 or Sunday for some of you, like Benjamin. How is everyone doing today? And we have Mags back. She's back from her camp out. Yeah, camp out. Yay. And then before that, two weeks at the cottage. Woo! Woo! So we have John here, who's John is our member of the week this week, if you didn't know. I know. You can read all about him. Benjamin, Janine, Greg, Jonathan, from Quebec City, Betsy, Tommy, Greg. Patricia, hello, Patricia from Kentucky. Mojavelin, hello. Willow Dean. Oh, she was off with the fairies. I'm jealous. Who's with the fairies? Mojavelin said she was off with the fairies. Ooh. And there. Who else here? Willow Dean, hello. June, Chris, Pip, David, Smith. And did I say that right? Mojavelin. Oh, Lynette. Oh. Lynette Jaster. She just likes to throw up that name because it's such a fun name, but she lets the listeners listen to us try and pronounce it, I think. I think. Yes, she does. People like to have me pronounce fun things. So. Oh, hey, Betsy. Okay, well. It is. Any interesting thing that anybody has to share this morning? Or if not, we will. If you're in New Orleans, I hear you're going to get some rain. Oh, yeah, there's Fred is coming. Fred, Fred. But let's go with some interesting names this year. Fred is on his way. Fred is on his way. We're talking about a hurricane. You know, in South Carolina, there's a ghost story where this guy will walk up to people and talk to them. And he says something like it's going to come. There's a storm coming or it's coming up a cloud. So it's coming up a cloud, New Orleans. Yeah, it keeps moving west. So it was first heading right towards where I am. The noun's going, we'll still see where it goes. And guess who else is headed right for where, Sarah? Oh, yes, that's why my mom is not here today. She is in the car driving up to see me. I thought she was going to be able to pop on, but I wasn't thinking that Chex had to drive here first. You know, then that's eight hours. So, oh well. Oh, we had some other people. Gary from Washington and Charles from Georgia and Hillary, hello. Hello, Hillary. Hillary. Fear some Fred. Fear some Fred. I'm not scared. I'm not scared of Fred. When I heard Fred, I was thinking Fred Flintstones on his way to Florida. In his little, he's running there with his little car. He's running on his little. That's what your mother's doing right now. Joe's in the car. Yeah, my mom is reading while my dad is driving. I can guarantee that's what's happening in the car right now. So, you have a dabbadoo. Yes, that is. You have a dabbadoo. I tell you, the deep conversations that we have on Saturday mornings is just amazing. Getting everything set up here. You know what I'm getting set up for, Sarah? So, do we have a question of the week? Well, we do. We do. I'm getting set up. Yeah. What is our question? Sorry, I was also searching because Greg asked if there was ever been a hurricane, Barney. And apparently, there was. And maybe, I don't know. It's not very specific. Yes, we are going to talk about those connections to John Tyner. John Tyner is Sarah's closest connection for the week. She is. John, we're the closest. 26th, well, that and France Gaul, whoever that is. John Tyner, France Gaul, I have no idea who that was. We're going to find that out in a minute when Sarah talks about the connections. But for right now, we're going to do the question of the week, which we had. I have a whole list here of your answers. Can you even see my handwriting? And sometimes Max can't even read her own handwriting. Oh, I'm good with reading my own handwriting sometimes. I have to say that there was somebody who gave a really cool answer. And the answer from Wendy Scott was wiki tree. And the question of the week is. Should we show the screen? I should show the screen, yeah. The question of the week is, how did you catch the genealogy bug? And if you've ever heard me tell the story, my grandmother literally caught me at birth and started screaming my family names at me. And I grew up on her. I grew up on her lap listening to family information. So that's how I learned. So basically for my grandmother. And if we go down the list, the top reasons people got the genealogy bug was from their grandparents. School project was right up there. One of the people answered that, and I love this one. Wait, wait, it's on the Facebook group. There we go. I just saw this. R.C. Honey has said she was raised in a religious cult. I just saw that. OK, how many people were a part of the Scholastic Book Club in high school or college or whatever? So I went to the fair, but I don't think I was part of the club. Yeah. Well, back in fifth grade, Elizabeth and Murphy Sutherland, the Scholastic Book Club offered a finding your roots pack that included a book and pre-printed family record sheets to fill out. She's been working on that specific package of stuff since then. I've got to fix my green screen. I'm not doing a green screen, and it says that I am. And I keep seeing green on you. That should have fixed it. There we go. I'm not green anymore. So that was a cool answer, the Scholastic Book Club. I love that. I also saw something fun yesterday in Facebook where people were saying that if you have a kid in school who does the Scholastic Book Club, that if you give $10 or $5 to the teacher to let them get a book for another kid who doesn't have enough money to have a book order, I thought that was a good idea, too. That's fun. So we have so many great answers. Mary and Poole, let's see, I'm on the first one. I'm not. So on the very first one, Mary and Poole said that she wanted to fulfill her mother's wish, which I thought was a great idea. I am not Kermit the Frog then, but I love Kermit. I would hate to get Miss Piggy mad at me if I was. Well, because Greg said it's not easy being green. Oh, yeah. So Mary and Poole, I've always loved history, but it was my mom wanting to know about her family before she passed away that stirred it up. Unfortunately, her mother got too sick to do it, and it got postponed. So after she died, she picked up the mantle and started doing it. I thought that was a great, great story. Lucy Savagio Diaz said that she and her sister used to drive around and look at cemeteries, and they would just pick any random cemetery and stop at the cemetery and see if there were any family names in there that they recognized. And that's how she got started, which I thought was fun. But she doesn't know exactly when she caught the bug. I think a ghost probably gave it to her from the cemetery. She caught that bug. Scrawling on down. David Smith. Who was in the chat? He's here. Oh, David Smith. Yeah. Hey, David. How are you? David caught the genealogy bug through his grandmother. And that was a lot of people's answers. It was my grandmother who did this to me. Yeah. When she was small, when he was small, her house used to be a bit like a museum, although nowadays a lot of other things had been replaced because that house was mostly not child-proof. She and my grandfather were amateur darts players. They played in a large organized league but never made any money from it. Unfortunately, so true of many dark tournament players, I think, the house is filled with many, many of their trophies. Then there was a black and white picture set that she always had of people that I didn't know and things from the war. So seeing all that as a child definitely impacted David. And David had to start into genealogy to figure out the connection with some of this stuff. Alexis Nelson, her father-in-law, which I thought was interesting, the first time I ever saw anyone working on genealogy was after I married my husband. My father-in-law, LaRoy Nelson, had written to courthouses and collected birth and death certificates. So he was compiling this family information and she actually still has the work he did and she thinks that he may have been trying to work towards possibly joining the DAR for, I guess, his mother-in-law, yeah. And so Alexis got her start doing that as well. That's so fun. Oh, Wendy Scott, I'm gonna just summarize hers and that it's really easy. She said, wiki tree. All right, cool. Susan Keele, my parents told me not to look because I might not like what I found. Scorches are looking. Yeah, don't touch that. Touch it. Don't touch, it's a hot, hot stove. Don't touch that stove. I'm gonna touch that stove. Moving on down, Ben Molesworth. My dad- Well, he just actually made a comment about his answer too. Okay, I'm gonna read your answer and then I'm gonna do your comment. My dad was setting our family tree with his father while they were doing that as a teenager. I was replicating the genealogy in a Bible, putting it down on paper in an easier to look at, way easier to look at. A couple of years ago, I took a tour group to look at a tall ship used for taking people to Australia. I wondered if any of my family had been on that ship. So I started looking at my own family tree, which I thought was really cool. And then Ben says, I didn't mention in my answer, my grandfather and his brother were discouraged from looking into their family history by their father because their father's parents weren't married. So finding out family secrets can be a thing. Jim Book answered in the Facebook chat, but she's also answering in her chat that my goal was to disprove my great aunt in cousin's family stories. They sounded like tall tales. All had a grain of truth except for the Native American connection. Let's see. And then people are talking about commenting on playing darts. Ben says that once he got the bug from the tall ship trip that he went out after it like a hound dog. That's crazy. My father always says, I mean, we have the most boring family in the world. Truly. My galling line is like not endogamous, nothing weird went on. And he always says, you're finding out all the stuff, all the secrets. And I'm like, what's secrets? Tell me if you're a secret, I don't know about it. We're pretty boring. On down, M Ross, let's go down. M Ross, and I made a paraphrase because you don't want me reading all of this stuff to you. He inherited the role from his father. His father was the family historian and he ended up taking on that role when his father died. That's cool. So he got passed down. Dieter Lawrence is Dieter here today. No, he's not. Oh, no, there was a wedding in the family. And his family, his wedding actually, and he had a lot of family at his wedding from both sides of the family. And for some reason, I guess they're trying to introduce themselves to him. They were telling him all sorts of stories, family snippets and things at the wedding. And of course, if you're wedding, you can't write all this stuff down. So after they got married and a little bit of time passed, he went back to every one of those people who told him those little snippets and wrote it down. And that's when he started his entry into genealogy, which I thought was a pretty cool story. And that kind of goes along with Chris Whitton. If you ever hear about why Chris started Wiki Tree, Chris did it because he was going to be getting married and he wanted Megan to know all about his family. So he started this Wiki Tree thing so that his family would start entering their information in. Isn't that cool? Did you ever hear of that? I don't think so. I think I've heard that story. Oh, that's what he told me. When you used to spend some time in the Salt Lake City Airport really late at night after Roots Tech late night chats with Chris Whitton. Yeah. Let's see. Moving on down, Chris Beriello, where are you, Chris? He's in here somewhere. No, truthfully, he says I was always sort of interested and it came with the territory of being part of an Italian-American family. And he heard stories from family and he just wanted to back up the stories to see if they were true or make them true or get to the roots of what went on. So that's a lot of people wanting to prove the family stories that they'd heard. Let's see. Thomas Kerneline. He's not here. Maybe it's here. Thomas is here. Oh, isn't that nice? Oh yeah, June. June says, Mags and Chris Whitton both welcomed me to Wiki Tree in 2014. How fun. Oh. Thomas Kerneline. He says it was from a family reunion and from his grandparents. Tyrion O'Kima was a family history book that got passed down through the female line. Let's see, she may be on this next page. Tyrion, where are you? There we are. I thought that was cool that they had a family book that just got passed down from the mothers to the daughters. So I guess you would call that kind of a matrilineal lineage information. Let's see, and Janice Johnson, Jamie Johnson from a TV show. She watched a TV show on the Statue of Liberty and that's what gave her the impetus to start. She wanted to find out how much of the stories were true and about all of the wonderful immigrants that she saw. She wanted to find out more about it. So that was interesting. Let's see, Rebecca Cornell, scrolling down. She had a family name that was both on her mother's side and her father's side. So instead of having four different names for her grandparents, she had three, only three names and she wanted to see what the connection of the family connection was there and she found it. So that was interesting. A little bit of endogamy there. Oh, and let's see, Marion Saruti. I often love Marion's answers. Let's see if she's on the page, she's still scrolling. Here we go. It's a family disease, she says. It's a disease in the family. I love that. Let's go on. Pamela Ryan. She just wanted to discover a family story. My grandfather's parents died in Iowa after coming from Ireland. He was four when his mother passed, six when his father passed. He was in and out of orphanages. He was 71. I was born. So he was quite old. So I never got asked about his family. My father did not even know his paternal grandparents' first names or where they were born. I started looking for information to get to the background. A wonderful county clerk in Iowa started looking for information to get to our background too. It's fun when you find somebody you get interested in your story. So this wonderful county clerk helped her and helped her answer so many questions and that's how she got hooked. Michael Stills gets the answer of the week. He says, catch it. I'm still looking for the vaccine that's effective. So I think that's a good way to round that out. But yeah, so inherited stuff from my grandparents. I was adopted was a big answer this week or I was adopted or there was an adoption in my family and I wanted to solve that. And going along with that, people wanted to solve a family mystery or find out if these tall tales that they had heard were true. Some people got inspired after they had been to a reunion school project or they inherited stuff from their family and that's how they found. So many great answers and Lynette says, there is no vaccine for this. No, there's not. Charles says that he got started and Boy Scouts working on his genealogy merit badge. There you go. And Betsy Kose says she had an interest in childhood but really got into it when a free ancestry trial for 30 days in the summer of 2015. And I realized all the information that you could find in records. Cool. Cool. Any other great, so let's see. I just added mine. Let's see, I didn't see it. So I got started in Boy Scouts. That's the one you were talking about which I think is great. And let's see. Anyway, that's great. See, John Tyner, you're our person of the week, member of the week. My great maternal great aunt wrote her memoirs. Published before she was 90 and she died in 2003, age 91. I started reading the book and was hooked. That's a good answer from our member of the week, John Tyner. And Hillary started investigating after finding some certificates in a suitcase. So finding that stuff that gets handed down or finding information because you got handed down. Really, it was my grandmother. And then I inherited the majority of the genealogy stuff. My sister has some of the stuff but I've got the majority of the genealogy stuff. And what I don't have, I think that my sister and I have worked on digitizing so it would both have it. So that's cool. Thank you guys. That is all so good. That was the question of our week. Lynette says she's had this disease for 42 years this month. Congratulations. Congratulations. Another question of the week. This one goes into the slot with the rest. You should see this with all her other notes. Here are my notes from all the questions of the week and all, there's another stack somewhere too. I'm gonna publish a book. Books of Meg's live cast adventures for Weekend Street. Yeah. Now it won't go in its little hidey place. It has to be neat. I'm one of those people who's completely insane because my desk is neat. OCD maybe. A little maybe, a little. It's good to be a OCD when you're a genealogist and you're working with lots of different people. Well, I guess it is now time for our profiles of the week and they are 1960s musicians this week to mark the release of Respect, the new biopic by Aretha. R-E-S-P-E-C-T. Find out what it means to me. Okay. I'm gonna let that know. Uh-oh. Uh-oh, what? I just closed this. I gotta open back up. Well, Benjamin, if you were here earlier, you would have, we mentioned that my mom is currently driving to come see me. She's in the car. In the car? Where are you from? Boston, though. In Boston? They have Boston down in Tallahassee in Florida but that's true. You hear a lot of Northern accents down Florida way. My question was, could we get Joe to log in while she's driving? Let me text her to see if she wants to come in. I'll text her now while I'm... So we... So Sarah's texting her mom to see who put her book down long enough to log in. Do they have a good internet data plan on their phone? That would be important. They have AT&T, so I guess so. Unlimited? Yeah, my parents have had AT&T since it was singular, if anybody knows what that means. So AT&T bought singular. Okay, so Aretha Franklin, born in 1942 in Tennessee, died in 2018 in Michigan. How many for me? And she was the first woman inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. That's pretty cool. I didn't know that. Which is appropriate. And she was the most influential female vocalist of the 1960s. And apparently she dropped out of high school after having her first child at the age of 13. She began her singing career in her father's Baptist church, singing gospel music. She recorded her first gospel album, Spirituals at 14 and she was signed to Columbia Records in 1960. And after a few years, she landed Atlantic Records and her popularity took off. So now her biopic, it's coming out. So that is our main feature. And while I am going through these, let us know who you're most closely connected to. Sarah is 39 degrees from Aretha Franklin and I am 35 degrees from Aretha Franklin. Ooh, that's the closest? Ooh, no. Oh, okay. Just telling you how you're related to Aretha. Okay. So next we have. Sir. Uh-huh. Sir Paul McCartney. Paul McCartney. From the Beatles. We all know, we all know, we all know Mr. Paul McCartney from the Beatles. You know, I love you. See. So he was born in June 18th, 1942 in England. And let's see. You know, he was obviously in the Beatles with George, Ringo and John Lennon. And yeah, so I actually know a lot about the Beatles because when I was working at the museum, at the History Museum down in Miami, we did a exhibit on the Beatles. Cool. I forgot most of it, but I did know at one point a lot about the Beatles. I was too busy in school about the Beatles. So I, there's a lot of, my favorite song is Yellow Submarine, to be honest. Yellow Submarine. Yeah. You guys are right, that one. Who wrote that one? Oh, I guess let's find out. Who wrote? Yellow Submarine. Yellow Submarine. Nope, Paul McCartney down the winner. Yep, Paul McCartney. Okay. Okay, next on our list is Johnny O'Keefe. Which is Ben Wildworth's close one. Johnny O'Keefe and Gordon Patrick. Well, cause he's Australian, so that makes sense. He was born in 1935 in Australia, died in 1978. Apparently he made his stage debut at the age of four when he played the role of Dopey in the Waverly College production of Snow White in the Seven Dwarves. That's cute. So O'Keefe's debut single was released in 1957, but failed to chart. Yeah. Are you familiar with Johnny O'Keefe, Ben? Is that a big? Oh, yeah. Betsy Koeh likes the background on that profile. Very cool profile. All the, or contact sheet. Shout, apparently that one reached number two in Australia. Shout? Shout, the song shout. I love that song, but didn't the Beatles do it? I don't know, it is it's... Ferris Bieler's Day Off, wasn't it the Beatles version that they were singing? No, it wasn't, it wasn't, it wasn't, it wasn't the Beatles. John Tyner says, O'Keefe is an Irish name. And so Ben answered you and he said, yes. He was the Australian Elvis. I mean, look at those sideburns. I liked Elvis before the sideburns. Oh. The big mutton chop, like sideburns, I didn't like those. Gordon Kirk. Another Australia one? Gordon Kirk, Kirk, Kirk. Slim Dusty. I feel like we've, I feel like he was on one before, but maybe I'm just crazy. That name sounds familiar to me, because we've probably done it before. Slim Dusty. Slim Dusty. Sounds familiar to you? Because I think he was on another profile grouping. But I don't remember why. So apparently he was a dairy farmer as well. So he was born, sorry, he was born in 1927 and died in 2003. 27 degrees, we're both 27 degrees from Kirk. Oh cool. And apparently the Prime Minister, John Howard said Slim Dusty was a one-off and a great Australian icon. He was a singer-songwriter, guitarist and producer. And he received 37 Golden Guitar Awards and was inducted into the A-R-I-A Hall of Fame and Australian Role of Renown. He was considered an Australian national treasure in his hit song, Duncan. So you can, there's a link to his, that YouTube. Well, there you go. There you go. There you go, Slim Dusty. Look at, he's like, even has a coin, commemorative coin. Next we have Dick Dale from Dick Dale on the Dill Tones. 1937, Massachusetts. And passed away in 2019 in California. Well, look, look at his little, that's the background, surface choice. American rock guitarist. He was a pioneer of surf music, drawing on Middle Eastern music scales and experimenting with reverberation. Dale was known as the king of the surf guitar. That's cool. Look at this. He looks so cool. His gold guitar. I love the headband, man. Right? You better rock him the headband. I wish I could rock a headband like that. Okay. Next on our list, we have Mama Cass from the Mama's and the Papa's. Born in 1941 in Maryland and passed away in 1947 in London, England. She was an American singer and actress. She was in depth, she was, in 1998, she was posthumously inducted. I can never say that word. So forgive me. Inducted into the rock and roll face. So yeah, when the, yeah, when Mama's and the Papa's. Monday, Monday. Apparently, she adopted the name Cass in high school, borrowing it from actress Peggy Cass as Denny Doherty tells it. There we go. I'm not familiar with her. You're not familiar with Ma- I don't think so. Oh, here you go. Let me turn the volume up really loud here. Maybe I'm familiar with some of the songs, but the name itself does not ring a bell to my brain. Ready? Oh, I know. I don't know. Okay. Okay. It's legal if you only play a few seconds. Just saying. Yeah, that's why I haven't played anything yet. I don't want to be illegal. Okay. Next we have Mary's Surveys. Did I say only if Thomas was here or if anybody else knows how to say that last name. Born 1919 in the Netherlands and passed away in 1998. What did she say? She is best known as this phrase. She recorded many songs and was very well known in the Netherlands. Nice. So yeah, we've heard this is in, let's translate this to English. Oh, that was her stage name. She was known as that. She was known as that name. Singer, aha, that makes sense. Oh, that's cool. So we have someone. So we have some people from Australia and from the Netherlands on our list. Very cool. I guess the next one is also from... You're closer to Mary's Surveys than I am by two. And you go up to her through your dad, of course. Yanni Johansson. Yeah. My mom was like, how do I pop in? I was like, go on Facebook. Go on Facebook and watch it on Facebook. Okay. So Jen Johansson, Johansson, apparently something about the Pippi Longstocking TV series theme song. It's like, it's speculative. He may be best known where he played jazz for jazz. How do I re-pronounce that? Where he played jazz arrangements of Swedish folk tunes or possibly for the theme song of Pippi Longstocking. So either or. He was born in 1931 and passed away in 1968. So he did, he would like to play in the piano. He was young when he passed. He was a pianist. He was very young. Yeah. He died in a car crash. Next we have France Gaul. Born in France. Full name, Isabel Jedevis, Marie Ann Gaul. 1947 and passed away in 2018. She was a French singer. She won the Eurovision Song Contest in 1965 and she remained very popular until the 1990s. Thanks to hits written by her husband, Michael Berger. She sold over 20 million records worldwide. Wow. I think she was in a rock opera, Starmania. Yeah. And then her singer-songwriter husband, musical Starmania. That is interesting, Starmania musical. It's a Canadian-French cyberpunk rock opera written in 1976. Cool. I guess I'm gonna have to, I wonder if you can watch that musical somewhere. Ooh, next we have Bob Dylan. Born on May 24th in 1941 in Minnesota. He was born Robert Allen Zimmerman, but he later changed his name to Bob Dylan. And when he was asked about the name change in 2004, he said, you're born, you know, the wrong names, wrong parents, I mean, that happens. You call yourself what you wanna call yourself. This is a land of the free. So he has sold over more than 100 million records, making him one of the best-selling artists of all time. Xerox, Incorporate, Y-Range of Political, Social, Philosophical, and Literary Influences. And he's received 11 Grammys at Golden Globe and Academy Award. He was inducted to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. He has the Pulitzer Prize, 2008, Presidential Medal of Freedom from Barack Obama and the Noble Prize in Literature in 2016 and was awarded for Bob Dylan for having created new poetic expressions within the great American song tradition. So he has a lot of awards. What's your favorite Bob Dylan song? Go. Oh, it's my mom, she figured it out. Hey, Joe. She's in the car, she's in the car. Oh, my favorite Bob Dylan song? I, there's so many. There's so many that I can't even think of one. Oh, Bob Dylan's bed seat's closest. Okay, what's our last one? Is Leonard Cohen. Tambourine Man? Is that your favorite or is that somebody else's favorite? No, I really like that song, that's mine. Okay, last one for Canada. Oh, Canada, oh my gosh. He's a singer, songwriter, musician, poet and novelist. He's been inducted into the both Canadian Music Hall of Fame and Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame as well as the American Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. He's also a companion of the Order of Canada, the Nation's Highest Civilian Honour. And 2011 Cohen received the Prince of Austria's Award for Literature, born in 1934 and died in 2016. Oh, Joe, Joe, killing me, killing me. In the car with a blueberry pie. You really have a blueberry pie? They just stopped at a gas station a little bit ago. So my mom might have gotten a blueberry pie, but I don't know. And everybody on YouTube. Bob Dylan, people are still answering Bob Dylan stuff too. Everyone on YouTube mom says hi, because you know, since you're on Facebook, there are new too, so you can't see each other. Okay. There's an iconic fellow who should be in for the Canadian stuff, who died this past year, who can name that person who was incredible with the Indigenous community, name that rock star. He played with a band called The Tragically Hip here in Canada. Amazingly, The Tragically Hip aren't that well known outside of Canada, which surprises me. They're like the biggest band in Canada. She's just joshing you. Oh, you lion dog, you get out from under my porch. Okay. Those are all of our profiles of the week. So who was I most closest to? You were closest to, besides John Diner, you were closest to Richard Monsour and Bob Dylan. Oh, no, wait, wait, wait, wait, Johnnie O'Keefe. Oh, Johnnie O'Keefe. Cool. And just so everybody knows, you can see, we were talked about this last week, you can see how you're connected to other musicians by searching the musicians category. So, let's see, like jazz musicians. You can see your connections up here. Miles Davis. So, Calaway, Cable, I don't even know who that is. That's Calaway. Calaway. Da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da. And then here my, so those are your direct answers in your cousins and then connections down here. So basically any category for the most part, you can do that, which I think is pretty cool. That is. New connections are so cool. They're so much fun. So much fun. And, oh, look, next week we are featuring pseudonyms. Oh, that should be fun for you. No. No. Because the only reason someone would have a pseudonym is because they can't pronounce their real name, right? Hmm. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, just look at the couple that are here already. So I guess the main one is Mark Twain, where you're featuring, unless it, so put in your suggestions, guys. Okay, now let's look at photos. Photos, photos. So our theme this week is hard work. The answer to the question about the Canadian band, The Tragically Hip, who was a lead singer who just recently passed away, which nobody seems to answer or want to answer, is Gord Downey. So we're done that. Photos. I don't know if you showed some of the things. I have been showing those. Okay. So they can see each other, see what they're saying to each other. Okay, photos of the week, hard work. Ooh. We know we have to make the joke, are they working hard? Are you hardly working? Ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah. What did you need uploaded this one? Apparently, so this is my great-grandfather, my mother's mother's father, Joseph Hiram Denton, he had a farm, did blacksmith. Oh, he went on work on a road, not sure where. So he's the one without the mustache in the middle. So this guy. The guy with the big X over his head? Bless you. Thank you. Yeah, the X over his head. You think the X ever bothered him? Like, was he trying to spot the X away during his lifetime? Get that X off my head. Oh, a magician. That's a cool one. That is a cool picture. Another magician, another magic one. Oh, it's the same, it's by the same- Same one? Yeah, same- Same people? Person who uploaded, loaded at Billsons. He always uploads photos every week. Oh, look, Clary's working on a Boeing B-29 plant. Go, Rosie. Rosie the Riveter doing their part during World War II. Oh. I was like, Rosie, am I missing something? Yeah. Oh, cool. That's cool. What's that name? Cineas. Cineas, I heard of Jack of Stodget. I don't know. Yeah, there you go. I tried. He's in a diving suit. Damn. Early diving suit. Yeah. Wow. I wonder how long, how long you could stay under the water with that? Well, there was an air tube, but still you had to go through the decompression to come back up. Well, I wonder how big of an air tank they had to, you know. Cool. I don't know. Very cool. Lynette says that her mom was a bomb girl. She made bombs. Ooh. So the question is, he's working on a wiki tree. And poor dog can't blind its bed. No, it's now a foot bed. Oh, look, he's working hard on a wiki tree. That's fun. Ooh, acrobatics. That's a fun. Oh, David, another photo. Another post by David. I like how they really wanted to get a photo of this, but they were far away. So you see heads in it. Yeah, it's fun. Chris Ferriolo says that that diving suit was a Scooby-Doo villain diving suit. I agree. Oh, yeah, definitely a Scooby-Doo. Oh, my goodness. Okay. Ooh. Another one by Kathleen. What is this? Welders. Team makes easy work of hard work. Oh, it's teamwork makes the dream work. That's the right phrase for that. Doing drywall work. He's on stilts. On stilts? Oh, dang. That's cool. That's dangerous, maybe. What are my sons does that? While doing drywork, I just walks around on the stilts normally. During drywall work. Hanging drywall. But John Miller teaches in Ruler. Rrrr. Oh, my gosh. This is in Ontario. That word got me. Rrrr. Rrrr. Rrrr. Rrrr. John Wilson. It's a weird combination of sounds. I don't know if that's a cow or a horse. That's a horse pulling a plow or probably a donkey. Oh, yeah. This could be. A mule. Yeah, I was also thinking mule. You guys know I love animal photos, so make sure. Oh. He looks like he's taking a break right there. I look like he's watching clothes, watching out some socks. Wilfred. Francis Russ. Was that your picture, Greg? That was the other picture was from Huntsville, Ontario, which is close to where Greg lives. Look, I think we've seen this photo before. Oh, no. We've seen a photo like this before. Yeah. We had a whole discussion about what an instrument was, and Betsy helped us. It was a different instrument, a different picture, but that E-flat alcohol horn is still there. It's the one right next to the middle there. Yep. Oh, actually, there's two of them together. Yep. In Brazil, Iowa. Oh, man. Hugs on the Erie, building Trestle on Erie Railroad. Wow. Looks dangerous. He's like just standing on that wood right there. Why don't you have hard hats? Ha ha ha ha ha. Got a hard heads back there. Hmm. It's hard work. Three kids is hard work. It is. I say, like, I agree. Look, I have three, but... It is hard work. And that was the last one. Never retire. You can never retire, Sarah, ever. Nope. I was gonna look at the G2G post. See if there's any other photos. Oh, look. There's more. This is the public domain photo of the Boeing B-29 in which Tawc Hans is. We had some discussion about that. Ben Mollsworth. Ben, I love it. I love it. Three kids, hard work? No, it's a starter kid. Ha ha ha ha. Starter kid. Look, she, look at Laura. Laura Smith sawing wood in her very long dress. I must have not been easy. I saw these, let's see. Magician magic. If it says what the magic trick was in the writing. Let's see. Let's see. He's, he told, apparently he was told that Hal spent hours before the mirror practicing his every move. Doesn't say what trick it was, but. The photo of me and grandpa Hal. Yeah, I think it was this one. Nice. Dude, dude. Oh, this one's the new one we can see. Photo shows my father-in-law's mother Elsa, Manda Peterson, working in the fields. While the, while the men worked in the fields with horses, the women largely worked everything by hand. Of course. Mm-hmm. I look the, I guess it says horse drawn here. Okay, cool. Great uncle Wilford, he was in the Royal Navy. Fox or his underwear. So he was in the Royal Navy. Yeah, he was in the Royal Navy during World War II and as soon as Canal pilot until 1956. Mom's vlogging all. She says bye, see you soon. Bye. But it, chickens, turkeys? Chickens, there's animals, Sarah. Chickens in Germany, German chickens. Chickens. Well, this is another one. Cotton candy. Cotton candy. I want some cotton candy now. Haven't had it in a long time. Another one we haven't seen. Ah, four door cells. They're piano tuners. That's a fun job. Apparently he, I don't see Scooby anywhere. So Scooby must be in the food. Yeah. Apparently they sell salvage valuables from shipwrecks and blowing them up with dynamite. Wow. Yeah, that was it guys. That's all folks. Ba-da-ba-da-ba-da-ba-da, powerful. So yeah, those were our photos. We talked about our profiles in the question of the week. And I wanted to mention about the connection challenge this week was Drew Smith. Oh, yes. One of our two challenge. And if you didn't watch Wednesday night, it was really interesting. All the information they found, what I loved, I know Drew and Drew and I are actually from the same county kind of area of South Carolina, Lawrence County. And I asked Mindy if they could figure out how to connect Drew and I. Drew and I should be connected closely, but we cannot find any kind of connection. So they never, nobody found any connection for Drew and I. But Drew got lots and lots of eyebrow rays. If you go back and you watch, his eyebrows are quite wiki tree mane, his eyebrows, he's probably sore. His forehead is sore, his eyebrows so much. And all the brick walls and all of the new ancestors that were added to his trees. So I really enjoyed this week watching some. I've enjoyed all of my friends who are on the superstar list in the challenge and Drew. Anybody that's from Lawrence, I really enjoyed watching that. So it was cool. Good job guys on the. And Lewis Kessler is Lewis in here this morning? No, I haven't seen him in a. Lewis Kessler knocked it out of the park because Drew had lots of Jewish ancestry which is very hard to work. And so Lewis did a lot of good work, Melanie McComb. There were lots and lots of great people who got in there and did some good work. So great on the wiki tree challenge. The year of accuracy. Yay. And if you guys didn't know, we got Lisa listen for, and then also any Johnson Crow coming up. This week is a bi-week. Yeah. You know what a bi-week is. It's the week off. You get to take a week off. Which is why I'm here talking to us about Drew. Yeah, next week, Lisa. Did I say her last name right? Listen, listen. L-I-S-S-O-N. Yeah. Not sure. I actually just see it in text all the time. Never heard it said out loud. Yeah. So. Okay. Well. Tyler says he added nine family members for Drew. Cool. Cool. Good job, John. This is why you're a member of the week. Not really. I mean, who knows? Coincidence or not? Who knows? No. Chris, you're giving me a $50 gift certificate to the Cheesecake Factory. Thank you. Even if that wasn't directed at me, I will take it. Well. So yeah. So chime in Wednesday for the kickoff for Lisa. And. Not Wednesday. Next week. This week's a bye week. Wait, no. My brain is. Are they still doing the kickoff for Lisa this week? I mean, I feel like. Now I'm confused. I think I got the week's confused. Please post and tell us. Because, so this, there's nothing going on this week but we kickoff. Between Wednesday and Wednesday. Gotcha. So Wednesday would be Lisa. Yes. See, Max just got me all compiled in my brain. I was like, did I? She's discombobulated. Just, yeah. Discombobulated. And next Saturday for same time, same place. And that's all folks. We will see you. Next Saturday. WikiTrio.