170: The Wrong Words - podcast episode cover

170: The Wrong Words

Oct 28, 202559 min
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Summary

This episode covers Tim's perpetually delayed November Rain-inspired music video, delving into production challenges and creative decisions. The hosts then introduce Tim's intriguing concept of "wrong words," discussing several English terms whose sounds or connotations contradict their actual meanings. Finally, they offer a detailed tour of their new office setups, sharing insights into workspace design, work-life separation, and personal touches, alongside a segment on a Brisbane collector's spoon.

Episode description

Tim and Brady discuss an upcoming music video, words that don’t work, a Brisbane spoon, and our new office spaces.

Today’s Request Room is here - https://www.patreon.com/posts/142242910

Support us on Patreon - https://www.patreon.com/unmadeFM

Join the discussion of this episode on our subreddit - https://www.reddit.com/r/Unmade_Podcast/

Catch the podcast on YouTube where we often include accompanying videos and pictures - https://www.youtube.com/@unmadepodcast

USEFUL LINKS

November Rain - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8SbUC-UaAxE

Brisbane - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brisbane

Pictures of Spoon of the Week - https://www.unmade.fm/spoon-of-the-week

Some pictures from this episode including offices - https://www.unmade.fm/episode-170-pictures

Catch the bonus Request Room episode - https://www.patreon.com/posts/142242910

Transcript

Intro / Opening

It's good to see you, man. I don't say it often enough. Is it? Yeah, yeah. Is it good to see me? I log on, you send me a Zoom, and there you are. It's like, oh. I think I look a bit bleary and red-eyed this morning for some reason. I think it's your camera. You think? Yeah, it's the camera. Ah, it's the camera. A bit pasty. Actually, I'm incredibly handsome, but this camera, I don't know. Have you got that special lens that you put on there to make it a little bit blurry?

Tim's November Rain Music Video

soft i've got the humbling filter on right the humble goggles i put them on every morning yeah Speaking of glamour and production and looking awesome and handsome, what's happening to Tim's music video playing the sofa shop on top of the big rocking horse? in Gammaraka in the style of Slash from November Rain. What's happened to that project? I thought it was happening. I thought the wheels were turning. I've even heard demos and I saw videos of demos being created by...

lots of handsome Australian blonde men that look like they should be in Sons of Anarchy. Right, yes. And then it just all went quiet. Well, man, as you know, nothing in Hollywood... Happens quickly. Nothing with Tim happens quickly. People are meeting with people. There's production meetings, designs, conversations, delays. You've got to get the money man on it. I've got union issues. I've got-

You're the money men, you know, and I've been back and forth. So there's been quite a lot that's gone on, but it's not nothing. People sitting in those, you know, directors' chairs. making decisions and calling cut and all that kind of stuff. Actually, we're not quite at that bit yet, but everything else, all the other stuff.

It's got bogged down with the lawyers. Yeah, a lot of it's legal. There were some, yes, that's true. There were some legal issues. There was some sourcing the right guitar issues, which is often, you often see that come up. Rights. Rights. Yep, yep, yep. Couldn't get the rights. Okay. And then so it went on the back burner. Then it's back on the front burner again. Right. But I've got two words to say, greenlit. Oh. Yes.

It's happening. I thought it was already greenlit. I thought that was the conversation we had months ago. Oh, it's been sort of amber. But no, it is. No, it's been greenlit, but it's been on a go slow. But we've taken it out of this go slow into the fast track. It's been fast track now. Okay, off hiatus. Yes, off hiatus.

And it's all systems go. It's happening. In fact, I was texting about it just yesterday. Honestly, the delay has been two things. One is the weather because it was very dark and our access to the rocking horse isn't. 24 hours you know there's no massive lights we needed to suit to film during the day so um we had to wait for uh us to get out of that mid-winter time yeah and um it's like we're it's like when you're filming in antarctica you can only do

it at certain times right and then i had to source the right guitar because i want the exact right guitar and get the piece made but we are we are we are pretty much done i would like to record i think we can film in the next month i've got a couple of trips interstate but apart from that We're going to be filming in the next month. You do. You work on a different timescale to me. Definitely, definitely, definitely this year. Wow. Definitely maybe.

I will believe it when I see it, but I'm looking forward to it. This reminds me, in my head, it's become like, you know that ad, which is probably my favourite. advertisement of all time where Jean-Claude Van Damme does the splits between the two trucks at sunrise and they had this small window to get it at just the right time and all this effort and planning went into it for this magical moment. This is what this video has become.

come to me and anything less is going to be a disappointment well I wonder if it's one of those things where a documentary about the making of the film will be more intriguing than the film itself, you know? Well, you know I've told you to film everything and have lots of footage of behind the scenes and what went into it because I do want people to get the full picture.

you know, the full story. Yeah, yeah. It hasn't really got a name yet. I think it's, hmm. Again, you referred to it as the sofa shop film in the style of Slash in November Rain on top of... The Rocking Horse at Gamaraka, which is one of the longer titles for a film that I've heard of. Yeah, but we'll get there. We'll get there. I cannot wait. We're certainly, you know.

more than halfway, having not actually filmed it. How would you feel about right here and now giving people a small, small audio peek at the music you had recorded? Just to throw them a bone and show them that something's actually happening. Well, yeah, if you feel like you want to, yeah, yeah. I mean. Just a little bit. Just a little bit. It does sound pretty amazing. Yeah.

Yeah, no, it's – yeah, no, no, go for it, go for it. And you're happy to pull back the curtain and let people know that you're actually going to be – air guitaring on top of the rocking horse i think i think people know that that's how films are made i mean really that's i think they know that i mean for instance slash himself in november rain doesn't have a lead in his guitar and he's in the middle of the desert so i think yeah

Are you going to have a lead in yours or are you going to do the homage to Slash and have no lead in the guitar when you're up there? No, I won't have a lead because if you have a lead, then you're wondering, where's that lead going? And it will just be going down the ladder.

And then, you know what I mean? It suggests a, it'll just totally, people will bump on it, you know, and be wondering where the hell's that lead? So no, it'll be me. People will be lost in the magic. A lot of jump cuts too, a lot of fast cutting, but also some really cool. Drone shots and stuff. It's going to be- Oh, it's all about the drone shots. Sorry, when I say drone shots, I mean helicopter shots. Yes. Yes.

Here is a very, very small peek for you. A little preview of the music. There was a big recording session, wasn't there? And this is some of what they came up with. This is not epic. No, it's just... It's a bit straight ahead. We want more grandiose, more foot on the foldback.

Good stuff. Well, there we go. Wet the appetite. Wet the appetite. I'm excited, especially now the sun's come out. We've moved into spring here in Adelaide, so it's perfect time for filming. Beautiful. We're going the opposite way. It's just completely... grey and dreary here now and you're starting and it's starting to be dark when you wake up it's like oh okay so you're going into that sort of english complaining kind of mode you know

Yep. Mustn't grumble. Mustn't grumble, but I will grumble. Yeah, totally. Ideas for a podcast? Oh, yes, indeed. You go first. Have you got something? Do you know what?

Tim's "Wrong Words" Concept

I've been sitting on this idea for... How long has this podcast been going? I don't even know how long we've been going. Eight years. Eight years. I reckon I've been sitting on this for six, if not seven. Wow. And I've just never been able to get it right. get it where I want it to be. And do you know what? I still haven't. Right. But I'm pulling the trigger anyway.

All right. All right. All right. So I haven't even really got the format or the name. I haven't even really got what it is. This sounds like perfect workshop material. Let's workshop this idea, man. All right. Let's do it. It just sounds like a Tim idea. So anyway, so let's do it. This idea is about words. It's about words that I think are wrong.

The word doesn't fit what it means. Oh, yeah, okay, yep. And sometimes it can be because of the onomatopoeia of the word, like the word just doesn't sound like the thing. And I'm not really talking about words that... I didn't know the definition of or I don't know the definition of. There are lots of those. And this idea was also very personal to different people. Everyone will have different words that they think are wrong. So I don't really know.

where to go with it, whether that guests come on and propose words or us as hosts would use the words. But it's about words that I think... It should be retired or changed in the English language because I think the word doesn't fit the meaning and it doesn't seem right to me. And do you have an alternative? No.

Right. In the podcast, you could. That could be the podcast. The podcast could be coming up with alternatives. I do enjoy coining words, as many people know. I have a bit of a reputation for coining words. So perhaps... that could be a thing, but I haven't got...

I haven't got it for that because I quite like coining words for new things, things that haven't got a name, but these are words that already exist and the definitions exist and they have for a long time. I just don't like the word. I'm going to give you some examples. Okay, that is a harder challenge.

to actually change usage of a word. It does happen across time. Famously, it happens to many words. But you being the catalyst for it is quite a challenge. But anyway, bring on an example. No, well, of course. I don't think the podcast would actually be an agent for change. It would just be a fun podcast. Let me give you some words that I think are wrong for what they mean. Bucolic. Bucolic. Bucolic. Bucolic, which I think sounds like...

A bit like colic. The bubonic plague. Yeah, it sounds like that. It sounds like it should be something terrible, doesn't it? Oh, it's bucolic. Well, I don't know what it means. What is bucolic? It means pleasant. and relating to the beautiful countryside. If you have a bucolic afternoon out on the farm, it means everything was beautiful and green and lovely. In English? Is it an English word? Yes, yes.

And that means lovely. Alcoholic would be more like it. I think that's an alcoholic afternoon rather. Yeah, exactly. Alcoholic, bubonic, colic. It sounds like something like that, and they're all negative things. But bucolic is a lovely thing. Okay. Wrong word. Wrong word.

We do have other words. So replacing that with something else is like, you can't say I'm going to replace that with lovely because lovely already exists. Yeah. Bucolic is more specific than just lovely, of course, but because bucolic relates. particularly to countryside and rural life. Right. But yes, I don't think I'm...

suggesting a podcast where you come up with new words. I'm talking about words that I think should be retired is basically what I'm saying. So for each of these, I want to have a go at a word to replace it with. And for this one, I'm going to go with Agrica Lovely.

That is agri-calovery. Agri-calovery? Agri-calovery. Well, that would not be my choice of a word, but good on you for having a try. Add it to your list of words. Bring it up in a minute as a word you want to see changed. Agri-calovery. Here's another one. Bourgeois. Yes. Yes. Because that's like a very French sounding word. It sounds like it's quite posh. It makes me think of, you know.

oh, you know, it's very bourgeois. But, of course, bourgeois means middle class and, you know, conventional attitudes. It's almost, I associate it almost more with mediocrity. in some ways. But there's... It's quite a posh sounding word. It is. I always... I would have it higher than that. It's certainly... I think of it as the opposite to bohemian. So if bohemian is unusual and alternative, bourgeois is kind of the mainstream, but richer.

That's how I would see it, almost like middle class. Yeah, it's middle class, yeah. It's above, it's middle class and, you know, yeah, materialistic. Yeah, yeah. The bourgeoisie are the people who were sort of, you know. Not the working class, above the working class, you know. Yeah, but not the upper class. No, no, yeah. But it's such a French-sounding juju word that I think, I'm not happy with it. Yep. I'm not happy with it. Okay? All right, all right.

Not proposing an alternative to that one? I've got quite a list. Well, yeah, I don't know if I want to propose an alternative to what we think it sounds like or for what it literally means. Let me think. I was thinking this last night, actually, when I was coming home. I was thinking we had been describing a particular street I was in. joking about how it's really leafy and lovely this is where i was playing tennis and joking about oh

Careful going back to your car, you know, for crime. And I was trying to think, how would you describe it? So leafy, wealthy, middle class, but in some ways quite boring. Hmm. What is a word? Yeah. Here's another one for you. I...

More Mismatched English Words

I'm going to propose the word sanguine. Sanguine. Oh, yeah, okay. So to me, this is a very calm word. It's almost a sad word. I find it a sad word to say, sanguine. More sad than melancholic. Yeah, yeah, that's right, yeah. But, of course, sanguine means optimistic and positive, especially in a difficult situation. I don't think the word sanguine...

Makes me think of someone being positive and optimistic. Because sanguine I don't think is a very high energy word. No. But being positive and optimistic are things I associate with high energy. I think it's in the same slipstream as the word swan. And I imagine something gliding, something slow, something graceful. Calmness. Yeah, that's right. Sanguine, yeah. I've got quite a long list here. How about bellicose?

Oh, I don't know what that means either. What's that? Well, bellicose, I think, sounds like quite a nice... A nice thing, a positive thing. Like Bella. Bellicose is someone demonstrating aggression and a willingness to fight, a warlike attitude. If someone's bellicose, they want to fight.

There's anger. I'm bellicose. But bellicose doesn't feel like that to me. Bellicose doesn't sound like an aggressive, angry word. All of these words, I feel like I want to check the etymology. Like, how did they evolve to this point? No, no, no, no, no.

I understand that's what you want to do and I respect that. Yeah. And once you do that, it will all make more sense. Yes, of course. And you'll say, oh, of course, that's why the word exists. But that's not what this is about. This is about the vibe and the reason. It's feel today. Yeah.

And the initial feeling because that matters more to me because that's how words are used. The experience of the word. All right. Keep going. Move through your list. Give us something else. I won't do all of them. All right. Hursuit. Oh, gosh. Hursuit. Tim, you are hursuit. You are very hursuit. So let me think about what that... Do you take that as a compliment? Are you taking that as a compliment? Hursuit. Yes, I would say neat, upright.

Yes. Proper. Yes. Yes. It means hairy. Right. I have a hair suit. Is that literally what it means? Yeah, yeah. Well, that's one way of putting it, yeah. Pursuit. Having a lot of hair. Tim is very hirsute. Chewbacca is hirsute. Hirsute, yeah. There we go. Wrong word for me. Yeah, totally. I'm sure if you do the etymology, it'll all make sense. Chewbaccaresque would be my replacement word. Chewbaccaresque.

Chewy. We can't have chewy. Go through. What's a word that we've heard of that's not too abstract? Well, most of them are a little bit that way because I guess if a word is super, super common, it takes over, doesn't it? It breaks free of those barriers. Some other words I've got on the list, they are... A little bit obscure, I guess. Verdant. Oh, what does that mean? What feel do you get from the word verdant? What kind of word is it? It's an adjective, is it?

I guess they're all adjectives. Yes, it is an adjective. England is verdant. Verdant. Oh, I think I know what this means. I think there's an album by an artist I can't remember called The Verdant. Does it mean like grassy? Like lawn green? Yes, green and grassy and lush. Yes. But to me verdant sounds more a harsher word like vertical and it sounds mathematical and, you know, it doesn't, ver doesn't, I know.

I know it comes from the French for green. So obviously it has a very, its etymology is obvious. Oh, right. And to French people, it probably makes a lot of sense. But if you don't know that... I don't think verdant is a good word for green. You're right. It does sound mathematical. It's the kind of one where they'd go, oh, okay, that's a prime number and that one's the verdant and that's the, you know. Yeah, the verdant of the triangle. Yeah, that's right. Yeah, that's right. Yeah.

Yeah. Puce. Puce. Puce. I don't know what that means either. Yeah, sort of a – it's a – purplish, browny, reddy, pinky colour. Oh, right, yes. Puce. Puce. Puce. But it sounds putrid and disgusting. Yes, it does. But I don't think the colour puce... is particularly disgusting my daughters are wonderful with colors they've got all sorts of pretentious names for all these different colors like for their nail polish and stuff and i'm over i just generally refer to prime

What do they call primary colours? You know, just like, oh, that's red, that's green. And they go, oh, dad, don't be ridiculous. You know, that's sky, you know, sassafras or something, you know. Sky sassafras. Is that a thing? Is it now the title of this episode? Sky Cessar Prince. Now, I have gone for very deliberately and it is what I want to do. words that just have a feeling to them and like...

A sound. Yeah. You know, like I said, sometimes the onomatopoeia of it, sometimes just the sound and the feeling of the word or the similarity to other words. There is another category of words you could bring in here. And it's not really where I want to go, but there are words that maybe are just misleading. Like the famous example is flammable and inflammable. Oh, yeah. So if something's inflammable.

it means it catches fire. And if it's flammable, it also means it catches fire. Another slightly better example of maybe things being misleading and therefore often being misused is nonplussed. If you are nonplussed by something. which very much leads one to think that means you're unhappy with it or disappointed by it. Indifferent even, yeah. Yeah, but of course nonplussed actually means surprised or confused, not knowing how to act.

That's the actual meaning of nonplussed. So there are words where, you know, you're almost misdirected by the word. And I'm happy to discuss them. You know, I think it could be interesting too. But that's not so much what I've been going for, as you can tell. Incontinent. is a word that I don't think suits what it is. Incontinent. Yes. So incontinence, pads, incontinence. Inability to control bodily functions, particularly urination, or inability to control...

passion and emotion can also less frequently be referred to as incontinence, incontinent. Yeah, I don't know. That one works for me. I think that might be the familiarity of it, though, because I don't think it does suit the word. Incontinent. Yeah, certainly continent. It's funny that one refers to a gathering of nations, a large body mass of land. Yeah, a land mass, yeah. Yeah, and then suddenly, yeah, it also refers to...

Something not very solid. Something that isn't a large mass. On that subject, effluent. Effluent almost sounds like a nice word, doesn't it? It sounds like affluent, which means wealthy, and you think of flowing and fluent. If something or someone is fluent, that's also a positive thing. But, of course, effluent is sewage. Yes.

So that's one of the famous running gags in a show. If people around the world want to get a sense of Australian culture, they can on YouTube find a show called Kath and Kim, like with a K, Kath and Kim. And that's of like suburban, Western suburbs. suburban Australia. And this is where this kind of language is misused, where they're making this, oh, those people, they have a lot of money. They're very affluent, you know. Yeah. It comes up again and again. Yeah. So. Suffrage.

Suffrage is a terrible word for what it is. I know, I know, I know. And I did quite a bit of research and went down, had a cup of tea at this suffrage centre that actually still exists here in Adelaide a little while ago near my previous workplace, the college. And it does. All my life I've thought it was like, oh, women were suffering. Like they were suffering under the burden of not being able to vote. Yes, of course, suffrage does relate to the...

the right to vote in elections and the women's suffrage movement is sort of the most common use of it. Yeah, at some point I realised, oh, the women were for suffrage. They weren't against it. No, yeah, no, exactly. They weren't like slaves and we're suffering here. It was like...

We're for suffrage. So there we go. Of course, Tim and I would love to hear more examples of words that you think are wrong. Wrong words. What are your wrong words? Good idea. Good idea. This is, well, we've talked about it for a little while. I like this. Yeah. And I feel like I'm going to be noticing them more because they do come up from time to time and I'll note them and we can bring them in as we go along.

words that can be changed. And, of course, one person's word that should be changed for another person is not. If you're very familiar with the word or you like it, you may disagree strongly. with what we're saying. And you may have a word that you think is wrong that we love. So it is very personal to the person. I still think it's fun to talk about.

Spoon of the Week: Brisbane's Identity

Give us your words. Send us your words, email, Reddit, all the usual places. We'd love to hear. Patreon as well. Tell us words that you think are not fit for purpose. Not fit for purpose words. Man, is it time for Spoon of the Week yet?

hang on just let me just let me get the jingle running hang on you ready here's the where's the button i've got this i've actually got a button on my keyboard it's a huge red button that just says spoon of the week right and when i press it you hear this what you got well brady we've got a wonderful spoon that's come out of the collection today i've sent you a photo of it just a few minutes ago it's from a place that is affectionately sometimes known as

Brizzy Whizzy. I thought you were going to say Briz Vegas. Oh, it's become Briz Vegas later on. That's right. Brisbane is a bit like the Vegas. It's like if Vegas was in Texas. That's kind of what. Queensland and Brisbane is like. So for those who don't know, Brisbane is the capital city of the state of Queensland, which is a sort of the top northeastern... quadrant of Australia. It's largely a big rural state but has a very long coastline and Brisbane is on the coast there. It's the capital.

And it has a little bit of the Florida about it as well because it's got like holiday parks and it's got... you know, like movie world and dream world, the sort of Australian equivalents. No, that's not Brisbane. That's Gold Coast. Sorry, I'm talking about Brisbane. It's a different city. I know that. I'm talking about Queensland as a whole. That's kind of, as a state, it's a bit like Florida. You know, it's got that kind of stuff. Yes, yes.

Because the reason I protested was I've been to the Gold Coast several times, including with you. I have never been to Brisbane. Oh, right, okay. Brisbane is way better. Really? I can't stand the Gold Coast, no. But Brisbane's actually a cool city and it's got some lovely, you know, music. and alternative areas and cafes and it's got a fantastic art gallery and Riverbank area and stuff. It's a nice city. I always hear people talk Brisbane down and I always...

To me, Brisbane has no identity. Well, it's no Melbourne or Sydney, no, but it's Brisbane. But, like, even Adelaide and Perth, you know, love or hate them, I feel like they have, like, an identity to them. But if someone said to me, what's Brisbane, I'd be like, well...

It's a city in Queensland, and it's near the Gold Coast, and it's near the Great Barrier Reef, and if you go inland, there's all this stuff. But Brisbane itself is just like, oh, it's got an airport. I'll give you this. It doesn't have... I don't have a mental picture of it in my mind. It's not like, oh, yeah, Melbourne, you know, I know that. Think of the Flinders Street clocks or whatever. Sydney, you think of the Sydney Harbour and the Opera House. Brisbane...

I guess I think of the riverbank, but only bits of it, like the art gallery and then there's the West End. It's not got a clear – it needs a brand. That's what it needs.

I always think that about bridges. Anyway, let's get back to the spoon. What's on the spoon? Well, maybe this could be their brand. This is what we can think of from now on because what you've got there is, oh, there is that bridge. Now, there is a bridge called the... I don't know if it's this bridge, but there is a bridge in Brisbane called the Go Between Bridge, which is-

Legendary because it's named after the great Brisbane band, the Go-Betweens. Wonderful, wonderful band from the 1980s. And so they named the bridge the Go-Between Bridge. But I don't think that's what this bridge is. This is an older bridge. But I don't know what. Yeah, on the spoon. So on the spoon, there's like a, on the enamel top of the spoon, at the top of the spoon, the handle we've got, there's like a sort of a bridge. It looks like a big, big.

elaborate bridge across a river, presumably the Brisbane River, a palm tree, the word Brisbane. This spoon to me encapsulates why Brisbane has no identity. It's just like a bridge that we're not sure what it is and a tree. Well, let me tell you, the rule applies here that anywhere that features a palm tree is bloody awful. Right.

I think unless you're in the Caribbean, you know what I mean? Anywhere in the Western world that puts a palm tree somewhere, that is going to be a bad pub, a bad resort, a bad beach. You know what I mean? Like it just feels paradise. Crap. That's what it feels like whenever there's a palm tree somewhere. Fighting doesn't solve anything, Daniel. Well, neither do palm trees, ma. What's that from? Karate Kid. Oh, right, okay. Fighting doesn't solve anything. Oh, well, neither does palm trees, ma.

That's not fair. I will say one thing about this spoon. Apart from its kind of, you know, brizzy-wizzy kind of emblem on it, the actual spoon's a classic, beautiful spoon. It's older and it's silver. And on the back it has a brand, which is Stuart EPA. So I Googled that to find out a bit about it. In fact, I chat GPT'd it as well to see if I could get some history. And there was none on it, but the Googling brought up a heap of spoons. It seems to be a very, very common Australian...

Italian silverware kind of brand. I got the impression it was a New Zealand company because this Stuart EPAI, because I Googled it too, it's like a, yeah, it's on the back of the spoon, but it's...

And it is like, I think it's the hallmark, you know, for the spoon. But it's a lot bigger than a typical hallmark. And, yeah, it seems to refer to the silver electroplating. And, yeah, I thought it might have been a New Zealand company that made it. I could be wrong about that. Oh, right. Okay. Well, let us know if you know. anything about Stuart EPAI. Stuart EPAI, the makers of the spoon.

This was one that your dad brought back from a trip to Brisbane, presumably? I presume it was. He went there in the late 80s. He went for a trip up to Brisbane and... Maybe he brought it back then, although it does seem like it's older than that. But he, of course... It may not be from the 1980s. He may have found it somewhere and it was even older. But it feels older than that. It feels like it's designed in the sort of 70s or 60s maybe.

It's got a nice ageing sort of patina about it. It's almost like it's a classic Royal England spoon, but then someone stuck a Brisbane sticker on the front of it, you know. Yeah, because the front, the Brisbane part is kind of a bit. A bit tacky. Yeah, okay. But there it is. There it is. It goes into the cannon and becomes an unmade-

Spoon, part of the collection. Yep, there's a page on our website where we have every spoon that's ever been featured. You can go and scroll down and have a look at them all. Tim, when were you last in Brisbane? Oh, that's a really good question. I think it was for a theology conference about five years ago.

Just pre-COVID, so that would be at least six years ago actually. Yeah, just talking to God, talking to Jesus. That was a good conference. We went down to the river and on the barge we had like a dinner and got up and danced a little bit and walked across. I remember that night because I remember on the way, one of my colleagues, one of the...

other theology lecturers, we went into a little bar and he said, oh, let me splash out. Let me buy a round of cocktails for everyone. And we were like, oh, gosh, not really a cocktail crowd, you know, more of a glass of wine crowd. But he went, cocktails for everyone. And then a few more people seem to have walked in in our group than he realised. And so he got to the end and went, I'm kind of regretting that now. That was quite an expensive round. $7,000. Yeah, that was great.

New Workspaces Podcast Idea

Tim, do you have an idea for a podcast? I do, I do. And you know how you sort of describe your workshop? unformed idea is Tim-esque mine's the same I've not come up with a perfect name for this although I keep going to the wrong word I keep thinking of calling it orifices but that's totally wrong because it's actually about offices or more specifically workspaces. I know that both you and I have very recently moved into new workspaces.

Mine's kind of an office, but it's more than an office. Yours is kind of a workspace. Yeah. And I just wondered. there was a podcast idea and it's talking about our workspaces, how we like to have it. I know you're quite particular about these things, particularly yours is, you know, your own, like it's not at a workplace. It's. your own workplace so i wondered if this idea we could we could actually have a go at this podcast idea by talking through a little bit of our workspace and and why

why your workspace is the way it is. And I can see a little bit of it over your shoulder. And last time I mentioned that you had a massive beanbag, today it looks like you're recording this podcast in... Sitting in front of Jabba the Hutt, actually, it's like it's just over your shoulder. Yeah. So to put people, I have this, like, big, huge beanbag, which I actually bought for our house. I bought it for Edward, my son, mainly because.

We saw one of these at like another place we went to, like a... activity center we went to and they had these giant bean bags and ed would love jumping on them like leaping off chairs and tables through the air and landing on it so i said i've got to get him one of these giant bean bags so we had it for a while in our house and he did enjoy jumping on it

But it kind of takes up a lot of space and my wife decided it was time for it to leave the house. And I have this workspace next door now, which I'll talk about shortly. So I moved the beanbag next door for me just to sit on because I have room for it here. But at the moment, this new office I've got set up isn't very acoustically friendly. It's got lots of hard surfaces and not a lot of furnishings in it yet. So to sort of soak up some of the echo in the room, I've moved the beanbag.

into the room whenever i do a podcast so just before you and i start recording i put this massive beanbag which is almost the size of a person sort of behind me to soak up some sound in the room so there's a big beanbag sitting next to me

For that reason. I mean, I would have thought, is that not dangerous for a little kid to go climbing in? I would have thought a little kid could get... get stuck when they're learning to walk in that and not be able to breathe or you know what i mean like in the middle of it like it's a massive mountain of sand or snow or something is it like that or is it pretty sturdy no it's not that soft oh okay okay

It's pretty tough. It's pretty hard and big. And he's like three and a half years old now. Oh, well, he is now, yeah. You can get in and out of a beanbag, yeah. But I think you should be careful, man. I don't want you getting on there unsupervised. All right. I'll be careful.

I'll be careful. We find Brady in six months' time stuck on his beanbag like he's a turtle upside down or something, waving his arms and legs. I know where to move. You said we're both in new workspaces. Tell me, first of all, why are you in a new office? What happened that precipitated you?

Because basically you've just moved from one side of a building to another, haven't you, your office? That's right. We have a bunch of offices and it was never a good configuration. So the whole time I've been here at the church, all these offices, it's not quite working because of the way one... office leads into another one and so we had some new staff begin and we had to move everything around so

We put four of them in one office. So that's called the Quad now. That's like a really cool sort of hangout space. A bit like in MASH, you know, the swamp, that tent's like got, you know, the three cool guys in it. And that's a really cool hangout area because it's like the youth.

the young adults pastor and the children's pastor and the worship pastor, they all have that cool quad space. Okay. So that's the cool end of the building. And I've moved up the other end of the building, one room and then another one that goes off for a bit more of a meeting counselling room. Yeah. But that's why we moved. We just needed to reconfigure it for Room. Okay.

Designing a Minister's Office

And you use this as a chance to reboot your workspace and how you want things to look and lay out and stuff? Well, it coincided with me resigning my position at the college where I had a different office. So I had to bring all those books over and all that stuff from there and set it up.

here so it was actually an opportune time to set it up properly here with new bookshelves and all that sort of stuff what do you need in an office as a church minister to make an office work like what are some of your requirements.

to have a good functioning office. What do you need to do in an office? Well, you just need, I mean, you pretty much just need a laptop and a Bible, but then you need some, you know, Bible commentaries and stuff. Like you need books to help you prepare sermons and you need.

a space to sit with people that's quiet and confidential to meet like meet with couples and right you also need a place to have you know you can just use a meeting room for instance to meet with staff or meet with teams and the church council so it's just like any other office really you just need to

be able to sit and you're of course communicating and emailing and all that kind of stuff because you're having meetings in there with uh sometimes you know like you say sometimes sensitive confidential meetings with people pastoral care yeah Is there any kind of look or feel you go for, things you beware of, things you avoid, things you make sure to do in the look and feel of the office? Yeah, yeah. So the room next door, which is what we've set up as like a lounge, you keep it.

it very simple and soft you go okay this is a room where people are going to be grieving where you know sometimes Difficult conversations happen. So you make it like any counselling room, really. You keep it reasonably benign. You don't chocker it up with, you know, lightsabers and, you know, massive beanbags and stuff like that. Like you just sort of make it pretty nice and pleasant.

And you make sure that it's... confidential so there's not like this one's got a big window and we're putting some frosting just along at yeah so when you're sitting down that's kind of at the eye level so you don't feel self-conscious about people looking at you in there people walking past on the street yeah but you also want it transparent

In terms of being a safe space with genders and kids and ages, all those spaces at churches, you want it to be so it's not like behind closed doors or anything like that as well. So there's a bit of a balance there, all those considerations. I had a friend that...

was diagnosed with cancer quite young, you know. She's a lot better now, by the way, but she was telling me at the hospital the doctor took her into a room to have a talk and it was like this sort of quite plain room with like... picture of a flower or an orchid on the wall as soon as she saw that picture of the flower on the wall she knew i know this is the cancer room yeah right yeah yeah yeah what what what artwork or pictures do you have on the wall for your sort of

Because obviously that room is a, I imagine a lot of happy, joyful things happen in that room, but also a lot of people who are grieving or have had sadness in their life and stuff like that too. So obviously I imagine there were lots of sensitivities.

I just want to know what picture you have on the wall. Is it a flower? We've got, no, it's no. Well, it is a leaf. It's, oh, but that's because it's on the album cover of a New Order album. So it's actually just a big poster of New Order, like the band, like an album cover.

Yeah. So that's the main picture in there, which is kind of benign, but looks like modern art, you know, that kind of thing. Okay. Then there's a wall of books and then there's a massive window and some nice stuff outside. So it kind of works as it is. Yeah. The books.

The books have like little plants. They're spaced out and stuff. It's not all chockers like here in my cavern, in my little place here, which is where I've – like this is my workplace. I've got Nick Cave on the wall and, you know, like I've got some lovely old – like an old –

picture of a cathedral and you know um nice big brick stone wall and stuff and then books everywhere yeah so quite quite busy aesthetic i would say your office is that fair it's got a lot of stuff in it but i like it i like it busy but in its place i don't like it chaotic

Yeah. Like the books are exactly where I want them and they're all categorized. So it's easy for the other staff to find them to use in their essays and stuff. Like they've got labels and stuff. And I've got like, you know, a couple of typewriters, but, and some unmade podcast stuff and everything, but it's all. In its place. Yeah.

Everything in its place. The desk has paper, but I like decluttering everything. I like have a lot of stuff, but in its place so that it feels decluttered for sure. When do you do your tidy declutter? Like do you do it every day before you leave the office? Every morning?

when you come in once a week like how often do you do like a all right let's sort this out or does it not get that cluttered because of the nature of your work instinctively during the day yeah generally when I come in in the morning right what's happening here and at the end of the day I'm leaving and unless I'm rushing I'm like right let's this I love get let's get rid of this piece of paper let's get rid of this piece of paper yeah so I do that every day on the desk I think yeah

How many hours a week would you spend in that office you're sitting in now, your minister's office there at the church? I'm full-time at the church here at the moment. But, of course, a lot of your work isn't in your office. No, you go and meet in a cafe and then you go do other things. If I think about a sort of a 50-hour week, I guess I'm in here maybe for 30 hours. Do you feel good when you come into your office, when you step in in the morning? Is it a...

Like, is it a good feeling? Like, oh, I love this space. I can't wait to get going. Yeah, yeah, it is. What's your emotion when you walk in? Yeah, I love coming to work and I love coming into the room. I need slabs of time with the door shut, you know, like to be quiet and get things done. I feel fantastic. But then I go out and go and looking for people. Hey, everybody, how's it going? What's going on here? You know, I love them popping in. Hey, come in. Joking. Yeah. Yeah.

I do. I love the feeling of being in here and working. Is there anything about your office you feel you haven't got right yet or you want or like... Is it exactly as you want it now? What would you change? What would you add? What would you remove? Is there anything about it that's not right? I think everyone has the same thing. I just need to buy a bigger monitor.

I just want a bigger monitor. Everyone always just wants a bigger monitor. I've gone to two really big ones now and I'm really enjoying having two. It is a real game changer being able to move things around and drag things from one monitor to another rather than closing and opening apps all the time and stuff. Yeah. This was a big monitor six years ago when I bought it, but it's, you know.

Suddenly I feel all boxed in and I need to spread out. I have heard it said, though, the bigger and more monitors you have, the lower you are in the food chain. Because there are people who do all the coding and the work and the grunt work have big monitors and lots of monitors and that. And yet if you're a CEO of a huge company, you normally spend your whole life just on a phone and stuff. Yeah, yeah, yeah. That's right. Yeah, you know.

So the fact I've got this second big monitor now makes me realise, yeah. I'm a soldier. Yeah, yeah, that's right. That's a very good point, actually. Yeah. So let me ask you about your space there, man. What have you done there? Well, recently, a little sort of... tiny flat apartment next door to where I live became available and I've adopted that as my office.

Tim's Home Office Experiment

For a while it was an experiment to see how I like working away from home because for the longest time my office was upstairs in our house. But now I actually have to leave the house, open the front door and walk to an apartment. very very close by but it is a separate place yep you can't do it in your pajamas or you could do it in your pajamas but i haven't i haven't got to that stage yet so there is a real sense now for the first time in a very long time of

coming to work, which so far is an experiment I'm liking very much. And because it is an apartment that has like rooms, I've got like a little kitchenette here. I have got a little bathroom. But there's just like a sort of a living room and a living space but rather than turn that into a living space with like a sofa and a TV and a dining table, I've turned that into a place where I want to film and it's going to be like a little...

Not a studio but just a workspace where I could build Lego or do the marble runs. There's a big table in the middle and I can put cameras around it and it's like a decent amount of space. It's not all cramped into one little room. And then in what would be the bedroom here, I've turned that into my actual computer office where I do my editing and sit at my computer and spend most of the time. But I haven't been in here that long. And because I have so much work to do...

And I'm always working. I haven't really been able to have like a week or two to get it exactly how I want it and design it and hang up the pictures and make it me. It does still feel a little bit new. or temporary it hasn't i haven't totally bedded into it yet but i am gradually doing that over time now bringing more of my own personality and stuff into it so it feels a bit more homely but i am finding a good place to work

Less distracted, you know, the comings and goings of home don't distract me. Edward coming home, I don't hear Edward come home and think, oh, I'm going to go down and see him, which inevitably turns into half an hour of playing Hot Wheels and stuff like that. There's less distraction here. I'm probably a bit more focused, but I'm also a lot more good at having a finishing time because when I finish work now and I turn the lights off and...

go back into the house next door, I can't come back to my computer to check something or do work. So there is a good separation. And I can't do a lot of my work on a laptop because I need all these hard drives with all the media on them and stuff like that. So...

it's not easy for me to do a lot of my work from home if I don't have access to the office. It used to be I could just say, oh, I'm going to go upstairs now in my pyjamas and work for half an hour. Can't really do that anymore. So going home means going home, which is... A new thing for me. And I think a positive thing. It's probably a good thing for Edward as well, rather than seeing that dad's here but distracted. Going to work is another place, you know, and then coming back. Yeah.

Yes, I do. I wonder about that though because I am noticing now, it also could be just because he's getting older and smarter, but he's very aware that Daddy goes and works like, oh, will you play with me, Daddy? And then I'm like, oh, no, I've got to go to work. I've got to go next door, go to work. And he's like.

kind of resigned to it. Oh, okay, yeah, you've got to go to work. And that kind of makes me feel a bit sad that he kind of like he's got this enthusiasm and happiness and then Daddy says, I've got to go away to this other place.

where you won't see me and be able to play with me. Whereas before I could, okay, let's play for another 10 minutes and then I'll go upstairs and I'll come downstairs. When I hear something funny is happening downstairs, I'll come and join in the fun. But now I feel a lot more like I go away and I see... Not a sadness in him, but just a realisation that daddy goes away from me and does this thing. And that feels more separate now. And it reminds me of my childhood. It reminds me of dad.

leaving every morning and me seeing him go out the door and walk off down the street and disappear until i next got to see him yeah and there's like a there is a kind of a There is a sadness to it, a melancholy to it. And I now see that. I now see myself as that person to him, which I didn't before. Kylie, my wife, goes away for her work and usually overnight. And there is a, you know.

where's mummy oh she's in manchester she's in london and his realization of what that means now that she's far away she's not here she has to do that less and i never had to do that Except when I went away for work, of course. But now I do it every day. And that has a little tinge of something to it that is a little bit sad.

Balancing Work, Family, and Sermons

It may be more honest, though, like, you know, there's because the time is proper time. I mean, I'm not a fan of talking about quality time versus quantity time. I think it's all about both. Quantity time is great.

But also a lot of time if you're there but not there, you know, because you're on your phone or not you, but a person's on their phone or just looking at the screen, oh, Dad, and you're so, oh, but I'm here, I'm here, you show me, but you're not really going, oh, sing it again, but you're not really.

And they notice that. That's the worst. I mean, he's three and a half now and if he wants to do something or show something or play something, sometimes he'll start it with, Daddy, Daddy. And I look at him and he goes, put your phone down. He'll tell me to put my phone down. so I can then engage with him and that. So, yeah, you definitely see that. And I do see an advantage to that now because I am a bit less distracted by work now. I do feel like I have a better finish.

time and finish line in my head. So when I go and spend time with him, I think I am less susceptible to distraction because I have shut things down better. So I think it's positive in that way. But yeah, there is that real feeling of Daddy's away. Daddy's home. Daddy's away. Daddy's going away. That is the way it is for most people. And it was for me growing up. And now I've created that situation a bit more now. It's hard to think about what's...

the best because when you go back through history you go okay we're going to work and coming back that is all part of the industrial revolution you go way back you go okay well we're all on a farm and we're working but you're kind of working together but of course you're not working together are you it's not like edwards

you know coding alongside of you there may come a time when that happens not that you code but you know editing alongside you and filming something with you and all the rest of it he's just there and you're doing the thing near him and that's kind of you're not with him anyway like i said so yeah and

And there is also I have now got like this magical space that he can sometimes come and visit. And once I've got it up and running a bit more with like cameras and tripods and exciting things, tools, power tools, ladders. computers, screens, microphones. It does become a bit of an Aladdin's cave that he can occasionally come and visit. He came and visited Daddy's office for the first time since it's been up and running.

a couple of days ago, and he was really excited. What's that? What's that? Oh, it's a microphone, headphones. Can I climb on that ladder? And I haven't even got all the cool stuff out yet. So once that happens, it will be an exciting place for him to visit. I was always excited. if I got to see my father's workspace and mine's just going to be next door. So, I mean, he's probably only a year or two away from being allowed to just come around himself.

Yeah, that's cool. You guys could, you could also do a cool little camp out. Like you could both pull out the sleeping bags and do a sleep at dad's office kind of thing as well. You know, like something like doing a stay over next door. That would be cool. Yeah. Yeah. It is still an experiment.

me working away from the house and we may decide at the moment it feels like it's working well but we may decide for financial reasons or other reasons it might not work I might go back into the house I do still have the room there that was my office for now. It hasn't been swallowed up by Kylie's beautification of our house yet. So it may not work, but it's feeling like a positive step. We've talked about it for years and years. you know should you work away from home

and I'm now doing it, although literally the wall in front of me is also the wall to my house on the other side. Oh, yeah, right. But I do feel when I come here, I do feel away from home. But you didn't put a door in then? You didn't make it? No, no.

The Personal Touch in Office Design

No, there's no. Because that would defeat the purpose. It just becomes another room then, doesn't it? Yeah. I don't like working at home. I like going home and not working. And that's hard as a minister because... Because you're always working. There's always someone phoning. And Sil and I work together, so we talk about stuff as well. But we try and... So there is something that bleeds, but certainly in terms of...

You get out the laptop, you do stuff. You know, I don't like to do that. I like to keep all that separate because I like being able to switch off. But that's for me really. Where do you prepare your sermons then? In the office. I know obviously you do it in your head. Yeah, that's right. It's all up here. I start them in the office.

And then I finish them off at home, which seems ridiculous. I started here at work in my office, and then I'd take the books I might be using or take photos of those pages home, and I'd do a bit more work at home on the web. weekend and then i get up and do the final polish early sunday morning i'm a really early riser and i love working early so i get up and always like do the last you know blush then yeah do you have

Like notes or bullet points? Obviously your sermon is not a complete written speech. You know, I've seen you give a sermon. It doesn't seem written. You haven't got an auto cue. But what are you referring to? Have you got like 15 bullet points? What does it look like, your sermon? It's generally, it's dot points with a couple of sentences that I want to say correctly or a quote from someone. Is it like one A4 page or is it on like little cards or?

No, it's generally two – it's generally three pages. The first page is just like the – it's got the text – that I've been dealing with and a bit of maybe an intro comment. That's just all of the one page because I space it out a bit because of my eyesight's not that good and I'm, you know, reading it.

obviously from a lectern or something. So it's a bit bigger than normal. Then generally it's two pages of information. Typed. Sorry, I missed. Sorry. Did you say it was typed or handwritten? Oh, no, typed. Yeah, typed on the computer. Yeah.

But I also love preparing at random places during the week. So generally, I do that initial work, looking at the passage in the Bible, thinking about where we're going and the theme and all that kind of stuff. And then I store that in my head for the week. And then if I find myself... at the apple store you know the genius bar it's oh gosh i'm going to be sitting here for 20 minutes i go right let me close my eyes and prepare my talk

Or let me pull out a piece of paper. Will you open your phone and write notes? Or is that all in head type stuff? No, I generally, if I think of something, I'll write it down and take, I'll generally send me in a self an email. I'll open an email and go blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And then cut and paste that later on. But most of the time I've got a piece.

of paper and a pen and I'll do then I'll write that down and sometimes I've literally I'm using that example because I've done that on two different occasions and the time it takes me it's okay I'm getting this down yeah okay that's pretty much great fantastic that's largely done now

Until Sunday morning. Coming back to your podcast idea, we've just done it, isn't it? It's people coming on talking about the space they work in, why they work in it, how they work, things like that. I do like seeing people's workspace. I was having... um lunch with someone at their house today and they and they're they're writing a book and they said oh you know i said show me where you work and i go into this little sort of enclave thing it's like cool this is nice

Perfect book writing sort of space, you know. Do you like a view outside when you're working? It's not important to me. My office at home that I had for a very long time had a beautiful view out over... water and into the distance and mountains. My current one could have a nice view, but I've decided to put the desk facing a plain wall and I never even look out that window. It's not...

It's not an issue. I'll tell you one thing I've done in this new office. It's nice. When you first come in the door, there's like a tiny, there's a little window in a little entry area that's got a little shelf below it. And I've put... all my awards on there, like medals and trophies and things that I've accumulated over the year. And it's kind of when I come into work, I open the door, I put my keys down and then I walk past that and I see it.

every morning as I walk to work. And it's nice. Like, I like it. Like, I'm not consciously thinking about it. I'm not looking at it thinking, oh, look at those awards. And I'm not thinking, oh, aren't I great? But... For some reason, it's just a little bit nice and inspiring and uplifting.

without consciously thinking, oh, the work I've done has been recognised at some point in the past. I'm not even thinking that. It's not even that conscious a connection. But having it as one of the first things I see before I start working.

Office Displays and Listener Call

This nice little neat area with some nice little pretty trinkets and trophies and things has been really positive. I've always seen offices and workplaces where they have a display cabinet of trophies and stuff in the foyer or reception a bit like, not pompous or vain or anything, just like...

I've never really got it. Like I've never really, I thought, ah, whatever. But I kind of get that more now. I kind of get why companies and places do that, have those things for their employees and everyone at the entry because it is a really.

positive start to the day rather than saying a mess or things that need to be tidied up or work that needs to be done. Having the first thing I see every day as like a... a little positive, neat, tidy thing associated with happy memories and award ceremonies and nice nights out. warm feelings of recognition and stuff has been surprisingly effective. I'm always interested in officers where they put their degrees on the wall or not.

I get that too. Yeah. I get that now. I get it more than I used to. Like, because it probably reminds them not only of something they accomplished over a long period, but lots of, yeah, it just, it's a beautiful, neat. nice thing that encapsulates a feeling of accomplishment and happiness and nice memories just at a glance. Yeah. At a glance. It's something I've done and it's surprising how much I like it.

Nice. Maybe I am incredibly arrogant. I don't know. It's your office. It's not like it's a... No one else is going there, so you haven't put it out for display. It's just for you, so, you know. Yeah, you're right. You're right. You're right. Yeah.

Yeah, but it works. It's nice. It's a nice thing. Yeah, and I'm doing a really good job of keeping this space neat as well, more than I did when I had that office next door in my house. I'm doing a pretty good job of having it as a tidy space, maybe because it's the new shiny thing.

It's also light, whereas your other one was sort of green and dark. I actually like the vibe of the other one a bit more, to be honest, but that one looks a bit more modern. Yeah, that's fair. Yeah, it's got a light paint. It's got light paint. It's still quite an old, because it's the same building. So it's still got like, you know, old period features and fireplace and all that sort of stuff. But yeah, it is more modern.

I'll tell you what else I'm getting is I've got a few toys here because every now and then you meet with someone and they've got a kid with them, right? And so you want to say, oh, here, the kid's got something to do. And so they feel comfortable in the room. But I'm actually wanting to build up a collection of, like, cool...

80s toys, like basically the toys that I always wanted to have when I was young, some cool Star Wars stuff and a Transformer and Astro Boy and some cool stuff. I'm going to build up a little collection like that and have that in a basket. To then give to the little ones when they're there. See, I'd be like, oh, no, this toy is too precious.

They might break it. Don't you realise this is a 1981 vintage Luke Skywalker? No. You can't play with that. That's the whole point of it. Like I've already got a Knight Rider. I've got Kit, which is cool. That's for kids to play with on the ground. It's great.

It's got a tram from Melbourne, which is a little bit more boring, but it's put in the same collection as well. Should we put a few pictures or things of some of our workspaces in the notes for people to look at? We can do that. Absolutely we can do that. I'm trying to think. I really like having the unmade podcast stuff here. So even though that's got, I mean, it's not nothing to do. I do the podcast here as well. But of course, the people that come in and...

I hear for ministry and all that kind of stuff. I'm not meeting with unmade podcast listeners all the time. Although sometimes I do when they visit the church and then I can bring them in. But we've not had anyone come since I've been in the new office. So you've got a little shrine, have you, of merch? That's right, I've got the medals there and, yeah, I've got the Tim Hine swimming medal, which is...

So for the untrained eye walking in, it's going to be a little bit, wow, that guy was really proud of that swimming accomplishment back in 1993. He's literally still got it in his office. Not realising it's here for ironic reasons. That's great. All right. Well, that was a fun talk for us at least. Again, again, it's really...

Curious, like if you want to send us a picture of your office or workspace, tell us anything distinctive you do or anything about it, we'd love to hear. Absolutely. We might talk about it on an upcoming episode in follow-up and parish notices and things.

Patreon and Bonus Content

Get in touch. Let us know about your office. We love hearing from civilians and stakeholders and the like. We haven't done prizes, random prizes today for Patreon supporters because I am very shortly setting up another marble run and I'm going to have a whole marble extravaganza to give away some prizes that will be appearing on Patreon in the usual places.

Join us, though, in the request room. Come on over. If you become a Patreon supporter, then you get access to some bonus content. We have a list of questions today, which are... Questions that have not been addressed in the past. They are what we might call B-sides. They are a bunch of lost dogs that we are going to pull together and pat.

Don't overstate the case, Tim. I'm not going to go through all the previous requests. I'm just going to go through unused requests from the last batch. Right. Yes. No. Okay. Fair enough. Yes. Okay. All right. But I like the B-sides idea. Come and hear some requests from B-sides.

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