 I've had some mail that apparently got lost in the shuffle in my move and just never opened it. Really? So, I'll do it in this intro. How long ago? A long time ago. In a galaxy far, far away? Oh, how perfect is that? Read that. Hi, Rick. I know we all miss him. I found the details of his life interesting. A man even more fascinating than his acting chops. Best wishes. Oh, that's awesome. You know who you are and this has been a while. Yes, it has. I apologize. The move got everything all lost. But thank you so much and I can't wait to read this. So, now you know where it went. Sorry. Hey, welcome back to our stupid direction. You need some Corbin? I'm Irfan. No, I know you are not. How dare you. And you should follow us on Instagram, Twitter for more juicy content. I probably know the answer to this, not because you aren't a reader, but because I doubt you're reading anything right now with your life. Yeah, I was going to ask if you're reading anything. What about your wife? Because she's a reader, but I doubt she's. No, not right now. Yeah, that does not surprise me. I mean, now is a little crazy. We have downtime. We're sleeping. Understandably. Totally understandably. And thank you. Thank you. I would love to know more about the man. Yeah, he's one of the saddest losses ever. Anyways, this is also going to be really interesting. This is called Most Rare Photos. British India Before Freedom. So, these are, before they were, yeah, the independence obviously. Yep. Which is coming up here, the celebration. Yes. And so, then they, so they, it shows photos and then it tells us who they are. Yeah. And like the significance of the photo. Got it. And so, I thought it would be really cool. Hold on. I just got to do this. Can you smell your phone? Weird. I'd like to smell your phone. You are so bizarre. Here we go. Rare photos. What if it was just all steaks that weren't cooked? I hope so. Get it? Rare foot. Wow. Oh, what a photo. That's amazing. That's awesome. I thought that was him. It definitely looks like him. Yeah, it looks like him. Oh, that's rough to think about what was in there, right? Yeah. Wow. Yeah. The footage of his, his funeral is thousands upon thousands of people. That's part of Pakistan, yeah. Yeah, I know, I know that face. I guess in the front. Hmm. What a photo. Looks like he was fasting at that, in one of those moments. It's almost a hundred years ago. Yeah. Yeah. When he was, he was a lawyer there. That must have been. Once again, what a photo. Very telling. Oh, I see a ton of them that say life on the bottom for Life Magazine. What a great video. Great pictures, man. Great, incredible pictures. Yeah. Yeah, they do, they do Pulitzer for photography, for some of the things, for science, for math. Some of those very well could have gotten, may have. A Pulitzer. Yeah. And I still maintain there needs to be a film about the partition that is as big as. Honest. Yes. What was that? What was the film? Sardar Udam. Sardar Udam. That depicts it, I think even more kind of like Chandler's List, that really, there's no hero, there's no nothing that just honestly depicts the ongoings of what happened. Because it's one of the world atrocities that almost the rest of the world knows nothing about. And the British try to forget. Like the Bengal famine. Yeah, yeah. And you could even combine those, right? Yeah, you really could. Because they're so connected, really. And it's funny, a friend of mine is watching Ms. Marvel, which I have not watched. But it's, the lead is an Indian. But apparently, they talk about the Indian partition in Ms. Marvel. Nice. And she says, not me learning about the partition of India through Ms. Marvel. And I was like, oh, that's crazy. I'm glad they're talking about them. So people can actually kind of, I don't know how they're talking about it, Ms. Marvel. Yeah. But they're talking about it. And so people are now being aware of what happened. Yeah. It's like our friends the other night, we were talking about Indian different things, everything from the channel to Andrani's background. And one of the topics that came up was how much we have been brainwashed and sometimes not even taught a thing. They too were of the opinion, like most everybody in the West at Winston Churchill was he's heralded as a hero, had no idea about the Bengal famine. He is for the British had no idea. Or some of the things that were done in Germany. So yeah, it's it's those those, I love the buggy photos and I've always as not as a full blown hobby, but I definitely take pictures all the time and always have I love capturing pictures. In fact, Andrani and I have an idea to like go on a trip together and just like go like say go visit Europe, take pictures while we're in the same places, and then publish a book where one side is what I've seen and on the other side is what she's seen at that location. And the book would just be called the way we see it. And then just write a paragraph of what I was looking at and we could look because we do that all the time. She loves taking pictures. And she'll show me a picture that she took up. Sometimes it's of the exact same thing, like a sunset. Yeah. So she'll take her shot and I'll take my shot. And we just photography. What's cool about it compared to because film is photography, just more frames. And but there's something about that still shot that captures that moment that is unlike anything else. The old cliche, a picture paints a thousand words, like some of those shots of Gandhi and that the 14 year old Bose. Where'd they even find that? Yeah, I have no clue. Anyways, that was fantastic. If there's other videos that we can react to of this or other things like that, please let us know down below. And also about or if Hollywood wants to make a, I think it would do really well. That subject matter is just Oscar material just because it's hard hitting, right? But obviously higher Indians do make it. But yeah, if Hollywood wants to make a film about the Indian partition, I would just say make sure the Indians are at the forefront of telling the story because there's film