Beantown Podcast - Salute to the Woolly Mammoth (07272023 Beantown Podcast)
Episode Date: July 27, 2023Quinn comes to you LIVE to ramble, and I mean ramble, about our greatest natural resource, the Woolly Mammoth...
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Next up on Right On Q. Elon Musk changes Twitter's name to X. What it means for investors.
NFL training camp opens. Our look at all 32 teams. And we catch up with former American Idol
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Coming up next on Right On Q.
Hey what's going on it's Quinn David Furnace welcome to my show Quinn David Furnace
presents the bean town podcast for Thursday, July 27th, 2023.
What's going on?
How are you?
What is happening?
It is a heat wave here in Chicago across the entire country.
And the best thing to do is to just hunker down.
What's the name of that city in Australia?
South Australia is a Cooper PD, what a name.
Gotta be Aboriginal, right?
Or maybe I learned yesterday in geography trivia,
let's talk about that in a second here.
I learned yesterday that the first European settlement
and actually let's make this our bean town trivia podcast,
bean town podcast trivia question of the week.
We usually save that for the end and then forget about it.
But here you go.
The first, this is not verified and you'll learn that source may be unreliable.
As we talk about trivia in a second here from last night, the source is a little bit
questionable.
Anyways, the trivia question, the first European settlement in Australia was named
Port this
So the last name that it was named Port X not Port Twitter
Although right on cue that's gonna be a great episode coming up later. I'm looking forward to that
So it was named after a former
It's not named after this person prison will be if it's a British colony, but it's the last name of a US president.
Okay, so there's a clue for you. Your other clue in our trivia question in the week is Trail of Tears.
Okay, so if you haven't picked up on it yet, if you're not really a history buff, Port Jackson, and I don't have a year for you,
but Port Jackson was the name of that first European settlement
in Australia before they started
shipping all the commies and the cronies
and the clownies and the Jadevian clownies over that way.
My name is Quinn David Fernison, this is my show.
Thank you for tuning in to today's episode.
We're going to be talking about a very special animal, a very special creature here on today's episode.
After we give a shout out to our friends in Pakistan, hello, Hyderabad, Karachi, Poon job, region, Kiber pass again.
Thank you for making us the 112th ranked comedy podcast in the great nation of Pakistan.
And listener discretion is advised when you were listening to the Bean Tum podcast.
Number one, we'll be kitchen in some language number two, this podcast is objectively terrible.
So trivia last night speaking of Pakistan.
So trivia, I'm aware of lots of different games going on
and I don't go weekly to any one particular place,
but I've been meaning to go up to spiteful,
which is right next to half acre.
It's this ball moral and Damon basically.
No easy way to get there,
either take the brown line to Damon, you walk up a mile, or you take the Clark bus up as I did,
and then you walk over almost a mile west of there. But I knew I had a free night. I don't have a ton of
just like random casual free nights on my own these days. And so I was excited. I've got a friend
who works for a spiteful shout out to Calvin. And so I wanted excited. I've got a friend who works for Spite Full Shoutout to Calvin.
And so I wanted to make my way up there
because I knew they played trivia on Wednesday nights.
And I confirmed that I was going to go on a Tuesday
afternoon when I saw that it was geography themed.
So I just want to say this about it.
This is not throwing any shade at anyone and I'm not like this isn't like
oh I didn't win first prize so now let me lash out on the bean-tongued podcast sort of thing.
It's just it wasn't really what I expected. Let's put it that way. Let's put the onus on me
and my expectations. Okay so when I hear that there's going to be geography trivia I'm thinking
Okay, so when I hear that there's gonna be geography trivia, I'm thinking
Questions where I get to use my geography sort of knowledge base, right? And the game started off that way because the first round was all about flags
And it was great because there were some ones that were like yeah, I'm pretty sure this is it and it was there were ones Where was on the fence and I didn't get it right like when I mixed up Russia and the Netherlands or
Brutal ones, you know like when they show up Russia and the Netherlands or brutal ones, you know, like,
when they show you the flag of Australia
and I guess New Zealand, which in my mind I was like,
I'm pretty sure those two flags are kind of similar,
but I couldn't really tell you what the big difference is,
I googled it after the fact,
the flags of Australian New Zealand
are like exactly the same, say, for one small detail.
It is absolutely brutal being asked, which one is which. I believe Australia has one extra detail. It is absolutely brutal being asked which one is which. I believe Australia
has one extra star. It's something that small, that's something that crazy. But then there
were also ones like, I don't remember if it was, it was a really cool flag. It was like
blue with a star. I can't even remember what it was now. It was some sort of Pacific island.
And I think I guess like some moa or something like that. And I don't feel too bad about guessing that.
Cause I think it was close.
It was, you know, something crazy like now,
or something, any you are you.
Almost a palindrome of the day, boy,
we didn't prepare for that one.
Let's just do poop, P-O-O-P.
There you go.
Your bean-tum podcast,
palindrome of the week. But as the game progressed, excuse me,
you began to learn that your geography skills
were not really gonna be much more useful here.
Another category was video game maps,
and so they showed you a still of a map
from a video game.
And look, it's not like these were video games
that were completely like no one's ever heard of.
They were classics like,
but you had to get the version right too,
which made it tough.
But like some of them were like Super Mario Land,
Legend of Zelda, Donkey Kong.
And it's kind of brutal because I actually,
I got half-created on the Donkey Kong
because I just said Donkey Kong,
but it wasn't the right version if you will.
But then I think I mixed up Super Mario Land and Legend of Zelda, which was frustrating,
because I was thinking the right way. It was just two maps that looked very similar.
But then there are other ones too, like Final Fantasy 7 or whatever it was, or I'm just like, yeah, I don't really know this.
So my, I should not have been preparing geography, I should have been catching up on all my
favorite video games.
And then there was a category that was kind of fun, you know, it was interesting, but it
was just like the world of the US largest egg is in this state.
If you're curious, I think the egg one was like, I don't know if that was the Oklahoma Kansas one, I think,
and then there was the fire hydrant, which was Texas.
So there was just a round of that,
which was just kind of like, man,
that's, you're just kind of doing blind guesses.
I guess I'm just not super familiar with the world's largest XYZ.
I knew the world's tallest filing cabinet.
It's in Burlington, Vermont, where I was really hoping they were going to ask
that the biggest ball of 20 Minnesota, one of those types of questions, did not get
there. Unfortunately, the final question of the night was, what's a country?
What is the country that I have always wanted to go to?
I being the bartender.
And you know what? It's just one of those things where you're sitting there like, well,
I got about 200, 198 or whatever it is to choose from.
I can probably narrow down like 50% if I think of all those Caribbean and Pacific island
nations that I'm not sure many people in the room know about, but you're still left with a lot.
The answer by the way, which I got correct, which was just one of many miracles I sort
of pulled out of my head in that game was Japan.
I just got this vibe from our trivia host, but anyways, I did not feel like my geography
skills really came in very clutch, but that's
okay. It was a fun time. Glad I got to go up to spiteful. If you haven't been, it's a nice
tap or a beautiful space. I got some outdoor action going on. And a really nice selection
of beers to him and a great draft list. And then they got some good bottles and stuff too,
like the goddamn pigeon porter. I've had that before. I did not have that last night, but I was
a big fan. So it was fun to play.
I'm always having a good time in the end.
Of course, oh man.
I'm like, okay, I gotta get home.
I wasn't that late.
This was a beautiful thing about this game.
It ran fast.
I think it was done by like 845,
started at like 715.
So we already talked about transit options.
I was just, you pull up your transit stop app, pull up the 22 bus going south on Clark
and it says no, no data available right now and you keep thinking like, okay, give me
five minutes.
Let me go to the bathroom, close up my tab, I'll check it again.
It's about a 15 minute walk over there from the brewery to the bus stop.
I like, okay, give me another five minutes
and you keep refreshing, you keep refreshing,
thinking it's gonna show me something,
nothing, nothing, nothing.
And eventually I just got a goal for it, man.
So I checked the brown line too.
I was like, what's coming there?
It's about a 20 minute walk to the brown line.
And it was like 11 minutes or 37 minutes going downtown.
So like, let's just start walking on Clark.
Let's go over to Clark, start walking South,
keep an eye out for a bus.
Use my little rear view mirror and my shoulder, of course.
And it's gonna come eventually, right?
You're not gonna actually walk the three
and a half ish miles all the way home.
And I just start walking and walking and walking.
The nice thing was there's the Cubs White Sox game
which went on for forever last night.
So I sort of had that to keep me company.
But then yeah, I went all the way home
and a bus never passed me.
I mean, it was three and a half miles.
I was walking for an hour-ish.
So yeah, no dice.
So stranded by the 22 bus.
But I'll say this. So we're recording on
a Thursday. Thank you for listening to our show. Thank you for supporting us. You can
always email us, bean ton podcast, yeah, who coming in this bean toning and podcast at
yahoo.com or go to the website, bean ton podcast dot com. Check out all our new stuff there,
including right on cue, which we featured today. But it's a Thursday I actually took the day off.
I have the way my job works.
You have three summer holidays, if you will,
that you have to take.
And so I did one when we went to,
we went somewhere and I took the day off then.
And then where I can't remember where we,
oh, summer festival walkie and so I have
two more than I have to use before August 11th is my last day and so I got one today just
kind of randomly no plans and really didn't do anything to crazy except being able to get
this podcast in. I went for another long walk like four miles got some sun in and then I got
another one next Friday. So I was thinking you know know, what am I gonna do today? It's super hot here, super hot everywhere.
I was like, I wanna get outside,
wanna get away from the just, you know, the laptop,
all that stuff.
Let me go explore our beautiful resources
that we have in this city.
So I said, let me go down to Lincoln Park Zoo
to go bust down there,
started walking around.
It was real hot.
A lot of the animals were not out too hot, too sunny for them, which I understand.
I mean, I'm feeling suns up to, we got kickball playoffs tonight. But I'm walking around, you know, you're, you're seeing a gray rhinoceros and a polar bear.
And I'm just thinking, you know, what there's something's missing. You know, you could say, okay, say okay, you know well when they got mere cats they got cockroaches. There's a pride alliance
You know what else could you really want?
They even got a duck pond. There's swans there. I think I saw a seagull that didn't necessarily live at the zoo
But maybe it was just like a guest rotation
You know a brewery's will do like a rotating guest spot,
maybe a cider or something.
So I'm thinking we're, but we're missing something.
This dude needs a heavy hitter.
And it dawned upon me what it was missing.
The woolly mammoth.
And man, it just, you think about a woolly mammoth and it just kind of stinks.
It's gone.
And I don't want, I don't want this to be too sad.
So it's going to be our salute to the woolly mammoth.
Let's pay our respects.
So I'm out there, I'm out in my mall, I'm my walk, I'm riding the bus, I'm riding the
train, all over, be bopping and skating all over this city.
Doing some research on our old friend, the woolly mammoth.
And in today's salute to the woolly mammoth,
I just want to share with you some facts
that I discovered as I was doing my research.
It's an animal week here at the Bean Tom Podcast.
So first things first, you might be wondering
about its habitat, right?
So will he mammoths to give you a little scale? These weren't like a prehistoric kind
of like 37 million years ago epochs, epoc, Hs, epics, whatever they're called. Not one
of those deals, right? These things, I mean, they probably were around then, but they didn't go extinct until like three,
four, five thousand years ago. Like back when they were doing, back when paleontology was kind of
cool, like you could be a paleontologist, like Sam Neal, it was just, you know, they discovered
their remains up in like Siberia and stuff, and it was cool. So their habitat, it was a lot,
I looked at a map.
And it was kind of confusing because it was the North Pole, was the center of the map.
And so I'm just sitting there just confounded, frankly, FR-AN-K-L-Y.
I really wish, almost wish, my parents and Amy Frank, so we could have called this podcast
if I may be Frank.
So I'm looking at the William Ameth habitat on this just crazy map.
You know, I'm used to seeing North America right at the center, kind of the way God intended.
But from what I could tell, I would have to verify this with an actual English map, because
this one was from above.
I felt like I was, you know, Jesus Christ looking down upon his creation.
Looks like we got a lot of Northeast Asia action. So we're talking Siberia, Khmchattka, Yakutsk, Erkutsk, and
similar regions of that geographical nature.
of that geographical nature. But they are back when the bearing straight wasn't a thing,
we had that cool land bridge, right?
Sort of some land before time for action,
a land bridge over to Chambers hometown.
And it looks like they could,
or maybe it was just iced over, I don't know.
Maybe there was no land ever.
Maybe the real land was the ice we melted along the way.
They extended all the way into North America, Yukon territory, Northwest territories.
Is it Northwest territories or territory?
I'm not sure.
Be a good trivia question.
Maybe next time.
All the way down to the Great Lakes region, down into Chicago.
Our apartment might be, it might have been previously like a cave
for a woolly mammoth. So just pretty cool, pretty extensive habitat. There weren't a lot of them in
like Tanzania or anything like that. You don't even though they're closely related to elephants, you don't really see them at the Serengeti,
S-E-R-E-N-G-E-T-I, Serengeti, Yeti.
You don't see Yetis down in the Serengeti either.
But speaking of Africa,
they're closest living relevant
that is still alive today is the African elephant.
Sorry, scratch that, it's the Asian elephant. And if you're curious, I know this is
getting confusing for you all. I'll repeat it if we need to. Their closest in size for
animals that are still around today is the African elephant. So closest relative by DNA,
genome sequencing, G-E-N-O-M-E. What if genome, G-E- G-N-O-M-E? It's like they take a
travelosity commercial and play around with the Helix. I'd be pretty
fun. It's an idea. I'm kind of a creative mercenary, if you will. Sort of just
float these ideas out there and you know eventually companies pick them up when
they catch wind of the bean-tum podcast
But roughly the same size as an African element elephant element. I can't tell you. What's the name of that?
Black Panther vibranium is that it? What's the one from a avatar?
Unobtainium, or is that something else?
Pandora? Another one of the geography questions, it reminds me. Now that we're speaking about mythical lands,
another one of the geography questions from last night was in the flag category.
They pull up this flag online, I'm pretty sure this is not, but this does not belong to a country
that I have experienced unless it's one of those cool ones like Sea Land,
not Sea World Sea Land, it's a
platform off the coast of England, check it out. It turns out it was Gilead from the Handmaid's Tale,
so you really have to be a big Elizabeth Moss fan, I think, to be successful at geography trivia,
I was scored to my main takeaway from last night. But yeah, I did not nail that one. I thought maybe it was either like
Brunei or Panem, all the Josh Hutcherson fans listening to this episode. But no, it was,
it was Gilead. Big Joseph Fiends, Joseph Fines. My, my my my my finds fiend friend
Continuing on here something really cool. I learned about mammoths and my research for this show
They they bred and hybridized with other mammoth species. So there are some really cool like
crossovers out there some sweet hybrid ones like your detastling corn to create
hybrid species. That's probably basically the equivalent of like a dogong and a chimpanzee
getting it on. I think from a genome chromatic, I was going to say chromosome, a chromatic, I was going to say chromosome, but chromatic perspective, that's probably pretty much like the distance between these two
woolly mammoth species. I didn't really do go on by the way, d-u-g-o-n-g sweet animal, even better Pokemon.
I did not do my due diligence and research, sort of the, the GNA, the GNA, the RNA DNA sequencing.
I didn't, you know, we used to have that Jurassic Park game on Game Boy Advance in one of
the like bonus levels.
I don't remember exactly how it worked, but it's like after every level you had to do some
weird like helix fossil.
No, helix fossil, that's another Pokemon thing.
Got Pokemon on the brain apparently.
Probably because I was pissed off
that we didn't get a Pokemon, one of the maps,
excuse me, from the video game map category last night
was not Pokemon.
I was waiting.
I was like, okay, like not gonna get this one,
not gonna get this one.
Definitely never seen this, but I'm like,
I kept waiting.
Like they're gonna show Gen 1 Pokemon, right?
No.
That didn't happen.
But yeah, they were getting it on across species.
They didn't really, they were kind of,
kind of naughty, if you will, which is pretty cool.
I mentioned their habitat a little bit earlier
and I also mentioned the years up until they lived,
but yeah, per my research, they lived in the Yukon
up until 5,, but yeah, per my research, they lived in the Yukon up until
5,700 years ago, and then there's some other, it was like St. Paul's Island, I think,
which I didn't do research.
I don't know where that was.
I used to, this show was started, was founded on St. Paul Street up in Baltimore, Maryland.
So kind of a cool little tip of the hat from the mammoth researchers to this show.
They had some sort of like colony
where all the other ones had died off.
Kind of like the Galapagus tortoises,
but the St. Paul's mammoths.
Which I think if you're, hey, so there's a new,
is it a rena football that they're bringing back?
Or there's something St. Paul in some sport
just got an expansion team.
And they were saying, floating team names around.
I think, again, this is some sort of like,
it was like minor league football or something like that.
I think St. Paul mammoths, a tip of the cap to the island
where they had that cool colony.
It'll probably be like that island in the quiet place too,
where they go in Juman Haansu is there, and it's like a very peaceful place.
And then somehow that bad guy alien like piloted the boat all the way,
chartered the vessel if you will all the way from the mainland out to this island.
And there's no indication in a quiet place, one or a quiet place, two up until that
point that, you know, these creatures have any sort of maritime experience. And this
one is just driving a boat. So, you know, rip to Jaman Hansu, DJI, M-O-N,H.O.N.S.O.U. Something like that.
I might be missing a consonant.
Oh, I thought that this was very cool.
So in my research, we all know Jurassic Park, right?
The Amber, the mosquitoes, the DNA cloning.
That's how they get the dinosaurs back per Michael Crichton's vision.
Again inside his mind.
But apparently it's actually a possibility that you could bring back mammoths.
Wolley mammoths even in the future.
And so there are like two ways they were talking about the first one.
I couldn't really follow. So I didn't really take notes on it.
But the second one is essentially because they're so closely related to modern-day elephants,
you could actually take a woolly man with sperm cells, which I guess were preserved perfectly in the Siberian and cross it with like an Asian elephant zygote of some sort, ZY, G-O-T-E.
And then you base it so obviously you have, you got like a half breed, right?
Harry Potter and the Half Blood mammoth, Chapter 6.
But they were saying basically what you can do is, okay, so you pump out a couple
of those. They breed with each other. And not really, now that I'm thinking about that,
I don't know how it works, but they're basically saying that the more times you do that, the
more it becomes like a woolly mammoth until the elephant part of it is almost completely removed, which I don't know.
I don't know.
I have to think about that.
I'm not a biologist or a genetics expert,
but I don't really understand how you would get rid of the elephant
aspect and preserve mostly.
You can never do it 100%, but get 99% mammoth 1% elephant
I just I don't know how do you get off this whole 50 50 thing, you know
That's what I would like to learn more about but let's say this you know anyone who's thinking okay
Jurassic Park you had your original trilogy and they'd had the reboot with Chris Pine and
Round Howard Jr
And all that fun stuff which was kind of like the first movie,
kind of like the new Star Wars trilogy, which is like the first one was fine,
pretty entertaining, lots of problems, but like yeah, you can go have fun. Second one,
pretty bad, like not sure what the plan was there, and then the third one, which like Star Wars,
I never saw, but heard
it was just garbage. Although I think, I think maybe the second of the new Jurassic Park's
Jurassic World, I guess, what they call it, was more poorly reviewed than the third one
by just a smidge. I think Star Wars 3 gets a lot of the flak. 8 is still not good, but
9 really people forgot about eight after eight.
Sorry, the way around eight people forgot about it after nine, seven eight nine.
Why did people forget about eight because seven eight nine?
But yeah, they could bring it back. It sounds like the technology is not quite there yet, but I was researching this a lot of those sort of paleontological discoveries and genome
sequencing and cross-hybridization commentary has happened in the last 20 to 10 years.
So there's a lot of cases you're wondering, hey, what's new in the world of fossils and
bones and ghouls and mammoths?
A lot, apparently. Just a couple more notes here, three more
notes. Getting away from the animal and getting a little bit more to the naming convention,
the etymology, if you will, the first recorded use of the word mammoth as an adjective, if
you can believe this, we all know it now is both a noun and an adjective, right? If you are a mammoth, people would think you're either a woolly mammoth or just
a large individual. If you're a mammoth, if you hit a mammoth home run, everyone knows
that baby's got to go at least 425, right? No one ever hit a mammoth home run that was
378. Hit the foul pole, a foot above the fence, right?
Kind of boring not mammoth definitely not mammoth
But if you're curious the first ever recorded use of the word mammoth as an adjective was in a description
And this is no lie. I thought this was so cool. I had to take a note on it
It was in a description of a wheel of cheese in the Chesher mammoth cheese.
Given to Thomas Jefferson in 1802,
I wonder what he did with the Chesher mammoth cheese.
If it were me, I probably would have boiled it down
and just gone nuts on that queso.
Is it queso if you just melt cheese?
And then you dip something in,
does that make it qu case or is there something,
but case is like it could be a hard cheese too,
it's a special kind of cheese like mozzarella,
or a pimento, or, you know, toe cheese, head cheese.
You know, I think case, I think you might be able to,
I think case might be like a special thing
that's just known for being melted down,
but I can't confirm or deny that if you know email us
Benton podcast at Yahoo.com again, let's be telling podcasts at Yahoo.com until we get a specific your cheese hotline setup, just you know, I'll forward it to the correct department
Before we hit our last two points here as we wrap up this show, I just want to again shout out our sponsor at HomePod organ when you need her home inspection essential organ call someone who's safe certified someone you can trust.
Someone could be my dad Steve, calm at 541-03016, Tom Quinn, sent you and go to homepod organ.com, home pride to inspection, perfection. Of course, a good friend's at Cutsby Q just did a little shave by Q here.
It's getting a little scraggly.
Definitely needed to do the neck beard and then decide
do you know what, let's just take it all.
Okay, and we did that.
And it's a nice, clean shave just in time for summer.
So when you need to fresh do some of the snap
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And of course, our good friends at the
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From Genesis to Exodus whether you're talking mammoth woolly mammoths or Leviathins or hydras or any other ancient creature
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When God speaks, He uses Samson.
Speaking of speaking, I heard one of the kind of push back to bringing mammoths back, there
were two kind of main ones, is that one, there's not really a lot of suitable habitat
for them anymore.
I think due to climate change, which is a total bummer,
I guess there's a lot of bad things with climate change.
Probably the worst thing is it's beier, responsible to bring back
woolly mammoths.
I think, you know, kind of universally we could agree that's probably
the worst part of climate change.
But then the second thing was apparently they're very gregarious
GREGARIOUS
So you have to you have to have a lot of them right they need to find their tribe their pack their group their murder murder of crows
Great level in hitman
That Matthew Feather burned on to a CD or something for us back when you're a kid
Matthew Feather burned onto a CD or something for us back when we were a kid. Close friend of the show Matthew Feather.
So that's one of the big reasons they don't want to bring it back
is because they are gregarious in nature.
Some of you like naughty by nature.
I like gregarious by nature.
Okay, last two things here.
I just want to say this.
Underrated aspect of the woolly mammoth, but it is easily a top five cave painting creature, right?
Think about it. You think about cave paintings. You don't do that a lot these days, but you think back to, you know, your anthropology textbook or something
or your, your, I don't know, history of the natural world textbook
or something cool like that.
You gotta put woolly mammoths in that top five, right?
What else are you considering?
Probably a saber tooth tiger.
I think that kind of covers the big cat kind of thing
in general, because I was also thinking,
like you could do a lion or tiger,
but I think a saber tooth tiger is even more bad-ass than that.
And I mean, I don't even know if anyone else could contend for that number one spot.
It's like saber tooth, mammoth, those are like two badass, really cool cave painting
creatures.
Give me a whole other episode on the Bean Tom Podcast, your top five, top 10 cave painting
creatures.
If I think of any other dynamite suggestions, I'll let you know.
Maybe like a...
I don't know.
A plesiosaurus.
I don't even know what that is.
It just came out and it sounded like a real dinosaur.
My last thing here in case, you know, the kids out there are wondering, okay, you've all
this stuff about woolly mammoths, but like, how does it relate to me today?
Well, I'll tell you some famous Woolly Mammoths in history.
Ray Romano, you might know him from Everybody Loves Ray, Everybody Loves Raymond, or that
Kumail Nanjani movie that he made about him and his wife.
There you go, Ray Romano, or Queen Latifa, who you probably know from the Equalizer TV
show.
All famous woolly mammoths in history.
So there you go, that's our Beentom podcast salute to the woolly mammoth Rachel looks
like she's got something she wants to say.
Oh, no, she just walked in and it sounded like, oh, she's saying wrap it up.
Do you have any thoughts on the woolly mammoth?
Any thoughts on the woolly mammoth?
No.
No.
Okay.
All right.
He wants me to wrap it up, but just put in the air pods back in, get in mixed signals
here.
That's okay.
We're having Rachel Batlid off in kickball semi-final
tonight. I tell this to my managers
all the time. You got to put your
shot takers and your shot makers in
the lead off spot. Rachel I think
last game you played you were just
like kicking ass right? So it's a
verbal comment confirmation there.
That's what we got for you. Wish us luck. My name is Quinn David Ferness. So it's a verbal, common confirmation there.
That's what we got for you.
Wish us luck.
My name is Quinn Davis-Fernes.
Don't forget to check out a new right on Q episode
coming out very soon here on the website.
Everyone, it is very hot out there.
So hope that you're staying cool.
And more than that, I hope you stay safe, stay sane,
and I will check in on you next time.
Bye. I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, ndご視聴ありがとうございました