 So, on January 16th, 2018, there was a Michigan Meteor, and people going crazy over this, and admittedly, me and my wife were fascinated by it as well, and we got to see the flash of the meteor. Now, and I had headphones on, was playing a video game, and I thought, I'm like, wow, my wife has a TV up really loud. If you don't know, I have a home stereo system that's kind of loud with bass. I just thought she was doing something or something in my headphones. I didn't really pay much attention to it. But the flash caught my eye, and I thought, wow, something's really, you know, bright. Well, that's what this was, and this is a great video of it. This is on YouTube. I'll leave a link to this. That little flash was the meteor. Not much. So, pretty cool. That I know of, nothing was heard, but look at this for a second. It almost is like daylight outside. We checked our security camera footage at the business here, and same thing, it lit up the whole parking lot briefly. I'd show you the video, but I'd have to dig through it, and it's really not interesting because our cameras don't look up. But dash cam videos do. So they gave us a better picture of what was going on here, pretty wild. But of course, right away, people are like, oh, no, it's a government conspiracy. It's a missile, and they shut it down, and people are saying, that's not the noise because it was a big boom, and they're saying, that's not the noise that it makes. I'm like, no, no, that's exactly the noise that it makes. And for those of you wondering, of course, then the conspiracy theories, I don't know why I ever argue with any of them, because it's mind-numbing at times. This was the 2013 caught on camera meteor, the Russian meteor. So look up the Russian meteor, tons of YouTube videos on this, but watch this and listen, it makes exploding noises, it broke windows. It's exactly how it sounds. This is what happened in Russia. So this is not a new occurrence. This is exactly how it works. It makes like a big boom. It's shooting really, really fast. It's really surprising when you're playing video games. And there's lots of videos. I retweeted a few of them. So if you follow me on Twitter, there's a link to there. I retweeted a few of the other videos. They're just wild to watch and pretty crazy. This video is from the ISS. So they caught the event as well on their camera. And there it is, entering our atmosphere and away we go. So you can find a lot of the stuff in here. I'll leave some links here in the comments, but it's a Michigan meteor incident. That's why I was retweeting about it because it came very interesting. This was kind of cool too that it registered as a 2.0 earthquake. I happened to live kind of where the air was a little further south. I live right down in here and it came from this direction. So that's kind of the way the sonic boom came in. But I'm doing this video because people are looking for it and want to know what it was and hopefully by now everyone does. I know the tinfoil hats are out there going government. It was actually South Korea. I've seen it already posted a bunch of times. I'm like, man, it's it's tough because before these people were on the Internet, they didn't have a lot of other people encouraging them. And now I can't tell if they're being encouraged by trolls or if they really believe the BS that they're talking about. But you can find as it was a real meteorological event, not a missile. And for anyone wondering, yes, go look at the Russian one. Yes, it makes a sonic boom when it comes in and will shake you and be very loud. But what a wild and astrological event also makes me a little nervous. I guess I don't know the size of it. I'm hoping for some my astrological astronomical, not astrological, different different category of people. Hopefully some of these astronomical friends that I have will help shed some light. I don't know how big the object was that causes this. Maybe we'll check for Neil deGrasse Tyson, one of my favorite astrophysics guy. So far, I see no tweets from him on it. I'm hoping he addresses it. He's real knowledgeable about these things. And I want to know, Neil, how big does the rock have to be to flash that big? That's that's the question I have for you. So maybe we'll I'll retweet some of this to him. And hopefully he replies as I don't know what he's been. He's T tweets a lot. Love the guy. Fascinating. So anyways, that's what happened in Michigan last night while I was playing video games and you can follow the links to see it. Yes, it's not a conspiracy. Yes, it really happened and it's novel and cool. So all right, thanks.