 Hello, hello, hello, and congratulations to Barbie for another spectacular record-breaking achievement Warner Brothers' biggest film of all time. Yeah. And then in similar news, you getting Barbie Botox? Hey, we'll go back to her tube of directs of Corvette. It's a thing. You can follow us on Instagram, Twitter for more juicy content. Thank you to everybody's for some Patreon, follow us on Instagram, and subscribe for like button. You heard about it? Yeah. Okay, we have another. It's a thing, look it up, Barbie Botox, it's real. A wrap. Wrap! From Santa Claus, Always, the best rapper of all time, ah, it's his elves. I have a whole bunch of, they're the better rappers notes here. Okay, if you want to start here. I have a note for you. Ah! That was an F minor. That's a chord, by the way. Sure. A note can't be an F minor. Shut the fuck up. It can be an F sharp or an F flapper or an F natural. Shut the fuck up. Or, if you're really, really kinky, you could find some guy who works in coal and F that minor. Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, you know what I'm saying? What are you reading, Bob? I need you to read that. Oh, you need me to read that. Yeah, okay. Sidhu does a beautiful job at breaking down the issues with religion, media and politics in today's world, while also covering a personal controversy. He wrote this song as if his father is telling him, all of this, while people are protesting in front of his house, Sidhu's song, Jati, Joni, more wargy, was heavily protested because of a line in the song, which apparently hurt Sikh religious sentiments or Sikh, if you prefer. A case under Indian penal code 295 was filed, which constitutes injuring or defiling place of worship with intent to insult the religion of any class. The so-called protestors also made her mother apologize and a lot of people were captured hurling all types of abuse and slurs at him and his family. Sidhu mentioned on his Instagram story after releasing the song. He said this song is for people who think they can say anything to anyone, especially his mother, and think no one would dare to speak against them. And he might have been quiet, but did not forget what happened. Sidhu had penned this song in 2019 when the controversy happened, but released it in his 2021 album named Moose Tape. So I'd note, these types of songs with sociopolitical commentary generally don't get many views, but the song is one of the highest viewed streamed, 500 million on YouTube. There is some more context and references in the subtitle, so I would suggest you to pause and to play to better understand what he's trying to say. I'm very intrigued and I'm glad we read that so we can understand the context of this. Clearly there's a lot of context needed. Yeah. Here we go. Damn good. That was amazing. And I love the fact that even though there were visuals, it wasn't like him singing it or anything, he wanted the emphasis to be on what he was saying as opposed to what was happening. Yeah, the visuals are just representations of the pain and the chaos and the anger and the hate and the bigotry. Yeah, I thought that was powerful as was, I mean, you could feel in the composition, both in the lyrics and in his vocals and in the music, I could feel the pain and the anger. I wouldn't have even needed, it helped to read what we read at the beginning to understand the clear context of what he was writing about. But even without that, just going in with it blind, and the visuals are so good that even without the lyrics, which I'd love to go back and read some of them because they went by so fast. They were so thorough explanations, but you can feel the pain and the anger and the hurt and the courage and the just, it reminds me, it just reminds me of some of the best things that have ever been written that come from a place of just pure honesty and the only reason the song's being written is because you have to speak something that's true. It was great. And it was, I like the whole idea to do it from his father's perspective. Yeah. Me too. Which is great. Yep. You can convey a lot via that way. And it said a lot, he said a lot about people and religion. He says religion a lot, politics in religion and politics in general and people how they basically like to, I think I forget the exact line. He's like, kick people while they're down essentially. Sure, and jump on the bandwagon of doing it. The mob mentality per se, ideologies. They're not even like invested. They just want to be part of the. Right, absolutely. The hate. Yeah. Nothing feels engagement like hate online. I'll tell you that. Yeah. So something George Carlin said in his standup routine was he likes people as individuals. But when you clump them into groups, that's when he doesn't like them. Because typically what happens when you clump somebody into a group, they don't have the moral character and strength to just say what they mean and stand alone. They tend to just gravitate toward the conformity of the group and can become mindless when they're angry. What about orgies though? The same thing. I mean, I don't know about your experience with orgies, but when I've been in them, it's always been pretty, nobody really likes to, I can forget, it's not even a worthy thing to go down. Yeah. It really is probably one of my favorite songs of his. Agreed. That we've seen so far. It's one of my favorite. It was both a rap and he was singing. And there was a lot, thank you for the thoroughness of both the description and the lyric description because it wasn't just translated, it was explained. A lot of it flew by way too fast. So it needs to be reviewed and seen again. I love the, I love the sound of Punjabi singers because they sound very passionate in their singing with just how, I don't know what to call, it just sounds Punjabi whenever I hear a Punjabi. Yeah, we've brought that up several times. And it just, there's a lot of passion in it. Yeah. And I like that. Anyways, so it was great. Let us know the songs from him that we can rack to, any other information that we need to know. Obviously, please let us know down below. Josh!