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00:00Which way is he coming from, this way or this way?
00:09That way.
00:10Okay, thanks.
00:10Yeah.
00:11Just wanted to have a view of seeing him coming.
00:18Oh, I didn't know we were filming.
00:20I would not look at my phone like a jerk.
00:23Can you give that to my brother when you got a sec?
00:24I have hidden folders so you won't find everything in there.
00:27It's not as creepy as you think.
00:30You get to have a seat until he comes.
00:31He's coming right away.
00:32You bet, you bet.
00:34So I should also welcome him and stuff, right?
00:36Totally, you got it.
00:38Hi, guys.
00:40Hi.
00:42Where do I go?
00:42Chair.
00:43Chair.
00:43There's a chair?
00:44I have a chair?
00:45Nice.
00:46Hi, guys.
00:47Nice to see you, by the way.
00:50You too.
00:50How are you?
00:51What's your name?
00:52Lyle Lexier.
00:52Nice to meet you.
00:53Lyle Lexler?
00:55Lexier, Russell.
00:56Lexier.
00:57Sexier when it's Lexier.
00:58Yeah, that's right.
01:00Very nice to meet you.
01:00My family and I are, like, huge fans of yours.
01:03I thank your family for having low standards.
01:05Oh.
01:06Hi, it's nice to meet you.
01:07I'm Alexis.
01:08Hey, Alexis.
01:09I used to have Alexis.
01:10Hi.
01:11Hi, I'm Millie.
01:12Hey, Millie.
01:14Were you going to ask me questions through that?
01:15I love it.
01:16Yes, maybe.
01:17All right.
01:19Hey, buddy.
01:19I'm Luke.
01:20Hey, Luke.
01:20How are you?
01:21Luke, at you.
01:22I've been a fan of you for 14 years.
01:25Well, thanks, Luke.
01:26It's like I've known you since you were a baby.
01:27I like your sense of humor on some of your shows.
01:34On some of them, though?
01:35Yeah, I don't watch them all.
01:37I only have watched some shows.
01:39I don't blame you.
01:39It's not that good.
01:43All right, everybody.
01:48I think we're ready to start.
01:49Yeah.
01:50Lyle, you get to open the show for us.
01:54Lyle, here's your microphone.
01:55Lyle Lex, here.
01:56That's right.
01:56Lyle Lex, here.
02:00Bienvenue à l'Assemblée, un collectif d'interviewer, autiste et neurodivergent.
02:07Welcome to the Assembly, a collective of autistic and neurodivergent interviewers.
02:13We are very delighted to have you join us today.
02:17Our rules are no subjects are out of bounds, no questions are off the table, and all might happen.
02:26Can you please tell us who you are?
02:28My name is Russell Peters.
02:30I'm a stand-up comedian for the past 36 years, and this is going to be fun.
02:35Because I, too, have no filter already, so it's just nice to meet other humans with no filters.
02:44First question comes from Mariah.
02:50Russell, once again, my family and I are huge fans of yours.
02:54Anyways, I've got a question for you.
02:56So, um, what is your most embarrassing moment?
03:01Oof, that's a lot of those.
03:03Um, I have two marriages to prove that.
03:05No, I have one.
03:07Not that I don't want to put you on the spot.
03:10Um, my most embarrassing moment?
03:12I don't know.
03:13You know, embarrassing.
03:14I tend to say embarrassing things when I meet celebrities.
03:18You would think, oh, Russell, you've been in the business a long time.
03:21Must be an old hat to you.
03:23No, I still panic.
03:25I'll tell you a story.
03:26I met Willem Dafoe, this is maybe about 10 or 12 years ago.
03:30I'm at the Toronto Film Festival.
03:32I'm standing in the hallway, and he's standing right beside me.
03:34And I'm like, holy mackerel, that's Willem Dafoe right there.
03:38And, uh, now you would think that your brain would start giving you all the movies he's been in, right?
03:43No, not my brain.
03:44My brain, much like yours, just went the other, let's go in the other direction.
03:48And, uh, my brain, somebody years ago told me, Willem Dafoe has a huge penis.
03:52That's what I remember.
03:53That's the only thing that popped into my head.
03:57Not at this movie, that movie.
03:59My brain went, that guy's got a huge penis.
04:02And my panicked brain, I go, hey, nice to see you.
04:07He goes, hey, nice to see you.
04:08I go, you got a film in the festival?
04:09He goes, yeah, you?
04:10I go, yeah, me too.
04:11He goes, oh, congrats.
04:12I go, thanks, man.
04:13Hey, congrats on your penis.
04:19And he goes, what?
04:21I go, no, I heard you got a big one.
04:23I said, if I had one like that, I'd have it hanging out right now.
04:31And then, and then he goes, what?
04:34And then you hear, Russell Peters?
04:35I go, nice to meet you.
04:37And I walked away.
04:40That might be up there with one of my most embarrassing movies.
04:42I'm sure there's plenty to share.
04:46Thanks, Mariah.
04:47I like your cube.
04:51What is that one?
04:51It's got a seal and an otter and a jellyfish on it.
04:54It's from T.
04:55Wow.
04:55He feeds the seals.
04:57He feeds the seals?
04:58At the aquarium.
04:58Oh, yes.
04:59Oh, nice.
05:00I also like otters.
05:01I'm an otter person.
05:02Yeah, you otter being pictures.
05:09Damon is next.
05:11Damon, Damon.
05:12You look very young, Damon.
05:18That very nice, clear, smooth skin.
05:21Like a seal, almost.
05:24That being said, TJ would like to feed you.
05:34I love that.
05:36Thanks so much.
05:39I am a handsome 24-year-old seal.
05:42Yes, you are.
05:48I am non-speaking, so it will take a little time for me to type my question.
05:53No problem.
05:57Now my brain thinks Damon has a British accent.
06:02You really want to mess with me, change it to the Indian accent.
06:04It'll really freak me out, Damon.
06:05Oh, my God.
06:10Um, Russell, would you at all be okay taking off your glasses?
06:13Sure.
06:13Yeah?
06:14Is that okay?
06:14Ew.
06:15Amazing.
06:17Am I reflecting?
06:18Is that what?
06:18We're reflecting.
06:19Ew, there I am.
06:21I was trying to hide my tired eyes, guys.
06:23Don't worry.
06:24You look great.
06:25You look great.
06:26Yeah.
06:27Fabulous.
06:28Mom, quick question.
06:31Before iPads and stuff, how did you and Damon communicate?
06:34We did not.
06:35Oh.
06:36He didn't communicate until he was 14.
06:38That's, wow.
06:40So you have 10 years now, and it's only going to get better.
06:43Exactly.
06:48In your book, Call Me Russell, you described a specific racial slur that was used as a way
06:54for bullies to assert their feelings of superiority over you as a child and teenager.
07:00At the time when you wrote this, you couldn't find humor in such name-calling.
07:05So, my question is, what do you think of the use of the R-word to describe people like
07:12me?
07:15Well, see, it's funny you should say that.
07:18That's a good question, Damon, because I would self-admittedly say I use the R-word
07:23all day long.
07:27But it's never about anybody with, it's mostly about situations for me, like, or I've been
07:33saying it so long, too.
07:34It's one of those things where I know my intention, but I also know where not to say
07:37it, you know?
07:38I'm not out there, uh...
07:39But I would never call somebody like you that.
07:42It just, that to me, that to me is out of line.
07:45That's when you're using it in the wrong way.
07:47It's a venomous way of using it.
07:49The evil way.
07:50The evil way.
07:51Yeah, that's the wrong way.
07:56Okay.
07:57Thank you so much.
07:59Thanks, Damon.
08:04Julia, your turn.
08:06Julia, your next love.
08:11What was your favorite moment from the time spent in the school that you went to?
08:16The one where you said all the autistic people sat on the table together.
08:20That's why this is not new to me.
08:21This was like being in high school, really, like, no.
08:24My school was like this.
08:25It was, and so I loved it because I feel like here, now tell me if I'm wrong, but I feel
08:31like autistic people are on a different level.
08:33And what they would consider regular people, I think we're stuck in a way of doing certain
08:39things, and you guys are able to see and do things that we just can't figure out.
08:44When people say special needs, I hate the term special needs because your needs aren't
08:48special.
08:48Your needs are, you have actually basic needs.
08:52We have the special needs.
08:54I can't have gluten.
08:55Special need.
08:56You know, I'm lactose intolerant.
08:57Special need.
08:58You know what I mean?
08:59You want to get into a building?
09:00That's not a special need.
09:01That's a basic need, you know what I mean?
09:03You need an elevator?
09:04That's not a special need.
09:05That's a basic need.
09:06I need to get upstairs.
09:08So being in that high school for grade 11 and 12 really, it just showed me how much
09:15better the world can be, you know?
09:17When I was in the other school with all the normies, they were dicks, you know?
09:23And I never, I never, I never had that problem in the other school.
09:27Like, I look at everybody here and I go, oh, finally, real people, you know?
09:31Nobody's hiding behind anything.
09:34Thanks, Julia.
09:36Liam, you're next.
09:39Good old Liam.
09:40I've got to be honest, Liam, you're the least Liam-looking Liam I've ever seen in my life.
09:47Thank you, I think.
09:50Liam, are you a power lifter or something?
09:51Jeez.
09:53Yeah, I am.
09:54Yeah, you look like you could lift the whole room right now.
10:00Um, you've discussed notions of challenging political correctness.
10:06And I was wondering what that meant to you, to challenge convention like that.
10:12Well, I've always been a guy that's questioned everything.
10:15You can't just tell me something and expect me to go, okay.
10:17Um, there's, there's always gonna be more information behind it than, than just the okay, you know?
10:24If it's not affecting or hurting anybody, why do we have to do that?
10:28Just, we're not a bunch of robots and that's why we're all here today.
10:31Because we all have different ways of looking at things.
10:34And, uh, if, if it's up to political correctness, they won't let any of us talk.
10:38You know?
10:39They're like, oh, they're gonna say something out of line.
10:40I go, well, I hope so.
10:42Because that's what I want.
10:43I want to hear people tell the truth.
10:45Saying what you saw isn't bad.
10:48It, you know, you saw it.
10:50When people tell me, oh, you can't say that, I go, but that's really what happens.
10:52Political silence.
10:53Yeah, that's what I call it.
10:54Yeah, that's a good one.
10:55Political silence.
10:56I like that.
10:56I'm so afraid of scaring, of offending someone up.
10:59That's almost getting scary in that way.
11:02Well, yeah, that's, that's, I mean, that's.
11:03That's part of a George Orwellian concept.
11:06Yeah.
11:06You know, look at, I mean, I'll make, I've been making jokes to you guys all day.
11:09But somebody's going to watch this and get offended for you.
11:13And I think when people get offended on your behalf, it's even worse.
11:16Because that means they're looking at you like they're smarter than you.
11:18And you're like, no, you weren't there.
11:20You weren't feeling the energy in the room.
11:22You know?
11:23And that's, I hate that kind of stuff.
11:24Like, oh, you shouldn't have said that to Liam.
11:26Unless Liam tells me himself, I'm not going to know.
11:28You know what I mean?
11:33Alexis, you're next.
11:34Uh, hello.
11:41Um, so, I, um, heard that you didn't have such a great relationship with your mom growing
11:48up, but that it's changed now over time.
11:52And I was wondering kind of what happened.
11:55Like, was it you that changed?
11:57Was it her that changed?
11:58Or was it like a little bit of both that like repaired your relationship?
12:00Well, it's funny because, um, my mom doesn't realize that we had a strained relationship
12:07when I was a kid.
12:08Mm-hmm.
12:09Because, uh, so my mom has not changed at all.
12:12Yeah, okay.
12:12I had to understand my mom.
12:16Yeah.
12:16More than she had to understand me.
12:18And once I realized my mom really didn't have any bad intentions, she just had a different
12:22way of doing things.
12:23Yeah.
12:24It made, it made it a lot easier, you know?
12:26And then, and now I'm a mama's boy.
12:27What are you going to do?
12:28You know, uh, you know, she's 84 years old and, and she's still kicking and she's,
12:34you know, she's mom and she's so little, you know, I wouldn't say I had a bad relationship
12:41either when I was a kid.
12:41It's just that my mom is very fair skinned.
12:44So I was, when I was getting, uh, racially bullied when I was a kid in the park and I
12:50would come home and my mom wouldn't give me that much sympathy.
12:53I was just assuming she was, cause she was white.
12:56Yeah.
12:56Um, I was like, oh, you're white.
12:57That's why you're acting like that.
12:58She's like, I'm from India.
12:59How am I white?
12:59And I'm like, well, you're very fair skinned.
13:02And I'm like, and I'm like, doesn't matter.
13:04You're one of them to me.
13:05Right.
13:05Yeah.
13:06But that's, but that's always been her way of dealing with it.
13:08She's never like, oh my God, are you okay?
13:10She's never been that person.
13:11Yeah.
13:12I don't think she's capable of being that person.
13:14Um, but that's fine.
13:15That's just who mom is.
13:16You know, you got to accept people the way they are.
13:18For sure.
13:18Yeah.
13:18You can't change them.
13:19So you have, if you want to really be what's around people, you have to bend the way you
13:23think to understand the way they think.
13:25Hmm.
13:26That's good advice for my mom.
13:27There you go.
13:28See, let her know.
13:29Yeah.
13:29And maybe she doesn't like you cause you're white.
13:31And I'm just kidding.
13:31I, I, I, I'm kidding.
13:33I don't know.
13:34Maybe.
13:35Yeah.
13:41What are you making?
13:42I'm making a bag.
13:43Nice.
13:44It's a crochet bag.
13:45That's pretty cool.
13:46Yeah.
13:48Uh, Nilly, you're next.
13:50I was wondering when Nilly was going to get up here.
13:55Sorry, somebody wrote all over you, Nilly.
13:57Um.
13:58So, I am a queer person.
14:05To me, that is an umbrella term that covers me being transgender and also varying sexual
14:11preferences.
14:13My question to you is, have you had any queer experiences or fantasies?
14:20Myself?
14:24No.
14:25I mean, uh, I, I don't have a problem with two girls with me, but I mean, uh, but I, I've
14:31never, no, that's, I mean, that's why I really understand it as it's not, uh, it's not a choice,
14:36you know?
14:37It's just the way you are.
14:39And I kind of accept everybody the way they are.
14:42Because whatever you are doing is really none of my business, you know?
14:46But if I care about you, I just want to make sure you're good, you know?
14:49It's never been for me, but I do have some very close gay friends and some trans friends.
14:54I have friends right across the board, so I get to ask them all the questions I want,
14:58you know?
14:59Because when you're friends with somebody, they understand where your heart is and where
15:01your, um, what your intentions are when you ask questions.
15:04So I tend to ask a lot of questions just because I want the actual answers.
15:08I don't want to ask a straight guy about how a trans person should feel.
15:11That's not fair to you, you know?
15:13So if I have a question, I'll be like, Millie, I need some answers.
15:18Yeah.
15:18Thanks.
15:20Thanks, Millie.
15:22Nick, you are out.
15:24Okay, then.
15:27Hey, Nick.
15:27Nick, pleasure to meet you, Mr. Peter.
15:29No worries, good hat.
15:31Anyways, my question, we're going to dwell a little on your past.
15:35Okay.
15:35Something a little more interesting.
15:37How you used to deal weed and hash back in those days.
15:40Oh, yes.
15:41Was there any particular instances when you nearly got nabbed, and did that cause you to
15:46think of maybe giving up?
15:47And is that even why you gave up?
15:52No, I, uh, so back in the day I needed money.
15:56And I never did drugs.
15:57And, uh, I knew some guys that had drugs.
16:02Ah, yes.
16:03And we're talking the late 80s.
16:05Weed was illegal at the time.
16:06Right.
16:07And so I needed money, and these guys said, here.
16:10And they gave me a brick of hashish.
16:12Oh, my God.
16:13And they said, uh, give us back this much, and whatever you make after that is yours.
16:17I remember sitting down in my bedroom, and I took this little brick of hash, and I cut
16:21it all up into $10 pieces, and I wrapped it up in tinfoil, and I went out, and I saw my friend's brother, and I was like, hey, you smoke hash?
16:29He goes, yeah.
16:30I go, you want to buy some?
16:31He goes, you got?
16:31And I go, yeah.
16:32I go, how much?
16:33I go, $10.
16:33A piece of black hash.
16:36I sell it to my friend's brother.
16:38I'm like, all right, I made my first sale.
16:40I'm a drug dealer now.
16:41And, uh, and maybe about, no, about half an hour later, his brother comes back, goes, I don't want it anymore.
16:47And I go, wait, what?
16:48Because I want my money back.
16:49I'm like, how am I the only drug dealer to return policy?
16:54So me thinking I'm street, right, I grab it, and I go, let me see it.
16:58And I open it up.
16:59Something didn't feel right about it, but I'm like, I don't know, maybe I've been touching it all day.
17:03And I smelt it, but my hands already had the hash on my fingers.
17:06So I'm giving you way too much drug information, but when you break black hash, it's brown on the inside.
17:10Yes.
17:10So I broke it, and it was brownish on the inside.
17:13I go, all right, but I give him his money back.
17:16But I'm like, I'm not convinced.
17:17And then I just went, I put it to my tongue.
17:20He took the hash and gave me back, you know those nibs, the little black licorice?
17:24Oh.
17:25He took a little black licorice and gave it back to me.
17:28Oh, my God.
17:30So I got ripped off on my first drug deal.
17:32Ouch.
17:33I learned very early that that was not the world for me.
17:37So it wasn't even about getting caught.
17:38It was more about getting ripped off.
17:41Oh, man.
17:42Yeah.
17:43Did you sell the rest of it?
17:44I did sell the rest of it, yeah.
17:45Oh, okay.
17:46I had a staunch no return policy after that.
17:49Very strict.
17:51Thanks, Nick.
17:52No problem at all.
17:53Fantastic.
17:57Luke P.
17:58Luke P.
17:59How's it going, Russell?
18:03Hey, Luke P.
18:04How are you?
18:04I'm doing incredible.
18:05I've been a fan of you for 14 years, and I love your stand-ups on Netflix and YouTube, man.
18:11My question for you is, you're Canadian, but live in the United States.
18:16What are some of the best and worst moments of living in the U.S.?
18:20I mean, the best moments of living in the U.S. were all pre-Trump.
18:26And, you know, the worst moments are living in them now, buddy, you know.
18:39It is very frightening, and it is very heartbreaking, what's going on in the world right now.
18:45I mean, you know, I talk about it in my act, you know, because I'm not an American citizen.
18:50I've been there 20 years, and they asked me, are you going to get citizenship?
18:53I said, no.
18:54They said, why not?
18:54I said, I'm not giving up Canadian.
18:55They go, you don't have to.
18:56I go, but I don't want the other one.
18:58I'm very happy with my Canadian citizenship.
19:00And they said, what if they kick you out?
19:01I go, that's not a threat.
19:03What, are you going to send me back to Canada?
19:04That's not a threat.
19:06That's kind of an upgrade.
19:11Thanks again for coming, Russell, and we have all the law of respect for you, ma'am.
19:15You too, Luke.
19:16Thanks, Luke P.
19:22Alex, you're up.
19:30Okay.
19:31So, a bit more of a serious question for you.
19:34Do you ever feel like you've become a safe brown guy for white audiences?
19:38Someone who makes race funny without making it uncomfortable?
19:40I mean, that was always my goal to do that.
19:47Not the safe brown guy part, but, you know, I'm from a different generation.
19:52I grew up in a different generation than the brown kids now.
19:54So, my experience is completely different than their experience.
19:58They have each other to lean against, and I didn't have any.
20:00So, being an Indian kid that grew up in Brampton before, it was majority Indian, and so I hung around the Jamaican kids.
20:11So, my experience, my childhood memories are all very, like, they're very different than the kids now.
20:17Yeah.
20:18So, I don't know if I'm a safe space, but I'm definitely a reminder of what Canada used to look like, or what it used to sound like, even.
20:24Yeah.
20:25Are you happy to see the difference of what it is, or how do you feel about it?
20:27I'm happy to see the difference.
20:28I'm just not happy to see the lack of simulation anymore.
20:31I think it would be great if we all intermingled more, because that's what made Canada so, kept moving us forward.
20:38And the minute we all started to just find our tribe and go away, that separates us, and that defeats the purpose of coming to another country.
20:45Yeah.
20:46Well, thank you.
20:47Thanks.
20:47Nice answer.
20:48Thanks, Alex.
20:50Looking forward to that bag.
20:51Oh, yeah.
20:52Oh, yeah.
21:16Thanks, man.
21:17Well, that's my energy for the day.
21:22No, I'm just kidding.
21:24Everybody feeling good?
21:25Yeah.
21:26Yes.
21:27All right.
21:29Back to the questions.
21:31Next is Sophie.
21:32So, uh, Forbes magazine calls you one of the richest comedians.
21:41One, what do you spend all your money on, what do you spend all your money on?
21:44Taxes.
21:45Taxes.
21:46Taxes.
21:46Taxes.
21:48Taxes.
21:48Taxes.
21:50Ex-wives.
21:51Baby mamas.
21:52Everything but me.
21:53Oh, those were the good old days, weren't they?
21:57Yeah.
21:58Pre-debt, I call it.
22:00Yeah.
22:01Yeah, you know, I think we're all pretty regular people here.
22:06We grew up in normal houses with normal parents.
22:08We didn't live a luxurious life.
22:10We got whatever we got.
22:12And then when you're a kid like me who grew up wanting things that your parents could never afford,
22:17when you start making money, you start buying all the things you ever thought you wanted.
22:21And then when COVID started, it taught me that I didn't need any of these things.
22:27Yeah.
22:28Well, good. Thank you so much.
22:29Thanks, Sophie.
22:32Gen Z.
22:34Gen Z from Gen Z.
22:40Howdy, rascal.
22:42I mean, Russell.
22:44Yep, I do get names wrong.
22:48And, you know, I got to tell you, there were so many cups I've done since age two to present.
22:58And long story.
23:02And do you have any regrets like that in life?
23:06Like, what did you do?
23:07And what happened?
23:08I mean, I think, I don't think I have any regrets.
23:14I mean, there's situations that probably could have handled better, but I wouldn't call them regrets because everything becomes a learning moment, you know?
23:22Yeah.
23:22And I also live a, I'm one of those people who lives a life of oh wells rather than what ifs.
23:28So I think a regret would be, a what if would be a regret.
23:33But what if I did that?
23:34Well, I should have done it then, you know?
23:36Mm-hmm.
23:39Yep, like right now, I'm always like, oh, I shouldn't have done that.
23:44You should have done it.
23:46I guess, I guess I did.
23:47And I'm glad you did.
23:48For sure, yep, I'll take your word on that.
23:52Anyway, it was great meeting you, Russ.
23:53Thanks, Jensie.
23:54Yeah.
23:56Great.
23:58Millie, would you like to close the show for us?
24:01Yay, Millie.
24:02Yay!
24:03So, how was this experience for you?
24:09Was it difficult?
24:10It wasn't difficult at all.
24:12It was actually really fun because I like people that are not, there's no filter.
24:19And I'm no filter.
24:21And so it's like talking to a bunch of me, you know?
24:25So it was great for me.
24:26It was a great experience.
24:27I think you guys are all wonderful.
24:28You got beautiful hearts.
24:30And it's a wonderful thing.
24:33And we thank you.
24:35And it's a pleasure to have you.
24:37Thanks for having me.
24:38Yeah, it's a pleasure to have you, Russell.
24:41That was a good impression of Russell.
24:45Good dancing with you.
24:47Thank you, everyone.
24:48You too.
24:49It's very nice to meet you.
24:50Thanks.
24:50Did he finish it?
24:51No, I did not finish the...
24:53I finished, okay, this part, the bag part, but not the strap.
24:56Oh, yeah.
24:57Yeah, I got it strapped.
24:57That's pretty quick, though.
24:58Yeah, thank you.
24:59It's impressive.
25:00You too.
25:03I got you.
25:03I'm right here.
25:04That's me touching you.
25:06Not in a creepy way, I hope.
25:07There we go.
25:10Thanks, Russell.
25:11Awesome.
25:12Go high.
25:17Bye, brother.
25:18Can I give you a hug?
25:20Thank you, buddy.
25:21I'm nice to meet you, Russell.
25:22You too, brother.
25:23Good to see you.
25:24Good dancing with you.
25:24Let's see it.
25:24Good to see you, Russell.
25:26Good to see you, Russell.
25:26Good to see you, Russell.
25:27Good to see you, Russell.
25:27Good to see you, Russell.
25:28Good to see you, Russell.
25:29Good to see you, Russell.
25:30Good to see you, Russell.
25:30Good to see you, Russell.
25:31Good to see you, Russell.
25:32Good to see you, Russell.
25:33Good to see you, Russell.
25:34Good to see you, Russell.
25:35Good to see you, Russell.
25:36Good to see you, Russell.
25:37Good to see you, Russell.
25:38Good to see you, Russell.
25:39Good to see you, Russell.
25:40Good to see you, Russell.
25:41Good to see you, Russell.
25:42Good to see you, Russell.
25:43Good to see you, Russell.
25:44Good to see you, Russell.
25:45Good to see you, Russell.
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