Hello. We're running late. We're running late this week.
Yeah, we are. We're on board. We
have reasons we do. They may not be good reasons.
They're somewhat reasons that we apologize. We apologize.
I think it'll be okay. I think they Forgive us.
Forgive us, right.
If you don't forgive us, send us a boost and a modern podcast. And let us know your bag. If you want to criticize us for something, that's the best way to do it, because you know, we're gonna get that message. Anything that has money attached to it.
Okay, jumping straight into it right now. Oh my gosh, saying the topic. All right. Someone was like, You need to eclipse Leila singing the theme song. And I was like, what? And apparently last week, we were like
Fun Fact. Friday. Friday, Fun.
Fact, Friday. Okay, so apparently, I sang the theme song last week.
And she didn't remember it didn't remember. She's like, What
do you dinner like two days later?
What are we talking about? Because I was looking at every once in a while we'll look at the the SAT machine on helipad. You know, just periodically throughout the week, just see what we got going on, you know, and we'll go into that in the support section towards the end. But it feels like when, when do I sing the? I'm seeing the theme song what's going on? And I pulled my phone out and played the episode 4g Like, oh my God, I didn't remember that. Like that you do.
That's you? That's what you sound like. Alright, so what's your topic for this week? maps? Maps? What's the song? Maps? Yeah, yeah. I'm not gonna go in. I'm not gonna know. I am not a singer.
I am. But yeah, we're gonna
talk about what?
I'm decent at it.
You're decent. I'm decent. You could use some work. Your tempo gets off sometimes, excuse me, you start singing too fast. I
can't Well,
you get you got you. Honestly, you do that with some of your instruments too. And that's why you use a metronome.
In band class as well. My teacher always gets mad at us because we can't count. Like, she's so be like, Okay, now saxophones have to count to eight measures, because that's how many measures we have before we enter. And we start playing like a measure early because we can't count.
Maybe, maybe I should learn to count. We can't forget a metronome. They'll have metronomes in there. We do. But they're really quiet. Oh, gotcha.
We have the little
ones. Can you see them? Or? No? No,
she needs to put one up on her on her board.
Right. All right. So we do have some good news. And hello. Hello, and welcome.
Back Bom. Bom, bom, bom.
Good news. So Leila's got some news? I believe it is running. Oh, no.
I close it out.
Auto are good news. We got some personal Good News. This week. We are going to both be in our local theater production of A Christmas Carol this here. Yeah, I went in and I didn't really have a part in mind. I just kinda want to be part of it, you know, and they asked you what party you auditioning for it. I'm like, Scrooge Scrooge, because like, whatever. But I wrote down, you know, I'm willing to take whatever. But then when we got back there, I remembered during
the story of a Christmas carol, there's a narrator. There's a narrator I'm like it. There's a narrator. Let me do the narrator because I'm the writer. That's like my jam. Yeah, that's your jam. But yeah, I'll be the narrator. And then
I leave some stage crew, Leila
stage crew, which is an onstage character in this version of the play. So it's like a rewritten comedy. Yeah. So anyway, that's just some good news from us. We went in auditioned and Bingo Bango got departs. So, yeah, so Leila, what's your good?
Yes. What lines about?
Dogs? Nope. Running. What? I know it's about something to do with running because I glanced at
your screen. So there's this cat, right?
What's the cat's name?
What's Casper now? Okay, I read the whole thing. But the there's this marathon runner in Chicago. And she is running marathon, obviously, as you do when you're running the marathon, and she sees a cat. And she just scoops it up and runs with the cat for about a mile. And then and then she finds this girl that wants the cat. So just See this again. And now the cat is owned by a nice family that adopted her.
So a random cat just wandered out onto the marathon route, apparently, and the runner was like, oh, I want a cat. And then like after a mouse is like caught I don't want a cat. Because cats the worst. And then just chuck the cat is somebody in the audience. Probably. That's what happened. Oh, no, that's that's what so Casper is now the name. Yeah. Well, that's cute.
I know. It's a cute cat.
So maps.
Well, that was a very, like, cut off the best
segue. I know. Right? Stop music. Talk about another topic. Oh, wow. So I found some interesting facts about maps. What do you find? Well, I found that map for a minute in 1978 by Joseph map map, when he he had to tell somebody how to get somewhere and he grabbed a napkin and a marker, which he had also just invented, map nap. And, and drew drew some lines. And then like some trees, was like, these are the trees that you're gonna see. Keep those on your left, and they're gonna
boom, map. First map.
But as trees didn't look like trees, we had a little thing at the top that said trees said trees and then drew the little tree.
And then he called that the legend. Oh, boom, legendary, legendary. So no. I think it's I think it's interesting that there's been so many messed up maps over the years. Yeah. So I'm gonna I'm gonna go into all that I've got like a whole a whole deep dive into weird things on maps.
He does, like I heard a video. Like someday. And it was about like, this island. So
there's an island in the Gulf and the Gulf of Mexico. That doesn't currently exist. What? But yeah, did exist? Or, or didn't they put it on a map? For border reasons? We were gonna say, for boredom reasons for boredom reasons. No, because, like, the oil rights and mineral rights and stuff like that of the ocean, are based on distance from the
coastline. So like, if if you're in the Gulf of Mexico, and you go X amount of miles away from the coast of America, just any anyone that goes from America, you go so many miles into the ocean, we can drill for oil and whatever else we're going to do in that water. And it's ours. Right? Well, if there's an island that belongs to us within that, that area, it extends the border out even further. So if there's an island, a big big island, that extends our border, that gives us more more reign
over the oil and natural resources in those waters. So putting islands on maps, like official maps that aren't actually there. You can lay claim to areas that are not sure it's really nerd, right. No, yeah. Okay. So I'll try and find that video. I didn't, that wasn't actually part of my show prep. I'm writing on a piece of paper because I can't find my boogie board. I think it's the house. I learned because the CI O M, go from Mexico. Okay, I'll try and find that put in the
show notes. It was a very interesting video.
We're gonna be right in the show notes. Anything like Island Gom?
What is Island golf? I'm just not gonna put in the show notes. Nobody looks at these things anyway. No, there's places that don't exist on maps. That's one of the instances or something like that. But back in the past, the map makers were just like, assume things. Just like, man, we got we got the map really good and accurate up to this point. But that's like another 100 miles to the coast. Let's just draw some stuff. And
they'll correct it later. If so there was a back in the 17, late 1700s, there was a map of one of the first maps of AP Africa featured a massive mountains of calm that was a mountain range. And that didn't exist. But it was on all the maps for like 100 years or so. And I'm like, I'll talk about more of those in a little while. But one of the other reasons things will exist
on a map is because of like copyright reasons. A map maker will painstakingly map out an area and do a really good job and they don't want somebody else just coming by redrawing In a different color and putting their own name on it, and then I'd be mad. Yeah, I'd be mad if somebody was copying my hard work. Yeah, how they make maps with a pen and paper. No map
making. I mean, that's the basic way of doing it. It's like math bars that no 100 feet just draw draw, just not to scale every fine cartography is a long and storied tradition with lots and lots of different techniques of doing it nowadays pretty much all satellite data. Yeah. Which is boring. has to get out there compass and sextant and, and do surveys and all that stuff. But Oh sir.
Oh, when's the last time you've been five miles to the left?
Did you see anything? Did you see anything? What did it can you draw it for me? No, but mapmakers will put fake towns
did you get the joke? No. Surveying. Awesome
I don't have a terrible joke. C for loud, what the heck was a sound board now?
I got a sound board now.
Um, well, no, they put they put they put fake towns on maps. Yeah. Because they they want to catch people copying them. Yeah, it's I mean, it's pretty simple, but effective technique. Yeah. Just like if somebody's copying you. They're like, oh, oh, you know. That's an old technique that was used by I don't know if it was ever. I'm sure it was. But like you tell something false. to three different people. If you knew one of them was like, giving that information to other people
that are supposed to be secret. It's how you can like find out who doesn't keep secrets? Well, as you give them a good, juicy piece of gossip, that's not true. And then you give your other two friends. Yeah, different. Different but similar gossip. Yeah. And then, so like, if I'm like, Alright, if I've got you know, Annabelle, Billy and Carl, ABC, and I give Annabella say, Hey, Sally. Sally, Sally doesn't wear deodorant. And then I tell I forgot the names. I used to
Billy Sally has head lice. And then you got to the third one. And it's like, a Sally doesn't clean your ears out. You know? Like, you gotta let your wax Hey, you really been late, Sally. Well, yeah, you just, you're just picking a different thing. And then a rumor starts spreading around and Sally has earwax. You know that Carl's the one. That's a big mouth. Right? Yeah. So anyway, that's just a little technique you can use to weed out the rats. But But yeah, yeah. So yeah, they put the fake
towns in. They call them bunnies. For some reason. Phantom settlements are Paper Towns. Yeah. Yeah.
So you know, the north.
The north. Yeah.
There's two north
on the king of the north. King of the Hill. And now king of the north. It's a it's a Game of Thrones thing. Anyway. Whatever the north
the North? I did didn't Did you make yourself? Oh, my gosh, what's up with the North? Go ahead. Go. So did you I can't even think, okay, it's the geographic north is the North that we've been told as the north the whole time. Right, you know, like the one of the very top of the globe, the globe? Yeah. That is one north. But the geomagnetic North is the one that your compasses point to. So if you like if you follow your compass, which I wouldn't recommend because it's like ocean there. But
if you just keep going, yeah,
there's gonna be ocean there. Well, the geomagnetic North like changes a bunch.
Yeah. moves. Yeah, like wiggles around. What
do you think of it just like, did you do just like wiggling? Well,
there's there's some like speculate because like, you know, the all the iron in the earth. Like it and then like, there's the plates. When like stuff moves. So the magnetic nor any, it's a whole movement, so I don't know what any of it means. Well, okay, so like the insides of the earth. Determine where the magnetism is, right? Like the stuff going on inside the earth like snow. Yeah. You think it's just a bunch of magnets. Yeah, no. Okay, well, we're not going that deep into it on Fun
Fact Friday. Just this doesn't matter. Oh no, like magnetic north moves because of like magma inside the Earth shifting
its magnetic
we're not going to go that deep into it. Unless you want to we can do like an addendum at the end of this episode if you want to dig into it. And like learn on the while we're recording. I don't know if we can figure it out right now. But okay, go for it. Look it up. We like why is the Earth's magnetic north moving? Why? Magnetic? So while she's doing that, I'm going to talk about how North isn't always up. Like north we just kind of like always, oh, yeah, I was gonna
say that too. But we always put maps with North being at the top. But that hasn't always been the case. During the Middle Ages, most western maps had east at the top of the map. And they had like, there's this 13 Year 1300 map by Christian map, a moody Apple Moon map map. Map. We got the cities today it's because it's Friday off of school. And we're you know, anyway, East was at the top and then towards the Garden of Eden with Jerusalem in the center. So that was the map of that area.
And Latin Latin, the word East is Oregon's. So if you're holding the map correctly, you had to orient it. So hard to learn. That's putting the east at the top. And then yeah, so that's that's actually where the word orientation comes from. Because you would orient the map. There's a NAT, what are you doing?
There's a NAT,
there's a NAT and Nat, I need to know, I need to spray around the studio from space.com space.com.
The Earth's magnetic field is generated by interactions in its molten outer core as the following iron generates electric currents.
That's exactly what I said. Exactly. Exactly. Exactly. Word for
word word for word. Now it makes your magnetic field it's constantly changing.
Yep. And north north and south pole, magnetic north can it can actually swap? And apparently, yeah. They say they say that this happened 70 or 780,000 years ago. And I'm like, you know, I can? I can I can take. I can take so much word on people about what happened a while ago. But when you're talking about almost a million years ago, we don't know. We don't know. They're guessing that's a guess they don't care. It could be 779,000 years ago. They can be off by 1000 years.
They should say we think is well all I'm saying we think the last time this epic. You know, and that's fine. That's a perfectly good statement to say we think that this happened around 780,000 year but they're saying it as if they know exactly what happened
happened 500,500 6342 years ago on October the third on
October the third. Exactly. Well, yeah, exactly. as well. Like we're using different calendars now. So they wouldn't even be able to exactly anyway anywho anywho we think needs to be added to more of these articles as all I'm saying. Or we're pretty sure if they're pretty sure. Okay, so here's another fun interesting thing that I found out about maps. You ready? What Okay Oh, I see. Hold on just Hold on No, no. Okay.
Throughout medieval times in Europe most maps of the world known as map a Mooney that wasn't a person's name that I was talking about earlier. So not alone D were maps of the world. So in that other
name oh, my god map of MOON
Okay, any anyway, let's get back to it. During World War Two, this is this is cool. This is what I was. I was I was right in early World War Two they made silk maps and they hid them along with fake money mixed with real money and game pieces all in Monopoly boxes. And you put the game pieces some of the game pieces were working compasses so they would they take a monopoly box right? And they put a soak map in it like the game Yes, the
Monopoly game the game. Okay during World War Two, so like they take a monopoly box from the store, they go to town Target or whatever World War Two target was. And they will buy a copy of monopoly, right? They cut it open. They take out some of the fake money and put real money in it. And then they would put a silk map. Why would they cut it open? Just calm down. And they put a map in there. And then they put a compass in there. And then they'd seal it back up. Right. And these
special games were sent to war camps. Yeah. And like, for the you know, for the guys that send over Hey, you guys, you know, we are trapped in there. Yeah. Here's a couple of monopoly games. Wink, wink. And then that would help the prisoners escape because they had maps of where they were and compasses if they got out. They could, you know, that's cool. Yeah, it was pretty, pretty neat little tactic.
Little tactic. That's really cool. I'm gonna look it up now.
Want to hear a whole story about the monopoly escape?
We get in fact site because you already read all those. amount about it?
Did you? Did you open the same site I was on and then yeah, get mad. So I like there's a there's a clip. I think it was from the show westwing where this guy is talking about how we use different projection maps. And none of them are actually correct, because you can't.
Okay. So there's Yeah. Assizes.
Yeah, the sizes are incorrect. Yeah. Okay.
There's this website. Size map. I don't know what it called map size map site, where it shows you different ways that the map actually is the true size of.com I think, oh, oh, yeah.
You can like you can like grab Australia and drag it over America. Yeah.
Yeah. Okay. Let's see. Yeah, yeah. Because it the way that maps work, it shows
it stretches, stretches and squishes
it stretches and squishes. And because the Earth is round, and they want to put that into rectangle form. That's not really how that works. You know?
Yeah. One of the map sites I was reading says that the hobo Dyer map is their their favorite for accuracy if you're using a rectangular map, and it kind of like stretches out things at the equator, and squishes things at the poles like they actually are. And it looks unsettling, but it's actually more accurate than the I think Mercator projection is what we're currently use. I think I think as in the Mercator projection, Greenland is almost as big as Africa.
Yeah, Africa
is not it is not Africa.
Okay. So you can fit like the entirety of America. Like I mean, North America, yeah. Inside of Africa,
take all lice all of North America and insert it and like the size wise you you can fit two of them and Africa. And also you can fit an entire copy of Africa into Africa. That's how big it is. So yes, a cassette copy of todos Africa.
Just two Americas in Africa.
We have like three cassette tapes. We have three cassette days. One of them is toto and the other Africa song on it.
We have Africa by Toto, we have a blank cassette tape, and we have Nirvana nevermind, which is currently being used by my friend. So we have to.
So speaking about things on maps that aren't real or misrepresented. There used to be a map in the 1500s that had the island of California.
I want to old map these look super cool. Yeah,
but old maps are expensive. But here's here's the key copy and old map. We can print them ourselves because we have no we can we have canvas paper for the printer. It would look super Yeah. You didn't know. All right. Yeah. Got it at the treasure hunt place. We can coffee stain that too. So it looks nice and old. We can make it look super old. We can like put it outside. But yeah. So in early, excellent explorations of California. It was rumored to be a lush tropical island off the
west coast of North America. Is this a lost island? No, it's California. But I guess when they got to it, they got to the part. You know how like California has the Baja California Peninsula, down in Mexico. So I'm guessing They came to the Gulf of California and went across it and they thought like,
there's a gulf of California. Yeah. What?
Oh my gosh. Okay. Oh my gosh, I believe you, Jesse. Oh, yeah. It's part of Mexico. That's why you never see this little guy exists. Yeah, it's a peninsula. Yeah. So my guess is they came up to the Gulf of California, and then went over to California. And they just assumed that it was an island because as far as they could see, north or south it was there was separated by water. So there's a lot of maps in that time periods that have California as being an island.
They were ahead of their time. Yeah. Because it's gonna break the ocean. And then Australia, in Thomas muslins, 18/27 book, The Friends of Australia, it depicts a massive river system in the interior of the continent. Because basically, he just didn't want to actually explore and map it properly. And he made a bunch of assumptions and but mountain ranges that weren't there and rivers that weren't there and I'd like a
little map. And I actually liked this map of Australia. It's it says, the northern part is called australind.
And then angle A
Candia in Canada is
like a roller coaster. It's a roller coaster ride. Oh my gosh.
But yeah, these are on the go. geomatics.ca website. Just cool. Cool stuff. And then another thing they used to put on maps all the time was sea monsters. Yes. But yeah, it was basically just like people, the guys on the ships used to talk about sea monsters. So the map guys were like, Yeah, put some sea monsters out here. That'd be cool. They get tired of drawing little triangles or mountains and draw a squiggly Snake Man.
Oh, this website has actual names for some Paper Towns.
Okay, Fire Map me.
We got Carmine, Pennsylvania. juxtapose Oregon. Point Pleasant, Indiana.
That sounds real though. This may sound real. I guess that's the point.
Yeah. Relevant. Florida. Sandy Island, New Caledonia. I don't believe that exist. Scarlet Scarlet Nebraska. Steve landing Illinois. tubs see Washington white wall California.
Yeah, so if you find out what map that those are on, don't ya? Buy a copy of that map? And when people ask you where you're from, be like, oh, yeah, I'm from stone field. What it was. Point Point Pleasant point. Pleasant, Indiana. Yeah. Be like, Hey, I'm from Point Pleasant, Indiana, and then show on the map. And then later on, when they look it up later. They'll be like, Oh, my gosh, is this guy the Mandela effect?
If you were if you
were from somewhere and they saw it on a map, and then like later on, they can't find it. They'd be like, what's going on? Okay, I have one more thing.
Oh, the Mandela Effect. Oh, my gosh, I didn't know what you meant. I remember this
is why we do the show on Thursday nights. Because your brain hasn't gone into weekend mode yet. My weekend
started on Monday. Really?
So okay, I'm always the weekend mode. Talking about the Mercator projection. Mercator was a map guy like he drew maps and stuff, right. And he has this one map from 1606 of the North Pole. And it's super interesting. And I'm just gonna read the article. This is from gogeomatics.ca. Did you know California that explorers believed the Earth's magnetic north inclination was due to a gigantic magnetic rock located at the North Pole. There off at Roswell. I think the rock was
just listen this listen to the whole story. It's really cool, and it makes me want to dig deeper into it. This rock was often depicted on maps as a large black mountain at the geographic North Pole. It was said to be 33 legs across and stand directly at the top of the globe surrounded by giant whirlpools that drained the Earth's ocean into its core.
That's so cool.
It was included on Mercator Arctic projection, as seen below and then there's a picture of it and and it looks really interesting, because if you're looking down straight on the center of it, there's this big black mountain. And then there's a circle of water around it. And then there's water coming out north, south, east and west. And there's four continents around it, and then the oceans and what we recognize
now is what it would look like if you were looking down. Okay, so these whirlpools were said to be inescapable for those who dare to venture too close and had previously been written about by Mercator in 1577, and letters to the famous mathematician John D. This quote discovery was conveniently provided a solution to why compasses point north, the first modern explorers reached the North Pole is in the early 20th century, which it sounds like they went there in the 15th
century anyway. And as we know, the northward orientation of compasses is due to the magnetic field generated through a complex process within the core of the planet and not by giant magnet situated at the poles. So, okay, I want to read more about this Mercator, talking about this big mountain at the North Pole, because who knows, maybe they filled up like in first
grade, and I was just learning about the magnetic field of the Earth. I was like, There's got to be a magnet there.
Got to be a big old magnet sticking out. And you know, in your brain when you're that young, you see it as this huge U shaped magnet where one is red and one and that was the original sticking, sticking out of the year. And they go U shaped mag. couple miles.
I like the comic magnets, right.
Yeah, like the madness. Oh, I guess I used to have one of those. Nothing. Cool is because I had a U shaped magnet. I would. I don't remember. I don't don't ever think you had any of the U shaped like the comically large U shaped magnet that I had. So what else do you have? Leila?
I don't know. I was looking at this site. This is literally just a copy of the other site.
I hate it when they do that. Yeah.
Let's see Fact File. Ooh, guru. So cartography, you know, it's the study of maps. Making map making Yeah, this is a lame fact. It's just telling you what to cartographers.
Well, that's a piece of information that I didn't know until I was in my late teens. So oh, now, you know, yeah, no, I know. You know, I learned what I was playing a video game called Ultima Online. And cartography was one of the jobs skills. And I was like, what? Cartography what is that? So I looked it up, and found out where it was. And then I decided not to do it.
Because that sounded really lame thing to do in a video game. I ended up learning how to shoot like fire bolts out of a wand or something.
Cartography and typography.
And the funny part is, in that game, I actually found out that becoming a furniture maker was one of the best things you could do. I made so many chairs. So yeah, I mean, I find that super interesting. Yeah. About the fact about dealing with the fact that we found I like, yeah, like the fun the obscure maps and the stuff like that. We talked about North being north,
right? Why is it north in the east? Yeah. Well, as it says, like, that's always baffled me. Because like, the earth, if it's floating in space, as a ball, and you jump off of it, like real high, and you'll look at it, there is no north, south, east or west, there's just the ball. Because depending on how you're oriented, floating in space, north north is whatever you you know, I mean, there's no, we've just kind of all
agreed without anybody saying it. The north is up. So if you ever want to mess with your own head a little bit, take a world map and flip it upside down and look at it, like close your eyes, flip it upside down, and then open it and look at it. It'll, it'll melt your brain will have
seen it. I saw that in Vsauce. One time. Yeah. Because he was like, you know, why is north up? Just like turn the north into his house. Yeah. Or because it's literally just the same
oriented. Get it? Because we said earlier. Anyway. So let's see. All right, and now we're gonna talk about some folks who helped us out with some support. We have. Let's see. I had I had it all pulled up. Here it is. So like Leila said earlier we had a 7777 Satoshi boost from Billy steed. For the show doesn't say an episode it was just the show in general, well boost and it says Leila singing fun. Fun Fact Friday jingle is fire. Little fire music by please clip for
your board. I clipped it but I clipped it to quiet. Soon as road caster Pro has this new feature with a soundboard where you can like change the volume on the fly. It's going to be amazing. And I think it's in beta, so I might go the beta route Anywho. Bullish it says it's gold exclamation point. Exclamation point. That's too. So
I should I should remake our theme song.
Yeah, I'm perfectly fine with that. Yeah, if anybody wants to help with that, if you're good with music. Yeah. I'm sure she'd be down to work on a new episode, or a new new theme song. Yeah, it's about time to freshen that thing up. And then we got an episode for our mutant an episode we got a boost for our mutants episode from Dred Scott none other than Dred Scott does the chapters one of our biggest supporters, and it is 123456 That's 123,456 SATs at the end with with Bitcoin
going up, I'm actually I'm gonna go look it up. I'm gonna see what the conversion is. Because you know, we get I get talking in SATs I think in SATs now. I don't think in money, like our you know, US currency. Okay, so let's see. 123456 Satoshis. That one's This is the broken one. Broken. Stupid calculators broken. Here we go. Okay, so 123456 At the current rate, that is 36.47 US dollars. That's amazing. That's amazing. That's, it's really, really fantastic. You know, I think in SATs now,
like bully STI, that's $2.30. Yeah, that's crazy. Like, it amazes me that y'all get that much value. It really does. But Dr. Scott says, Can I get a shout out for your favorite anonymous six year old listener in California? Who turns seven on Sunday? Absolutely. Absolutely. We talked about this. We talked about it. And we were like, do you sort of we want to sing Happy Birthday. Because I don't sing well. I don't sing well, and Leila things is pretty good. But we
were like, but then we're gonna need some backing music. So I went and found some copyright, Creative Commons Attribution, Happy Birthday Songs. And I started listening to I'm looking for just some good background, Happy Birthday music and some of these are just gold. So we're gonna play a few for our favorite six year old about to be seven. listener. And we're going to talk about them because some of them are hilarious. Absolutely. So this is Happy birthday by Dana. collagen.
Ack big birthday. And Hank, it's your day, it's time to just say happy birthday, Dan, or Uncle Fred or fluffy. Whatever it was answered.
I'm going to skip that one because that one was okay. And then let's see. This one's called Hey, hey, happy birthday by Daniel C. Smith.
May we say happy birthday? Hey, hey. Dear Francine. Francine.
Francine is on this one. All right. That's kind of falling apart. Some of those kids weren't weren't weren't sticking with the picture.
Like having a kindergarten class thing it that's the way
it's kind of what sound like. Alright, so this one's called. Happy. Happy. Happy, happy birthday by Geoffrey Moore.
Have you had to have happy happy happy birthday? Yeah, pretty much. The name goes here to you. Be Happy Birthday. And we hope to see you this time next year too. These are fun. All right.
We found we found one earlier.
Yeah. Hold on. We're almost there. I think we're almost there. Okay, so this one is congratulations to you by jazzy jazzy.
J jazzy J.
Piano.
Happy Birthday Tony. Do you make all your dreams come true. You made it through the bad times. You made it through the good. You always knew you could. All right. Okay.
All right now we're looking for one specific that was five songs. I think we're gonna win. I'm looking for one. It was really funny.
Yeah. It's a day to celebrate. Celebrate your birthday. Happy birthday, Barack Obama. You we are hope rock Obama. Come True Happy Birthday Barack Obama Happy Birthday
that's Susan and Amy singing Happy Birthday to Barack Obama. All right. What was that all the ones you wanted to play? Like? Remember? There's so many of them. Were on free. Music archive.org/music/happy birthday songs have a contest. They did a new Birthday Song Contest. I gotcha. Yeah, so there's 140 new different Happy Birthday Songs. So, so yeah. If you ever need to have a birthday song, go to FunFactFriday.com find this episode, and find the show notes. Birthdays homes.
I kind of really I find it really weird. How you get your song sang to you on your birthday? And it's just the song that people came up with one day?
Yeah, I mean, when people sing songs to you other times Yeah, but it's like like weird when you get married the there's a What are you doing song and like when you graduate high school they sing that high school song to you by vitamin C
No graduation is called graduation summer they never go Hey, guys, that was so funny. Like I don't know what you made your voice do that.
Anyway, anyways,
happy birthday so much. I hope you have a fantastic birthday weekend and all of your wildest dreams come true.
Happy birthday, and I'm a six year old listener from California.
And thank you, thank you, Dr. Scott for the Satoshis it means so much to us when y'all send us something.
Wait, what? Next week on Thursday. Guess what? What? What are we gonna go do?
Yeah, we're gonna I almost forgot. You did? I almost forgot to say this. I mean, I didn't think it was gonna happen. Yeah, we are going to be on a different podcast. That's not this one. And not meet us pod. Yeah. Stalling because I'm trying to pull it up on my calendar. Or you bet it is called. Nope, not that day. It is called the story show story. So the story show. I'm pulling it up now on the podcast index podcast in decks.org. hitting OK, and then it's slow. Lee pod
index. That's not it. Gosh,
you're stalling.
I know. I know normally better than this. I'm only way better this that story? Or no, it's the the
none of these are it? What
is it that it's that story show? Okay, it's that story show by James Kennison. It's a clean comedy show. So it is family friendly. He's got 452 episodes out there. This guy has been around a long time has a bunch of other podcasts. We've been talking and we are going to go on and we're gonna tell just some funny stories. So yeah, you can look for that story show space dash space clean comedy by James Kennison nice and yeah, so and we're gonna try and get try and get James on the podcasting.
2.0 Kick. Get them in there. Get some Satoshis moving around. But yeah, that will be I believe they go live on Thursday nights. Let's see what time
oh my gosh, is that episode name? Khattar problem.
Yes, it's cat are probably 451 of listen to a couple of nuggets from funny guests. So yeah, it will be I believe 630 I believe they do it alive somehow. Or maybe we'll just be like, I don't know. But it'll come out of the pocket. asked also so keep keep a watch on our socials Fun Fact Friday one on Twitter and Fun Fact Friday at social medias media.com. And you'll get to know when that episode comes out. We'll make sure and post that. So yeah, everybody have a
fantastic weekend. Say, oh, yeah more.
Yeah, Thursday next week.
Oh, what are we gonna go? Oh no, you're,
we talked about this.
We're gonna go to the movies. We're gonna go to the movies, we're gonna go to movies, and we're gonna see a movie, you're gonna see a movie, and it's called, it's called.
Watching this movie for about four years now, it's finally out. And we're gonna go see five nights at Freddy's. I don't know what it's about. Other than a little bit, other than a little bit. I
was playing a little bit. He's watched a little bit MatPat I've watched a little bit of
videos on the floor show, which is not great. But basically, it's seems like a scary version. And when I say scary, not like rated are scary. Like, I think it's PG 13. Scary. Well, the movie. Yeah. Not so much. Yeah. So it's I'll go watch it. I think I'll probably be entertained. It's got Matthew Lillard in it, which was just a staple in all 90s movies. So yeah, I'll get to see how old he is looking. Pretty All right. So everybody, have a great week. We'll see y'all next week. On
that story show clean comedy. You can look that up or we're also going to release an episode of our own. So everybody have a great weekend.
Bye. Oh, that's the wrong one dad
was testing this testing. Even though we're late
Kyle stone here. Fun Fact Friday with Leila and David is a Mitas media production all rights reserved unless otherwise stated. If you'd like to help support the show, you can make a donation via Patreon or PayPal over at FunFactFriday.com. Just click the donations link at the top of the page. Please follow like and subscribe and join us next week for another Fun Fact Friday.