Wow in the World
Wow in the World

WeWow on the Weekend

6d ago35:205,682 words
0:000:00

Dennis gets a goldfish and he and Reggie struggle to name it. Then they answer voicemails. Plus an encore episode of, β€œBANG! Where'd the Universe Come From?!” Originally aired 3/1/25.See Privacy Polic...

Transcript

EN

Hey, Bowser fams, Mindy-Year, and before we start the show.

[roars]

Oh, hey, Redge, what's that?

[roars] A new pigeon drop-in? Isn't that the postcard you send out to members of the World Organization of Wowsers every quarter? [roars] Can I see it?

[roars] What?

β€œYou need to see if I'm a member of the WLW first?”

[roars] Come on, it's me, Mindy! [roars] You're not seeing a Mindy on the list! [roars]

Okay, uh, try Mandy, I think Thomas Fingerling signed me up. [roars] [roars] [roars] [roars]

Yes! Can I get my pigeon dropping now?

[roars] What? I gotta wait for it in the mail? [roars] But it's right there! [roars]

[roars] Okay, fine, guess I'll go wait out by the mailbox. [roars] In the meantime, to get the next quarterly mailing from Reggie, you can sign your Walser up to the member of the World Organization of Walsers

by Monday, March 16th. [roars]

β€œIt's so top secret I haven't even seen it yet.”

[roars] Now where did I put my mailbox? [roars] [roars] [roars]

[roars] [roars] [roars] When you sign your Walser up to the member of the World Organization of Walsers, you also get birthday cards in the mail from me and Guy Ross,

access to over 1,000 online activities inspired by our podcast, and a welcome kit from me and Guy Ross, including our autographs in a special t-shirt. Plus, you get to help support all the work that goes into powering the Walser at TinkerCast. [roars]

grownups visit tinkercast.com/membership to sign up today. That's tinkercast.com/membership. That's it, and now let's get back to the show. [roars] [roars]

[roars] [roars] We are on the weekend, we are on the weekend, we are on the weekend, because this is what we do on the weekend, talking laughing, me and Reggie, losing in laughing, and then we awake. No, I said laughing twice. Whatever, we are on the weekend, we are on the weekend, because this is what we do on the weekend. I love and welcome to we are on the weekend, I'm your host Dennis, and that's my co-host, Reggie the giant pigeon.

This is the show where we hang out and should chat and listen to episodes of Tinkercast Podcasts. Hey Reggie, guess what? I got a pet go fish, isn't that exciting?

Yeah, mother said I'm finally responsible enough for a pet, so I got a go fish.

β€œI know, look at its scales, aren't they so shiny and cool?”

No, I haven't named it yet, what kind of name should I pick? Oh yeah, that's your name, how about Dennis? Oh, right, that's my name. Maybe we should just ask the fish what its name is. What's your name? Huh, how do you spell that?

All right, that didn't help, I've used it as sentence. Now I don't understand, okay, we'll just come back to that later, it's time for our next segment, "Rating Revisives". I'm "Rating Revisives" for me, and for "Useies We Fills". Why? Reggie, let's ask the browsers.

The browsers Reggie, let's ask the browsers about fish names. We can get suggestions. Yeah, they can call in or write their ideas in the comments and we can look through them and find the perfect name. I know, it'll be like having a fish-y fish name book. Well,zers, let us know if you have any ideas of what to name this fish because Reggie and I are stuffed.

Okay, let's do a kill when I segment. Yes, I know we were doing reviews, but now I don't feel like it. Keep up Reggie. Ah, the Q&A segment. Alright, let's just get the old answering machine pulled up here. Okay, here we go. Hi, you've reached Dennis from WeWow on the weekend.

That's me. Do you have a question? Well, I do too! Lots of them! And who's gonna answer all my questions? You? Probably not, but I guess I can answer yours. Leave me a message! Hi, Dennis. My name is Eddie. I'm from Florida.

Hi, Heidi.

Huh, why do penguins have wings, but they don't fly? That's a great question, Heidi.

Well, actually Reggie, penguins kind of fly through the water. Yeah, huh, I once saw a video of penguins swimming underwater and it kind of looked like they were flying underwater. And then I saw another video where a fish jumped out of the water and was swimming through the air.

β€œSo that's what I think. Some birds like penguins fly through the water and some fish, like the flying fish swim through the air.”

Oh, Reggie, is water just thick air? Ah, well, look into it. Next question. Hi, I'm in this table and I'm from Oregon. Hi, I have a question. Why don't you like spiders so much? What? Why don't I like spiders so much? I love spiders, spiders are the best.

Reggie, no, I don't like bugs. Spiders aren't bugs, they're arachnids. Here, I even wrote a little song about how much I love spiders and it goes a little something like this.

I love spiders, they are great bugs have six legs and spiders have eight.

They also make really cool webs and stuff and bugs are gross in a dump. Man, it like I'm spiders, spiders, I like your eyes and your spiders. Spiders, spiders, man, I sit on my top and you can sit down beside me. Next question. Fire is cow. Hey cow, what's your got?

β€œI'm wondering if you like to go outside and bring the snow.”

Do I like to go outside and play in the snow? Um, no, I do not. Think how's Reggie, I'm what they call an endorsement. I prefer the warmth and coziness of a couch or a chair or a fort made of pillow willows and blankies. Besides, there's nothing to do outside in the snow.

Okay fine, you can build a snow fort. Okay fine and you can go sledding, I suppose. Right, or skiing, or skating, or have a snow ball fight. Or makes no angels and spell out words with your footsteps.

Or build a snowman, but that's basically it.

Oh, you're right. After you're done playing in the snow, you get to go inside for hot cocoa. I forgot about that part.

β€œOkay, maybe I like going outside and playing in the snow.”

But only so I can come inside and get warm. Thanks for your calls, everyone. If you've got a question for me, call and leave me a message. The number is 1, 8, 8, 8, 7, wow, wow. I just might answer your question on wewawa on the weekend.

Alright, and let me know if you have any ideas of what to name this fish. Okay, yeah, I'll describe it. It's little and orange and gold and has big eyes and it's super cute. Oh, it's looking at me. Do you think it's trying to tell me something?

Yeah, probably not. Okay, let's move on to a little segment I like to call inside. Tinkercast Studios. I'm inside, Dickercast Studios. This is the part where we listen to an episode of one of my favorite Tinkercast podcasts.

And today we're listening to season 2 episode 10 of "Wow in the World" called Bang. Where the universe comes from? That's a good question, Reggie. What did the universe come from? From the universe star?

That doesn't sound right. Ah, a university. Yeah, that's probably it. Well, let's listen and find out. Okay, here we go.

And play. Wewawa will be right back. grownups, this message is for you. Hey grownups, spring is right around the corner. And as schedules fill up with activities and travel,

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That's it! Now back to the show. [Music] Ah, what a beautiful evening.

β€œA clear dark sky quiet and just me and my telescope.”

Nothing, nothing absolutely nothing could take away from this peaceful, and I hope you call it night. Oh, I love looking at the stars. That's it. Downing great guys.

What is that? Over here boys, right this way. What? Yep, that's it. You've got to know it a little bit more from the frying pan section.

Maybe. Hey, now it's middle smoke. [Music] Oh, I'm just representing with my fun and smile. I don't scream you'd ever once they night.

I hear it's quiet and peaceful feel. Maybe I can see them with jumping a little racket. Can you please cut it out? What? Here they are.

They're so sexy. What did you just say? Maybe cut it out.

Oh, I'm holding a second.

I'm going to stick my fan to stop playing. Hey boys, what a win on it. I'm not rolling. Okay. Much better.

I can hear you now. What were you saying? Mindy, what in the world are you doing? What? I was enjoying a peaceful night in this field

looking through my telescope at the stars. Wow. Well, that sounds like fun. Can I take a look? Mindy, why are you making such a racket?

Oh, racket.

β€œGarals, are you talking about those sweet sounds you just heard?”

Can it, boys? Sorry.

Garals, that was my pots and pans band practicing

for our wins in a jamboree. Oh, well, actually I'd have preferred the moonlights in Hanna. Oh, we can do that. Hey, boys.

- Bye! - Oh my god, you ready to go? - No! - And a one, and a two, and a two. - No!

- And a two, and a two, and a two, and a two, and a two, - No! - That's not what I would last me for. - And I just get some facial quietness. - Oh, they're hot.

- And now, you don't have to shout. - And ears. - Ah. - Okay, I guess I'll send the band home. - Time to pack it in, boy.

- Wrap it up. - Thank you. - Okay, so you were saying-- - Well, I was trying to observe the cosmos. - You mean outer space?

- Yeah. - With this little telescope. - Well, yeah, I'm hoping to try and understand the mysteries of our universe. - Mysteries?

- Yeah. - Mysteries like what? - Well, for starters, the biggest mystery of all, which is, had we even get here? - How did we get here?

Well, let me see, we took the 32 bus from Fifth Avenue and Broadway, and then we got up at the wrong stop. - No, no, no, not how did we get here

β€œto this particular park, but how did all of us humans get here?”

Like, how did our planet get here? How did the sun that our solar system and all the stars and planets in the sky get here? - Wait a minute. Are you talking about the origins of our universe?

- Yes. - The source of our existence? - Yes. - Okay, then, I'm going to need to put on my leotard. Where is it?

- And it was what then? - Leotard is sweatband. - Oh, yeah, because gyros, it's time to get met a physical. - Yeah, get it. - Oh, my goodness.

- Here. - I brought you a Mo Mo Mellon Unitard. It's one size fits most, and not sure I'll be needing that. I'm just trying to explore one of the greatest theories in cosmology. - Cosmology, Cosmology, Cosmology.

- Oh, Cosmology, you're talking about the study of our universe, right? - Yep, and one of the greatest scientific theories in cosmology, or explanations based on facts and information found by scientists,

is what's known as the-- - I think I know where this is going. - Well, can you guess? - If I was a betman, I'd say you were talking about the big bang.

- Exactly, Mundo Mindy. I'm talking about the very, very, very beginnings of our universe, and everything and everyone inside of it.

- Man, if only I could hop into the time machine and see it.

- Well, that would be cool, but maybe we don't have to do that.

β€œIn fact, every single night of every single day”

of every single year, each and every one of us can become a time traveler. - Without a time machine, go on. - Here, here, let me show you. - Right now?

- Go ahead, Mundo, look through the telescope. - Okay, well, yeah, let me look through this thing. Hmm, yeah, it's pretty cool. Oh, I think the star I'm looking at is, is that proximate centauri?

- That's the one, and as you know, Mundo, proximate centauri is the closest star in space to our solar system. - Okay, but just to be clear, the closest star to Earth is, of course, our own sun.

- Right, our sun is the center of our solar system. We have eight planets in our system that orbit or circle the sun.

- And I always kind of think of our solar system

as our block or our neighborhood. - Interesting.

β€œ- 'Cause our solar system is kind of like our neighborhood”

but in space. - That's a really interesting way to think about it and Mundo in space, just like with neighborhoods, there are millions and millions more solar systems in space, millions of sons with their own planets

circling around. - Well, does that mean that there are other creatures out there, somewhere in space? - Well, we just don't know for sure, Mundo, but if I had to guess, I'd probably say

there's a decent chance because our planet Earth is just one teeny, teeny, tiny planet in our galaxy. - Our galaxy, known as the Milky Way. - Yep. - Named after a famous candy bar.

- Huh? - Nope. - And in the Milky Way, there are millions of solar systems and astronomers believe

as many as 400 million other planets.

- And that's just our galaxy. - Exactly.

β€œThe Milky Way galaxy is full of 100 million stars”

and 400 million planets, and that's just one galaxy in a universe of a millions or maybe billions more galaxies. - This is so exciting. I can't wait to make friends with aliens. We'll jump rope.

We'll have a lemonade stand. We'll collect pond water and stick it under a microscope. We'll trade baseball cards. We'll be best friends forever. - Well, I'm not so sure that's gonna happen

many times soon, Mindy. - Why? - Well, for starters, the distances in space are so vast, so huge, that even if there are other living creatures somewhere out there in the cosmos,

there's a good chance that if they exist, they haven't figured out how to travel through space in time to come and visit us. - Wait, a minute. I almost forgot, I rose.

You said that if I looked through this telescope, I'd become a time traveler. And Gaira's, I don't know about you, but I'm standing right here right next to you in this park looking up at the stars.

- Single. - Single, Mindy, you got it. - I wouldn't, Bingo, I didn't even know I was playing. - Bingo, as in you hit the nail on the head. - I'm not even holding a hammer.

- You hit the bull's eye. - Well, what color the horseshoe? - Okay, enough with the idioms, I get it, but I don't see how I became a time traveler. - Mindy, just by looking up at that star,

Praxima Centauri, you are seeing the past. You are looking at history happen right before your eyes. - I think I know what you mean. If Praxima Centauri is the closest star to our solar system, it means it's about

4.2 light years away. - Right, it takes the light coming from Praxima Centauri, about 4 years and a few months to reach the earth. - Which means that when I look at the star from here on earth, I'm looking at it four years ago.

- Yes, you and Mindy, we are time travelers right at this very moment. And anybody on planet earth can be one, too. - Wow, we're real life, great, a 100% certified organic non-GMO free range time travelers,

right here in the, wait a minute. - Karaz, why are you so excited? - What do you mean? - I mean, we own a time machine. My dad was working on it for 30 years

and I finally helped him finish it.

- Oh yeah, I almost forgot about that hunk of junk, speaking of which. - Come on, Karaz, get up, put this on quick. - Helmet, why do I need to help it? - Oh, my single Robert requires them

of all passengers now. - Robert, Siegel, what happened to Reggie? - Oh, so Reggie's auditioning for the school play

"Buy By Virti?

So Bob, the Siegel here decided to step in

and help me out.

β€œHe's newly retired, so he's got a lot of free time to fill.”

Where are we going anyway? - My house, come on. - You're house. - Technically, it's a gingerbread mansion. Are you ready?

- I'm not really, but, here we go. (screaming) - I can't believe I missed landing with Reggie. (laughing) Glad I wore that helmet.

Mindy, Mindy, where are you? - Oh, my God, he's just dragging it. - Do you want me to shake out of my garage here? - Give me you, oh, when, oh no, Mindy. Do you know how late it is?

- It's nine o'clock, why? - Well, it's a weeknight. And I was supposed to be in my jammy's a half hour ago. There is no way I can travel through space and time at this very moment.

- Well, good for you. I have the perfect solution. - Uh-oh.

β€œ- We'll go back in time to the very, very,”

very beginning of our universe. - You mean the big bank? - Yep, the big bank.

- You mean 13.8 billion years ago?

- You got it, Galileo. - Well, how do you expect to go back in time? - 13.8 billion years ago, witnessed the big bank and get me home in time in bed by nine PM. - Ah, well, glad you asked me, Compodray,

because after we've witnessed the big bang, all we have to do is set the time machine to 30 minutes before your bedtime and-- - Presto, back with time to spare. - Exactly, Doritos.

You'll have time to brush, floss, rinse, and repeat. - Oh, I love those nights. - I've been deeper in a kiss, I'll let you drive this time. - All right, here, take the keys. - Let's set this baby to 13.8 billion years ago.

- Okay, here we go. (cheering) (dramatic music) - I hope you took care, Antima. - Thank you.

- And Cindy, because this could make you.

(cheering) - We interrupt this program for a brief, Barric Brick. - Wow, in the world we'll return in three, two, one. (cheering) - What a journey!

And so glad you lined the time machine with those covers we use in the back seat of the car. I mean, it really kept the bar for making a big mess. - Yeah, good call, Guy Ros. Plus, it preserves the resale value of the time machine.

- So, Cindy, what are you here? - Nothing. - What is in? - I'm listening. - What do you hear? - Nothing, is it possible to hear nothing?

- Yes, you are hearing nothing, because we are in the middle of nothing. - Hold fun, Guy Ros. If we're in the middle, we have to be in the middle of something if there's nothing, there's no middle.

- Yeah, fair point. So, Mindy, peek through the window here, because we're probably better off keeping the hatch of the time machine close, just to be on the safe side.

Especially once the big bang starts to go bang. - So, look out here, right here, Mindy. - Okay, what do you see? - Outside the window, describe what you see. - Ah, is nothing an answer?

- Yes, that's right, nothing. Naba, Nulka, no dice, nothing. - So, this is where it all began, huh? - Yep, nothing. There is nothing to see here.

Move it along, folks. - No, here, here. - No, there, there. - No, where are what? - Or who, but why?

- Okay, so, if what I think is about to happen will happen very soon, we should start to see the birth of our universe. - You ready? - I'm not seeing anything.

- Wait for it. - I'm very impatient. - Wait for it. - You're not seeing anything. - Wait for it.

- Okay, I can't stand it anymore, Guy Ross. Your sing is gonna be a giant explosion, a bang, and in the universe as we know it is gonna form. - Wow, not exactly. There was probably no single moment

when everything just exploded.

β€œThe truth is, no one really knows how it all happened.”

- So, what are we waiting for? - Well, good question, I am not really sure, but where we are right now? - In the middle of nothing. - In the middle of nothing.

- There's intense energy. Can you feel it? - Oh, good, no, not feeling it. - Hmm, I had hoped we might feel something. - So, are we supposed to see something?

- Well, I'm not sure, I mean, all I know

Is that around 13.

there was this invisible intense energy,

β€œso much heat and pressure that it started to expand”

and expand and expand as that heat and energy expanded and grow. - It started to build our universe. - Yep, all the stars and planets and asteroids and space rocks and eventually are Earth.

- Oh, the truth is you're that.

- Yeah, yeah, I heard something. - It's starting to feel like, like our time machine is being pushed out. - Hey, hey, you feel bad? - Mindy, how we might be experiencing

the earliest phase of the big bay expansion of our universe? - Yeah, and I'm feeling like our time machine is about to get. - Last thing to say.

- Quick, Mindy, type of 13.8 billion years of the future. - Okay, okay, I'm typing as fast as I can. - I don't forget to have those 30 minutes. - Okay, here we go. (screaming)

β€œ- Man, I think, I think we just witnessed”

the start of the big bay.

- Yeah, and Mindy, it's all starting to make sense. - What's starting to make sense? - My trampoline, what? - My trampoline. - You're trampoline.

Garaz, what unplanned it hurts are you talking about? - Wait, let's go to the backyard. I want to show you something on my trampoline. - Garaz, you told me it's a weeknight and you had to be in bed by nine o'clock.

This is no time for jumping on the trampoline. - Come on, Mindy, jump at trampoline. - Ha, I'm so confused. - Right, right, right, come on. Come on, Mindy, come on, get up here.

- Okay, but what does a trampoline have to do with any of this? - Okay, well, think about our universe kind of like a trampoline. - Does it have a basketball hoop attached? - Not for the purposes of this experiment. - Oh, gotcha.

- So imagine that at the center of this trampoline, we put a really heavy bowling ball. - Okay, still not sure why, but all right. So lucky for you, I just happened to have a bowling ball in my backpack here.

- Perfect. - Okay, now imagine our planet Earth is like this baseball here at the edge of the trampoline, okay? - Okay. - When the bowling ball in the center of the trampoline moves,

look what happens to the baseball at the edge. - How it moves, too. - Precisely, Mindy, precisely. This is exactly what the famed physicist Albert Einstein was talking about.

- Wait a minute, you're telling me the Nobel Prize

β€œwinning physicist Albert Einstein had a trampoline?”

- You think he did flips on it? - No, no, no, minty of course not. - But you just said Albert Einstein had a trampoline. - No, no, no, what I'm trying to figure out is Einstein's theory of gravitational waves.

- You're talking about Einstein's theory that if something really big happened out there in distant space, somewhere in the cosmos, we shouldn't theory, feel it right here on Earth? - Yes, the theory of gravitational waves.

Just like when the bowling ball moves at the center of the trampoline, it makes the baseball at the edge of the trampoline move as well. - But did Albert Einstein ever prove his theory? - No, not during his lifetime,

but amazingly Mindy in the past few years, astrophysicists. - You mean the scientists to try to explain how our universe was born? - Right, those scientists,

they detected a gravitational wave here on Earth. - You mean they noticed something big happening in distant space that reached here on Earth? - Yes, exactly here here. Well, let me show you in my bird bath over here.

- And, between your trampoline and your bird bath, your backyard is getting pretty cramped, guys. - So watch as I toss this pebble into the bird bath. - All I see are ripples going out from where you drop the pebble.

- Exactly, those ripples expand out from where the disturbance in the water was, and in this case, the disturbance was caused by the pebble. - So that's sort of like how gravitational waves work.

- Yes, and Mindy, something incredible happened right here

on Earth on August 17th, 2017. And we've just found out about-- - August 17th, oh wait, I know. August 17th is National I Love My Feet Day.

- No, no, no, that's not it, Mindy.

- Oh, sorry, I took a guess. It's also Black Cat Appreciation Day.

β€œ- No, no, no, Mindy, besides those are real holidays,”

they're just made up by marketers to try and get us to buy things and discuss them on morning news shows in the third hour when no one's watching. - Okay, well, you may not love your feet, but I know that on August 17th,

I was soaking my old dogs in a warm bath of absence salt. - Well, on that very same day, Mindy, August 17th, 2017, Astrophysicists detected a gravitational wave, a ripple in space that they were able to detect using a very special laser

that for a brief moment, Mindy stretched and split every single one of us on Earth. - Wait a minute, you're saying we all got stretched and squished on August 17th? - Exactly, Mindy. - Every single human creature and object on planet Earth,

even if we didn't actually feel it,

on that day, a gravitational wave, 130 million years

in the making arrived to our planet and passed through all of us. - You know, come to think of it, I do remember reaching all the way up to that top shelf of my library to check on the status of my Seemunkies and I did it without a stool.

- Well, that sounds like a coincidence, but it is true for the briefest of brief moments we all grew a teeny, tiny bit that day.

β€œ- Well, what happened on August 17th to make that possible?”

- Mindy, on that date, August 17th, 2017, Astrophysicists working in labs around the world, all detected a spectacular explosion that happened 130 million years ago. - Wait a minute, 130 million years ago?

- Yes, a ginormous explosion in distant space and explosion that is so far away,

it took 130 million years for us to see it here from Earth.

- Wow, that's sort of like when we were looking at the stars earlier tonight. - Exactly, we were looking at the star, Proxima Centauri, and that star's light took four years for us to see it now.

- Right, because Proxima Centauri is a star that's about four light years away from Earth. - Which by my calculations would take us about 165, thousand human years to get to on the space shuttle?

β€œ- Wow, really? - Well, yeah, because we humans”

don't have the technology to travel as fast as light does. - Mindy, what happened 130 million years ago was so powerful, so incredibly huge that it created a gravitational wave, just like on the trampoline, just like in my burn back.

- So, what caused the explosion? - Well, two giant neutron stars collided in explosion so big, it's called a telenova. - And neutron stars are small stars,

but very, very powerful stars.

- So powerful, Mindy, that in that moment when those two neutron stars crashed into each other, it produced an explosion more powerful than all of the energy our own son could make in 10 billion years.

- You're talking about a gamma ray burst. - That's exactly what astrophysicists believe they all witnessed, and even though that explosion has long passed, the energy from that explosion just reached us here on Earth in 2017.

- That's bunker balls. - And it's not just bunker balls, it's beyond bunker balls, Mindy, because this discovery has helped astrophysicists get one step closer to understanding

just how our universe was created. - Colour me impressed. - Man, it gets better Mindy, because this gravitational wave wasn't just detected by the special laser astrophysicist use, a NASA satellite up in space, called Fermi,

was also able to see that massive explosion. - Wow, so what happened after the explosion? - This is where it gets even more amazing. - What? - Well, that explosion created

1,000 trillion tons of gold. - Oh, quick guys, get into the time machine. We're gonna be rich, we're gonna be rich. - Well, well, hold on just a minute there, Mindy, because even if we could get up there,

we'd probably get turned into dust simply because that explosion was hot hotter than anything we've ever known. - But 1,000 trillion tons of gold,

I mean, at today's price of gold.

- Okay, so one gram is about $40.

β€œOne ton is 97,000 grams, so 97,000 grams”

times a trillion. - Mindy, that would be. - Mindy, don't, don't that calculation is too big for your calculator. - Don't worry, little buddy, just a few more adjustments.

- Mindy, it's too big a number, you're gonna, wow. - Short circuit. - Matters start saving for a new calculator.

Mindy, I just had some gold to buy one way.

- Oh, no, I'm going to bet 'cause I know where this adventure's gonna am. - But if we just put on our heat shield in the time machine. - No way, no way, besides, if I don't get eight hours of sleep, I get really crumpy in the morning.

- Come on, don't be a party pooper. Just one little trip in the time machine. - No way. - Mindy, just one teeny, tiny, itsy, busy journey to the greatest gold Russian history.

β€œ- I think a stick was staying here on earth for now.”

- Okay, well how about a good night, Lullaby? - That sounds really nice, what you got? - Oh, my pots and pans band wrote something special for this very occasion. - No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.

- We call it the sweet super-nobas and that guy. - Like it. (upbeat music) - Wow, that was so cool. - Oh, can you believe there used to be no universe?

- Like there used to be no weewaw on the weekend, just a big empty space in the cosmos

where an incredible podcast should be.

And then, boom, there we were. It really makes you think. (crying) - Hey, Ratchy.

β€œ- Ooh, should we get the pots and pans band back together?”

(crying) - Yeah, you're right, that was a horrible band. - Well, let's wrap this up. (crying) Thanks to all you listeners out there

for tuning into Weewaw on the weekend. - You have a question for me, right? Or a name for the goldfish, call and leave me a message. At 1, 8, 8, 8, 7, wow, wow. That's one, 8, 8, 8, 7, wow, wow.

I just might answer your question on Weewaw on the weekend. - Okay, should we do the goodbye song? - All right, let's do it. (crying) β™ͺ That's the end of the show β™ͺ

β™ͺ I need to go and contemplate the fabric of existence β™ͺ β™ͺ And name this goldfish β™ͺ β™ͺ But I'll do another show tomorrow β™ͺ β™ͺ But for now it's the end of the show β™ͺ Bye!

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