 very disappointed. What? I just, I know that Priyanka was in Los Angeles for holy and she and Nick in their backyard had a big party and they didn't invite us. That's rude. But still love them. Still love you Priyanka. I decided I wanted alcohol. You're in sample. I actually, no, I actually would like, I would prefer I haven't had my Jameson bottle at home is empty. So this is nice. This was an empty old monk bottle that I filled with my Jameson that was left over. Those are old monks. Do you have a preference of, because Indrani and I sure do, of the alcohol that, there's some alcohols that I like the feeling of getting drunk with and then there's others I don't want to get drunk with it at all. No, I don't care. Really? I mean there's alcohol I don't like. Like my favorite alcoholic beverage above all is red wine. Never want to be drunk on red one. Never. Yeah, I don't care. Really? No. And you don't feel a difference. Like red wine makes us tired and gives us a headache. vodka doesn't, gin doesn't. No, no, little bitch. I haven't even introduced us. How you doing guys? Instagram. Yep. Twitter. We've gotten so far from the original intro of juicy content. Some people are so upset. I'm sorry. I just forget sometimes. And it just shows you it's organic kids. Yeah. We don't contrive stuff and like it just if it happens, it happens. If it doesn't, it doesn't. Today we got his butt plug. Some... We got a live Malialam performance. Cool. Fusion performance by K. S. Chitra and Sharith. Here is a fusion performance by the legends K. S. Chitra and love Jameson. You guys have already experienced both. Chitra ma'am is well known to you. Sharith, sir is well known music director. You reacted to his composition Sriragamo. Here you can see his vocal skills. And by the way, you have a lot to explore when it comes to K. S. Chitra. I'm sure it's true. I wonder if... I'm sure they do because some people get upset at everything. But do you think people when we interview people and we don't call them like Anjurag sir or whoever sir? Like whenever I see other interviews of like Indians interviewing, it's always something and sir, right? Yeah because I think right from the get-go when we when we interviewed Astaji Zakir Hussein, did they tell us beforehand or after? Somebody said it was Astaji. Somebody said it was Astaji. I don't think he would have cared. He's been in America for longer. Like that's not something... And it's just him. He wouldn't care if you give him any kind of a honorific title. But yeah, we did. It happened with a lot of G. There were a lot of people that were like, when you say her name... I'm talking to people we interviewed. Oh, oh, oh, okay. Like we didn't call... I think they called females like Kalki Mam or... Oh yeah, the same Mam or like when Shreya. Yeah, and like they say it, like when I've seen Indians interview other Indians, it's always that form of respect. Sure. And obviously here, obviously we're not saying we don't respect them. It's just how we show respect. It's just that's part of our... It's just not what we do. It's not part of... I was just wondering if people could have said that we don't do it. Yeah. In fact, sir, in American culture, when you say sir, what we mostly think about are those people who've gotten that title from Great Britain and have been knighted like Sir Anthony Hopkins. Yeah. We would include the sir with him because that's his earned title that he got because he was knighted. Yeah. You know, we don't respect doctors and you know, respect... Even though I mean, I respect doctors and I say doctor and that's what they call but like I think it's ridiculous the people that have those titles. Yeah. And like correct people to call them a doctor if they forget or don't do it. I'm like really you're that pretentious? Yeah, exactly. Go fuck yourself. Like, cool of you, good job but we're just having a conversation here, doctor. Anyways, that's not what this is about. No, fusion performance coming up. I love that horn. Yeah, me too. Hey, boss, we can do anything. Yeah. Pretty harmonizing. Insane what they get, like especially when they do the thing that it's not a prevalent at all in Western music. I don't know what it's called, right? I do it perfectly. You do it exactly like a guy fully classically trained who's had seven bottles of Old Monk and is in the middle of a seizure. She's called me Hustaji Corbin Miles G. Superhuman. Yeah. It's just, it's really insane because obviously we have this reaction to that sound. It's like, oh my god, that's like an orgasm to the ears. Everyone else is there just like, this is nice. Exactly. Nice job. Please go on. What do you want for dinner tonight? Mediocre I'd say mostly. I don't know how they could just like sit there with this performance going on. And you know what I love too? I really love this so much. So like as much as an incredible vocalist, Christina Aguilera can be, right? Let's say we have a Grammy performance. She's on stage and she's fully done up and it's the light and the background dancers and she's doing her stuff. What she does vocally isn't as hard as what they just did and they're just standing there looking at their music just nicely for the night. There's only one reason Indian classical music needs to be trained from basically childhood. Yeah, but one of my favorite things about so many of these performances with vocalists that we see is it literally looks like they just kind of, and I'm not saying that they don't look nice or that they're not dressed the way they should be. I just love that there is nothing but the focus on the artistry of their voices. It's just anything else. You don't need anything else. You wouldn't want anything else. Just let them stand up there, give them a music stand and a microphone and then be labyrinth-gasted that there's very few people on earth that can do it. They just did. What boggles my mind about it is that I don't even know where you would, how would you even begin to try to, I can't even impersonate it. You know what I mean? I can, but I'm Ustaji Korban Lailuji. What do you say? There's nothing we could say. Yeah, it's like watching Ustaji Sakuza. Yeah, it's like, that was good. They're talented. They're gonna go play that. Hey, do you know this song? Do you know like the song they were singing? Okay, I didn't, I was like, it's Mali Adam, so I didn't know if you knew it, but it sounded like you were. First of all, look, their vocal range on that song. What do you call that, by the way, though? That thing. See? Old monk in seizures. Right. Yeah, I know. Yeah, it's in classical. Amazing. It is. It's the same kind of thing as you do in vibrato or if you're doing runs vocally, but it's so much more complex and there sounds amazing. I don't know what notes they went. Charlie Puth could tell us because he has perfect pitch. More like Charlie Puth. I don't know what their bottom note was and their top note was, but the range that they demonstrated in that thing and her vocal quality reminded, it was like if you took Ladaji and Shreya and blended them, you'd get that voice. Yeah, we've heard her many times and she's extremely, I think. Good grief. I think she's at the same level. It's like a Ladaji in absolute, I don't know what her native tongue is. I don't know if it's Malayalam or Tamil or I think we've heard her in multiple. Who's her? Oh, yeah. Him as well. Obviously, I know we've heard him many times, but I don't know her. Unimaginably incredible. You know where she's from originally? South. Yeah, she's South. I just didn't know. I think we've heard her in multiple languages. This one was Malayalam. It's just so funny to me what people in America equate to musical excellence here. Sometimes like Celine Dion. Garbage. Wrong, wrong example. Ah, debatable. More like my butt will go on. Burn. Anyways, let us know whether classical songs should react to live performances from them or others that we can react to. I had to degrade the conversation somehow. Let us know down below.