 So what's up, man? How did you see the picture of the black hole that I did you Google it? I saw it in a news story that we were running. Oh, okay. Oh, yeah. And then immediately when I saw the story, I was like, what is this? And my buddy texted me, sent me the article and you know, I read the article. And so the when I saw it, I go down a strontomy rabbit holes almost on a daily basis. It's fucking fascinating to me. And you know, the whole theory of relativity, the whole quantum entanglement thing that just absolutely fascinates me. So when I saw this, I was like, yes. But like, I mean, if you get a picture of a black hole, like what? You're not gonna see anything because we can't see black holes. And so when I saw this picture, I'm like, I can't be a black hole. Like there's no you can't get light. Like you can't see it. Like, what are they? How are they doing this? And so they, you know, they took the picture in a wavelength of which the the human that we can't detect. So I was like, oh, OK, well, all right, that makes sense. And it's just so fricking cool. Yeah. I mean, in the fact that in the size of this thing and, you know, the fact that, you know, every galaxy has a black hole at the center of it. It's just like, oh, it's so cool. So cool. Yes. It's very cool. Now, did you ever see the movie Interstellar? I did. Good movie. So actually, as a matter of fact, I think I saw Interstellar. That's the picture of the with you in Toronto, the picture of the black hole. Yep. Very similar to what they saw today on, you know, what scientists showed us today. Fucking amazing. Art imitating life. It's crazy. Well, when you've got science or life, man, when you've got scientists advising the filmmakers and what the stuff is supposed to look like, it looks. Yeah, it's pretty much spot on. I mean, that's spot on. But hey, you know, it's pretty damn close. It's nice to be right, you know, like like the tweet we're just talking about. Oh, my God, it's amazing. Oh, that's so cool. So so to since you just mentioned the tweet, I'm going to go ahead and read the tweet. The tweet is from one of my heroes, Mr. Neil deGrasse Tyson. The tweet is read this like a script scientists. We've produced the first ever image of a supermassive black hole 55 million light years away. Response. Ooh, scientists. We've concluded that humans are catastrophically warming the earth. Response. Well, that conflicts with what I want to be true. So it must be false. Savage. Savage. How it goes, though. I know. That's a whole other show on to itself, too. So what did you think of the supermassive black? Pretty sweet. It's pretty fucking. You got my opinion. It's pretty fucking cool. I mean, it's, I mean, shit that you grew up in. You see the movie, the black hole going across the universe and it eats everything. And then the older you get and the more scientists find out about this stuff is that they're destroyers of worlds, really. But at the same time, they they're very stationary. They're not like traveling across the universe, at least not, you know, in not in not in lengths that we can fucking, you know, rationalize with our minds right now. You know, there are theories out there that black holes will eat everything in the universe. And then eventually that's the only thing we left be black holes. And eventually all the black holes will eat each other. Which that when there's a theory for that. And I forgot. I forgot what the hell it's called. But anyways, regardless of the fact that that the picture today of the black hole is amazing, you know, it's it's really fucking cool. And I dug it. I'm a huge nerd. So I dig all this crap. You know, it's it's one of those things that that makes me think like, you know, you get people get so consumed with their lives and themselves. And, you know, they become so self-centered. And when you think about black holes or you think about, you know, life outside of this very, very small blue planet that we live on, the universe is unconceivably huge. Yes, it's also. And like when you think of the stress that you have in your life, the stress that you have in your life is so insignificant to the universe. And when people say, like, oh, you know, the universe is against me, the universe couldn't give two craps about it. It's it's very, I mean, it's very scary. It's it's scary because it is scary. But it's scary, cool. All right, I agree. But, you know, some people can't handle that. If you want to see something really sweet and it might make you pee a little bit, go to something called I push it. It's called the scale of the universe. And what it does, it starts off, I think, at like human scale. And you can zoom in and you can zoom out to the smallest measurements and like things that we are that we are known to man. You can zoom in and see those things. And you can zoom out to the largest objects in the in the known universe. And I think at the end of it, it it just it just compares sizes and it shows you like in meters what how big these objects are. And oh, wow. I mean, it'll take you five minutes to go through it. I mean, it breaks down to the smallest things, which I think are quarks. Yeah, I think they're quarks and the largest things which it ends on, which is the observable known universe. And it's like 10 to the minus 35 to like 10 to the plus 35, I think. It's it's so big. It's it's ridiculous. I mean, it's it's it's hard to even rationalize those numbers or so infinitely, infinitely small and infinitely huge. But it's just it's just a cool thing. And I mean, I think it's science is vastly underappreciated right now. And I don't think people give a credit for what it's it's done for us. And they don't listen to scientists enough. And it's OK to have belief and have faith in certain things. And I totally get that. And I understand it until to a degree. I'm like that, but I'm going to listen to people that are smarter than me when it comes to certain things because they're smart because they're smarter than me. Yes, well, I mean, yeah, but whatever. Think about that, though, you know that the number that you just, you know, rattled off the top of your head and how big that is. But yet people think that we are the only ones. Like, I mean, I look at the size of it and I think to myself, it's so it's inconceivably ignorant to think that we're the only form of life. I don't think it's it's just it's just not possible. It's not possible. I don't think it's anything to do with ignorance. I think it has to do with arrogance. It's not being ignorant. It's being arrogant. Yeah, you know, that's a better word. And that's not so much ignorant. No. Yeah. So if you go to the scale of universe.com, it's an amazing site. You got flash because you're going to need it. It goes down to the site will remind you if you don't have it installed. 10 to the minus 35, which is a plank length. And I think you can zoom into the next thing, which you might recognize, I think, is a quark neutrinos. So quarks are at 10 minus 35 neutrinos are at 10 minus 24. Geez. And then the largest thing. This is a lot of fun science with Rick, the largest object in the observable universe. 10 to the 27 is the estimated size of the universe. Observable universe. They really don't know how big it is. Yeah. But anyways, you have to go check it out. It's pretty cool. It's humbling to say the least.