00:00:00
so let me tell you guys a little story
00:00:01
okay this this is a true story this
00:00:02
actually really did happen so a couple
00:00:04
years ago I went to Belgium for the
00:00:05
first time in the city of Brussels and
00:00:07
uh I decided hey why don't I do a
00:00:09
subscriber Meetup because I have quite a
00:00:11
few subscribers in Belgium you know I
00:00:13
decided to meet up with everybody in the
00:00:14
grand PL the gr class the what's it in
00:00:18
Mar or something I don't know so I met
00:00:19
you guys about 20 of my Belgian
00:00:21
subscribers came and showed up and it
00:00:23
was really cool meeting you guys I got
00:00:24
to talk with a lot of you guys and then
00:00:25
I remember there was a moment and if you
00:00:27
were one of these people you'll remember
00:00:29
that I did this we all stood in like a
00:00:31
big circle and I told all my Belgian
00:00:34
subscribers I'm like hey guys I'm glad
00:00:35
you guys showed up I'm glad you're here
00:00:37
it's nice to meet you I just have a
00:00:38
little question I'm just curious how
00:00:40
many of you guys are from the Flemish
00:00:42
speaking community and about half of the
00:00:44
group raised their hands and I'm like
00:00:46
okay how how many of you guys are Woon
00:00:48
or the the French speaking community and
00:00:49
of course the rest of the group rolls
00:00:51
their hands and in that moment it was
00:00:52
like the world froze over time Stood
00:00:55
Still everybody just like tensed up wide
00:00:57
eyes they were staring intensely at the
00:01:00
linguistic counterparts of their fellow
00:01:01
countrymen they're like hesitating
00:01:03
waiting for the next one to make a move
00:01:05
it was at this moment I realized I kind
00:01:06
of lit the fuse for like an atomic bomb
00:01:09
of awkwardness and I'm like okay dude I
00:01:11
got okay I I'm like I got to diffuse
00:01:13
this situation somehow and so like after
00:01:16
I don't know like three excruciatingly
00:01:19
Eternal seconds later I just like perked
00:01:22
up and I'm just like well you guys are
00:01:24
all belgians in in a split second just
00:01:26
like a light switch everybody was just
00:01:27
like they relaxed they started smiling
00:01:29
they're like yeah we are belgians and we
00:01:32
all became friends and then we went to
00:01:34
delirium bar and then I got I remember I
00:01:36
got a beer that was like 133% alcohol I
00:01:38
don't even like beer I don't like beer
00:01:40
but like when you're in Belgium you kind
00:01:41
of have to I don't know my my rule for
00:01:43
alcohol is like if I absolutely must
00:01:45
drink it then like you got to hit me
00:01:46
hard and fast because that that sounds
00:01:48
wrong but no I'm serious because like
00:01:50
that's the way I like it doesn't help
00:01:52
the point is away from the alcohol stuff
00:01:54
the point is after I did that weird like
00:01:56
French Flemish Fiasco experiment thing
00:02:00
that was just like the first little
00:02:03
taste I got of realizing how
00:02:05
frighteningly unique Belgium is let's
00:02:08
have a joger
00:02:13
talk hey jogger peeps oh my gosh golly
00:02:16
Jolly toddly wones what have we here
00:02:18
it's a geography now blood of those who
00:02:21
fat F the freedom shirt a lot of my new
00:02:23
subscribers are probably like what the
00:02:25
is that shirt why is there blood on it
00:02:26
it's it's an old joke if you don't
00:02:28
understand it to that I just say
00:02:31
don't question it just get it Destiny
00:02:32
will reveal itself in time geography
00:02:34
now.com lot of cool stuff do it blah
00:02:36
blah blah it's not selling out if it's
00:02:37
your brand and it's my brand so I'm not
00:02:38
selling out anyway let's move on when
00:02:41
most people around the world say I'm
00:02:43
going to Europe nine times out of 10
00:02:45
they're probably just going to go to
00:02:46
like Italy Spain or France maybe the
00:02:48
more like Broody pensive slightly
00:02:51
pedantic people will go to the UK or
00:02:53
Scandinavia whereas the competitive
00:02:55
tripsters that are always trying to
00:02:57
boast about new hidden gems that they
00:02:59
swear they discovered they'll probably
00:03:00
be like oh well I discovered a secluded
00:03:03
beach off the coast of Albania that
00:03:05
nobody's heard of except for the locals
00:03:07
but almost no one practically no one
00:03:10
ever screams to the group oh my God guys
00:03:13
we're going to
00:03:15
Belgium for my fellow Americans the
00:03:17
equivalent to that would be like oh my
00:03:19
God guys we're going to North
00:03:22
Dakota no [ __ ] on North Dakota by the
00:03:24
way you guys got a lot of interesting
00:03:25
stuff too like that Enchanted Highway
00:03:27
you got like one of the highest
00:03:28
concentrations of Buffalo you got the
00:03:30
Sue tribe with their cool traditions and
00:03:32
performances like North Dakota is
00:03:33
actually kind of cool but the point is
00:03:35
Belgium is kind of known for being like
00:03:38
that like it's not exactly known for
00:03:39
being like a beach resort country I mean
00:03:41
they do have like 65 km of beach on the
00:03:44
cold North Sea and like for 3 weeks of
00:03:46
the year they have like nice sunshine
00:03:47
and for the rest of the year it kind of
00:03:48
just looks like this speaking of which
00:03:50
you would think it would make sense for
00:03:51
this area to belong to Belgium but it's
00:03:53
actually a detached exclave of the
00:03:55
Zealand province in the Netherlands and
00:03:57
see that's just one part of what I see
00:03:59
as the real true charm of Belgium when I
00:04:02
think of Belgium I kind of think of like
00:04:04
it's it's like a puzzle that never gets
00:04:06
solved cuz once you get close more
00:04:08
pieces get added to it and then you can
00:04:09
never finish the puzzle and you're doing
00:04:11
the puzzle while bouncing on a unicycle
00:04:13
on a tight RPP and you're like trying to
00:04:14
solve a Rubik's Cube with your other
00:04:16
hand first of all dissecting the concept
00:04:18
of the Belgian identity is already
00:04:20
complicated enough as it is why I don't
00:04:22
have time to explain just watch the
00:04:23
Belgium episode no I got to explain
00:04:25
Belgium is like a fusion country so
00:04:28
basically it's made up of the the north
00:04:30
Flemish speaking side and the South
00:04:32
French speaking side so like here's the
00:04:34
deal I'm not going to waste your time by
00:04:35
giving you like an 847 hour lecture
00:04:37
about Belgian history because like trust
00:04:39
nobody nobody not even Belgian people
00:04:42
want to do that okay so I'm just going
00:04:43
to give you like the very quick
00:04:44
cliffnote summarized version okay
00:04:46
basically Romans came in the Latin
00:04:48
speakers bada bing bada boom that's how
00:04:49
the French stuff evolved then like
00:04:51
Germanic peoples came in I think in like
00:04:53
the 9th to 10th centuries or whatever
00:04:55
that's how bada bing bada boom the
00:04:56
Flemish people evolved from that done
00:04:58
and then like over the CES they were
00:05:00
taken over by various kingdoms and
00:05:02
Empires blah blah blah 1830 comes along
00:05:04
they find some German guy to be their
00:05:06
King and they become Belgium and in the
00:05:09
world of monarchial Ascension 1830 is
00:05:12
actually considered pretty late like
00:05:13
only two other countries actually
00:05:15
adopted a monarchial system after
00:05:16
Belgium it's like UAE and Bhutan
00:05:19
technically but then you know some
00:05:20
people will argue well actually the UAE
00:05:22
was just a separate community of shakeds
00:05:24
that already had a hereditary monarchial
00:05:26
system set in place whatever the point
00:05:27
is most countries don't adopt monarchies
00:05:30
post 19th 20th century okay anyway we're
00:05:34
getting off topic but the crazy thing is
00:05:36
it's always been divided when you go to
00:05:38
Brussels you really see this being
00:05:41
portrayed it's almost like the whole
00:05:42
city has an insane amount of deliberate
00:05:44
Fusion you walk down one alley and
00:05:46
you'll notice Alleyways with the skinny
00:05:48
narrow buildings with the step and Bell
00:05:50
gable roof facades very iconic of
00:05:52
classic Dutch architecture it feels like
00:05:54
you're in a neighborhood of Amsterdam
00:05:55
but then you go like two blocks away and
00:05:57
then suddenly you're in a wide Avenue
00:05:59
neighborhood with French cream colored
00:06:01
Stone manian buildings it's like you
00:06:03
just stepped into Paris it's almost as
00:06:06
if the whole city is like fighting with
00:06:07
itself to see which side of its dual
00:06:09
identity will become more dominant it's
00:06:11
weird but once you step out of that
00:06:13
whole like culture Clash thing you start
00:06:14
to realize this city is really cozy
00:06:18
immediately you're hit with both the
00:06:19
sweet and savory smells of the copious
00:06:21
amounts of chocolate waffle shops next
00:06:23
to the m fre restaurants that sell
00:06:26
buckets of muscles with fries that you
00:06:28
can dip in special mayonnaise by the way
00:06:30
my opinion I don't care I'm just going
00:06:31
to say it Belgium makes the best
00:06:33
chocolate in Europe Switzerland I've
00:06:35
tried your chocolate meh Belgium oh my
00:06:37
damn Belgium wins fight me on that I
00:06:39
don't care the belgians beat the Swiss I
00:06:41
know the belgians will fight you on it
00:06:43
and they're going to win cuz they have
00:06:44
better chocolate sorry Switzerland you
00:06:45
lose try to be neutral on that fight I
00:06:48
just pissed off like 9 million people
00:06:50
wouldn't be my first time and in
00:06:52
addition you have like those small cozy
00:06:54
book shops that sell like old antique
00:06:56
books and they have so many comic book
00:06:58
shops as well because they're like
00:07:00
famous for their comic books like Smurfs
00:07:02
and asteris and Tintin they even have an
00:07:05
entire metro station devoted to Tintin
00:07:07
which by the way fun fact I have read
00:07:09
every single Tintin comic even the
00:07:11
extremely racist one that they had to
00:07:12
revise and give you know a disclaimer
00:07:14
for contemporary audiences look they
00:07:15
made the comic in the' 40s like let's be
00:07:17
real so I'm not Belgian and I can't
00:07:19
speak for belgians and if you're Belgian
00:07:21
please by all means correct me if you
00:07:23
think I'm wrong for what I'm about to
00:07:24
say I'm just someone observing from the
00:07:26
outside but like if you meet Belgian
00:07:28
people and if You observe Belgian
00:07:30
Society you'll notice that there's kind
00:07:31
of like a topic that's kind of not
00:07:33
really comfortably discussed a lot but
00:07:35
it's a really well-established known
00:07:37
part of their social structure it's like
00:07:39
if you look at Belgian culture and
00:07:41
Belgian media and Belgian historical
00:07:42
figures and whatever encompasses the
00:07:44
influence that Belgian has ever procured
00:07:46
for themselves over the years there
00:07:48
always kind of seems to be like a
00:07:50
domineering emphasis on the French side
00:07:53
of things despite the fact that the
00:07:55
Flemish are actually the majority of the
00:07:57
country at about 60% even during
00:07:59
colonial times when they had colonies in
00:08:01
the DRC and Rwanda and Bundi they
00:08:03
imposed the French language not the
00:08:05
Flemish one on the colonies when you
00:08:06
come across any Belgian comic books or
00:08:09
like literature or whatever it's always
00:08:10
the French ones that are prioritized to
00:08:12
be on display and distributed first not
00:08:15
the Flemish or even Dutch ones why is
00:08:17
that that's because historically French
00:08:19
was kind of seen as like the
00:08:20
aristocratic language that was used by
00:08:22
the high class Society whereas flamish
00:08:25
was more of like The Agrarian quote
00:08:27
unquote subclass Society language the
00:08:29
thing is because of this linguistic
00:08:31
demographic Oddity so to speak Belgium
00:08:33
has always had a very complicated way of
00:08:35
managing itself which eventually led to
00:08:36
the country having six State reforms
00:08:39
since the 1970s which would eventually
00:08:41
lead them to being the country with
00:08:42
quite possibly the strangest form of
00:08:45
government on Earth I would argue even
00:08:47
more than bosnan and heroina because at
00:08:48
least those people are all like cousins
00:08:49
that have family drama the belgians are
00:08:51
like two complete separate technically
00:08:53
three families we'll get into that it's
00:08:54
so complicated I have to make a motion
00:08:56
graphic visual to help you guys cuz like
00:08:58
you know funny colorful pictures help
00:08:59
people learn brain here you go today the
00:09:02
country is broken down into three
00:09:03
regions Flanders the Dutch Flemish
00:09:05
speaking side Walia the French speaking
00:09:07
side and Brussels which is essentially
00:09:09
the capital city Brussels which is
00:09:10
officially a bilingual region all
00:09:12
services must be offered in both
00:09:14
languages despite having a French
00:09:15
majority speaking population at about
00:09:17
80% and despite being completely
00:09:19
enclaved within Flanders which makes
00:09:21
things more complicated and in that
00:09:22
regard belgum also has governments set
00:09:24
in place for the three linguistic
00:09:26
communities for all citizens the Flemish
00:09:27
Community French community and the third
00:09:29
German community for the small German
00:09:31
speaking areas that are found in the
00:09:32
Eastern parts of alunia sometimes
00:09:34
referred to as ipen M that's right the
00:09:36
German areas are considered part of
00:09:37
alunia they do not have their own region
00:09:39
however they have their own Community
00:09:41
status despite only making up about 1%
00:09:43
of the population oh but we're not done
00:09:44
there are certain municipalities that
00:09:46
are located in a region that speak the
00:09:48
opposite language of that region and are
00:09:50
allowed linguistic services and
00:09:52
Facilities to accommodate they are
00:09:53
mostly along the borders currently there
00:09:55
are almost 30 of them four Flemish
00:09:57
speaking municipalities and two German
00:09:59
speaking municipalities in wallonia
00:10:01
whereas there are 12 French speaking
00:10:02
municipalities for French speakers in
00:10:04
Flanders and nine in the German
00:10:06
community areas now here's the grand
00:10:08
finale each of these regions and
00:10:10
communities has their own separate
00:10:12
Parliament that share equal status with
00:10:13
the federal government except the
00:10:15
Flemish Community because they decided
00:10:17
to merge with the Flemish region and
00:10:19
operate as one so effectively that makes
00:10:21
five parliaments as well as the federal
00:10:23
government making up six entire entities
00:10:25
with co-official and equal status but
00:10:27
each one has distinct roles that cannot
00:10:29
not overlap the other so what do I mean
00:10:31
by they can't overlap each other all of
00:10:33
the parliaments are co-equal okay but
00:10:35
they each have their own distinct roles
00:10:37
think of it like this imagine a retail
00:10:39
store okay you got three employees
00:10:41
they're all paid the same wage but one
00:10:42
person works the cashier one person
00:10:44
folds the clothes the other person
00:10:45
stocks the shelves they all have their
00:10:47
own individual duties but they are all
00:10:49
equal in their wages and employeeship I
00:10:52
don't know maybe the cloes folding
00:10:53
person is kind of lazy and they're just
00:10:54
not doing their job very well but they
00:10:55
maybe they need to be cut I don't know
00:10:57
that's basically Belgium's government so
00:10:58
for example the federal government they
00:11:01
are in charge of Defense foreign policy
00:11:03
justice social security finance and
00:11:04
Railways the regions are in charge of
00:11:07
making the laws for their economies
00:11:09
Transportation environment housing and
00:11:11
infrastructure whereas the communities
00:11:13
are in charge of making laws for
00:11:15
Education culture Media Health and
00:11:17
language policies and that means things
00:11:19
like the federal government can't do
00:11:21
anything about education the regional
00:11:22
governments can't make laws on foreign
00:11:24
policy the community government can't
00:11:26
make laws for transportation they are
00:11:28
co-equal but distinct in their duties
00:11:31
and speaking of governments let's talk
00:11:32
about the federal government and this is
00:11:34
going to blow your mind because imagine
00:11:36
all the craziness we just discuss you
00:11:37
know the Flanders Woon the communities
00:11:40
the French Brussels grab all of that and
00:11:43
then shove them all in a room and tell
00:11:45
them to try to agree on things that's
00:11:47
the federal government Belgium is a
00:11:49
federal parliamentary constitutional
00:11:51
monarchy yes as we mentioned they have a
00:11:53
monarch or a king whose role is mostly
00:11:55
ceremonial but he does have some certain
00:11:57
powers like he appoints the prime
00:11:58
ministers and he signs certain laws but
00:12:01
then it gets really twisted and weird
00:12:03
because in order to form a government
00:12:05
they have to do a lot of for this I need
00:12:06
a Belgian person so guys say hi to my
00:12:09
number one go-to Belgian that I randomly
00:12:11
met in turkistan jul hi barbs nice of
00:12:14
you to call how are you doing oh I'm
00:12:16
good I'm just pre-recording all this
00:12:17
footage pretending like we're having a
00:12:18
real conversation in real time but I'm
00:12:20
just stitching up all the clips together
00:12:21
making it look like we're having a real
00:12:22
dialogue I feel you bro I'm just reading
00:12:25
the part you sent me so that's great so
00:12:27
jeel explain to me like I'm a brain
00:12:29
damaged 7-year-old kid who wants to
00:12:31
understand how the Belgian government
00:12:33
works well first of all that's going to
00:12:35
be quite impossible for you I mean the
00:12:37
brain damage kit will be fine what the
00:12:39
Belgian Federal Parliament is by Camal
00:12:41
it's mandatory for belgians to go out
00:12:43
and cost their vote and when all votes
00:12:45
are accounted for in a piece each party
00:12:47
knows how many seats it has obtained
00:12:49
Weir side note a party is mostly only
00:12:52
represented on one side of the language
00:12:54
barrier so that means whether you live
00:12:56
in Bonia or flounders May entire change
00:12:59
your voting ballot and who you can vote
00:13:01
for or what party you can vote for does
00:13:03
the king have any role in all of this I
00:13:05
was literally about to explain don't Dr
00:13:07
please what the the king now appoints a
00:13:09
format typically the party leader of the
00:13:12
party with the most seats in the chamber
00:13:13
but this can differ this person goes
00:13:15
dating around with other party leaders
00:13:17
to try and see who would like to form a
00:13:19
coalition he goes dating around what do
00:13:21
you mean by dating around because in
00:13:23
Belgium to form a government that is
00:13:25
functional you'll need at least 76 seats
00:13:28
in the chamber of of Representatives
00:13:30
otherwise a 50% plus one majority of
00:13:33
votes you'll need to pass an ordinary
00:13:35
federal act in the chamber parties need
00:13:38
to compromise and argue over everything
00:13:41
and until they are done arguing we have
00:13:43
no government and that's not quite
00:13:45
uncommon Belgium has been without a
00:13:46
government a lot of times in the past
00:13:49
decades oh yeah and didn't you guys have
00:13:50
like a world record for not having a
00:13:52
government thing 500 something what was
00:13:54
that about our golden football
00:13:55
generation they might have not won the
00:13:57
World Cup but at least we're still world
00:13:59
champion and longest government
00:14:01
formation it took us 541 days in 2011 to
00:14:05
finally form a government that's quite a
00:14:07
while during Times Like These it's not
00:14:09
like Belgium freezes to death or
00:14:11
something like that life goes on people
00:14:13
don't care and often times even a
00:14:15
caretaker government steps in and
00:14:17
handles the essential Affairs by the way
00:14:19
if you're ever elected into parliament
00:14:21
in Belgium I hope you're fluent in Dutch
00:14:23
and French because otherwise you won't
00:14:26
understand because it's a mixup over
00:14:27
here nominal loger
00:14:37
does like a random German guy from the
00:14:39
German community ever come up and like
00:14:40
speak in German in the parliament well
00:14:42
of course he can but is anyone going to
00:14:43
listen to a minority I can imagine it's
00:14:45
like okay yeah that's cute now sit down
00:14:47
mommy and daddy Flanders and Woon are
00:14:48
speaking you're lucky we bend over
00:14:50
backwards for you
00:14:51
1centers and I just pissed off 880,000
00:14:54
Germans thanks for having me bars and if
00:14:56
I just may have the attention of the
00:14:58
geography for a few more seconds fine if
00:15:01
you're fluent in Dutch and between the
00:15:03
ages of 18 and 35 then may I introduce
00:15:06
you Mundo Travel Mundo is a travel
00:15:08
company that allows you to travel the
00:15:10
world I'm currently a two guide over
00:15:12
there and I'm loving life so if you're
00:15:14
interested on one of our tours we would
00:15:16
love to have you in 2025 or Beyond
00:15:18
thanks again Paul see you buddy J you're
00:15:20
a tour guide now when I first met you
00:15:22
weren't you like working for you got a
00:15:23
new job yay cool congrats jul mandero
00:15:26
travel he's a tour guide there that was
00:15:27
also kind of weird how you asked for
00:15:29
Dutch speakers but you were saying the
00:15:30
whole thing in English we could have
00:15:31
added captions if you wanted to you know
00:15:32
what it's it's done and done whatever
00:15:33
thank you jeel for being in the video so
00:15:35
we've just discussed all of that
00:15:37
legislative complication stuff about
00:15:39
Belgium right but you know what's even
00:15:40
crazier the story doesn't end cuz it
00:15:42
gets even more complicated because there
00:15:44
are sections of Belgium that are
00:15:46
nonsensically chopped up and Scattered
00:15:49
in the most in congruent ways all across
00:15:51
the whole country and their neighbors if
00:15:53
you zoom in on the East part of the
00:15:55
country Germany has five enclaves within
00:15:57
Belgium but are only only separated by a
00:15:59
single train track only a few meters
00:16:01
wide that belongs to Belgium so you can
00:16:03
literally walk a straight line in
00:16:06
Belgium in between two parts of Germany
00:16:09
along the Lee River along the border
00:16:10
with France they have strange tradeoff
00:16:13
pen enclaves on the opposite sides of
00:16:15
the river for each other then of course
00:16:17
there's the famous town of barl nasau in
00:16:20
which borders literally intersect entire
00:16:22
buildings and the rule is you pay taxes
00:16:24
to whatever country your door is on so
00:16:26
you could technically reconstruct your
00:16:27
door on the other side if you wish to
00:16:29
change your taxes and on top of that
00:16:30
Brussels has an entire Province called
00:16:32
Luxembourg which is larger than the
00:16:34
entire country of Luxembourg and you
00:16:36
know what's even crazier a long time ago
00:16:38
a bunch of luxembourgers moved to
00:16:40
Wisconsin and they named the town
00:16:42
Belgium and it's even crazier a bunch of
00:16:44
belgians moved to Wisconsin as well and
00:16:47
they named their Town Luxembourg and
00:16:49
what's even crazier is just North of
00:16:51
both of them there are two more towns
00:16:53
called Brussels and namore namore being
00:16:55
the main city in wuna to be fair though
00:16:58
Wisconsin is the drunkest state in
00:16:59
America so it's like it's not a shocker
00:17:01
that they either drunkenly name places
00:17:03
like frog station Sugar Bush bolt and
00:17:06
Random Lake or if they just got lazy and
00:17:08
stole a bunch of other place names like
00:17:10
Alaska Denmark Poland Moscow Vermont
00:17:14
Wyoming and Little Chicago oh my God I
00:17:17
love Wisconsin people i' I've said this
00:17:18
so many times on the channel every
00:17:20
American needs at least one friend from
00:17:23
Wisconsin that I've never met a
00:17:24
Wisconsin person that hasn't been able
00:17:25
to like make me crack up and laugh
00:17:27
anyway this video is not about Wisconsin
00:17:29
look I'm just going to end with this
00:17:30
okay look Belgium I know it's kind of
00:17:31
like a common theme for like other
00:17:33
countries in Europe to kind of bag on
00:17:35
you guys and you're like uh you're kind
00:17:37
of bland you're not that you're not
00:17:38
interesting enough and I know sometimes
00:17:40
even you guys are like very
00:17:41
self-deprecating you're like oh my
00:17:43
country blah blah blah but I'm going to
00:17:45
be honest like I when I went to Brussels
00:17:47
and I even drove a little bit in wallia
00:17:48
but when I checked out your country I
00:17:50
was fascinated I've never seen a place
00:17:52
that had such a stark demographic
00:17:54
dichotomy Clash but was still able to
00:17:57
maintain some kind of sense of I guess
00:18:00
Poise and dignity amongst it all it's
00:18:03
crazy cuz it's like you guys should fall
00:18:05
apart but you just won't something about
00:18:08
you guys just you need each other and
00:18:10
you keep staying together it's the
00:18:13
weirdest thing ever and I really think
00:18:15
that's your biggest charm that's kind of
00:18:17
how I see Belgium you're the most
00:18:19
chaotic thing that works and that type
00:18:21
of stuff fascinates me and I wish the
00:18:23
world would see you guys in that type of
00:18:26
confusingly unique light if that makes
00:18:29
sense all right that's my video hope you
00:18:30
guys liked it cheers stay cool stay
00:18:32
tuned