MetaFilter's site and server can always use upgrades of hardware, software, and bandwidth, as well as more stable funding for continued support of its small but high-skilled moderation and backend team! If you'd like to chip in, you can donate to Metafilter.

Podcast 16 Transcript

From Mefi Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search

A transcript for Episode 16: $40 Bridge to PEI (2007-09-30).

Pronoiac passed the podcast to otter.ai.

Summary keywords

people, post, thought, favorite, awesome, filter, dude, totally, blog, songs, link, books, zork, talking, play, glasses, house, classic rock, flickr, big

Transcript

mathowie 0:00 And welcome to the metal filter odd cast Alright, let's go. So let's try to I don't know, maybe we'll just do this for 40 minutes and quit. matter where we are just set a timer for the hell of the podcast page go, so it's been three drops off. Yeah, that was awesome. Like, I'm totally gonna use that on the intro. And I have to pick out some other. Oh, so this is the 16th episode of the podcast sweet 16. It's been three weeks. It doesn't feel like three weeks since the last one. But really,

Jessamyn 1:06 while I was away, we're away. Yeah, it

mathowie 1:09 felt like just been a week or two. But yeah, so that egg Trump song I'll play on the intro. And have you heard some of the superhero songs for the September? Music challenge?

Jessamyn 1:21 Hopefully not. I heard a couple when they first got going. And then I haven't I haven't listened to them in a while. Are they good at that? That ends on what the 30th So yeah, we've

mathowie 1:29 only got six. No, we only got five for that. Yeah, there's only been five uploaded, I knew that it'd be music challenge fatigue. It's I think it's a bit too much to ask people to keep writing and recording and posting songs while work.

Jessamyn 1:47 Well, once again, though. I feel like when it's nice weather here, I feel like it's nice weather everywhere. So maybe everybody's been outside. That's true.

mathowie 1:55 There's this awesome one with like a mouth bow that just sounds kick off some kind of superheroes.

Jessamyn 2:01 Well, and people have a couple more. They've got a couple more days. Yeah.

mathowie 2:05 And I'll play a couple other songs as bumpers here. I guess there's a lot of links to talk about for the last three weeks. My personal favorites are pretty close to the lots of the popular favorites.

Jessamyn 2:20 Well the the all out flat out favorite I believe was the Nick Cave filter. Somebody's taking very good advantage of the more. But you know, seriously, if you like Nick Cave, this is like lots of YouTube, but also like articles from all over the place. And you know, it was a timely, it was timely. It was on his birthday. 50 years later, it was really 152 favorites really, really very, very appreciated. Yes,

mathowie 2:53 post is insane. I mean, the moment I saw it, I was I was like holy shit. This is wiki pedia. And I thought about like when we had these debates about whether or not to add more insight for the last year so often talk about, like, this is kind of what I think you feared would become the norm or something like

Jessamyn 3:11 that. Everybody thinks these kinds of posts are freaking awesome. Well, you can just use them for huge block quotes. Oh, Time Magazine.

mathowie 3:19 Yeah. Oh, this is kind of what I was like, it's gonna get a little you know, Wikipedia, like if we do this, but like, this is insane. You can just tell how much work is in this just fucking

Jessamyn 3:30 once in a while. It's awesome. The problem is if you get like five of these every day, nobody reads them. But if you get one every week or so. But yeah, I knew something was up when I looked at the flagging queue. And there was like 15 flags on this. And everybody thought it was awesome. That that ever happens. Yeah.

mathowie 3:47 Yeah, I just Yeah, I saw this the other Saturday night or something on was this? Yeah, it was Saturday night. I was like, Holy crap.

Jessamyn 3:54 On the other hand, I get kind of overwhelmed that I look at these posts sometimes. And I'm like, oh, yeah, I'll totally get back to that with all my free time. And

mathowie 4:01 oh, yeah, I didn't even I still haven't added the YouTube auto links. And the more inside there's a zillion YouTube links that you can't just play in line really quick.

Jessamyn 4:11 So I don't use the inline player. So I don't Oh, come

mathowie 4:14 on. How do you live?

Jessamyn 4:17 How do I live? I've tried it. And it filter.

mathowie 4:21 We tried it. It's amazing. It's an amazing Why don't

Jessamyn 4:24 for the rest of us. Matt, why don't you tell us what so I don't even know what it is. What is Oh, so

mathowie 4:29 you turn it on? And adds just a little icon next to any YouTube link on meta filters

Jessamyn 4:35 plays it like vignette style, like great. Yeah, like you like

mathowie 4:39 so you'll pass over these things with three YouTube links in them and you can kind of just hit it in a load they'll start playing you can just close it immediately. It's kind of you know, it's the light box kind of pop up in the middle of your window. Yeah, so like a div with that the middle of Yeah, I mean, totally blacked out your browser. So you're just staring at YouTube but like it's so quick not to have to go to YouTube and let it load in. buffer load and all that other crap and all the comments go in use Shut up you jerk. Moon Landing fake. Yeah, so if there's if there's more than one YouTube link in any post it's the biggest time saver in the world because it feels more like scant skimming text in just sort of skim the YouTube like is click it load and either yes, no to keep it going. And you can turn it off go the next one go the next one without ever leaving the page or leaving your spot.

Jessamyn 5:27 I may try it. I may try it.

mathowie 5:30 Try it out. I swear it's like a humongous time saver for these kinds of things. So Nick Cave is the king of Metafilter for the month.

Jessamyn 5:38 Well and The Very Hungry Caterpillar is the king of I mean, you know all Nick Cave did was be born but this was actually a very hungry caterpillar is first post. Oh, really been a member since that late December. But this was their first

mathowie 5:53 post. They probably worked for Nick Cave. That's self link.

Jessamyn 5:58 Yeah, right. You go try that one.

mathowie 6:00 Whatever happened to that Flickr, other popular ones? The Flickr accidental upload by the guy with the tattoos? Did they ever find the guy I kept seeing, like more and more. Post? Oh, wow, they figured out

Jessamyn 6:14 no idea what you're talking about. Oh, so

mathowie 6:18 accordion guy, you know, Joey Joey posts, a link to this Flickr photo. It was a stolen laptop or stolen iMac from like, half internet cafe coffee shop thing that use using Flickr booth. If you ever use Flickr booth, it's like Photo Booth using the eyesight in the computer but just automatically sends it to Flickr. It's pretty much like you click the button and then it just goes on the internet. Yeah. And it's like no intervention, everything. All the passwords are stored and all that stuff. So computer gets stolen. And suddenly some dudes Flickr account has this guy with tattoos taking photos of himself. That was like holy criminal actually just took photos of himself. Oh, they got um,

Jessamyn 7:06 sweet. You sent me a link to what you're talking about.

mathowie 7:10 Now, you know how everyone in the podcast field. The other day. The other day, I was listening to another podcast and they're talking so deeply forever about something I'd never even heard of. No way the dude turned it into police. So it's an iMac, he steals it from a coffee shop takes it home. Liquor booth must have been right on the desktop. Because that's kind

Jessamyn 7:34 of see what you're saying. He stole a laptop that had this piece of software and then took a picture of himself the criminal did Yes, it was. This was like people jerking off around in an Apple store. Oh,

mathowie 7:46 yeah. So cyber cafe. They like they want their patrons to take photos of themselves for upload to like the coffee shops Flickr account. That's like, you know you're enjoying a lot of coffee shop is fun and wired. Yeah. And you're like checking email. You're like, hi, there's me and my latte Yo, you know, taking shots. So I would assume the desktop had like nothing on it except flicker booth, you know, shortcut. So the guy launched it was like, Oh, hey, look, it's a camera. He took the shot. And as soon as you press take shot, it's on Flickr. So people had he had all these weird tattoos. So people are going down to tattoo shops is on Vancouver. saying like, do you know a guy that's crazy dragon thing on the shoulder and in this lizard on his back? And oh my god, this is great. Yeah, so it's one of those internet justice things where you like, Yeah, awesome. He's so gonna get busted. This is gonna be great. And then for the last, I mean, it's been a few days and nothing had come up. They kept tracking like pictures of him on security cameras going in and out of the coffee shop and stuff. They actually track the IP address of the posting, so they could narrow it down. But I guess he just walked into a police station with the iMac and gave it up. That's good to hear closure.

Jessamyn 9:05 Well, you probably have to at that point, right? You're like Dude, stop photoshopping lol cats on my head.

mathowie 9:13 Well, I mean, it's probably like, you know, he's kind of, I mean, it's easy to be oblivious that flicker exists. You know, you might not have known about the whole thing, but I think they're really starting to circle the wagons. Sure, sure. So more and more and more.

Jessamyn 9:27 I'm gonna be in Vancouver. Two weeks. Oh, cool. Three weeks library conference. When is it?

Unknown Speaker 9:34 Oh, I

mathowie 9:34 don't know. End of October or mid October. mid October. Oh, wait. You're there when I'm gone. Right. Yeah, I think so. I think we're both going to see the well. Yeah,

Jessamyn 9:46 I've never been to Victoria before.

mathowie 9:47 Never been to Victoria. No, I know. I thought you always went there. Oh, that's what I thought you'd been there like a year or two ago. Vancouver Islands. Nice Victoria. He's gonna

Jessamyn 10:00 cheeseball someone else.

mathowie 10:04 What? No, I thought Victoria comes up a lot. I think it's like a, I mean, I have no idea what is to Vancouverites or BC people, but it seems like a silly Rose. It's an antiques shopping Yeah, I think it's like a silly little touristy vacation spot. Oh man,

Jessamyn 10:21 it's getting worse. I'm there all the time.

mathowie 10:23 It's gonna be rough. Go in there were like $1 Canadian is now voc

Jessamyn 10:27 every dollar American dude, I just got back from Canada on Monday. It sucked. Everything's expensive financially, financially. Yeah, otherwise, Canada's freaking awesome.

mathowie 10:35 It was awesome. But it was always awesome. Because like, everything was $1.50 or 25%. Cheaper, sorta, or overpriced, but cheap.

Jessamyn 10:45 It's awesome. Because they're so nice. They're so nice.

mathowie 10:53 Like a bad stereotype at this point.

Jessamyn 10:56 No, I mean, not if you're from New England. Like, people around here. They have many fine qualities but niceness is not among people in Halifax. Oh my god. Nice. And we had a teeny meetup. It was totally fun.

mathowie 11:08 Awesome. I would tell you an awesome place to stay on Vancouver Island, but it's probably a bazillion dollars now American.

Jessamyn 11:17 No, I'm staying with some Canadian buddy of a friend of mine. Okay, cool. Santoli?

mathowie 11:23 Let me see my other favorite post. Was this one of the comics dude at an olive garden? I don't know. I loved it was just so funny. Just this. He has a series like maybe 30 short comic panels of his actual time working at Olive Garden and how much he hated it.

Jessamyn 11:39 Hey, Greg, just one of our guys. izany

mathowie 11:43 Oh, yeah, that's right. To make a monkey job. The monkey joke.

Jessamyn 11:51 The monkey joke don't even read meta talk.

mathowie 11:53 Just like 10,000 people I have to keep track of sometimes I miss it.

Jessamyn 12:01 I'll find it. She's talking about apes. But the tag says monkeys in the pan Hmong culture post. Oh, one of those bazillion meta talk threads about tags. Why doesn't the post about Charles Darwin have something about Charles Elliman it? Somebody posted? Greg nod has the actual best. Yeah, comment. But I'm sorry. What else did he do? He was an olive garden.

mathowie 12:26 He worked in Olive Garden. This is awesome. Comics. Dine a little inside each day at Olive Garden.

Jessamyn 12:32 Oh, like not stand up comics. But like like he draws? Yeah,

mathowie 12:37 comics. sequential art. I don't know what the nerd going.

Jessamyn 12:41 Comics is fine. I just heard it wrong. Nick, that's awesome. Is it from projects? Or is it?

mathowie 12:50 No, I think it's something he did several years ago. And I don't know how someone found it. Maybe you should put them on the user sites. Mi fi user sites blog. Oh, that's

Jessamyn 12:57 a good idea. I love the Mi Mi fi user sites site because we

mathowie 13:01 get much love isn't me fine. Brooklyn, that made me want to add that URL. It's kind of fun way to meet people. You have to think of a way to incorporate that into the site.

Jessamyn 13:18 It has an RSS feed.

mathowie 13:19 Yeah. Oh, the other awesome accordion guy thing was the 72 scenes from The Simpsons. On his personal blog, he had 72 scenes identically ripped for movies. I mean, half of Simpsons humors parody or something close to that. And these are like shocked.

Jessamyn 13:45 That was like one of those weird little genius things from grow a brain Yeah, it's got amazing he I think grow brain to dude has amazing stuff.

mathowie 13:55 And it's like, you could do this all day. I mean, there's so many Simpson shots. I can't believe no one's ever done this before. Just the dude. Sorry, it's important. When I saw I saw this, The Simpsons shots. I just thought you know, wasn't that done? 10 years ago, but yeah, hasn't so. Very useful.

Jessamyn 14:18 There's stills and not scenes. Oh, man. This is great. Yeah, this is great. I actually this was another one those posts that I was like, Oh my gosh, that's awesome. I'll have to go back when I actually have time to load a big page and blah blah blah. That was lovely.

mathowie 14:36 Um, the other Star Wars musical people seem to like I thought they talked about that several years ago. I think it's found metadata years and years ago when it first talked about but the songs are terrible. It's so it's like a car accident to look at it and listen to it.

Jessamyn 14:57 That huh?

mathowie 14:58 Yeah, I just We'll see the Luke Skywalker song is horrible to sounds like community theater. Without if the people behind it It's an ambitious project and funny. It's a funny concept but executions.

Jessamyn 15:15 Right? It'll have lots of Star Wars fans really into it. But then Yeah.

mathowie 15:20 The other super popular thing was the Chinese. Was it Chinese? Oh no is the cheap eyeglasses. And the cool thing about that, did you see the cheap glass? Yeah, no,

Jessamyn 15:30 no, I saw that one.

mathowie 15:31 The cool thing about that is this all started with a guy's blog, glassy eyes dot blogspot. Like so. Guy has a blog guide. Just goes I don't know, he was searching for something he like bought, you know, another $500 pair of glasses or they broke. And then he's googling he's like, I'm gonna try all these wacky ass you know, overseas $20 Eyeglass places. And it's like, it was pretty good. And like, I remember life hacker link to his blog post about it. He was just some random guy in Blogspot. And he got in all these fights with optometrists and he not really optometrists, he seemed to be fighting in the comments with people that worked for optometrists that are in the business of selling $500 glasses.

Jessamyn 16:16 And they would be like, to understand the quality is totally different. Yeah, it's

mathowie 16:19 terrible. And like, you know, we are fitting specialists are so skewed qualified to get the right shape. And, you know, we tweak so much, you're not going to get out of some crazy outfit. What's your recourse if your eyes go badly, you know, basically a lot of Canada argument, right. Yeah, it was a lot of FUD. And so he ended up it got so this one post got so big, he started an entire blog about about it. And he started buying glasses from everywhere. And he's got something like a dozen pairs, and he has a review of each place. And the guys are kind of dodgy, who do these. I mean, they're like, a lot of them are based in China or India and like one of them actually spammed AskMe Mehta filter. We've actually banned someone members, I was Taiwan, it was

Jessamyn 17:03 like, I'm trying to figure out which glasses places are good. And they link to like these two total.

mathowie 17:08 But they they looked up every single post ever about eyeglasses, and they left the like identical comment, you should go to classes for free.com or something like that was glasses for something. Yeah. And it's like a real actual reputable place, they must have one or two dumb employees doing this stuff

Jessamyn 17:27 or spammers aren't on on payroll or whatever. Yeah.

mathowie 17:31 But so the so someone linked to what a couple of the stores and a lot of people flagged early on because it was like, you just linked it to like random places selling eyeglasses on the internet as a metaphor or post but I think the comments saved it. And early on people bought brought up this guy with a blog about the cheap glasses and it turned in this massive thread about what a scam it really is it really like optometrists started kicking in and going, you know, we do pay $8 for those lenses, we charge 124. And the frames are down to 10 bucks instead of 150. And this is a huge source of money for a lot of these things. And I think this consensus by the end of the thread is like nobody's ever going to buy anything from an optometrist again. Everyone's so pissed off and I had no idea LensCrafters and all this sort of like mall chain eyeglass places are all owned by the same company. Yeah, everything

Jessamyn 18:33 so I'm just out on having perfect vision. Every out this world

mathowie 18:39 every well every like sunglasses, hot, LensCrafters Pearle Vision like all these sort of like things that aren't optometrist places that are kind of they show up in shopping malls and mini malls. I don't know what you mean. They're all owned by one like European company with like one of the 10 richest people on the planet. The guy's

Jessamyn 19:00 like rich Swedish guys. Yeah. Yeah, just

mathowie 19:03 a strange, rich Swiss guy or something. It's like, if you've ever gone to I've had to go to LensCrafters twice. Now I broke my only glasses at like eight o'clock at night and I had

Jessamyn 19:13 dinner with other people, you get like a 30% Aaa discount. So if you just need like a shitty backup pair of glasses,

mathowie 19:19 but an emergency, I don't think I've ever paid less than $300 and it's been up to 500 Like it's crazy. And essentially what you can get 30% I don't support AAA because of the stupid highway bills

Jessamyn 19:32 that he doesn't lobby for highways.

mathowie 19:36 They actively tried to kill bike lanes. I can't give him my act.

Jessamyn 19:39 He gave me maps for Canada to keep you from getting lost and running over bicyclists Google Maps. Hi, no, dude, iPhone wouldn't work

mathowie 19:49 in Canada.

Jessamyn 19:50 Right? It doesn't work at my house either. That's true. I made lots of good iPhone jokes in Canada actually because of that.

mathowie 19:58 But Vermont is like Are Americans Canada in terms

Jessamyn 20:02 that I'm like Canada because my iPhone doesn't work either har har har, Ro Walter the farting dog

mathowie 20:07 to well to the farting dog. This sounds familiar. What is that? Well,

Jessamyn 20:11 it's probably a book for you on this read. It's a book about a dog that farts. Ah, but it was Nova Scotia. So he was wearing a kilt.

mathowie 20:19 Okay, what

Jessamyn 20:21 it's like new Scotland everybody's like Scottish there

mathowie 20:25 is no my geography so bad. What are the health is this like? It's like, by T AI and stuff like, okay. There's a lot of kickass web developers in the in the PE, as they call it.

Jessamyn 20:42 Every time I open my laptop anywhere up there, there was free Wi Fi everywhere. I couldn't believe it.

mathowie 20:47 So let me see. Wow, Nova Scotia is way the hell out there.

Jessamyn 20:51 Yeah, but it's like it's like a one hour flight from Boston. hour and a half. Yeah, it

mathowie 20:56 didn't look that far. Only.

Jessamyn 20:58 Oops, thanks to ask Metafilter Thank you. AskMe Metafilter. So it was oh,

mathowie 21:04 is p i the Newfoundland Island up there. Where the hell is

Jessamyn 21:09 it's north of Nova Scotia. It's north of New Brunswick. So there's Nova Scotia, you scoot west from Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. You drive across the $40 bridge. In your word Island, it was like a billion dollar bridge. And so it just costs a freaking like my sister and I were like, it's gonna be expensive. We're going to do it. And we thought expensive was gonna be like 12 bucks. No $40.75

mathowie 21:34 to use it. Oh, I see. It's a little teeny Island. Yeah, that's cute.

Unknown Speaker 21:39 They can't even see over the sides, because it's got like jersey barriers on both sides. So like looking at the bridge. It's amazing. But driving over the bridge totally sucks. Oh, that's good to see water, anything? Not really. But we saw it before. So 40 bucks each way. Just one way.

mathowie 21:55 It's free to go there. Oh, to come back.

Jessamyn 21:59 That's to come home. There's my one picture of it. It really was kind of beautiful. And I'd read about it in a book about fridges like it's it was the last grade bridge engineering feat of you know, the last century apparently.

mathowie 22:10 How long is it?

Jessamyn 22:12 Eight miles, something like that. Jesus. I mean, I don't know if it's in kilometers, right. But the funny thing is you drive across it and it's there's like a radio station you can listen to when you drive across it and they tell like stupid jokes and like they have like little news and stuff. But like the loop is only about five or six minutes long. And it takes you like 15 minutes to drive across the bridge. So you hear it like two and a half times. If you tune into like bridge radio. poorly.

mathowie 22:44 Shit phone's ringing. I probably can't get it. I'll let it go. I think that's everything I had for metal filter. Any other favorites? You had? Oh, wait, I guess I had the Zork map. Did you see the Zork map?

Jessamyn 22:57 This is no but I can just imagine from you saying that what it must be I know

mathowie 23:01 like you load it into like about Zurich, you load it and you're like holy shit, you know someone in sixth period or in sixth grade probably could have done this 25 years ago. Oh yeah, there it is. It was made in 1982 Oh, yes. It's it's actually like artistically viewed in its ridiculousness, and yeah, that's like control

Jessamyn 23:24 Damn. Oh, well, because I totally had like, I mean, I don't know about you, but like I totally had visions of what all this stuff looked like and now like seeing it in a little box is really oh my god the troll room.

mathowie 23:37 I swear. I only got about 20% into it but actually I played it a couple years.

Jessamyn 23:43 Oh my god, sorry, fine.

mathowie 23:45 Andy bale and waxy hooked up Zork to I am like you could plays or via I am. And it was actually a fun way to waste an hour here. And then the whole first like 2030 scenes I just kept picturing like places in Oregon I'd seen before like the boarded up house with the mailbox and the cliff looking out, like all the basic stuff when you start out. And I wanted to like do a photo project where I just cruised around Oregon taking photos of Zork. So they'd be like, like, you know, you just present the photo, and then you just have the line from Zork next to it.

Jessamyn 24:22 I think that's a great idea. I think that's a brilliant idea. That's like

mathowie 24:25 my someday retirement.

Jessamyn 24:29 We have winter time, which is when we get all those projects done. That's a big problem on the West Coast.

mathowie 24:35 Yeah, we all go inside like hermits and don't do anything.

Jessamyn 24:39 You just drink a lot of coffee and get depressed. We actually have to stay inside and do something to keep warm.

Yeah, no, that's amazing. I mean, I used to play sports like in junior high is that possible? Like we had a we had like a coupler modem and I could dial into the mainframe where my dad worked and play at home.

mathowie 25:00 Oh geez,

Jessamyn 25:02 kid actually kiddish felt like a kid, it must have been my dad selected home. I was like, 11. Yeah.

mathowie 25:10 I think 1983 CompuServe. And I think I played Zork a little bit, but I didn't have a lot of patience. So I just give up after 10 moves.

Jessamyn 25:18 See, I had a lot of patients and not that much else to do. But it was like the only thing to do with the computer, you know, you could like program it and basic or you could place work.

mathowie 25:26 That's my problem. I grew up in Southern California, it's 72 degrees in perfect every single day outside, I just like, I'd play games for maybe a half hour then go ride my bike, like no. Nothing like

Jessamyn 25:41 nothing like winter, no.

mathowie 25:56 There, metal filter posts,

Jessamyn 25:58 I think most of mine that most of mine, you talked about the only thing I really noticed with metal filter. And this is a great segue on to AskMe. And a filter is there was like a lot of posts. I mean, like I know that meta filters are very literate and erudite group of sort of intelligent people by and large, or at least there's a lot of those people around. But I was surprised at how many favorites in meta filter. And like the Favorite List favorite of all favorites, was an asked meta filter three weeks ago. So like,

let me see. Let me see. Let me see that one of the 30 day favorites in meta filter was the

where is it was the librarian who had the wiki of hundreds of online learning sources that Johnson posted. Oh, yeah. And of course no Johnson. It's like immediate favorites, whatever. And we had to mention them anyhow. But when you go into AskMe edit filter, the favorite is favorited thing of all favorites. Let me Yeah. Now I've gotten myself now I've gotten myself confused. Oh, yeah. Like I've never seen anything at all. It's the last 24 hours.

mathowie 27:08 Oh, yeah, the post on the single book, I guess. Did we mention it?

Jessamyn 27:13 favorited? Like your 30 day? AskMe? Still not?

mathowie 27:17 No, no, that happened like, the day after we record the last podcast. So

Jessamyn 27:23 this year this because it was also favorite in the last 24 hours. We actually need something. Something that'll get you like the last week in the last 30 days. Like we haven't

mathowie 27:32 Yeah, we have the secret URLs here. They are.

Jessamyn 27:37 Linked to secret URLs.

mathowie 27:40 Yes, yes. Yes. This it's it's hard to mount a leaf. There's I know there's a mountain of stupid things. I've been fixing them. Like if PBS around this would be done in five minutes. Like he just gets it done.

Jessamyn 27:54 I know he's Mr. Handle it dude. I wonder if that's gonna if he's going to be able to maintain that.

mathowie 27:59 I think he Yeah, I think you will. Yeah, I think it'd be okay. It's just that he's finally home with the baby.

Jessamyn 28:06 I read I read. That's so great. So yes, the single which single book is the best introduction to your field or specialization within your field for laypeople.

mathowie 28:16 This showed up on dig this guy all over the web. So that's why it's sort of skyrocketed. Uber

Jessamyn 28:21 Uber favorited. Yeah. Well, this is this is Lehman ask who's made two posts to meta filter and eight posts to ask meta filters since joining in November of last year, they linked to one user. They've given like 30 answers, and they have the most I believe favorited I mean, do we have like most favorited AskMe Oh,

mathowie 28:41 we do? We refuse to build that stuff?

Jessamyn 28:44 No. We refuse to build it. Good. Right.

mathowie 28:47 Right. Okay, on message.

Jessamyn 28:51 But at any rate, 669 users Mark, this is a favorite game for pig. I mean, there's still users. Yeah, and it's just amazing list of, you know, awesome books to read. Of course, my I think my comment was first.

mathowie 29:07 No, it's great for like, you know, it's something I'd love, I would love to ask, it's silly. If you're a plumber, like what's the one in the plumbing is not a good example. But great example. I'm sure. There's no awesome books on plumbing, but like, like, awesome books

Jessamyn 29:23 on plumbing? Well, I'm a librarian. Don't say that.

mathowie 29:27 But I love it. It's for lay people. So it's like you're an evolutionary psychologist or something that seems really obscure and hard and hard to explain and hard to get for lay people like what's the one book that brings it all into perspective and how I can learn something from it as a regular dude without a PhD? That's essentially what the question was shooting for. There's this awesome bunch of like, holy crap. Yeah.

Jessamyn 29:53 Well, it'll be interesting too, because so many people put in Amazon links that if this post getting really popular, some sort of uptick in metal, Amazon? I see that. But like I read that I mean, you know, after commenting in that post, it just showed up in my recent, you know, my recent activity like for weeks and weeks, and it was great. Like everybody had really interesting stuff to say. And it's not one of those topics, like I've said about books and cooking. People don't fight about it. They're like, Oh, another great book, yay. For books. They're not like you. That's not an evolutionary bias. So it was, it was a great,

mathowie 30:31 what's funny as I thought about the ones about the web, I was like, yeah, those are pretty good books. Yeah, there's, you know, but hearing about completely obscure topics. I was like, Oh, I gotta get that fluid dynamics textbook. That sounds awesome. Like, I hope people felt that way about the about the weird, you know, web things that we're talking about, if that's correct. Yeah. That's completely, you know, mystical to them. Alright, sweet. The person. Thanks, everyone, you won't make the best answer. Because the entire thread is awesome. Right? Well,

Jessamyn 31:06 what can you do unless you go read them all? Somebody, somebody posted a comment that it was the most expensive thread and meta filter history because everybody was now gonna go shopping and buy a bunch of books on fluid dynamics they would never read. Wow.

mathowie 31:19 Nobody mentioned Strunk and White until almost the very end. It's like basic people

Jessamyn 31:24 totally dish on Strunk and White when it shows up in metal filter now, though,

mathowie 31:28 what do you mean? Well,

Jessamyn 31:29 they're like, Oh, they're

mathowie 31:30 like outdated,

Jessamyn 31:32 a little tired. It's a little snooty. Some of it's outdated, et cetera, et cetera.

mathowie 31:38 The Strunk and White thing it's ever happened to me. Of course I do. I had this boss that would like write me these niggling little emails about like, you know, punctuation, like, is insane. I was showing mock ups and stuff. And he would criticize punctuation and

Jessamyn 31:57 like you double spaced after that period,

mathowie 31:59 right? That's not an M proper M dash or N dash. There's a difference. People are crazy. So I wrote something for the blog. It's like multi paragraphs long and he sends four or five grammar edits and I actually had to look one up to like, disagree with him prove it that I use the parentheses correctly outside the period, which is a rarity, but you can he he sent an Amazon copy of Strunk and White to my house like this happened on like a Friday night and Monday morning like Strunk and White shows up like nothing. He didn't say anything about it. I was just like, You're the biggest fucking asshole on the planet. Oh, my God, I was passive aggressive thing I've ever had to happen to me.

Jessamyn 32:43 Wow, that's crazy.

mathowie 32:45 I guess I just checked the Amazon earnings are probably up. 50% Yeah, it's Wow. Yeah, I guess it's skyrocketing. I guess a couple 100 bucks.

Jessamyn 32:56 Well, one of one of the other posts that I liked and asked me to filter that was it was I mean, these are great. I think examples of how you can have kind of a what's the best X or what's your favorite X that don't turn into, you know, I like blue. I like orange. I like a bluish orange. I like orange blue. The other one that I really liked was the international radio stations. What are what are really good sort of eclectic radio stations worldwide. And basically it was somebody who's like, you know, I really like online streams or radio stations, but I'm running out of really good ones. And and it's just another nice list of people being like, oh, yeah, FMU is great. And this is great. And that's great. Like, I know you've written before that like now that you listen to iTunes more you don't listen to the radio as much. Yeah, I have that same problem. And so I don't discover new music as much unless I'm like driving around in the car, which as we know, of course is all like, crap. Pink Floyd. Basically up somebody finally asked that question. Oh, my God, that was the best. Let me see if that was in the

mathowie 34:00 wow, these are all awesome stations. Well, exactly. All W's so I can get them you know, except online. There's a Nova Scotia. Answer. Really? I just I was just scrolling advice on Nova Scotia.

Jessamyn 34:16 Well, there was this one thread, and I don't know if it was, Oh, yeah. It was on September 20. When was our last podcast? What

mathowie 34:23 wasn't seven that? Yeah,

Jessamyn 34:25 it was the seventh. This was my favorite. And I totally forgot about it. Because this is the question that I have had that somebody finally asked How come Classic Rock stations the world over play the same songs by Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd and rush?

mathowie 34:39 Hmm. I don't know that.

Jessamyn 34:41 Because like classic rock I grew up in that era. There was lots of different stuff on the radio, but now it's like five shitty Pink Floyd songs. Two crappy Led Zeppelin songs, two good Led Zeppelin songs. And like one good and one bad song by rush. And then there's actually somebody who lists who says, Well, I actually work for are, you know,

mathowie 35:01 are those just everyone's favorite songs?

Jessamyn 35:03 No. It's just, I mean, yeah, it's not only that their favorite, but it's that like people like them and they're not unlikable. And then somebody actually posts the thing about like, well, here's how classic rock actually kind of works. And people don't people don't, you know, nobody's requesting them. It's, it's just like songs that are really easy to segue into segue out of test well, et cetera, because I have that around here. If I'm just listening to like, whatever my normal local radio station is, which is some Clear Channel nonsense if I'm not listening to Michael, my local indie station, yeah, they're playing Pink Floyd, like nine times out of 10 when I drive, and my commute is like 18 minutes long, basically, you know, so there's only like, five songs I get to listen to or six and one of them is always Pink Floyd, and I've never understood it. I've never ever answered my problem.

mathowie 35:57 I haven't listened to classic rock since like, probably the mid 90s. In Southern California. I would listen to a lot just being bored and someone answers gave an answer. That's exactly what I thought of the first time you said classic rock, which is what? I bet that every song from Steve Miller's Greatest Hits. 1974 978 is on the playlist of every classic rock radio station, but not a single cut from any other album. Right? Well, I remember Steve Miller, Steve Miller, Steve Miller, over and over over again. This is like 10 years ago. Just every crash from the Greatest Hits sometimes Boston but almost always just nothing but Steve Miller.

Jessamyn 36:35 Yeah, Boston, Steve Miller. Yeah, there's like eight bands or something. And there's no reason it has to be that way. Like there were a lot of bands. Yeah.

mathowie 36:42 But this is an extension of something from maybe a month or two ago that I just skimmed. I don't remember the details. But if someone's saying like, I think the thesis of their question was I really loved mid 90s College Music and you know, I keep hearing it on all these stations that play all this retro junk. You know, like there's hardly any new music on the radio, it seems now everything's from like, 1995 just being replayed to you. And it's like, is that just nostalgia? Or is new music crappier? Is? Was music really great in 1993? Or is it just my college fumes? Like getting the better of me? And I think the consensus, skimming through and this is a month or two ago, I'm sure other people listening to this can remember, it's specifically a surprise. We might have mentioned it. I don't know. I don't think we did. We're like you know, mostly it's nostalgia. Dude, you remember when you were happy and you know, having lots of sex and goofing around. But like, there's plenty of good music these days. It's just harder when you're like 35. And you know, working in a law office or something to pick up on new music. That's good.

Jessamyn 37:46 Right, and you don't have a bunch of buddies and you go to shows with them all the time and blah, blah, blah. you're

mathowie 37:51 immersed. Like you're immersed in it when you're in college, like music is a huge part of your life. And

Jessamyn 37:55 it's every pitch for you go see shows you Yeah, whatever the pre pitchfork was. What was the pre pitchfork

mathowie 38:03 zeroing stone or spin?

Jessamyn 38:05 I used to have a subscription and Rolling Stone and then spent Yeah, I used to and

mathowie 38:09 I used to hang out in a record store, like, friend worked at one I would just go there on the board.

Jessamyn 38:14 Well, and then we had no depression in Seattle, which was, you know, right then. So

mathowie 38:19 Kay k xp, which was always probably good,

Jessamyn 38:22 K CMU we used to have. And then there was the big fight.

mathowie 38:28 Let me see, some of my favorites are like, here's all my specific favorites. One of them was like, someone's mom and dad are hoarders actually, are two threads sort of about like, Hey, I

Jessamyn 38:43 saw that one. I saw that one I have.

mathowie 38:45 Here's the other one, which is like dad stroke, health declining, mom's health declining, you know, they're both retired, she's trying to care for him. And the other one was the hoarders and both of them are sort of like, I am the 30 year old person doing my life and my parents are deteriorating, what do I do from across the country? And both of them are awesome. In that, like, I had no idea. That's the whole point of social workers and stuff. I'd note there's all these support mechanisms, people are like, there are services that specialize that are like government run that will go in and clean up a hoarders house and, and put them up in a hotel, and they'll find you a therapist and all this stuff like that. But I just thought,

Jessamyn 39:24 I mean, if the system is working properly, I mean, a lot of what it does is like children family stuff. Yeah. Yeah, that's a lot of what a lot

mathowie 39:30 of us don't like to be New York to like, like New York has a really nice structure. And if you're in the middle of nowhere, you don't have that as much, but I just really never even thought that like there was those sort of services to help out in that sort of way.

Jessamyn 39:44 Well, and part of the issue in New York especially or any big city, is that if you have one person in some sort of apartment building who has some sort of problem that affects everyone, it's like that that's like a hygiene ish issue. It affects everyone so everyone gets bed bags are roaches or mice or you know, whereas out here like, I'll fill my house up with goats. It doesn't really. We had a we had a goat Porter,

mathowie 40:10 for real. For real, like, Lady awesome.

Jessamyn 40:14 It was a crazy go dude. And you know, on the one hand, you're like, Well, if he wants to bring his goats into the house in the winter, that's kind of his business. But then then it becomes a question of like, how far is too far? Whereas if you're in the city, sort of community norms dictate that? Yeah.

mathowie 40:29 So I mean, some of them are borderline, they'll come in, you know, steez the house and clean it and put your parents in this place and try and help them it is, like some of its kind of pushing some boundaries. Here's my

Jessamyn 40:41 drawing a line between like, what's hoarding? And what's just being messy? Yeah, I think some people it's really obvious, but for other people, it's like, is not cleaning the cat box in and of itself? You know, to gross? I'm sorry.

mathowie 40:57 Oh, this is my favorite. Awesome, like, weird question. Just because,

Jessamyn 41:03 yeah, I love that. Launched by female magician. Yeah, that's the question of

mathowie 41:07 the person goes, Are there any female magicians or assistants here? Do you know any web resources or blogs regarding women and professional magic, and this is like, just mind blowing that, you know, the blogs, these stupid things 12 techies did, and you know, the late 90s, and like little blogger and pirate like, has, has grown. So there's so many blogosphere, there's, you know, sort of, you have to Oh, yeah, I

Jessamyn 41:31 mean, I belong to the library blog goes

mathowie 41:33 right. And then there's knitting ones. And there's a Kottke of the knitting blogosphere that everyone loves, and hates, and like, all this stuff, and that there actually are magician, blogs and communities. And then that there was steek. There was one just about feminine magicians and magicians assistants, and they have an online outlet that's like God, like it's so I just thought there's a one in a billion chance of even getting an answer and that you had answers. And there was whole world of magicians online. Auditions,

Jessamyn 42:05 I thought that was totally, I thought that was totally great. Like my other,

mathowie 42:09 I just, I just loved. I just loved the idea of a magician's assistant having a blog from the point of view of magician's assistant ship, like, and then I held the hat and the Rabbit came out for him. And

Jessamyn 42:25 it's, there's a lot of work involved in being a physician assistant, and you might want to blog about that. The sidekick role, generally, I think, is horribly misunderstood. And, you know, oft overlooked, so yeah, I'll have to go, I'll have to go check that out. My other two favorites from AskMe. Metafilter was this one, which is called Alien senses. But what it really is, is somebody who's putting together a list of like, a species that doesn't have you know, it's the I'm writing a book thing, but it's a species that doesn't have the five senses and has totally different sets. And so this person, believe it's a woman is like, let's talk about other senses. And of course, there's tons of other kinds of senses, you know, like, being able to see electromagnetic fields or proprioception, which is like, the ability to tell where your arms and legs are, or like the way birds migrate and they can they can sense the magnetic fields and I was just listening to this on the radio, they can, like, sense the magnetic fields through their eyes, but they're not. They don't see them. It's just It's weird. They you see in quotes, and then Robert Siegel asked some stupid question. I turn the radio off, but there's a sense of smell. There's the electric fish that

mathowie 43:36 sonar dolphin, you know, echolocation. There's all kinds of weird.

Jessamyn 43:41 Yeah, sensing chemicals. Oh, yeah. Women who can sense two different kinds of green? No, seriously, dude, it was it was so interesting

mathowie 43:51 because like super tasters and weird stuff, the people

Unknown Speaker 43:55 are actually super tasters, the people who see numbers as colors. Yeah, that's all speaking of the super tasters are people that think peppers tastes bad. And broccoli. It's different. It's a it's a recessive gene. Yeah. You're super taster. Yeah, it's the same kind of thing.

mathowie 44:15 I always thought all kids were super tasters. Because when I was a kid, I everything playing and couldn't handle anything. And then and then I guess I broke my tongue, like going to rock concerts breaks your ears, and then I needed hot. That was always my sort of personal hypothesis.

Jessamyn 44:31 What did you break your tongue on? Did you like a tree and you were gonna starve

mathowie 44:34 or like at 18 or 19? I just started using, I don't know, mild sauce or something. I stepped it up something. My mom is always using gnarly stuff. So

Jessamyn 44:46 Oh, yeah, my mom will eat pretty much anything. And my dad used to travel a lot and so he would eat everything. But like at home. He's total like meat potatoes. Like he eats at the same restaurant every day for lunch and orders like the same thing. Oh my god. It's yeah, it's a little it's a little OCD. Dude, there's like, my mom is like, let's go to the Afghan grill. None of my friends want to go to the Afghan. Yeah, let's go. I'm like, All right, dude.

mathowie 45:09 This other this one was awesome. Super useful asthma.

Jessamyn 45:15 Exactly. That's also my favorites too how to make conversation with celebrities at public events, or what

mathowie 45:21 do you do when 10 feet away as a celebrity without being dorky? Like period? Like what? You know, sometimes your elevator? Yeah, sometimes your elevator, you're at restaurant and you're like, oh my god, I love their work. What do you say like last time I was at a bar. And after a concert, and I ran into David Byrne and like, we were both there waiting for beer are two inches away from each other. So I just said like, Do you know him? He doesn't know you? Right, right. And I know what that feels like, but go into meetup. But it's like, yeah, all I said was like, Oh, hey, I really admire your work, which is like one of the loser things to say.

Jessamyn 46:04 But if you want to have a conversation, or if you just want to be like, Hey, how's it going? Big suit.

mathowie 46:09 I don't know what I wanted. I just like, You're a fucking genius, dude. It's not just good music, everything, the whole package if people didn't see, yeah, all I said was I really admired your work. And he was like, thanks. And that was it. I didn't really want to have a conversation. I think I just wanted to tell him like he's really, really good. And he should keep doing what he's doing. But ambrosia somebody had some awesome stories of what to do some weird stuff about how you ignore them. And they hate that people are talking about how to tweak their egos, because they're, like, famous people are just all ego. What was that thing where you tell them there's something on their shirt or something? That was

Jessamyn 46:51 Oh, yeah. And they totally don't expect it because they're gearing up for you to be like, you're awesome.

mathowie 46:57 And what was some of the other some of that? Like there's some openers about how you should phrase it so that it beefs up their ego and doesn't mention you. And then there's the awesome one with Bong. Oh my god, the greatest story is Scotti. Scotties was that story or was that monster that was Michelin stars? Yeah, getting kissed by Bong Oh, Jesus Christ and hanging out with them as hotel room. It's just mind blowing.

Jessamyn 47:22 And saying that he was really short. In college. I

mathowie 47:25 had this freaky friend who was just a weird guy like an autograph, dork. That always, I think

Jessamyn 47:31 slink to in that thread. Is he the one what? I just said, Steven. Steven garden's?

mathowie 47:38 No, I'm just saying like in college, I had this friend who was just obsessed with autographs. I always thought it was something from his childhood. Just some ridiculous hobby, you know, that people don't really do when they're 22 or something. But then we went to a concert and had backstage passes. And I had to get autographs for him because he needed everything double autographed, and it was a double autographed. What does that mean? Just the dumb at like, while we have a poster autographed by the band. Let's get another poster autographed by the band it has something to keep and or when to sell or like, just in case something happens like it's just crazy kind of forced. That's annoying. Yeah, but I ended up talking to Richard Thompson for like 20 minutes, which was fun. Actually, I did forget I did shoot the shit with him. Just because I'd never heard him ever and then saw him open for Crowded House. This is like 91 or something. Richard Thompson's awesome Australian dude,

Jessamyn 48:29 I'm a total Oh, are you kidding? I totally know who he is. He's awesome. He does that awesome cover of Britney Spears? Oops. I did it again.

mathowie 48:36 Any any had the Kenny G stuff right with him? Like mocking can eg I think moodini Was that is Australian. I think Kiwi or Australian.

Jessamyn 48:51 Question Wikipedia. What are you laughing at?

mathowie 48:56 librarian doing library work?

Jessamyn 48:59 What? Spawn? I can't spell. Yeah, my parents used to listen to him. He's British. Huh? Yes. You just think he's Australian because you think he's so cool.

mathowie 49:13 He was hanging out with Crowded House kiwis. And he sounded vaguely Australian on stage. Oh,

Jessamyn 49:18 boy. There's nothing you can do to piss off British people are Australians tell him they sound like the other people.

mathowie 49:23 Yeah, exactly. Yes. Especially friends from Adelaide that have the gentle accent sound exactly like British people. And they

Jessamyn 49:30 Hey, I have a friend. I have a friend from Adelaide. Like you

mathowie 49:33 know, Far North Queensland and Gold Coast people they are crazy you know, Crocodile Dundee, but people from Adelaide sound gentle and British and yeah, they get confused all the time. He's just awesome on stage like playing by himself acapella practically needs like, two chords at once. And he was amazed.

Jessamyn 49:54 I saw him at Bumbershoot and I was I was totally I was totally blown away. You know,

mathowie 49:58 I tried to see him in Port. landed a couple years ago at the Aladdin which is a pretty big theater and the place I'd seen huge indie rock bands there and the place is half full and this Richard Thompson for some reason, there were people like hanging out in the rafters and it was billion degrees inside from all the bodies. It was crazy. I've never seen anything like it. People are insane about him here in Portland.

Jessamyn 50:23 Yeah, he's big in the Pac Northwest. So any other big big things to mention besides the superhero music challenge ending on Sunday years coming to the United States and there's gonna be a ton of meetups all all around everywhere. Oh, cool.

It's gonna be in Vermont next week.

mathowie 50:42 I heard other quick rundown all the ASP Metafilter last bit.

Jessamyn 50:50 So I'm still looking for that one

mathowie 50:51 about good automatic pod. Someone wanted an automatic podcasting that work by wireless like magic. Like so. Let's say you walk

Jessamyn 51:00 into the room and your iPad suddenly starts playing havoc.

mathowie 51:03 No, no, no. Like you drive. If you drive an hour each way every day. And you park your car at night. It joins the network and pulls down new podcasts. Let me drive out the next morning. That's got new podcasts for you.

Jessamyn 51:16 That's like the Cory Doctorow plan right? Yeah, there actually

mathowie 51:19 there have been some wireless stereos but no one really found a good solution. Let me see the other one. That one wasn't that good. Cannot

Jessamyn 51:27 find this parents one. I remember reading it but it's not under human relations. It's not under parents. It's not under the orders. Yeah, yeah,

mathowie 51:35 it's not recording recording.

Jessamyn 51:38 I did. Well, I didn't search I just looked at tags. Oh, speaking of which, the back tagging project is still going if anybody wants to get involved

mathowie 51:49 is asthma filter done yet?

Jessamyn 51:51 I mean, that's medical term is done. And we've got like 17,000 posts left in meta filter which is not that many compared to how many we started with.

mathowie 51:59 Oh, so asthma filter we tagged something like 20,000 posts or something? Yeah. Jesus Christ. That's awesome. It's crazy. How

Jessamyn 52:07 does the sword I'm looking at the search. It's like

mathowie 52:12 I don't know probably date. Oh, my favorite another favorite anathema

Jessamyn 52:18 loss? I found it. Filthy is the word I was missing.

mathowie 52:21 The someone's source, the Calvin and Hobbes pain like comic that was killing me like five years ago, the moment the moment I saw it, maybe what late 90s Now it's like early 2000s. I was like, I remember that strip. Like I saw it was like Cowen's penal Chevy logo or something. I was like, he was like in the corner scheming something. I I went through all my Calvin and Hobbes books one night for like eight hours and I couldn't find it and it was killing me killing the water balloon. That's why yes, and when I saw that, I was like, holy shit. That was the that was this comic. I was thinking of add almost, you know, at eight Calvin Hobbes books, I think Calvin Hobbes is still going at the time I saw this and

Jessamyn 53:02 right. And it was answered in 10 minutes by MC low carb and then again by 23. SkiDoo, like, you know, 15 minutes later.

mathowie 53:09 Yeah, um, the other one,

Jessamyn 53:12 this is it. What is that? That was about the, I thought that was the guy that was growing man

mathowie 53:18 boobs. No, that's another funny one. It's not funny. It's tragic. Tragic. It's like he just put on some weight. I have that problem of

Jessamyn 53:28 you have Manboobs? Yes, I thought you just had a meet beard.

mathowie 53:31 Meet beard and man boobs. That's how fat I am. This, this one's like a lost camera. And the only cool thing about it is that you can search. The third comment has a link to a search of Google digging in the Flickr for EXIF data that mentions your email, and that you stick your email address in the camera and the person that lost the camera did this I guess it got stolen. You can stick your your email be buried in the EXIF data. Then you can actually Google search it and there's like an example Google search for people's emails buried in their EXIF data on Flickr, and it's pretty cool. So if someone did steal your camera, you can track them down that way if they upload it to Flickr, which is you know, an edge case but I thought that was whatever dude,

Jessamyn 54:26 you know, Judas got her camera back to be gotten back.

mathowie 54:32 Those are the only bad Canadians I've ever known where they can oh, gosh, they were hot. That was one thing I remember telling Judy.

Jessamyn 54:40 Karla Homolka was also Canadian. So you know, I

mathowie 54:43 can't believe they should get their Canadian citizenship revoked for being that have

Jessamyn 54:47 to move down here with the rest of us. The rest of us assholes.

mathowie 54:52 Yeah, so yeah, I think that's pretty good. I think we've taped 45 minutes

Jessamyn 55:00 Yeah, maybe even a little bit more do you have do you have outro music because that other song that's on the front page of music is actually or the other popular? Yeah it's actually pretty good

mathowie 55:10 What's it oh the egg thing

Jessamyn 55:15 no this is why I'm fantastic mashup oh by the Manitoba regional Junior body I don't even know what Kabaddi is.

mathowie 55:22 What are you talking URL please? On the front page

Jessamyn 55:27 language now it's in like top playlisted or something like that. That's the list that I usually look at if there's not anything that I've heard most favorited tracks

mathowie 55:37 this is why I'm fantastic

Jessamyn 55:55 Yeah, I'd heard it on my computer but I thought it was just some mash up that I got from somewhere else. But then then I found it here

mathowie 56:04 the hell is that? Did he just like cut up sample shop? Yeah. Oh man crazy.

Jessamyn 56:10 I kind of like it

mathowie 56:13 for now phonetic nd Yeah,

Jessamyn 56:15 that's about it see that's another great ending you just have to pick one

mathowie 56:24 here that'll be my ending every week it's different That's my secret news

Unknown Speaker 56:46 Oh, I wanted to tickle your 100,000

Unknown Speaker 56:58 you can hear my sound like the sun and a swirling dust bowl there was some on found me that I couldn't share some kind of crazy code that I couldn't bring every leaf in the forest was all out of blue and there was a curtain a small drum crush behind a wall of solid steel that I could punch through

Unknown Speaker 58:01 summon all fired off all these things these demons and villains are keeping me Oh

Unknown Speaker 58:24 again I was just this close but just as close getting further once I got on stage I had nothing to say

Unknown Speaker 58:49 I believe

Unknown Speaker 58:52 I could go strong

Unknown Speaker 58:55 because you know you

Unknown Speaker 59:09 just maybe you don't want me to say

Unknown Speaker 59:24 wall solid steel all fired off all these

Unknown Speaker 59:37 these demons and villains to keep me awake.