 Greg. Oh, I can hide. Happy Saturday. We were talking about it. We're talking about the weather, weren't we? Yeah. And also how it's the last Saturday of January to us, which was shocking. Yeah, I thought January was just going to keep going. Yeah. Never ending. Never ending. The never ending January. Oh, it's Janine's birthday. Happy birthday, Janine. Happy birthday, Janine. Janine, thank you so much for working on those Templetons that I adopted in Tennessee. They look mighty nice. And that was a great, she discovered, working on these guys, that there was an African gentleman with a surname Templeton who actually lived with a family, but she couldn't figure out the relationship. So she and I talked and she did a great job of working out how he could possibly be related in the research notes section. That was great. Yay. They're saying they're going to come to my house because I'm in Florida, but it's pretty cold here, too. It's like in the 30s is going to be in the 20s. So we don't isn't in Joe. Aren't Joe and your dad getting cold, too? Yeah, they're in the 40s, 50s down in South Florida. 50 degrees. That's probably nothing. Sounds like heaven up here. Yeah, it's 10 degrees here. We would be outside in our shorts. I'm outside in my shorts all year. So. Oh, thank you. They John said, nice glasses. Mags was just realizing it. Yes, they're new red ones. They're not orange, but they're red. Storming terror, terroric of the year. Terror of the key. The board's freezing up. It's freezing up. Oh, and then also they were talking about Maggie and her bread, apple cider bread. That sounded really good. Maggie, you like the bread. Where was that? That was way back up here. Way back. Yeah. Before people were going to blueberries. What? What? Ms. Wiki tree. We can turn her bread. Here we go. Apple cider bread with hot coffee. Sounds so good. Is it homemade apple cider bread or we have the recipe? Really? And then Thomas is also here. Hi, Thomas. Hey, Thomas. Chris says it's snowing in New Hampshire. Of course it is. You got a bomb cyclone happening. Wendy here in Ireland. But you just had a bath. And Kathy's also here in Patricia and June. Hello, June. We all have fat fingers. We do. I was going to say, yeah, look at these. We all make the typos. Here, there. I'm just like this all the time. That's right. Florian Straub. Hey, hello. Hi, Florian. They're they're active on Twitter. You see them a lot on Twitter. Hey, let's see. Thomas Kerneline is giving us a weather report. Our normal 30 to 40 is great weather here on the West Coast. But we had an immense fog and a tsunami warning a little while back. Yeah, from the total eruption. Yeah, it was last week, right? Yeah, Wendy and and Hillary's land, Wales. Five degrees in Indiana. And hi, Jonathan. Hey, Jonathan Boyer. I liked your answer today. Oh, and your answer actually took place less than a kilometer from my house, which is so cool. Well, speaking of what is the question of the week? What is the question? The answer to what question, Megs? You got me in the mid, mid, mid job. You started it. I did. All right, let me get up here and grab this. So the question of the week, what is your favorite discovery that you've made in your research? And a lot of people turn this into my favorite discovery on wiki tree, which was cool. And one person brought actually made a video answer to the question of the week. I'm going to try and play that. I don't know if it'll work because you'll have to hear the sound through my speaker system. If you can download it, you can play it. I think that's how you're going to have to do it. We'll try. We'll see. Yeah. So there are lots of great answers. And I've written down a whole bunch of this stuff to try and cue myself with 43 answers. And remember, people, to go through and upvote the question and upvote some of these great answers, there was one answer that was odd. But all the rest of them, upvote all of them, except for that one. I believe Beaver Christensen, that my maternal grandparents were third cousins once removed. That was a long ago time. And while my mother still lived, she was surprised when she told her. And people are like, OK, third cousins once removed, that's not a big deal. Well, maybe it's a big deal from where she's from. She's from, she's from, she's from. So yeah, cool. Yeah, thank you, Finnegan. That was Finnegan, right? No. Who barked? I hiccuped. Oh, you hiccuped. Yeah. It was a hiccup, Mark. My poor dog getting blamed. Kiki. Let's see. I discovered fascinating tidbits of information during my research. Uncle Waldo Truslow, who burned down the family house while playing with matches when he was a kid. My current favorite is the wedding announcement of my great-grandparents, John Hogan and Alice Ryan, which revealed the existence of her sister, Bertrude, and brother, Martin, that she never knew existed. Good job, Dorothy. I love this, Alexis. We just loved you, Alexis. Alexis, her favorite, her favorite, is meeting a fourth cousin, Lynn, here on WikiTree. Become great friends, even though we live 1,000 miles apart. This is Lynn on the left, David Fisher and me. How cute is that? Meeting cousins. That's her favorite discovery. Dieter Lawrence. Now Dieter did not put a picture of this up. Third, John Tanner says his favorite discovers that my third great-grandparents were buried eight miles from my late aunt and the uncle without them knowing it before they moved there. That's interesting. One of my favorite discoveries, undoubtedly, Dieter, is finding out that there's a hereditary lease contract on the purchase of a part of a dissolved Ducal farmstead in Bernhof in the dukey of Holstein, which so far the oldest ancestor of my wife, Dagmar. So he's found this lease that was related to the Peterson family. And he did some research. He found that when they visited and they talked about the history that the Petersons are still running thus. And he got to go to the archives and make a picture or get a copy of it. And I asked him to post a picture because I thought it would be beautiful because you know how ornate those things are. Let's see. I'm renting them down, land contract. Judy Addon, this is a good one. You guys, discovery about my sixth great-grandfather, Frances LeBaron, a French privateer wrecked in Buzzards Bay. The officers and crew were on their way to Boston as prisoners of war. At the age of 26, he was an accomplished surgeon and a notable Huguenot family in royal disfavor. The day the prisoners arrived at Plymouth, a woman suffered a compound fracture and the surgeons there were gonna amputate her leg. When this guy heard about it, he's like, let me take a look. And he did a surgery on her and saved the leg. And after that, they took him out of being a prisoner, gave him a place to live and let him be an important person. Jane Austen even wrote a book about him, Nameless Nobleman. Cool, that is. Let's see. Um, Chris Ferriero, we gotta talk about Chris. This is one relatively recent that should top anytime soon. He found he's a second cousin, once removed of European actor Pasquale Eliari. He, his aunt cousin and cousins all tested on my heritage and showed up as DNA mages. Now, I just have to say, we all know Chris and we know his love of the world of fantasy and role-playing and superheroes. This guy was a, is known for playing the role of JD Salinas in Resident Evil. Of course he is, Chris. We're excited that you made that discovery. Let's see, keeping on going down. Let's go to page two. I can't read them all. So you guys can go back and read the ones that you can. Maggie was just picking the most interesting of the interesting. I am trying, yeah, they're all interesting. They are. Let me see, share it. June, to parents story related to the owners of the dog house. Of course, June is gonna tell us a story about being related to a famous hot dog stand. That is hilariously wonderful. But yeah, in that funny, my parents were related to the owners of the dog house. A hot dog stand known for its butter-flied hot dogs with special sauce at Wright's Beach, Blaisdale Lake, Sutton, New Hampshire. Who knew? Who knew? She's a cook. She likes to cook. She's got a list of a couple of other people. I'm looking for Cheryl Kotecki. Let's see, where are you, Cheryl? There it is. All right, my favorite is usually the most recent discovery, but the most recent may outlast that rule because I found the identity of the father of my illegitimate fourth great-grandmother. And this is everybody's dream. When we're doing research, we wanna find a diary of the town's first minister, Ebenezer Parkman. He lists the father in this information. That's cool. That's cool. So that's fun. She had no DNA and so finding this diary was just incredible. That's great. Let's go down here, looking for Debbie. There we go, Deborah. Learning that Mary Draper Ingalls is my sixth great-grandmother. She was captured by the Shawnee Indigenous peoples in 1755 at Draper's Meadow, Virginia. Held hostage, taken to the area of present-day Cincinnati, Ohio. Escaped, walked home from Ohio back to Virginia in 1755. That's a feat. Her story is a basis for the novel and movie Follow the River. So check that one out, guys. I thought that was a great story. And I love Ken. Ken Parman, he just did a bullet point list for us. So his favorite discovery since joining WikiTree. And like I said, people turn this more into a discoveries because of WikiTree than a discoveries that I've made. But discovering that I have more than a dozen ancestors that fought in the Revolutionary War, discovering that I've descended from at least one Mayflower passenger, discovering that several dozens of ancestors that arrived in America's 1700 prior to 1700, discovering I descended from English and European royalty, discovering I'm a fourth cousin once removed from a U.S. president. Me too. Only one of them. And it's interesting which one. Discovering the home of my sixth great-grandparent and how cool it's still being used today, you can see that's a what a great log building. Isn't that cool? And then that my great-great-grandmother was murdered by her former second husband. But my favorite discovery of all was getting to collaborate with and meet my fifth cousin once removed, Kelly, here on WikiTree. That's the second time we've had that brought up, but it's actually brought up a lot more than that throughout. And again, go back through and read. And Mary and Saruti, Mary and we love you. We love your pictures. With so many discoveries, it's hard to find a favorite, but one thing I try to do is identify the people, the photos. So she had problems figuring out who all these people were, and then she did, what a gorgeous photograph. That is a gorgeous photograph. I noticed that the photo of the week hasn't changed for a couple of weeks on the main page at WikiTree. So maybe we should say they should put this one up unless there's a better one that Sarah's gonna show us a bit. She said she didn't know who anybody else was. She knew the person on the far right and the person on the far left. And then she figured out it was a generational picture of firstborns in her family. So that's pretty cool, pretty darn cool. Oh, and the next one, I told you, Ryan, we're gonna come to you, where'd you go? Ryan, here we go. Favorite discovery I made in my research, of course. Okay, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. Come here, here we go. There we go, skip. Let's see. Oh, no, we can't hear it. Anyway, so Brian has this great video up. His mic didn't pick him up too well, but yes, go to click on his answer in the question of the week and go and watch his video. It's so much fun. Thank you, Brian. I love it, love it, love it, love it, love it. That's the question of the week. And does anybody else got, let's see. Oh my gosh, the spirits in those houses with murders. What is she talking about? Was that another answer? I had no idea. Is that house with murders? That sounds scary. You guys are following the chat. No, I was mesmerized by you with Meg. Yeah, yeah, there you go. That's the question of the week. Go in and read him and enjoy them. Watch Brian's video, it's fun. Get that volume fixed on there. Maybe next time we'll download it. Yeah, then we can, then you can. That's probably the thing. I'll watch it together. That's right. Thomas Kernelon says he didn't answer it, but he supposes his favorite discoveries was breaking down a long standing brick wall in Vienna. Oh, he thought it was dramatic, but it ended up being bohemian. Of course, you know, those always stump me. What about you, Sarah? What about me? Never mind. What, you're, oh my goodness. Hey. Hey. Hey. Should we go on to the profiles? Let's do that. Yes. Okay, then. I think it involves some kind of food. Food, what? Never mind. Meatloaf? Oh. Profiles of all food. Sorry. Yes, meatloaf is the profile of the week, yes. And it's all because he's a mononymous notable, so a notable who goes by a single name, meatloaf. So he's, because he just recently passed away. And so that's the, that was the inspiration for whoever picks, who does pick the, did we ask this already? Who picks the, the concept for the profile of the week? Oh, Aowyn makes sense. No, that was just, that was just, that's Aowyn in the chat. Oh, it is Aowyn in the chat. She's in the chat, but she's not in it. Why aren't you in the video? Come on, Aowyn, come to me. The profiles are picked. Usually they have different themes and make, like usually, you know, there's something big that happened, like meatloaf just passed away. You know, I'm trying to, poorly with dates. Your commentary about meatloaf and being dinner, if you've ever watched the Rocky Horror Picture Show, there's just so much more meaning to what you said. Yes, because he starred in the Rocky Horror Picture Show. I know, meatloaf is dinner, so. Oh. Oh, well, that was disturbing in so many ways. Let's continue. Let's continue. Anyways, meatloaf was born as Marvin Lee, a day. And born in December 27th, 1947 in Dallas, Texas, just passed away, January 20th this year in Tennessee. He was born as Marvin Lee, but he did officially change his first name to Michael, but he was given the name meatloaf when he was young because of his stocky build. He was a husky young lad, as they used to say. And then was a multi-platinum musician, active in the rock scene, had a rock opera, Battle of Hell, famous for lots of things, including the Rocky Horror Picture Show. So there we go. And he's one of three of the profiles this week that not only am I connected to, but I'm actually directly related to, which is a very interesting thing. So I'm curious if other people are actually directly related to meatloaf. I'm actually directly related to meatloaf too. Are you? How are you directly related? I was looking it up before, I was like 20, 22 cousins, four times removed or something distant long, long ago. I don't see meatloaf in my, what's his real name? Michael Marvin. Michael Adai, yeah. Michael Adai, I got him. Michael Adai. I am not biologically related to meatloaf. 21st cousins once removed through some, yeah, I think it was 26, oh wait, I am. I'm 45 degrees, but I am directly related through my dad. Wow. How about that? That's amazing. So the next one-namer is Charlemagne, who was born as Charlemagne or Carolus Magnus, also known as King of the Franks, Emperor of the Romans, Carolingian, son of Pepin de Frank, Bertrada de Frank, husband of at least four wives, it looks like here, and father of many children. And he was the King of the Franks, the King of the Lombards, and then eventually the Holy Roman Emperor, which reminds me of a sketch that used, was on, I think it was Saturday Night Live, but the person who always gave the coffee touch, coffee, she'd just throw out a topic, she says, the Holy Roman Empire was neither Holy nor Roman, discuss. Yeah. Anyways. But this biography is very well, I'm not gonna read through it all. Judy just said she was just working on that, she worked on that profile. It's a thing of beauty. There's a lot of information here. I love how you've got all the different names for Charlemagne. So in English, she was known as Charles the Great or King of the Franks, Emperor of the Romans, or in French, Charlemagne, King of the Franks, Emperor of the Anxilons, and German, Carl des Gross, King of the Franks, Franks, King of the Anxilons, Megs, I should have got you to pronounce that one. And then all the different ways of, all the different titles and the different languages. Like that's a very cool addition to the profile. Yes. I just looked up, I'm his 35th great-granddaughter. Uh-huh. And he says it wasn't Charlemagne she worked on, it was Meat Loafs. Oh. Oh. Well, that was good too. Ha ha ha ha. But if you're wondering, if you wanna play along at home and find out how did Sarah figure out that she was the 35th granddaughter? So if you are on someone's profile and you click on the second menu item there that has their little wiki tree profile, you scroll to the bottom of that list because all the menu items are actually in alphabetical order, so that's an easy way to find them. You know what you're looking for. You wanna find them a relationship to me. This will check to see if you're biologically related. And so I'm the 34th great-grandson of Charlemagne. And you can both see all the different. I need to collect my inheritance from him, I guess. Yeah, I'm related too. I was 35th on one step away than you further. We're all related. I'm curious how many people in the chat are directly a great-great-grandson or a granddaughter to Charlemagne? I bet almost everyone is. Yes. Yes. The next one-namer is Cher, who I suspect most people... And I was done by a father. Have you heard of her? She was born a Sherilyn Sarkissian and daughter of her father John Paul Sarkissian was Armenian. And her mother, who was Georgia Halt, who had been born as Jackie Jean Crouch, and it's through her mother that she claims Cherokee ancestry. Besides the Sonny and Cher show, which I watch growing up, which lots of people would have watched. I think the first, other than that, that I remember Cher from was the movie Moonstruck. Yes. So I assumed she was Italian all this time. I'm not kidding. But I'm apparently not Armenian and Cherokee and maybe some other stuff. I'm not, I'm not directly related to her. No. Me either. I'm related to her through Greg Alman. Oh, are you? Oh, neat. Anyways, very nice profile here. What's neat is that, I mean, she's obviously still alive, but there's a, it's quite a full profile. In the past, in the last few weeks when we were doing comedians, people who were still alive had, some of them had, even though they had a big body of work, had very tiny profiles. So someone's done a lot of nice work here outlying some of her major accomplishments and movies and things, honors and legacy. Yeah. And sometimes there's profiles that are of living people that haven't been worked because people are not taking, you know, they're wanting to protect privacy, but obviously this is a really good profile. Yeah. Yeah. So that's neat. The next one, Sidoné Gabrielle Collette is someone who I'd never heard of. Many cat, we smiled because of that pronunciation. Oh, did you? Okay. That's good. She was born in Saint-Sauveur-en-Puisais in Yon, France, daughter of Jean-Joseph Collette and Adele Eugenie Sidoné, L'Androit. I'm not going to read all the names though. I know you're enjoying it. Yeah, I'm a GM. I am, because I couldn't be able, I wasn't, I wouldn't be able to. Well, the French names I can pronounce, some of the other ones I can pretend to, but anyways, she's a French author. That's what she's famous for. And she went by Collette. That was the, that's the single name that she's known as. Famous for her novels, but she was also a mime and later on in the profile, it actually says she was a, what's the word, not outrageous, but a scandalous mime. So. Happy to be a scandalous mime. But what would you do? She roped in too many. Some hand gestures that just shouldn't have been done. I don't know, I don't know. Actress and journalist. Bonne chance au revoir, which is in Burgundy, France. Her father is a captain. In the military school, he lost his leg. And so that, and then became a tax collector. That's an interesting career change. From scandalous mime to a- Yeah, that's right. Well, her mother was a feminist and an atheist. And, So, then her mother went by a single name as well, Cido, or at least that's what they call it. And because of her extravagant tastes that led to the family's ruin that you're ruin. Anyways, Colette married twice and no, three times, but received lots of honors. Was even made the grand officer, the legion d'honneur, the legion of honor, which is a pretty impressive thing too, so. Interesting at the very end. So she died of arthritis and was accompanied by her best friend who was her last husband. The Catholic church refused to her religious funeral. Maybe they saw her mime act, I don't know. What the reason was. But she had a national funeral instead and was the first French woman ever to receive that honor. So that's very cool. It's a way to go national funeral France. I wasn't related to her either, so. No. Mags is a leftist, so no. Yeah. Okay. Bye, Mags. Bye, Mags. Rodrigo Diaz Viva was known as Elsid. So he was born in 1043 in Castille, Spain. And. Nobody wants to see me or hear me blow my nose. Sorry. Oh, well. Okay. Thanks for sharing. So Elsid was a nobleman and a military leader in Medieval Spain. He was known as Elsid and El Campeador and also the national hero of Castille. His greatest achievement was capturing the kingdom city of Valencia from the Moors where he ruled that city in the name of Alfonso VI, but he was more or less their independent ruler. Shortly after his death, his widow Yemena surrendered Valencia to the El Moravids. I'm not sure who the El Moravids are, but. In the group, I guess. So this is a good example of a wiki profile that has research notes attached to it, which suggestions of things to do to improve. So I'm not going to go through the details, but if you're creating your own profiles, it's always good if you've come to a place where you can't go any further or there's a place where you know you want to go further, but you don't have time today is to put a section like research notes in. And so I thought I would do that. And put them on profiles that aren't yours because you've done research that may help the profile. Yeah. Notes are a good thing. Very good thing. Yeah. So there we go. And Elsid might have, was he the other one? Let me just check to see if I'm related to Elsid. Yes, he's the other. Who knew? I've got some Spanish blood in me somewhere there. 31st, great grandson. Now you need to work on your Spanish, Greg. Yes. How are we doing? No, I was going to say my mom's missing out because the last, this one and the one before, while we're not directly related, we are connected through her, which usually doesn't happen, which shows she's missing out. Ah, nice. For her side. So it's through my French-Canadian side. So maybe in the Southern France, they cross the border in Basque there somewhere. Must be down here. Okay. Moving on. Jeanne-Claude-Marie, Dana de Guillaubon, was born in 1935 in Casablanca. How cool is that? Casablanca, Morocco, Maroc. Daughter of Leon Armand Dana and Angela Priscilla Feckheimer. And the wife of someone with a Cyrillic name. Oh, I cannot. I can't. Is anybody in the chat can pronounce that for us? Now, later in the biography, it says that Jeanne-Claude-Dana de Guillaubon was known together with her husband, Christot Jabacheff, as Christot and Jeanne-Claude. So my guess is that this translates somehow to Christot Jabacheff. And if no one knows who that is, think of the guy that paints things like Heng's pink fabric over an entire bay of a city or something. He did these humongous displays, these art displays. And that's the other, yeah. Known for their large landmarks and landscape elements wrapped in fabric. There you go. Except for the wrapped Reichstag, the Pont Neuf wrapped running fence in California and the gates in New York City, Point Central Park. So you're familiar with this, Meg. I had never heard of this before. I feel like I, yeah, I've seen his stuff. You've seen his stuff? Yeah. I think I saw, I actually saw his Central Park when it was cool. It was humongous, but it was cool. I wonder if the Wikipedia article has pictures. Oh, like that? Yeah. No, it might. That's called Valley Curtain, 72, Pont Neuf wrapped. There we go. Yeah, I'm wrapping a bridge. Okay. So, so she went, so she just went by Jean Claude, I guess, and Crystal and Jean Claude is the couple. The next one. Bolzio Valentino Ribirace. Four of them are known colloquially as Liberace, but so his father was Italian and his name would have been Salvatore Liberace. He would have pronounced it Liberace. Not the Americanized Liberace that we've all grown up listening to. And his mother was Polish, Francis Samzikowski. Hmm. So he was born in 1919 in Milwaukee County, Wisconsin and died in 1987 in Palm Springs, California. Known as an American penis, singer, actor, child prodigy, son of Polish and Italian immigrants, had a long, long, four decades of concerts, recording, television, motion pictures and endorsements, very famous. At one point, the most famous and highest paid entertainer in the world, which is quite a feat. Yes. Like that's to be the one at any point in time to be the one is pretty wild. But his family was, his family was musically gifted as well. His father was also a musician, played the French horn for the Milwaukee Symphony orchestra, Francis played the play, his mother played the piano. His siblings played violin and piano, but it was Walter who later became known as rubberachi, who was the real genius in the family. And he's the one who went on, of course, to become famous. And as I say, the rest is history. Another huge, well-written and informative bio. So good work here. And some, and it ends off, when they end the profiles with not, not just sort of a, they died, but you know, whatever, a nice sort of summary of their life. Liberace brought joy to millions of people during his career and left an incredible legacy of showmanship and entertainment that will never be forgotten. It's a nice way to end a profile. And Brian says, yes, Batman villain was greatest accomplishment. Oh. As Chris had said, he was also a Batman villain. Was he? And did he just play himself or did he have a character name? Yeah. Ah, funny. He had a little baby with two deaths. Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. That's right. I'm shocked that my closest connection this time is to Pocahontas. Me too. Really? Well, I think degrees-wise, I mean, I was, I'm not directly related to her. No, I'm not directly related either. Yeah. She's one of her grand children, Roth's, married into one of my lines. Isn't that interesting? Which I didn't have 19 degrees from her. How many? 19? I'm 16. What about you, Greg? I think I'm in the 20s. Well, show me in the bottom here. No, I have to go to the connections page, right? Do, do, do, connections. And Pocahontas, 22 degrees from Pocahontas. 22, do I hear? She is my closest as well, along with Cher. Interesting. I would have tagged Cher on you. I would have. You would have, eh? Absolutely. Cher is 23 for me. Meet Lofa's 22. Okay, so you know what? So look at this. Aowyn brought this up in a video yesterday that reminded me, I think someone had told me this before, but I didn't remember. When it changes color, that means it's because of a marriage. It only changes color once, well, twice. Twice. Twice, so that means it's very close, right? So through her husband's sonny. Yeah, so sonny's, mother's, oh, so this is basically sonny's. Mother's, brother's, son. It's an AJ Jacobson. Yeah, so this is sonny's. I blame them all on her sonny's first cousins, married one of my great, great, great, great, grand. Some great, great thing. Some great, great thing. So anyway, we got this distracted from. A beautiful, beautiful. I'm going to tell you, I'm also known as Bocahontas or Po-Hotten. Her father was Wahun-Seneca Po-Hotten. Po-Hotten. How would you pronounce it? Po-Hot, Po-Hot, I don't know. Po-Hotten. Po-Hotten. Don't ask me what I'm saying. Po-Hotten. Po-Hotten, okay. And some people say Po-Hotten, but as I understand it, the emphasis for native language is Po-Hotten. Po-Hotten, okay. Okay, that sounds good. Pocahontas was. So now I'm doing it live on air, sorry. That's okay. Give me a hard time. She was a Native American woman of Po-Hotten Nation with an incredible amount of mythology surrounding her. Her legacy is a positive influence on early settlers of Virginia remains popular today. So again, this is another long profile. I'm not going to read through it. It's well written. And I was interested in reading it because there's the Disney movie and there's lots of, as it describes, mythology. And I was just curious how much is true in what has been mythologized and the truth stretch sort of thing. But I think the profile does a good job in trying to balance. In fact, even talking about. Yeah, legend from. Legend, yeah. Yeah, even talking about how they discover where they came up with the birth date and stuff. Yeah, cool. So very, very good, very interesting. I didn't realize that she was, like after her marriage to Rolf, she was actually given a title like Lady Rebecca. Lady Rebecca Rolf. I would not have known that. I didn't know that. You didn't know that? We did not know. She was referred to as Lady Rebecca Prince. Prince? We all love Prince. Yeah. Now what surprised me about reading this profile was that Prince's first name is actually Prince. For some reason, I just assumed he made up the name or just sort of said, oh, I'll be known as a Prince. But he was actually born as Prince Rogers Nelson. That was news to me. I guess I'm just a bad Prince fandom. Not a huge follower enough to know that. But prolific, flamboyant, multi-talented singer, songwriter, performer, born on June 7th. My wife's birthday, different year. Not gonna say anything more. But prolific output, 39 albums. Like that's crazy. That's a crazy number of albums to have done. So many awards. Links to three of the three iconic songs there. Well done. Well done profile here. And they say when he died, the clouds turned purple. Oh. Isn't that nice? Well, the one link is to him singing purple rain in the pouring rain, which is kind of cool. It's kind of cool. Very. Well, as a brief aside related to that, there's a local folk festival here called the Mariposa Folk Festival and one year, Gordon Lightfoot was a star. Now Gordon Lightfoot lives in Aurelia, born in Aurelia. So he's a local native. But one of his most famous songs is the wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald, which is all about a ship that was lost at sea in Lake Superior in the midst of a huge thunderstorm. And when he went on stage to play that, it actually started to rain and there were sort of rumblings and stuff. So it was so appropriate. Now, at that point, lots of people started leaving the park because it wasn't covered and whatnot, but I stayed to listen to the whole thing because it was just perfect. Anyways, brief aside. Chris had to add that Prince also did a soundtrack for Batman. Of course. Bat dance and party man. Oh, okay. William Seely Gossett, also known as student. So. And what? What's that? Student. So that's his one name to fame. That's his one name to fame. He's a student his whole life. Yes, this is a really cool profile. Again, this was someone- Of course, you're in love with this profile. Yeah, I'm in love with it because this guy was a mathematician. But you'll like him too, Megs, because he was a mathematician and he applied it all to Guinness. Be here. So he was trained as a, he went to school. He was a mathematician and a chemist and he got first place honors in both of those degrees. And then he went to work for the Arthur Guinness company. And so I'm just sort of paraphrasing some of the profile here. But maybe, yeah, he's a scholar. He worked for the company and did lots of studies and worked in their labs and took notes and took the stats. And he hired other scientists because he figured we can make this beer better if we can do it scientifically. And you know what, Greg? I'm actually related directly to this gentleman. No way! I am, absolutely. Oh, that is so cool. That is so cool. I think I am too. I better, I'm gonna double check that. But he applied his mathematics to the science of brewing and came up with some better ways of doing things but also discovered some cool things about statistics and put forth some new theories. But the reason he had to use the pseudonym student was because at one point the Guinness company decided they didn't want their studies, they didn't want their company named in these studies because the study was about the probability of having errors when you're doing an average and you're doing statistics. And anyone who's done science knows that when you do an experiment, there's always a margin of error just based on different things that happened during science experiments. And so that's what his stats was all about but the Guinness company didn't want their brand brought down because they had all these errors. And so he used, he published his papers under the pseudonym student. That's... Greg, I love listening to you talk about the profiles but I'm looking at the time, man. Okay. You're running out of time. The last one is Leslie Hornsby Glosson, also known as Twiggy. Twiggy? Oh, Twiggy. Yes. Now the one thing about this that I, the only complaint I have about this profile is that it doesn't stay Twiggy up here anywhere. You're not supposed to be on here complaining. What's that? You're not supposed to be complaining about that. I love the profile and it says right here in the thing, Twiggy. And then it refers to where it's Twiggy but where would we put Twiggy so that the word Twiggy shows up here? If we were to do that. Would it be under nicknames? It would be under nicknames, right? Yeah, it would be under nicknames. So it should show. Anyways, Twiggy has a very nice profile and I did not realize that she was made a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire. Ooh. There we go. Dame Twiggy. Dame Twiggy. Sorry, Sarah, I took too long. You're fine. I got carried away. That's fine. I enjoyed it. I learned a lot. And also while you were talking, when I was looking at the relationships, I was, because since we had some connections in common, I looked up how we're related, Greg. Oh. And it says, well, this is funny though. So it says we're 26 cousins once removed, but who, so show this, but who we're related through is pretty funny. Hold on, let me share my story. Yeah, you show yours. You're mean. I am cousins to the man. And then we can see who. Okay, I'll start. Is it through me? No. No. We're cousins, Sarah. That's very cool. Okay. Can you see it? Is it showing? Can you see? 26 cousins once removed. So, but look, we are through mistresses of Henry I. Oh, my. That's how we're related, Greg. Oh, my goodness. Ooh, la, la. Oh, no. I don't know. Wow. Okay. How did this happen? I don't know if we're really related. Maybe. Yeah. Okay. Just want to share that. I thought that was humorous. Thanks, Sarah. That's great. Oh, man. Okay. So before I begin, I want to confirm that I chose the right photo to the week, since I did the wrong one last time. Mask. I'm going to go with that one. Look at some masks. It's warm here, isn't it? Masks. Oh, cool. That's not a mask. And also the 52 Answer Week 3 is also a favorite photo, so it's depending on how fast I can go through these. I mean, we can have a few photos to look at. So, see if we can find it. Oh, look at that one. Okay. Well, there's my nightmare. I think Dieter actually, did Dieter upload this one? Sorry, Dieter. Yep. Kinder Masquerade. I like that. Oh, neat. Kinder. He's Snoopy. Aw. That's cute. In Tinkerbell. Mm-hmm. Oh, my, that is terrifying. You don't like the big bunny? Just, I don't know, the mask just is like, I don't know. That's Dixie and Janine Goodson in there. Sorry, Janine. It kind of looks terrifying. Not y'all. It's the bunny. No, it's the bunny. Me too, Florian. Florian's comment is, I'm just waiting for the Batman comment. Oh, wow. That one's funny. Where's the mask on top of her head? I guess. Oh, it's a Halloween mask. That also looks scary. That's scary. It looks like I'm wearing a mask. Aw, she put her dog on her mask. How cute. How cute is that? Who is that? Let's see. Christine Miller and her dog Remington. Remington is my dog. That's cute. What is this? What are they watching? I don't know. I'm trying to figure out what is going on. I was like, robot. It's the parade. Oh. At Tuesday, it's Monty Grock. So they throw candies and necklaces and stuff. New Orleans. Okay, that makes sense. Yeah. Aw. Oh, that's cute. Free school mask. Ah, building a surfboard. That's cool. So he's masked up. Uh-oh, Chris, Brian. There we go. And it wasn't even Chris who uploaded this one. Wow. Did she have- So apparently her grandson drew this. Oh, nice. Kathleen's grandson drew this. Very impressive. That is very impressive. Mm-hmm. They're tight-ed ghosts. It's the Grim Reaper and two of his charges. Right. Chris really liked the Batman. Yeah, I think so. Oh, look. It's a pageant. Common school pageant, Oregon. Look, fairies. I like the wings on the one there. So that was it for that. So I guess then the, and I pulled up the 52 ancestors was favorite photo. There's some pictures here. So you look at these two. Nice. Look at the detail on that dress. Mm-hmm. Of some ruffles. I was watching a TV show yesterday and they were showing an old photograph and there was somebody in the window behind the person on the photograph and I thought of you people. This is a really pretty photo. I like that. Alexis. Alexis has good ones. So does Betty Ko. Mm-hmm. So this is a photo of the liberation of Shem Shuipo POW camp. Kowloon. Wow. Mm-hmm. Oh, I've seen this one many of times. I like this one. That's a good one. So I'm from Susan Lawrenson. What is this? Wow. A whole bunch of. The picture on a picture on a picture. That's what it looks like. Like a triple exposure. My favorite photo from this collection is a double exposure he took with some of his friends while enlisted. Oh, the potential double exposure photograph. Oh, look, donkeys. How cute. Can you blow that up some? Yes. And thank you. Oh, wow. Wow. They look, they look so big on those little donkeys. Mm-hmm. I wouldn't have thought to put on a suit and tie to go riding a donkey. No. No. That seems pretty formal. Apparently you could rent a donkey to take you up the top of the mountain, which was an overlook to the valley below. Halfway up a photographer would take your picture, which you could use then to purchase as a momento. I did that at Niagara Falls a couple of weeks ago with my parents. I ziplined. They actually did a video of our zipline. My mom went down the zipline across Niagara Falls with me. That's fun. That's a nice photo. Let's see. I guess that's it unless I wanna open some of these links through some favorite photos. I'm gonna see a photo on here. Oh, there it is. Here we go. I have a friend who posted some pictures of her family and in one of them I was like, oh, it's Dame Edna. How did you get Dame Edna in your picture? And she says, that's my aunt. I was like, oops. Oh no. Look at this photo. He's just relaxing on the ground. Just hanging out. Yeah. Chill. What's on his arm? I don't. Maybe a hat. I'm just laying there. Let's see. There were a couple of other links. You can look at. Anybody saying anything in the chat really or? Awesome ziplining mom. Look at this one. It has a horse in the back. A horsey and a buggy. They look so happy. 1928 or 20. 1920, yeah. Susie, Janko, Petrini, and Lenny Steven. Judy says it was a napkin on his arm. Oh, I'll just close the darn. Okay. Well, I guess that's it. Did you guys watch the video of the wiki tree challenge? I got posted this week. No, I did not. Tell us about it, Greg. Okay. Well, I just watched it last night, I think, and it was posted to YouTube. It was a summary of the first week of Jimmy Wales because he was the first guest for this year. Wikipedia. It was neat. I thought it was quite interesting. It starts out with Mindy welcoming us. It's a mix of them revealing to Jimmy all the connections and discoveries they've made, but they also had interspersed some shots from the Zoom recording. So one of the things they're doing differently is they're actually having a number of Zoom meetings throughout the week so that the people who are working together on this can meet and collaborate using that as well. And I think Jimmy is part of those, I'm not sure Jimmy was part of some of those Zoom meetings or not, but it was neat to actually see pictures, because some people had their cameras on so you could actually see, like Thomas Conline, who's here in the chat, he was there. And so put a face to a name. It was kind of neat. Nice. Nice. Who was next week's challenge? The one that just finished this week was Paul Gilmartin. Right. And then the next week is, I don't remember. Chris in the chat, do you know off hand? Anybody knows before Greg can find it? That's right. Oh, next up is Hasafrubug, Swedish rock musician. Cool. That's cool. Yeah. Yeah, Thomas also answered it too. Oh, did he? Swedish guitarist. Hasafrubug. Anyways, I thought that was a... It's interesting. I like how they're doing it now. The genealogists, they're doing just, you know, other famous people that don't have their trees done and we're making them. Right. Was date night yesterday? Was it? Or is it next week? We really should get our act together on this stuff. I know. Julie should have come on like I asked her. Well, do we have any other updates? Chris wants to get his famous person discovery into the weekly challenge. Weekly tree challenge. So, gotcha out there, gotcha back. They're saying next week is Friday. Good thing we have people who know. Yeah. So this coming week is date night. Woohoo. So tune in on Friday. So tune in on Friday afternoon at four o'clock for that. See us back here on Saturdays. Same channel, same bat time. Let's just keep going with the Batman team today. It seems like there's a lot of Batman today. Yeah, we did do a lot of Batman stuff today. There was a photo for the photo of the week of Batman too. What are the chances? Nobody had a photo of Meatloaf as the Batman villain though. I kept waiting for that one here. Well, I guess until next time, friends. Stay warm. Yes. Goodbye.