 I am a lumberjack and I am okay. I work in the woods all day. Oh, that's it. Okay. Hey, welcome back to our Stupid Reactions Units. I'm Corbin. I'm Rick. And you can follow us on Instagram and Twitter for more juicy content. And you can follow us on Patreon, follow us on official Twitter account, ring the bell for you part of the notification squad. Hold on. My other hand is full. Mama's drinking. Today, what are we doing, Rick? How do I know? I don't know. Today we're reacting to a song, I believe. It's called The Voice of Nagaland. Nagaland as one. Is that how you pronounce that? Because I think that's a place. It is Nagaland or Nagaland. Okay. I don't know the correct pronunciation of that, but I've seen it. I know of that before. But The Voice of Nagaland presents as one single music video to promote peace and unity through music. We have different religions, different languages, different colored skin, but we all believe one human race. Each tribe of Nagaland sings their traditional songs to create a common unified voice. That's cool. Cool. I like that. And I believe Nagaland is from the Northeast? Correct me if I'm wrong, guys. I think. You don't know? I know we haven't reacted to a lot from the Northeast, and we apologize about that. Hopefully this makes up for it. So, ready? Yep. Three, two, one, go. Love the guitar. Love it. A tremendous undertaking that was. Good night. Dang. To do it in every single language. Yeah, and I just... And then also recording every single one of them. Yeah, that wasn't just the languages either. It was representative of people groups, but from all over as well. So that's what's interesting to me. I guess it was focused on Nagaland, which is, I think you're right. In fact, I'm looking right now. Yeah, it's up near Assam. Yeah. It's the Northeast. Yeah, but they were covering Punjabis and all over the place as far as representation. Yeah, it definitely showed you how diverse India is. Because a lot of those people, if you're not Indian, you wouldn't know those people were Indian. I don't know about you. There were still some people groups there that I don't know that I've been introduced to yet. And we've been focusing on India every day of our life for the past year and a half. And there's still tons and tons of people groups that we're just getting to know. It's astonishing. Yeah, we're still stupid a year and a half in. We're still as dumb as we were. Still as dumb as ever. The first day, you can count on that. This channel will always be stupid. You can count on that. And I know some of you already know that. But yeah, that was beautiful. It was like, what was the one that they did years back in Hollywood? We are the world, right? We are the world. Yeah, that's what it reminded me of. It reminded me of something like that, like a very unifying thing, but more impressive because that was all in English, right? Yeah, that's the other thing. I think they were all singing something of their regional anthem or tribal songs and they were put to that. So for those of you who are from those regions, I bet this was a far more important thing for you to hear that blending. It would be as if we had heard a blending of songs we're familiar with of national anthems. Like if we heard the Canadian national anthem or India's national anthem, you know, national anthem. We don't know regional tribal songs. So massive undertaking. And it did carry that same spirit of like, I would never put We Are The World in my playlist. But it's what that song meant that was what was most important. Yeah. Yeah. Well, that was wonderful. That was wonderful. And obviously there's a lot to learn. I know the Northeast. I know even in one of our, when we did the Big Tali in India, all they had for the entire Northeast was Momos, I think is what they were called. And so Northeastern people were very upset about that. And so I tell you that you guys get neglected. And so I don't want that to happen. So please send me stuff that we need to see. I can't react to it or do anything about it if I don't know about it. But I want you to be represented. I do. You're just as much of India as everybody else. And I know there's, I think there's some tensions between like that part of India and the rest of India because like they get forgotten a lot. Yeah, they get forgotten and they get misrepresented. I know when I learned and can differentiate now. Like I remember meeting a girl who was awesomies and she asked me if it was on the trip. And she said, do you think I'm Chinese or Indian? And I said definitively I said, you're Indian. And she smiled. She said, yeah, I'm Assam. I'm from Assam. She said, I'm awesomies. And because so many of them in the Northeast, they do genetically. They have far more of that leaning in the Asian influence, but they're Indian. And it's very, very important that they're represented as such because they are Indian. Well, that was great. Let us know more that we should react to down below.