- 15 hours ago
This is an in-depth Met Office UK Weather forecast for the next week and beyond. Due to various atmospheric and oceanic factors coming together around the world, the UK is increasingly affected by a negative North Atlantic Oscillation. This eventually causes colder and drier weather for many but, before that happens, some places will see more heavy rain. Bringing you this deep dive is Met Office meteorologist Aidan McGivern.
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00:00The weather in the UK is about to turn colder, but before it turns colder, in some places it's going to get even wetter.
00:10The rain and the change to colder weather are both connected, not only to each other, but to the atmospheric circulation close to the UK and thousands of miles from the UK.
00:23I'm going to explain how all of these pieces fit together in this week's Met Office Deep Dive.
00:28Welcome along. Thank you for joining me. We do these every Tuesday for our YouTube channel and a couple of other places.
00:35And if you enjoy them, please do tell us about it. Send us a comment, hit like, hit subscribe, tell your friends about it, spread the love.
00:43But lots to cover in this week's Deep Dive, so I'm going to crack straight on with it.
00:48We're starting with the radar there. This is Tuesday morning. Spells of rain are spreading across the UK.
00:54The rain has been a talking point and it will continue to be the talking point during the next few days.
01:00But the temperatures have also been a talking point.
01:04We're going to talk about how it's going to turn colder in a moment.
01:07But let's first mention how exceptionally mild it has been this November so far.
01:14Take a look at this. This is the accumulated temperature.
01:16So the mean temperature for November 2025 so far.
01:21Here's the current line and it is way above the red line, which is the highest on record for the time of year.
01:29That was set in 2015.
01:30These kinds of records where you look specifically at the day of the month, well, these go back to the 1930s.
01:38Our monthly seasonal temperature records go back to 1884.
01:41But these particular records where we can look at the finer details day to day, they go back to the 1930s.
01:46So it has, at the time of recording, first 10 days, been the warmest in that particular record for the mean temperature.
01:54That's the average of the maximum and the minimum temperature.
01:56But the maximum and minimum temperature have both been way above average.
02:01The minimum temperature, warmest on record.
02:03Maximum temperature, the daytime highs, one of the warmest on record.
02:08There's the average.
02:09So we should be just under 8 Celsius.
02:12Instead, it's been closer to 11 Celsius, just a little below.
02:174.3 degrees above average for November.
02:20Of course, you'd expect the first half of November to be a little warmer than the November average as a whole.
02:26Because it gets colder as you approach winter.
02:28But not that much warmer.
02:31The first 10 days have been more like the kinds of temperatures you'd expect in the first part of October.
02:37Not only that, but it's been a wet November so far as well.
02:41I know, I'm probably stating the obvious here.
02:43Everyone is fully aware of how warm and how wet it has been.
02:47And it's going to continue to be warm and wet for several more days in some parts of the UK.
02:55Not everywhere.
02:56It's going to turn colder, starting off in the north.
02:59And then eventually that colder air will spread further south.
03:03To explain what's going on, what's causing the heavy rain, and what's causing that transition to colder air.
03:09Let's take a look at the bigger picture.
03:12Now this shows the Atlantic and Europe, the jet stream, the synoptic picture, that's what we call it.
03:18The lows and highs and so on.
03:20So far this November, we've had what we call a very zonal jet stream.
03:24That means it's been relatively flat across the Atlantic.
03:27And it's been firing areas of low pressure towards the UK.
03:30So we've had spells of rain, a lot of cloud, and west to southwesterly winds.
03:35And in some ways, it remains the case that we've got the jet stream pointing towards the UK,
03:41sending us further low pressure systems and weather fronts.
03:44But there are going to be some significant changes in that jet stream over the next few days.
03:48And the cause of those changes, well, that's down to a number of things that are all coming together.
03:54Remarkably so, they're all coming together in the same way.
03:58Now, we often talk about teleconnections in the Met Office 10-day trend.
04:0210-day trend, yes, and the deep dive.
04:05And these teleconnections, that's where the weather, the atmospheric circulation,
04:09or the sea temperatures in other parts of the globe can have a ripple effect on the UK's weather,
04:15most notably on the shape and the intensity of the jet stream.
04:20And that, of course, controls whether we get low pressure and high and so on.
04:23Now, teleconnections such as El Nino, stroke La Nina, the Indian Ocean Dipole, the stratospheric polar vortex,
04:34the Madden-Julian oscillation.
04:39We've got videos on all of these, so I'm not going to go into detail on what they are and how they affect the UK's weather.
04:46If you're interested, we do have videos on our YouTube channels.
04:49Check them out.
04:50But suffice to say, at the moment, there is La Nina in the Pacific.
04:56We've got the Madden-Julian oscillation in Phase 6.
05:01That's where you get this enhancement of tropical rainfall close to Indonesia around the West Pacific area.
05:09We've got the Indian Ocean Dipole in a negative phase rather than a positive phase.
05:15And we've got the quasi-biennial oscillation in an easterly phase.
05:21Now, all of those things tend to promote more blocking in the Atlantic,
05:26that is, high-pressure building in the North Atlantic, and a weaker, more wobbly jet stream.
05:31And they're all coming together.
05:32So, at the moment, with La Nina in place, that tends to, well, that does mean that the West Pacific,
05:40it has above-average temperatures, and you get more rainfall over Indonesia.
05:45With the Indian Ocean Dipole in a negative phase, that roughly means the same thing.
05:52Indonesia warmer and wetter, so big thunderstorms over Indonesia.
05:56The Phase 6, the Madden-Julian oscillation, as I mentioned, more thunderstorms over Indonesia.
06:01And then the quasi-biennial oscillation, that's the wind in the stratosphere way above the equator.
06:09When that's in an easterly phase, when it's moving around the planet in an easterly direction,
06:14that can have a drag effect on the jet stream.
06:17And so, when you've got the enhanced thundery activity over Indonesia,
06:21that can send pulses of energy throughout the atmosphere, buckling the jet stream.
06:24All of these factors, for once, sometimes they work against each other,
06:28but for once they're all pointing in the same direction.
06:30And that is a weaker, more wavy jet stream, higher pressure over the North Atlantic in the next week to 10 days.
06:38And that is, indeed, what we're going to see play out.
06:41Now, this is the jet stream at the moment.
06:42It's got some wobbliness to it, but watch how wavy it gets.
06:47Into Wednesday, you can see this branch pushing way north over Greenland,
06:51as high pressure builds over Greenland and Iceland.
06:54And then we've got this dip to the south of the UK.
06:58And by Thursday, it's really quite amplified over the North Atlantic.
07:02And we're heading towards what we call a negative North Atlantic oscillation.
07:08What does that mean?
07:10Well, the North Atlantic oscillation is essentially the difference between the pressure over Iceland
07:15and the pressure over the Azores.
07:18On average, you get higher pressure over the Azores than over Iceland.
07:22That promotes a westerly, on average, wind coming in from the Atlantic.
07:26It's what we've seen through the first part of November.
07:29But when you get lower than average pressure over the Azores and higher pressure than you'd normally expect over Iceland,
07:38well, that leads to what we call a negative North Atlantic oscillation.
07:42And it tends to weaken that westerly influence.
07:46It doesn't always get rid of the westerlies, but it can weaken it so much that you get easterlies or northerlies over the UK.
07:53You also get a more amplified jet stream.
07:55Now, often this is simplified to the extent that people might say that a negative North Atlantic oscillation late autumn into winter
08:05leads to colder and drier weather for the UK.
08:08And that is often the case, but it's not always the case.
08:12In fact, it's going to be far from that case for some parts of the UK over the next few days.
08:17We're going into a negative North Atlantic oscillation.
08:20We're going into a period in which we've got lower pressure towards the southwest of the UK,
08:25higher pressure towards the northwest of the UK, a wobbly jet stream, more of an easterly wind.
08:31But at the same time, some parts of the UK are still going to be exceptionally mild,
08:35and some parts of the UK are going to be exceptionally wet.
08:38The reason is that low pressure towards the Azores is close enough over the next few days for the rest of this week
08:45to continue to send pulses of rain towards the UK from the south and southwest.
08:52And with those south and southwesterly winds, of course, it's going to stay very mild.
08:56Temperatures of 16, 17 Celsius across southern parts of the UK.
09:00Meanwhile, the colder, drier weather is starting to make inroads, but only into the north of the UK.
09:09And you can see that by Thursday, that's the day in which the colder air starts to dig into Scotland.
09:15And it remains mostly across Scotland for the rest of this week.
09:20But it becomes increasingly cold across Scotland, whilst it becomes increasingly mild across the south of the UK.
09:26And this contrast, this thermal contrast, this difference between the cold and the mild,
09:32actually helps to pep up the rain, the weather fronts that mark the boundary between the cold air in the north
09:38and the mild air further south.
09:40And it's on that boundary that will oscillate across the UK during the next few days.
09:45It's going to come up from the south, push back, and then come back up again at various times.
09:51It's going to wave across central and southern parts of the UK.
09:55But along that boundary, a couple of things happen.
09:58The weather fronts become more active, so heavier rain, but also the isobars tighten up.
10:04And Friday in particular, very heavy rain, which I'll talk more about in a moment,
10:10but also tighter isobars, so particularly strong winds developing.
10:13And those winds coming from the east, less of a common direction for strong winds in the UK.
10:21And as a result, could cause some issues.
10:24Also, the heaviest rain affecting eastern parts of the UK, or at least east-facing hills across parts of Wales and the Pennines, for example.
10:35Again, less of a common thing to happen in the UK.
10:39So, yes, we're going into this phase where we've got a negative North Atlantic oscillation.
10:44That's being caused by a lot of different things occurring at the same time around the globe.
10:50It eventually is likely to make the UK's weather colder and drier next week, perhaps.
10:58But in the interim period, it's actually causing some parts of the UK to become warmer and wetter for a bit.
11:07If we had westerlies, these fronts would move through quickly.
11:09You'd have spells of rain like we've had through November so far.
11:13But as it is, these fronts get stuck.
11:15They stall.
11:16They become heavier, but they also stall.
11:18So they're going to become slow-moving.
11:20And so that's why we're expecting some issues from rainfall over the next few days.
11:24Let's take a look at the rainfall, first of all, before we get on to the temperatures.
11:29This sums it up.
11:3024-hour totals each day of the working week.
11:34Now, initially, Tuesday, you can see the highest totals, a couple of brighter dots on the map if you can squint and see closely enough.
11:44I will show this in a bigger picture in a moment.
11:47But it's southwest Scotland, it's parts of Wales and the southwest.
11:51So it's western areas seeing the heaviest rainfall at first this week because at first we're seeing these systems come up from the southwest.
11:58Wednesday is very similar, another bout of wet weather for parts of Wales and the southwest, but also more widely across England, Wales.
12:06And one front becoming stalled across northern Scotland.
12:09Thursday, a bit of a gap between systems before the next band of rain pushes up from the south later in the day.
12:15And then Friday, you can see that by the bright colours there, Friday is the day we're most concerned about in terms of rainfall totals.
12:21A little bit of uncertainty at the moment because it does depend on the timing and the intensity of these weather fronts and different commutables are saying slightly different things.
12:31It's several days ahead, but certainly one to flag the time being particularly nasty amounts of rainfall, not only for the UK, but as you can see, for parts of Ireland as well.
12:43Let's go through the day to day detail. And Tuesday afternoon, we've got our first weather front moving through what we call warm sector conditions, a warm front pushing into central Scotland and then a cold front arriving into the west later across much of England.
13:00And Wales, a brief gap, a lot of cloud, very mild temperatures in the mid-teens and also windy, particularly towards West Wales and the southwest.
13:09Those spells of rain push through overnight, but the cold front slows down and stalls across southern parts of the UK overnight.
13:18And then by Wednesday, it's moving north again across much of England and Wales, really, through the day.
13:24So heavy rain to start things in the south and then pushing through Wales, the Midlands, as the day continues.
13:30Showers for the north of Scotland and we're starting to see blustery weather there and a change in wind direction for the north of Scotland.
13:37You can see this big contrast between Southerlies in the south and northerlies across northern Scotland.
13:42Temperatures in the single figures in the north of Scotland, 15, 16 across southern parts.
13:47Thursday, a fine start to the day for many, although we do have this stalling weather front across northern Ireland, central Scotland, northern England.
13:55That's going to peter out. Brighter skies further south.
13:58But here's the next bout of rain pushing in and that spreads, as you can see, brighter colours on it.
14:07It starts to move in late Thursday and then overnight, very slowly moving north across southern parts of England into the Midlands, East Anglia, parts of Wales as well.
14:18This is dawn on Friday, soaking start to the day and then that front really slow moving across Wales, the Midlands, East Anglia, before by the afternoon it's pushing into parts of northern England.
14:31Another bout of rain then moving into the southwest as well as Wales and the winds all the time strengthening.
14:37We've got these colours here indicating wind gusts of 50, 60 miles an hour across north Wales, west Wales, for example, western parts of the Pennines.
14:45The wind bouncing over those hills as it comes in from the east and could cause some issues as it peps up across parts of west Wales, in particular north Wales as well, combined with lashings of rainfall.
15:00Friday evening, as you can see, really quite wet across the Republic of Ireland into northern Ireland.
15:06Much of England and Wales, Scotland, meanwhile, into the cold air.
15:11These showers falling as sleet and snow, perhaps the lower levels across Shetland, two to four hundred metres over the hills of northern Scotland.
15:20And then it takes a while for that front as we head into the weekend to weaken.
15:26So it's a wet start for this broad central swathe of the UK.
15:30The wind's only slowly moderating as well.
15:34Very unsettled start to the weekend for some before eventually it turns a little quieter as the high pressure to the north starts to build further south.
15:44And I want to focus on these two episodes of rain now.
15:49The one to start the week and then the one that we're going to see on Friday.
15:55So the one to start the week.
15:58Here is how Tuesday looks.
16:00We're already most of the way through Tuesday, but just because the rain is going to continue into the evening.
16:05Here are the rain totals and the brighter colours indicate where we're likely to see 50 millimetres of rain.
16:11So it's parts of southwest Scotland, particularly over the hills, South Wales, Dartmoor as well.
16:16Some significant rain totals, 60 to 80 millimetres possible through Tuesday.
16:23East Anglia, the southeast, northern Scotland, not much rain at all.
16:25But it's, yeah, western hills in particular.
16:29And that explains why we've got these warnings across many parts of the UK.
16:35And then into Wednesday, we've got this warning here.
16:43I rewind a little bit.
16:46There we go.
16:47We've got the southwest warning to start things off.
16:50South Wales as well.
16:51And Wednesday's rain totals, another 20, 30, perhaps more millimetres of rain over the hills of South Wales and southwest England.
17:00Coming on top of Tuesday's wet weather, of course, and the wet weather that we've seen often through November so far could cause further issues.
17:07So western hills start the week.
17:10Then we've got this gap into Thursday.
17:14Thursday starts off dry, but the next system pushes some heavy rain into the south by the end of the day.
17:23And these are the 24-hour totals on Thursday.
17:26So many places seeing a dry 24 hours.
17:29Like I said, a gap between systems.
17:31But we've got the lingering rain across central Scotland, southern Scotland, northern England, parts of Northern Ireland.
17:37Then this next system pushing into the south.
17:39By Friday, take a look at this.
17:40Some really quite substantial rainfall totals, likely Thursday night into Friday and continuing into the start of Saturday because of a slow-moving weather front that moves up from the south.
17:55Becomes really quite intense because of that temperature contrast between Scotland and the rest of the UK, where it's much milder.
18:02And because of low pressure to the south-west and an active jet stream.
18:07All of those factors coming together to lead to a slow-moving weather front with strong easterly winds leading to the highest rainfall totals ending up over eastern parts of Wales,
18:20eastern hills of the south-west of England, parts of the Midlands, the Pennines as well.
18:25And if we cross-reference this map with the key, you'll see that quite a few areas across parts of England and Wales,
18:33more than 50 millimetres of rainfall through the 24-hour period of Friday.
18:38But add on Thursday night's rain, Saturday night's, Saturday morning's rain as well.
18:42There's a bit more.
18:43But the greatest concern, in the UK at least, is south-east Wales, where as you can see, there's the risk of 70 to 120 millimetres of rain through that period,
18:58Thursday night to Saturday morning.
19:00Coming on top of the rain that we're seeing over the next two days could cause some significant impacts.
19:06And it's east-facing hills in south-east Wales, so places that aren't typically as wet as further west.
19:15That's Wales.
19:17You can see there the very high rainfall totals that are possible across eastern parts of the Republic of Ireland as well,
19:26just to the south of Dublin.
19:28So, yeah, likely to be issues for the Republic of Ireland as well as parts of the UK.
19:33Parts of the UK where we don't see quite as much rain as, say, northern Scotland, which is comparatively dry over the next few days.
19:42So, just emphasise, Friday's rain, quite concerning.
19:47Stay tuned for further updates over the next couple of days.
19:52Let's move on to temperatures, though, because we are going to see a drop in temperatures initially across Scotland,
19:57and then the colder air eventually reaching other parts of the UK.
20:03But it's the wind that is the key feature explaining why these temperatures drop.
20:10Initially, we've got southerly winds, very mild air across the whole of the UK.
20:14Then through Thursday, you can see the northerly winds arriving in Scotland and the southerly winds continuing in the south.
20:21By Friday, easterly winds, as you can see, potential for impacts from that strong easterly wind,
20:27particularly for parts of the Pennines, west of the Pennines, Lake District, north and west Wales, Irish Sea Coast.
20:35But at this stage, we've got northeasterly winds starting to spread further south.
20:39Higher pressure building in for this weekend.
20:45That eventually, that higher pressure as it builds in from the north, weakens the front.
20:51Eventually, the rain fizzles away.
20:53It's going to take much of the weekend for that rain to completely disappear.
20:56There will continue to be showers in the south.
20:58But eventually, much of the UK ends up drier than the next few days.
21:05Low pressure starts to fill towards the southwest and move a little further away.
21:10High pressure starts to build in to the north.
21:13At first, the cold air, as I say, into Thursday is across Scotland, but nowhere else really.
21:22This shows the height of the freezing level above sea level.
21:27And where we've got the greens, that effectively means the freezing level is above all mountains in the UK.
21:34So you're not going to get any snowfall.
21:36No surprise, really, given how mild it's going to be over the next few days across England, Wales, Northern Ireland.
21:41But you can see there, the central belt northwards into that cold air.
21:44We've got the blues.
21:46The blues indicates a freezing level of 400 to 600 metres, typically.
21:50And as meteorologists, we often subtract about 200 metres to determine the height in which precipitation will be falling as snow.
21:58Now, for somewhere like Shetland, that could be happening down to sea level.
22:03So snow showers down to sea level for Shetland on Thursday, Friday.
22:08For the rest of Scotland, more likely 200 to 400 metres.
22:12So relatively modest hills, sleet and snow showers.
22:15But the showers, not particularly heavy or prolonged.
22:19So I think disruptive snow, fairly unlikely.
22:24It will tend to ease as well as we go into the weekend and that high pressure moves in.
22:28The showers tend to die away.
22:30But what will be more noticeable is the downward trend in temperatures.
22:34There's some uncertainty about the temperature change through the weekend and into the start of next week.
22:41Two aspects of the uncertainty, the speed of which the cold air spreads across the UK and how cold it will be in the south and southwest.
22:49I covered some of these aspects of uncertainty in the week ahead forecast on Monday.
22:53It's not quite as uncertain now, but there's still some uncertainty.
22:58By the start of next week, it looks most likely that colder air will be across the whole of the UK.
23:04And if I just show you this, I'll fast forward to Monday morning, for example.
23:12This shows the temperatures for Monday morning as we're waking up from one simulation of the European model.
23:25This is the control run and it shows temperatures fairly widely in the low single figures, perhaps below freezing in some spots.
23:33So a chilly start for many.
23:35But we've got another 50 model runs from the European model.
23:40And if we just click on a few of these, you can see some differences in the temperature, particularly when you're looking at southern parts of the UK.
23:48They're not all that cold.
23:5037, for example, shows temperatures of 10 to 12 Celsius.
23:53So what's happening through the weekend is that we've got the cold rare trying to come in from the north and northeast.
24:00But we've still got low pressure.
24:01We've still got weather fronts close to the south and southwest.
24:04And there's always the possibility of some lingering cloud and rain in the far south and southwest.
24:10To visualize that in a slightly different way, we can show what is known as percentiles.
24:15So this is where we take all 50 ensemble members, all 50 simulations, and we take the coldest 5% and see what it comes out with.
24:27Let's call the fifth percentile.
24:29So this is the coldest 5%.
24:30So if the coldest 5% of those computer models were correct, we'd be looking at temperatures fairly widely down to frost levels Monday morning.
24:40Chilly start for many of us and not much warmer.
24:43In fact, if we go to the afternoon, three o'clock below average temperatures for the time of year, low single figures.
24:51So anyway, that's fifth percentile.
24:53Now, the 50th percentile would be what's also known as the median.
24:57So the middle of all the computer model simulations, the middle value.
25:02And again, that's showing reasonably chilly, certainly colder than this week across the south.
25:06Six, seven, two or three across Scotland.
25:09But we've also got the 95th percentile.
25:12So if you take the warmest 5% of models, it's got the double figures in the south.
25:17But actually, none of the UK, or at least none of the south, is as warm as it's going to be over the next few days.
25:22So high confidence for it turning colder.
25:25How cold in the south and southwest?
25:27That's the tricky aspect.
25:29Another way of showing that is to plot all of those temperature trends on one graph for the next 10 days.
25:38And we can see what that looks like for different parts of the country.
25:41This is the temperature trend from 50 computer model simulations, or 51 from the European model.
25:48And what we've got here, we've got somewhere across the south of England.
25:53And it shows a few things of interest.
25:56Next few days, those temperatures remain remarkably high.
25:59By day and by night, very little difference.
26:0113, 14 Celsius, both by day and by night.
26:04Then we've got a lot of range in these temperature projections through the weekend.
26:09But if you can basically take the signal rather than the noise, it looks like there's a downward trend into the start of next week.
26:19Much more of a day-night difference.
26:21But we've got this signal for it all turning colder.
26:25And even the mildest runs, there are still some mild runs, they're colder than what we've currently got over the next few days.
26:32So that's the south.
26:33But it takes all weekend to get that colder signal for next week.
26:38If we go to the north, say northern Scotland, you can see it's Thursday.
26:42Thursday, strong signal for it to turn colder.
26:44And then we're into low single figures by day, below freezing by night.
26:50Again, a bit more messy there as we get to the middle part of next week.
26:52But virtually all the computer model simulations have it colder than the next few days.
26:57So strong signal for it to turn less mild.
27:02But how cold is currently a little uncertain into next week.
27:08And there's two potential scenarios for next week that are highlighted by this.
27:16We've shown this before.
27:17This is the most likely weather patterns.
27:21Let's put this on.
27:22These are the most likely weather patterns for the next couple of weeks.
27:29Indicated by various colours here.
27:30And you can see a strong signal each day throughout next week for this one.
27:35High pressure to the north.
27:37There are different flavours of high pressure to the north.
27:39High pressure to the north, in other words, a negative North Atlantic oscillation,
27:44typically leads to colder weather at this time of year.
27:47And the map here shows that if we select, say, Sunday's most likely weather pattern,
27:55it's got northerly winds.
27:58But going into next week, whilst that remains the most likely weather pattern,
28:02there are some less likely weather patterns.
28:07For example, high pressure over the UK.
28:08Or, for example, more of a low pressure there over Scandinavia and bringing some more unsettled weather in.
28:19But, essentially, we've got that signal, the high pressure to the north signal, throughout much of next week.
28:25Before these blues start to become apparent, that's where we've got a greater chance of lower pressure starting to return.
28:33And the most likely scenario for that is southwesterlies.
28:37So, reasonably strong signals for the bigger picture.
28:41But I think the key uncertainty there through next week is how much the south and southwest keep something a little milder
28:48and a little wetter at times.
28:51Now, with those northerlies, they're most likely to affect northern and eastern parts of the UK throughout much of next week.
28:58And there's likely to be some showers, and those showers may well fall as sleet or snow.
29:03But mostly it would be hills, and there's no strong signal for significant disruptive snow of any sort.
29:10Even if we keep some rain to the south, it currently looks like that would be in the milder air rather than in the colder air.
29:18So, yeah, still some uncertainty for next week.
29:21But the general trends look to be there for its turn less mild.
29:26Some might call it colder, but nothing particularly exceptionally unusual for the end of November.
29:31And it all ties in with the kinds of weather patterns that we've currently got all around the world,
29:38which is, well, in my opinion, very interesting.
29:41Hope you've enjoyed this week's deep dive, but do let me know if there's any comments, any questions that you might have.
29:47And, yeah, you'll have a chance to ask us live if you tune into the Weather Studio Live this Friday at 12.15pm.
29:54But otherwise, I'll try and answer as many comments as I can online later on.
30:00Hit subscribe if you haven't already.
30:02Keep following us.
30:03And, yeah, bye-bye for now.
30:05Bye-bye.
30:05Bye-bye.
30:06Bye-bye.
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