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228 lines
8.6 KiB
Plaintext
228 lines
8.6 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3905
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Title: HPR3905: Presenting Fred Black
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3905/hpr3905.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 07:46:34
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3905 for Friday the 21st of July 2023.
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Today's show is entitled, Presenting Fred Black.
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It is hosted by Falky and is about 18 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is I have a short talk to present Fred Black.
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Hi, this is Falky and I think we should fill the gaps in the HPR schedule.
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I'm not alone in this.
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I have my son with me.
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Present yourself.
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Well, I call myself Fred Black.
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Don't really know what else to say.
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I think you could tell the listeners a little bit about the school system in Sweden, especially what you have done.
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Yeah, you start first class at 7 years old and at 6 years, when you're 6 you start with a school class.
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But it's not called like first class, it's called pre-school class.
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So it's not like pre-school, which you have like below school level.
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It's like it's literally called pre-school class.
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But that's a long time ago.
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Yeah, so that means that first class you start first class at 7 years old.
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Which means that you're always a year older than for example people in Germany would be in a specific class level.
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So he left the ninth grade now that would in Germany where I went to school would have been the tenth.
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Yeah.
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What do you plan after the summer?
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Yeah, I'm going to go to high school or college or whatever you want to call it.
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So a program called the International Baccalaureate or for short IB.
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Can't do like whatever you want, but everything is in English.
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So you are practicing a little now.
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You can call it that.
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I hope your English is better than mine.
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No, I would say that.
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But I think we left the school aside now.
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We have holidays.
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So what else do you do?
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Well, obviously a lot of computer stuff.
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But I don't really know that much about computers.
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You don't know much about computers.
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What system do you have on your laptop?
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I have Manjaro Linux with I-3 and I-CVM as window managers.
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But every time I install a computer, Volky helps me.
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When setting it up, that kind of stuff.
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Last time you did pretty well yourself without me.
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Come on, I still need a lot of help with that.
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But you're learning.
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Yes, I know.
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So we are sitting here without two thinkpets.
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As he said with his I-3 and I'm with my sway.
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So pretty the same, but with Wayland.
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Yes.
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And what are you using your computer for with your I-3 or sway?
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I-3, I-3.
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I play a lot of games through Steam.
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And then Minecraft, of course, then just to rush text documents with them.
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I'm on the vanside.
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I'm only e-mix-side.
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Yes.
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You see, we have the editor wars in the family.
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But no, to be honest.
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I'm using evil mode on e-mix.
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Yes.
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Is that all you're using your computer for?
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Pretty much.
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Like the browser.
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But I think you also have audio files on your computer.
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Podcasts?
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No, I don't really use my computer for podcasts.
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I have that on my phone.
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That's why he's sitting with his phone all the time when we are on the bus.
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No, I just use my phone all the time on the bus.
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So you see a teenager?
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Yes.
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But I think you're listening to podcasts too.
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Sometimes it's gone up a little bit again.
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But I listen to a lot of music.
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So it's like, yeah.
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It collides.
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The time I could use for listening to podcasts instead of listening to music.
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I'm somewhere, for example, in the HPR feed.
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I do you call it HPR?
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I don't know.
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I just like to do it.
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I'm somewhere in the middle of January.
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No way, the second, the beginning of February.
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With all your podcasts.
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So yeah, I might listen to this episode at like New Year's eve or some time.
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So you are even better than me.
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You're not only listening to the New Year's show.
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Sometimes in summer, as we all do now, you are listening to the New Year's show from last year.
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When the next is short.
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Yeah, I might do that.
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But don't you...
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Didn't you tell me you're listening to podcasts?
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I don't even have it in my head.
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Yeah, there are some mostly...
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The ones that I just, that I've come across through YouTube, like animals to the Macs, where...
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Which is this?
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It's podcasts by a guy named Corby and Mac, say, for God's word.
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Where he was from.
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Somewhere from, yes.
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He talks about animals and people who dedicate their lives to them.
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Yeah, animals.
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There's a lot of animals, like turtles and different...
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Different species of turtles and taurses, alligators, e-mews.
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Yeah.
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Yeah, he's just super interested in animals.
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Then I have them just shortly about another YouTube one, Anthony Pedelia, who just interviews other YouTube celebrities.
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And yeah, he talks about whatever.
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Then because I'm interested in vinyl records.
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Oh, yeah.
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Now it begins.
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I listened to a podcast called The Vinyl Guide.
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Yeah, by the way, both of those podcast animals to the Macs and The Vinyl Guide include a lot of ads.
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You're not...
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Yeah.
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You're not as allergic...
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Yeah, I might become...
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I might become...
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If the ads become way too like...
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Yeah.
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But those ads are like animals to the Macs.
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He mentions his Patreon and that...
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Oh, there is like some bonus material that you only get if you are a Patreon subscriber.
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I stopped listening to many of podcasts I had before.
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I don't listen to Skeptic Sky to the Universe anymore.
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I don't listen to BBC World News anymore.
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I don't listen to...
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There are so many English-speaking podcasts I now don't listen to anymore because I can't stand all the ads.
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And I have so many German-speaking Swedish-speaking Norwegian-speaking.
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We might come back to that later.
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Because without any ads and that's because most of them are from public radio stations in Scandinavia and in Germany Austria and Switzerland.
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I have two.
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Which are those?
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We can talk about them another time.
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But I think Swedish-speaking Norwegian.
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Yeah, we might go into that.
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One that I know you listen to too.
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Yeah.
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It's not can happen with Swedish or Danish.
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It's a podcast where Norwegian person, Swedish person and Danish person, they all are a journalist.
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Yeah, a journalist.
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Sit down and talk about stuff that happens in the countries.
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They're a point of view on issues, on different issues in the countries.
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And they're not like...
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They haven't just agreed on, oh, we just speak Swedish or so.
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No, they speak Norwegian.
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Who is a woman?
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Speaks Norwegian.
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The Swedish woman was also a woman.
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Speaks Swedish.
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The Danish one is a man.
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Speaks Danish.
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And they understand each other, even though the Swedish woman...
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She sometimes uses Danish and Norwegian words.
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They will understand her better.
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She is asking if there are words that aren't so quite familiar and Swedish as they are in Danish and Norwegian.
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The last episode I heard, she literally almost talked Norwegian but in Swedish pronunciation.
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It can happen.
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But it's really funny to listen to those three.
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And they have political issues but also more...
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What would you call it?
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What people are talking about besides politics.
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It can be quite funny.
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It's also very serious.
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Especially when something serious is happening in one of the three countries.
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Or when something is happening outside the three countries that is...
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It's somewhere connected to the...
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Connected.
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I think they also talk about American politics.
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They also talk about the war in Ukraine.
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Yes.
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Out of their perspective.
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How they are like...
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What you...
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Yeah.
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I think we can wrap it up here.
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We have already nearly a quarter of an hour.
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Could you think about...
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Have your own show sometime on HPR?
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I might.
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For example, I have a small project where I created my own language.
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I might do a show about that.
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That's interesting.
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Yeah. I might do a show about that when I come a little bit further.
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Like when I have gotten some basics.
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You don't want to become the new token.
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Or do you?
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No. It was like...
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It was a project that my mother and friends started.
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Where she proposed the idea.
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Oh, let's create a new universe.
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I came with that idea where...
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I don't really like when it's like...
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Oh, they are in like Germany or something.
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And the book is an English.
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But then they translate what they say into English.
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But they are supposed to speak German.
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And it should be in German.
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Yes, I know that you have to be able to learn German.
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To understand German to read that book.
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But yeah, it's kind of frustrating.
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Okay.
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But wait.
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I nearly forgot something.
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But you played an instrument in the beginning.
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Yeah.
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What?
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Now.
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Is there someone out there who knows what it's called?
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We're just curious what you know about that.
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Do we want to give hint?
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No.
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Let's make it next show.
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The next show that someone of us...
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No, no, no, no.
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No, no.
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Someone, some other show.
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And say what he, she, they...
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What they think it could be.
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And describe the instrument and why it could be this instrument.
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Yes, let's do it.
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Good bye.
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See ya.
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