 What'd you say to me? Uh, I was thinking it. You heard it? Yeah, what'd you say? Well, I said it before. I just don't know if Alexis ever heard it. What? What kind of bees make milk? Boobs. Boobs. Oh, you said this to me the other day. Yeah. We're using intros we used a week ago. Yep. Used intros. Wow. He just woke up. This is why you don't have children. Hey, welcome back to our studio. Not why you don't have children. Why you don't have children with me. No, not with me. He's right here on set. He's burying a hole. Hey, welcome back to our stupid rags. It's Ian and some Corbin. I'm Alexis. We're stupid. You can follow us on Instagram and Twitter for our juicy content. Thanks for the page and follow us to the camera. We'll see you in the next video. Hey, we are reacting to a haul. I thought we were going to react to one of Evie's full diapers. Is your son gambling over there? What's shooting crap? Yeah. He is. Today we're reacting to a song. I'm sure he is shooting crabs. But don't just. Oh, they smell. Everybody. Yeah. But babies. Once babies start eating food, man, that poop turns to Duke. Oh, not fun. I mean, it's not even that great before. No, it's definitely not. But it's not what it becomes when they start harvesting the hard stuff. But it's not as black as it is in the beginning. That's myconium. That's something if you've never been around a child that you don't know right at the beginning. I didn't hear what you said. Your mom? Today we're going to do a song. It's called Laman. Laman? Laman. Pianada. Official song. Folk song. Folk. Himacho. Himachali. Hindi and Dogri and Mahasu? I don't know what that means. Laman is an Indian folk and semi-classical band from Himachal Pradesh and also an initiative to explore and recreate the existing and forgotten folk melodies with the help of modern sound and instruments so that the contemporary world could identify with these melodies. I wonder if Tushar knows about all this. I'm sure he does. Hey, Tushar, we miss you, bro. You haven't explored this region yet. Yeah. Pahari cinema refers to cinema in Western Pahari languages, especially Dobri language, spoken primarily in the Jammu division region of Jammu and Kashmir. Okay, cool. And Himachal Pradesh of India. The song is Hindi, Mahasu, Himachal Pradesh, Shimla, and Dobri, Jammu and Kashmir. Love this. I've ever heard those terms and names. Never heard those words. Never. Learn something new every day. Freaking love it. This is going to be a gorgeous video. You don't know. Like a album. If it's filmed, look at the first frame. It's filmed up in that region. It's going to be gorgeous. I've seen mountains before. There we go. Don't say it's gorgeous. You've seen one before. Don't want subs, yeah. Your place to go. What deal are you talking about? Vikram Anasad? Yes. Thank you, Vikram and Asad, who I guess you know those languages. So this is from the Kashmir and Jhanu, right? Yeah, Jambu and Kashmir area, which I believe is where our host from Emiratesar lives. Yes. Or at least when he did, because I know he trained, or flew, or trained down to meet us in Emiratesar to show us around, and everybody loves him. Apparently he has his own channel, so go check him out if I can find it, I'll link it below. There's nothing to do with his video, but yeah, that was extremely, so what are you all talking about? When you said that, he said, what, the apple orchard? No. I thought the apple orchard was a nice place to go. Yeah, no, there's just, there's certain things that you anticipate when you listen to music long enough, and if you write music, you know where certain things are going to go typically, especially if it's a basic song. There's standard one, four, five chords, a three, a minor chord, and then there's some times where you can take it into a chord that typically doesn't relate to that key, and you basically, you leave the key for just a second, but you haven't, because it's relative, and you go to a chord that's typically not used with a note that still relates to all the other chords, but you've left the general flow of the major chords that are a part of that, typically, because most songs are one, four, five chords. That's standard in terms of, it's C, F, G, C, F, G, or some variation of the same, but then if you add, if you're playing, for example, for those of you who know basic Western music, if you're playing C, F, G, you could play a B-flat chord, because it's relative to F, which also is relative to C, but it, and then get even weirder by going to something like E-flat, right? And that's what they did. E is weird. It's something that is not typical for that key, so it was just beautiful. Why is E weird? It was so surprising. Why is E weird? It's not that E is weird, an E-flat chord, an E-flat chord would be very unusual for a song written in the key of C. Do an E-flat. The note? Yeah, do it. Do the note. Give me an E-flat. I have a piano app. I'll check you. Okay, hold on. Wow, I haven't heard anything in E-flat in a long time, so okay, so hold on. Mike, you could probably do it. Yeah, Mike is better than you. That one's a little flat. Or you can also be sharp. I don't understand music. Alright, three, two, one. You were singing in E. I was an E natural. I was a half step off. But that's good. How do you not know that? That's close. Yeah. But, okay, we just heard, at the beginning of a song with the kids' voices, I was sitting here in a state of like, I was just receiving this, just heard a language I've never heard before in my life. Never heard that language in my ears in my life. I think we have. I don't believe, I've never heard of that language. Well, we've seen stuff from Kashmir and Janna. Yeah, but I've never seen that. Soon we've heard it. I could be wrong. But the other thing is, as far as the composition's concerned, they got away from an electric guitar in that song. Yeah, they did. It was unexpected. Yeah. Yeah, but it worked. Yeah, that was cool. But I also, I don't know, emotionally, there's certain regions of the world that if you just mention them, it hurts my heart. Syria, Kashmir, putting a lot of them in, and that's how I was going to go, that whenever someone says Kashmir, my heart hurts because of what's gone on there and how many people are just stuck in that and it hurts them. So I, when I hear Kashmir, a great song, so let us know what other songs and bands we should react to from this region or others down below.