 Squirrel's still eating. Squirly squirly on the fence, grab that fly on top of my pants. Eat that corn, eat it raw. Suck it through a little straw. I'm uncomfortable. unreal music I'm Rick Tur 있으면 am I supposed to do the throat. It's so juicy. It's so juicy. It's so juicy. It's so juicy. It's so juicy. It's so juicy. It's so juicy. I suddenly turned into a motha. We're acting to an enormous man covered in mayonnaise. An indie song, a Asamese song. It's called Fui Agui Fui. I love that title. Fui, Lui, Agui, Fui. Say this. Kirinjat Busumatari Bodo song. It's Bodo language time. It's a Bodo language song sung by Kirinjat Busumatari. Bodo is, I'm assuming you pronounced it, is the largest ethnolinguistic group in the Assam state of India who usually speak Bodo and Asamese. Have you ever heard of Bodo? Me neither. I don't know, but I think it's Bodo. The song is about a simple love story of a village boy who falls in love with a city girl who came to their village for an educational survey. Here the boy addresses the girl, a sister, as people usually address them if someone meets an unknown girl. Well, cool. We don't get to often see Assamese or Bodo. No, Bodo. I don't know that language I didn't even know about, so this is cool. So would Assamese be spoken more in the more metropolitan areas of Assam and Bodo would be more rural? I thought Assamese was the... Me too. But obviously there's so many languages in so many different cultures. Incredible. Obviously there's a ton. So if there's more from Assam or Bodo songs, please let us know. Please. About to hear the language we've never heard before. Unless it was in one of the films we saw. Yeah. Wonderful. I'll make you cry. No, no, no. I was just wiping my eyebrow. It was just delightful. Yeah, that was wonderful. I loved the singer's voice. I don't know if... One of the... He had a lovely voice. I loved the composition of the song. I think it was really pretty, really lovely, easy to listen to. I thought the video was really cute. Really cute. Very complimentary. Very believable. It almost felt like we were seeing a tourism video. It captured... I don't know you who are in Assam would know way better than we would. But it felt like this was imbued with love for this culture. Just everything. The way it was written. The meter in which it was written. The instrumentation. Everything seemed to be this celebration of this kind of life. These people. This culture. This place in the world. I loved it. I liked it a lot. The people from Assam in the north eastern region of India have such a wonderful look. They look Indian but they also look some other different types from Asia. They're like a mix of all of them. It's like that whole region there. There's a very unique look for all. It's this transition phase from what you would get from the South Indian but they're all so different. But when you go up into the northeast and you start to head up to the Himalayas you go into the regions where there's Nepal and Mongolia and then into the southern portions of China. It was amazing. Wonderful blend. I remember when I was first learning about that because like most things in India had no clue that there were people that were Indian who had that particular kind of genetic look. I was in Kolkata in a restaurant with Indrani and I had just become aware of that for several weeks at that point and our server came over and served us. I said to Indrani, I said, yes, good. Good job. You can pick it out. And it was like, remember those girls that came up to us? Yeah. Which was sad because it was at the beginning of COVID and so they were talking about how people were spitting at them because they looked Chinese but they wanted to know do we look Indian? It's like, yes. We know what awesome you're Indian. Also, if you ever see anybody doing that to somebody, punch them in the face. Yeah, stand up for people where you see hate. One doesn't matter if they were Chinese. No. It's still wrong. Still wrong. It doesn't matter what denomination. Sorry. That's racism and it should be obliterated. Yeah. In the face. Sorry, it makes me very upset. But I would love to learn more about you. Obviously, we want to see more from Assam because we've only actually seen three films from there. Two of them were from Rima Das. And then one of the one which was the one we spoke to the director. What was the film? Ames. Thank you. A phenomenal film. So I'd love to see more so you can let us know what the next would do for another Assamese film. And anything else from that region that we have yet to explore? It's one of the lesser I know it's a smaller industry. It's a smaller industry and we know there's not a lot of information and a lot of content that comes from that region. But anybody that knows as part of the stupid family that can get us more culturally whatever it may be we want to learn more. Yeah. Down below.