 from Matt Willigolf. This was a serious one off Twitter, but it adds on to the, he asked you, what is more challenging to make serious or humorous video content? To serious without a doubt. I mean, the, let's put it this way. The funny content that I make is more technically difficult as far as, you know, I, if you pay attention to any golf shop video, just pay attention to how many times the camera angle changes. Yes, I do. Yeah. So I mean, the setup and just, you know, really, you know, when you're reading from a script and you have to do multiple takes and it takes a while, whereas like if you go into a launch bay and you're just talking about a golf club, yeah, you might flub up a couple of times, but you can do a jump cut and it's like, you shoot that video in an hour and you know, you're done and you edit it in an hour and you're done. But the technical videos are more difficult as far as knowing what you're talking about and you have to be spot on or you will get torn apart by the wolves in the comment section. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And I, I didn't take, I don't take, like I said, the game's a hobby to me and I don't take it that seriously. And that's why I knew kind of midway through is like, I don't really want to be into the serious like club reviews. Like I do my own kind of style of club reviews, but it's just very opinionated. It's just me saying, you know, don't waste your time with this or, hey, this might be something you'd be interested in, but I try not to get too technical because that's, I'm out of that business. I did it for 10 years and I just, I'm done with it. I don't want to, I don't want to fight those battles anymore. But yeah, making, making serious content is more difficult as far as the content itself, but from a technical standpoint with making the, the funny stuff, it takes, it's a lot more time consuming. To do it properly, like the level you're doing it as, because I agree. I've watched the videos and the amount of, like you said, different angles that you're filming from. It's fantastic, the effort that you put into them. And I think that's again, I don't know how many people actually do appreciate what goes into it because, like you said, you have to really watch carefully, but those videos, whatever they are, I don't know. If, if, if you, if you saw it, if you understood it, then I would be bad at it because the idea is, it's supposed to look natural. It's like, I've always been told just, it's like, if you do good sound, if you do good lighting, if you do good editing, people should never know. They shouldn't know. But if you do it, if you do it poorly, they'll know. There's a lot of man hours go into those videos is basically what I was trying to say from what you, what you make. There's a lot go, a five minute video. And I dread to think the amount of man hours that you put into that. Yeah. I mean, if, do you want to know, because I'll tell you. Yeah, let's do it. Okay. Well, let's, let's do it this way. Let's just say like a standard golf shop episode, they're usually like two and a half to four and a half minutes long, something like that. Yeah. Well, writing that script is time consuming, because I don't just like, Hey, let's just wing this. No, I mean, I like, I write a legitimate professional script and I have them all saved. I have every single one, but I write it. And then I'll usually do a couple of drafts on that. And then I have to set up that shoe. I have to find time that works with my schedule and whoever else is in the video schedule to make that. And I also have to go there and set up all the equipment. I mean, now it has to do with lighting and it has to do with the camera. And most of the time I'm doing this by myself because the people that are helping me, I don't want to put that burden on there. You know, I'm, they're there on their own time and they're helping me out. So I set up all this stuff. So just in that alone, I mean, you think of how many like hours go into that planning and then the shooting of it, like I said, it's multiple takes multiple camera angles. You're talking three to four hours. I mean, everyone who works with me, Quentin, especially will tell you that my saying is one more time. Let's do it one more time. And when I say that their eyes roll, rolling the eyeball so hard because they know that they have another 30 minutes. Yeah. So when we do that, that's, that's where it ends for them. Like Quentin, perfect example. That's where his responsibility is done. But then, you know, I have another probably five or six hours on that video because I have to go through every take and see what take matches with the take before. So yeah, I mean, one, three, four minute video, that turns into 12 hours real quick. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I think that that, because that's probably something that I imagine a question I'm sure I've seen been asked of you before is that, why don't you produce content more regularly? Yeah, why not, right? There's the answer, isn't it? No, without a doubt. And it's like, as soon as you get like a little bit of a success, and I noticed this right around like 10,000 subscribers and it was like, why aren't you more popular? Why don't, why don't you make more content? Like they forget that you have a day job. Like I work, I never, since I've been 18 years old, I've never not worked 40 hours a week. I just never have not had a job. And it's just not, I mean, all the way through college, even I worked at the golf shop, but I worked nonstop. And just think about that. Like every time you go home and you sit down and you watch a TV show or every time that you go out and you play golf, imagining rather than doing that. Yeah, exactly. Yeah. Editing or shooting a video. You do that. You do that. I mean, you do that for a year. It's like, it wears you down quick. I mean, I try to like, every year I kind of slow down in the winter months. It's kind of a nice break for me. It gives me time to sit there and breathe. But trust me, if I had the time, I would do nothing, but just make videos. But I just, it's, it's not in the cards. It's not possible, especially the way I do it. Now I tried to introduce segments where it's like, you know, my over easy segments where I kind of just sit and talk about some stuff that's been happening with the channel or I do, yeah. And I do the hard boiled segments where I do some club reviews, which is fun for me to do. But I, people want the golf shop. They do. Yeah. They want the rap videos. They want just, they want what they came for. And I don't blame them, but it's hard. It's hard to deliver that. So for me, it was if you had the opportunity, to, I suppose it's working, making videos for YouTube. So if, if financially you're given the opportunity to make the videos as your career, would you enjoy it? Would, is that something you'd like to do? No, I, I, I, I, I don't want to, I don't want the pressure of it. I don't want the expectation where it's like, and that's what a lot of people don't understand. I think what kind of turned me off as far as working in the golf industry is like, I don't want somebody telling me what to do. I don't want someone kind of being like, hey, I paid you money, make this video for me. I don't, I don't want that because it's like, I want these videos to come from like inspiration. I don't want them to come from, I don't want them to come from desperation. I don't want it to be like, oh no, I need to make this, I need to, to turn out a video because it's been two days and I have to put a video every two days up or otherwise people don't subscribe at the rate that they did last week. And it's like, it was too much. And it was, I think every YouTuber, I don't care the genre, I think they all go through that and they learn that lesson of like, they get very obsessed in those early stages. When you, when you start to see the numbers come through and you start to see the increase and you become very obsessed with it. And it's almost to the point where that's where I walked away, like, you know, about a year ago, and it just, it became too much. And I don't, and it was because of that pressure, and it was all pressure I was putting on myself. So I can't imagine if I had to, to work in an industry where they, they were like, hey, we need a video every two days, or lose your job. Like, I don't, I don't want to. Yeah, it is without doubt. It's the biggest difficulty because you, you know, and we, I did a video similar to this about what content you produce and how often you produce it and the reasons why and then selling out and making quick, easy videos. I've been through all that process. It's very difficult to find a balance with all this because I think what people and only what anybody realizes unless they do it is outtime consumers, but also how much should have, and I was obvious to say, but that time impacts massively on your life. And YouTube is obsessional in the sense that you feel a huge pressure to produce. If I haven't put a video out for two or three days, I'm coming out in a sweat. And that's not a nice thing to do. And then the video you do put out is put out for all the wrong reasons. So it's good for you that you've found a way anyway, at least you sound happy enough in the sense that, you know, you're putting the content out and you're in control of it really. Yeah, I'm over it. I'm over it. I'm over trying to make content. I mean, I've said this in multiple ways to multiple people. I mean, even on social media, it's like, I don't make content for my subscribers to watch. I make content that I want to watch, you know, like, and it just so happens that everyone that follows me, they also enjoy that. Like, I'm not going to make a video anymore. I used to, but I'm not going to make a video anymore that I wouldn't sit down and watch myself. And it makes it much more enjoyable. It makes the process much more enjoyable. And it just kind of takes all the pressure away from everything. Now, don't get me wrong. I still like, I love it. I don't know if you've ever noticed that usually within like the first 24 hours, it's usually the time frame I get myself after I post a video, I make it my personal goal to answer every single comment that gets put on that video in any video I've ever made, because it's important to me that those people know that I understand they don't have to spend their time watching my content. And so if they even if they say great video, I'm just like, thank you. It might be it might be it just an emoji smiley face I sent to them. I want them to know that I saw it and it means something to me because that's important to me from my end because I know what that feels like to do the way around. It's just like I feel so like unappreciated and it's just like you feel like another sheep in the flock and it's like, you've seen it with Rick. Like he's very active in the comment section. It worries me people on both social media and both people on YouTube when they don't interact with their with their fans or followers. It's like, I don't know what you think's going on there, but I can tell you right now that they don't care. I mean, they don't care. I mean, I'm not obsessed with it to the point where like every I mean, but like I said that first 24 hours, I mean, yeah, I know those people really enjoy and they're there for the right reasons. And I mean, it just I back when you said something to somebody and you know, and they see it and you know that they see it and they just ignore you. Just you know yourself. I mean, one of the things you've built is a very loyal following. And if you go through the comment section, it's the same people that come back and keep on effectively building a relationship with them. Like I know some of their personality like I know some of the people I know exactly what they're going to say every time I post a video because I've grown like a bond with the people that follow me. I feel like it's a nice group of people. And I think that's why like you said like, I don't go out there and I'm not like, Hey, subscribe, subscribe. And I don't I want people to discover me organically. I want them to come to me because they discovered me because their own path took them that way. I don't want them to find me through like another venue because then it's not genuine. I feel like they don't appreciate it as much. And I think that's where obviously that's the loyalty as well. Isn't it where people if people come and they subscribe for the all the right reasons and because of you know, they love the content, enjoy the content. That's what keeps them coming back for more. You've got a great ratio of sort of subscribers of views and again, every that means basically when you put up a video or I read it anyway, when you when you post a video, everyone wants to go and watch it, which is you know, that's nice, isn't it? Yeah, it makes them watching for the right reasons. It validates your work. Like I said, I make the content for me, but I'm not I'm not totally crazy. I don't just sit and watch my own videos and laugh at them. I mean, I do sometimes, but I I do like when people validate it like, Hey, I can't tell you what this means to me like I was having the worst day and this made me laugh and that's a big deal. That makes that makes me feel like those 12 hours I put in making a video were all worthwhile because one person was having maybe you know, a horrible day and they spent two and a half minutes just to escape and I was able to get them away from that horrible day for a little while. That to me is more important than any aspect of YouTube, social media, anything. It's like, if I can just just give them a little bit of a turnaround or give them a little bit of sunshine in their day, it just that's more validating to me than a thumbs up, then then money, then anything like that. That's the most rewarding part. Yeah. And vice versa. I think it's important to say and maybe look at the camera for this bit is that, you know, having comments on videos is also it's very rewarding as the creator, isn't it? As well, though, it is nice to see that feedback and it does mean a lot. I don't know whether everybody that comments on video fully understands and appreciates the fact, but like you say, it only needs to be a few words, but it does mean a lot when you read down your comments and get some positivity. Yeah, it is a nice thing. And I heard Alex comment on this earlier when you guys did your show before. And I wanted to make a point to say something about it because he was talking about when he makes a video and he gets all these positive comments and then he has one comment through that just tears him down and he tends to focus on that. And I understand exactly what he's talking about because anyone who's put anything out there on the internet has had this happen to him. And it's, I understand where he's coming from, but I, if you go through my videos and you see someone say something bad about something that I did or something, you know, like make a comment, I still comment to those people. I still write to those people. Now, you know, it might not be nice what I say back, but it's important to me that they know that their words are being seen by another person. They're not throwing them out there into this like make believe world. These are real people on the other side. So I make sure that they know that. And I think that's important for other people to know. Make sure that when people say things on the internet that they're held accountable for that. And now I'm not saying give them attention and go back and forth with them. Just write something to them that it's just like, you know, people was like, you know, this is a horrible video. And I'd be like, you know what, you're right. And your mom doesn't cook so well. There you go. Yeah. Yeah. And then just leave it alone and then block that person. Don't give it another thought. To be honest, I mean, on a personal level, I enjoy that engagement a bit too much really, because I do engage. Don't do attention. Like I said, just throw something horrible out there about, you know, how their walk away is sleeping around on them and then block them. That's what I do. That's what that's my favorite thing. I almost get, you know, it's very close to the amount of enjoyment I get out of that from a positive one because it's like, you know, say something nasty and block. Yeah, yeah, walk away. Yeah. The worst PA announced. This is the horrible. I should probably not say that. But it's true. A lot of your early vids were at Bobbix. And we've said you no longer work in there, Brian, Quinston. Do you miss all of that? Do you miss the job? And did Quinston and Brian both work at Bobbix, first of all? Yeah, they both did. But very intelligently, when they were done with college, they moved on. But no, yeah, they both worked. You're all three of you there. Was it a lot of fun? Was it a fun job? Or was it just the bits that you made fun when you did the videos? Or was it? That's the reason I worked there for 13 years. And I think that anyone who works in an environment like that doesn't necessarily have to be in a golf shop. It just my case was, is that it was a small business. Everyone there, they were like my family. And they still are like my family. When you work somewhere for that long, it's not because of the money. I'll tell you that because everyone knows there's no money in golf. It's golf retail. But if you work in a place that long, it's because of the people. And that's why I stayed there is because the environment was so amazing. It was fun. I enjoyed going to work every day. It's just nice. And I would always talk to my boss. He would ask me how things are going. I'd be like, you know what? I was like, this would be the perfect job if it weren't for golfers. Well, I think again, going back to Quinton and to Brian, they again came across as nice people as well, even through the videos, didn't they? To be fair to them. So again, you get that through the videos. And you still got obviously a strong relationship with Quinton, I assume. No, Quinton's a jerk and I hate him. You did tell me to withdraw that invitation, which I did politely and Quinton seemed fine by it. I'm not kidding you. Five minutes ago, he just texted me. He's like, Hey, did you start talking with Andy yet? Is he okay? Yeah. I told him he canceled it. So I hope you replied with no. No, I'm not good. I don't talk to him anymore. Oh, so I also I can't not mention Scuba Steve. You clearly have a great relationship and you seem very much a sort of family man anyway, with bits and bobs that I've seen on the channel. What does what does what does he make of all this? And when I say all this, I mean the kind of whole YouTube thing, like my dad, it's hard to explain him to people because he's he's so unique. Let's put it that way. I because I know he watches your video. So I have to I have to make sure that he hears what I'm saying to him right now. He him in this whole YouTube thing, like you would think he's like Brad Pitt in his house, like he just he like he's become but it's not like he's not he's earned it because people genuinely love him and I do not understand how that's possible because he is okay, you know, if you've seen the videos, you know how he is, but like people at work call him Scuba Steve. Like when people come in, like they're like, Hey, that's Scuba Steve over there. Like that, like he's become like this like local celebrity in his circles. People now don't call him anything other than Scuba Steve or Scuba. Yeah, yeah. And it's just yeah, he he loves it. He loves it. He's like, he'll be like, I think my fans want to see me do this. And it's like, don't talk like that. Don't say that. You don't have fans. Okay. But he does. He does have fans. They buy his t-shirt. They buy shirts with his silhouette on them. Like, I don't understand that. Like, that's crazy to me. Like, if you if you told this to 14 year old me, I would have lost my mind. I wouldn't know. Yeah, there's no way that can happen because my friends would always mess with me in high school. And they'd be like, dude, your dad's so cool. And I'd be like, don't say that. Oh, we can't be friends anymore. But like now I have 27,000 people telling me how much cooler my dad is than me. The guy, he wears cut off t-shirts and like swishy pants every day. And he's like, I can't. But he wears it well. Don't say that. But I just, I just like people, if there's anything I want people to know about my relationship with Scuba Steve, it is that what you see on camera is exactly it. If the camera's running, if it's not running, it's all there. Me, the frustration, me yelling at him, him yelling at me, the conversations and the way in which we have them on camera, it is the exact same. And a lot of times you'll see frustration, like genuine frustration in one of us. That's 100% real. I, my goal when I edit those videos is to leave in as much of the genuine. There's a few times where my dad will turn on like camera Scuba Steve, where he tries to like be a carrot. He tries to be what he thinks Scuba Steve is. I cut it. I cut it and I edited it out. And he's like, why'd you do that? And I'm like, that's not what these videos are. I want the real portrayal. I remember, but he's evolving as a character. You've just got to let him grow a thing. No, he doesn't. He, he is, he has been the same person since I have had consciousness. And but the thing is, is that I, I had a old, I said I had three brothers. My oldest brother was four years older than me. So when he turned 12, he wanted nothing to do with me. I'm eight years old. My youngest brothers, they're four and five years younger than me. They're born 13 months apart. They were best friends. So here I am, middle child syndrome. I have nobody within my household to play with. We lived out in the country. So my dad from the, from the age of when I could walk till I was 13, 14 years old was my, he was my only friend. He's my best friend. He's my best friend to this day. And I swear if you don't edit that part out, we won't talk again. But we, we, my dad, my dad is very much my best friend. And that's had its difficulties on our relationship when it's time for it to be father and son time. It's, it doesn't work because we have always been best friends. And it's always been that like when we spend time together, I mean, we treat each other like there's no respect their father to son. He doesn't treat me like a son. I don't treat him like the father. We are just like peas in a pod and we, our relationship has never evolved. It has never changed. We have always been the way we are. The only thing that's changed is that he's gotten older and he can't beat me at basketball anymore. And he can't beat me, you know, playing, like a foot race. And he doesn't like that. No, because he doesn't like that. By the looks of him, I'll find a picture and I'll post it one of these days. You would never guess how athletic this man was when I was younger. I mean, he was a legit track star. He was a legit like just talented at anything and everything he ever tried. And it's, I've seen him, you know, he just would demolish me at any sport when I was younger and golf was the only sport that I could, I could compete and I could take him in at a very young age. Like, you know, around, around 12, 13, I would beat him. He basically, and I can see now watching the videos that he's, he's still got a very much a competitive side to him, hasn't he? Yeah, he thinks that's what's like, I don't, I never play my best against him because he knows how to get inside of my head more than, I mean, and no one else can do that to me. I don't care about anybody else and what they say to me while I'm in a competition, but him because, you know, there is that like dynamic there where it's like, he's my dad and there's that friendship. But when he like starts to get and like dig into me, like he just, he gets in there like a, yeah, like a, like a, like what do you call those puppet master? He just pulls all my strings and he knows, he knows what makes me mad and he knows that's the only way to make it close because skill wise, if you, if we go out and play golf at a golf course without a camera, it's not even really that competitive. There's been times where he's given me games, but it's not that competitive. But when we play at our golf course that we made or Beverly Hills, the longest hole is 112 yards. I mean, he's right there in it and he just, he has no quit. You can't get him down. You can't, I've seen it. If the man could, if he could read and write, I would tell him to write a book because it would be one of those things where like his approach and his mental game, it's something he's never shared with me. It's so selfish of him because he has one of the best mental games I've ever seen of anybody, but he holds it close to him and he won't share it with me because he knows that's his only advantage to be his own son. And that should show you how cold-blooded this man is. He won't even show his own son how to win. Instead, he wants to demolish me my whole life. And to this day, I mean, I still- It's made you the man you are, Andy. That's what you got to remember. I'm night terrors. I can't sleep at night. I'm a mess and anytime, you know, I'm around. I get the handshakes and stuff and he just, he has no idea. Like I said, the father aspect's not there. The friend is because he won't, he just has no interest in my well-being as his son. He just wants to continually crush me on YouTube. It's interesting because throughout the whole interview, this seems to be the most therapeutic element to it. Why do you guys always want to talk about my dad, huh? You know how hard I work, huh? He does nothing. He just sits there and he takes over the show and he boasts about it. Makes me look like an idiot. I did a podcast literally four days ago. Same thing happened. I'm like, hey, just nice, even kill Randy. They bring up Scooby Steve. They're just waiting to talk about him till the end because they know I'm It's just like in the fuse. It's just like in the fuse. And the best of it all is, it was Scooby Steve that told me to ask this question. What? He said that this question. This was his question. Do you see what I mean? Do you see what I'm saying? Like this is him. He's like, he's like generating his own buzz. Like he, like, he makes his own fame and it's like, how do you not see this? How do people not pick up on this? The man is a monster and he needs to be stopped. Well, I think we'd better leave that one there. I mean, I think the one good thing is on a serious note is it's clear that what you said partway through that explanation was the fact that the way you are on camera, you and him is again real. And it goes back to that. What we said is that when you're, so when you're doing your course, vlogs at Beverly Hills, people get to see it's the real you, the real in that case, Scooby Steve. And you just, I think that's the appeal again. They see that relationship. They see there's no one trying to add. It's no fake going on. Yeah. I think that's a key to the channel. If I take, if I answer you seriously, when I play golf with my dad out there at that course that we built there, there's no course. There's no place. There's no one. That's, that's it. That, that to me, if I get one more round of golf, I'm going out to that place and I'm playing around with him. And it's just to me, it's just, I don't know. It's just like, it means a lot to me. And I see in people's comments, they're like, dude, like if I had one more day to spend with my dad, like, that's how I would want to do it. And it's like, dude, I do it all the time and I'm appreciative every single time I get to do it. And it just, it's one of those things that I know a lot of people don't get that opportunity. And I do not, I do not take it for granted. And all joking aside, I absolutely, it means, it means a lot to me and I'll never, I'll never take it for granted. And once again, if you put this part in the video, I will, we will not speak again. To be honest with you, I can't even reply because I get too emotional. So it's you need to brought me to tears. No, to be honest, and again, I play golf with my dad this morning. I play majority of the golf fight due to the way in which he'd set up the golf that I do now. I don't play very rarely, play any sort of serious golf as you call it. So I play nine holes on a Friday afternoon and 12 holes on a Sunday morning. And that'll, without doubt, 99% of the time it's with me dad. Good for you. And yeah, it's great because it's the one that we've always, but we've got again, the competitive elements has dropped off a little bit in the sense that it used to be exactly the same, brought up a very much a hard school of would give you absolutely nothing. I never let you win. And yes, we still we still I literally couldn't seriously couldn't talk about it because I would get too emotional. So I'm not going to. But we play golf again this morning. And it's brilliant. And the one thing I love about golf and this is away from interview all together is that the one element I love is that you can play golf from a young age to an older age. You can still remain competitive because of the handicap system that they're all the bits that I think are fantastic about golf itself and why it's such a great sport as well. And that whole relationship thing that you can build with, whether it be with your dad or your your mates and all the rest of it. It's a huge part of the game that's if you're not involved in it, I don't think people really understand that side. No, and I think that that's kind of what the attraction to Beverly Hills is. And my dad has said this. And I think he said it in quite a few videos is he calls it the the ultimate equalizer. He calls that because if you think about it, I don't care. I mean, I've seen 95 year old men hit 100 yard shots before. So it's as long as you can still stand upright and you can hit a shot over 90 yards, you can compete out there. And that's what's so great about that course is it takes away every advantage I have because he can hit it 100 yards just as easily as I can. And it just takes it and it makes it competitive again. And it takes it takes me back to when we used to play those pick up basketball games in the driveway. You know, it takes me back when we used to stay up till midnight playing ping pong in our basement. Like it takes me back to those times where I got to see him and admire his athleticism and be like, man, I really look up to him and I want to be like that someday. And he's completely flipped it on me to where it's like, I don't I don't want to live anymore because he just beat me. And I don't I can't do this anymore. Like I can't be around him right now. But it just it's it's so fun. And it's not that's what makes it so enjoyable is that it's like you said, you can play the game forever. And he's a testament to that because he's so old. He's so just weak now. He's so weak and old. He can still play. Yeah, yeah. There could be a few comments about that one from him, I think. But yeah, it is it really is nice to watch. I'm going to I mean, I'm pretty much one hour 13 in. I'm going to end it there because I'm pretty much at the end of the questions. And honestly, I enjoyed every bit of that. It was it was a great chat. And from a personal level, I've asked the questions that I want to know the answers to as well. So I hope I hope you enjoyed it, Randy. Absolutely. Thank you for taking the time to talk. I hope it I hope it helps in your recovery from all the things that you clearly suffer from. This is what you guys do. You bring everything to the surface and then you walk away. It's like free and clear. Here I am alone in my house right now to deal with this boiling emotion. And then you just got to go off and do whatever you well, I will text you a number just in case somebody I can talk to. Yeah, I'm a little bit concerned after this. I'm just going to call my dad and yell at him. It's all right. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Let's hope that now brilliant stuff carry on making the great content that you do one day. And I don't know whether it will it's ever feasible. We may get a game one day. And I look forward to that. And also with scuba, Steve and Quinton, everybody else involved. You have an open invitation anytime you want to come out to Beverly Sills. Yeah, you got free lodging. I'm sure my dad would love to have you. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, that's brilliant. Honestly. So everybody, thank you for watching that. Like I said, most of the people who watch, who watch my channel will be well aware of Randy's. But if you're not for every reason, I'll put a link down below and make sure you go and check out his stuff and subscribe and just become, I was going to say a friend of his channel because that's pretty much what you end up doing. It's one of them things he posts a video you click on watch and it really is good stuff. Thank you again to Randy for that hour of time he's just given to this channel. It's been absolutely brilliant. Comments down below. Love the feedback and I will speak to you all very soon and once again. See you soon, Randy. Thank you.