I will see you next time. Thank you for hanging out with me today. Have an incredible fatty day. All right, so that is our podcast today. I hope you had the best Hello, I'm tuning in. Or if you're in North America and you'd say, tuning in, you're wrong. Hey, hey, I went into a black hole learning about why is it that certain countries, USA, say things like, hey, so the countries, Iraq and Iran as Iraq and Iran, it gets on my floppy tetes so badly? How is like, why is it because I started watching this. This program Designated Survivor on Netflix is five out of 10. Don't bother with it. Maybe if you like, I don't know, whatever. Anyway, it's like the president. And they say, I reckon I ran all the time. And I'm like now and obviously, I noticed it before then. And so then I googled it like, why, why, why, why? Why is this happening? And apparently, so two different theories is that Germans say, Iraq and Iran. And during World War Two, this German phrasing of it rubbed off on people from the States. And most more recently, which I found was interesting was, that is a way to mock those countries, the same way that people used to say itallian instead of Italian, and that's kind of fallen out of thing. I didn't know that I Italian was a way to mock Italians. I didn't even occur to me, because I don't say, but that's kind of fallen out of out of the lingo of, of people from the States. But apparently, that was what people from the states would say, would say itallian they, and I'm presuming people still do. But mostly, it's fallen out of fashion. But saying Iraq, and Iran hasn't fallen out of fashion. Isn't that interesting? And also, there was another theory that it doesn't make sense in, in English language, like an eye before a an AR should be eye rack, not E rack. Because that is not a sound that is associated with those orders of letters. So who knows. But if you and a lot of people were like, Oh, I just don't know how to pronounce it. I was not sure. So I always just say Irek. But it's like a wrong, I looked up the correct pronunciation, I'm probably going to pronounce it wrong. But it's Iran, Iran, like an E R N. N Erec. So anyway, side note, I was just thinking about it. I'm always just thinking about because my accent is changing all the time. It's becoming more Irish, the longer I'm in Ireland. And the more Canadian the more I mean, Canada, and I've been there for 10 years. And so I noticed myself saying words differently. And like, you know, John Oliver from Last Last Week Tonight, I really like I really like that show. And he was saying some words, which were, he said in a North American version, and I was thinking, Oh, I wonder if he's doing that just to because most of the audience are probably from the States. Or if he has fallen into saying these words differently. And you know, what I heard was, right. Really, words are words unless you're being you know, purposefully a dick about it, which most people probably are. But yeah, anyway, side tangent, I'll say goodbye. And I think by and you started making me talk about all this stuff. It's not making me talk about all of this stuff. Anyway, all right. Okay. All right. All right. All right. All right. Okay. I'll see you later. Have a great rest of your day. Stay fierce, fatty. And I will see you in a while. Alligator. I gotta go bye bye.