 Right, okay. I've decided to do a quick book review of this book that I've just finished reading Simulacra and Simulation by Jean Baudrillard, French philosopher, written in the 80s. Now, I don't know whether that text might be reversed on this because I'm using the front camera on my phone. If it is, I don't care, you know, I've just read out what it says and you guys watching this can't read anyway. So, who cares? Translated by Sheila Farrier-Glazer and it's published by the University of Michigan Press. It's a French philosophy. So, let's get down to the review. It's not a very long review, okay? Everything is fake. It's basically what Baudrillard is trying to say in this book. I mean, that's pretty much what he's saying. It's 164 pages of pointless waffle where he's essentially saying everything is fake. Although it does appear to like the book Crash by J.G. Ballard and I think he likes the film Apocalypse Now as well because there's an essay about that and how that's maybe not fake or something. So, most things are fake except for the things that Baudrillard thinks are good or something along those lines. Now, whether you believe that everything is fake or not, that's your choice. But regardless of whether you believe that everything is fake, I think we can all agree that there's evidence to suggest that not everything is shit. Unfortunately, this book does not form part of that evidence because it is 100% utter crap and proof if you needed it that French philosophers like Baudrillard are nowhere near as good as German philosophers like Nietzsche. There's a whole chapter at the end where Baudrillard explains how he's a nihilist and then goes on to say that nihilism is fake. So, what's he saying? That he's fake? Who cares? He's French, he's dead, this book's shit, don't buy it.