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165 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
165 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1709
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Title: HPR1709: Hacking Your Teeth
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1709/hpr1709.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 08:05:54
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---
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This is HPR Episode 1,709 entitled Hacking Your Teeth.
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It is hosted by MRX and is about 21 minutes long.
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The summary is advice on Hacking Your Teeth.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by An Honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15.
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That's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Before we start, I had to be listened to this and I realised that I made a big goof.
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I make reference to the Class of 99, where really I should have said everybody's free to wear sunscreen.
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Apparently that's the name of the song I was talking about, so I apologise in advance.
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Please ignore my nonsense. I speak later on.
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Let's hope there isn't too many other mistakes that I find or that you find.
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I haven't found.
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Anyway, on with the show, hello and welcome Hacker Public Radio audience.
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My name is MRX and welcome to my 9th HPR podcast.
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It's been a long while, but hopefully you'll enjoy this one when you get to listen to it.
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Let's start again as usual by thanking PeopleHPR, it's a fantastic service.
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Really without them being here, I would never have produced a podcast in the first place.
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It's actually really very easy. You can pick any topic you like.
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It's completely open-ended and it's an interest, an interest in the story of God, an interest in
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family history, an interesting hobby. Anything at all, it's just pick up a microphone and
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talking to it. You can use an MP3 player or anything. It's very easy.
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If all the listeners just produce one show a year,
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we'd have plenty shows in the queue. My plan is to do one a year and so far I've been in
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your drawing. It's so much that I've done more than one a year and I've got other ideas in the
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pipelines so they'll be more coming. Anyway, this podcast has been a bit hastily pulled together.
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I did battered on a few we notes but it's really going to be free-flowing.
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I had also some funny ideas of what we're going to call this. I thought about calling it
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Tata for new or hacking your teeth or something like that but I decided to go with hacking your teeth.
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I feel a bit like the chap in the song for the class of 99 dispensing advice. That's a great
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song if you have a chance to listen to some great advice on that and yes, do your sunscreen.
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Definitely a good idea. I live in Britain and Britain we have an innate choice which is
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in the National Health Service and I kind of part of that is linked to that as a dentist and
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it's not completely free. I think I think for a check-up I pay something like £7 or something
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like that. If you need extra work then it can cost more and if you're wanting
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to say you need a filling or whatever and the tooth needs to be you want something that's
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quite as opposed to a malgum then there's opposed to a silvery card thing. If you want something
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that looks a bit more appealing then you need to pay for that. But for basic
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and tooth care it's heavily subsidised by the government so we're all pay for it so that's
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how he works in Britain. I have no expert in this field at all so I suppose that should be
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a stamp by saying that but it's just a thought of just an interesting thing that you might
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find interesting about my experiences of dentistry over the years.
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So my recollections I suppose start at school, the school dentist and I recall him having
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there was like a we get tripped down into this caravan type thing it was parked on the side of
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the school building and you get you go into this thing and it would be rather terrifying
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and I seem to remember the chap we wore a white coat and it had small hexagonal glasses. I'm
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sure he had small hexagonal glasses and you know you always imagine I'm saying things like
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you know this will hurt you more than it will hurt me and sometimes it did. So that was a bit
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daunting obviously but at some point we went to a local dentist in the area and he was
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quite an interesting chap he was I think I think he originally came from Africa I think and he had
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actually I'm sure he had a couple of scars and I said he's face very very thick African accent
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very very very difficult to understand in fact certainly for me anyway I could never understand
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a damn word he was saying mind your suppose when I had things stuck in my mouth and whatnot
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he probably didn't hit understand much of the patient was saying either I suppose so
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but then in my later years the dentist that I had it was it was very nice I had
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fantastic bedside man are very very relaxing and really put you at ease I made a big difference
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from my previous experiences servers actually quite skilled at the dentist as I'm sure many people are
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I'm not sure the time scale I'm really bad for for time scales stuff but this this recent dentist
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I had was a tad for several years and was very pleased with with his his work and you know you
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would go into the place and it would go a bit like this you know you get and then it did a lot
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Mr X hi there please take a seat and you sit down and open up wide
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how are we today Mr X and how's Mrs X oh yeah that's good that's good okay now if you just
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open up a bit and we'll just take a wee look and see how you're doing okay upper left missing
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filled blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah that's great Mr X
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we'll just do we push and and clean and that would be good to go and the Mr we bit at the back
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they will we'll see you in another six months okay thank you bye and that was it and that went on
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for many trips and I was very pleased and and and and this was great or so I thought
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so a few years ago I went in and I was told that my normal dentist was unavailable but one of
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other dentists could stand in so that's fine no problem so I stepped into the dentist's office
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and I was I was greeted by a woman and she said sit down please and I thought that was rather
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rather she thought she was rather a brat but I never took any notice of that really and so she
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said you know open up Mr X and well take a look and she did the checks and whatnot and at the end
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of it she said right you have moderate to severe gum disease you need to take immediate action
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if you don't all your teeth will fall out it's very serious you have to deal with this
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take away this leaflet take away take away make away this corset del cream apply this
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think it was twice a day take these interdital toothbrushes read the leaflets it's very important
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and we'll see you at a month's time so at this I was rather shocked where did this come from this
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this is bizarre and when I looked at the leaflets yeah the gum disease is very serious
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or can be very serious and I had this moderate to severe gum disease and I was completely unaware
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of it I had no pain in my mouth no pain in my gums it was I just didn't know it was there
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it's a real shock and so and it turns out that really as an adult gum disease is very prevalent
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and most people will banner where they've even got it might say a little bit of bleeding when
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they're cleaning their teeth and perhaps a little bit extra sensitivity which I think when I
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think back I did have I'm using that well-known brand in written called scentedine and yes it does
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work but I don't use it now and don't need to use it but more of that later so what does
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the happen is that in the gap between the teeth I think food tends to sit there and and damage
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the gum line and so the gum pulls away from the base of the tooth and it exposes a pocket
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I'm ledically that's what happens I may have the terminology a bit a bit wrong but then this
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pocket gets deeper and wider and deeper and it can extend quite far down there below the gum line
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and then you can end up with abscesses it's can be very very common and then you know eventually
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leading to your teeth falling out or whatever I've never had an abscess I think that maybe I was
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was saved by this I may as opposed to mistil get an abscess but I think that
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reduces your chances and so I use every day I use well twice a day in fact in the morning and
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that night I use the interdental brushes and obviously I want to use the cream for this
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coastal cream for a month or so it all cleared up the pockets remain but they don't get any deeper
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so you can stop the rot so to speak so I use three interdental toothbrushes I use a
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blue one a yellow one and a purple one and so the idea is that you go in between each tooth
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starting from bottom body you can start anywhere I suppose I'll start at bottom right and work
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to bottom left and then top right to top left going in between each tooth and then when you first
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do it it seems quite difficult almost impossible difficult and the blue one is what
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science is a blue one I don't know what science a blue one is I can't it's not a number on it but
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the blue one actually goes between every single gap in my teeth and once I've done that I then
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move on to the yellow one which is next bigger one up and that does about three quarters of the
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gaps and I get to know which ones they are and then finally the big molars I've got big gaps
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big molars and I use the purple one and those that's used in four gaps I think in the teeth
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but all that takes 60 seconds I type myself just to see how long it takes just one minute
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when you first do it it's quite slow and difficult and quite and maybe a bit uncomfortable
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see the idea is that you want to pack the gap with a tight fit on the brush
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so that's why you start with the nervous one and then go between each tooth once
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and then move up the next one and that way you get a tight fitting between all the gaps if that
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makes sense one of the ways you can tell they um apart from slightly bidding gums and what not
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is if you if you look at your teeth if you sort of open your lips and look and the gaps between
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your teeth um the gum should come to a point between each tooth if it's round either and blunt then
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that suggests that the gum isn't adhering tightly to the to the surface of the base of the tooth
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and then that promotes gum disease it was quite remarkable um you know looking at my teeth in
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the mirror and how that transformed over time and that's helped by by brushing the the gums
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themselves i think what maybe contributed my to my problem was a remember as a as a child
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we were given a big giant cardboard teeth and practice brushing them and the the wisdom at the time
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if you pardon a pun was that you your brush would start at the base of the gum and you would
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rotate your your your wrists so to speak to to swivel it up the way butting the fragments of
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of food from the base up to the tip of the tooth and do the opposite brush down the way from
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the the base to the tip from the top set of teeth of course this was a bit laborious and
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and um it was a good intentions but it meant that you didn't really brush the gums properly and um
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i think i make more or less constricted more on my teeth than the gums and you really need to
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brush your gums um for you know i don't know how long but for a reasonable amount of time when
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you're brushing your teeth don't just brush the the teeth i just do it you know the traditional way
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side to side and in and out sort of thing um not rotating my my wrist like i used to do as a
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as a child and young adult sort of thing um but uh the same my my my gums have the shapes completely
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changed it's now they're all pointed between the teeth uh as a dentist said that and um i really
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think that um that she probably saved my teeth uh in the long run and while the previous dentist
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had a great bedside manner and uh really put me at ease and he perhaps didn't do me any favors
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by not strongly enough telling me that i had um gum disease is you know severe gum disease at that
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and i wonder how many other people are uh in the same camp i mean maybe the dentist
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himself got fed up trying to tell people you know look you're not doing this properly but
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but i really uh a tough stance is probably important so that people are aware of the implications
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or maybe some people don't care i suppose maybe a lot of you read listening to this won't care
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and um well obviously it's a free country you can decide for yourself um and obviously you can
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skip this podcast if you don't think it's important um it's not a hobby it's not um it's not
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um anything like that it's just that i was quite shocked by the fact that for all those years i
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didn't know i had a problem and i just think maybe i said i would imagine a lot of people are in
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the same camp as myself and maybe they would care too if they knew that they had to murder
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us if you're gum disease um if you find your gums tend to bleed when you um brush and if you
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also find quite likely that your gums don't come to a point between the teeth then you may want
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to bring this up with your dentist and um have the next visit and ask them you know do i have gum
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disease should i really be um tackling this what do i do ask you ask his advice might you save your
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teeth anyway i hope i haven't rambled too much and uh i hope you enjoyed this podcast um i can
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be contacted at mr x at hpr at googlemail dot com as mrx at hpr the at symbol googlemail dot com
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so until next time thank you and goodbye
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you've been listening to heka public radio at heka public radio dot com we are a community podcast
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network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday today's show like all our shows
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