Episode Transcript
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0:01
You're listening to Comedy Central.
0:07
From the most trusted journalists at
0:09
Comedy Central.
0:10
It's America's only sort for
0:13
news.
0:14
This is The Daily Child with
0:16
your host Jordan Clippers.
0:37
Welcome to the Daily John Jordan Bluffer. We
0:40
got so much to talk about Tonight. Lewis
0:43
Black takes on the cyber truck.
0:45
All right, k JR.
0:47
Look Black's here. R k Jr.
0:49
Has something he just can't get out of his head.
0:51
And Christy nomes hopes of becoming VP
0:54
have been taken out to the gravel pitting shots.
0:57
Plus Matt Damon joins us tonight.
0:59
Not about show.
1:04
First, Let's catch up on all the
1:06
latest in the presidential race with another installment
1:08
of Indecision twenty twenty four. Let's
1:17
kick things off with the huge trial
1:19
that threatens to destroy a politician's
1:21
career. Not Trump's trial.
1:24
He'll get off scott free. No, I'm
1:27
talking about public opinion versus Christy
1:29
Nome, South Dakota governor and
1:32
big fan of the last two minutes of old
1:34
Yeller. The
1:36
mainstream liberal media has
1:38
been coming at her for days just
1:40
because her new memoir has a little
1:42
story in it about executing a puppy.
1:46
So now she's turning to
1:48
her base on conservative media to
1:50
find some support, But it turns out that
1:52
even they are having a hard
1:54
time with this.
1:55
What happens if you are debating Kamala
1:58
Harris and she says, well, wait a second, you
2:01
shot your dog.
2:02
I never tell anybody round personal conversations
2:05
with the dolt. I
2:07
talked to President Trump all the time about the dog,
2:09
about a lot of things.
2:10
Governor.
2:10
If you asked me a month ago, who's at
2:12
the top of the list to run with.
2:13
Donald Trump, I would have said your name.
2:15
If you ask me that same question this morning, I don't even think
2:18
you're on the list.
2:21
These people are harsh. You're not even on
2:23
the list, not on the VP list, not on the
2:25
cabinet list, not even on Craig's list. I
2:29
will say the past few years I
2:31
have been wondering how far is too
2:33
far for the right wing MAGA crowd,
2:36
And now we know it's shooting your dog
2:38
in a gravel pit that is
2:41
not acceptable until
2:43
Trump does it. Then then
2:46
every Republican has to shoot their dog just
2:48
to stay in the party. So kudos
2:51
right wing media for putting your foot down
2:53
against killing dogs. You can hold
2:55
your head up high and go back to your regularly
2:57
scheduled segment, Why don't we toss to my
3:00
kids into the Grand Canyon?
3:03
Got it?
3:04
It's a very compelling segment every
3:06
Wednesday at nine. But not everyone
3:08
in conservative media had their knives out for Christina.
3:11
In the bowels of Newsmax, Eric
3:14
Bowling tried his best to throw
3:16
her a lifeline, Governor.
3:18
I've also written a couple of books, and I know how
3:20
the process works. You write some chapters. You don't
3:22
write the whole book at once. You write a chapter or two. You
3:25
send it to the editors and they edit,
3:27
They read it, they add, they subtract.
3:29
And here's my question.
3:30
The editor the editor, was she possibly
3:33
a plant to a liberal plan?
3:38
A liberal plan editor? Eric, she
3:40
wrote the book, she wrote it. You
3:43
can tell conservatives don't really believe
3:45
any of their conspiracy bullshit by how
3:47
casually they try to fit one into any scandal.
3:50
Just say your editor was a liberal plan, Christy.
3:53
Maybe your dog was trying to rig
3:55
the election. Maybe
3:57
your dog was DEI is that something
3:59
I don't?
4:00
Oh, just pick one, I believe
4:02
it or not?
4:03
Shoot eater dog. Isn't the only scandal
4:05
about Nome's book there's also a
4:08
story about when she met with North Korean
4:10
dictator Kim Jong un, or she
4:12
wrote, I remember when I met with North
4:14
Korean dictator Kim Jong un. Except
4:17
she had to take that story out because she never
4:20
actually met with North Korean dictator
4:22
Kim Jong un. And
4:24
she says the story was put in
4:26
there by accident, and she took it out
4:29
as soon as she found out, even
4:31
though she wrote the book and
4:35
recorded the audio book.
4:40
And if you're wondering, didn't she find
4:42
that out when she recorded the audiobook.
4:44
You're not the only one.
4:46
You said you when you learned of it,
4:48
you immediately took action. You recorded
4:50
the whole book in the audiobook, you read this whole
4:52
passage out loud.
4:53
Why didn't you take it out then? When you read the audiobook?
4:56
You know, I've traveled for years. I've been involved in policy
4:58
for almost thirty years, so I've
5:00
gone all across the world. I've met with world
5:02
leaders. So you didn't really brought to
5:05
my audio book when I was brought to my
5:07
attention, and it was I asked the
5:09
publisher if they would remove the name, and they did.
5:11
Okay, I just bet you didn't answer my question when
5:13
you record.
5:13
You posted pictures and video.
5:15
Of yourself recording the audiobook. When
5:17
you recorded your own audiobook, you didn't notice.
5:19
I'm not going to distress about my meetings with world leaders.
5:21
I'm not asking you to I'm asking about recording the audio.
5:23
Did you want to talk about something else today?
5:25
For God's sakes, can we talk about something else? I
5:28
shot a dog once, Diday hear about that. Kim
5:33
Jong Un is not someone you forget
5:36
meeting. He's a madman.
5:38
No one's ever like, yeah, I met Hitler.
5:41
Oh wait, Eatolf Hitler. I
5:44
was thinking of a deadyone, Greg Hitler from Tampa,
5:46
That's who I was thinking of.
5:47
Yeah.
5:48
Look, I know we've been talking about
5:50
this Christy Nome story for a few days in
5:52
a row now, But she lied about meeting Kim
5:54
Jong un and she shot a puppy. I
5:57
honestly can't think of a political story
5:59
that could be crazy enough to push that out
6:01
of the news cycle.
6:03
In a new report, Robert Kennedy opens
6:05
up about health.
6:06
Issues from a quote worm
6:08
that.
6:09
Got into my brain and
6:11
ate a portion of it and then died.
6:17
What I
6:19
don't know what's worse That rfk Jr
6:22
had a worm that was eating his brain,
6:25
or that his brain is so poisoned it killed
6:27
the worm. It's
6:30
so wild that we've all been joking about how rfk
6:33
Jr. Must have brain worms, and then
6:35
he actually has brainworms.
6:38
It's like if the weird kid in class came back
6:40
from the doctor with the note saying, actually,
6:42
Kyle does have stage two turnface.
6:46
Please let him get his affairs in order. Now,
6:49
the Kennedy campaign is dismissing the notion
6:51
that the dead worm in their candidate's
6:53
brain could cause any cognitive
6:55
problems. But the story actually
6:58
came out because The New York Times found a twenty
7:00
twelve deposition from Kennedy's divorce
7:03
and which he argued that his earning power
7:05
had diminished because quote, I have cognitive
7:08
problems clearly, so
7:12
I guess his argument now is no, No,
7:14
the worm didn't eat the president part
7:16
of my brain, just the part that
7:18
has to give my ex wife money. And
7:22
as if this story couldn't get any weirder, it
7:24
turns out that Kennedy discovered the worm
7:26
because he was getting tested for brain fog
7:28
and memory loss. But doctor said
7:31
it probably wasn't the worm that was causing
7:33
the brain fog. It was more likely
7:35
that he had severe mercury poisoning
7:38
from eating too much fish.
7:42
I mean, no wonder RFK cares so much about climate
7:44
change. He's legally a thermometer
7:52
and the
7:58
how will this affect the race? Probably
8:00
not much. I know the idealists
8:02
out there would love to vote for a perfect candidate,
8:05
but we live in the real world. Okay,
8:08
does RFK Jr. Have a worm in his brain?
8:10
Sure?
8:12
Trump's brain is just two possums and a squirrel.
8:15
Biden Cerebram is riddled with slugs.
8:18
You know, would it be nice to have a candidate
8:20
whose head is full of all brain?
8:22
Sure?
8:23
And I'd love a puppy tube, But Christy Nome shot
8:26
it.
8:26
Grow up.
8:28
For more on the ongoing medical situation,
8:30
we go live to the RFK Junior campaign
8:32
with our own Desie Lion.
8:38
Wow, Desie.
8:41
Words inside a presidential
8:43
candidate's head is a terrifying
8:45
story. What's the mood at the campaign?
8:48
Well, it's understandable why people are nervous,
8:50
but as it turns out, brainworms
8:52
are very common healthy
8:55
even in fact,
8:57
some might say society would be better
8:59
if everyone had worms in their brains.
9:01
Oh wow, that sounds
9:04
like something a worm would say what.
9:07
No, Jordan, it's me a
9:09
human woman. I just
9:11
think people shouldn't be so scared about
9:14
embracing a symbiotic relationship
9:16
with another life form, a
9:18
beautiful parasitic life
9:20
form. It's not like I'm asking
9:22
you to surrender to us. Surrender to
9:25
us.
9:25
Okay, all right, if you can.
9:27
I'm genuinely concerned, Dosie. This doesn't
9:30
sound like you at all, is it?
9:32
Is it possible you have a brain worm?
9:36
What?
9:38
Joran?
9:41
No, of course not.
9:43
I don't know why.
9:43
You mayn't even say that.
9:44
Why would you say that, you're
9:47
you're you're eating soil, you're
9:49
eating you are a worm, Jordan?
9:51
If you're suggesting that, I was interviewing
9:54
RFK Junior, and he tricked me
9:56
into touching our eyeballs together so a
9:58
bunch of your worms could funnel
10:00
into my brain's left cortex. And you are way
10:03
out of line, way out of line. It
10:06
was just a normal interview. It wasn't
10:08
weird, okay, although you know it
10:10
is weird.
10:11
Legs am I right?
10:12
No, this is horrible. If
10:14
you're in there, Desi, you have to fight the worms.
10:16
Fight the worms.
10:17
Ohing God, Jordan's stopp being so paranoid.
10:19
It's just me DESI, lordick or whatever.
10:23
I'll tell you what when I get back to New York,
10:26
let's just sit down together, you know, and touch
10:28
eyeball.
10:29
No, absolutely, absolutely not. Don't
10:31
threaten me worm. I won't tolerate that.
10:33
Oh oh, what are you gonna do?
10:34
Fire me?
10:35
Then you're gonna have zero worms in late night?
10:37
How's that gonna look?
10:39
So you admit it?
10:40
You are a worm? So what's the endgame here?
10:42
You build an army of warm people, brainwash
10:44
everyone, and then get RFK elected.
10:46
Oh my god, no, Jordan, that's insane.
10:48
I mean, yes, we're building an army of worm people
10:51
to take over the earth, but we're not voting for
10:53
RFK.
10:53
That dude's crazy.
10:56
No way I.
10:59
Got worms for It's not shit for brains.
11:02
Fair enough, lawrens a alight Like
11:04
everybody, we come back, Lewis Black.
11:06
Let me joining us.
11:07
Don't go away,
11:30
Welcome back to the Daily Show. When
11:32
a news story falls through the cracks, Lewis
11:34
Black catches it for a segment we call back
11:36
in black.
11:44
Cars used to be away to let people
11:46
know you were cool, or, in the
11:48
case of your friend's dad, to let people
11:50
know you were having a midlife crisis,
11:53
and in recent years one of the coolest
11:56
cars you could buy was the Tesla. Not
11:58
only was it a status symbol.
12:00
But it was electric.
12:01
It was like a compost bin that
12:04
you could drink and drive it. For
12:07
a while, Tesla's stock price was
12:09
skyrocketing, but now it's
12:11
sliding down like half of Mitch McConnell's
12:14
face.
12:15
The numbers are in and Tesla has
12:17
fallen short of expectations. Elon
12:20
Musk's electric vehicle company releasing
12:22
its first quarter earnings, showing its biggest
12:24
revenue drop in over a decade. In
12:26
the first three months of the year, Carsel's
12:28
dropping eight and a half percent, adding
12:31
to a plummeting stock price that so far
12:33
this year has gone down over forty percent.
12:36
Holy shit, down
12:39
forty percent. The only thing worth
12:41
less than Tesla stock is
12:43
a fully grown adult at p Dinny's
12:46
house.
12:51
Stop it. That's
12:56
the least of the problems.
12:59
But don't worry, sorry, Tesla owner Elon
13:01
Musk is a perfectly reasonable,
13:03
dumbest explanation for
13:06
this.
13:06
We should be thought of as an AI robotics company.
13:09
If your value tells as just
13:11
like an order company, you would
13:13
just have to fundamentally, it's
13:15
just the wrong framework.
13:18
Sorry, elon my mistake.
13:21
All this time, I thought your company
13:23
that sold cars was a car company.
13:26
God, one of us must be a real idiot.
13:30
So Tesla is clearly in the shitter.
13:33
And the thing that was supposed to save it
13:35
was the cyber truck, a vehicle
13:38
that looks like what happens when you
13:40
inbreed Deloreans.
13:44
But unfortunately the cyber truck
13:47
appears to be cyber Tesla.
13:50
Recalling its entire fleet of cyber
13:52
trucks nearly four thousand and all, the company
13:54
says the accelerator pedal could get stuck,
13:57
causing to pick up to unintentionally speed
13:59
up, risking a crash.
14:01
Well, remember it's not a car crash,
14:04
it's an AI crash.
14:06
Open your mind, man, Seriously,
14:09
though you recalled all of them,
14:13
none were okay. Even
14:15
with the baldwinds, they made one
14:17
good one. I'm
14:20
not gonna say which one. I
14:22
don't want to get shot.
14:25
And this is just the.
14:33
And this is just the latest
14:35
problem with robocops
14:37
Wagon, because that thing's
14:39
been shit in the bed since day one.
14:42
We've gotten a lot of tails of malfunction.
14:44
So, for example, vehicles dying after
14:47
traveling just one mile.
14:48
The steamless steel vehicles are quickly showing
14:51
signs of rust.
14:52
One guy sharing how the drive through car wash
14:54
was two marks for the Tesla cybertrock. He
14:56
doesn't know what happened, but.
14:57
Says the owner's manual does say you should wash
15:00
your car in sunlight.
15:02
A Tesla cyber truck had to be rescued
15:04
by a Ford pickup after the Tesla
15:07
got stuck in the mud and snow on a road
15:09
in the Sierra south of Lake Tahoe.
15:12
Oh fancy cyber truck
15:14
had to get rescued by the big tough
15:16
Ford. You are the laughing
15:18
stock of all the other trucks. That
15:21
Ford pickup's probably banging your wife
15:23
right now, you cybercuck.
15:27
Plus, what use is a truck
15:29
if it can't all road? That's like
15:31
a sex doll with no holes. Now,
15:35
I just seem weird having it on
15:37
my couch. And
15:39
this car is just failing its owners.
15:42
It's trying to eat them.
15:44
Cyber Truck users are reporting injuries
15:46
from the automatic trunk.
15:48
Everybody's been waiting for this the finger
15:50
without further ado, we're
15:54
closing the cyber truck.
15:55
I'm gonna put my finger flat right here and
15:57
see what happens.
15:58
Ready, re ready?
16:04
Oh?
16:06
Okay, Oh my god, Okay.
16:10
I can't even move my finger right now.
16:13
I might have actually broken it.
16:15
Good good,
16:17
because I'm team cybertruck
16:20
on this one. You morons
16:22
had it coming. Do us
16:24
all a favor, save us from another
16:27
generation of cyber truck drivers.
16:29
Stick your balls in there too.
16:36
Luckily I still have all
16:39
my fingers, so I can deliver
16:41
this message to Elon on
16:43
behalf of Best the Stop album.
16:49
Unlike unlike AI,
16:52
this is pretty straightforward, so
16:55
is this one.
16:58
Jordan's Oh
17:00
It's black everybody when we come back back
17:02
label all the good, Gun the show, don't go away,
17:20
Welcome.
17:21
Back to the Daily Show.
17:22
My guest Tonight is an award winning actor
17:25
and producer of the critically acclaimed documentary
17:27
about you two in the Bosnian War called
17:29
Kiss the Future. Please Welcome Matt
17:31
Damon.
17:41
Let go Black,
17:55
All right?
17:58
They react to everybody like that.
18:01
This movie is.
18:02
It's it's remarkable a story
18:04
I I I hadn't heard of it. So it
18:07
follows the seize of Sarajevo
18:10
and sort of the art the
18:13
art community that sprang out of it. And
18:15
also the ways in which you too was sort of used
18:17
as a as a touchstone to pull people together
18:19
at that time. I wonder, what, what, what what compelled
18:22
you to tell this story?
18:23
Well, it's I had the same reaction.
18:24
I just somebody told me the story and it was so
18:26
incredible, And we had this
18:28
great director, Nana Chitchens Shine
18:31
who who was from there and who who
18:33
came in and talked to us about it, and I
18:36
just wanted to help get the story out there and get
18:38
it because it's such a beautiful story
18:40
and ultimately about light winning, triumphing
18:42
over triumphing over dark, you know, so
18:45
and these people in Sarajevo who were just so resilient
18:48
but used music as like
18:50
an act of defiance and resistance in the middle
18:53
of these horrible circumstances. And I
18:55
just found it just a beautiful story. So
18:57
we just so I'm a producer on it. It's like a
18:59
docu mentory. It's not my normal kind
19:01
of thing to do, but it just it was something I wanted to
19:03
put out there for people to see.
19:04
Yeah, I think it's it's remarkable in watching
19:08
war torn Sarajevo and you see people who
19:10
are they talk about dodging bullets
19:12
and stiper fires so they can go listen to music
19:15
in a basement. How like normalcy
19:17
is so so important
19:19
to them, just to feel like they're connected to something. There's
19:21
moments in there when it's like, I wish we could just like airlift
19:25
Taylor Swift and dropped her in Ukraine just to
19:27
sort.
19:27
Of find some peace.
19:28
It feels very modern in that way that.
19:30
Might be the answer to everything.
19:32
Yeah we could, Yeah
19:38
she can figure it out, Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
19:42
But it is that it is that, you
19:44
know, the movie really
19:46
covers all of these lives of these Sarah Evans
19:48
who who really came to that conclusion
19:51
reflecting on life and what is life really
19:53
and and and actually it
19:55
was worth risking their lives to go to
19:57
gather so that they could listen to music or play
20:00
music or just be together and
20:02
and that that bonded them and strengthened
20:05
their community and that resilience. And you know,
20:07
it's as as
20:09
Bono said in that little clip there,
20:11
it was it was carrying on with their lives was
20:13
a way of saying, you know, you're
20:16
not beating us, you're not defeating you will not take
20:18
our lives from us. You can, you can kill me, but you
20:20
still won't take this from me. There's a great photo
20:22
in there that we have of one of these punk rock
20:25
drummers who lost his hand
20:27
on the front lines and he
20:30
and he there's a picture of him with
20:32
his drumstick duct taped to
20:35
his to his his army
20:38
in place of where you know, where his hand was, and he's
20:40
just and he's and he's playing like death
20:43
metal, like come on, you know, like
20:45
like you're not going to take music away from
20:47
me, you know, And and uh, it's just a
20:49
beautiful The stories are really incredible
20:51
and the people that we
20:53
we we got a lot of footage from from
20:56
the sarah Avans who were there, and so you
20:58
know, there's a wedding in the in the middle, like all
21:00
these real moments that were really happening
21:03
amidst this siege.
21:04
I think they sort of articulate that with the wedding, the scene and the
21:06
wedding under all of this chaos.
21:08
And again, it's it's hard to watch this and not see
21:10
the image of your seene on news as well, but then to
21:12
see people go through wedding, walking
21:15
through war torn areas and just finding
21:17
those moments of joy, and you really see joy
21:19
as an act of resistance in
21:21
those moments, exactly exactly. This
21:24
movie also follows again this YouTube
21:27
concert in Sarajevo and sort of the conversation
21:29
around you two a little bit, and they're
21:32
sort of looked at in some ways as a way that
21:34
art can shine through, it can find a
21:36
beacon for people, a way out. I'm
21:39
curious, as an artist yourself,
21:41
what were touchstones for you? Clearly
21:44
you didn't grow up in war torn
21:46
Boston from my understanding, but
21:49
I'm wondering, as an artist and
21:51
a creator, like finding those touchstones
21:54
that make you feel connected to something larger. What
21:56
do you see when you watch and produce a film like that?
21:59
Well, I feel look, I mean I was.
22:01
I was in Australia last year looking
22:04
at cave art that was eighteen
22:06
thousand years old, and just that very
22:08
human impulse that we have.
22:10
To tell stories to each
22:12
other.
22:12
And it's a way to kind of tell
22:14
somebody another perspective, right
22:17
And if you and if you you know, for filmmaking, if
22:19
you can put people in other people's
22:21
shoes, that builds empathy
22:24
and compassion, and
22:26
as you know, Edge says in that.
22:27
Yeah,
22:30
there are.
22:32
There really are these legitimate
22:35
dark forces that are trying to divide
22:37
us. And you see that a lot in politics, you
22:39
see that a lot. And and what art
22:42
and music and film does
22:44
hopefully is is
22:47
it's a bulwark against that and an attempt
22:49
to kind of bridge those divides
22:51
and keep these communities together.
22:53
Do you feel attention to somebody as a creator and
22:55
a producer, Like we're
22:58
in such partisan times, such political times,
23:00
uh, and selling political ideas
23:03
is not the not the easiest sell as it
23:05
used to be. People don't want to go near
23:07
that as far as producing things that might have a
23:09
larger political agenda.
23:11
Uh.
23:11
But you also are balancing having a
23:13
platform and such a difficult
23:16
time. Like, what do you see as you are moving
23:18
forward and making things? How do you see the art that
23:20
you want to produce and to be a part of?
23:23
Well?
23:23
I think you want you know what
23:25
what, whatever it is you're making, your your heart
23:27
has to be in it and you have to feel like it's
23:30
Look, even if it's a movie that isn't overtly
23:32
political, if it's about building understanding
23:35
about the you know, if you can watch a movie that
23:37
has no relation to your to
23:39
your life, and and be affected
23:42
by the characters. Then that's that's that's
23:44
one little small bit of evolution, you
23:47
know. And and we're bombarded by all of
23:49
the you know, I mean you you're.
23:51
Forced to sit through it because you got to write jokes about
23:53
it.
23:53
But but I mean, it
23:56
really is kind of an assault on your senses.
23:58
And then the and and it's constantly telling
24:00
you that that that we're different, and we're divided,
24:02
and we're split and and
24:05
I think movies like this and and uh and
24:07
and and other films can can
24:10
can kind of call bullshit on that idea, say
24:12
we're actually a lot closer than than than we
24:14
think, or then we're told, well.
24:18
There it
24:22
was like, there's a final quote in this movie
24:24
that's a poignant one. They wonder whether we need
24:26
that concert more today than we needed it
24:29
in ninety seven.
24:29
Yeah, that was one of the seriae.
24:31
Evens said that, which was really and
24:33
that's why Nanad decided to close
24:35
the movie with it, because it is you do see a lot
24:37
of parallels to all over
24:39
the world to what was happening there.
24:43
And so again it's a I mean, it ultimately
24:45
is really an uplifting movie because it's it's beautiful
24:48
to watch, you
24:50
know, these people and what they did and
24:52
how they overcame their situation.
24:55
The band and what you know. Incidentally, the band
24:57
was there.
24:58
One had kind of they reluctant
25:01
at first, just because they didn't want to make a U two movie.
25:04
No, we don't want to.
25:05
We're like, no, no, no, you know, we're gonna put
25:07
the Sara Evans in the center of this and that's
25:09
when they so they gave us all of this footage
25:11
and the concert at the end that
25:13
they play is it was the first time
25:15
that the fifty thousand
25:17
people gathered and they were on different sides
25:19
of this conflict, and they gathered
25:21
and just listened to music together.
25:23
And the movie is.
25:24
Called Kiss the Future because Bono
25:27
when he started this concert, he grabbed
25:29
the microphone and he said the past,
25:32
kiss the Future. And so that's why we call
25:34
the movie Kiss the Future because that was the
25:36
Yeah.
25:39
Well, it's a beautiful movie more
25:41
than before. Kiss the Future
25:43
is now available to stream exclusively on Paramount
25:45
Plus. Matt Damon, I want
25:48
to talk about
25:49
little That's
26:03
a show for tonight two days to borrow and your host will
26:05
be John Stewart.
26:06
No. Here it is.
26:10
Yes, enough, Stewart, this
26:12
interview is ridiculous what you were doing
26:14
right now, so you need to stop. It is
26:17
okay, it is. Let's talk about some real topics
26:19
that Americans.
26:20
Care about before you're out of time.
26:21
Oh well, of course we are.
26:22
We do.
26:22
Thank you for being with us.
26:25
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26:27
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26:28
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26:30
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26:31
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26:36
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26:43
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