 Okay, cool. So yes, today I'm going to be doing a Q&A for the Asperger's in Society documentary. So if there's anything that you want to ask, you are very welcome to put it down in the comments. I am also on YouTube as well, so if there's any comments over on YouTube then please let me know if there's anything that you want me to talk about. I do have some questions already drafted up from people from the questions section of the Instagram. So yeah, for anybody who isn't already aware, the Asperger's in Society documentary is a documentary that I made by myself. It's the first documentary that I've ever made and I started off the documentary with literally about zero video editing skills. I suppose like the majority of the editing skills were in like iMovie, so it's not really that great. I had very minimal equipment and this whole sort of process was me trying to contact different people and getting in contact with them. Shoot a few videos around Manchester in my own time and before the documentary I wrote a literature review which was like just going into the aspects of autism and the co-occurring conditions of like mental health and stuff. And it was very, very interesting to go through that because I realised that mental health was something that is quite common but I didn't realise quite to the extent that it was and so that sort of spurred me on even more to try and make the documentary as good as possible. And I'd say that it was a very difficult process. It took me around over 300 hours to plan it and this is excluding the literature review. Get all the sort of the content forms and video release forms and all that. Shoot the videos, plan the interviews, edit it all. I finished the project in my final year but it wasn't quite to the level that I wanted it to be and when Covid sort of came along and isolation came along then I started and sort of used the documentary as a bit of an anchor in that time. And over the three weeks that I was editing it I had to change a lot of things basically. I had to apply some of the knowledge that I have now to what it is now to the documentary process. So it's a very difficult sort of journey that I went on obviously because I'd never done anything like that before. It was quite hard. There was a lot of blood, sweat and tears going into it definitely and there was a lot of occasions where I was so engrossed in fixing a tiny issue and having to redo things over and over again to get it to the standard that I wanted it to be. But I'm very happy with how it's turned out so far. The people that I had on were amazing and I think I did a good job of delivering the interviews in stages, more appropriate stages I suppose. And yeah I'm quite pleased with it. I think one of the questions that someone's asked me is how did I feel when I watched it back? And the funny thing is is that I haven't watched it since it's gone live on YouTube. I sort of paused it during the premiere because I decided to sort of get out of the house and try to chill out because the nerves were building up as I was getting into the premiere. So I paused the premiere and I sort of interacted with people and stuff but I haven't watched it since because I can literally recite the entirety of it for you if you've wanted me to. That's how much I've gone over it and tried to tweak it. So if there are any questions as I said please put them down in the comments. It can be anything to do with the documentary process or the meaning behind it or pretty much anything that you want to ask about it. I'm very open to answering any questions on this little Q&A live stream. But until we get one of those I will go through some of the previous questions. So there's this one here. When you felt drained and exhausted what did you do and how did you keep yourself motivated? That is a very difficult one. I think I've always got the motivation to do projects and to make videos and to pop things out. But I did on many occasions get so into the editing process that I forget to eat and I'd sort of work on into the night and stress myself out and have a difficult time sleeping. But I think as the editing process went on and I got past a few of the big stages that's when I started to sort of schedule in times in my diary in order to finish the editing. It was very difficult. I think my girlfriends and my family and friends where I've always been a very big source of comfort during those times. I usually put quite a lot of pressure on myself in every aspect of my life so it's sometimes quite difficult to cope with that. What is the background meaning behind the documentary? I think this is an important one to cover. The meaning behind it, the reason that I made the documentary is because of those mental health statistics. The way that I wanted to go with it was to give people a more personal understanding of autism and how other people view it and the type of things that go on in daily life for autistic people at all stages. So just in a general sort of take one local environment to school, to adulthood. And that sort of awareness is a very core sort of integral part of it. It's not one of those documentaries where it's just personal and emotional and story driven. And it's also not one of those factual videos and films and that's all about these other traits and this is what you should know about autism. It's not like that. It's a combination of the two and it was a difficult job to try and combine the two but I think I managed to do it. I wanted originally to call it the mental health crisis in the title. That's what I just said, the mental health crisis because the intention of it is to shine a light on the mental health stats for autistic people with severe co-occurring conditions. The fact it being quite a big sort of social model of disability kind of thing. And then I guess I'm hoping that this documentary will open avenues for me and other people within the community to go and talk on actual mainstream platforms to get these messages out. And I think being able to get into that mainstream arena is very important for influencing policies. There are a few policies that I want to sort of push some actual actionable things that I want society to action I guess. First being mental health specialists for autistic people, autism specialists in the mental health and counselling and all of that kind of stuff. I think that's a very important thing because we don't have a lot of that stuff and we know that traditional mental health work for autistic people is not as effective as it should be. Second thing would be education at a young age. It doesn't have to be like a whole course on autism but if we can get children to understand what autism is at a younger age and sort of have that exposure to it and I guess sort of empower autistic kids to tell people that they're autistic, then maybe it will become less of a difference and more of something that's common to life I guess. And then lastly it would be to do with workplaces and we know that workplaces aren't suitable for autistic people in many situations. There's a lot of difficulty with being autistic in terms of it's quite similar to the struggles that you have at school and it's hard to cope with that and we need some way of educating people about what autism is and why we need to change stuff. So that's sort of the meaning behind it, that's the background sort of processes to why autism is part of the documentary and why I put so much effort into it. So I've got the next one which is how did you know when you finished the documentary? How do you know when to finish? I think I never really knew when I was finished to be honest. The problem was that the quality of the audio and the video in some of the scenes was not up to scratch. It wasn't good enough and I had to learn lots and basically just try and tweak it around as much as I can by listening to other content producers on YouTube and things like Skillshare and stuff like that. But I never really knew when I was finished and even when I put out the documentary I still felt like there was something that I had to do. And I guess there is a couple of, there's like two spelling mistakes in some of the slides that I've been made aware of but I decided I've put so much into it that it doesn't really matter those little quotation marks or spares. So yeah, no idea, no idea when I knew when I was finished with it. It was very difficult to get that straight in my head. Alright, so we've got another question over on here. If you had endless financed time resources, what would you have done differently? I think that's a good question. Well, I think I wouldn't have, I've had to put so much time into editing if I did have that endless finance. It was a big limiting factor and I did have to put a bit of, probably about 100 quid of my own money into making it. There wasn't really that much support in terms of monetary support from the uni. And I think I would have liked to have like a bit more lighting and just stuff that makes it a little bit, little bit more nice and clean and high quality. The thing that you've seen is really the height of the content that I've put out, even with the sort of background noise and some of the interviews and some of the choppy audio. That choppy audio and that stuff is processed quite a lot to make sure that it's alright. I think finance is definitely the biggest thing. It would have been nice to have like a co-producer or something, but I think it's nice that it is something that I've done. So we've got a question over here on Instagram. Ian Lowe has said, hey, how are you doing Ian? Ewan, sorry, Ewan. But we've got a question here as well from WSky783. Hiya Tom, where can we find the documentary? You can find the documentary over on YouTube on my Ask Burgess Grove channel. It is at the moment completely unmonitised and ad-free, so it's very clean, easy watching. But if you want to sort of see some of like the blog posts and the behind-the-scenes content and the stuff that I've been doing around the documentary, then you can find it on my website which is AskBurgessInSociety.com. But yeah, that's where you can find it if you didn't already know. We've got a question here. What personal barriers did you have to overcome during the production of the documentary? I think for someone who struggles with mental health to accept that I do, there's a lot of personal barriers to overcome. There's a lot of things that you've got to tell yourself that it is good and you've got to reassure yourself. Sometimes taking a break from the editing is something that I needed and it's something that I guess I've learnt and instilled more in myself since the sort of editing process of the documentary. Usually with YouTube videos I'd just be going through and I'd be shooting it, editing it, uploading it. But I guess with the documentary you can't really do that, so it's more of a slow crawling process. And there's a lot of personal barriers. I didn't have much experience as I've said. I had to learn all of it myself from scratch. I had to deal with some difficulties in terms of promoting it. The University of Manchester said that they would put a lot of effort into trying to promote it for me, but the PR campaign they did didn't really do much. I guess that gave me more time to make a website and put the behind the scenes content out and stuff. What were your desired outcomes for the documentary? Well, as I said, I want people to watch it. I want people to be aware of autism. I want autism to creep into the mainstream media and make a bit more of a big impact on people rather than just be a standalone project that is primarily by autistic people. It's nice to have that as well because I included so many personal accounts of autistic people. It's obviously in the best interest of autistic people, so it's nice in that sense. But in terms of actually making a vast difference in the world, it's got to be a mainstream thing. How did you learn all the skills required to make a documentary? YouTube Skillshare. Any videos online, just those videos that you can search for? I never did a course or a degree or anything that I had to pay for. It was all freely available information on the internet that I'd searched for. Every time I hit a barrier and I didn't know what to do and I wanted to make it better, I searched around that and I taught myself and I implemented that into the documentary. But yeah, the skills were hard to learn and that drew out the length of the project quite a lot. Quite a lot. I think if I was to do it again, if I was to make another documentary again, then it would be a lot more fluid and it would flow a bit more and I'd be able to get it out quicker. A bit less stressful as well, definitely. So this is the one that has been asked by three or four people. What is your next project going to be? I think for the time being, I'm going to take a little bit of a step back from those massive projects because obviously the documentary took so much time to produce. I had to take a step back from my other media responsibilities. So I stopped doing as many YouTube videos. I tried to keep up the 40-odd podcast as much as I could but maybe skipped and missed out on a few of the deadlines that I'd usually set bi-weekly. But yeah, that seems to be the next project. I want to make something that's more in-depth into the autistic community. I want to actually go around autistic advocates and influencers and produce a documentary around that. So I feel like one of the difficulties of the autistic community on Facebook and in those groups and the ones on the arena of people on Instagram is that most people on there are most followers would be primarily autistic people or people who are parents of autistic people. And it's not really information that's not already readily available and not understood and relatable to some extent from autistic people. But this stuff doesn't get out, it doesn't escape. Obviously there are some great work that autistic advocates are doing and I'm definitely not taking away anything away from that. Like I'm doing the same but it's very hard to get that information out and these experiences to outside sources and different people. Now here's one that's quite similar to the last question. Have you ever considered doing a documentary featuring neurotypical people discussing their views of autistic people? Sort of like an open educational session, obviously in a positive sense but something which highlights the myths. Yeah well I think obviously the documentary that I did was partially neurotypical people apart from Peter Bainbridge and sort of the main storyline. I think the difficulty of producing something about autistic people just talking to neurotypical people is that it's not going to feel very good for autistic people to watch it because there's always needs to be some aspect of the personal views of autistic people or else it's not fully representative of autism. Maybe it'd be nice to sort of put together something that's to do with like for example parents and maybe make them have conversations with autistic adults or relationships that could be another sort of topic that we could cover. But all of those things are sort of on the back burner and it is something that I'm thinking of doing and I would like to produce projects like this in the future. It just depends where I can get funding and the support and the equipment that's needed to do that kind of thing. So I've pretty much gone through all of the questions that I have received. There are some questions that people have sent me but they haven't particularly... I tried to go through them and tried to find the other questions but I couldn't find them. I couldn't find them anywhere and just seeing that Instagram has just deleted all of them. So if you are watching and you do want to ask another question please feel free to. We do have some personal questions that are not related to the Asperger's in Society documentary but I'm not sure whether that would be appropriate for this live stream. Is there any other questions that anybody wants to ask about Asperger's in Society? Please let me know. Please send it over. Well I have a drink of water. Good old age too well. Hashtag, hydrate the aspies. We do need some hydration. One thing that's funny about doing a podcast is that I've realised just how unhydrated most autistic people are. There's so much lip smacking in the podcast that I do. It's quite funny because I do it as well. It's not just of people. So that's where the hydrate the aspies comes in. Yeah, hashtag hydrate the aspies. That's the new meme. Definitely. Are there any questions anyone wants to ask? Or else I will just keep rambling on about the documentary until it's finished. I think if I remember correctly the actual interviews that I did the ones that really stood out to me were obviously I was quite surprised with Rick Simpson, my Daikonno instructor with his ability to please very nuanced views and experiences with autistic people. With Michelle she's my mom and she's amazing. I never really heard her talk about autism to an audience. She speaks really well and I was so surprised at just how amazing she was at speaking. She produced some very important points. I actually had to read just some of my motives for the documentary just to include those bits because I thought it was impactful. Then I guess Peter Bainbridge obviously gave a lot of different strong opinions and that was really great to hear from him. He was a brilliant guy to talk to about these things and he's obviously had a lot of experience. There was also just to see how the difference between the views and personalities and the experience of just five autistic people. It was crazy. It was very different and the levels of different traits all seemed to be on a different level to each other. It was quite eye-opening just to watch that. I was given a lot of help to find these autistic people from Norman Darwin from the Access Summit and he did a lot of work to pull people together and encourage them to do the documentary and to speak. So I'm really grateful for him. We've got some questions over on Instagram. Are there things people can do in the workplace to make it easy for us bees? Yes, be nice people. Be nice people, listen and be kind and don't be too quick to judge. It's all very basic stuff like basic human qualities of just being kind and friendly towards people. I think that's very overlooked. Beyond all the traits and stuff, you don't really need to know about autism to be good to an autistic person, to be a good friend or to be a good colleague. It's not really a difficult task, but people need a reason to do those things against a lot of scenarios. So training for managers is very important, giving them some guidance on introducing autistic people and putting in place different things to help with the difficulties that they have and also to try and maximise the actual productivity of them. And then I guess the awareness in the workplace would be something important to work on just in terms of just being a little bit more kind and aware. Yeah, definitely. Hashtag be kind. We've got another question from WSky who's giving me a lot of nice little questions. Do you think it was easier or harder for you as an aspiring to make a documentary because our space can be more focused? Yeah, I think the concentration definitely comes in there. It's easy for me to get carried away. I'm not the type of person to go with something faced by a big obstacle to sort of go out and care and pass it to the side and not do it. I'm very much an anxious worker. I'm very much an anxious worker, so if I have something in my head that I need to do that day and I haven't done it, I will continue working on it until it's finished and it doesn't matter if it's like 1am in the morning or anything like that, I'll get it done, but I suppose that has some impact on my mental health and my ability to work, which I guess could be a negative as well. I think most of it is just my motivation to do it and the documentary is part of my mission to try and raise awareness of autism and to educate society on how to better include autistic people. With me having such severe mental health conditions, it's very much an anchor for me. It very much keeps me around this goal that I have. I don't particularly enjoy life just in general. It's very difficult for me and having that sort of outside motivation to keep going is important for me. Is there a different response to the documentary from Aspies and Neurotypicals? Well, to be honest, most of it has been extremely positive. There's been a few comments about, the only negative comment that I've got is from an autistic person saying that I should delete my taekwondo instructor's interview because he says that autism is not a disability per se, which I don't understand. I think that's a good point. I think if we're talking about the asperger's aspect of things, that's a good point. Of course people have... The recent podcast that I did with Esme Hayes, one of the autistic interviewees that I had on the documentary she talked about the difference between autistic traits and autistic impairments. The co-morbid traits that come along with being autistic can impair daily functioning and stuff like that. I thought that was a really important thing to highlight. There's always the elephant in the room when we talk about autism awareness and acceptance. What about those people who can't communicate and do need 24-hour care? I feel like that addition of the distinguishing autistic impairments is quite an important thing. Yes, everyone is going to have different viewpoints and that's the point of it. If I could get someone who was very harsh and completely getting autism wrong and being a right asshole about autism I would include that as well just to say what an asshole they are. It is a university documentary and I'm supposed to keep it PC and a little bit less inflammatory for that purpose. But maybe in the future, maybe we could get some cool-toned children's puzzle piece company on to talk about it now. They'd probably sue me to be honest. It's more other people's reactions to aspes that causes problems. Yeah, I think in real life, in daily life, it is very much a social... It is very much attributed to the social model of disability. I think that's important and it is characterised by difficulties. I did a video interview with a guy called Guy Shahar from the Transforming Autism Project. He actually told me about the study that they did about three groups of people. It's supposed to show the difficulties in social communication and social cohesion that autistic people have. They broke up into three groups, half and half autistic and neurotypical, fully neurotypical and fully autistic. The neurotypical group performed really well, they were amazing at the group tasks and they did well. The funny thing is that the actual full autistic group, 100% autistic group performed equally as well on all of the tasks that they were given. Which is very cool. The problem came in when they had 50-50 autistic and neurotypical. They performed a lot worse and I think that really highlights the fact that the way that we communicate isn't necessarily bad. It isn't necessarily a difficulty and an impairment, it's just that we communicate differently. I thought that was an amazing, amazing thing. I'm going to ask him to send me it soon. It is a brilliant thing to talk about. Are there any other questions that anybody wants to ask me? I know WSky has given me a lot of awesome questions and I'm very appreciative of that. Yeah, you should read it. I need to read it as well. It's just a comment. Don't quote me on that but I just found that quite interesting. I'll have to ask him. I'll send it to you Vicky once I get it. What are the kind of stuff that I've done around the documentary? I've got the website, the Aspergian Society website that I made myself. It took a long time. It took about two days of solid work to sort of iron it out and learn all the ins and outs of website building. That has, I think, currently about two blog posts on my experience making the documentary and also a topic that Esme wanted to talk about, one of the autistic interviewees. We had a little bit of conversation back and forth on the 420 podcast about the media representation of autism. That was a very productive article and I sort of laid out all of the things that I wanted to change in society for it to be better for autistic people. Then I guess you've got the behind the scenes video series that I'm going to be doing. Esme's has already gone out. What it is is basically the full interview rather than the little snippets that you see in the documentary. Just to give you a better background into the actual views and opinions and experiences of these autistic people. Sadly, if I was to include all of the interviews, it would be a massive film and it wouldn't really be a film anyway. Those are really interesting. I only chopped out a few things that Esme didn't want to go public. It is a nice little video and I think I've got about everyone but one person that has got back to me about being on the behind the scenes series thingy. The 420 podcast will be going out on Saturday with Esme and it's a very long one. Esme has a lot of strong and very intricately worded opinions on autism and media and it's a very interesting interview that I did. That will go out on Saturday at 12 on the YouTube channel and Spotify and Apple podcasts. That could be quite a nice good listen. I've also got James coming on to talk on the 420 podcast at some point and there's Adam and Nick who may come on to it. If they feel so inclined I suppose. There's a lot of stuff going on around it. I've done a lot of video interviews with the National Autistic Society which is going on Friday. I've done obviously the one with Guy Chahar. There's this big BBC producer and broadcaster freelance director called John Offord who has started his new podcast. And he wanted me to be the second interviewee on that. It's pretty good. Yo yo yo, what's up my brother? How are you doing? What's up bro? Do you got any questions for me about the Aspergist in the society documentary? I would love to hear some nice juicy questions that I can sink my brain into. Not my teeth because that would be silly wouldn't it? I was trying to think of some more questions so let's have a look. We have had quite a few people tuning in and giving some questions. Less so on the YouTube side of things. We've got some more things here. How does autism occur? That is a good question. Autism is... the research around autism is a little bit mixed. It's not fully appreciated as it is. So you can say that it's partially genetic and it's partially environmental and social. Genetic being that it's likely that if you're autistic that you can have relatives or parents or siblings that have autism or have autistic traits. But it really depends on the environmental and social factors around that person that distinguish whether they have enough traits to be considered to be autistic. It's a very complex way of going about it because it's not like a test for diabetes or something. You can test people for diabetes but you can't test people for autism. You have to look at the traits and make a decision based on those traits and whether the person is autistic and that's not always going to include every single autistic person. And sometimes it's not even needed. Sometimes it's not even needed to have that autism diagnosis because there's no need for the level of support that the diagnosis would bring. But yeah, it's partially genetic, partially environmental. Hi, greetings from Mexico. Thank you for coming in from all the way from Mexico. Greetings from the lovely North Yorkshire in England. Nice to have you on. We've got a few more people joining in but currently I'm not sure. So we've got about 15 minutes left of this little Q&A stream. So if there's any questions that you want to ask me about the documentary, please do ask anything to do with the documentary. It would be always very appreciative because I've gone through pretty much all of the questions that's been sort of pitched to me beforehand. So we've got another one here. How do I know if I'm autistic? My mates keep calling me it. I think knowing that you're autistic is a difficult thing. The best way to know that you're autistic is to firstly read up the baseline medical knowledge of autism in terms of those traits. Seeing whether any of those traits really get you on any level. And I suppose the next step is actually going out there and listening to our experiences of autistic people on YouTube, on Instagram, on Facebook, whatever. Anything like that, having that idea is very sort of mixed understanding of autism is a good way of determining whether you are. Another one. Does autism give you a kind of superpower? I think it really depends on the person. Superpower is a very extravagant word. I think there are a lot of traits of being autistic that make us great workers and make us great at what we're interested in. Being that concentration, being that outside the box thinking because there is no box. Being just the way that we process and understand our environment and ourselves in sort of more of a logical sense and more of an analytical sense. That can be a certain superpower. For me when I was doing my taekwondo, concentration, liking to stay to a routine was a big part of why I got so good at taekwondo. So I suppose in some ways, yeah, yeah, some ways a lot of good traits. Other side of that, a lot of bad traits but you can't have one without the other or at least most people can't. You're from West Yorkshire as well. Hey, another Yorkie. New Yorkie bar. Nice to meet you. Thank you for tuning in from West Yorkshire. You don't think it's a superpower? Well, it's not, is it? But there are some benefits and some downsides. It's just a little bit sort of difficult to know. It depends on the person really, I guess. I guess you have people with like savantism who have like amazing mathematical, I guess you could say superpowers. But then on the flip side of that, they're not very functional in life and they need a lot of support, like a lot. It depends on the person still. Do scientists have a rough idea of the environmental factors? The environmental factors I wouldn't say are completely from, you know, like chemicals and stuff. I'm not talking about, you know, the age-old stupid myth about vaccines and autism. It's not about those kind of environmental factors. It's more to do with, you know, how you brought up the way that you taught, the things that you experienced. I think because there is such a neurological difference between autistic people and non-autistic people, a lot of that is going to be coming from the genetics. There are some genes that have been highlighted and there's also some differences in hormones and hormone receptors and differences in the sizes and connectivities of different parts of the brain for autistic people that aren't really a subject to environments, I suppose. But there are always, in terms of the traits, there are always those environmental factors that dictate how the person behaves in the world, I guess. How long did the documentary take to make it from the concept? So I had the concepts already. I wanted to make something about autism and mental health and thought, hey, you know what, we're going to include a main storyline but we're also going to go behind the scenes and include some, I guess, some more personal interviews. It really was just a trial and error process. I thought, tell you what, I'm going to go out there and I'm going to get some B-roll that relates to what the script that I'm putting across is like. I'm going to try and give a bit of an explanation in my own words on my own personal videos about what autism is in terms of the trial and impairments and stuff like that. But a lot of that is bringing it to light in a very slow, constructive and progressive, God, I'm using a lot of buzzwords here aren't I? I basically just winged it. Winged it with a plan, yeah. Was it difficult for you to get a diagnosis? It wasn't difficult. I was diagnosed when I was 10. And it wasn't difficult. I was definitely autistic. And because of them, obviously in the UK, I didn't have to pay for it. My parents didn't have to pay for it. We got a few benefits from it which was good because I kind of needed it. And I was, yeah, 10 years old. It was one of the highlights of my childhood. I don't really remember much from my childhood but that was something that really stands out for me. Your mum and dad are autistic too? Well, my mum's definitely not. I would say that there are some aspects to my dad that are typically autistic. And that is not a bash at all because he's got every base of his life covered at the moment, he's into his fitness, he socialises, he dates, he does all of that stuff that is good for a mum to do, a person to do. But yeah, he does have a lot of traits of autism. But I'm not too willing to say that he is because it's not really my place to do that. I can only suggest and I can only sort of inquire about things. But yeah, I'd say it comes more from my dad's side, especially like my granddad, definitely my granddad. No question about it. He doesn't know it. He thinks I'm the disabled little kid in the family but it comes from him. He's passed it on to me. Can I ask what made your parents think there was something different? Yeah, I used to bounce about a lot on the jump line. I used to bounce by a brother by his pants. I used to spin around a lot. I used to get on my parents' nerves to be in no belief. You really used to annoy them. When I was a kid, I used to go like this. I always used to stand on the edge of new places that I was being taken to. I stood back and I analysed people before I entered situations. And I guess I was a little bit too black and white and direct and stuff and sometimes situations and transitions got the best of me. So we are about 54 minutes into the live stream so it's going to be finishing up soon. I hope that everybody is doing well with the Covid situation. It's not exactly the most fun situation for us. Covid is probably a good thing to talk about. It was really difficult for me to deal with isolation. The first three weeks that documentary sort of pulled me through and gave me something to focus on but it really just wiped out all of the things that I would usually do and that really just stabilised me quite a lot even now as an adult and being able to live independently and stuff. Covid is difficult. There is a joke that we have in the autistic community. It's an autistic world now. There's no social interaction. Everybody moves out of the way of you. We have no physical contact. Stay team is away from me. So that's sort of a meme that's going around in the autistic community which I think is quite funny. The realness of it is that I am quite a social person and I like to see my friends and it's quite hard for me to go out and see my friends in a situation. It's quite lonely as well. It's nice that I've got my family around and stuff. I've got some good contact with my friends and stuff in my video chat with my friends now and again but it can be quite hard. Yeah, it is hard. Love you too bro. Thanks for coming on to support me and Julia. Thank you very much. I appreciate it. So we've got some new people have joined. Hello Beth and hello Auti Evie. We do have only four minutes left so if there's anything that you want to ask me about the documentary you've got to get it out soon because it's going to be over soon. If there is any questions that you want to ask please ask me. There may be an opportunity in the future to do another sort of catch up live stream about it and if it does kick off and we do get interviews on mainstream media sites then maybe it might be worth having another live stream about all the stuff that's been happening but we don't know until it comes along so this could be the one and only live stream and you've only got three minutes. Three minutes on the watch. Where can you watch it? Aspergys Grove YouTube channel and on the www.aspergysandsociety.com There you go. So about that bouncy on the trampoline. Bounced my brother by his pants on the trampoline because I was a naughty boy. Probably gave him some irremovable scars from there. I apologise, I'm sorry. I'm sorry I thought you were enjoying it. You have a scar. Oh god I'm sorry. It's taken a turn for the wrong. Any more questions? We've got two minutes left. Quickfire round to get some questions out. We're going to talk about the dock. Can I drive? Yes, I've got a licence but I hate driving. I hate driving. I don't find it pleasurable. I like being in the car but no worries. I'm glad that everybody has come on to support me and it's nice to have a platform to talk about the documentaries. I've been so behind the scenes, behind the computer for so long that I haven't really had a chance to interact with you guys. I think it's nice that many of you have come on to watch this and tuned in and out and asked some questions and stuff. I'm very appreciative of it. I'm going to have to round it up now though but if there's any questions that you want to ask you can send them to my DM and I possibly could do it in the future. If you haven't already checked it out there's my YouTube channel Aspergerist Growth Mental Health and Autism Videos Forty Autie Podcast which is available for free on Spotify and Apple Podcasts. There's about 13 episodes in total as of this Saturday and there's lots and lots of more videos on the AspergeristInSciety.com website that you can check out. Anyways, thank you very much for tuning in. See you later.