries. It wasn’t always about the biggest laughs, sometimes it was just the sheer audacity of what they were doing.
What Started to Stand Out for Me
Over time, I noticed a pattern in what I considered “best.” It wasn’t always the most polished or the most popular. For me, the top-tier episodes usually had a few things in common:
- Genuine reactions: When you can tell they’re actually surprised, disgusted, or delighted. That stuff’s gold.
- The “Will It?” series: Okay, this is a classic for a reason. Some of those combinations are just… wow. Hard to look away.
- Episodes where they’re clearly having a blast with each other. Their friendship really shines through in the best ones.
- Those taste tests of really weird or old foods. Always a winner for me. You just can’t make that stuff up.
I also started to appreciate the simpler stuff sometimes. Just them talking, riffing off each other. It’s not always about the big spectacle. But finding those needles in the haystack? That takes time, let me tell you.

My “Best” Isn’t Necessarily Your “Best”
Here’s the thing I really learned: “Best” is super subjective. What I ended up bookmarking as my personal favorites might be totally different from someone else’s list. I’d watch an episode someone raved about and think it was just okay, and then I’d find some obscure older one that I thought was brilliant.
So, my “practice” of finding the best GMM episodes wasn’t about creating some definitive, objective list. It was more about exploring their whole universe of content and figuring out what truly resonated with me. It’s like going to a massive buffet – you gotta try a lot of different dishes to find your favorites. You can’t just trust the menu descriptions.
It was a fun process, though. A bit time-consuming, sure, but I definitely have a much better handle on what makes a GMM episode click for me now. And I’ve got a solid playlist of my own personal “greatest hits” to go back to. That’s what really matters in the end, right?