Angela Lin 0:21
Today we’re getting drunk. Cheers. For those who can’t see us on camera, we just cheers to our respective drinks. Jesse, what are you drinking?
Jesse Lin 0:43
I am drinking plum wine because of my hard alcohol has been in my apartment for a few months now. And I’m pretty sure it’s undrinkable. So and it’s Tuesday, so I don’t want to die tomorrow. So I’m just drinking some plum wine.
Full Transcript (Note: Transcribed via AI, may contain errors)
Angela Lin 1:01
Well you have it in a super fancy class though for people who can’t see it. Yeah, it’s in like a martini glass.
Jesse Lin 1:07
Yes. We fancy up in here.
Angela Lin 1:11
Meanwhile, I have a literal koozie in my hand with a beer. I’m drinking a Sierra Nevada Pale Ale.
Jesse Lin 1:20
Wait, is that what you call a beer? cooler holder? A koozie?
Angela Lin 1:25
It’s a koozie. Yeah the foam thing that you put a beer in?
Jesse Lin 1:29
Oh, this makes so much sense.
Angela Lin 1:33
Are people using the word koozie and you’re pretending like you, you know, but you don’t?
Jesse Lin 1:37
I mean, I knew was like beer adjacent. But I didn’t know exactly what it was. And it was like never important. So I never asked where it was.
Angela Lin 1:48
And I guess do you even drink beer that much? Because I’m like a big beer person -that’s why because if you’re if you’re not a big beer drinker, you wouldn’t like be using koozies.
Jesse Lin 1:58
I feel like I’ve gone through phases. Like I think out of college. I was really into beer because college and then like, like, a few years into working. I was like, I can’t drink anymore because I’m gonna die and not go to work. So then I started doing like, easy drinking at home, which means like wine.
Angela Lin 2:17
But that’s funny because I associate beer with easy drinking.
Jesse Lin 2:21
No.
Angela Lin 2:25
Oh, if you drank beer, you had to go balls to the wall.
Jesse Lin 2:30
Well, I mean, it’s like just so easy to drink. It’s like fizzy water. You just keep drinking and drinking and drinking is the same thing doesn’t happen to me with wine though. Because at a specific point, I just fall asleep.
Angela Lin 2:42
Wine does make you sleepy. Hmm. Yeah, that’s true. Maybe it’s a carbonation and beer that keeps you not sleepy because carbonation kind of like wakes me up.
Jesse Lin 2:53
Yeah.
Angela Lin 2:55
Yeah, but beer you can’t drink like that much. Because you get full.
Jesse Lin 3:01
Yeah. Well, that’s part of the reason why I like stopped drinking beer because I was like, I feel so bloated like all the time after drinking and it’s really not fun.
Angela Lin 3:53
Anyways, anyways, sorry all we just went on a tangent because we’re drinking now. Um, but let’s let’s get to why we’re drinking. Um, so one is just the fact that you know, we’ve covered a lot of topics that can be heavy, and like, you know, requires a lot of emotional capacity for for us. And we need to just sprinkle in some like light hearted shit in here. And so we decided to have an episode where we kind of mix heavy things and make it lighter. So we’re gonna play a drinking game with each other, where we are going to try to stump each other with whether the headlines that we share news headlines that we’re going to share our fake or real COVID headlines and to be transparent, we’re going to be drinking throughout the whole thing, but I think I guess we’ll just say the rules are if we guessed wrong on our respective thing we take like, what an extra long sip or…
Jesse Lin 5:08
Um sure.
Angela Lin 5:09
Yeah, clearly a loose game here. Do you want to go first or second?
Jesse Lin 5:16
I only will go first. Which one? Okay, guests at baby’s birthday party fined 11,000 pounds as 24 people crammed into flat.
Angela Lin 5:29
Wait, what? Wait, what does this have to do with COVID?
Jesse Lin 5:34
Cuz they’re fined for Oh, yeah.
Angela Lin 5:39
I thought you were saying like they found 11,000 pounds. Cuz I didn’t know what you were talking I was like pounds of what cocaine?
Jesse Lin 5:50
Let me repeat guests at baby’s birthday find 11,000 British pounds as 24 people crammed into flat.
Angela Lin 5:58
Imma say that’s a real.
Jesse Lin 6:01
Yes, that is real is specific. That’s true. very specific.
Angela Lin 6:06
Okay, but tell us a story tell us well,
Jesse Lin 6:09
there’s not really a lot to it. Basically, they just got they got caught for breaking like the restrictions on group gatherings in the UK. I got this from Metro UK by the way it was so it’s like, questionably real news source…
Angela Lin 6:24
Hey it’s not the Daily Mail.
Jesse Lin 6:27
It’s like Daily Mail adjacent. I think it’s the same company
I love Daily Mail.
Thank you, you keep us afloat with all the ads, they have so many ads. Okay. But anyways, they were just they were found in violation of the gathering restrictions. And this one I think is just so funny because it’s like, right in the middle of two really bad things. Like the whole gender reveal celebrating your baby like nonsense. Like, celebrate your baby, but like, don’t be crazy. Okay, so there’s that. And then there’s like the people who are just like not paying attention to any rules whatsoever. Also, like totally fine. Everyone breaks some rules, but like, come on out. 24 baby in a tiny London flat. Sorry. 24 people. Yes, they’re 24 babies and they were fined. No, 24 people in a tiny London flat for baby like, I mean, like, the baby is at risk. Come on.
Angela Lin 7:26
Okay, well, I’ll give you one. Let’s see what she think. I’m ready. Taiwan authorities revoke quarantine fine for man after discovering he was kidnapped.
Jesse Lin 7:42
Revoked quarantine fine after discovering he was kidnapped. I’m gonna say that this is true.
Angela Lin 7:52
It was true. You’re right. Okay, this shit is bizarro. So there was a guy who came in from a flight. I don’t know if he’s from Hong Kong or if he just flew from Hong Kong, but he came from Hong Kong in October. And he was quarantining on a friend’s house so the friend was not there it was his friend just let him quarantine there. And one night, late night, people broke into this guy’s house and kidnapped him because they are debt collectors and I guess the friend owed a bunch of money. So the debt collectors thought that this guy was his friend so they kidnapped him and I guess beat him up because they said he had injuries and then he made him pay the debts and then let go and then police found out that the guy left his house and then fine to him 3500 US dollars for leaving – for leaving quarantine during his you know because Taiwan has mandatory 14 day quarantine upon arrival. And so not only did he get beat up kidnapped, extorted for money, but that he gets fined for leaving the quarantine against his will. The silver lining is that once the local authorities passed on to like a higher you know, judicial power they were like, oh, actually, this guy was kidnapped. This is bullshit. They dismissed the fine, but it’s just like what bad luck does this guy have?
Jesse Lin 9:26
So like, what did he go back to Hong Kong? Like what happened to him?
Angela Lin 9:30
I don’t know what happened to him. It just says that the fine was dismissed and they’re looking into the kidnappers but like
Jesse Lin 9:38
What a saga.
Angela Lin 9:40
Okay, your turn.
Jesse Lin 9:42
Okay. Underground juggalo convention shut down for violating COVID-19 restrictions.
Angela Lin 9:49
True.
Jesse Lin 9:50
It’s false. I made that up. Aw drink girl. It does sound really true right?
Angela Lin 9:58
It sounds real enough.
Jesse Lin 9:59
You know what’s so funny is that as I was going through these headlines that I made up, I’m like, some of these might be real news
Angela Lin 10:07
I had to Google. Some of mine got debunked. I was like damn.
Jesse Lin 10:11
Oh, like the ones you made up? Were actually real news. Oh, my gosh.
Angela Lin 10:15
So be careful with my next one.
Jesse Lin 10:18
No juggalos please.
Angela Lin 10:21
Okay, my turn Moscow offering free ice cream as COVID-19 vaccine incentive.
Jesse Lin 10:32
Does this fit Putin’s MO? I’m gonna say this is false.
Angela Lin 10:38
This is true. It’s true.
Jesse Lin 10:44
I need to hear more.
Angela Lin 10:45
Yeah. Okay. So this is from the New York Post. And the article was like two paragraphs long. So there’s not a lot to it. But basically, I mean, the background, which is like useful information to know, is that generally Russians don’t want to take the vaccine. Because for good reason, they are suspicious of their government. So like, I didn’t know this, and actually, I think I read this somewhere else. But I’m like, when – because Russia was one of the first or was the first country right to develop the vaccine. And they were trying to like, rush it out before they even had like the finals, safety checks on things. And at the time, they were like, yeah, let’s get this out. And Putin was like, Imma till this is like, proven to be safe for because he’s like, 68. So yeah, he’s at the, you know, the brink. And so it’s like, I’m not gonna take it yet. Until it’s like, proven safe for my age range. And so, obviously, that in the population, it was like, um, if you’re not going to take it, why should I trust you, for me to take it? So basically, the story of this article is that people don’t want to take it, only 38% of Russians are confident about receiving the shot. So basically, no one wants to take the shot. And so it’s just one vaccination center, but there’s some center in a mall who is incentivizing people to come in to get the shot by giving free ice creal, this shit’s real. Yeah, it’s in a mall. That’s also like the funny, like, funnier imagining of the scenario.
Jesse Lin 12:29
Okay, like, but ice cream in Russia, like, is that like, do people like that? It’s freezing all time isn’t it?
Angela Lin 12:38
Yeah, right. Right now, it’s probably very cold. Yeah, and this was published two days ago. So yeah, it’s cold right now. How about our cocoa doing? Yeah, hot toddy.
Jesse Lin 12:51
Yeah, vodka, even vodka would be better, right?
Angela Lin 12:55
Yeah. Well, I know. And so it’s kind of bizarre. But also, the other interesting thing is so like the context of that no one wants to take it there. But juxtaposed against Putin’s goal of having 60% of Russia vaccinated in six months, I’m like, hmm, seems like it’s gonna be kind of hard if no one wants to take it.
Jesse Lin 13:17
I mean, it is Russia. He could literally just force everyone.
Angela Lin 13:22
I honestly was kind of surprised that they had a choice.
Jesse Lin 13:27
Yeah.
Angela Lin 13:28
Okay. All right.
Jesse Lin 13:31
Let’s see what I got for you. Pop pedophile Gary Glitter is one of the host of elderly prisons given COVID vaccine.
Angela Lin 13:43
Wait, what? Read it one more time.
Jesse Lin 13:47
Pop pedophile. Gary. Glitter is one of a host of elderly prisons given the COVID vaccine.
Angela Lin 13:54
Prisoners?
Jesse Lin 13:56
That’s what the headline said.
Angela Lin 13:57
Oh, you said prisons.
Jesse Lin 14:00
Prisoners, elderly prisoners. Am I drunk?
Angela Lin 14:04
Maybe? Yeah, you and I both don’t drink that much more. So probably. Um, true.
Jesse Lin 14:11
This is true.
Angela Lin 14:12
Okay, you have to drink. I guess correctly.
Jesse Lin 14:16
That was not a rule.
Angela Lin 14:18
I’m making it up now. I’ve been drinking up in between the questions.
Jesse Lin 14:25
Okay. So first of all, I don’t know who Gary Glitter is whatsoever.
Angela Lin 14:28
Great name though.
Jesse Lin 14:29
But apparently he is a pedophile and he is an elderly prisoner. That has been given the COVID vaccine before guards and victims and this was in the Daily Mail UK.
Angela Lin 14:41
The Daily Mail
Jesse Lin 14:43
Daily Mail UK girl. This is a hot contentious issue here too, about vaccinating prison populations before like general public.
Angela Lin 14:54
Okay, how about this? Frequent sex can lower chances of contracting the Coronavirus. That’s false.
Jesse Lin 15:04
It’s false. I was like that should like make your chances of having Coronavirus with more because you’re having sex with random people.
Angela Lin 15:15
Hey, whoa, it doesn’t say what the random okay could have been like with your partner.
Jesse Lin 15:20
Okay, well, I just revealed too much about.
Angela Lin 15:23
Yeah, clearly Jesus.
Jesse Lin 15:25
No, but also still doesn’t make sense. But sure.
Angela Lin 15:29
I mean, I don’t know, because people try to call people try to claim sex is like exercise. So I don’t know, you could have made a connection between like health and exercising, because people that are unhealthy are more likely to have more symptoms.
Jesse Lin 15:46
But I don’t think you I don’t think those are like, directly related.
Angela Lin 15:51
Yeah, well, here’s a PSA for because it’s wrong. But I looked up some stuff for some tips from Harvard health around having safe sex during COVID. They are just like myths, debunking myths. So like, the sex itself, like penetration like that is not able to give you COVID. And so just let’s just rule that out right there. But it’s because sex involves a lot more things and like, you’re just you’re just closer and more intimate with people. It’s like kissing and the droplets that can transfer COVID because it’s a you know, airborne, it’s a respiratory disease. So that’s the part that actually gets you potentially sick. But Harvard health did say, do still be intimate with your partner. Because I think there’s a challenge right now, right? Because people are like, you have to be safe. But then people are being like extra cautious or like you’re super isolated. So then you’re like, removing the mental health positive part of connecting with people. So basically, it was just saying, like, be safe. You can still have sex, especially if you’re with like a committed person and you’re like quarantined together. Like that’s not a reason to like suddenly be apart from each other. But like, don’t obviously have sex with someone who just tested positive two days. It was just like, be fucking smart. It said wait seven days after they’ve been symptom free. And at least I think similarly seven days fever free basically use common sense. But like still have sex and still be intimate and still have connection with people.That’s all.
Jesse Lin 17:36
Yes, that 100% mix makes sense. I love looking at these tips from some of these places because it’s like really, like a really weird thing to see from very prestigious institutions. Like I remember I think the CDC also had a list and like glory holes were on them. And I was like, this is the first time I’ve seen glory holes on the CDC website. Like ever.
Angela Lin 18:01
Didn’t, um, didn’t Cuomo have a PSA around sex or something? I saw something about New York about like, don’t have sex or something. And I was like?
Jesse Lin 18:17
Let’s be real people are still hooking up and having sex.
Angela Lin 18:20
Yeah for sure. Okay, next.
Jesse Lin 18:24
UK Coronavirus strain is doubling in the US every 10 days.
Angela Lin 18:30
I feel like you’re tricking me with like, it’s probably like every 20 days, not every 10 days or some bullshit like that. It’s true.
Jesse Lin 18:40
It is true. It is true. I will drink. It is doubling every 10 days in the US. This is a report on CNBC. And it was based off of modeling done by the CDC.
Angela Lin 18:57
Where are people really traveling that much still, how are we getting the UK strain?
Jesse Lin 19:03
Well, yeah, that’s it’s very it’s very unclear. But I guess since international travel was like, not actually shut off. People can still shuffle back.
Angela Lin 19:13
I mean, it is well, it is unless you’re national. So I guess it’s like if yeah, if someone was an American who was abroad, and then came back.
Jesse Lin 19:25
Or if you have a lot of people yeah, a lot of people going back and forth are dual nationality people.
Angela Lin 19:31
Okay, how about this? Dogs can be trained to detect COVID-19
Jesse Lin 19:38
True.
Angela Lin 19:38
Oh, you already read about that?
Jesse Lin 19:40
I’ve seen this before.
Angela Lin 19:42
It is true. Okay, so this was from CNN as well, but also a website called prevention.com.
Jesse Lin 19:50
Interesting.
Angela Lin 19:50
Oh, well, it’s mostly from CNN. But the prevention calm was that the Miami Heat have allowed a limited number of fans to come to their games, and the arena is patrolled by these dogs that can sniff out. Yeah, yeah, anyways. But the kind of, you know, the high level is that it’s promising, it’s good that like dogs can be trained to do this. Basically, the types of dogs that can be trained to do this are ones that already can sniff out illnesses. So I don’t know if everyone already knows, but dogs, some dogs are trained to be able to smell like colon cancer, malaria, Parkinson’s disease, like a lot of really, you know, serious things, they can actually sniff those out. So those are the dogs that are now in these studies in a lot of different places. But this article’s specifically about a study based in France and Lebanon, where they had about 180 patients, half of them were COVID positive half weren’t. And they use the sweat. They like isolated the sweat from each of the patients and how the dogs like sniff through them, and they consistently were able to identify the ones that were positive. So basically, it’s promising. It’s not like at all meant to replace COVID tests. But it’s they’re seeing it as like, complimentary, especially for opening up these more public spaces, like airports, and like the Miami Heat with like sports arenas and stuff, places where like people are gonna be gathering and like coming and going. So, you know, this is the future.
Jesse Lin 21:28
I mean, it’s use every tool you got, why not? Okay. COVID-19 vaccine causes HIV in some recipients.
Angela Lin 21:36
False.
Jesse Lin 21:37
This is false.
Angela Lin 21:38
Yeah, I feel like I would have heard about that. That sounds too big of a, like,
Jesse Lin 21:46
There were two, there were two related news stories. So one was that I think one of the like, canceled vaccine candidates was cancelled, because it caused people to be more susceptible to getting HIV. And there was another candidate that was being developed by a biotech firm in Australia. And they were using like, an engineered version of the HIV virus to deliver an immune response, like deliver the virus virus particles to create an immune response. And they stopped that one because because they were using the HIV like a edited version of HIV virus, it could cause people to accidentally test false positive for HIV. So they stopped they stopped developing on that one too, but there were a few that were like, adjacent news stories to this.
Angela Lin 22:37
I know what you’re saying. Yeah, cuz I did hear something about using like, something with HIV cure or not cures like HIV medicine or something as a base. I heard something about that as like.
Jesse Lin 22:50
Yes. There was another one where it was like a some kind of like anti anti anti viral that was originally developed for HIV. They were trying to use it as like experimental treatment. I don’t think it worked.
Angela Lin 23:03
While they were trying everything at some point. Yeah, still are. Okay, how about this, um Coronavirus will resemble the common cold?
Jesse Lin 23:18
Is this a headline?
Angela Lin 23:20
…scientists predict
Jesse Lin 23:34
Yes true.
Angela Lin 23:40
Could you tell was true only because I said “scientists predict”?
Jesse Lin 23:44
No. Well, it didn’t seem like a real headline because it was so short. I was like, is there like a conclusion to this headline?
Angela Lin 23:57
That’s what it was, “Coronavirus will resemble the common cold, scientists predict”
Jesse Lin 24:02
That comma scientists predicts make all the difference.
Angela Lin 24:07
Well that’s why cross it off initially because I wanted to trick you. I was like, I mean, the catchy part is the part before scientists predict
Jesse Lin 24:17
No but I have seen that where they’re saying well because the Coronavirus is related to other coronaviruses which cause the common cold.
Angela Lin 24:25
That’s right. Um, and yet this is from New York Times. It’s funny how I pulled all the legit sources. Sorry. Because I love Daily Mail constantly being served daily mail articles because my love of like serial killer things.
Jesse Lin 24:45
Oh, okay. I was like, why are you on Daily Mail?
Angela Lin 24:48
I’m never on Daily Mail. People are pushing me Daily Mail articles. Oh, okay. Anyways, um, yeah. It’s exactly what you said it’s very similar to the common colds from like a family of Corona viruses because I don’t – I think most people know by now but like this is not the Coronavirus, like Coronavirus is like a group of it’s like a type of virus and COVID is one of those anyways. And yeah the hope is that it will one day become endemic basically that it just like exists but it’s going to circulate at low levels and will not cause serious illness that’s the hope and apparently, if we just like never had vaccinations it would take a couple years to up to decades for it to become endemic but luckily because we have vaccinations coming out the hope is that you know, it it will speed it up and they say which is I don’t think it’s gonna happen but they say that the an efficient vaccination rollout which is not what happening right now, but could shorten the timeframe to a year or even six months for it to become endemic. So that’s like best case scenario.
Jesse Lin 24:57
Okay, it’s my turn. Yeah, my turn.
Angela Lin 26:14
Okay, look at that martini glass pose.
Jesse Lin 26:18
I am thinking it through Okay. Why people three times more likely to be vaccinated than mixed race people
Angela Lin 26:27
I’m gonna say false because I don’t think headlines say white people.
Jesse Lin 26:34
It’s true.
Angela Lin 26:36
Yeah, outlet this?
Jesse Lin 26:38
Well, it’s, it’s on it’s on Metro UK.
Angela Lin 26:44
You pulled all your articles from there?
Jesse Lin 26:46
Yes. I was like, Where can I do like a one stop shop for like, trash news that’s written in a way that seems that could be false, but it’s most likely true. Obviously, this is all like UK people. But new figures show that white people are three times more likely to have had a Coronavirus vaccine that mixed race people in England and 1.5 times more likely than Asian people.
Angela Lin 27:13
I mean, that makes sense to me. I guess I was just thrown off by the fact that they call them white people. Oh my god. Like whenever we talk and I say white people I feel a little like…
Jesse Lin 27:30
I shouldn’t say that about them.
Angela Lin 27:32
So funny. Okay, well, should we move into fortune cookie?
Jesse Lin 27:38
Yes.
Angela Lin 27:40
You can take us in
Jesse Lin 27:41
Welcome listeners to the Fortune Cookie section, the closing section of our podcast. I am almost at the bottom of my martini glass. So we’re having a good time. There’s nothing here. Oh my gosh. Oh my god,
Angela Lin 28:06
Too drunk to scroll down to our fucking Google Doc.
Jesse Lin 28:08
I’m sorry. I’m looking at the wrong thing. She’s looking at the wrong part of the outline. Okay, so to complement our drinking, during this episode, we’re gonna each disclose what our favorite hangover foods is. And I will go first because I am already talking.
Angela Lin 28:26
I think we should drink more often.
Jesse Lin 28:32
Yeah. This is really fun. What’s my favorite hangover food? Yeah, I’m gonna say french toast. I really like french toast. Yeah.
Angela Lin 28:43
But where are you getting french toast? Oh, hangover. So So morning, morning. Well, sometimes there’s like Sorry, I was confusing drunk food. And hangover food.
Jesse Lin 28:55
Oh, got it. No, no, I like to do like brunch at the no. I like to do french toast at brunch the next day. I was gonna say I like to do brunch at the brunch the next day because I forgot french toast
Angela Lin 29:12
You have a spot to don’t you?
Jesse Lin 29:14
They usually go to. Um, yeah, I mean, like, I won’t go there now because it’s so. So cold. And just like outdoorsy thing. It’s like not great there. But there are a few places in the neighborhood that I like to visit. What about you?
Angela Lin 29:29
Um, so I don’t do this anymore, because I don’t drink enough to get real hangovers. But this was a pro tip. When I was in business school. It did me well, every time and part of me wishes I could be as big of a degenerate again as that so that I could repeat this routine that I did. So when I was in business school, it was Chicago. I was in Chicago. Not a lot of Asians there, right. But there was a very legit Chinese restaurant that was like, a couple blocks away from my apartment. And what I would do before so like we had, you know, it was business school is just like college point oh, so we have like, you know, dances and like other formals just like high school and college. So when we would have one of these like big events, I knew I’d be fucking wasted. So I go to the Chinese restaurant earlier in the day, and I’d order a combo fried rice, which was always too big because it’s a Chinese restaurant. So it was like, a big enough portion for like two people or two meals for one person. So I’d get that. And then I’d stop by Mariano’s, which is the supermarket chain there. And I’d pick up two giant Gatorades. I’d take those home, and I would put the Gatorades it’s in the fridge and also the fried rice. But when I’d come home wasted, I would drink a full Gatorade and eatt half of the fried rice and then go to sleep. And the next morning I would wake up kind of groggy, but not like dead. And I would drink the other Gatorade and eat the rest of the fried rice and then I was functioning. Okay, which is the best you can hope for when you’re like when you were super super wasted.
Jesse Lin 31:25
I have no idea how that is like, how that even works. A the if that’s good for you? No, no, like, I don’t understand how that works. Not that like it doesn’t work.
Angela Lin 31:36
Let me break it down for you as the drunk, drunk person,
Jesse Lin 31:41
CEO of drunk.
Angela Lin 31:43
Rationalizing my decisions. The Gatorade is electrolytes, you’re dehydrated, that’s a big reason why you get hangovers is when you’re dehydrated. So it’s first of all, like a shit ton of liquid that I’m forcing myself to drink but Gatorade has electrolytes in it. So it’s like refueling you with the right kinds of things you need to be re hydrated as you’re sipping your last drops of your martini glass. And then you also need carbs to soak up the alcohol because another reason you like throw up and like feel awful nauseous and stuff is when you have like an empty stomach and the alcohol is just like swishing around in there. So the carbs soak it up. So then I like do half the work the night before so that I’m not like letting it percolate in there. And then the next morning, I finished it off at the same regimen and then it’s just great.
Jesse Lin 32:32
I guess that makes sense. I mean, if you saying, if you’re reporting it works.
Angela Lin 32:37
Oh, it works every time.
Jesse Lin 32:39
Okay, well, then I’ll have to try that sometime. But like probably not for like a year.
Angela Lin 32:44
Yeah, I mean, when are we going to go out again, so anyways.
Jesse Lin 32:47
Probably soon please?
Angela Lin 32:51
Well, hopefully you can take our tips for the future when we are allowed to go out and have fun again.
Jesse Lin 32:59
Please.
Angela Lin 33:01
Um, write us in with your either your favorite ridiculous COVID headline that you’ve seen during this time. Or your favorite drunk slash hangover food that you want to share with everyone and reminder that we are still looking for listener story submissions, so write us in about your experience with either this topic or whatever you want at tellus whereyourefrom@gmail.com the YOU’RE is y-o-u-r-e.
Jesse Lin 33:29
And as always, join us next week for a more sober episode.