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The Skinner Co. Network

FC007 - Bunny Cussin'

Broadcast on:
13 Feb 2011
Audio Format:
other

Prepare yourself for Journalism, The Collective Detective, Egypt, and male prostitutes.

(upbeat music) - Hello and welcome to Flashcast, episode seven. Prepare yourself for journalism, the collective detective, Egypt, and male prostitutes. (upbeat music) (upbeat music) (upbeat music) (singing in foreign language) (singing in foreign language) (singing in foreign language) (singing in foreign language) (singing in foreign language) (singing in foreign language) (singing in foreign language) (singing in foreign language) (singing in foreign language) (singing in foreign language) (singing in foreign language) (upbeat music) (singing in foreign language) (upbeat music) (upbeat music) - Tonight, we have myself, Opoponax, vocal, and visual lead, Jessica May. (speaking in foreign language) How do you a producer and shoulder to cry on? And J.R.D.? - Hello. - The syllable slinger. - How's everybody? - Very well, good. This came together so quickly. We sat down so fast that, yeah, I feel slightly unprepared, but we'll do fine. - Yeah. - How are you, syllable slinger? - We've been watching a lot of Egypt coverage. - Yeah, that's right. - Yes, and since I stay at home with little people, I've been watching it non-stop on the MSNBC, and been really enthralled in telling kids about it as much as they can understand what's going on, and in fact, Mr. Eight, I told him, I said, do you remember that guy who said he was gonna, or we thought it was going to leave, and then ended up not leaving? He's like, yeah, I'm like, he left last night. He's like, and he just broke out in applause, and just started clapping, like, he was just-- - We go, yeah, and he was so happy, and I was happy to tell him. - Like, it was such a crazy, crazy moment. - We try to tell our kids a little bit about politics, though, that's-- - And what happens in the world yet? - Things that are going on. Nothing that would, I think, be too much. - Weird the mood. - Yeah, did they not watch Obama's inauguration speech with us as well? - Yeah, and they remember the stories that we would give them about George Bush when he would frustrate us. - Yeah, they remember the election night, where we were all set up to watch. - Yeah, they stayed up and watched. It was a big deal. - We're gonna have little-- - But-- - Political geniuses, and Algeria, I think they're right now having some similar sort of goings on in Egypt, but 400 protesters, apparently, today were arrested. - And Iran said that, I heard from a tweet from the White House, that the Iranian government said that it would be illegal to do what the Egyptians did. They said that what they did was honorable, but that they don't condone it themselves, and that it would be illegal for them to do so. So, you know, who Barak said he wasn't going anywhere, he would die on Egyptian soil, and on the next night he was on a plane, so that's just a whole lot of words, I think. - Yeah. - It's been a big deal around here. We're into American politics and international politics. - I'd be interested to see what their popular culture kind of stuff looks like right now. Is it really all like strained, fakey stuff, or is it really somebody-- - Like, are they getting honest news? - No, no, but I mean, not the news so much is like, what is their fiction? What does their TV look like right now? What does like CSI Egypt look like? CSI Cairo. - I like that idea, actually. - We're gonna figure out who still is Sphinx's nose. - Yeah. - Anyway. - Looks like what we have here is a pyramid. - So, this last week we had a few, well, okay. First, I have to apologize. Obviously, this is a little out of order. I said the next flash bulb would be up, and then a flash cast on Sunday, and now we're releasing a flash cast on Saturday and flash bulb on Sunday. I had some plot issues that I just couldn't wrap my brain around. - Then we like to keep you on your toes. - Yeah, a little head fake, a little tuckaroo. - Deep to the left. - Actually, it really totally kills him to have to mess with the schedule, and it's only if it absolutely is absolutely necessary. And if that is to happen, it's generally because you're having some sort of block, something is not coming together. It generally does come together and come together quickly. - Actually, I get kind of mad at myself 'cause I feel like I'm being posturing a little bit. But in this last week, we had an interesting, we had a couple of stories. We had a mulligan and a collective detective, and there was sort of a bunch of back and forth between me and Barry about the, well, not a bunch, but a little bit of back and forth between friend of the site, Barry, from bmj2k.com. Regarding, and he raised an interesting question, which was essentially, this is relating to Flashpop 128, I believe. So if you guys haven't listened to that, maybe just scoot back to that before you listen to this, but he asked the question, was this a case of people just sticking their nose where it didn't belong? Which is a fair question because-- - Were internet folk to be trying to find-- - Yes, because it wasn't like a murder, like most of the collective detective stories are all around a cold case murder, right? So you're poking into something with a certain amount of legitimacy, but they were essentially tracking somebody down who may or may not want it to be found. Now, my thinking has always been that I kind of keep the collective detective, the standard that I put them to, and the standard I think they meant in this case, was that I think of the collective detective's ethics as what I would attribute to a decent journalist's ethics. Now, as I mentioned on the blog, that raises a weird question though, 'cause then it becomes a matter of, well, in a world full of bloggers, what does journalism mean anymore? If anybody can grab an iPhone with a mic and a video camera and start up a, like a news YouTube channel or a blog that, you know, covers their local news just by going over there with their iPhone, why is that person not considered a journalist when a guy who, you know, doesn't really require that much schooling to get on to the local paper. So. - Agreed. - No, I-- - It's all about endorsements. - I also kind of have some experience with that sort of stuff in a more far-fetched kind of story and feel free to interject and sidetrack from this, but way back in my early days of internet use, I had way back before blogs were really blogs and we call them EN sites. I did an interview, I think I've mentioned this before, with a group of people, how do I describe this? Who really enjoyed the company of Canines. - Okay. - In sort of an adult fashion. - We like to be very close. - Yes. - They like snuggles. - They were very passionate about it. - Yes. And, you know, I just, the membrane was so thin on the internet at that point that you could just wander into chat room for, you know, Canine Love, and there'd be people there. And then generally people who are willing to congregate are willing to discuss their topic of choice, especially the anonymity, the anonymity of the internet allows you to just, you know, let your free flag fly, as it were. - And I'm sure it was easier to find at the time. There was just less there, so it was-- - Well, you know what though, here's the truth. If you really wanna find it on the internet, it ain't that tough. It's just, who sits down and thinks, "Geez, you know who I'd really like to talk to?" - Yeah, those guys. - Yeah, so, but it was just, it was coincidental because we had discovered this channel through like a sort of meandering system of looking up other people who were in other channels. Like, this is way back in the IRC days when you could kind of poke on what people were doing and spy on people a little bit. And we were hooligans, so what can I say? Internet hooligans. - You were just representing. - So, okay, so that kind of comes across as just a comedic whatever, and you couldn't really necessarily call that journalism, but as a follow up to that, I don't know if you remember it for a time when I was in Second Life. I don't know if people are familiar with Second Life, it's sort of a 3D virtual world where you were just very much given the basic tools for building things. And I actually signed up for a newspaper that covered the internal of that world. - Yeah, I remember your desk being so proud that you had a desk. - It was fun, it was, you know, kind of plain reporter, but then some weird happened. In one night, I was filing a story, like you would just have to file these 100 word things and they would go up on this website and people who also cared about Second Life would go read it. Like it was just basically an internal blog almost, but what happened was I was filing, I was at the office, I was filing some nonsense story, and then somebody came by and was like, "Hey, is there a reporter here I can talk to you?" And I happened to be the only one on site, and they said, "There's a protest going on." So I went over to this thing, this protest, and it was fairly large, and people had built signs, they had whatever, and this, in Second Life, you have a parcel of land. So think of somebody's yard, and the person next to you can walk their land so that no one's allowed on it, but you can still stand in your yard and see into your neighbor's yard. So these people had created a brothel in Second Life, and they had locked their yard 'cause a protest had started, but people were in the neighboring lot, which had been bought by actually a Native American group, and they had started the protest, I guess. Not because the brothel was a brothel, but because everyone who worked in the brothel, even though they were adults themselves, they used avatars that were children. So it was a virtual child brothel. - That's gross. - Isn't there some way that they could block those mannerisms from attaching to a child avatar? Is that silly, can they not do it? - Well, in Second Life, what's to dictate what's a child, what's a midget, what's a tiny elf? - Like... - Yeah. - So it was really, it was kind of disturbing, and I mean-- - Does an opinion on it? - Sorry. - Do you have an opinion on this? - Well, hold on, hold on. - Does that not, if you were engaging in this activity and you were seeing this behavior, even if it is virtual rally, could that not be considered child pornography? 'Cause you were watching a child? - Virtual, yeah, we see that to me. And that's kind of my feeling. But at the same time, it is a weird kind of murky area. And I ended up, yeah. I mean, and the thing is, it's all in this weird, privatized system. Like, would you go to the police over digitize? Like, I don't know. - But then, it's just breaking your ground. Like, we've never been in the same argument. Can't you be arrested for having child pornography on your computer, for having pictures and stuff like that? - Yes, but I'm- - That's having drawn pictures? - Okay, but yes, can you get arrested for having drawn pictures? Can you get digitized? You know what I mean? Like, if you take a bunch of snapshots of a pretend child, does that still kind of child born? Am I mine, kind of, but- - Yeah, like, wow. - Anyway, but is that enough to arrest the dude over? - Jeez. So if there are any law enforcement agents out there- - Yeah, anybody who works in law enforcement, that would be awesome. - Or legal people that we know. - But anyway, so it was an experience, because I spent, at first, I was just with the protesters themselves, and that was a little interesting, 'cause everyone always has their weird personal angle. Like, you end up talking to somebody about, you know, they're in a wheelchair, and it really hurts for them to be here, but they're still here forever, 'cause they don't wanna log off, 'cause of this terrible thing that's happening. And then, finally, it kind of starts falling apart, and I got a message, because I had been there a while, I'd been asking different people, different questions, and I'm guessing they must've had a mole in the crowd. I actually got a message from somebody on the other side, and they were like, do you wanna talk about, do you want an interview from somebody on the other side, and actually- - Wow. - It was the supposed daughter of the person who ran it, but the daughter in the virtual sense, and that these guys were into some weird role-playing family situation. So, I don't know if it was actually maybe the person who ran it, and it was just them logging in as a daughter avatar, essentially, but I ended up, they, like, teleported me over, they invited me via teleported over to their house, quote unquote, and we essentially sat on their virtual porch, and they kinda walked me through their argument that they weren't hurting anybody, that everyone was a consensual adult, that, you know, they were just role-playing, and, you know, I tried to maintain some neutrality, but I didn't really- - Yeah, that can't be too easy. - Yeah, no, it was pretty- - That's an exciting night at the office, though, yeah. - Well, yeah, it was interesting. It did leave me a little queasy afterwards, though, 'cause these people aren't, you know, they're not joking. These people are possibly showing indications that somewhere along the line, they may do something that would injure somebody. Anyway, so that was my experience with reporting on the internet, and then a few weeks ago, we headed downtown to get a report from, for the bothersome things guys, from a male prostitute, and that didn't really work out so well, 'cause it's really cold in Canada right now, but at the same time, can I, like, in that situation, if I had actually managed to find one, could I have claimed myself to be a journalist? I'm just doing, like, a report for the web, but at the same time... - It's like you have to have a certain amount of cred, but in order to get that cred, you have to have done field work. - Yeah. - Yeah. - But where's the, I guess... - Where do you feel it in your heart? - Yeah, well, technically I'm a reverend, right, but I never use that, but where do I kind of go on the internet and get signed up for journalist credentials somewhere? - Yeah, that'd be handy, wouldn't it? - Anyhow, so that's my reporting stories. I just thought I'd share those, but... - Thank you for doing so. - Yeah. - It's been so long. I almost forgot that. Well, I forget things all the time, so it was almost like brand new. (laughing) - Let's move into... - The audio. On accident. Of hope. - So we got you a new thing? - Yeah, you got me a toy. Something really awesome. It's a USB jack. - Dilly Dally, from my lap and bow top. - Dongle. - On my guitar. So I can now play the guitar and it comes on my screen, which is exciting. - Yeah, directly from your guitar to USB, right? - 'Cause before I was just playing up to my mic. - When are we gonna hear some new music? (laughing) - I was fiddling around the other day on my guitar. - The problem is, is I have-- - You were fiddling around on your guitar? Fiddling? - Oh, wouldn't that be funny if it was a fiddle or a violin? - Fiddle R. - Fiddle D, fiddle dumb. I don't know. (laughing) Music, yeah. I don't know. It's like, I really wanna get to it 'cause I know how much fun it's gonna be, but it also gives me anxiety. Like, I expect too much for myself or I expect that nothing at all is going to happen. I don't know. It's so much conflicting emotion. It's hard for me to sit down. Plus, I'm so busy that by the time I can sit down, I don't wanna. Yeah, I'm busy. I hear that. No, I'm busier. I'm for sure the busy wheels, the busiest to all y'all. - Yeah. - Anyhoo and junk. Don't pressure me, punk. You know what, I'm not-- - No, listen, I was totally, like, the reason we're not doing wheel coffin tonight is 'cause I got totally psyching myself out just with anxiety and-- - I'm afraid I don't play the guitar well enough and then it's not-- - But you're not gonna get better if you don't play it, I don't understand. - Your mom. - The art of narration. - There is going to be trouble in the new wheel coffin because our program is not an explicit program and one of the wheel coffin characters is a very explicit character. - She's an explicit lady. - Yes. So that's actually-- - She doesn't mean to be hurtful with it, she just doesn't know any better. - She likes her cousins. That is what we're trying to say. And I think Jessica May is gonna have to do something about that 'cause I don't think she's really the kind of character that you can rewrite, is she, Charity? - No, if you take out her cousin, it's kind of a weak character. Well, you know, sorry, last episode, last Flashcast, we were discussing Barry's email, which personally I thought was sort of the best part of the episode almost. - For reals. - And he mentioned that you don't wanna weak-sauce your cousin, you don't want it to be like mother of freaker. - Yes. (clears throat) - Especially, yeah, with a raunchy hard core character. - Yeah, there are certain-- - Like it's not a bible. - The type of characters you can't write without including some cussing. And I'm kind of comfortable with this middle ground of having her cuss but just bleeping it out. 'Cause I think that it'll lend, it also goes with her character, that level of comedy. And it'll lend itself to the-- - It almost points out like how often it happens by this jarring sound. So that's something Jessica May is gonna have to handle with her next editing. I wonder if we should use the same sound, whether it should be like a comical sound. - Like a gelop he said. - Like a gelop he said. - No, I don't want it to be like, (imitates clucking) - Yeah. - Yeah, just a plain bleep. - Just a bleep. - Yeah, like a hard core. Yeah. - We should leave the, if anybody wants the full explicit, like-- - Version for yourself. - Cuss for yourself. - I mean, drop me an email maybe, I don't know, we put those up on iTunes. - Yeah, like maybe it's distracting, maybe you don't like it, but it's, you know, for our cred we gotta keep it clean. - Yeah, for our iTunes positioning. - Yeah. - Yeah, there's logistics to custom like a sailor. - Yep, there's always consequences. - Yeah, see, we, for longest time with our eldest children, they just would never even think of doing such a thing of cussing. So if they, the odd time ever heard us, it would just, like we would get scolded. - Yeah. - But now there's a little one who's very, very repetitive, like will repeat everything that you say. - Doesn't matter, it's a complex word or a cuss, and it'll come out, so we're doing our best not to-- - Well, it's a self-reinforcing system, right? Like, because you hear a two-year-old drop the f-bomb, you kind of start laughing, but then the two-year-old goes, well, if I say this, everyone starts laughing, so-- - Yeah, like you don't wanna, yeah, it's hilarious, but you just, you don't wanna hear that. - You know, I loved the movie "The Fantastic Mr. Fox" for that, 'cause they just said cuss all the time. - Yeah. - Mm-hmm, that was great. I thought that was hilarious. - Mm-hmm, or a broge from "The Big Bang Theory." He was talking about how cuss were holy, and then every time he was gonna say God, he just said cuss. - Oh, yeah. - And it was cuss. - Oh, yeah. - I can't remember the specific phrase, but I did, it would be bang on right now, but-- - Mm-hmm, wah-wah. - Weren't wah-brahmin'. So, let's move finally into-- - Back, boom, watch. - So, yeah, upcoming will coffin. I realized that it's not, I can't really do a one-parter, so it's gonna be a three-parter, but this puts me in a weird position, 'cause it's gonna be the first time I've done a three-parter, where technically the first part is the Friday story, and then the three-parter's going to end as of Wednesday. - You were saying that like, you can't introduce Will in a thousand words. Is that why you're doing it a three-parter? 'Cause the first introduction to Will, you need to do more. - Yes, yeah, basically. So-- - Plus, it's such a creepy sort of, like the way that you were able to express things so quickly, like I was able to be shocked quite quickly with some of the imagery you were able to use, and yeah, it was definitely creepy. And like the, what's his name, Harm? You know, it's still kind of comedic, it's still kind of funny, you know? - It's so kind of-- - I feel like I need to keep that Cary Grant kind of gloss on there, like a little bit of that comedic edge, or else. - There's just so much death. - Yes, there's so much killing in that story. - And with Will, you know, without giving too much away, there's death, definitely, but it's creepy. There's some-- - Yeah. - It's not joking. - Yeah, it's for real. - It's funny because I've been trying to come up with a picture for the new series, and I've been thinking with some guidance from JRD that we maybe do the area in which he lives, right? - Right. - Like the apartment building, right? - Right. - And every time I picture the apartment building and the way you've described it, it just looks just like a condo that my grandpa wants to move into, and I think no grandpa, no. - Don't go there. - Don't go. - It's not the building building. - They'll get ya. - Man, I was so enthralled with that storyline with those characters, I'm really, really excited. I think everyone's gonna really enjoy it. - Yeah, I hope our listeners aren't getting too frustrated with us being like, "Oh yeah, I will cough and it's so great." We wanna hear it! (laughing) - Well, see, I posted an audio biography today, and it was basically whining about how I've been able to do stuff that's maybe a little more, quote unquote, relevant recently with my stories. Like it has some sort of social or whatever. But at the same time, I kinda needed to step back today. Today was really about stepping back and going, okay, some of these things are gonna be brilliant and they're gonna work at multiple levels and it's gonna be great. And sometimes, there's just gonna be a dude and maybe he's got some sort of magic involved and it's gonna be fun and it's not necessarily gonna, whatever, and I need to be less prissy and less posturey and more and just shut up and write. - You don't need to find a moral for this one. It just needs to be a good story. - Yeah, yep. - Well, I think Bunny is her own moral, in a way, so I'm kinda feeling a little better about that, but-- - Bunny is the swear, I don't know if we-- - No, we have it. - She's the cussy. - She's the cussy. - Yeah. - Cussy, hussy. (laughing) So, anyway, I think that's probably enough. Let's just cut to mailbag. (phone ringing) So, I wanted to give a big shout out to Nutty Bites Podcast. - Thanks, Nutty Bites. - I'm sorry that I can't Neutchaz. Neutchaz, snoochie-boochies. I'm sorry, you know that your name is hard to pronounce and I'm just gonna call you Nutty. But, yes, thank you very much. Keep up your fledgling podcast grade work. It's coming along smoothly. - And send us an MP3 of how to say your name. - It's actually in her, she has, she's only done like two episodes so far, but she has an episode zero in which she actually explains quite explicitly how to explain it. - Oh, okay, I'm sorry. - So, you're obviously not with the program. - Well, maybe you should have given us this reference material for the episode. What? - What? - Yeah, Jared, he's got nothing to say. - We also got an email from such a bad person for not being able to remember his band's name, but he wanted us to play his song, I think. His message was a little bit cryptic. So, unfortunately, it doesn't really fit to just drop it into the show. We'll play it at the end. But, yeah, I guess, thanks for sending it along. You sound like a talented fellow. - We like talent. - We like talent. You got spunky and moxie. - Kid? - Kid. - I like you. You go in places. - I like the cut of your jib. I like that one. - See you on my jib, I got it. - I tell you, jib, yeah. - I'm sorry, geez. I'm always letting you down. - Oh, that's not true. You're a very handy lady. - Thanks. - Okay, so let's, I think we can keep this one nice and short for today, as it was a short week in a way. And there's just annoying animals, sounds in the background constantly now. - Our dog is whining at our cat, who's batting at something noisy. - So-- - Fantastic. - Fantastic. Send in your audio comments and everything. Jessica, may you go on any last words? - You look especially adorable, audience. - Any last words, a pope? - Scissors, telephone, Batmobile. Those are my last words. - One more. - Okay, well, if you have any comments, questions or suggestions, you can find us at skinner.fm, or call our voicemail line at 206-338-2792. You can also email us, text our MP3s to skinner@skinner.fm. - Hello. Jessica May's vocal talents and musical stylings, if she ever gets around to doing anything with it, can be found at maytunes.com. - Got it? - Popenax's artistic work and general updates can be located at a popenaxfeathers.wordpress.com. - Sometimes, I'm Batman. - The entire run of Flashpop can be found at skinner.fm, or via search bar and iTunes. And Flashcast is released under the Creative Commons at your recent non-commercial 2.5 license. - Good night, bye. (upbeat music) (upbeat music) (upbeat music) - That was nice. ♪ I was walking past the storm ♪ ♪ I saw this pretty face ♪ ♪ She wasn't there to make ♪ ♪ I had to make my way ♪ ♪ I said, "Shall you wish I may ♪ ♪ And can't take through what I'd be ♪ ♪ She replied, "Yeah, that's right." ♪ ♪ I'm listening to my A-game and something fake ♪ ♪ But I didn't get the number ♪ ♪ Said I know and had to try and be Mr. Cucumber ♪ ♪ Cooler, you wonder just why I haven't called you yet ♪ ♪ While I'm looking for you outside the target ♪ ♪ At least I sparked your interest ♪ ♪ So what a next run of who you will forget your boy knows ♪ ♪ How you smell like almond oil ♪ ♪ And I sprung just slightly coyons ♪ ♪ So you see ♪ ♪ Said, "Listen in the Jodicy ♪ ♪ You're writing this like this ♪ ♪ Excuse me, Mrs. just taking you out my mind ♪ ♪ No, no, call it what you want ♪ ♪ Love it first, I may be ♪ ♪ But I know what I like and I think that I'm crazy ♪ ♪ Just like none of us, maybe tomorrow we'll meet if we're supposed to be ♪ ♪ See if the prey of you will hit the Mars ♪ ♪ But you won't know what it is ♪ ♪ I was walking past the store ♪ ♪ I saw this pretty face ♪ ♪ But you wasn't with me ♪ ♪ I had to make my way ♪ ♪ Say, "Shall you wish your name?" ♪ ♪ Say, "Shall you wish your name?" ♪ ♪ Yeah, I took her one and ready ♪ ♪ She arrived so lovely ♪ ♪ Made myself look like a baby ♪ ♪ At that point, words couldn't describe the fail ♪ ♪ Hoping the numbers she gave me ♪ ♪ Just rail, excuse me, are you in a rush? ♪ ♪ She was like 12 steps away ♪ ♪ Broke's tried to hit what I had to say ♪ ♪ Caught up quickly, bags in the hands ♪ ♪ So I'm like, "Let me get these." ♪ ♪ I know it's kinda strange ♪ ♪ But what are the odds of this kind of exchange ♪ ♪ And now we'll go, I will shower ♪ ♪ And no destination, now I'm in this situation ♪ ♪ The fact that we met a minute ago ♪ ♪ When it feels like our own friends compensate ♪ ♪ And I like that your body type is athletic ♪ ♪ Attractive features, that's just genetic ♪ ♪ But I've got a notion ♪ ♪ From about the set, something emotionally could be connected ♪ ♪ Under me toes, they could be connected ♪ ♪ Getting ahead of myself ♪ ♪ But I looked up from the sidewalk at a ride ♪ ♪ Smaller than face, suggested you check what I felt ♪ ♪ Comfortable falls lost in the moment ♪ ♪ Or maybe just lost ♪ ♪ These are the side effects and she's because ♪ ♪ Like the match to the bridge we just crossed ♪ ♪ No turning back from this point ♪ ♪ And I found that you won't regret ♪ ♪ A minute of time invested in us ♪ ♪ And for your trust, I'm into a death ♪ ♪ I promise you respect ♪ ♪ Under the leader one you select ♪ ♪ Years in the future, I still remember the day ♪ ♪ How could I ever forget ♪ ♪ I was walking past the storm ♪ ♪ I saw this pretty face ♪ ♪ She wasn't with me ♪ ♪ I had to make my way ♪ ♪ It's a shot in a shot in a shot in a shot in a shot in a shot in a shot in a shot in a shot in a shot ♪ ♪ She replied yes ♪ ♪ She smiled and walked away ♪ ♪ I was walking past the storm ♪ [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] You