 So I am genuinely still recovering from what took place at our house on Sunday night. What happened? An impromptu dance party. I will not play the video because it's a song that would give us a potential strike, but this is, this is, this will give you kind of the vibe that was going on there. Um, yeah. So that, that'll give you the vibe. I don't know if you can see that, but it's Andrani and our friend Valerie and Joanna dancing and Mickey was there. Valerie directed the header monologue I did by the way. Yeah. It was impromptu dance party that began at 10 o'clock and didn't until about one 30. We just nonstop danced around the living room. Andrani put the girls in dresses that they hadn't come dressed in and I'm blaming a brand new spirit that we've enjoyed called Old Raj. Not only is it the most delicious gin I've ever heard, but it produces pretty frickin fantastic nights. Sounds like a hell of an orgy. It was. Hey, welcome back to our Stupid Directions of Corbyn. I'm Old Raj and you can follow us on Instagram, Twitter for more juicy content. Thanks to Patreon, follow us through the accounts, subscribe and like button. It was a blast. I am genuinely, we just, all five of us were just choosing songs and go, we did not stop. The windows were all steamed up. We were writing things on the windows had to open the windows, even though it was probably, you know, three degrees Celsius. Heck of an orgy. It was, I'm genuinely, it was 48 hours ago, I'm still recovering. It was glorious. Today we got a, this is kind of a documentary somebody sent me. It's called, say this. Brash Kiholy. And I think it's going over, I know we know about Holy, but this one is actually a documentary. Film the documentary to your, I thought it was going to read this. In the Braj region of India, where the Hindu deity Krishna grew up, the festival celebrated until wrong Panchami, excuse me, and commemoration of the divine love of Radha for Krishna. Holy celebrated as a festival of love. Obviously we know Holy and we've seen many stuff about Holy. We celebrate Holy every year and we've actually had the blessing of celebrating it in Mumbai. Yes. Just before the pandemic exploded. And the night before, I forget what the night before Holy is called, but when they right bonfire and we did that whole thing, we didn't have logs of that. Please go check those out. There are there on the channel. Just look up OSR Holy and you'll find them. But I think this goes over a little different stuff. So cool. Here we go. Wow. Wow. Wow. It's a shot. Many terms that we don't know. Huh. Here's a little do it. Oh, wow. That's a completely different form of clubbing. Thank you. Thank you very much. Thank you. I've wanted to do this all year. Wow. He is covered. Kyawa. Shot gets me emotional sickness. Oh. How adorable. The videography is great. Yeah. Oh, they're really wacky. Yeah. Holy does make everything so picturesque. That's for sure. I also love shots in villages and towns where they got the same color blues on every building. Yeah. I think that's in, I think this is in Rajasthan. It's in, did they say? They did. I've forgotten. It might be the blue city, which they used to do for cast, but now it's kind of like a tourist thing. Oh, is that the reason it was cast coloring? That's not such a beautiful. Oh, they reason they've changed it. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. But nice. That's just lovely. That's cool. Oh, one of those. Chica, Chica, boom, boom. Whoa. Oh yeah, I almost ordered. No, I did. I ordered one last year. It didn't work well. What are those called? Starts with a P, right? Those little, I just like remember, Pichakoli man or something like that. I don't want to know what kind of camera they were using. Seriously. Or if it was just all color correction, which is probably what they did as well. Pichkari. Yeah. Pichkari. I was close. Because when I had that in India, and I had two of my pocket, they call me Pichkari man, which is my superhero name. This is somewhere in Rajasthan. Watch me be wrong. This is just the day that all the women take revenge on the men. Yeah, I like it. Wow. Constant color just coming out of that hose. My goodness. Looks like they're in at least ankle deep water too. Just dumping buckets. I guess don't wear clothes that you that you care about. Next level. Buranga Sampan. Just beating them. I respect their tradition. Great video. Wow. Hats off to Vagabond films. Yeah. For making a fantastic rate, especially like visually. It's like, you know, I'm hoping you submitted this, which I feel like India should do for like documentary. You can make a film that is about holy, but also more like follow a family or something. Right. Kind of like they did with all that breeze and like their drama. Right. But it's about the birds. But then you also get more. Absolutely. But like on holy or Diwali or whatever, 10,000 other festivals they have. And like people would learn a lot and also it probably could be a powerful documentary. Absolutely. Maybe I'll make it, but I don't think I'm qualified to make it because I don't know enough. But yeah, it could be made, you know, it actually would be a beautiful perspective to have it made by someone who isn't India, Indian, and just allow it to be their view of those things, drinking that in. Yeah, but beautiful video. And it's super interesting because obviously we've been doing this for four years now. I think for going on five, I guess, right? We are now entering year, we are entering year five. So we're done. Yeah, we've done four years. And 19, 20, 21, 22. Four years we've celebrated holy. Correct. The first year we kind of just threw one up on the hill with the kids. Second year we were in India. In India. Which is crazy. And then COVID game. COVID game. But I've played holy every year with my family, at least in the backyard. Leland loves it. I need to make sure I have holy I was just going to say, have you ordered your colors yet? Well, actually, if you just go to an Indian grocer, they'll have it. They have it. They have fireworks and stuff for Diwali and any kind of stuff. Not big fireworks, but sparklers and stuff. But I need to make sure I have some of that. But yeah, to learn something that we haven't learned yet about this specific celebration, I love that it just seems like the day of the year that all the women take out their frustration and anger. Oh yeah, 364 days of patriarchy. And now we have our turn. I know that's not what it's actually about. No, it's a joke. It's a joke. It seems funny in that light. I like it. It looks like a... I don't know if I would do it. It seems really intense in a lot of people. My goodness. Well, the totality of it is 40 days long. That is biblical in its perspectives in terms of festivities. Also, you know, and there's not 40 days that goes on in India that another festival doesn't come along. Of course. So you're celebrating two festivals at the same time sometimes? The land of festivals. There's no way there's a 40-day gap between festivals in India. No. I just, I know for a fact that's not the case. Absolutely. But yeah, fantastic documentary. Any of you from this region and have partaken of this celebration? There's no way it's not in Rajasthan. Everything about it felt... Looked Rajasthan, not the part... And the architecture. What the ladies were wearing. But again, the director photography, all the videography was just gorgeous. It looked like it was shot on a red camera with perfect color correction at the end. Yeah, it was probably shot on something like that. Anyways, fantastic little documentary. Shout out to Vagabond Films. Making great content there. Let us know what are the videos we can react to and holy hay.