Den Dybe Tallerken

Den Dybe Tallerken #28 Frederik Ris

Daniel Paarup
Speaker 1:

Hi, ladies, and welcome to episode 28 of the Deep to the Air, this time with Fredrik Ri as guest for the second time. It's just a nice conversation between me and Fredrik where we're talking a little bit about our USA tour in summer. It was Fredrik's first time to USA and we had so many great experiences that we thought we should do a deep review of it when we get home. So we're also talking a little bit about some kind of tour and that kind of thing. So I'm excited to help you with a deep review. Have a nice conversation, have a good one. Bye, spedden, what's up? What's up? You're going to have a microphone a little closer to you, a little closer to you? Yes, you're going to be honest Really. Yes, it's better. Yes, so we're sitting here again Once again. Once again, we're sitting with. There's a lot going on.

Speaker 1:

There's also a lot going on there's also a lot going on since we sat here last. We sat here last Once again, where we made our March on episode, where we talked a little bit about your life, some things you said you've been through. If you haven't heard about that episode, you can take a very good look at this episode. You can just dive in and hear our first episode together where we talk about some really, really exciting things. Yes, and then after that we'll just go back to this episode.

Speaker 2:

Yes.

Speaker 1:

But I think we should try and take it chronologically. If I remember correctly, yes, whatever, let's just talk. We've been in the US together. Yes, we have. Yes, that was your first trip to the US. Yes, for the whole time Shit man, I'm mega excited to hear how your experiences have been and, for those who don't know it, I can understand that it has been a dream for you. Can you explain a little more?

Speaker 2:

I think that the US has always been. I think there are really many who experience that they just want to go back and I think there are really many who have what should you say? Not seen as a possibility Because it's so big and maybe I'm so far away. So the US for me, before we were in town, it was something you didn't play and it was something you saw on YouTube with some crazy people and you think what the fuck have they started over there in a crazy country? But I have always thought it has been an interesting country Because it is so big and you can travel to the US and in the East and West, and that's two different things. So I just think that when the possibility rose, it was just something it's all too cool.

Speaker 1:

And then there was something like that you have a foregold to the Wild West. Oh, yes, he has. Because we were going to the Wild West, we were going to the Promised Land, we were going to Oregon, and not just a wild place in Oregon. We were going to Bend, oregon, which is an old Lumber City, or Lumber Town where you call it, which is a I don't know what the old name is, but it must be the old Fáilsevis. That's where you get your hands on the things to fill the trees and make them for something you can do yourself, and you can still find that light in the city.

Speaker 1:

Even though it has been, it has been, it has been where it is. But it is such a vibe that I am in the area in the US Now I have been so much more than really really many different places in the US and there is such a vibe with the Wild West. So they are cowboys, they hang out in the wind and and all the way.

Speaker 2:

It's all too cool.

Speaker 1:

Let's just dive into how your expectations were in relation to what you saw and experienced on the tour.

Speaker 2:

I think that my expectations. I can't remember the place. I just think that it was so surreal that you were going to the place and that you met there in the airfield and was ready to go there. But I think I had expectations that it would be a good tour and that there would be some impressions and that you would see something that you would not forget again. That was what I had in mind, that I would take you home. And then I think that when we are on the move from Amsterdam to Portland I think it went up for me when we are fucking at the place.

Speaker 2:

But it's also the first time I've been on such a fucking plane. It's so big and then just be upgraded to.

Speaker 1:

I can't remember the name of the best city in the country yes, one of the most luxurious Mega-fantastic we all all of us, lisa are upgraded. It's so nice of you, so nice of you, lisa, my beautiful lost dog. Now we have a dog that comes here, carla. No Sit, lisa, there was a crab, it was a real place. And then we all, all of us, others, we are upgraded, we are five places. So four are upgraded to Business comfort and then we have Lisa there, just gets sent down to.

Speaker 2:

Rijke 50.

Speaker 1:

And just in the middle of a Rijke. I just had to go down and say where is my place or what. There was a Rijke and then Carla If I say Carla on this episode here a few times, so it's because we have uploaded this episode here with me and my lost dog really wants to be with me.

Speaker 1:

Now she's over here and needs me a little and a little out of the box, yes. Then you come over there and then you go out of the airport and then you have to go through the immigration. And it's always just a little bit exciting Because it's the whole tour there, you know, there is a person sitting there who knows a little. Can you say no, yes Again, why no? Just no Again, so as soon as you come up on the other side of it.

Speaker 2:

So it's like okay, now we have.

Speaker 1:

Now we drive, but we don't do that. We don't drive anywhere else. No, why are you laughing?

Speaker 1:

Oh my head, Because we come down and I'm going to rent our rental car and my driving license is in the band from the last time I was there and that's just no go. And I'm the only one who has decided on a credit card. So you know I can't go too much detail, but we end up in ordering an Uber From Portland, the band we talked for three hours on the tour With all our luggage and I'm not sure if it's Mike or what. Mike and Cecilia.

Speaker 2:

And Lil Atlas.

Speaker 1:

And Lil Atlas. We also had to order two U-Bots With all the luggage. We could barely afford it.

Speaker 2:

It was press.

Speaker 1:

Yes, we had five people on the driver. We had to order a big Uber. What the hell can we get A little over 2000 kroner?

Speaker 2:

It was okay, we drove for three hours.

Speaker 1:

It was a taxi tour to Købenavren he was so nice, he was so nice. Go to Paul.

Speaker 2:

Paul man.

Speaker 1:

Paul. Paul just wanted to show us the whole thing.

Speaker 2:

He was just going to tell us some stories. The whole tour, it was fun.

Speaker 1:

Easy to just get to the end. And then we passed Mount Hood and we said we shouldn't drive up and we just sat there. I was totally jet lagged.

Speaker 2:

I think I've been driving a Max for 40 minutes On the move on the 10-hour tour. I just couldn't sleep. So when we were sitting in the car I felt like I felt like it was a dream. I was actually so surprised. It was really weird. He was just like who are you talking about? Should?

Speaker 1:

we drive there or not, I don't know. You just have to say no, no, okay, but I'm not sure you are. Yes, I was driving the last car before I know the whole thing when I drove the tour I've driven many times yes.

Speaker 2:

It was really nice, it was really nice.

Speaker 1:

Yes, it was a drive from Portland to Bend, when you drive through almost all types of environment. There is grass forest and then there is the earth, and then there is land, you know farmland and all that.

Speaker 2:

It's really weird to drive through so many different places in three hours. Yes, really weird. Yes.

Speaker 1:

Bend is just If you look at the picture. It's just If you look at Oregon from here. Oregon is split in two. One half is filled with forest and the other half is actually the earth. It's called high desert because the trees are going up and there is a little mountain range that makes it split in two, where it rains a lot towards the coast and then there is really really green and gold on the other half and Bend is just in the middle of the two. Yes, where you drive a flow called the shoot river, where you then in the old days, transported all the towers, All the towers they had.

Speaker 1:

They have been transported down through these flow systems here. Yes, what was it you have? There is a, a country with you, and this western With the west, and that's a thing that I've always known. I've always called it the old school. You can always go to Macaw, where I have something like that. How was it to experience it in real life?

Speaker 2:

Oh shit.

Speaker 1:

I was at home.

Speaker 2:

It was really strange Because typically the things I I gather with it is a real old movie or old game when you run around Outlaw Really just to make cowboy life. So it was a very wild experience that it actually was found, find it and it's not possible. What can you say On film? So it was mega-merky, mega-cool. I think it was so interesting. The way their relationship and the way they approach life and assist is fucking cool. It's really nice.

Speaker 1:

Are there any of the things that are jumping out?

Speaker 2:

There are many things, I think, what can you say? Cowboy-like, I think that the whole landscape, the driving tour to Bend, where we drive, I think we came across the old Indian Reservoir we just bought it a long way and then out in the horizon, you can see the clips that are flat and go down.

Speaker 2:

That was the first impression I got. It's the Westman, I think it was the first time. And then I think that we came into the shelter where we lived. The two people we were living in the shelter they were so cowboys, but just the way they were talked about.

Speaker 1:

They were mega-cool for a whole year. It's so unique when you're at home in Denmark where you feel that people are very, very distanced in Denmark. Is there a place in the bush where there are no people? You sit there. It's very strange to sit on the side of a wall if there's a place, but there you talk about it, you just offer people welcome. It's very unique.

Speaker 2:

That's important. I think you could learn something from home. I think it's much more beautiful that you just get to be like what's going on? Not because you have to have a big conversation, but just a real curiosity.

Speaker 1:

When we go out and have a tour, you get to be like where's the other one? It's amazing.

Speaker 2:

But there's at least one experience that stands right in front of you.

Speaker 1:

It's a tiny town. Can you explain what a tiny town is? A?

Speaker 2:

tiny, tiny, tiny, flat in nothing. There's almost no service on the phone or anything like that.

Speaker 1:

We're actually driving from Bent, and then we're driving from Udderly into the Örkland landscape, because we're going out for a Peanute, hells and again this place. Here we're going to something called Tacketown and to tell you the truth, last time I was in Oregon I was in Tacketown and there I actually bought a T-shirt for you.

Speaker 3:

I put a Tacketown on it.

Speaker 1:

And then there was a picture of Bigfoot Tallard or something, and then I remember I was in the city thinking, yes, fred, can he see this place here? It's full, it's not going to be a cowboy anymore Than this. And it didn't even happen.

Speaker 2:

No, it doesn't. This time we stop in front of the city so that I can see it, but also because we're going to have some gasoline on the car and you I mean you or Lisa, who's standing out and thinking, I have to go out and stretch my legs. Then I come out and I hear a heavy guitar sound and then there's one guy who's almost he's screaming.

Speaker 2:

He's not screaming, but he's giving it to him in a different way and he's like what the fuck is this? How does it come from? Then he goes like this, looking a little. Then there's a building that has a facade on one to one western.

Speaker 1:

So you have the big flat facades up there over the boutiques windows.

Speaker 2:

Yes, just up there and then it starts to go over there and you can see there's an old man playing the guitar and I was like fuck, that's cool, that's it. So, very fast over there with our polo-ed camera. It's just a little mission on a tour and capture some unique moments and that one. It was very clear that I just took the picture and I come over and stand there just like that and listen to it and kind of nod to him because it sounds good here.

Speaker 2:

And then he starts to ask me if I have to sing for him. Well, that's how he likes it. And then I ask him, is it okay to take a picture of me? But he says it's so nice, and then he starts to jam out there.

Speaker 1:

On his completely low margin guitar.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, for fuck's sake, man, he's seen things and says I've had this guitar in 60 years 65 years.

Speaker 1:

I like how much now it's a what yeah he was just completely do.

Speaker 2:

Hi Karla, yeah, he had worked with. What was it he had?

Speaker 1:

He had been a lumberjack. Can you see his face? I think he would be a little bit of a.

Speaker 3:

A lumberjack, A lumberjack yeah that's what you call him.

Speaker 1:

He's heard on a chair in.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, he's the whole life Without the rubberjack or whatever it was. So he was just stoned. He could find a song, he could find a guitar and he could find a. To see, fuck's sake.

Speaker 1:

He saw fuck's sake.

Speaker 2:

So I got the chance to take a picture with the camera and just sat down to enjoy the moment. And when he had played the first song, he started to ask me what I was doing here, where I was from, and explained that I was from Denmark. And then he started telling the story. He was in Europe once, in England, because his only son was married to a woman there. So he was in England once, or he had lived in Europe before, and then he came.

Speaker 1:

I actually have a song about Europe.

Speaker 2:

And then he started playing a new song. So it's a short conversation, a short conversation, a short conversation, a short conversation. And you come over to me where he's playing the guitar and I just think we all stand up and enjoy that moment. And then he wrote a little book about his life that we both ended up buying and fascinated by himself. Yes himself. That was just a fucking great experience.

Speaker 1:

It was so cool to hear how he talked about this that he's been playing the guitar for more than a year. So the drum board was held in to the guitar room I can't remember the name and the drums were completely cut off. Yes, it was so cool. The guitar was just being with him and he talked about it when they had. You know, they had been playing the guitar all day and we were just sitting down at the table playing the guitar. I don't know if it was completely wisky, it was so cool. How old do you?

Speaker 2:

think he was. I think he was around .5 or 8 or 9.

Speaker 3:

I think he was very old, do you think so?

Speaker 1:

Yes, I think he was around 100% in his 40s, 40s, yes, something like that. He was very specific about his 40s.

Speaker 2:

He was like 40s Was it wild. It was really really wild. A very nice experience.

Speaker 1:

It was really unique, because now we know each other for a while and I know that you have searched a lot. You were at least happy to see the result of USA. And then we are there and we are in Tiger Town, which is no more western than that. There are 9 people living in that city. There is a tank station, a farm where a bear can live in a bear, and then we are in a souvenir shop looking for things and then you sit there with him. It was so cool from my point of view.

Speaker 1:

One thing is that when I have lost travel a lot and I also missed it a lot and one of the things I think is cool when I travel now is that you will take others with you and so they can experience some of these things, because some of the things you see on these trips, they are so unique and it's so hard to explain when you come home. So I think that's it. There's so much in it when you're older that it's so cool. It was so cool at that moment where I walk by the car, after thinking about it, towards the souvenir shop where he's playing outside, and then you see him there. I actually put a story up there where I took pictures of you and him and then I'm glad I met myself in a parallel universe.

Speaker 2:

Yes, that's right, but it's really what you're saying, that it's like you're getting down to experience things. Now, I was allowed to take the picture of him. It's the best picture I've ever taken on a trip, and when I came home I just wanted to show it to God and be a man. It's so cool, the picture. That's really cool, isn't it just cool? It was fantastic. You can talk about it in time. So I think it was just the sun and the stars where it was perfectly placed at that time. So I was allowed to experience it. It's not something you can just run into and see.

Speaker 1:

You can't arrange it.

Speaker 3:

No.

Speaker 1:

And those eyes are just you just have to be in them. I also remember that we're all together. There's not one star in our phones. We're just sitting there listening to his story, trying to understand what he's saying. Trying to understand what we're saying, because he can't hear his shit.

Speaker 3:

It was really cool.

Speaker 1:

Really really cool Shit man, it's just such an eye view. We're going to Paint it Hills, and then there's this beautiful landscape and then we're going to the street and we're going to buy that thing and I'm going to go down. It's the shop where you can buy it?

Speaker 2:

No, it's not something with a deck, is it no?

Speaker 1:

A gentle man or something. A gentle man, I think. So you can buy something if you're in love with it.

Speaker 2:

Yes, a hat and a little bit of the world.

Speaker 1:

It was a big mission for me. I actually have this one right here behind me Right after she bought it. It was at the festival, but it's a real one. It's not like that, Not like plastic.

Speaker 2:

No no.

Speaker 1:

When you go to the country festival in Oregon, so it's not plastic that you buy, then it's real. It's real people coming out and having this standard. It's really cool. Do you think there was something that was hard on the tour?

Speaker 2:

Yes, the impressions. I actually feel that was what was hard on the tour. It was that you wanted to experience things every day, but I think that I'm at least a person who needs time to process every day In such countries, when there are so many things and there are so many experiences, you see so many things that you're so fascinated with.

Speaker 1:

So I could An overloaded impression right. Almost everything is new.

Speaker 3:

The cars are new, the roads are new, the trees are new, the animals are on the streets, the toilets are different, everything.

Speaker 2:

So I think that I should find the right way to get there. How I did it the best way? So I really think that it was. So we just tried to get there, because you really experienced some crazy things every day and then it was just a little bit easier.

Speaker 1:

It was one of the best times.

Speaker 2:

No, no, no Overhead. The day we got there, where we were going to the band after we had gotten the hat and all that, we were going to eat and we sat on that bar Maybe a sports bar.

Speaker 3:

Yes, yes, yes.

Speaker 2:

And we were sitting up there with the kids and ordered something, and I feel that there is an eternity before it comes, and then it comes. I can't eat anything. My stomach is just like no, no, no, no, let me eat. And I'm so tired of sitting in that bar and sleeping you were so tired, I was so tired I was so happy.

Speaker 1:

Yes, crazy man. We looked up at the bar and said Okay we have to go back.

Speaker 2:

We have to go to sleep now, I think so because I didn't sleep on the plane. It was terrible.

Speaker 1:

Many people actually want to know that you did it right, that you power through the plane and then you have as long a day as you can have and it stops the sound a little early. But then you are so tired and then you go to bed at 7 or 8 in the morning. And then you just sleep as much as you can. And then, if you're good, you can sleep until 6 in the morning, and then you try to do the same thing power through the next day.

Speaker 2:

I think that jet lag is really impressive. It was bad the first day, but it was the first time I experienced it. I've never tried it before, but I feel that.

Speaker 1:

How would you describe jet lag if you were to use it? If people would try it.

Speaker 2:

The way I collected it. When I was younger, I played a lot of computer games at night and there was a whole good party. You were playing at 6 or 7 in the morning and then you go back to the cabin and buy a round-trip and then you go home again and then you can sleep after the day. The feeling is that you like to go to bed at 10 o'clock, so the body sits a little.

Speaker 1:

A brain is totally back after. And then you go back to the cabin.

Speaker 2:

And then maybe you go to bed at 2. Exactly so that's how I would describe it, but I actually feel that it's okay. On the 30th day, of course, I was tired at night. That's what I experienced the most the first week. It was if that could work well, but at night I was really tired, so I think it was a good idea to get over it again.

Speaker 1:

So 3-4 days I felt that it was okay, you were like fuck man, it was just so hard. And I can't find out anything, but it was also something else on the way home.

Speaker 2:

Never try something like that. It was the worst.

Speaker 1:

You just missed. Fuck, man, what was it? I was trying to talk about the things we experienced. It was so crazy man Concerts, country music, music and some breweries. We lived at a golf resort. Can I thank you, man? Is there something that you think is over-surprised? Positive?

Speaker 2:

Just generally. I was really, really over-surprised about the guest-freedom Completely general and I could also ask people about you should have pissed off, what the hell is it? You hear about. There were a lot of people who said that it's not the good stories that sell in the media, so it was clear that you could hear negative things, so I had a little bit of a. It's not really about the media, it's about how you go there, get out of there with a shock and say get off my property.

Speaker 2:

It was really crazy guest-free and really cool and if you had used help from one country or liked to see one country, you could just say it. Then there was only one country that would help you. It was really over-surprised that people were so cool and just wanted to help.

Speaker 1:

We were over-surprised at a fantastic time. There was just so much fun. It was generally really fun. Every day there are people who come to the band. You can see the Four Sisters all the girls out there and when you go to Smith Rock you know good, beautiful, beautiful nature. But that's what changed a bit this year.

Speaker 3:

Can you explain what?

Speaker 2:

exactly happened there. We had been out at Smith Rock twice.

Speaker 1:

Smith Rock is a national park.

Speaker 2:

Very, very, very, very beautiful, Absolutely. We had been out once and then we had taken the running shoes and running shoes with us and we had been like we have to say something about the trail. There is a bit of a hard trail over here in the USA, so we drove out there and when we I think it's actually the first time we I think when we get out there it's starting to go up. For us it smells a little bit like smoke, and when we get out of the car it's just a piece of shit. So there is the whole thing. It's a very special heat sink.

Speaker 1:

The sink, when you see it in the morning, is kind of like a cold blue. It was very heavy in the beginning.

Speaker 2:

It was really heavy, really heavy, and then there was some wood fire. I think we got to the heat around California, maybe.

Speaker 1:

It was actually. No, it was really close it was. I don't know if I should say a team's race or something. So if you drive west and then up around the mountains at Broken Top, south Sester, North. Sester, you have to go on the other side and then out east towards the Eugene over there.

Speaker 2:

There, that was just a bit close. It was very close.

Speaker 1:

And after Ismute there was a fire just south of the city. I almost saw it in the distance.

Speaker 2:

It was wild.

Speaker 1:

And then there was just fire 24 hours.

Speaker 2:

It was so wild that the fire was far away compared to where we were standing. But just when we came home and went back to the cabin it was like you stood up and there was fire Just sitting there.

Speaker 1:

Really, really wild it was so special when you went out in the evening and looked at the smoke. There was a line, there was a train, but it wasn't cold. It was like there was some kind of darkness over it.

Speaker 2:

I can remember when we chose the evening scene filming with the only the brave or with the firemen. I hope there will be more fire.

Speaker 1:

We were in the fire season. It was so crazy over there Fire season. Now I know that the air quality is just insane. The next few months, because it just goes on fire and lights up and down and then there is the fire.

Speaker 2:

It was crazy Did we rain? We had rained that day, my Emilie. We said I'm sorry, it was the only day we experienced it or there was no. It was a really special experience.

Speaker 1:

The smoke I think it was my second time. It was a real thing. It was a real thing. Well, shit, man, willー, I just tried to dive into this with this and come home from such a tour, and then I just realized all that you have experienced. Now we have just sat down and had breakfast together. You told me that you are talking about Morgan.

Speaker 2:

I think it's because it's first, and now we have worked all the experiences and we are coming home in mid-November and we are coming home from August, so it's also time to work on the positive side. But I think it's because the impressions are so big. And I think we have got the big experience of Broken Top.

Speaker 1:

Exactly. Let's try to dive down in that tour. That was a good day. Let me try to set the stage. Broken Top is a bear in the episode of the Bear Cat. Broken Top is known for having no weight. You can't have a whole weight. Me and Elisa and others did it one day and there is about 11.5 kg of weight and we decided that if we didn't go to the gym we could go on tours.

Speaker 1:

We were just going up to the gym, so there was only 5 km. We bought the tickets for the morning and we sat in the kitchen and we were ready for the test.

Speaker 1:

And then I woke up in the morning and I have a feeling of the tour. I can remember how the 300m tour ended at the parking lot. There are so deep holes in the road that you have to be straight, so you have to go up the road. And then I go in and research and I can see that it requires cars with a free height. They have a distance of half a meter. It's like a monster truck. I was sleeping when we were sleeping. If we were to do this we had to take a long hike and it was a long hike. I was convinced that we could do it as a whole, but Emilie was a little nervous.

Speaker 2:

I think that at the beginning we were like fuck yeah, we just have to do that. I can't remember what happened, but I think I got really angry at the time.

Speaker 1:

We were on Smith Rock and Emilie was there, and I think that was a little bit of a shock.

Speaker 2:

I think that both Emilie and I were like, okay, can we actually go up the road? But we were like, okay, fuck, we just try.

Speaker 1:

Exactly because I'm coming down to say that I have some new ideas. We should just go down to take the forest pass all the way up, and you were like, okay, let's do it. And I was like, okay, I'm going to sell you there. But then I was like shit, that's it, Fuck, that was good enough.

Speaker 2:

The first 45 minutes was the adrenaline pumping. Of course, it was still not early in the morning I think we were around 7 or something. You were still going, you were just going to wave and start, and I remember that we started going really fast in the forest and right before we came out of that I could feel on myself that I was on Emilie, that this was a really, really hard trip. And then it's like me and Emilie, we go like this, we say a little bit of a word because we expect it to be a bit hard which one should we do? And then we come out of the quiet forest where it gets a little more dark and you can start to see some mountains, and I think that's where you get a boost of energy, because you walk into the forest.

Speaker 1:

it's really beautiful. It's really really beautiful. But after 20 minutes you see it and then we go over some water runs and things are also very nice. But the first pass is very stylish and then you get out of there and you talk about it and it's so flat.

Speaker 2:

And I think that's where we started to see where we actually are in terms of the mountains, and you could see the trees a little bit away.

Speaker 2:

I think it gave a boost. Now we're going. Now we're just going up, and then we go up further, where we end up, where we can go to the higher or the lower. We actually started with going to the left, where it's a wrong way. We're not going that far, so we choose to go back again. It's the right way, and then it's really getting very kind of up. There are not so many trees. You go between that kind of landscape and then we come to where it's flowing out, to the right, where you could fill up your water, and then you get a little bit of a dunk up. I think that Emilie has a point where she's just what can you say?

Speaker 2:

Mental damage when the city itself is Also in that regard, and I was just about to take a break and say now it's up where you're fucking with, and then we go after that, and I think that was really good for both him and me and for the whole tour.

Speaker 1:

It was so perfect. It was so perfect because you forced her to hold a pause. We all sat down together, and it should be said that the first thing there was actually a pretty good piece of the flat piece, and then you can actually see Broken Top all the way.

Speaker 1:

So you actually go. It's enormous. You go like whoa, okay, what the hell are you doing here? You meet right in between a couple of walks and then you all hold a pause there at a time and then it's just like you know. Then there's just filled up on the batteries again, so we just get to eat some snacks, some nuts, and then just get the water and then just go back to the hotel.

Speaker 2:

And then there was just new energy. And then we come to Snillandska. Yeah we came. We were just about to go. It was really strange. We drove from Portland to Bent. You're just getting to the point where you're just standing there. It was a bit the same. It was really strange to be on the road to get all the way to the sunburn.

Speaker 1:

And then go in the snow.

Speaker 2:

It was really strange. I was just thinking about it and then I just noticed the cold snow. It was special.

Speaker 1:

Just like snowballs.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it was really cool. And then we came back up to the blue water, or the water up there. Yeah, it was really.

Speaker 1:

There's a lake up there. It's actually a volcano, so it's a lake up on the volcano crater there.

Speaker 2:

Then you go a little further. I think that also needed a new boost, because then we had the last stage.

Speaker 1:

So when we got there, we were like, okay, we're getting there, it's just up there. But it's not just up there, it's strange that you can see a human being up there. It's a very small human being up there. But then I knew, okay, this is what's going to happen today, because it's the last thing, and it was up there at the top. That my second favorite moment my first. I have two favorite moments on tour. One was when you sat with Tiger man. Can we call him that Tiger man?

Speaker 1:

with his, with his crooked legs and his stools.

Speaker 1:

And his cowboy hat and his you know fronze. That's one of my other favorites. The last stage why? Because I've been together with. I've been together with you for, I'd say, four and a half hours or something. It's been a bit harder. We were just going to hold some breaks, we were just going to put some sunscreen on All the practicalities. It's been like, okay, we can do this, we can do this. But now something to the point where I was like, okay, this is what's going to happen today, and I know the big reward is coming up there.

Speaker 1:

Because you get to the whole way up. It's a very, very, very stylish piece which is maybe, in the same way, 200 meters or something, but it's 200 meters, very stylish, in a very powdery way.

Speaker 1:

And when you get up to the end of it, then you get up and look out over the edge of the beer, the opposite edge, where you've been all day, which means you're actually looking out over all the other mountains and I think I've been saying all day Pay off. It comes at the top. I promise, and I don't know when you say something, I say it because I really want to have you continue and I really want to. I also hate it, but I also get to see the expectations a little higher when I do this. But it just got met Like there's no, you know. You know Emilie, your beautiful girlfriend, you just get to the head and get to the eyes and I think she's you go over there and say what's so good, is everything okay? And then she says it's just so beautiful.

Speaker 1:

It's just so beautiful. And then it's she's been very touched and I've seen it. It's also a huge smile, and then I'm just a little bit out of it. So, you can have it there here for myself and it's just like fuck man, it's. It's just a moment I've had, if it's to be a little bit of me when it's. It's exactly what it's about when I take people on some tours. It's really what's happening there. It can almost not be said in a better way.

Speaker 2:

No, it was a very unique moment Because you're not done yet.

Speaker 3:

You're done now.

Speaker 1:

And there's still style to the last part, really, really style. And it's hard, it just gets white. And then you get up and you see it while you're completely naked. And then you look out over there, those four bears just standing on the fence All the way down, or all the way down. You're just so wild.

Speaker 2:

It's funny because the whole tour that day. When I think back on it it's a little bit of a small clip from the whole tour, but from the last stage there it's just completely clear and I think it's because it has given so much pressure and especially that I saw that Emilia was so touched by it. I really think it's such a big impression on me that it's just so clear in the hugamson it can be something.

Speaker 1:

It can be something like a bear. It's so scary what it does to one. You just get up on one side in a very special way. You just have to be a little bit more clear.

Speaker 2:

Really.

Speaker 1:

And then you look out over there, snipyclad bear top. And there's just a big tree, two or three of them Down and down, and the man is standing on one side. It was so special that we were the sisters who were just over there On my birthday. And then I look up at the broken top. Fuck, man over there, it's just so nice to be over at the broken top.

Speaker 2:

It's really nice. We also bought a magnet with the bears on. It's always fun to see it on the Christmas tree.

Speaker 3:

That's where we've been.

Speaker 1:

Let me check if I can still do it. I'll just put my phone in the right place. Can I go?

Speaker 2:

to the toilet.

Speaker 1:

Yes, I'll do it.

Speaker 3:

We're going to the pool and the water break.

Speaker 1:

Did you learn anything about?

Speaker 2:

the pool. Did you go to the pool with him? I think I went to the pool, some good experiences. With my two years. How do I explain that? That I should pay more attention to things, I think what?

Speaker 2:

do you mean by that? Well, such experiences in the world can be as big as the ones you've experienced in the US, like, among other things, we're sitting here and recording podcasts. When we're done, I'll be back. I'll be sitting here for 10 minutes. Can you imagine it was a certain set price for it? Almost in the moment or after the moment. That's something I'm trying to learn from After we get back home. Even though there were so many experiences in the US, there are still so many experiences at home. But I think it's about setting the price. So that's something I'm trying to learn from and something I feel I'll get better at. So that was at least one big thing I thought about at home.

Speaker 1:

It's very true. I think one of the reasons I've driven so much towards this journey is that experience. It was really important to me that, if you've been with me for a while.

Speaker 1:

You might know this too, but all this journey, guys, it's about reading an article in your remaining time about how it feels to ask people, how it feels and different things, among other things, a yes, how it feels to hit the bell, how it feels to be a layman and how it feels to be old. He said he had his own chair every night and he thought about what he had experienced in his life, and that was the first thing I thought about. I was going to have some unique experiences and it's really important to me that when I'm sitting at the chair, I'm just going to look back. That was my life's mission, which I was going to say ten years later.

Speaker 1:

I was going to look back a lot, so it's very important to say that you can get them home, which you certainly can. That's what I'm not going to say. You just have to stop there and remember to pay them. What's the meaning of all this trauma?

Speaker 2:

Because I think that before we were out of the US I thought I had a thought that before I had an experience I should go out and travel to another country and experience some wild things.

Speaker 3:

But it's necessary.

Speaker 2:

It's something we're not sure about, and what can you say? That even if something let's say for you at home is not a big experience, you can also have a big experience for me, and to use it in that way. So I think it's important to be aware of what you actually experience at home, so as when you're out and about. And I think it's important to go as fast as possible because you don't have to stop there. And think about what happened.

Speaker 1:

The reason you should remember your travels better, your everyday life, is that we are in this huge day and we don't want to use calories on things. It's less work that can do, but it's what we need to do to get the impression. When you travel or take a new place, you should think actively about where you should go, where you should go on this new place, where should we eat? It's a new impression and therefore they will be more intense than if you rent a place, if you want to have something out of it, and that's also the reason I've been looking for a place. I'm trying to get myself into a situation where my brain needs to be active, where it needs to take a new choice.

Speaker 1:

I'm a very intense person and I also look for intense experiences and therefore I can enjoy looking for something that no one else can do I've been to the US for a long time, but I could think about where I've been, where I've been to Greenland and where I've been to Africa. I've been to some kind of places and that's where I need to get my Caribbean again.

Speaker 1:

I've been there and the beach is mega cool in the US. I still think I could use something that shows that I could find experiences like this at home, Because when I first came here, I fell into a certain gear. It becomes a routine gear, but routine also goes here Because that's where you can think about things. If you always wanted to think about everything you did, you would be tired. You wouldn't be able to give it an extra scale.

Speaker 1:

So, there's pros and cons, for me at least, to do both one thing and do the other. I think I've also spent a bit of my time on my own to travel a lot, so I have to find my rhythm again. I've spent a bit of time on getting better at this or this. You take a little, you give a little, you get a little. There's pros and cons and all that, and the landscape should go up to the end.

Speaker 2:

What have you learned about this tour? Exactly the tour, not the general journey, but the tour we're on.

Speaker 1:

I've learned that it was a hard lesson for me, that everyone. It sounds a little different to say, but this is what I mean. It was difficult for me to find out that everyone is not like me in relation to travel, and that's what I mean. When first I travel abroad, then I can get home again. I have a 12 year old, but that's not what I have in me. I don't have the feeling, because I've traveled a lot, I don't know exactly what to do when I travel.

Speaker 1:

I could see it all, feel it all, taste it all, all of that. So for me it was really difficult to just say, okay, how can you not want to go out now? How can you? Why would you just want to be here? But it's probably because I know what opportunities there were and Ben knows me well. It was my 10th time. So I think that what came out of it for me was that teachers, that others have completely different behaviors than me.

Speaker 1:

And that just needs to be the place and that I would like to have that. This is right for me, that it's not right for you or you or you or you. And then it was really unique for me to be in a group dynamic again, and it was a very special group dynamic because we were some of the know each other well and then there were some in the group that didn't know each other so well, and it's always a little it's a little bit of a dance, but how do you?

Speaker 1:

just how do you just get it all out of there so that we can just talk together? And so you know, one of the things that was, for example, this here was that it was really important for me that you could say if it was that I was intense or not intense. But you just have to say if you want to be at home, and then I would sit down in the evening and think, okay, let me just sit in that place. Come to the US.

Speaker 1:

I don't know where to go, I don't know the place but, when you're together with someone who knows where everything is and knows the place really well, then you just say, okay, you can do that yourself, and so it was. It was. It was, of course, one thing I took home. It was. It was that that the other has some. He has some completely different needs than I have, and it's just so fine and it's so fine. Yes, so there are times when I notice that I just have to be a little better to just sit down a little bit and just get all the food. But I've done that all my life, so it's not like a surprise.

Speaker 3:

No, no, no, but I'm just fast.

Speaker 2:

But it's also cool that you're aware of that, especially, just not to skip the thought.

Speaker 1:

So it's nice. Yes, it was, it was cool. I mean, I would say I think we adjusted, we were good at adjusting. Yes, yes, absolutely.

Speaker 3:

Yes, we found it very fast, very fast, but then we just went up and it was just like wow okay, I'm one who would like to have the force at all until it happens.

Speaker 1:

Yes, fuck, it comes right like a curveball. Fuck, yes, okay, no, no, no, no, yes, yes, yes, it's dead. Yes, he's right. But then I have also been out travelling with gymnastics many times where we have had a group of people on the 30th where you would scheme out where we are going where we have been, there have been times where we can just relax a little bit.

Speaker 1:

I just want to let him have a seat and have a look. And I just want to let him have a seat and have a look at the interview today or something on my iPad. Thank you.

Speaker 2:

Yes yes. Yes, yes, and that's a good thing.

Speaker 1:

Yes, yes, Well, she's coming. Carla, over there, just to say hello to you. Hold on to her, Carla.

Speaker 2:

Carla, it's, you can just hear it. Yes, yes, yes.

Speaker 1:

Yes, yes, yes, should we? I have something else to say, I think we should get to it. Yes, on this episode here, and that's we're just. No, not just, but Look at the year. We're just finished with what we do every year. Yes, october, october. Yes, that's the other thing I think that could be exciting to talk about. Yes, are there more to the USA?

Speaker 2:

No, but I think we're missing something in the USA. Yes, the Halmarathon.

Speaker 1:

Did we get that on the other episode?

Speaker 2:

No, we're running after. We're running after.

Speaker 1:

Yes, what the hell did I do? We haven't talked about the Halmarathon. Okay, hey, this is coming right over the top of the bottom of the line, because now we're going straight back to the Halmarathon. Why are you stopping? I know that, yes, we're running the Halmarathon. Yes, we're running after the Halmarathon in the summer. What was that? Now, it's completely weird.

Speaker 2:

We're talking about it last. No, it's not. No, it's not.

Speaker 1:

We're just getting to know each other. We're getting to know each other. Yes, you know it better than me, because I we're not talking about it?

Speaker 2:

No, we're not talking about it. We're talking about it, but we're not talking about it.

Speaker 1:

Yes yes. I'm not on the podcast. We're running up to the Halmarathon. We're running up to the Halmarathon in the summer. Yes, and we're getting to know each other. Yes, the two of us. Yes, there's Mike and Mike. Yes, and that was. It was a really great experience. Yes, for sure. Yes, keep it up. I'm in Germany as a guest.

Speaker 3:

Yes.

Speaker 1:

Without the N yes, so I'm running two times with you. No. And then I come home, so it's weekend, and then we're running after the weekend. That weekend I'm running around with my hair, so I can't go to the other one.

Speaker 3:

And I just have this fucking hair there.

Speaker 1:

That means I can't run the whole week up to the Halmarathon. No, but okay we're done. Yes, then we'll start. Then we'll start shooting. Yes, we're just running 800 meters, then I run around again oh. On his fucking, big, fucking butt-stiletto. Yes, carla, carla, I'll get her some coffee. Some people are listening to me. Carla on the Q Not good, I just run around and I know how powerful it is to run behind me. He runs behind me. I can hear him say Uh, yes.

Speaker 1:

And I just run around Because I've had a lot of problems with the connection. I know that it hurts when the iron comes through. So I just run around and then I can feel that the shoe is just exciting. Yes, no, we just have to get the shoe to loosen a little, and I just have to do that. The whole shoe is open, yes, and then on kilometers 13, I think, I get the feeling back from knee to knee, like you've got mid-skinned legs or something. I couldn't feel anything, it was just a lump.

Speaker 3:

Yes, it was a wild experience.

Speaker 2:

It was a great day, man.

Speaker 1:

Yes, we're just going to talk about how the city of Halvarton is.

Speaker 2:

It's the biggest festival yes, from that.

Speaker 1:

Hold now, fucking man, it's fucking wild.

Speaker 2:

Yes, hold up 10,000 runs, right. Just fantastic atmosphere and everyone is in good mood and it's just awesome it's. You can see it as if you're doing it yourself, so that you can come before everyone else that attitude to it. You can also see it as if we're all running together, if that makes sense.

Speaker 1:

Yes.

Speaker 2:

And I think that was the one we had, in a way.

Speaker 3:

Yes.

Speaker 2:

It was just awesome to see that it was from, yes, from a small, small small the children to the elderly who were running after Halvarton yes, people running in high-speed cars and one running in full military gear.

Speaker 1:

Yes, it was just awesome. Yes, it was fucking awesome and it's fun to see how you could have run 17 kilometers without problems. Yes, but the last five are so crazy hard.

Speaker 2:

Yes, it is, I think, since we started training up to Halvarton and then we reach the goal, at least the last 200 meters from me, just before the last 200 meters, where we believe and we believe we reach the goal, but we don't do that. We thought we saw the goal-stream and thought, yes, we are there so we just turn to the left, we run down.

Speaker 1:

I'm sorry and I said come on, Fredrik, there's no, need we just have to have him to the right. He turns to the right and then it's just right there down in the parking lot and then we just run to the left.

Speaker 2:

Carla Coq, it was so fun, not at the moment, but no, it wasn't that fun. And from the start.

Speaker 1:

We ran out in the 20th of February and I said, man, what's my box? And then we went back eight kilometers or seven kilometers back or something like that. And I was like shit it's crazy here, it's crazy man. And then when you know, I think, just like you, we think we'll be done, I think I'll just come to the toilet and then we'll go to the left and we go up through that little street and then out and then down to Frederik's L, and then Carla Coq she just wants to be a foodie now.

Speaker 1:

And then there's this oppressive someone who likes a goal. And I think it's a goalie line. So we just go out we ask people is that a goal? Is that a goal? No, it's a commercial.

Speaker 2:

It was one big commercial and I remember it was wild.

Speaker 1:

It was a great experience, man.

Speaker 2:

Yes, I remember the last part there, 200 meters, 100 meters, I can almost not remember them. I remember the moment well, but I feel that I I think I describe it afterwards as a little bit like a film, when I run and just getting closer to the goal it's small that I see that it's all the training. They're there early in the morning and it's so cold and you have a lot of.

Speaker 1:

It's all flashed and you just get a close-up experience.

Speaker 2:

Just the last half a year you've trained up. It was really strange to try and really touching and emotional feelings when we get over the goal line and it's just Dislute. It was very strange it was a little blouse. Yes. I had it very strange after yes, it was Some days after yes, it was like what's going on now? Yes, it's going to happen again.

Speaker 2:

Yes, then came the USA tour, of course, but more on such training. With its plan, something new is going to happen. Yes, now you have used so many months to what, should I say? Train up to the halmartain. And now it's just, that's it. It was quite wild to try.

Speaker 1:

Yes, so it's almost the whole marathon, isn't it? Yes? She will be happy, Happy to be in the world. I just want to get my microphone up. Oh damn it, Carla.

Speaker 3:

I can't.

Speaker 1:

Carla turn. I'm just going to put it out here Cover, cover, good, yes, but then it's, then we're.

Speaker 2:

Carla, are you blinded, carla? Cool, Then it was.

Speaker 1:

Sobo, oktober. Yes, because we're taking a little decision to run the whole marathon next summer. I was just doing it. Yes, I was just between me and the halmartain. Then I was like, should I run the whole thing?

Speaker 1:

Holy shit it was good that I didn't run the whole thing, but for Sultan. Yes, so it's been half a month, so now I've run three this summer. Yes, when you have to be ready for the day, yes, where I've run a few times where it was like, oops, I'm not going to run that long. But there you have the flow and you know the evenings. There you're like I'm just going to take 5 km more, I'm just going to take 5 more, which is a really good, a really good state.

Speaker 1:

But on the running days you have to be ready for the day, and it has so much to do with what you're setting yourself up for, because I had run 17.5 km 4 days before the 2nd half-maternary. And it was so easy for me that I thought this half-maternary. It's so easy that you never think when you go into a run, because then you start with you start with the completely wrong mindset and then the run gets just fast 6-5 km and all that shit is going on out here and then I try to do it in a way that's not in the scale when it went really well, and then it's easy behind us where it's just the flow.

Speaker 1:

But it's so cool, it's getting cool and running all over the marathon. But that requires training. Then we can secure into our Sobo-Ktober. If you don't know what Sobo-Ktober is, it's something I arrange every year and I actually decided to keep this in mind. I think it's going to be done in the same way every year from now on, because that's what we did the last few years, and this year and the last year we're in.

Speaker 1:

Sobo-Ktober we're supposed to be a group of people so many of us would like to be with us, and then we're going to run as many kilometers as possible, and then we're going to set goals and reach a destination In the year. We set out to Paris and we were nine, I think, and beyond that, you don't have to drink alcohol the whole month.

Speaker 1:

And beyond that we're going to try to find a book that we all have to read In the year. It was the Power of Now. And then we're going to run to Paris and we're going to end up. It's not a competition. No, not at all.

Speaker 1:

But if you're a competition person, then you can get over it. But it's not the idea. No, not at all. I think it's healthy in this form. I've made it because it's very natural. I just want to try to do this Because it's super comprehensive. So I'd like to put number one.

Speaker 1:

It means a lot to me, but it's just as guilty, because it's about how much we do together and then, you have a little oil card in the month when you have to drink A simple time If you have a family birthday or you have something when you have to.

Speaker 1:

Because, if it's like, I can't be like I'm going to do this this month, because there are many people who feel like that. I've been in the show every year the last six years, maybe Five years, where every year there has been. If there are people who want to be with them, they should have family, so they can't, or they should have a husband and wife. So I've introduced the oil card when it is that even if you Are a foodie, you can't do it twice and you have to do it one kilometer.

Speaker 1:

So it's better to keep it, so it's just right. So we do it every year and it's it's so cool.

Speaker 2:

It's so cool that you press yourself and press each other, the little group of things you have, and if you don't have it running, then you just put a picture in it.

Speaker 3:

And you just run five.

Speaker 2:

What's inside it? Named to be shot. I'm just going out in a black shirt.

Speaker 1:

It's so cool there's this social component. It's so cool, it's really really cool. And there are some who have run a lot more and they've been Fucking freakballing. Man Run 111 kilometers. What it's? A three with a half marathon, god.

Speaker 2:

It's so cool.

Speaker 1:

It's number three.

Speaker 3:

It's not an idea, but instead he's ranked number three.

Speaker 1:

It's so cool. Yeah, it's so cool. I just run three kilometers every day. He does that in the first three weeks. Then he starts to screw up a little bit.

Speaker 2:

It's a good way To be active, to do something social. It's just to be good with yourself, exactly.

Speaker 1:

It's so cool to be out running. Now. The pendulum has been swinging a little bit. I'd like to admit that I haven't run so much this month as I had hoped and I can feel when I'm out, when I'm out walking, how light it is. The system is hot, then it flies away.

Speaker 2:

They have 6 kilometers to run.

Speaker 1:

I couldn't do that, I couldn't say that. It was like I was walking home.

Speaker 2:

I run 6 kilometers, there I stand up and when I've run my scooter and come home to the apartment again, if I had time I would have taken a round more. You're like that.

Speaker 1:

Now I'm going.

Speaker 2:

It's very special If you can't run. It sounds quite insane, but I think you should have tried it first.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I was with Chris McDonald.

Speaker 3:

Yes.

Speaker 1:

He said that To be motivated to do high-fives training Doesn't exist. It doesn't exist Because we have only done that To have fun, because when I was here I was collecting in the last 250,000 years. So high-fives activity Is not something you live up to and want to do. It doesn't happen. So you have all the odds. You have your whole genetics, your genetic odds, if you have to do high-fives training and it's so special Because it's so healthy.

Speaker 2:

That's the best.

Speaker 1:

Wasn't it great to talk about that. We run on a home. It was a very strange day.

Speaker 2:

We had both of us running in the morning and we came down to work and it's like we can just see it, but we have to say something and then it's just the last thing.

Speaker 1:

I feel like I'm holding on to one of the most Valuable secrets you can't say anything Because words, it can't be told.

Speaker 3:

It's a scary experience.

Speaker 1:

When you do high-fives training, how much more energy you get and how much better than the exercise and how many better decisions you take and Everything works. The top motivation you have to go through it now it's the same. It makes a huge difference, but you have to have the clarity of knowledge.

Speaker 1:

It's so strange that the nature is integrated in that way, because everyone you know McDonald's food, you eat slicks, you go to a lot of towns and you fall apart and you get old. You can't think, you just have to run, just run. It's not that hard. And if you look at the range of things, how much you can get out of it If you don't run. If you don't run. I'm fucking annoying, but that's the same. If you look at how much longer you can live.

Speaker 1:

In the course of McDonald's If you start when you're 50. And you're 45 minutes away. It's the pulse up 45 minutes or the mood I think it's about the day Okay. So you're top tier Physical active. You can get 26 years more to live in. It's wild.

Speaker 2:

What? 26 years, 45 minutes? Look at your screen time.

Speaker 1:

There. Just look at your screen time. You can still hear podcast. Yeah, and you live so much longer, you have so much better. And it's to say, barry of entry, from when do you think it's crazy to?

Speaker 3:

run.

Speaker 1:

To think it's crazy. It's a very short timeline. You don't have to do it for more than 2-3 weeks, so you think it's the coolest thing in the world. 2-3 weeks, it's nothing, it's nothing.

Speaker 2:

Over time, but I think it's too much. 2-3 weeks Really long 2-3 weeks, especially if you don't care about running in the beginning. It's not something you've done before. I remember it was too much to run when I started running and I think it's. Where did you?

Speaker 1:

start.

Speaker 2:

I think, I've tried a bit before. I've tried a bit before I've lived at home but Corona and virus, I think On March 2020. I started like this Now I can't train, now I'm running, and then I think it was just the emotion I was going to have today.

Speaker 2:

It was just running and then I think it's just getting better. I lived in Vibro at that point, so I moved to Overhouse and then I stopped running Because there was a flood and you could just fall into the house. And then I started running again and then I got a new motivation for it. But I still think it was Really annoying to run, because I think it's. I've always seen it as when you run you have to stop, and it was too annoying.

Speaker 2:

And then I started running. It was okay to stop. One slurry of the summer, it's completely wild. Just two minutes. If you have it really fast, just pull the pulse down Again. You have summer energy, so it's okay to stop. When you run, it's actually quite important to stop. It's all about stopping. Because it's all about stopping, it's all about stopping.

Speaker 1:

It's all about not stopping when you run, it's all about how long you're out. It's a mind blowing science. In the process, I think everyone wants to know If you just have a little, I'm running but I'm not really completely the same. Okay, but just know, it's all about not stopping when you're out, it's all about how long, how long you're out, so just stop when you're out. My responsibility. I started running here for I don't know half a year ago.

Speaker 1:

And for a month he was like I'm so sorry to talk about it. How long do you run? I run 3 km. Why are you so sorry? What's your pulse when you run? It's around 150. About 150. You're doing something completely wrong here. You're doing something completely wrong here.

Speaker 1:

I was just about to see some numbers. I didn't get a word or anything. I didn't get a word or anything. I just bought a. I was like what, you're buying a watch? And then I bought a Phoenix, six, solar. And then I said you can hold your pulse at 160. And then hold the power supply. And then he said, okay, I'm not going to get back to that. And I said Are you ready to run with a 7-pulse pace? Nice, it's not what it is.

Speaker 1:

It's how long you've been running. You have to activate your slow-twitch, your muscle fibers. You have to do that at the start, okay, and then he said my sprint. I didn't lose it. I just burned all the sugar in my muscles. It took a long time and you know the system was up at the start. It was like a cool process, and then I talked to him about how it was running.

Speaker 2:

It's the world.

Speaker 1:

Exactly.

Speaker 2:

It's wild.

Speaker 1:

Okay, now we've run an interval. When we've run an interval, it's not that fun. It's just that it's fun.

Speaker 2:

And I think it's about it gives you so much on a longer term. You just have to buy a disable, and then you just have to do it, yeah, and it's so cool.

Speaker 1:

I'm looking forward to it. I'm not so much at the end of the day, I'm going on a tour.

Speaker 2:

See you, I've thought about something, something I'm curious about. I'm going to ask you something, then we'll check if it's really remembered.

Speaker 1:

Okay, you're Suspense.

Speaker 2:

I have a thing we need, yeah, may 5th. May 5th.

Speaker 1:

May 5th, we're going to run a marathon, Copenhagen. Are you ready? 100% F***. How cool man. May 5th Phew.

Speaker 3:

I just got a little dumb pair.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it's going well.

Speaker 2:

I think it's after October, october, start November, where I'm like, okay, now it's over, I'm going to do something new. Yeah, and the marathon is f***ing long, it's so long. I've also had a. I've been thinking about it, but why should you not? It's just. It's just a trend, of course I know it, so we all know that.

Speaker 1:

And we also have Mike with us.

Speaker 3:

We also have Mike with us, we'll see you in the next video. Bye.

Speaker 1:

Four months. So no, we're going to November. Four and a half months December, january, february, march, april, may. Six months, six months. How the hell did you get it for four, I don't know, but if it was four, we'd do it.

Speaker 2:

We'd do it. Cool enough, fuck, I'm so happy.

Speaker 1:

And we have to get into it. Right now We've just got a new job, we're going to get a degree. It's, it's, it's. It's a pleasure, absolutely yes. I think it's exciting to present it to you, because it's actually the promise of Frederik and Ann to explain a bit about what Artifact would actually like, because I get two roles One is to be a transporter, the other is to help them with these three legs on a tapestry, and the one leg is the transporter, which we know the other leg is something called collection and the third leg is something called academy, which I'm going to help with.

Speaker 1:

But we actually have to help each other. It's going to be a collective thing. I'm just going to be a project leader on it. I'm going to sit down. I'm going to sit down and hold the meetings and go to the garden. When I'm going to, you have to help me with a landing site and I'm going to go to Michelin and I'm going to use her in relation to the brand thing or something. And have you heard about it?

Speaker 2:

Four words, four words, but not more than that.

Speaker 1:

Okay, it's a short presentation because we have a podcast we also started, mayer Frick Belling, who is called Brunch and Brainstorm, which will be launched in early December Hopefully it will be launched in early December when we have to brainstorm on how we do these different things and how we move them out of the world, and then we have to, from episode to episode, have come in the way with some things. It's like a good way to get the first thing and, for people, a little bit of a machine room and see how the artifacts develop Artifacts, history and how do you do this? Because people have also been given an insight into how much you fail when you're trying to do something Because it's not sound or sound at all Not at all. So the tattoo part is just a tattooing, so we know it.

Speaker 1:

The collection part is a little bit about that. There are some girls who make art In their freedom. We have me who makes merch and makes glitter and makes what's it called possible poses and all that Michelin, and also makes paintings and stuff, and the idea that we should be it should be. There should be a possibility for the tattooers to to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, To, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to to to to, so you get a lot of art exposure.

Speaker 1:

And because people come out of a coffee shop, there are a lot of people, so you get some exposure to Artifact and put yourself in the city-bed. So that's what we're doing. We're in a total final phase.

Speaker 1:

And then there's the academic part, where we're going to try and see if we can, if we can learn anything from each other in the study. We've talked about this before, but I was just curious to hear from you. Our students have been a little afraid that the AIRBOTICs aren't so happy with each other and, as a bi-product of that, we haven't talked to each other as tattoo artists at the time and we know each other so well Now. I know how much you network on the X-Bots, how much I network on the X-Bots and all the others in the X-Bots, and it's a very unique situation and it's something I've dreamed about for a really long time.

Speaker 1:

For a really long time. I've always been like why the hell can't we talk to each other?

Speaker 2:

Right after I started tattooing. You've also talked about it.

Speaker 1:

That's why I started feedback Friday, because we could meet and do feedback with the other's work, and I don't think there's any agenda.

Speaker 1:

I don't have anything to say about it. I think it's just that it's cool for everyone. It's a win-win situation. So we're going to talk about whether we're going to start keeping these workshops or seminars up in the shop, and the first thing we're going to try is to get Lui up and hold seminars about AI and how we can implement it in our daily lives so cool. So we're going to talk about that today. This episode will come out a little earlier than the start of December.

Speaker 1:

But if you know, at least from the start of December, you can see Bronson Brainstorm on various channels, or you can just keep an eye on where we are. So we'll post it. But I've had some great people up there had a great studio, and then I'm going to joke a little bit more that you've gone from teaching to director. Oh, that's so funny. It's really funny, isn't it cool?

Speaker 2:

Yes, it's really funny, it's wild, it's crazy. There are many things right here, at the start. There are many things you have to be aware of and you have to find the right way to do it and you have to find your new roles, but it's a whole Scubaan process. Yes, yes, it's a whole process. Yes, I'm so happy for it. It's really cool and we're so excited, we're so excited.

Speaker 1:

Yes, you're the one who made it up there.

Speaker 2:

Yes, you have to see it. You have to see it.

Speaker 1:

It's so nice. Well, we're not doing anything right now. I think so, yes, we're not just going to run down here and then we'll just do it again at the time when we After May 5th.

Speaker 3:

I think so.

Speaker 1:

Sorry, I don't know. Thank you for joining us. It's always a great pleasure. Thank you for being with us, Of course, bye Falcons.