The Royals with Roya and Kate - Taylor Swift, the Prince, the Emperor and the Princess Royal
Episode Date: June 27, 2024A week of pomp, pageantry and pop as the Prince of Wales dances along to Taylor Swift as if no one was watching (but Roya and Kate were). Japan's Emperor Naruhito begins his state visit with King Char...les rekindling an old friendship with some new jokes, and we look at the impact of the Princess Royal's incident involving a horse at her Gatcombe Park estate. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I knew you were trouble when you walked in.
I'm sorry?
Do you want me to begin again?
Ah, I know your game.
Yes, it's a love story for the ages.
William and the children at Wembley,
but not football for once, with dad dancing.
Shaking it off?
Bravo.
How many more Taylor Swift songs can we fit into this intro?
Look what you made me do.
It says here that I should be singing,
but I've politely declined the editor's request to burst into song.
Let's get into it, shall we?
Oh, yes.
Welcome to The Royals with me, Roya Nikar.
And me, Kate Manthie.
So we're going to be discussing the Japanese state to visit.
And we were there at Buckingham Palace last night, weren't we, Kate?
We were.
And it was a truly splendid affair, as you would expect.
And we'll have more on the news surrounding Princess Anne's accident in due course
and how horses have been such a part of her life over the years.
How to start when there's so much to talk about?
Chronologically?
Geographically?
Let's do both, Kate.
And the role week started at Wembley.
Go Swifties!
Now, I had a lot of love for this story,
and not just the timing of it.
I used to think that on a Sunday newspaper,
and anything clicked over kind of past 7pm on a Friday,
I'd say, it's in my time, it's in my pitch now.
And I did think of you on Friday night.
Friday night.
We got it in late though.
We did get it in late.
Well done.
Well done.
William's 42nd birthday.
We thought all the news of William's 42nd birthday
was going to be that lovely picture
that the household put out,
taken by the Princess of Wales,
of William and George, Charlotte and Louis
leaping over a sand dune.
Leaping into the unknown.
In Norfolk.
Looking joyous.
The children were looking joyous.
He looked a bit fearful.
Sweet message.
Happy birthday.
We all love you so much, Papa.
Lovely.
I have to say, it does great on me.
I do.
You don't like the Papa?
No.
I mean, and also if my husband ever calls me mummy,
he would never would because I'd divorce him.
I do know.
I know him and I don't think that's going to happen.
But you know what I mean.
But it was sweet, sorry.
Memo for William and Catherine.
We thought that was rather lovely
and everyone went to town on the pictures.
And then Friday night,
people's phones started whirring, didn't they,
with unconfirmed reports that William
was actually not celebrating down the pub
with his favourite pint of cider,
but that he was with the kids at Taylor Swift,
at Tay-Tay, at Wembley,
the other big news event of the week.
And there was sort of no confirmation officially that night
because if they were there,
it was private time, wasn't it?
It was private time. Private time is very private when it comes to...
When you're shaking your booty in front of thousands of people at Wembley.
But then what emerged on Saturday morning as I was trotting around Hyde Park, my phone,
which I didn't touch because I'm a controllable horse, was whirring away and I thought, hey, hey, what's this?
And there was just some spectacularly wonderful,
highly entertaining footage of William dad dancing,
shaking some moves,
quite not dissimilar actually to the moves Prince Louis has clearly inherited
when he was shaking it.
Yes.
You know, shaking his little bod, drooping the colour.
There he was at Wembley Stadium in a box, but jiving away to Shake It Off, Taylor Swift's very
famous hit. And I thought to myself, even if we don't get a picture of them there, this is just
going to write itself, this piece. Let's get a blurry of them there this is just going to write itself this piece let's get
a blurry screen grab of that on page three let's get a screen grab of that let's embed that video
onto the times website make myself a cup of tea and i'll just have a lot of fun writing this which
i did but then joy of joys the selfies just just just you know a bit of messaging with kenston palace well we don't
know we don't know and i was thinking this could be really good if we get my picture editor said
on whatsapp if we get that picture my head will explode with happiness
and uh a few minutes later i did make his head explode with happiness when not one but two
pictures because first we had the kind of selfie it looked like someone was taking a picture of them taking the selfie which obviously as a
journalist you always go well I want to see that selfie yeah and almost as if they had prepared
their social media presence around almost as if they had done you know it's all been choreographed
as such within a few moments we had Taylor's version as she says on you know it's all been choreographed as such within a few moments we had taylor's version
as she says on you know when you stream her music of the picture which was them all kind of
grinning into the into the camera the selfie itself yes with mate and charlotte called him
mate m8 charlotte and george were with william on his 42nd birthday meant to have been a treat
for the kids but if you look at that picture
and if you study the video of William dancing I'd have the guess that he's a bigger Swifty than his
kids yeah and on his birthday as well oh I'm just doing it for the kids and the picture he looked
quite it's the same kind of expression Charles used to have when he met people like Diana Ross
when he was younger and things like that it It's that kind of like, ugh.
Yeah.
I'm going to change my name to K8 now.
K8.
I like what you've done there.
But this wasn't
William's first
encounter with Tay-Tay,
was it?
No.
Because he had actually
got up on stage
years ago
at a Centrepoint
fundraiser,
which is the charity
which is patron homelessness
charity
at Kingston Palace.
John Bonchovy.
Yes, and he recounted this a couple of years ago
doing a Time to Walk podcast where he recalled...
Don't plug another podcast, right?
No, I shouldn't, should I? Ours is better.
It's not a podcast, it's called a walking,
Apple Fitness walking experience, audio experience.
Sitting with Taylor Swift and John Bon Jovi
was just about to get on stage and sing Living on a Prayer. And Taylor, he said, Taylor, look, touch me on the arm
and said, come on, William, let's sing.
And led him onto the stage like a puppy.
Even though he's not known for his singing voice, I think it's fair to say.
It was the puppy, it was the puppy dog element of it all. I thought it was kind of slight
cringe.
He did get up on stage.
He's a big fan.
I think it's fair to say William's a big fan of Tay Tay.
It was nice to see that
it was
it was nice to see him
you know
cutting loose a bit
do you know what I thought
was interesting
there were a lot of
celebrities there
on
a lot of freebie VIPs
Friday, Saturday and Sunday
Keir Starmer was there
and I didn't see
other politicians are available
yes
I didn't see Taylor Swift
put out any other photos
of other well-known people
apart from William, George and Charlotte.
And that's quite interesting, I think,
in terms of how she sees them.
Because whenever we talk about the royal family,
you know, they're globally known,
but there's always a sort of slight sense
that some members of the royal family,
quite a lot of them,
don't like the idea of being celebrities.
But, you know, when you have the likes of Tom Cruise
and huge stars that vary over the weekend,
the only picture that Taylor Swift put out was with Prince William,
Prince George and Princess Charlotte.
I think that's quite interesting.
Yes, it is.
I think because they meet so many famous people, don't they?
People like Taylor Swift and Tom Cruise.
There can't be that many people that they have that kind of celebrity kind of,
oh my goodness, experience.
But when they meet members of the royal family, that is the reaction.
What do you think was the reasoning behind that going from sort of private time
to, okay, you can have a picture?
I think it struck me that they were quite sensible about, you know,
how could it possibly be truly private?
When there's 80,000 people there.
When there's that many people there.
And they must, I think they knew on the Friday night
that they obviously had this plan to put out this picture the following day
in their kind of schedule, social media schedule.
Yeah.
So I think then they, it's kind of a shrug, isn't it?
That kind of public, semi-public.
And, you know, watch this space.
Could Taylor Swift be helpful
to William in his Earthshot Prize
or something like that?
Take on some sort of role for him?
That wouldn't hurt at all,
would it?
So it could become
this kind of mutually beneficial
mateship.
With her many millions
of followers on social media
and her empire.
No, it'd be helpful, yeah.
You didn't get a ticket then, Kate.
I feel like I'm the only person in the country
who didn't get to see Taylor Swift.
I didn't get to see Taylor Swift.
Well, if she's listening, maybe we could...
She's coming back, isn't she?
Come on our podcast in August, Tay Tay.
I'll settle for a couple of tickets, even at the back.
But I did see you, Roya, another hot ticket.
It was very hot. It was very hot.
It was very hot.
I felt about 40 degrees on Horse Guards Parade on Tuesday for another musical spectacular,
which was the official welcoming for the state visit,
inward state visit for the Emperor and Empress of Japan.
Yes, it was a hot ticket in that it was boiling standing on horse cars parade.
But finally, the Japanese state visit got underway because, of course, there was so much
uncertainty over whether or not it would happen once the general election was called,
as we discussed in our previous podcast episode.
So the emperor and empress arrived and they had their official welcome didn't they on horse guards
but William had gone
to collect them from Clariters
he'd done the sort of meet and greet
and then escorted them
onto horse guards
where
funny old scene with
well
Charles and Camilla
the king and queen
and then Rishi Sunak
walked across with James Cleverley
and David Cameron
and you just sort of saw him
and you thought
if if he doesn't win the election with James Claverley and David Cameron. And you just sort of saw him and you thought,
if he doesn't win the election and the polls are right,
that is really sort of his last big moment publicly,
you know, as the sort of statesman prime minister, isn't it?
He did seem to be enjoying it.
You thought he did?
Yeah.
I'm smiling at you because I wondered if you were going to mention Prince William being late because he went to claridge's to pick up the emperor and empress
yes the hotel they were staying at and then they came they did come around quite a few minutes
and i did feel for the king and queen it was scorching okay they were under canopy we were
we were you wearing a hat cleverly well done um but I think the official line was that that was traffic
and that he'd actually arrived on time.
Oh, you're unconvinced.
Kate's unconvinced.
Let it be noted.
No, but it was.
It was delayed, wasn't it?
There was a question over whether it would happen at all
and then it was delayed anyway
because in his speech at the banquet,
the emperor said that actually it was the late queen
who had invited him initially five years beforehand.
And he had said, you know, obviously that it had been delayed because of the coronavirus pandemic.
Then we had this new date. Everyone's looking forward to it.
And then could it be delayed because of the general election?
But what they've managed cleverly to do is just to make sure that there's any of those kind of political elements,
like a visit to Downing Street, which would probably have happened.
That was taken out of the schedule.
Although there are kind of protocols
and everything has to be run past the Cabinet Office,
which meant that, of course, Sunak, as the current Prime Minister,
was there with Home Secretary and Foreign Secretary as well.
But you did, I mean, although it was slightly altered because of that,
we did get the full pomp and pageantry of, you know, the carriages,
the sovereign's escort of the household cavalry.
It was lovely to see them again.
We saw them on trooping.
But what was quite striking were the images of the King and Queen
and Prince William all going back from horse guards to Buckingham Palace,
down the Mall with the Sovereign's escort
of the House of Cavalry,
and Empress Masako with her mask on,
because...
She's allergic.
There may have been a lot of beautiful
House of Cavalry horses and full-state kids,
but she's allergic to horses.
Because she had the mask on at the procession,
but when actually we saw her in the palace,
she'd removed it.
So it wasn't, you know,
people might have looked at that and thought that it was a kind of you know hold over
from covid or something no but she's had her own health issues you know she nearly well she did
step down from public duties for a while she has this kind of anxiety stress related condition
um but she has started to come back to to more public duties more recently. And I think they've seen it as a really enjoyable trip so far as well
because they got here on Saturday,
even though the official start of the state visit wasn't until Tuesday.
They've had some sort of downtime.
They'll go on Friday to visit Oxford University,
where they've both studied in the past.
And it's an opportunity, I think, for them to see something different.
So I think they do seem to be enjoying it.
We, on Tuesday night, we were lucky.
You and I were at Buckingham Palace, weren't we, for the state banquet.
And we got a little sneak peek preview, walk through the way it's all set out,
the way, you know, it's absolutely extraordinary.
The gilt that's laid out, the flowers that are laid out,
the table settings.
And we were walked through this and it's always remarkable.
And what struck me, Kate,
wasn't just the magnificent apples of Asperides candelabrum.
It wasn't just the beautiful roses from Buckingham Palace Gardens
and Windsor Castle.
It wasn't just the beautiful roses from Buckingham Palace Gardens and Windsor Castle. It wasn't just the special Japanese maple trees that were so beautifully set out, which we were
told, of course, would be upcycled and repurposed later. And it wasn't just the drumroll,
coronation service or the grand service originally ordered by George IV. No. Do you know what it was, Cade? What was your favourite
bit, Roya? The bit that I noticed that really struck me was the seating plan of the King's
Principal Private Secretary, Sir Clive Alderton, seated next to the Labour leader, Sir Keir Starmer.
Because of course, the palace and the royal family are always above politics.
But I thought it was very interesting that he wasn't sat next to the prime minister.
No, his right hand man is cosying up to the potential future leader.
There were some interesting guests, weren't there?
There were some interesting guests.
And I thought there was a sushi master.
Diplomatically.
Yeah, and a former astronaut and I think that diplomatically it was really interesting given that we're in this
general election campaign so randomly apparently you know this is all very it's all part of
protocol as the palace would say but it did look odd that in that royal procession going in
we had Akshata Murthy the prime minister's wife
walking in with the royal procession but he wasn't so he was already in the room and though they said
this is protocol and such like and it's just the way the tables are laid out it was interesting to
see I think then you also had Ed Davey there the liberal democrat leader you had Stephen Flynn the
SNP politician.
So there were sort of nods to all the different parties, I think.
It was all on a very level playing field, wasn't it?
Yeah, but it was.
Those things are always fascinating.
It's always the people.
And then you walk in.
So as journalists, we get this kind of walk in, walk round to have a look at who's sitting where, the little table plans.
But the thing that you can't see on the pictures, of course,
is that smell that hits you of the flowers.
They were amazing.
And they were everywhere.
I thought they were the best I've...
Extraordinary.
They were definitely the best I'd ever seen.
I don't mean to speak ill of the late queen's flower choices,
but they were so beautiful, the flowers,
and they just had a general sort of Charles Quite Wild vibe.
Do you know what I love?
This is going to sound quite niche,
but they were silver dishes all up the tables,
just piled high with juicy peonies.
Yeah, the peonies were great.
They just looked like you wanted to kind of pluck them off and eat them.
Looking at Charles's peonies.
Sounds interesting.
And there was, of course, no Princess of Wales,
no Princess Royal, Princess Anne.
So two senior members of the royal family
who would have been there, not there.
It's a sort of reshuffle at the last minute.
We'll move that person's name tag.
Duchess of Edinburgh made the top table.
She was on the top table, wasn't she?
Seated next to...
Even though the Duke of Edinburgh was, you know,
a bit further down.
I know.
No, it was a royal kind of promotion for her.
Yeah.
One thing I thought was funny
surrounding the whole Japanese
inward state visit was all the acronyms that we hear for our job so MRF members of the royal
family and TMs for their majesties and yesterday they were all kind of tripping over themselves
verbally sort of going we've got the TMs and I mean um you know their majesties but I'm not
meaning their majesties I'm meaning our majesties,
because, of course, normally when you have a state visit,
you have some sort of head of state coming in.
President.
Who's not a member of a royal family,
but because you had an alternative royal family,
we had them saying our majesties and their majesties.
It was overly majestic, wasn't it?
It was very majestic.
I'm not talking about a wine shop.
And the speeches were great as well.
I think they've known each other for so long i actually read the the emperor's memoirs the thames
and i because he came in 1983 stayed in 1985 studied at merton college in oxford and studied
very niche subject of the 18th century thames waterways and is quite a buff on the subject
went back to Japan, wrote
a book about that. But then he wrote memoirs about his time in Britain, which is really
funny about how he learned how to order a pint in a pub and he was quite nervous to
do so. And then he talks about his fly fishing with the prince and the Balmoral picnic.
They're good mates.
And they are. They are good mates that it came across really well, didn't it?
I think it's one of the reasons why, although it's technically a decision for government,
whether or not that state visit went ahead during the election period.
But I think the king was very keen that it should happen and not be postponed again
because he holds the emperor in such high esteem.
Even in that day, even in that day when we looked around the Buckingham Palace display
of the artefacts from the Royal Collection Trust,
which were shown out, anything sort of Japanese related
was sort of wheeled out so that everybody could look at them.
And there was the book, his book that he'd written about the Thames
and Charles had written a foreword to his memoirs
and there was a sort of signed copy of the book
that he had given to Charles when they were both princes.
And now, you know, now they're running the show
and it's nice for them.
They still, it goes back decades.
But this is the kind of proper soft diplomacy,
isn't it, of the royal family.
This is the thing, these enduring relationships.
The ties that bind is the phrase, isn't it?
You know, you have politicians that come and go,
but these are ingrained relationships
that tie the two countries
in a way
that you can never
otherwise expect.
That politics can't do.
There was a few
kind of jokes
I thought fell
slightly flat.
Which were the jokes
you thought fell flat?
All the jokes.
In the speech?
I think sometimes
it's quite funny in speeches
but I thought that
sort of Pokemon speech
he made a reference
to the
he made a reference
to the Pokemon
he was talking
about his fly fishing
and how they used
to go fly fishing
together in Scotland
when they were younger
and then he said
well you know
I'm not very good
at it nowadays
not like Pokemon
you've got to catch
them all
and made a reference
to his grandchildren
and I just thought
I did think
well of course
and that's interesting
as well
that we think
we think of Charles talking about his grandchildren the first thing you think of is the Wales well, of course, and that's interesting as well, that we think of Charles talking about his grandchildren,
the first thing you think of is the Waleses.
But of course, because he doesn't have that connection
to the Sussex grandchildren at all,
so you don't even think now,
oh, I wonder which grandchildren he's thinking about.
And the fact that maybe he didn't think of that
when he was doing that speech, do you think that crossed his mind?
Or how will people perceive it if I say grandchildren?
Or maybe it's just now so written out, the narrative, as they say.
Oh, that's a good, that's a deep question.
I think you're right, your assessment is right.
When he says grandchildren, you know, most people here would first and foremost
think of the ones that he's seen with, you know,
on Buckingham Palace balconies at the big moments.
And that's not Archie and
Lily
but
we know that you know
both sides would love that
relationship to be
closer and stronger
but
the distance means
it just isn't
it's a shame
I think it's time
we had a break Kate
a break
we are never
ever ever
getting back together
we will be back after this break let's be back let's come back we had a break, Kate. A break. We are never, ever, ever getting back together.
We will be back after this break.
Let's be back.
Let's come back.
Welcome back to The Royals with Roya and Kate.
Now, a very notable absence
from the state banquet
on Tuesday night
was Princess Anne.
After the worrying news
we heard on Monday
about the incident
that happened at Gatcombe Park Estate on Sunday.
So what do we know?
We know that the Princess Royal was walking on Sunday evening
inside Gatcombe, her estate.
And we know that she suffered a concussion and minor injuries.
And we know that horses were in the vicinity.
And from what Buckingham Palace told us,
her medical team said that her injuries
and the concussion are consistent with horses.
Yeah, being either hit by a horse's head or its legs.
Or hooves or legs.
She was taken to hospital straight away.
Air ambulance came, but she didn't use it.
I can imagine. You can imagine. Well, We can read between the lines on that one.
Giving them short shrift when that air ambulance landed. And she was taken to Southmead Hospital
in Bristol, where she has been, as we speak, she's still there. She's had visitors. She's
had Tim Lawrence, her husband, come and see her. Zara's been to see her. And Tim Lawrence has said
a couple of times when he's come outside and spoken to the media that she's recovering slowly but surely quite quite
an incident it was quite a shock because we sort of Anne is so she's such a sort of stalwart steady
stoic presence so you you just think when Anne's taken into hospital.
You're serious.
Yeah.
Yeah, and I think the fact that she was treated at the scene, that both the ambulance was scrambled, that the police helicopter was scrambled, that she was walking within that
kind of, they made it clear that she was walking within the security perimeter when they first
released the news on Monday. The inference being it wasn't an attack from somebody,
clearly seems to be some sort of incident with the horse,
despite the fact that she's a very experienced equestrian.
She wasn't riding.
She wasn't riding, she was on foot.
But yeah, I think it is worrying.
I think this is somebody who consistently tops the tables
for the hardest working royal.
There's a lot of public affection for her.
She's now cancelled the trip to Canada so she was due to go to Canada on Sunday and Monday for a two-day
visit I mean she typically had another sort of 11 billion engagements this week didn't she which
she she had a very packed diary which she had to postpone and the Canada trip isn't significant as
well because she's going there in a kind of military capacity there was supposed to be uh the remains of a first world war soldier repatriated in canada um during this
ceremony um an unnamed soldier so it was going to be quite a poignant event um for the canadians
and i think princess royal was obviously keen to go. And as you say, there's like a whole list of stuff
that she's expected to do and had been planning to do
throughout July right up until the beginning of August
that now seems to be hanging in the balance.
This news certainly was, I think, a shock to a lot of people.
She will not be swayed from her love of horses
by a kick, a kick, will she, or even concussion.
This is a woman who has spent most of her life around horses, enjoying them, riding them,
competing at the highest level, competing at the Olympics, competing in all sorts of other huge
competitions. She, you know, and we saw, she's like her mother. I mean, she is, you know,
horses run in her blood. And we were just talking about Anne the other day, weren't we, on
Trooping the Colour when she was riding Naughty Noble. She will, you can just imagine Anne sort
of, okay, first of all, you can imagine Anne absolutely loathing being the centre of attention
and media attention. She'll have really disliked the fact that while her brother was hosting a state visit,
a very high profile state visit,
Anne was the main news of the day
because she loathes being the centre of attention.
And she would have wanted to be there
to represent the family.
And she would have wanted to be there.
She will definitely, I think, you know,
fingers crossed when she comes out of hospital soon,
I think you can imagine her being around horses again very soon because she, you know, fingers crossed, when she comes out of hospital soon, I think you can imagine her being around horses again very soon.
Oh, totally.
Because she, you know, they're such a huge part of her life.
She will not be, she will, she shall not be put off by a rogue hoof.
I agree. I think you're absolutely right.
I think we can even look to the past.
So in April of 1976, she was knocked off a horse.
It fell on top of her. She broke a vertebrae in her 1976 she was knocked off a horse it fell on top of her she broke a vertebrae
in her back um was knocked unconscious and just a few months later she was competing in the Montreal
Olympics an equestrian event after such a difficult fall so this is the spirit of the woman who just
keeps getting up and getting on with it age Age 73, though. Head wounds not to be taken lightly.
So I think everyone's wishing her well.
Abundance of caution, I'm sure.
She's being treated by an excellent medical team.
Yeah.
That means, of course,
that Princess Anne won't be there for Scotland Week
when they go to Holyrood next week.
But someone I know sitting very close to me
will be going to Scotland, won't you, Roya?
Well, I am going to Scotland tomorrow. Well, I am going to Scotland tomorrow.
Very good.
Yes, I'm going to Scotland tomorrow.
I'm quite looking forward to this trip, actually.
I'm going to Scotland tomorrow
because Balmoral is being opened up to the public
for the first time next week.
And I've got a little sneak preview
for the Royal Rotor.
That'll be brilliant.
I'm really looking forward to it, actually.
Balmoral's great,
especially this time of year
when it's super hot and muggy.
It's actually, will it be in Scotland, though?
But that's what I mean.
It won't be, so it'll be nice.
Exactly.
It'll be cool.
That's why the Queen used to love going there for holidays.
She did say, I think all her family used to say it was where she was at her happiest.
Having her barbecues and her picnics.
I think it's interesting that they are opening up more of it,
because, of course, you can see, I think it's interesting that they are opening up more of it because of course you can see,
I think you can just see
the ballroom
or very small bits of it now
but a decision's been taken
to open more of it up
and I think
it's already sold out
apparently.
Not surprised.
Yeah.
So I'm sure
we'll have plenty
to talk about
next week
when I've been up
and seen it.
And then of course
we've got the King and Queen
Hollyreid week
or it's just Hollyreid days, really, isn't it?
They've crunched it down because he's got to come back
for this small matter of the general election.
Well, yeah, he's got to be back in time.
To welcome a prime minister.
If there's a clear winner,
then on Friday they'll be going to Buckingham Palace
and he'll be saying ta-ra to the old prime minister
if it's a different person from the new prime minister.
And if it's the new prime minister,
Clive will be saying, oh, hello, mate.
Saw you at the banquet.
You again, old chap.
And I'm going to a banquet tonight, finally,
despite the fact that yesterday...
But you're going as a guest.
You're grand.
You grand thing.
The husband has been told he's not allowed to wear his flip-flops
So, white tie
Is that right? You can't wear flip-flops with white tie?
Well, sort of, apparently not
What are you wearing?
What are you wearing?
A long pink kind of flouncy dress that's very on me actually
But nice
I'll send you a picture
Yeah, please do
Right, I think we've discussed a lot in a really busy week
Plus, I think we've probably gotten enough Taylor Swift references
to warrant a VIP ticket to her next concert.
Shall we bring this episode to a close, Roya?
I think that's a very good idea, Kate.
Is it over now?
Is there a Taylor Swift song for everything?
Seems to be.
Seems like it.
Bye, Kate.
Bye, Roya.