Transcript of E7: Cal a Bun Gaa

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Bhavneet: Welcome back to Drive With Us. I’m Bhavneet

Taranjit: And I’m Taranjit.

Bhavneet: And many of you, at least in the Americas, probably heard about this really cool event that happened a couple of days ago. The super blood wolf moon. I said that really weird

Taranjit: The super blood wolf moon.

Bhavneet: I forgot the name. I was like there’s a wolf in there somewhere, there’s some blood and its super.

Taranjit: It sounds like you’re announcing like you know like in WWE where their like this person’s coming and they’re always like, really emphasizing.

Bhavneet: The Super blood wolf moon! Aaaaaahhh

Taranjit: Music and here it comes.

Bhavneet: Yep. That is exactly what it sounds like. I mean, this was pretty spectacular. If you saw it. For the first time, the East Coast of the United States was able to actually see a cool event, cool space event, but it was too cloudy in Maryland to actually see it.

Taranjit: That’s how it always works. Whenever we can actually see something. There’s clouds.

Bhavneet: Like we rarely can see anything. But when we actually get the chance to this. The clouds are like, no, that’s okay. You don’t need that, go to sleep. Go to sleep. Show has ended. So this happened from Sunday night on the 20th to Monday morning, January 21. And you could apparently see it only throughout North and South America, which is pretty cool. We were special. Now you might be wondering, why the heck is it called Super blood wolf moon.

Taranjit: I actually found this article by Popular Science that was breaking down the different different types of moons.

Bhavneet: Oh

Taranjit: And I love the way the article was written. It was so funny. And it was educational. But it had humor.

Bhavneet: It had flare.

Taranjit: Yeah, flair.

Bhavneet: You need some flair in your life.

Taranjit: Nobody wants to read boring articles. Anyways, so you have to have some comedy.

Bhavneet: How many of you read a scientific journal article? They are very dry.

Taranjit: Well, science is more about just getting the facts.

Bhavneet: This is science in a fun way.

Taranjit: I feel like astronomy is a little different. Like they can add that interest.

Bhavneet: Well, I mean, if you read a straight on astronomy journal article it’s going to be very dry and way over your head. I tried. It’s not pretty.

Taranjit: So the first type of moon

Bhavneet: Super blood wolf moon?

Taranjit: A regular old moon.

Bhavneet: Why is it old? I mean, it is old. Yes, it is old.

Taranjit: So basically, it was like this moon is the one you see every day. But you see the same side every day.

Bhavneet: Well don’t take it for granted because the moon does a lot. Hello, tides. That’s the moon.

Taranjit: So we all know the regular old moon. The next moon it listed was the Super Moon. It was basically saying that the news was combining all these words together to make this moon sound way different than other moons. And apparently in like Native American culture they used to call it the blood or a wolf moon.

Bhavneet: Yes, the Native Americans and the colonial Europeans would call the January Full Moon a wolf moon because the wolves in the region would start howling due to hunger in the winter. So it’s a wolf moon and because it happened in January is now the wolf moon. But there’s still super and blood.

Taranjit: So what makes a moon look bigger?

Bhavneet: Its proximity to the earth.

Taranjit: Yeah, so there’s these terms I didn’t I never heard of called per…perigee? And apogee? P e r i

Bhavneet: could you use that…no I’m just kidding. Spelling bee, please spell it.

Taranjit: P e r i g e e. So the closest point of its urbit….urbit. Orbit is the perigee and that’s when it’s like at that perigee

Bhavneet: Perigee?

Taranjit: Purgee, perigee.

Bhavneet: I think it’s more like peri

Taranjit: Perigee?

Bhavneet: Perigee? I don’t know.

Taranjit: When it’s at that point it’s closest to the earth so it becomes a super moon. And when it’s at the Ap…apo…a p o.

Bhavneet: Apoptosis. Death.

Taranjit: Yeah, so basically what it said, that point is the furthest away, so we see a micromoon.

Bhavneet: So we had a super moon, the moon was all buddy, buddy, because it’s cold. It’s winter. So imagine how cold it is in space. So it was like, give me some warmth it’s lonely. It wants to come and join us for winter. Give me some warm, so it’s like, hug. Hug. Hug. Yeah, come closer.

Taranjit: The closest it can.

Bhavneet: But ironically, well not ironically. But interestingly, fun fact about the moon. The moon is apparently drifting away from the earth at about 3.8 centimeters per year. So in like 50 billion years, which is not a long time in the large scale it will take about 47 days for the moon to orbit the Earth instead of 27.3. So double its time. So we lose the moon, which eventually in you know, some billion years, we will, what will happen to Earth? No more tides, no more moonlight walks.

Taranjit: Would we somehow get another moon? Because, like, how was the moon formed and got into the orbit.

Bhavneet: Something impacted the earth some billion years ago. So you’re saying that something else must impact the earth in a couple of billion years, and then we’re just going to boot the moon Bye, moon we don’t need you anymore. Thanks for your faithful service.

Taranjit: Well, it could be the man made objects that are in space. That could become…

Bhavneet: We could have Tesla’s car be our new moon just orbiting us, like,

Taranjit: Turn it’s headlights on.

Bhavneet: Yeah, exactly. Headlights.

Taranjit: Just have it on the auto setting. Yeah. So when it’s dark, light, when the sun comes up, off.

Bhavneet: Yeah, it’s like time to go to sleep, guys. And then the guy in the car will also go to sleep. He’ll be our ruler like, he’ll tell us when to wake up and when to sleep. That’s scary. That’s going to be a very weird time. If a car was our moon. How would you even see it?

Taranjit: You will see two headlights.

Bhavneet: It must be some very bright headlights, I hope. But whatever they use for those headlights they don’t put in cars right now because I would be blinded.

Taranjit: So I also found interesting fact about blue moons, which you probably already know, but… So basically, it describes a blue moon as when two full moons happened in the same month. So if we got two full moons in the same month than a blue moon, it’s a blue moon. It’s not like it’s color. It’s just…

Bhavneet: That’s very deceiving. So it’s just a regular moon.

Taranjit: Yeah, but we get two full moons. So the last time this happened,

Bhavneet: So never in February, because that’s probably not going to happen.

Taranjit: It said that when the calendar year, calendar days, went by the moon, it would have one full moon per month. But then when we switched to the sun, there’s a chance of having two full moons in a month. So the last time this happened was in 2018. But what was the last time before 2018 that happened?

Bhavneet: 1000 years ago?

Taranjit: Not that long ago.

Bhavneet: Nobody’s ever seen a blue moon. 20 years ago. A very drastic jump, but you know. I feel like I’ve heard of a blue moon before.

Taranjit: 1999.

Bhavneet: Okay, maybe not that blue moon. Maybe I haven’t. I feel like, I remember something about it before.

Taranjit: Last year there was a blue moon.

Bhavneet: Yeah. Last year. I remember that.

Taranjit: Yeah. But I was asking before last year.

Bhavneet: Yeah, exactly. I probably don’t remember. That was like, what? Three?

Taranjit: Yeah.

Bhavneet: Like, yeah, I remember that.

Taranjit: So when do you think the next one’s going to happen?

Bhavneet: And well, that was 10 years ago. ish. Nine… last year?

Taranjit: How is that 10?

Bhavneet: Oh, yeah. 2019. I was thinking… I forgot. Like, I skipped out on the entire 2000s. We don’t need that. Who needs those years? They were pretty good. But who needs them? Okay. How about we cut out the 2010 to 20 now?

Taranjit: 20 now.

Bhavneet: Yeah, we’ll cut out those because the rest of the time was pretty good. What was the question?

Taranjit: When is the next one?

Bhavneet: So that was like 19, 18, 19 years ago. So probably in like, 50 will be the next one. If a movie keeps moving away.

Taranjit: The prediction is 2037.

Bhavneet: So that is not 50 years from now.

Taranjit: No, that’s not.

Bhavneet: More like 18 or something. I didn’t do the math. I just guessed a number.

Taranjit: So you paused for that long.

Bhavneet: Well, I was pause because I’m trying to think what year it was. Is 2019 everyone. Yep. The year changed. Uh huh. And to get to the thirty

Taranjit: Like it does every year

Bhavneet: That would be 20. And then you need to subtract like two because it’s 37 not 39. So 18. So the same amount of time every 18 years. That’s no fun.

Taranjit: Was it 18 years? From 99 to 18? Yeah it is.

Bhavneet: Is that 19 years?

Taranjit: Oh, yeah it is.

Bhavneet: You don’t know your math either. Somebody help us. We can’t math.

Taranjit: Yeah. Very bad. That was so bad. You even paused.

Bhavneet: I will edit that out.

Taranjit: I guessed.

Bhavneet: We will edit that out. That never happened. We can math. We have degrees. Science degrees.

Taranjit: I have two and you almost have two.

Bhavneet: Science degrees. We can math. It’s okay. But I heard that like once you start doing advanced stuff, the easy stuff like goes away, like, what? The easy stuff so hard to do. What’s the quadratic formula for Blah, blah, blah?

Taranjit: For blah, blah, blah, blah?

Bhavneet: Yeah,

Taranjit: I’ve never heard of that.

Bhavneet: I could probably do that. But then what’s Four plus one? I don’t know.

Taranjit: You even struggled on saying four plus one. One.

Bhavneet: That’s how hard it is.

Taranjit: The last moon that this article was talking about was a Paschal. I don’t know, I’m probably saying this all wrong. P a s ch a l moon.

Bhavneet: Probably named after some person. I have no idea.

Taranjit: So basically, this is just the first moon of spring.

Bhavneet: Oh, well, I like that moon because it means Spring is here. No more snow, ice, slipping, getting stuck. What about the blood moon? This is a super blood wolf moon.

Taranjit: Well, the article was all like the news just as these extra words to make it sound more fancy. Fancy.

Bhavneet: Well, the Blood Moon is when there’s a total lunar eclipse and the earth blocks the light from the sun and it gives a moon a reddish glow. So blood because apparently blood and wolves go together. Because you know, wolves, werewolves tear you apart. And where there’s werewolves there’s apparently vampires, because that’s Twilight. I don’t know.

Taranjit: I was like, where are you going with this?

Bhavneet: I don’t know where I was going with it. Because I thought a blood and I’m like, well, wolves. They don’t always kill people or something. But then there’s then there’s there’s werewolves. vampires. There’s Sasquatches, Bigfoot, Loch Ness monsters, the troll under the bridge, The creepy shadow in the dark that scares you when you leave the bathroom. That was you. So right now, I probably had a mini heart attack because somebody decided to jump out at me and make the weirdest noise. I don’t even remember what it was… like eeeeeee and gave me a heart attack. And I actually screamed. I don’t really scream when I’m scared. I like internally terrify myself. But I actually screamed and she jumped back too.

Taranjit: I wasn’t ready to like scare you. I just panicked and I’m like, Oh, she’s coming. What do I do? And then all of a sudden I scared you.

Bhavneet: That was not fun. I actually screamed.

Taranjit: Yeah, you like jumped and screamed so loud.

Bhavneet: It wasn’t even like a delayed response. I usually have a delayed reaction when I get scared. I like something jumps out of you. I process. Two seconds later I’m like aah. Except for this time it was like you charged that me all eeeeee. And then I was like, aah! And then you jumped back.

Taranjit: I laughed for a good like 5, 10 minutes. Water was coming out of my eyes.

Bhavneet: I know. She started crying. I think she felt bad about scaring me. And scene. That was a movie. I hope you enjoyed it. Come back. We’d like to make it a hit in the box office. Thank you.

Taranjit: It’s more like a trailer for a movie.

Bhavneet: What, all the times you scared me and I jumped. And then at the end I actually screamed and scare you. Yeah. Great movie.

Taranjit: Yeah. You already ruined the ending. You’re supposed to say spoiler alert.

Bhavneet: Well, that was the trailer. And you won’t know that that was the end until you actually watch the movie. And you’re like, where was that scene? And then you get to the end. And you’re like, oh, it all comes together now. That makes so much sense. Encore. Encore. That was brilliant.

Taranjit: Oh yeah. So brilliant.

Bhavneet: Yep. So super blood wolf moons. Pretty cool. I didn’t get to see it firsthand because clouds hate us, but if any of you did see it. I saw some really cool pictures online about like these really cool places. Like someone saw it near a waterfall. And there was like this canyon area. And they’re like, really cool pictures. They must be like, professional photographers or something. I don’t know. But it was pretty cool. First off, it made me sad that I didn’t see the moon and second it made me sad that I can’t take pictures like that. My pictures suck.

Taranjit: Yeah, I saw this one person who went hiking or like what out up into like, a hiking path or something to get a picture of this moon.

Bhavneet: People are dedicated.

Taranjit: It was a beautiful picture.

Bhavneet: People are so dedicated. I cannot be a photographer. I would not do that. I’d be like too cold bye. I’ll see it online. I don’t know.

Taranjit: Online is not as cool.

Bhavneet: I know. It’s not fair.

Taranjit: So I found these 80, this page about 81 out of this world facts about the moon from factretriever.com. So I picked a couple interesting ones. Hit me with them. Whack.

Bhavneet: Speaking of, the moon gets hit by meteors way more often than you think. Don’t hit me with a meteor.

Taranjit: One of the facts was about like the great whack but I believe that because you already kind of touched on it.

Bhavneet: Well, speaking of meteors, apparently, did any of you see that little flash when the super blood wolf moon was happening? Apparently a meteor hit the moon during this event. That’s pretty cool. But not a lot of people actually saw it. You had to like look really, really closely. But a meteor hit it. They were thinking that it might be the first time it was documented during a total lunar eclipse.

Taranjit: That’s not the first time the moon was hit by a meteor.

Bhavneet: No. I saw this thing, some guy from NASA was saying so. I mean, if they were saying it’s got to be right, right? I think. He was saying that the moon gets hit with about 2,800 kilograms of meteor material every day.

Taranjit: Wow. That’s a lot.

Bhavneet: Which he was saying it’s not actually a slot… not

Taranjit: A slot.

Bhavneet: It’s not actually a slot. It’s not actually as much as you would think because

Taranjit: Oh, so you just drop saying a lot. You just said as much.

Bhavneet: That didn’t make any sense. So it’s not actually as much as you would think. If you consider the size of the moon, surface spaces all around the size of the moon. It’s not actually a lot that happens. But overall.

Taranjit: That number just sounds high.

Bhavneet: It does.

Taranjit: But I guess it’s not as high compared to other things.

Bhavneet: Yes like flying cars. Which apparently, someone launched a flying car recently. I forget who, some airplane company, I think.

Taranjit: Yeah, I think Boeing or something like the first I don’t remember. It’s

Bhavneet: It’s quite possible. I mean, there’s already one in space. Why isn’t there one flying around the Earth? Yeah. Food for thought.

Taranjit: So 81 out of this world facts about the moon. You already said the first one.

Bhavneet: Lack of gravity?

Taranjit: No. How far the moon is.

Bhavneet: Is it 238,000 miles?

Taranjit: Yeah.

Bhavneet: Don’t think that I actually knew that. I was looking at facts too, as well.

Taranjit: How many Earth widths is that?

Bhavneet: How many Earth widths?

Taranjit: 30 Earth widths. That word is so hard to say. Earth widths away.

Bhavneet: Wow, that’s not a whole lot if you think about it, but I mean, it orbits us. So it can’t be that far. Interesting.

Taranjit: The next is probably kind of obvious. But it’s a fact.

Bhavneet: Most facts are obvious. Like, the sky is blue. The grass is green. Not always. Because if it’s dead, it’s brown. But the sky is also not always blue. Because if there’s clouds and it’s about the thunderstorm it’s gray. So yes, there are exceptions to all facts. Nevermind, this is not good examples.

Taranjit: Remember the one time we are driving and it looked like there was like a mountain or something in the distance. But it was like clouds.

Bhavneet: Yes, that was really interesting. Should have got a picture of that. That was so weird.

Taranjit: The clouds were hanging like right above where the buildings you can see in the distance. So it looked like mountains.

Bhavneet: The cloud was making its own picture, like, Oh, you want to go the mountains? Here, drive towards us. This way! Like, no, I don’t want to go towards the mountains. Turn around. U-turn, u-turn. Except we were more like, go towards that. I want to know where that goes.

Taranjit: So the obvious fact or the fact that you probably know is not all the moons are the same size. Not all full moons are the same size.

Bhavneet: Well, I mean, if it keeps moving away.

Taranjit: Yeah, pretty much.

Bhavneet: And they say that we only ever see half of the moon. But sometimes we get to see a little bit more than half. One article was saying about like, sometimes we see about 59% of the moon.

Taranjit: But we still see the same like side of it.

Bhavneet: We always see the same side. But, there is no dark side of the moon. Myth. Myth Busters. Busted. It’s considered the dark side because we don’t see it. But it gets the same amount of light as the light side. So yes, go the dark side. Get some cookies. Because it’s not even dark over there. You have plenty of light. It’s all like a cover up like Greenland and Iceland. They’re just trying to confuse you.

Taranjit: They don’t want you to go over there.

Bhavneet: Yeah, so don’t go to Iceland. Because it seems cold. But it’s actually really nice. Go to Greenland and be like, what the heck is this? I didn’t sign up for that.

Taranjit: So when it’s at the perigee, that word, point it’s closest to us.

Bhavneet: You should just be like the P e r i g e e. That spells Tigger. Now you try. T i double-g er.

Taranjit: Oh, what did you say? Spells Tigger? I don’t even know. So when it’s at the closest point how much bigger does it look?

Bhavneet: 30%?

Taranjit: Whoa, that’s a lot.

Bhavneet: 5%?

Taranjit: Not that less.

Bhavneet: 15.98364.

Taranjit: Okay. You went a little crazy there. 14.

Bhavneet: If it was accurate, it wouldn’t be crazy. Like pi is 3.14 something something something something and people don’t say you’re crazy if you say that number. If that was the number.

Taranjit: Yeah, it wouldn’t be, but it’s not. 14.

Bhavneet: I was close.

Taranjit: Not when you start adding those decimals.

Bhavneet: I was a little bit further away.

Taranjit: You were going further and further.

Bhavneet: Just a little. The more decimal places you go the less it is.

Taranjit: Yeah, but you’re getting further.

Bhavneet: I am right. Close enough.

Taranjit: Another interesting fact how you were talking about the tides and how they’re linked with the moon, when it’s at that furthest point away from the earth. I was about to say away from the moon, when the moon is furthest away from itself.

Bhavneet: Well, I mean it needs a break. It can’t always be with itself.

Taranjit: When it’s at that point when it’s furthest away it affects our weather and our weather is more predictable.

Bhavneet: So it doesn’t affect it otherwise?

Taranjit: But when it’s closer our whether it’s more unstable.

Bhavneet: The Earth is like, Get away from me!

Taranjit: It was saying like something about the increased gravitational pull causes larger tides and more unpredictable weather.

Bhavneet: That actually makes sense because it’s closer. It pulls more. It’s like, give me some water… share. That’s not nice. Yeah, but then when it said, fine you don’t give me water. I’ll go further away. And then we’re like, okay, live our lives and then it comes back. It’s like that crazy stalker. Every time it comes back we’re like aaaaah. And then when it leaves your like okay, I’m good.

Taranjit: What?

Bhavneet: Except for we need the moon, it’s really good.

Taranjit: Yeah.

Bhavneet: It’s like that weird sibling. I don’t know.

Taranjit: You called it a stalker.

Bhavneet: I mean, it’s always hovering around us orbit orbit orbit. So I mean, if you think about it like that we’re the sun’s stalkers just like, orbit the sun. Give me your rays.

Taranjit: Stalker or like, what’s that word?

Bhavneet: Stalker?

Taranjit: When, like, you have like a king or queen? And you’re like…

Bhavneet: We’re a serf.

Taranjit: What?

Bhavneet: Back to like, the old times. We’re serfs, peasants.

Taranjit: Subjects you can’t live without.

Bhavneet: Without what? I was waiting for something to come. You’re like, can’t live without.

Taranjit: You can’t live without the sun. That’s what I said.

Bhavneet: Okay, you can’t live without… stare at me intently.

Taranjit: I can’t live without you.

Bhavneet: Awwww. She didn’t say it.

Taranjit: I looked at you.

Bhavneet: Yes. Yes, you did. Very weirdly.

Taranjit: So what do you think is the temperature on the moon?

Bhavneet: It varies.

Taranjit: Oh, you already know this.

Bhavneet: Not a whole lot. I saw that and I’m like, yeah, that’s a lot of temperatures. Really, really cold, pretty warm.

Taranjit: It goes from negative 200 to 200 degrees Fahrenheit.

Bhavneet: Yeah, a little more than my tolerance levels.

Taranjit: Little bit?

Bhavneet: Just a little, you know

Taranjit: A but

Bhavneet: Not… a but. A bit more. Like if you take my tolerance level and just smudge it a little bit. Write it in gel pen.

Taranjit: That’s how much?

Bhavneet: And as far as you can smudge it, that’s how much more it is. It’s a smudge lengths away.

Taranjit: Yeah. That’s how much you can tolerate. If you had a spectrum. How much of a smudge length. That’s how much you can tolerate.

Bhavneet: So I would use not a gel pen. Because then it wouldn’t smudge very much at all.

Taranjit: What if you had like a pencil and you like got in that?

Bhavneet: Speaking of, I somehow manage to no matter whenever I use a pen, no matter what kind of pen. it is. I always end up having pen marks all over my hand. Like how does that even happen?

Taranjit: Yeah, same. I don’t know.

Bhavneet: What is this? The pens are attacking us. Does anyone else ever has this problem? Like whenever I use a pen I’m like, where did this blue line come from? My thumb is green. I don’t know.

Taranjit: Sometimes I’ve noticed myself accidentally, like when I’m putting the cap on. Line. But other times I’m like, I don’t remember touching my hand with the tip of the pen.

Bhavneet: Exactly. I don’t know how that happens. No idea.

Taranjit: So smudge.

Bhavneet: Smudge lengths away.

Taranjit: Oh, did you know that the largest crater in the solar system is found on our moon. It’s called the South Pole Aitken. I can’t pronounce what it says.

Bhavneet: Is it actually the South Pole? Or is it the North Pole? Because apparently our South Pole’s the North Pole and the North Pole’s the South Pole. And oh my god, craziness.

Taranjit: It’s on the other side of the moon. So we can’t.

Bhavneet: It’s all the dark side. You see, more reason to go to the dark side of the moon. I think that’s a line in a Mulan song. Something about the dark side of the moon.

Taranjit: And then the largest crater that we can see on the moon is called the Bailey crater.

Bhavneet: They’re all named after like scientists and astronomers and all these people that made contributions to astronomy.

Taranjit: How big do you think it is in diameter?

Bhavneet: The size of your forehead? That’s how big it is. Times…

Taranjit: What are you saying, that I have a big forehead?

Bhavneet: Times… You didn’t let me finish.

Taranjit: It didn’t sound like you’re going more.

Bhavneet: I’m trying to think of a number. Times 238,000. So it’s bigger than the distance of…

Taranjit: I don’t know what that number would be.

Bhavneet: Let’s measure your forehead. Now is it the diameter of your forehead, or like the whole like area. Or is it… I don’t know.

Taranjit: Well, I’m asking you in diameter.

Bhavneet: Oh, well, let’s just go with that. I don’t know.

Taranjit: Pick a number.

Bhavneet: I told you, that number times…

Taranjit: Yeah, what is that? Do the math.

Bhavneet: Are we doing like inches, feet, miles.

Taranjit: Miles?

Bhavneet: How much of a mile is your forehead?

Taranjit: I don’t know.

Bhavneet: 458

Taranjit: Miles? Wow. That’s big.

Bhavneet: Oh, really?

Taranjit: Yeah.

Bhavneet: Five. You looked at me like it was super big.

Taranjit: It’s 183. The one that we can see. The one on the other side is 1,550 miles.

Bhavneet: Oh my god. The moon’s not even round. It’s like cheese. Some holes are bigger than the others.

Taranjit: Pretty much. So we learned that 50 earth widths is a distance to the moon. But how many moons can fit in the Earth?

Bhavneet: Whatever number I say you’re going to be like, what? Where’d you get that. So a number.

Taranjit: Pick one.

Bhavneet: Eighty hundred.

Taranjit: Hundred?!

Bhavneet: So 8,000. 200. 100. 80. I’m going to pick 180. That’s my number.

Taranjit: 49.

Bhavneet: Oh man. The moon is bigger than I thought. Two times bigger than I thought.

Taranjit: But it’s only 400 times smaller than the sun

Bhavneet: Only.

Taranjit: Only.

Bhavneet: But that means the Earth is less because it’s bigger than the moon.

Taranjit: But it’s also 400 times closer to the earth. So that’s how they look the same size.

Bhavneet: What?

Taranjit: The sun and the moon look about the same size when we see it.

Bhavneet: Oh, that makes sense. Proportions. 400 and 400 hundred. The more you know. I actually thought the sun looked a little bit bigger. But I mean, eh.

Taranjit: They’re saying about.

Bhavneet: When it’s setting it can look a whole lot bigger. But that’s very cool.

Taranjit: But you shouldn’t be looking at the sun anyways.

Bhavneet: Yeah, burn your eyeballs out. Wear sunglasses. And still don’t look at the sun.

Taranjit: I thought you were going to give a tip of how to

Bhavneet: No

Taranjit: And still don’t do it.

Bhavneet: Yeah, still don’t do it. Because that is bad. You’re gonna burn your eyeballs, your eye sockets, your eyebrows, everything on your face is gonna burn and everything in your head is important for you to be alive. So don’t do it. That is my…

Taranjit: Parent Tip of the Day. You’re just like a parent. Don’t do it. Don’t do it. Because I said so. Just don’t do it.

Bhavneet: I try to think of like, what are those things called the like the public promotion announce… or the public whatever announcements. A PCA, whatever it is. I don’t know. I can’t remember what the word is. Like my social public, social awareness announcement thing. PSA.

Taranjit: PSA?

Bhavneet: Yes.

Taranjit: Public Safety Announcement?

Bhavneet: Yeah. That’s what it is. That’s my public safety announcement for the day.

Taranjit: That’s a PC announcement. Computer announcement.

Bhavneet: PCA. It’s like a computer announcement for all but PC doesn’t start with C so nevermind.

Taranjit: Okay.

Bhavneet: I would actually say it backwards. Computer Com for all.

Taranjit: Okay.

Bhavneet: Yep.

Taranjit: We can’t say CPA because that’s an accountant.

Bhavneet: It is?

Taranjit: Yeah, it is. I don’t know what it stands for, but…

Bhavneet: You also can’t say APA. Because that is a citation style. English, no more like psychology. But any of you that write papers APA style you know what I mean. Back to science.

Taranjit: Back to another fun fact. So you probably know there’s no wind or water on the moon.

Bhavneet: And less gravity.

Taranjit: So how long can astro… astronomers.

Bhavneet: They’re people to.

Taranjit: How long can an astronaut’s footprint last on the moon?

Bhavneet: Forever. Well, how do they know? Because only like, I saw that only 12 people or so have set foot on the moon. All American males by the way.

Taranjit: Yeah.

Bhavneet: I don’t know if this was very recent, if anyone has since this article is posted. But I kept seeing that number. So how will they know how long it lasts?

Taranjit: I don’t know. Their estimate is millions of years.

Bhavneet: So forever. Because who’s going to be there in that time?

Taranjit: Yeah.

Bhavneet: They’re going to have a car moon, like, what are they going to know? They’re gonna be like, Oh, yeah, that’s in our history textbooks. We just have this car right now. It’s headlights are so bright. For some reason it didn’t crash into us, it just started orbiting and became our moon. I don’t know. Isn’t it supposed to crash back into Venus or Earth?

Taranjit: I didn’t say it was going to become the moon. You added that.

Bhavneet: I know because we said that earlier. It’s gonna happen. I don’t know. It’s gonna be our moon.

Taranjit: So my last fun fact, since we’re Drive With Us, and we’re a podcast for the commute, this one’s about how fast the Earth rotates in comparison to how fast the moon rotates in miles per hour.

Bhavneet: Oh, snap, you probably can’t drive this fast.

Taranjit: How fast does the Earth rotate?

Bhavneet: Not very.

Taranjit: What’s your number?

Bhavneet: Wait, rotates on its axis? I mean, it goes every day. Because you get the sun. Then you get the moon and get the sun and the moon for 365 days in a year and it keeps going.

Taranjit: How many miles per hour?

Bhavneet: Four.

Taranjit: Four?

Bhavneet: Well, okay, there’s 24 hours in a day. I don’t know how big it’s axis is. 500?

Taranjit: Double it.

Bhavneet: Oh, dang. And we don’t feel that.

Taranjit: It’s 1000 miles per hour.

Bhavneet: Yeah, good luck driving that fast. If you drive faster than that, you can beat the rotation. And you can always be with the sun. And just like keep driving.

Taranjit: Are you suggesting…

Bhavneet: That would be pretty…

Taranjit: Don’t listen to her, she’s giving bad advice.

Bhavneet: Okay, don’t drive, you can fly. And then you just follow the sun like weeeeeeee. Just always go with the sun, I don’t know. Or the moon. If you like the moon, I’m not being a partial. Pick what, whichever one you want one you want. Sun. Moon.

Taranjit: So you’re telling them to follow one or the other?

Bhavneet: Well, I mean, if you go faster than 1000, you can get to the other side and start following that one.

Taranjit: So you’re telling them to go super fast.

Bhavneet: I said if you possibly can. I don’t think you can go that fast. I don’t think there’s anything that currently can.

Taranjit: You probably could do the moon’s rotation.

Bhavneet: Okay.

Taranjit: How much is that?

Bhavneet: 40

Taranjit: No.

Bhavneet: 500?

Taranjit: No.

Bhavneet: Oh, that look. 80

Taranjit: No.

Bhavneet: Hundred. 80 hundred?

Taranjit: Nope. Much slower.

Bhavneet: One.

Taranjit: That slow?

Bhavneet: I could walk faster than it?

Taranjit: No.

Bhavneet: 30.

Taranjit: Nope.

Bhavneet: 31.

Taranjit: You’re going the wrong direction.

Bhavneet: 20.

Taranjit: No.

Bhavneet: 21?

Taranjit: No.

Bhavneet: 25.

Taranjit: 10.

Bhavneet: 10?

Taranjit: You were going in the wrong direction so I just gave it to you.

Bhavneet: Okay, you can totally follow the moon. Totally follow it. So much more easier. So I guess we just start there, you can take a photo or video journey of the moon around the world.

Taranjit: By driving?

Bhavneet: No.

Taranjit: In a car?

Bhavneet: No. I mean you still would have to be able to go as fast as the Earth’s rotation because you’re on Earth so that wouldn’t work. Alright, nix that plan. We’ll try again next time.

Taranjit: Try again next time? Try what?

Bhavneet: On your next commute we will hatch a new plan and it will be more successful so please don’t try doing that while you’re commuting at the moment. Please don’t do that.

Taranjit: Don’t listen to her she’s giving bad advice.

Bhavneet: Today is not a good day for advices. I don’t know. But I gave a PSA, a good one. Don’t look at the sun.

Taranjit: I’m pretty sure people already know that.

Bhavneet: I mean, people did that when the sun

Taranjit: What was it?

Bhavneet: The solar eclipse was happening, people did that.

Taranjit: I was about to say lunar eclipse.

Bhavneet: Yes. During the lunar eclipse, everyone was like, ooh sun! Let’s look that way.

Taranjit: Yeah, that’s better idea. Solar Eclipse, moon.

Bhavneet: Lunar eclipse? Moon. Always just look at the moon. You won’t burn your eyeballs. There another PSA. See, I’m full of good advice also.

Taranjit: Yeah, and some bad ones.

Bhavneet: I didn’t tell anyone to take it. So again, like I said…

Taranjit: You were like, if you have the opportunity to drive

Bhavneet: I didn’t say drive. Fly.

Taranjit: Whatever. And follow the sun.

Bhavneet: Around the Earth.

Taranjit: Yeah.

Bhavneet: It’d be really cool to see that on video.

Taranjit: See it on video.

Bhavneet: A photo. I never said I would do it. Again, next time we’ll come back to this.We will come up with a better plan. Or if anyone has a better plan. Let me know.

Taranjit: You’ll come up with a better plan.

Bhavneet: I have all of these people to help me come up with a better plan.

Taranjit: Doubt it. So since we’re talking about space, and moons, let’s move on to stars. I found this cool article that said that there’s two islands in the world that are the best to go to if you want to stargaze.

Bhavneet: What? I thought just going to Arizona was really cool. Like we saw so many more stars than you can see here in Maryland. Like it was like, Whoa, there’s that many stars in the world. Not just the globe, but like the universe. Oh my gosh, it was amazing. So you can see more than that?

Taranjit: Yeah, the best stargazing places. There’s these two islands.

Bhavneet: Hawaii.

Taranjit: No.

Bhavneet: I was gonna say you get like, cool scenery around you and above you.

Taranjit: But no, that’s not one of them.

Bhavneet: Volcanoes, they just get volcanoes. Okay.

Taranjit: I’m sure you could probably see stars there too. But it’s not the best.

Bhavneet: Is it in the Caribbean?

Taranjit: No,.

Bhavneet: Oh, not even close. Madagascar?

Taranjit: More that way. Keep going.

Bhavneet: Sri Lanka?

Taranjit: Nope.

Bhavneet: Malaysia.

Taranjit: No.

Bhavneet: Singapore.

Taranjit: No.

Bhavneet: Is it in Indonesia?

Taranjit: No.

Bhavneet: Aww. New Zealand.

Taranjit: Yes, New Zealand. The north and south of New Zealand. So there’s,

Bhavneet: Wait, there’s two? There’s more than one Island in New Zealand?

Taranjit: I guess. I didn’t know that.

Bhavneet: I thought New Zealand was one island.

Taranjit: But it’s northern island, the Great Barrier island and it’s southern island, Stuart Island. Two best places.

Bhavneet: So just New Zealand, all you New Zealand, Zealandiers. All your New Zealandiers.

Taranjit: Zealandians? New Zealandians? Zealandiers?

Bhavneet: Landiers. Landiers are super lucky you get to look at the stars. So how many of you are astronomers because I want to look at the stars. Please teach me.

Taranjit: Teach you or more like…

Bhavneet: I look at the stars and I’m like, oh, Big Dippers up there somewhere. I can, I can find the Orion’s belt. That’s about it.

Taranjit: That’s so easy to find.

Bhavneet: I okay. When I took science in sixth grade, no eighth grade. Eighth grade, middle school. We learned about astronomy and I would stargaze and we learned about where the stars are and the constellations so I can point out Polaris, and the Northern Star and like Big Dipper, Little Dipper, the five sisters whatever that cluster out

Taranjit: Name about everything

Bhavneet: Taurus, Orion’s belt. The moon, it’s different phases. But now I can find Beetlejuice. And I can find Orion’s belt.

Taranjit: The easy ones.

Bhavneet: And sometimes I can find the five whatever sister cluster is in Taurus. I don’t know what the Taurus constellation looks like. But I can find those. I can’t find the Big Dipper to save the life of me. Or the Little Dipper. I don’t really know how to connect the dots. I make my own shape. So if I’m ever lost I cannot look to the stars, but I can look to the moon. If I just follow it I will eventually make it home. Right?

Taranjit: Sure. Bad advice again.

Bhavneet: I would never do that.

Taranjit: So we are interested in figuring out what kind of star we are. So we took the quiz.

Bhavneet: I want to be a good star.

Taranjit: Are you ready?

Bhavneet: A very bright star.

Taranjit: What kind of star are you?

Bhavneet: A very bright star.

Taranjit: A PlayBuzz quiz. Do you believe in ghosts?

Bhavneet: No, maybe. I don’t know.

Taranjit: No. I don’t know. Yes.

Bhavneet: I don’t know.

Taranjit: I don’t know. Okay. Who else would know? You should know if you believe in them or not.

Bhavneet: Well, it’s an option so I can click it. Right?

Taranjit: Yeah.

Bhavneet: What’s your answer?

Taranjit: Yes. You tongue-sticking-outer put that back in your mouth

Bhavneet: Put that thing back where I came or so help me bom bom bom bom. It’s for a musical that we’re practicing, rehearsing, for.

Taranjit: For a movie. Question 2: do you enjoy exercising? Sometimes, Absolutely. There’s an exclamation point. I feel indifferent or not really.

Bhavneet: See, the thing is, I want to

Taranjit: But do you. It’s not if you want.

Bhavneet: Yeah, I want to, but I guess super unmotivated really fast.

Taranjit: I’m sure we all do.

Bhavneet: So you start listening to podcasts to keep you awake and motivated. That’s what I’m going to do.

Taranjit: So your answer?

Bhavneet: I thought so.

Taranjit: Sometimes. Absolutely. I feel in different or not really.

Bhavneet: I feel indifferent. What about you?

Taranjit: I will say sometimes because some days I’m like, I’m gonna exercise and the other days I’m like, do I have to?

Bhavneet: So I started doing this, like, 30 day challenge to make yourself a morning workout person. Halfway through I’m like, I don’t wanna. Who wants to wake up and exercise, but I’m going to finish it. I’m not happy about it. But I’m gonna finish it.

Taranjit: You can do it. I believe in you.

Bhavneet: But I don’t want to.

Taranjit: So you feel indifferent.

Bhavneet: Yes, very indifferent.

Taranjit: Question number three. I think. We’re on three.

Bhavneet: With a question mark at the end. Three?

Taranjit: It doesn’t have a number. How many books have you read in the last year?

Bhavneet: Well, if  this was any other year? A lot. But last year?

Taranjit: Five plus, two, three, one or zero?

Bhavneet: Probably like one. I don’t remember. Not a whole lot because I’ve been busy doing schoolwork. Actually. No.

Taranjit: I already clicked your answer.

Bhavneet: I read books in English class. They were boring.

Taranjit: That doesn’t count.

Bhavneet: But I read them.

Taranjit: That doesn’t count.

Bhavneet: Yeah, it does.

Taranjit: You’re forced to read them.

Bhavneet: But I read it. Some people just don’t read it.

Taranjit: Yeah, but you’re forced to read those.

Bhavneet: That is true. They’re very boring. Some were kinda interesting but I would never read it on my own.

Taranjit: Exactly. So they don’t count.

Bhavneet: One.

Taranjit: I already clicked one for you.

Bhavneet: Okay. How many of you read?

Taranjit: I clicked two to three because I think that’s how much I read this year. I’m trying to read more.

Bhavneet: I want to read more but I don’t have time.

Taranjit: Make time.

Bhavneet: Maybe if I followed the moon, I’d have more time.

Taranjit: If you are given the chance will travel to another planet? No way. I’m not sure. In a heartbeat. Maybe.

Bhavneet: Maybe. I’m not really sure. Because…

Taranjit: Wait, I’m not sure or maybe?

Bhavneet: Those could mean the same thing.

Taranjit: So which choice?

Bhavneet: Maybe. It depends.

Taranjit: I’m not really sure.

Bhavneet: Because it would depend on the circumstances. If it’s routine and everyone does it and it’s totally safe. Yeah, I’d do it. If it’s was brand new, like this car going to outer space. Yeah, no, I don’t want to be the first person. I like to make sure people come back first. And it safe.

Taranjit: I said maybe to. It all depends on if I want to at that time.

Bhavneet: What’s my mood at the time?

Taranjit: Yeah, at that point. I might or might not want to.

Bhavneet: I don’t feel like it today. I’ll drop like 100 grand tomorrow. That’s okay. If I feel like it.

Taranjit: Yeah, pretty much. I know the answer to this question. But here’s the question. Are you a vegetarian? No

Bhavneet: Who’s asking?

Taranjit: Not really. Yes. Or sometimes. I like how there’s sometimes some days I am.

Bhavneet: I mean, because there’s those people who are like, yes, I want to be vegetarian. But it’s so hard to give up beef.

Taranjit: Bacon is the one that people can give up.

Bhavneet: Yeah, bacon. Same thing. Comes from the same animal, right? Occasionally.

Taranjit: Really? I thought beef comes from cows.

Bhavneet: Yeah.

Taranjit: Bacon comes from pigs.

Bhavneet: Bacon comes from pigs?

Taranjit: I’m pretty sure.

Bhavneet: Can you tell how vegetarian I am?

Taranjit: I’m pretty sure it comes from pig.

Bhavneet: Uh, you’re vegetarian is showing.

Taranjit: Yeah, a lot.

Bhavneet: Let me hide that up. Okay.

Taranjit: Same thing. You’re like beef bacon. Same thing.

Bhavneet: I mean, they both come from animals and you eat it. So yes, that’s my answer.

Taranjit: I already knew that because we both are. So yes. Yes.

Bhavneet: Yes. Yes. No, no. Yes, yes.

Taranjit: Sometimes, sometimes. Yes. Yes.

Bhavneet: Weirdo.

Taranjit: You’re the weirdo

Bhavneet: No, I’m not.

Taranjit: I know your answer to this one too. I think.

Bhavneet: I think. That is a good question. Okay. I gotta trip her up.

Taranjit: Do you perform? That’s not the word.

Bhavneet: Do I perform?

Taranjit: Do you prefer?

Bhavneet: I was going to say, excuse you? What kind of question is that?

Taranjit: Do you prefer a warm or cold climate? Here’s your choices. I’m not sure. I feel like that’s the answer choice for every question. I like both climates equally. I prefer warm or I prefer cold.

Bhavneet: I perform warm.

Taranjit: the way you said it. I perform warm.

Bhavneet: It came out very weird. I prefer a warm because as I was saying it, I was wrapping myself up in this fleece blanket.

Taranjit: Disney princess.

Bhavneet: Yes, Disney Princess fleece blanket. Because we’re sitting in our cold attic right now. And then well you’re in, in, an

Taranjit: In, in, in.

Bhavneet: You’re in an Incredibles blanket. I see Dash running across your arm right now.

Taranjit: You have Ariel looking up at you.

Bhavneet: Hello, how’s it going? Under the sea. That actually worked.

Taranjit: That worked out really well. Well I’m in in my blanket and I also said warm.

Bhavneet: My foot is frozen.

Taranjit: Well why didn’t you wear your slippers?

Bhavneet: Oh man. Okay we’re gonna take a break so I can run and get my slippers

Taranjit: No, you’re going to freeze. How many hours of sleep do you get each night on average? Your choices: eight hours, 10 plus, six hours, I’m not sure, less than four. Should have known I’m not sure is an option.

Bhavneet: Well on average 8. I try very hard to get eight because eight is important.

Taranjit: Seven to eight.

Bhavneet: Yeah, but there’s no 7 to 8 options, so close enough. We’re going to round. Average. Be positive.

Taranjit: Is that your blood type?

Bhavneet: B positive? I don’t know.

Taranjit: B positive.

Bhavneet: Yes I was trying to be inspirational not telling everyone in the world by blood type. So if anyone needs a blood donor apparently I’m B positive. Like you could take the blood and be like be positive! Have a great day, think happy thoughts! And then it will inject into you and then you’ll be like yeah I’m happy, it’s a great day.

Taranjit: What if it’s the wrong blood type then antigens will make it clump up and then

Bhavneet: But they’ll get the vibes, the be positive vibes.

Taranjit: I also chose 8. I get it every day.

Bhavneet: Very good for you. Are you be positiving? Are you be positiving too?

Taranjit: Yes. Your be positive vibe. I can’t talk. Your be positive vibe is coming this way too.

Bhavneet: Oh, cool. So I was be positive first.

Taranjit: Yes.

Bhavneet: And I sent the vibe so it works.

Taranjit: Yes, sure. You can say that. I’m curious to know because I don’t Saturdays with you. What’s your ideal Saturday afternoon?

Bhavneet: That was sarcasm wasn’t it? I was like, wait a minute, what’s happening? Do you have a replacement that spends Saturdays with me?

Taranjit: So your choices are: working on a project you’ve been meaning to finish, snowboarding or something similar, anything outdoors, other, or hanging out with your family and friends. Oh, there more. Going to the movies, or reading a book by the fireplace, or baking.

Bhavneet: Baking? That is something you would do. But I hang out with my friends and family. Which is this person sitting across from me who said that she doesn’t. So apparently she has an alter ego replacement.

Taranjit: I was joking.

Bhavneet: I don’t know you anymore. Who is this person I was spending my life with?

Taranjit: I don’t know. Who is she?

Bhavneet: Well, I mean you should know, you hired her.

Taranjit: What. Wait, what?

Bhavneet: Alter ego.

Taranjit: I don’t have an alter ego.

Bhavneet: Oh snap.

Taranjit: Do you?

Bhavneet: No. Wink. Wink.

Taranjit: Wink. Wink.

Bhavneet: Like this is how, like you can hear my wink.

Taranjit: I closed both eyes.

Bhavneet: I know. It was a double wink. So I mean, that’s more like, shut eye. Yes. I got half a second asleep.

Taranjit: You napped for a second.

Bhavneet: Yeah. Shut eye. Open.

Taranjit: That’s how you get your eight hours.

Bhavneet: Yep. Just blink, blink, blink, blink, blink, blink, blink and add it all up. You’re going to eight hours eventually.

Taranjit: I also said the same answer.

Bhavneet: I mean, how many times you blink in a day because I mean it should add up to a substantial amount.

Taranjit: I feel like a blink more than the normal person.

Bhavneet: What, you just walk around like blink, blink, blink, blink, blink, blink, blink.

Taranjit: I feel like it just blink more. And I feel like it’s due to like driving in the headlight lights and the sun and it just like I just keep blinking. So now it’s like a thing.

Bhavneet: Interesting. So you get more than eight hours of sleep. You get like 10 plus hours of sleep.

Taranjit: I guess if blinking counts.

Bhavneet: Yeah, shut eye, shut eye. It counts.

Taranjit: I know the answer to this question too.

Bhavneet: You know the answer to all the questions.

Taranjit: I could probably take this quiz for you. Are you super-sitches? Not really

Bhavneet: I’m super-sitches? What’s the sitch? Kim Possible.

Taranjit: Stitious. Not really, no, totally, or sometimes.

Bhavneet: I know some people who would be like totally dude, Calabunga. I don’t know what Calabunga means but no. What does Calabunga mean? Cal, let’s bun the ga.

Taranjit: I chose not really because I feel like there’s times I just say things that are superstitious but I’m not really superstitious so I’m just gonna go with not really.

Bhavneet: Or it’s more like Cal, look a bunga.

Taranjit: You’re still stuck on that.

Bhavneet: Yeah. There’s a bunga over there. A bun guy. Cal, a bun guy! Calabunga. Say it really fast.

Taranjit: Cal, a bun guy. Guy, how do you get the “a”?

Bhavneet: You say it really fast. Calabunga. Calabunga. A bunga!

Taranjit: A gaa.

Bhavneet: A bun gaa. If there’s a real meaning to that word, I’m sorry.

Taranjit: Gaa, like a cow.

Bhavneet: Oh! A cow. A bun, a bun gaa. What, does the cow have two buns? Like two little side buns like Princess Leia or is it like one in the back just a regular bun or is there like… I don’t know. What kind of bun does a cow have, but apparently there is one.

Taranjit: It could have a man bun.

Bhavneet: Apparently there is one and Cal must look at it. And everyone sees one all the time when they’re on the ocean waves. And they’re like Cal a bun gaa. And why are there so many cows? There’s a lot of cows in this earth, apparently. And everyone who surfs knows one and they always see a bun gaa. A bun cow. Now that we have deciphered more than one word.

Taranjit: I don’t even remember what the question was because I already clicked the answers. But next question.

Bhavneet: Yeah.

Taranjit: What is the most important quality in a person? Integrity, dedication, humor, intelligence, honesty, kindness,or other.

Bhavneet: I would say integrity because then you can trust the person and trust is important.

Taranjit: I said the same thing.

Bhavneet: Uh huh.

Taranjit: Because we think alike.

Bhavneet: Yes, you read my brain and it’s very creepy sometimes.

Taranjit: So you got… that was the end of the quiz.

Bhavneet: Thank you for the great segue. Very nice segue right? Very nice. I was so ready for that.

Taranjit: My results are still calculating but you got pulsar, spontaneous and creative.

Bhavneet: I’m spontaneous and creative!

Taranjit: Yeah, apparently your wild at heart and a free spirit.

Bhavneet: Yes, I am.

Taranjit: Your spontaneous

Bhavneet: Am I not following the moon or the sun?

Taranjit: Your spontaneous and always the life of the party.

Bhavneet: I don’t think that’s true. But thank you.

Taranjit: And your unique energy is contagious and people are drawn to your carefree nature. Your love, not yours, you. You love life and live every day to the fullest. You’re a risk taker. No, you’re not.

Bhavneet: Quite the opposite.

Taranjit: And enjoy a good challenge. Your energetic Yeah, yeah, you are.

Bhavneet: Thank you.

Taranjit: And find conversations with strangers as refreshing. Sometimes your energy can be intimidating, but you don’t care.

Bhavneet: Yeah, I don’t care. I’m weirdo at heart.

Taranjit: Now, my answer has finally loaded. I got red dwarf, kind and compassionate. You’re compassionate and wear your heart on your sleeve.

Bhavneet: Do you?

Taranjit: I don’t know. Do I?

Bhavneet: I don’t see it. I mean, your blankets are…yeah, pull your jacket aside. I don’t see it but why would you take it out of your chest and put it on your sleeve

Taranjit: Because I wear it on my sleeve.

Bhavneet: I get better circulation there. Boom. I just alternate arms.

Taranjit: I mean, my circulation apparently is not great here. So…

Bhavneet: Testing it out in different areas. I alternate sides. Very nice. Yeah.

Taranjit: I have to move it to where I need more circulation. Today, on this sleeve.

Bhavneet: Right now I need it on my toes. But okay.

Taranjit: So you can move it to your feet. You’re an inclusive person and never leave anyone out.

Bhavneet: Go on.

Taranjit: You always put the needs of others ahead of your own. You’re natural caretaker and caregiver. Sometimes people take advantage of your kind nature but you always bounce back quickly. Your positive, friendly, and a good hugger.

Bhavneet: You’re a good hugger? How would I know? I don’t get hugs.

Taranjit: You take them. That’s how good my hugs are. You want them, you take them.

Bhavneet: Intense.

Taranjit: Last sentence. People are inspired by your positive outlook on life.

Bhavneet: So you are B positive.

Taranjit: Oh yeah. According to this.

Bhavneet: Yeah. And according to you, I’m be positive. So we’re both be positive. We just spread the love. How many people are be positive? Let us know.

Taranjit: I don’t even know what my real blood type is.

Bhavneet: No idea. But apparently I’m B positive. I could be completely wrong. And if I ever need but I will die because someone gives me B positive.

Taranjit: Well, they’re going to test it. They’re not going to just give you blood.

Bhavneet: Shady hospital. What kind of blood type are you? B positive? Okay, get the B positive.

Taranjit: They’re gonna check. They’re not going to just give you any blood.

Bhavneet: They could just give me O. Just give me O negative.

Taranjit: Well, yeah, they could do that. But what if there’s no O negative?

Bhavneet: Well, I mean one of them’s super rare. One of the O types is super rare, right? The negative, so not very good chance.

Taranjit: Yep. Good luck. It would be nice to know, just in case of an emergency.

Bhavneet: That is a a good thing to know. So another PSA, public service announcement.

Taranjit: Podcast service announcement.

Bhavneet: Yes. podcast service announcement. I going to say that from now on PSA. Get your blood type checked. You should know, it’s a very good thing to know. Because what if you need blood, emergency, or somebody else needs blood. You need to know if you can help them. Podcast service announcement. Enjoy the rest of your commute. Speaking of blood, are you guys fans of crime? Not in a creepy psychopathic way, because then I would be a little worried, but in a you-enjoy-hearing-about-funny-and-weird-crimes-with-a-comedic-twist way. Well, you’re in luck! There’s this podcast that discusses cromedy, crime and comedy. So, here’s a quick promo for the podcast.

Bhavneet: And with that, thanks for listening and letting us join you on your commute. You can follow us on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter at Drive With Us podcast and we look forward to joining you on your next commute.

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