Summary

This week Sam is sick, Chris went to Auckland after dealing with a scheduling problem.

Our audio kept getting screwed up this week due to things freezing. But we’ve cobbled it together

We talk about a internet power user that lost all their open tabs, chicken blood at a wedding ceremony. Some new water jet invention which led us to find out about a pet water cremation machine.

A missing cat is reunited. What is the grandad of Dunedin up to and why you probably shouldn’t get a think called a vampire facial.

All this and so much more. Come have a listen.

Links

Power user with 7500 tabs
Chickens blood splashes at wedding
Pet Water cremation machine
Cat reunited after being stuck in a box
Grandad of Dunedin
Vampire Facials

Show Transcript

This transcript was generated by an AI and may not be 100% accurate. If you have questions about any of the information found here, please reach out to us.

Sam [00:00:21]:
Hello and welcome to episode 480 of the Chris and Sam podcast.

Chris [00:00:25]:
I’m Chris.

Sam [00:00:26]:
And I’m Sam. Welcome along to your weekly fix or randomness technology in life even if we have some sort of disease. That’s just me.

Chris [00:00:34]:
By we, we mean him.

Sam [00:00:37]:
I got my COVID booster and a flu jab at the same time. So I do and in each arm. And literally 10 minutes before I went in, I was like, my throat feels a little funny. So take your pick at whatever’s going on with me. But I feel better today than I did yesterday. But it was only yesterday afternoon that I got real yesterday evening, I got real hammered.

Chris [00:01:00]:
Damn. Oh, hopefully, that’s just all sorted itself out. Yeah. Carolyn’s been off sick for a bit, apparently, and, so I stayed up with with her, for a couple of days in the weekend. She’s been real sick for a she goes, this is worse than any COVID. But she took a COVID test before I went up there and, said, no. It’s not COVID. But Oh.

Chris [00:01:23]:
Pretty crappy. So there’s a bit of that going around. It’s that, what is it? Change of season type, time of the year, I think.

Sam [00:01:32]:
Yeah. Maybe. Maybe. Who knows?

Chris [00:01:34]:
Maybe.

Sam [00:01:34]:
Anyway, let’s talk about your trip.

Chris [00:01:36]:
Well, let’s talk about the the and episode first.

Sam [00:01:41]:
The 11th.

Chris [00:01:43]:
September 11th is the date we have booked. Have we got a venue yet? Or are we No. Not yet. No? Okay. Good.

Sam [00:01:49]:
Don’t worry about that.

Chris [00:01:50]:
Just checking. Yeah. Alright. I’ll I’ll do some work on that. So yeah. So, still still working on a venue for The. But, five and episode. Weekly episodes, that’s, like, 10 years because we’ve missed a few episodes over the years.

Sam [00:02:04]:
I think we’ve missed, I reckon over 10 years. I think it’s 3 or 4.

Chris [00:02:09]:
Yeah. I was gonna say 4 or 6. 4 to 6.

Sam [00:02:11]:
Okay. Let’s say 4. It’s not many.

Chris [00:02:13]:
Not many. I mean, there was a couple of you know, we had Christmases off and stuff.

Sam [00:02:17]:
But when we started, we did 3 a week as well. So it all evened

Chris [00:02:21]:
out. True.

Sam [00:02:22]:
We do a lot. We’ve done more than 500 episodes if you include the The day stuff.

Chris [00:02:27]:
Yeah. Yeah. True. But those field days ones are short. So, actually, before we get on to anything else, hello to Charlotte. Hello. As I’m recording this, I just caught up with Charlotte, just half an hour an hour ago. And, yeah.

Chris [00:02:42]:
And I she she added the podcast to her playlist on Pocket Chris. So hey, Charles.

Sam [00:02:49]:
Do they just do it? Or do I feel like you’re, like, standing over them going, add it now. Do it as you’re watching them?

Chris [00:02:55]:
No. She she’s she’s into the the podcast, but she listens to who is it? Lex Fridman? Do you know him?

Sam [00:03:02]:
Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yep.

Chris [00:03:03]:
Yeah. And she goes, yeah. No. I like the long the long podcast. I’m like, I hate long podcast. Yes. She

Sam [00:03:08]:
goes for, like, 3 hours or something. Yeah.

Chris [00:03:10]:
Yeah. He says, chris his average is 3 hours, but there was and 6 hours long I listened and. And I was on the edge of my seat the whole time. I’m like, oh my god. I couldn’t do that. I don’t think I could do that. I might do that if I was in a train or a plane for 6 hours, but

Sam [00:03:23]:
Yeah.

Chris [00:03:24]:
Anyway, speaking of train trains and planes, I, had to do some travel in the weekend, start The start of the week. And so Saturday, morning, I was like, right. I am going to go up to Auckland on the train. Now I looked to the, the timetable, and there are no trains on Sundays because I had to be up there for Monday morning. Right? Yeah. So I was like, I’ll go up Sunday. Oh, I can’t. I’ll go up Saturday.

Chris [00:03:52]:
So I look at the the timetable on my phone. I was like, yeah. 2 PM Saturday would be good because, Carolyn, was working in the morning. So I was like, yeah. Fair cool. So that’s cool. So I got an Uber. Now the company has an Uber, account.

Chris [00:04:11]:
So

Sam [00:04:12]:
Yeah.

Chris [00:04:12]:
I just and it’s linked to mine. It’s really cool. It’s so good. And I just flick it over to the Uber, to to their account, and I order an Uber and it bills,

Sam [00:04:22]:
yeah, upgrade

Chris [00:04:23]:
the car. Brilliant. Love it. Love it. So get the the Uber to the train station. I’m a bit early because, you know, I’m a bit paranoid about missing my train. But, you know, early. Nobody’s there.

Chris [00:04:35]:
Climb up on the over thingy

Sam [00:04:37]:
Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah.

Chris [00:04:38]:
And there’s the the lone security guard. There’s always the loan security guard up there.

Sam [00:04:43]:
Oh, okay. I know. Yeah. Okay.

Chris [00:04:44]:
Yeah. Up the top, there’s always a security guard. I know. So I says to him, oh, yes. Just just when’s The, when’s the next train to to Auckland. I really only said it just to say something because the

Sam [00:04:58]:
poor guy is

Chris [00:04:59]:
sitting there. It sounds like

Sam [00:05:00]:
it sounds like it was lucky you said this.

Chris [00:05:02]:
Yeah. It was lucky I said this because he goes, you’ve missed it. And I’m like, no. I was gonna get The 2 o’clock one. He goes, there is no 2 o’clock and on Saturday. There’s only a 9 o’clock and 11 o’clock. And I’m like

Sam [00:05:17]:
So what did you rate?

Chris [00:05:18]:
He shows me on the thing. Well, apparently, he goes, You went across and down, right? And I’m like, Yeah. On the timetable, he goes, no. They they’ve changed the way it is. You can’t go across and down. You only go across now. I’m like, what? What? Anyway, I looked at it. I went, oh, yeah.

Chris [00:05:32]:
Screwed it up. So I’m like, oh, well, I guess I will catch the bus. Now this is why you never get me to book accommodation or

Sam [00:05:42]:
No. That that is right. That is yes.

Chris [00:05:44]:
Somebody has to organize it and tell me where to be at what time. Honestly, I’m absolutely useless. I’ve missed flights. I’ve missed international flights. I just and I don’t care. So anyway,

Sam [00:06:00]:
That’s the spirit.

Chris [00:06:01]:
Yeah. So I I go down to the, so this was, Roto Roto Kari. Go into the The, get to a bus. There’s nobody in the bus. The bus driver’s having a fag in the bus stop. And I saw

Sam [00:06:13]:
I thought you were gonna say you took the bus. Epic story.

Chris [00:06:16]:
Yeah. I stole the bus and went to Auckland. Yeah. No. And I says, he goes, oh, the bus doesn’t leave for half an hour. I’m like, that’s okay. The train doesn’t leave for 2 days. So I think I’ll wait the half hour.

Chris [00:06:29]:
So I get the bus into the into the the, transport station.

Sam [00:06:36]:
Yeah. Yeah.

Chris [00:06:36]:
What? 3 on a Saturday?

Sam [00:06:39]:
Yeah.

Chris [00:06:39]:
Maybe it’s 3 by this time? No. It’s actually earlier than The. But, yeah, probably 2:2 on a Saturday. And, there’s not anybody in there. All The windows are closed. There’s nobody working there at all. No. And so I, jumped on my my phone, and I’ve I’ve ordered ordered a bus up to, you know booked a bus ride up to Auckland.

Chris [00:07:03]:
That’s all good. And people are coming up to me all the way through this while I’m sitting there booking it. Where where is everybody? Do you know do you know how do I get it anywhere? I don’t know. I’m I’m working out.

Speaker A [00:07:19]:
I’m

Sam [00:07:19]:
You know what? You know what you say? It’s Hamilton. Everything’s a little bit

Chris [00:07:24]:
shit. Everything’s a little bit shit. That’s pretty much it. I I could almost believe it on a Sunday, like, because there’s no trains and stuff. But on a Saturday, I I just couldn’t believe it. Anyway, got the bus up. It’s cool. Got the Uber at the other end.

Chris [00:07:40]:
But yeah. It’s all good. The only thing that didn’t work with The Uber, I had planned to order Uber Eats the whole time as well.

Sam [00:07:47]:
Yes.

Chris [00:07:47]:
But it didn’t let me put that on their company account.

Sam [00:07:51]:
So But they thought it did, Like

Chris [00:07:53]:
Yeah. They’ve mentioned they mentioned it did, but it didn’t. So whether that’s a The thing somewhere or Oh, yeah. Well

Sam [00:08:01]:
Oh, yeah. Probably is a permissions thing.

Chris [00:08:03]:
Yeah. So anyway or or it might not be linked up.

Sam [00:08:07]:
And the filming thing went okay on Monday?

Chris [00:08:10]:
Yeah. The filming thing went really well. We had a, had it was pretty good. So I was filming for a, a building in Auckland for the Auckland City Council. I think I can say all this. So, we’re filming, 6 emergency scenarios so that they can do online learning for inductions. Because there’s, like, 3,000 people in this building.

Sam [00:08:33]:
Nice. In

Chris [00:08:34]:
fact, I thought that lifts were interesting. This is how maybe I’m just old and and crotchety or whatever.

Sam [00:08:40]:
Be. Let’s see.

Chris [00:08:40]:
Could be. So you go up to the lift, and you swipe your card, and you click on the floor you want to go to.

Sam [00:08:48]:
Yeah.

Chris [00:08:49]:
And then it says lift a, and you just wait for a to come or b or d or c. A, b, c, d.

Sam [00:08:55]:
Oh, okay.

Chris [00:08:56]:
But when you go in, there’s no buttons in the lift. It just takes you to those floors.

Sam [00:09:01]:
Oh, no. I haven’t seen one of them.

Chris [00:09:03]:
Yeah. So I

Sam [00:09:03]:
was in a lift yesterday and it was just buttons on the inside.

Chris [00:09:06]:
Yeah. There’s no buttons on the inside. So you and as you when the doors and, on the inside of the door, the inner edge of the door, it tells you which floors it’s going to depending on people coming in.

Sam [00:09:18]:
And

Chris [00:09:19]:
so you can’t get in the wrong lift because I knew I I didn’t think of that at first. So yeah. Anyway, so that was pretty cool. So we did some good filming, and we, I’m I’m pretending to be

Sam [00:09:31]:
How how was your acting?

Chris [00:09:33]:
My acting was pretty good, I thought. I thought it was good, from what I’ve seen. But at one point, I was going to walk past the the bomb, the bag, the dodgy bag down at the thing. And was like, oh, I brought a hoodie to do the drop off, but it’s gonna look funny if I’m the person dropping it off and the person walking past it. So I got the building manager to, put chris hoodie on and and, you know, come in. He sits down by a plot plant, takes his bag off, sits there for a, you know, few seconds, then stands up and walks off leaving the bag there. And that was cool. It looked good.

Chris [00:10:08]:
We filmed it. Then we’re he goes, oh, we wanna get the insert of the the the bomb, you know, like The announcement over the PA system.

Sam [00:10:17]:
Oh, yeah.

Chris [00:10:17]:
Yeah. We go into the security room, and there’s chris big wall full of screens. You know, it’s, like, pretty cool. And so, we did a bit of a pan from the screens down to the sky, and he talks on it. And then, I think it was Jay said, hey. Can you bring up the, the

Sam [00:10:34]:
Footage of the

Chris [00:10:35]:
from 5 minutes ago? Yeah. Perfect CCTV footage. Like, we couldn’t have framed it better if we planned it. Nice. There’s this guy coming in and dropping off. So that’s absolutely going into the training. But the funniest thing is, you know, it’s the boss. It’s the Yeah.

Sam [00:10:50]:
They’ll love it.

Chris [00:10:51]:
They’ll love it. They’ll love that stuff. Anyway, it was great. Had a great time. We got it all done, in the one afternoon, so I came back on And afternoon, which was great. So yeah.

Sam [00:11:00]:
I got a question for you. Yep. I think I know the answer. You weren’t on a film set on Sunday, were you? No. I saw a post. I think it was a story. It was Kelly Fritz, and she was in Auckland, and she was the art director for a small series shoot in Auckland.

Chris [00:11:16]:
Right.

Sam [00:11:16]:
I’m sending you I’m sending you the photo now. And there’s a photo, and the person in the center at the top with his back to the camera looks like you.

Chris [00:11:24]:
Oh my god. It does too.

Sam [00:11:26]:
It does.

Chris [00:11:27]:
That looks a 100% like me.

Sam [00:11:29]:
I know. I’ve been on sets and seen you like that. That’s

Chris [00:11:33]:
Yeah. Damn. That’s crazy. Yeah. So, that was that was my travel. That was my, thing. Yep. Just so everybody knows, don’t ever, expect me to be somewhere in a different time zone or a different place unless you book the travel and tell me where I need to be at what time.

Chris [00:11:54]:
Because yeah. Otherwise, I’m pretty crap.

Sam [00:11:57]:
You are a man that has a 1000000 tabs saved or open or bookmarked.

Chris [00:12:04]:
Yeah. I have got a lot open, actually.

Sam [00:12:06]:
No. No. Just in general. So there’s a story this week. It’s more of a marketing thing from Firefox more than anything. They had a power user, and she had 7 and a half 1000 tabs open at all times. And something crashed or she shut it down or they disappeared and she freaked out. And they were like, no.

Sam [00:12:28]:
No. We chris restore them. So they restored it for her and they said, look, all those tabs only uses, like, 30 megabytes of, data or RAM or whatever. They said we’ve got it. So it’s so efficient. It doesn’t matter.

Chris [00:12:42]:
Yeah. No. Because I know they have a a whole, pooling thing on The. So they’re open,

Sam [00:12:47]:
but they’re

Chris [00:12:47]:
not open anymore. So that’s that’s the reason I feel comfortable having I’m gonna save 45 tabs open

Sam [00:12:56]:
now

Chris [00:12:57]:
right now on that one. And then I’ve got my work Chris, which isn’t open at all, but there’ll be another 20 tabs on that if it was open. Alright. So, and there’s a 100 on my phone. I I’m pretty diligent about keeping it under a 100. Whenever it goes over a and, I I drop it the tabs down. So it’s under a Top

Sam [00:13:16]:
tick tip there. Keep it under a100. A fielding couple and baby are splattered with chicken blood in a wedding ceremony.

Chris [00:13:31]:
So people The like tossing No.

Sam [00:13:33]:
The might make more sense. The blood you chris story just gets better and better. It was in January The. So somebody’s just heard about this and tracked down the story, like, you know, 4 months later. They collected the blood during the slaughter of a friend of the couple’s chicken. Always good to know. Wanganui based wedding celebrant, he held a coconut shell filled with blood and cranberry juice. Because they always go together.

Sam [00:14:01]:
Remember that. As they’re doing the vows, he flicked The brush dipped in blood onto the rings and then onto their faces and also onto their baby Bjorn. It sounds gruesome, but it’s not that bad. She said she’s German Swedish. They’re not religious, but we wanted to do something in front of some sort of God. So we decided to go with Nordic mythology. It just felt right. A wedding photographer pulled out of the ceremony last minute due to thinking the blood ritual would be too graphic.

Sam [00:14:35]:
And I was like, no. It’s not chris too graphic. They just didn’t want their gear getting covered in blood.

Chris [00:14:41]:
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Actually, I figured it looked quite good. A little bit of, animal back now. You can never have too much blood.

Sam [00:14:49]:
So this so this guy, this wedding celebrant, is niching down, and he’s calling himself an extreme wedding specialist. His business is called Married With Metal, and he’s done zombie themed to satanic weddings. He has no limits. He said, the only thing is I might not do a naturalist wedding in the middle of winter. But that’s about it.

Chris [00:15:15]:
Very cool. You’ve gotta have your limits. You gotta have your limits. I got this, little story I thought was pretty cool, and I haven’t got a link to it now. I I wrote it down, but I think I saw it on, The video somewhere. I didn’t get the link. But it’s it’s this new water jet, so you might be able to find it. It’s and it was created by a Hollywood worker that did onset weather.

Chris [00:15:40]:
So that was his job. You know, he did the, you know, the, bands and the rain and all that sort of thing. But, basically, what he’s done is invented this little thing, and it’s only little. It it wasn’t huge. Like, you could scale it up, but it wasn’t huge. And incorporated microjets of water. So there’s a cylinder, with all these microjets of water coming into the cylinder and a small jet engine at the and, and it forces this water out. So The microjets of water, and it just makes this huge mist come out of this thing.

Chris [00:16:16]:
And the mist comes out at up to a 100 kilometers per hour. Right? And it’s the best firefighting

Sam [00:16:26]:
thing ever.

Chris [00:16:27]:
Because for, bushfires and stuff, it comes out. It can go against the prevailing wind if it has to. Like, it works well in the high wind environments because it’s being forced out at such thing. Moist air is heavier than dry air, so it punches back against high wind. And then, and and it’s it’s, really efficient because the microjets make it, you know, a fog rather than, water. So it uses less water to put out more fire,

Sam [00:17:01]:
if that

Chris [00:17:01]:
makes sense. And, there was a video with The. I was like, dad is genius. But, yeah, it’s like he wasn’t a firefighter. He was a Hollywood guy. Like, I just I can’t

Sam [00:17:12]:
easily find The. But I did find a Scoop article that was published 20 hours ago. Now Scoop is an independent news website, and you could submit your own stories, basically. So press releases go up there. Kiwi invention of impossible pet water cremation machine.

Chris [00:17:34]:
Okay.

Sam [00:17:35]:
He’s created a machine that treats the remains of our beloved pets in a low temperature water process that has near zero impact on the environment. A US supplier of 1st generation machines has described Brown’s invention as impossible, but the first of its machines are already working in New Zealand and Australia. It’s a quantum leap advance from the 1st generate there’s no flame cremation and somehow oh, here we go. There’s a little picture. Here we go. So

Chris [00:18:05]:
So I I lost you for a bit.

Sam [00:18:07]:
Yeah.

Chris [00:18:08]:
So you, and my the recording’s my and, so I might have to get you to repeat just from,

Sam [00:18:15]:
Oh, I I was trying to figure out what it does because it didn’t tell me for a while.

Chris [00:18:20]:
Yep. Tell us what because you said you just started reading something from it.

Sam [00:18:25]:
I don’t know what I was saying. It seems like it’s got there’s no flame involved from what I can tell. So I think it says here your pets are generally and respectfully placed in The sealed compartment. There’s 95% water, 5% alkali.

Chris [00:18:40]:
So you just said that 95% water, 5% alkali.

Sam [00:18:44]:
They heat it up to 95% and they circulate it uniquely. And that’s the commercial sensitive, but they can’t tell you how they do that. Right? Reducing everything but the bones to a liquid, then they neutralize the liquid making it safe for water recycling or use of fertilizer. Takes 8 to 10 hours. They then convert the bones into powder and then return everything back to you. He’s looking into doing this for humans and there’s a lot of people interested in human water cremation. I think they should just call it cooking people into a soup because that’s what they’re doing.

Chris [00:19:22]:
Superfaction.

Sam [00:19:24]:
Oh, it says here water cremation was known to the Maldives centuries ago. Some chiefs were immersed in the boiling hot alkaline springs, and their bones were collected about a year later. So okay. So anyway, from the Hollywood worker making an amazing mist machine, which I can’t find, to these guys.

Chris [00:19:45]:
Yeah. Yeah. Nothing like randomness with your technology in life. This one’s more of a life story. I I don’t know if you heard about chris. And I was gonna mention and last week. We ran out of time. But, did you hear about the Amazon Adventures of, Galena? No.

Chris [00:20:02]:
Utah cat? So, Galena is a patchy cat. I I don’t know what you call them. Looks patchy. There’s a photo on the link. But, she loves jumping into boxes, And she jumped into a box that was being returned to Amazon. So the owners sent her away. And she traveled for, like, and miles or something. So she’s after sneaking into the package, she traveled oh, sorry.

Chris [00:20:36]:
500 miles in a 3 by 3 foot shipping container. 6 days of travel with no food or water, but was, discovered in relatively good shape by an Amazon employee. So, the Amazon employee sort of started feeding her and trying to figure out where she came from. And, anyway, got got, got

Sam [00:21:00]:
a little bit of a I got, the very start of that and the return bit at the end. So that was good. I did hear that I did hear that story. I’m surprised nobody heard the cat meowing because I thought that’s what they normally do. They were they were returning something weird, weren’t they? That was the funny thing that I picked up on from memory. Hang on.

Chris [00:21:20]:
I can’t remember what they were returning, but it does say 3 by 3, foot shipping container. So I don’t yeah. But yeah. So Galena endured 6 days of travel with no food or water, but was discovered in relatively good shape by an Amazon and employee,

Sam [00:21:37]:
you know, who It wasn’t indoor cat only. So it wouldn’t want to get out more than a normal cat, I guess.

Chris [00:21:46]:
Yeah.

Sam [00:21:47]:
Alright.

Chris [00:21:49]:
Whereas we’ve talked about my, grandma’s cat before because somebody somebody you you mentioned that, somebody brought that up because it it used to The put it in a cuttery box to take it to The cuttery. We’re in the car. The cat clawed its way through the box, ripped the box to shred, raced around and around the car attacking everybody because it just freaked the hell out. Nearly crashed the car. So when dad gets back from the holidays, when we all got back from the holidays, he, pinches the shopping cart from a local, supermarket, gets his welding gear out, and makes us, welded welds a cage for the cat, which

Sam [00:22:33]:
I’ve been at the I’ve been at

Chris [00:22:34]:
the for years. Anyway, that’s and old story. We all know that.

Sam [00:22:42]:
There’s

Chris [00:22:42]:
Oh, yeah.

Sam [00:22:43]:
What? Oh, I know what it was. I was trying to remember. What was the story about some woman that was doing something over and over, and it was like and I think it was The was an old woman somewhere and she was making like like a million pikelets or something. Okay. Like she kept making pikelets or something. You vaguely vaguely remember that? Okay.

Chris [00:23:02]:
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.

Sam [00:23:03]:
So there’s a dude in Dunedin, an old guy, who’s been dubbed the grandfather of Dunedin. He’s knitted over 900 pairs of baby booties for expectant mothers. He was he was taught by his grandmother when he was 6. He’s 82 now. And he just sits around just knitting piles and piles of little booties.

Chris [00:23:27]:
I guess it’s better

Sam [00:23:28]:
than doing drugs. Right? That’s right. So I mean, good on him.

Chris [00:23:34]:
Or or maybe he does both. Actually, I would have been surprised that he’s he’s stoned out of his court, you know, missing 2 No. While on the golfers.

Sam [00:23:46]:
So I don’t think it says what he used to do. He just he’s knitting booties. Yeah.

Chris [00:23:50]:
Oh, that’s cool. I I this one I thought was interesting. Have you heard of the vampire facials? So it’s Of course, everything looks like. So, trendy, unproven vampire facials, performed in an unlicensed spa in New Mexico, left at least 3 women with HIV infections. So what it is is I mean, I because I was really just going, what are they doing? So, basically, vampire facial is The common name for a platelet rich plasma microneedling procedure. In this treatment, a patient’s blood is drawn, stun spun down to separate out plat separate out plasma from blood cells, and the platelet rich plasma is then injected into the face of the microRNA.

Sam [00:24:45]:
The makes sense now.

Chris [00:24:47]:
It is claimed, with little evidence, that it can rejuvenate and improve the look of the skin and got notable promotions from celebrities including

Sam [00:24:57]:
Oh, yeah.

Chris [00:24:57]:
With a paltrow because we all know how freaking amazing she is.

Sam [00:25:00]:
They’re the 2 worst people to endorse anything.

Chris [00:25:06]:
Yeah. Pretty much. But, because so this woman’s got gets, notified she’s got HIV and she’s like, but but but and her husband hasn’t got it. And she’s like, but she didn’t hit any of the risk factors, like, couldn’t figure it out. And then the, the investigations lead to The spa, and they found these other ones also, other people had got HIV from this, same procedure at Skip Spa. I just I don’t think cosmetics and beauty should have anything to do oh, fuck.

Sam [00:25:48]:
Yeah. So it brings us to the end of the podcast.

Chris [00:25:55]:
Yeah. So I was just going to say, I don’t think cosmetics and beauty should have anything to do with needles. Anytime you go, I want to look better, if it says you need to be injected, just say nah. Nah. Because yeah. Why would you?

Sam [00:26:18]:
Oh, you’re back. Hello. No. Okay. So that brings us to the The of this podcast. Normally, we do it in person, but I don’t wanna spread the diseases. Yeah. Chris looks like he’s having a mental breakdown.

Sam [00:26:35]:
That’s okay. I know. That’s when it seems to pause. That’s when you get all animation and move too fast. You’re too jerky, and it goes, oh, no. Can’t deal with that. Okay. Bring us into the podcast.

Sam [00:26:52]:
Check us out at christasabpodcast.com. Book us September 11th. We’ll have a venue, soon, hopefully. I will feel better next week. Okay. Until then, I’m Sam.

Chris [00:27:03]:
I’m Chris.

Sam [00:27:04]:
See you.

Chris [00:27:04]:
Bye.