 Come close her Welcome to life lessons and film shorts where we're thinking of doing also just sprinkling in some shorter videos of things We've just been reflecting on and some such what not what have you yeah, well you called us here. You called the meeting So we just recorded Yes Lessons we gleaned from if feel street could talk And then I was playing the main song Yeah, and I was just thinking which I've been thinking the whole time right because I went and researched everything about the actors and the score Afterwards and then discovered that Nicholas brittle. I think his name is He yeah put the score together and he also put the score together for moonlight apparently And I thought that he was a black guy. So this is a guess where I'm like, oh, is this gonna be controversial? You know because I'm all I'm always going well I mean I've mentioned a couple of times here, but Outside of YouTube. I'm always going on about things like well How do you even know what is being black and how what is being white? You know because really? There isn't any Like static well, you know maybe maybe how he captured because you know you were saying and I agree with you like We both kind of assumed that the composer for feel street could talk was it was a black composer Yeah, just you know seemed to capture the what the characters themselves are going through, you know Yeah, as though he had the black experience But maybe maybe maybe the the direction was you know just right universal themes, right like the kind of music of like Well in the sense of like just right what what you would feel would be two young lovers Trying to make it in the world against all odds kind of thing. There is that you know, but Right, you know, and by the way for me this Reinforces my thinking that this guy is extremely intelligent So there's this movie guess who's coming to dinner. It turns out, you know We should totally come ridden by a white guy and he covers black experiences so well, it's scary I was like, how does this just these little things that if you're a black person and you're watching it You know, you know stuff that we say to each other about life and Dynamics of every day existence as a black person that you will never really say you can say to other black people Because you know like it's a it's a space where you can talk about these things and the person will understand It doesn't necessarily mean you're bad person or that you have issues or whatever But then you won't really explain it to other people because maybe they might get uncomfortable Even though it's not something that's a big deal, but this guy covers that kind of stuff In guess who's coming to dinner and we were just incredibly just And so I that's how I feel about Nicholas Birdo. I'm honestly when I was watching this the first Few seconds into the movie. I cried. I thought we'd have to try like 10 times to get through the movie Yeah, the second time again. I cried afterwards. I'm crying out of my mind I'm writing poetry. I'm reflecting on my life. This movie hit me Everywhere and in my pores Yeah, well, I you know it kind of makes me think of like when for the interstellar movie Christopher Nolan asked Hans Zimmer He said I'm not gonna tell you anything about the movie But the main theme is kind of the relationship between the father and the daughter and kind of like that I'm needing to reconnect and like and so Hans Zimmer had written something that was kind of related to his relationship with his son Right turned out it was like a science fiction movie and all that but and so in the you know But the theme still in my opinion work I think it's beautiful music in that movie Yeah, but that was kind of his thing as he's like, you know In a way it was more related because he's like well, this is from kind of relationship between me and my son So son a father and daughter. It's similar, you know can kind of still work It's not quite, you know as different I guess but maybe it was that kind of thing where he just gave certain directions to write You know or maybe again the guy just tapped into just Truly so I think yeah, like you're right and we said we mentioned this when we were talking about the longer video is that Even if you're not you a black person who ever experienced what Fani and Tish experience You can still find Relevance in that movie to your own life So I think that anyone can watch that movie and completely Understand what it was that was going through their minds their hearts what it must have been like in that way Then maybe Nicholas Brittle a person who is white Wrote this beautiful score and I thought it was a black guy still they're just do you know how I would say right? I was the same right now because I'm like if I never saw Bonnevere or Fleet foxes or Bjork or You can still say it's actually pepper. I wouldn't I wouldn't know but I got tricked by this guy I don't know if it's Like a intellectual Intelligence or if it's like an emotional intelligence, maybe musical intelligence or musical intelligence, you know Directors like I'm going for this kind of Sam. Yeah. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah, let's these instruments with this combination and with from this era Yeah, but this guy Nicholas Brittle Yeah, I'm Incredibly impressed by you. Yeah, very skilled. Yeah, there is no static idea of anything Yeah, what a certain person can and can't do. Yeah, exactly. Yeah Yeah, but I was tricked. I gotta be honest and I'm human. I'm not perfect You know as much as I know that there's no way of being there's no Static way of being black static way of being white. I still can get tricked because I'm human. I'm flawed, right? So that's all I want to say Yeah Come on, I said some stuff. Anyway, okay. Bye. I get it