 I saw Conan O'Brien, he tweeted today that he just realized that when we fall back, we have to add an extra hour to 2020. Hey, welcome back to our Stupid Reactions Edits. I'm Corbin. I'm Ray. Pizza ground, Twitter, juicy content! It's so juicy. Bye! Also on personal YouTube channels, links in the description below. Today we're reacting to, I think it's a song, it's called Color White. I was showing my skin, because it's very white. How white is it on your booty? That's never seen the sun. Almost all by now. But it's from, I believe, this group. Pariyaz? Description. This song is from one of India's best indie rock bands, Pariyaz. It's a Bangalore-based band, founded by two Kashmiri musicians and two from Bangalore. They write their songs in Kashmiri and Urdu, and you can hear psychedelic rock blues influences in their music. Cool. Their songs typically also carry the nostalgia and sadness, frustrations of the people of the region. Not sure how many outside of the indie rock circuit know them, but they truly deserve to be known to the world. Cool. Awesome. I like rock. Yep. Here we go. I think it was sung by our shovers, too. Thank you, shovers. Thank you, shovers. Fargo? It could be Fargo, then. Thank you, Asad. Beautiful job. Guarantee that was... I mean, some of the words that were in there, the choices of those words. Yeah. The lyrics, everything about the song was gorgeous. The singing, the instrumentals, the visuals. But especially the lyrics. They're just gorgeous lyrics, like poetry, basically. And I've been so impressed. It's obviously just American ignorance, obviously. But obviously, before we started reacting to Indian stuff, you definitely never thought of India as having bands. Right. Like, if you thought about it, you're like, okay, yeah, there's probably some bands, obviously, but they're probably not very good. But you think of, okay, they probably just play the sitar. They probably just play, you know, whatever. You know, I'm not saying now. I'm saying before we ever knew anything about India. Sure. That's probably what most, at least, Americans think. Right. But I've been so impressed because there's so many great bands that have such talent. It's quite impressive, and this was no exception. Yeah, I love the video itself, and I don't know how much of this I got. But I was trying to figure out while we're watching it, and I'm listening to the lyrics, and I'm watching the visuals as far as color white. And my suspicion, I could be way off. But my suspicion is the snow. Well, yeah. But it's analogous of the struggle of people in that region of India and how their struggle is one where they feel, they know they're not alone because they have other people who were there going through the same struggle they're going through. But it also feels very isolating in the rest of the world. By the time somebody gets to even see the tracks they've made in the snow that are saying, this is my struggle, more snow comes and falls on it and just completely erases what just happened. And it's like this sense of what's the whole point of even striving to fight to be heard and to make connection. I thought it was really powerful. They're walking right to each other. And they just walk right past each other. And that sense of that tension between the futility of what everything seems and feels like to, I can't escape the fact that I believe things can change. I think that's what it's trying to convey. At least that's what I got. And that color white is this sense of, and I love that pull away shot at the end, that to basically everybody else who's not living in it. Number one, you don't know what it feels like. You literally, you can't, you don't know what this feels like. And experientially, the struggle is so foreign to you that it's just like white noise. It's just, you don't, as much as you want to try and understand what we're going through, you can't, but we need you to. It's that tension of, it's not going to change until you start paying attention to it. If that's what they intended, that's great. If I'm just pulling that out of my butt, then I'm pulling that out of my butt. Is this, is Kashmir one of the, obviously, obviously I know they have, there's a lot going on in Kashmir. Obviously I'm not, but are they, is that what most of the time they're talking about is the fact that you hear all this stuff on the news, but you're not, you're not living here. I think unless you fully understand what it's like, the good and the bad, you don't know what it's like. You just, all you do is you hear it on the news. Right. I think unless you're Kashmiri and you live there and you've experienced it and you see what's going on day in and day out, that you probably don't really comprehend what's happening there. Kashmir is one of the most beautiful places we, it's been featured in obviously a lot of videos we've seen and a lot of movies as well. It's gorgeous. It's a beautiful place. Like in the south of India, I think of Kerala in terms of just, right, at least, I know there's a ton of beautiful places obviously, but that's like the first place. I'm like, I really want to go there. I've seen so much stuff. How beautiful it is. Yeah. In the north, I think of Kashmir because everything we've seen is just, it looks mountainous, snow, gorgeous. Yeah. Kashmir is always, every visual we've ever seen from over there, it's so funny. It reminds me of stories I've heard from soldiers who fought in Vietnam. One of the striking things the soldiers who fought in Vietnam said was how gorgeous Vietnam is. And then when they first got there, it was so weird to think a war was going on in such a beautiful place. That's why I thought of a mash if you've never seen it. They filmed it here in Los Angeles in the mountains. There are some, it's like a foresty kind of area, but it's mostly deserty, especially what it looked like in the show itself. Vietnam's very tropical. Mash was Korea. It was Korea. Yeah, it was Korea. But still, that's tropical. Exactly. Yeah, it's tropical. And it is. It's in the same location where the little house on the prairie set was. Oh, that was over there. Yeah, it's on the same basic area of Square Mile over there. Yeah, we did exteriors for Little House. It was in the same. We're in the same general area, which isn't too far from where they do Westworld exteriors right now. Oh, yeah. Yeah, out through Malibu Canyon. That's cool. But anyway, that was gorgeous. It was really pretty. Let us know more from them and any other indie rock band. I'm glad we started to explore them a lot because there's a lot of really talented bands out there that we enjoy. And oftentimes they'll often reach out after we react to stuff and say thank you so much. Because I know a lot of people know about them, but I know a lot of people don't know about them sometimes as well. Outside their region. Yeah, and I'm glad that in a small way we're able to introduce these bands to more people because they deserve it. So anytime, let us know more down below. You killed me.