Episode Transcript
[00:00:02] Speaker A: Ready for what? Bradley?
[00:00:04] Speaker B: I know, I know.
Oh, here we go. All right, if you are.
Have landed on this video, I, I apologize in advance.
[00:00:17] Speaker A: Move along quickly.
[00:00:20] Speaker B: Let's, let's just say who's our target audience? It is not you. How's that for a sales pitch?
What are we doing here? Okay, if you weren't scared away by that, Spencer and I here, we are going to work through.
I know the temptation is already just building. I just can't wait to hear more. We are going to work through the podcast YouTube channel that we want to build together.
And I had the potentially not so brilliant idea of recording our sort of work in progress right here, partly mostly for ourselves as we work through things, but just in case anybody is looking to. Well, for one, what I would really like is feedback on our content.
[00:01:06] Speaker A: Based.
[00:01:07] Speaker B: On what we say. And then also if you're interested in starting a podcast or YouTube channel, this is, I was going to say the way to do it.
This is one way to do it.
Okay, that's enough of me. Spencer. Hi. How are you doing?
[00:01:22] Speaker A: Good. I, I guess like what we should tell folks is, is as briefly as we can, what the idea is. And it's that you and I have had many conversations in the past about the future.
AI, what does it mean for our kids? What does it mean for work? What does it mean for retirement? What does it mean? Like, and I think it's something that we see many, many, many people of all ages, of all backgrounds, we all have say the same questions. The future is as unclear as it's ever been. And yeah, we've had a lot of conversations about this and I think it definitely helps to gather together in groups and talk to each other and figure stuff out. And, and for me, like that, that's the, that's the premise of this podcast, is how can we best advise ourselves? How can we best advise our children? How can we best navigate the future when there is no map and the compass doesn't work anymore? Like, what do we do with that? How do we, you know, what's the things that we should be doing, should be thinking about? And yeah, wow, there's a million topics from, you know, resilience to wealth and across and across the board. And I think, like, I, I always remember my gran always used to say to me that there's this, it's like a three legged stool in the kitchen, that you need all three legs of the stool for it to remain balanced, that you can still sit on the thing and it works. And, and you can use this in a way that like if you think of the three legs of the stool as health, wealth, you know, like the big topics.
[00:03:13] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:03:13] Speaker A: Relationships. So like health, wealth and relationships. So in your life you need all three of those to be functioning well, to have a stable, well functioning life. And you can. One of them, if one of them is. Gets a bit wobbly, like work gets a bit wobbly, you can still sit on the thing and it's okay. If two of them get wobbly, suddenly your health and work get wobbly, then it's going to start getting really hard to sit on this thing and keep it stable. And so I think for me it's. Yeah, it's. How do we keep those three things, relationships, health and wealth to keep our stool stable that we can sit on it. To use a very weird analogy, but it's something my gran used to talk about a lot. But yeah, so that was a bit of a ramble. But that's how I see what this thing could be.
[00:04:10] Speaker B: I like these. I like these three. I had health wealth, then I had sort of travel expat, international and then family and parenting. But relationships covers because you could say family, parenting, friendships, romantic relationships, business relationships. I like the health, wealth, relationships.
[00:04:33] Speaker A: It also goes into that your local community goes into all the weirdness that is social media and all of the politics of division where you're in this tribe and I'm in this tribe. And I think like relationships these days, you know, we have more virtual relationships than we do non or in real life relationships sometimes. So I think it's.
Yeah. If I had to try and distill it down to three things that those three would probably be it. But. But I like your addition of the travel.
The travel side. The lost gypsies side. Yeah, that. That almost feels like maybe we have a four legged stool.
[00:05:19] Speaker B: Well, okay. Because what are our. So I just, I just spent almost three months in the States and I was born in the US and I have a US passport. But in the States I can be the American.
I can do it.
But when I meet people and I say, oh, I live in Europe, they're whoa. What?
That's crazy. It's a huge different thing. And that's. I think, Spencer, where you and I really get to talking is these whole.
And we've got to use the right words here because like expat means a certain thing, international means another thing. And so it. I don't even know what to call it. Right. Multicultural or living in different countries. But we've grown up with our families and have grown up in different countries, speak multiple languages.
We currently both live in a country we were not born in.
And not only do I think this is just interesting, but especially in. In the state of the planet, I think the number one conversation I would have with the Americans when I was just there for several months was, wow, lucky you.
How do I get over there? And I, I don't. I'm not saying.
I'm not saying I want to turn this into a, you know, how to get a visa program. Not at all.
But it's. I just see it as. Because if, If I'm looking for our, you know, our added value, our. Our unique selling proposition. Right.
You and I are the two guys, and we can also talk about health, wealth and relationships. Awesome. But what's our angle? And this is where I think our angle or our spice or flavor is different than two American guys or two British guys or two Dutch guys. You know, we're two guys who have international families who live in a different country.
And that. Because that makes up a lot of the other stuff.
[00:07:20] Speaker A: Yeah, yeah. And it's, it's. It, it's. It's who we are. Right. Like.
Like, as you know, I've. I've started speaking or talking about resilience a lot, but, like, yeah, when I, When I looked back and thought about, okay, what was it in my life that gave me certain things that I could use as resilience, it was.
And you're the same, that we've spent a lifetime putting ourselves out of our comfort zone. We've done things, whether it's improv, public speaking, moving countries, different languages, relationships with people from different countries that, like, the. The, for us, change is kind of a positive. It's not a scary thing. And I think when you look at what's happening to the world now, and definitely the next five to ten years before we discover whatever AI will do to the world is that the one thing that we know for sure that's going to happen is change.
[00:08:19] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:08:20] Speaker A: We have no idea what that change is going to be, but there's going to be change. So I think for me, it's. It's thinking about how can we best equip ourselves to navigate extreme change? Because I would imagine that's probably what's going to happen. We don't know whether it's going to be good, bad, weird, funky, all of it. Who knows? But I think, like, that is something that you and I have done an enormous amount of work on over enormous amount of years. From different directions. But being comfortable with change really helps.
[00:08:57] Speaker B: That's. I just, I just moved that up in. Okay, a technical note. Spencer and I just spent way too long trying to also share a document and have our videos here on Zoom and we could not figure it out.
[00:09:09] Speaker A: And if anybody knows, please tell us.
[00:09:12] Speaker B: Maybe we should have an episode on.
Hey guys, it's real simple.
[00:09:17] Speaker A: Two people sharing the same document and on screen at the same time. Impossible.
[00:09:22] Speaker B: There's going to be people that unsubscribe. These guys can't even get a document on their Zoom call. Come on. How are they going to teach me about anything?
But we are resilient. We will, we will. We will follow through.
Anyway, this, this change, I like this. This could even be a, a the umbrella.
And because we talked about health, wealth, relationships. Well, they all have. If, if everything stayed the same, then, you know, none of this other stuff matters, right? Health, wealth, relationships. Oh, my health consistently stays the same and nothing ever goes bad or, or worse or better. Great check.
New wealth. Oh, well, my, my income is the same forever and so are my costs. And everything's. Everything's all perfect. Great.
[00:10:07] Speaker A: Yay.
[00:10:08] Speaker B: I mean my relationships and my, my kids just stay the same age. Oh by the way, I stay the same age as well, forever.
So I like this. I mean change. It's a huge topic.
[00:10:20] Speaker A: Yeah. And, and if you think about the going back to the analogy of the three legged stool, like I always think those three legs are not equal. Health. Health is the most important one. Like we all know if our health disappears, everything else becomes irrelevant. Like we just want our health back.
And when I think about the amount of change that's happening and you know, every single person I know, whenever I meet them for coffee, dinner in the street, whatever, it doesn't take long before somebody starts talking about the future and AI and what's happening. And I'm scared about losing my now am I going to earn money? And, and I think like the second those kind of things start to impact our sleep and what we eat and how much time we spend doom scrolling on our phones, that makes the, the health leg of the stool a lot less stable. And I think like, so for me, I think it's, it's becoming more and more important that we are okay with change. And I guess for me this kind of goes to resilience in the sense that as I've done a lot of thinking about this, but you know that it's the river and the boat, it's the. What can I control? And what can I not control? And, and this for that, because people won't know what that mean. The river and the boat. But this comes from something I read years ago when I was traveling as a young man. And I read it somewhere and it was the, a parable about, you know, you can't control where the river goes. You can't control if it's fast water, slow water, if there's rapids, if there's a waterf.
All you can do is be the best navigator of your boat. So the analogy is that your life is the river and you are the boat. So you can't control the AI is happening. You can't control what Elon Musk is going to do and change the face of the planet. All we can do is control how we show up and how we navigate it and how we look after ourselves. And I think that that's becoming a more important skill to, to separate in our head. What can we actually control? Because if I can't control it, I don't want to be destroying my health over it because I'm stressing about it, I'm losing sleep, I'm doom scrolling or whatever. But actually what I need to do is have a daily practice of actually what can I control? Because I can control how I show, I can try and control what I do and how I do it. And, and yeah, it's not perfect. There's going to be days when that all goes out the window and I'm going to do way too much doom scrolling. This for sure happens. Yeah, so I think, but, but I think it's the many times it's being aware of something is the first step to building a habit around improving it.
[00:13:07] Speaker B: But, but yeah, so being aware, that's also an interesting sort of topic because if you and I have this podcast YouTube channel, we are being more aware. You know, they say if you really want to learn something, teach it.
And I'm, I'm not saying we are going to be teachers necessarily of these topics, but we're becoming more aware by talking about them. And then ideally we have a topic of the week and we're going to do a little homework and dig a little more because as brilliant as you and I are, we had to do a little homework for our, for our topic of the week. Then we're going to learn more and then the two of us talking about it to share more and to build awareness.
And you know, what comes to mind is also confidence. I just, just this morning, I will tell you more details later, but just this Morning. I. Let's just say I smoke with a. I spoke with a mutual friend of ours from Slovenia.
Yeah. And he's got.
He's got a big, big decision to make and big plans, and he was. So he's coming to me for advice, and he says, you know what, though? At the end of the day, wherever I go or whatever happens, I'll be all right.
Because exactly what we're talking about here, the change and resilience. And he's got.
The word I wrote down in our document was mindset. Right. How can you have a mindset of the change is going to come?
I can. I can whine about it and. And moan about it, or I can do something about it if there's something to be done about it.
And I. I mean, you know the guy, of course, and he's. He's so optimistic and so positive, and he's like, whatever happens, I'm gonna make it work. And if it's challenging, then I'll bust my butt and. And make it work.
Yeah.
[00:14:56] Speaker A: And I'm always. Again, this is something that came from my traveling days, but I had this realization pretty young, like mid-20s, where I was like, actually, nothing really matters if you. If you really think about it, like, you know, and it's something that's been around on. I've seen it on Social a bit. A bit as well, where there's a video where it talks about, yeah, a hundred years from now, nobody will remember you. Somebody else will be living in your house. You'll be gone.
Nothing matters. So, yes, it does. Because, yeah, we care about what people think. We care about what we're doing. We care about how much money we have, how much freedom we have. Like, things do matter. But actually, if you can let yourself off the hook and think, I'm just doing the best that I can right now with what I have and what skills I have. And I think, like, yeah, eventually letting yourself off the hook and thinking nothing really matters, it's at least for me, I find it. It gives me a lot of freedom or agency to just do things maybe that I wouldn't have thought of doing before. So I think, yeah, not. Not getting too lost in the what's it gonna all mean, what's gonna happen? But, yeah, just understand that, yeah, we need certain skills. And. And that's the other thing that things like resilience, mindset. It's a skill. Like, it's a practice. It's something that you can definitely foster for sure.
[00:16:33] Speaker B: I was thinking of you. Quickly glossed over how we met and we met through.
So Spencer lives in Amsterdam and I live outside of Utrecht in the Netherlands.
And we met at improv comedy class in Boom Chicago in Amsterdam.
And speaking of resilience, if you can do improv, I'm a little bit of the opinion if you can do improv, you can do anything in a way. I mean, improv is. In a way, it is resilience. It's a way to come at a problem. You say, well, let's study it for 17 years and figure out the best path, or, all right, let's just go for it and see where we can go. But I mention it because I'm thinking of. I want to make a list here.
So, you know, I'm all about YouTube lately. And in YouTube, you can make a poll, like a text poll. They're very popular. It's fun because people love voting on stuff. And I was thinking, and actually, I can't remember, is it three? I'm going to take a quick peek here. Is it three or is it four or five things? Let me make a check.
[00:17:44] Speaker A: So whilst you're finding that the.
The improv thing, I think when you spoke about it, I was like, actually, it also links to nothing matters.
So the great thing about improv is the more you fail on the stage, the funnier it is and the better experience for the audience. So actually, like, we, like, we're taught the. My only objective when I step onto that stage is to make you, my scene partner, look good.
[00:18:13] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:18:13] Speaker A: And your only job is to make me look good. And I think, like, yeah, what happens outside of that? Yeah, sure, we've got some guide rails, but actually nothing really matters. Just have fun. Like. So.
[00:18:25] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah.
[00:18:26] Speaker A: Improv. Yeah, I agree.
Improv is. I think everybody on the planet should spend six months doing improv. Definitely.
[00:18:36] Speaker B: You're gonna get some hate. You're gonna get some hate comments on that one.
[00:18:39] Speaker A: I know.
[00:18:40] Speaker B: Definitely.
[00:18:40] Speaker A: I'll take it. I'll take it.
[00:18:42] Speaker B: What?
You're crazy. No way in the world.
My eyes over the fork.
Yeah.
Okay, I just checked and there are four things, so YouTube polls. Because what I would love to do is I don't know how we're going to do this, but I would love to have four topics that people could vote on that they would like to hear me and Spencer.
Hear me talk about. To hear me and Spencer. Grammar. Sorry. To hear me and Spencer talk about in this upcoming podcast. And I don't. And, you know, maybe this is where we get into hierarchies. Like Maybe it turns into an episode. Or is this one of the. Hey, you know what? Four actually goes back to your. You had the three legged stool or the four legged chair. So four is an interesting number. So I wonder if we can get it down to four or even, you know, not set in stone, but for. Because you, you started out with health.
Health, health, wealth, wealth, relationships.
And then do you have a fourth that comes to mind or.
[00:19:54] Speaker A: Yeah, it was more the travel lost gypsies, that kind of thing.
[00:20:01] Speaker B: Travel.
So, you know, we could do, we could do. Okay. Health, wealth, relationships, travel. And we could also just. It could. It's open for comments. People could comment. I mean, based on.
For the Die Hards who are still watching this fantastically wonderful video.
[00:20:18] Speaker A: We know you want to watch it again.
[00:20:22] Speaker B: Just put it on repeat.
Know what topics. Well, also, because I know, you know, I'll make short set of this and I want to get to a point where, okay, you know, what are the, what are the main topics? This is difficult, right? What we're doing here is.
[00:20:40] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:20:40] Speaker B: Difficult.
[00:20:41] Speaker A: It's. What questions do we all have? I think, you know, it can be, it can be questions. How do I navigate the future when everything's uncertain?
How can I advise my kids on a career when the future is so uncertain? How. How can I build wealth when maybe earning money is totally different?
How. How do I protect my health when more and more my life is on the phone? Like, I think these are the, the, the juicy questions that we all are tackling with and trying to figure out.
[00:21:16] Speaker B: So then, okay, because I'm a big podcast listener and YouTube watcher, and so I'm going to want to know, okay, you have these big questions.
Who are the. I'm going to play the devil's advocate. Who are these two guys to tell me. Right?
And that's where I was kind of going to. What are our strengths and what are. How did we meet? And we got improv and we have international and we have, you know, multi. Well, I guess it's the same thing. Well, multilingual but international speaking. We've barely mentioned speaking. You come from a speaking. Professional speaking background and more writer background and that. But we're still creating, we're. We're creating stuff.
So I'm just curious about if I see this matrix or, or that.
What are the overlapping circles called? Yeah.
[00:22:13] Speaker A: Venn diagram.
[00:22:15] Speaker B: Venn, thank you. The Venn diagram. So, okay, here's, here's what we could talk about. Here are the topics and here's what we're good at.
And then if you want to add a third one, here's what we like, right, because we can talk about taxes. I can tell you all about taxes.
I know way too much about international taxes.
[00:22:33] Speaker A: And this, ladies and gentlemen, is your needing to get to sleep playlist at night.
Bradley, on taxes.
[00:22:42] Speaker B: First of all.
Yeah, so, but. Exactly right. Like, I know. I currently know a lot about, like, us and. And Dutch and Italian taxes. Right. It's boring as hell, except for that rare individual for whom it's. It's important information. So where's that Venn diagram of the what and the who and the kind of. The kind of the why and what's that for us?
[00:23:11] Speaker A: I think we're all in this boat together. We're all sailing into the distance and we have no idea of the destination. Like, we.
And we don't really know where to navigate. And we're. And nobody has the answers because nobody truly knows what the future will be. So I think it's. Yeah, what are the.
What are the questions we should be asking? You know, it's a bit like the, you know, give. Give me an hour to answer a question, and I'll spend 50 minutes asking the question 100 different ways. A hundred different ways. But, yeah, like, what are the questions we should be asking ourselves? What are the skills that we should be building?
How can we frame things? Like, just something. Give us the scaffolding, something to, you know.
[00:23:59] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:23:59] Speaker A: You know, maybe it's. I know, maybe the analogy is a map or something like that. But.
Yeah. Yeah, I think we're. We're all in this boat together. So even just having these conversations start and we'll bring in other people to interview and have conversations with.
[00:24:17] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:24:18] Speaker A: And we can figure. Figure this thing out together.
[00:24:21] Speaker B: Yeah, that sounds fun. I like it. You know, fun is a big element. You and I often talk about this. It's got to be fun.
Yeah. And we've got to have fun. And ideally, the audience is having fun. Except for that thrilling tax episode. That's going to be great.
[00:24:41] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:24:43] Speaker B: Yeah. Well, okay. All right. I have a big list of things here, but I think I will.
They're smaller. I think they're more.
You know, I've got entrepreneurship, passive income investing, real estate, social media, lost gypsies.
[00:24:59] Speaker A: A lot of those come under wealth. Like.
[00:25:01] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:25:02] Speaker A: Entrepreneurship, I think, is a massive topic. I mean, if you think about anybody under the age of 25 today.
[00:25:10] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:25:11] Speaker A: Entrepreneur. Being an entrepreneur is probably the best skill set you could possibly develop right now because, again, that's about flexibility and Adapting to change and pivoting and working with minimal resources, working fast. So I, I believe, yeah, entrepreneurial skills are something that's going to be important.
[00:25:37] Speaker B: But you, but you're right, that could go under.
Well, wealth.
Wealth is an interesting one because you originally had something like work or something and I thought work is too narrow.
[00:25:52] Speaker A: Yeah.
Wealth covers pensions, tax work, building skills, side hustle, like anything like.
[00:26:02] Speaker B: Yeah, you're right.
[00:26:02] Speaker A: You could even stretch it further into non monetary wealth. Like maybe the, the travel and the experiences and the joy that also goes into wealth becomes like a more holistic. I have a wealth of not just a wealth money wise, but a wealth.
[00:26:20] Speaker B: Right.
[00:26:20] Speaker A: Of joy and experiences and things like that.
[00:26:25] Speaker B: You know that's a fun angle. Right. I'm thinking they say health is wealth for example, but as a topic because as a title, like we were looking at titles and we had words like hope and then. But well, I wonder, like wealth, it's such an interesting word. It's you. It's sort of a. I don't know, I don't know what your take on the word wealth is, but I really get into digging into words and wealth is often it's like this luxury thing, whereas. Exactly. Like you said, health is wealth but also it could be non monetary. And so what is, what is wealthy really? Well, wealthy is. A lot of people say wealthy is freedom or choice.
[00:27:07] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:27:07] Speaker B: I have the choice to choose where I'm going to go to lunch. Right. Well, I like the word wealth. That's cool.
[00:27:16] Speaker A: It's something I've definitely been on a journey these last two or three years. But when you see at the moment, because all of our governments are putting the overdrive button on the money printer, that the value of every currency is plummeting. That you know, we all know that I used to buy a jar of coffee for €5 only a year ago and now it's 10, it's doubled all this like 3, 3% inflation. And all the massage figures that the governments give, throw it in the bin. We all know that our shopping bill has doubled in the last year. So I think for me we absolutely need to think about these things and to figure out, yeah, I need to not keep cash in the bank if I'm lucky enough to have some cash in the bank.
But I'm gonna buy shares or I'm gonna buy Bitcoin or I'm gonna, yeah, I'm gonna buy something that will go up because if I don't, you know, the, the most sobering fact was that the Euro which obviously we're in Europe but like lost 20% of its value in the last five years.
So that, that for me is like, that shows you where this thing is heading. And, and it looks like the governments now can't not print money. They have to keep doing it. They're stuck in this game that they set off to play. And yeah, so I think that, that it almost becomes something that we have to think about and to take care of and to look at and to teach our kids.
[00:28:43] Speaker B: Yeah, I love the teach our kids part. I mean, we'll talk about that more later. But you've really helped me, you, Spencer, have really helped me with some ideas for, well, speaking of growing wealth with the kids. And we're really taking some concrete steps.
So I want to make a note on that. I think you and I, another reason we get along is our curiosity and our passion for learning. Right. I mean we'll get more into it later but Spencer is currently taking this intensive six month program.
You can tell us there's a little teaser for later episodes. But you are just a. Getting a fire hose of information and learning so much and sharing it, you know, sharing with me. But also we can share what you've learned, whatever. Some of it, yeah, yeah, definitely.
[00:29:38] Speaker A: I'm always happy to share anything that I've learned. But I think that's actually an important thing that you mentioned in the sense that having a curiosity is another one of those critical skill. We all say it's one of the soft skills, it's a critical skill, but actually it is. And I think now we have the amount of, you know, information and intelligence has just become dirt cheap. I pay, I pay €20amonth for Claude AI and I have access to such an amazing amount of intelligence. So yeah, what drives what I get from that is my curiosity now and where do I take it and what qu. You know, how can I ask better questions? How can I be more creative? How can I be more curious? How can I push it to go further? So I think, yeah, the soft skills, communication, creativity, confidence, you know, more confidence too.
Yeah, I think these, these are the things that now we have to, you know, they always used to be seen as second class citizens to the hard skills. But what we see at the moment is the hard skills are becoming you. You have every, every hard skill you need for 20 bucks a month.
So if I can have the most intelligent person sat on my desk for 20 bucks a month, it's, it's about something else now. It's not about those things.
[00:31:06] Speaker B: But yeah.
[00:31:08] Speaker A: Yeah, learning, I think learning, for me, I'm.
But learning gives me joy. I'm always happy when I'm learning something new.
So that's always been. That's what led me to. It's what led me to improv. It's what led me to many things. Is this insatiable curiosity to learn more things.
[00:31:29] Speaker B: You know?
Well, learning helps with change because I currently have, at the top of my organizational chart, there is change.
But I'm just. I fear that it's such a big topic. I'm not even sure that it's a topic because everything's changed. Really? Yes, because then if I have. Currently I have health, wealth, relationships, travel.
Because I want to get those four things into that little voting quiz thingy. Yeah. But change, I don't know. Change is too big. I don't know. Maybe I'm wrong.
I like it.
[00:32:07] Speaker A: Yeah. Connect. Change connects.
[00:32:08] Speaker B: It's.
[00:32:08] Speaker A: It's like uncertainty. Like, the only certainty is uncertainty. And I think, yeah, yeah, that's in everything. That. That's in health, wealth, you know, everything.
[00:32:20] Speaker B: Yeah.
Okay, I'm gonna send. I'm gonna send out a little call out here, and I'll probably make a little clip of this. But if you're watching, or if you're only watching this tiny little clip, we're looking for a major umbrella. We're looking for a name for this channel or podcast.
Can you help us with the name? You got some ideas? And also I'll put a link down to where those topics are in a YouTube quiz. You can go help with that. And if. And if those four aren't doing it for you or based on what you've heard, what else. What other topics would you want to hear?
And go put it in the comments there or put it in the comments under this video and let us know. What would you like this to be about? What could these two guys with their very specific character traits and knowledge and everything, what could we help with? What could we open up awareness for?
Yeah, that's what I'm thinking.
[00:33:19] Speaker A: That was good. I think, like I said before, we're all in the same boat together. The future is in.
Nobody's coming to help, so we need to figure this stuff out ourselves. And I think this is a nice way to do it, to build a community of people around.
How do we navigate the future when everything's uncertain?
[00:33:43] Speaker B: Yeah, good. Nice tagline there. How do we navigate the future when everything's uncertain?
Okay. Have we had enough? Are we good for now?
Any last words?
[00:33:56] Speaker A: No.
[00:33:57] Speaker B: Okay.
[00:33:58] Speaker A: All done.
[00:33:59] Speaker B: All right. Awesome. If you are still watching at this point, you are. You have a sticker that you are a fan and we love you and leave a comment below.
[00:34:10] Speaker A: They want your tax information.
[00:34:14] Speaker B: And we will definitely have a tax episode. I know. Way too much.
All right. All right. Thanks, Spencer, for doing this. And I know we weren't sure it's the greatest idea. I'm still not sure it's the greatest idea. But it's still. It's just talking it through and getting it out there. And that already builds exactly what we're talking about. We've now made some of the uncertain a little more certain kind of just by talking about it. So we're going to have that conversation and we'll bring in experts in things where we are not expert, which is probably most things.
[00:34:45] Speaker A: So is this like officially episode one? Are we that brave?
[00:34:50] Speaker B: Well, it's either episode zero or episode one. Yeah. I don't know. We'll see.
[00:34:55] Speaker A: Yeah, we were about forward looking. Hope so. Let's do this is episode one and it's up to you people watching. If anybody managed to get to the end, do we go to episode two and what should be in episode two? Answer Bradley's quiz. And if you say tax, I'm going to go on mute and let Bradley take over.
[00:35:18] Speaker B: I'm gone. I'm out. I'm out.
Spencer out. Yeah.
All right. All right, Spencer, episode one in the books.
[00:35:30] Speaker A: Done.
[00:35:31] Speaker B: All right, I'm hitting stop. We got to stop. All right, thanks everybody for maybe not watching at all.
See you next time. Bye.