1 00:00:00,200 --> 00:00:05,600 Speaker 1: Now here's a highlight from coast to coast AM on iHeartRadio. 2 00:00:04,800 --> 00:00:09,719 Speaker 2: Kevin, let's talk about Mars. Is it our manifest destiny 3 00:00:09,840 --> 00:00:12,120 Speaker 2: to go to Mars? Or is our escape plan when 4 00:00:12,119 --> 00:00:13,400 Speaker 2: we screw up this planet? Which one? 5 00:00:13,440 --> 00:00:14,319 Speaker 1: Is it? No? 6 00:00:14,440 --> 00:00:18,720 Speaker 3: I think it's I think it's Humanity should be everywhere. 7 00:00:19,120 --> 00:00:22,279 Speaker 3: I mean meaning I think that the Solar System. A 8 00:00:22,320 --> 00:00:23,920 Speaker 3: lot of people when they think of the Solar System, 9 00:00:23,960 --> 00:00:26,239 Speaker 3: they think of it as just nine planets and a 10 00:00:26,280 --> 00:00:29,640 Speaker 3: couple of moons. It's there's actually more than a million 11 00:00:29,720 --> 00:00:33,280 Speaker 3: objects in the Solar System and our Solar System alone, 12 00:00:33,840 --> 00:00:36,839 Speaker 3: and some moons have or some planets have more than 13 00:00:36,840 --> 00:00:40,159 Speaker 3: one hundred moons. And so with Mars, Mars is like 14 00:00:40,240 --> 00:00:42,920 Speaker 3: the rest stop to the rest of the galaxy. And 15 00:00:43,000 --> 00:00:45,159 Speaker 3: people talk about the Moon a lot. But if we 16 00:00:45,200 --> 00:00:47,080 Speaker 3: can't when we get some Mars, it's not even if 17 00:00:47,159 --> 00:00:50,000 Speaker 3: when we get some Mars and Elon Musk likely will 18 00:00:50,000 --> 00:00:53,559 Speaker 3: go there before twenty thirty three according to his latest 19 00:00:54,120 --> 00:00:57,640 Speaker 3: public comments and SpaceX what they're planning for. But it's 20 00:00:57,720 --> 00:01:00,240 Speaker 3: how we get some Mars and being able to when 21 00:01:00,240 --> 00:01:03,120 Speaker 3: we're there, be able to get fuel on that planet 22 00:01:03,200 --> 00:01:05,600 Speaker 3: so that we don't have to bring the fuel there. 23 00:01:05,760 --> 00:01:07,839 Speaker 3: That's what is the biggest challenge. 24 00:01:08,080 --> 00:01:11,000 Speaker 2: So there is fuel available on that planet that we 25 00:01:11,040 --> 00:01:15,000 Speaker 2: can somehow make spaceship worthy. 26 00:01:15,040 --> 00:01:20,119 Speaker 3: There's technology available that we can create energy on that 27 00:01:20,200 --> 00:01:23,520 Speaker 3: planet to then come back and if and that is 28 00:01:23,560 --> 00:01:26,000 Speaker 3: the game changer. It's just never been done before. So 29 00:01:26,240 --> 00:01:29,080 Speaker 3: Alon Musk said, I think it was this week, if 30 00:01:29,120 --> 00:01:31,760 Speaker 3: not definitely in the last ten days, that when he 31 00:01:32,000 --> 00:01:35,240 Speaker 3: goes to Mars, they're going to send humanoid robots. And 32 00:01:35,480 --> 00:01:38,560 Speaker 3: I think he said publicly he did say publicly, think 33 00:01:38,600 --> 00:01:40,720 Speaker 3: of the image that that'll that that'll be when we 34 00:01:41,040 --> 00:01:43,160 Speaker 3: touch down on Mars with humanoid robots, and then the 35 00:01:43,200 --> 00:01:48,640 Speaker 3: next step is to then, you know, bring humans. There's 36 00:01:48,720 --> 00:01:51,600 Speaker 3: actually a new development that came that just found that 37 00:01:51,640 --> 00:01:55,680 Speaker 3: there's a shortcut to Mars. Because of the solar and 38 00:01:55,720 --> 00:01:57,600 Speaker 3: the way that the planets are and the and the 39 00:01:57,760 --> 00:02:00,720 Speaker 3: orbit and everything, there's a window to that could get 40 00:02:00,760 --> 00:02:05,000 Speaker 3: us there with existing technology and I think three to 41 00:02:05,080 --> 00:02:09,720 Speaker 3: four months, which is crazy, crazy, crazy fast. Oh wow, 42 00:02:10,280 --> 00:02:12,880 Speaker 3: So we could turn Mars into a rest stop. That's 43 00:02:12,919 --> 00:02:14,760 Speaker 3: that's what I tell people when I when I talk 44 00:02:14,800 --> 00:02:17,639 Speaker 3: about it, when I've been reporting on this, the scientists 45 00:02:17,680 --> 00:02:18,400 Speaker 3: and the technologist. 46 00:02:18,480 --> 00:02:20,400 Speaker 2: They they view Mars. 47 00:02:20,960 --> 00:02:22,640 Speaker 3: I don't want to call it a gas station, but 48 00:02:22,880 --> 00:02:26,480 Speaker 3: a rest stop to be able. 49 00:02:26,200 --> 00:02:28,840 Speaker 2: To go to all their places of the milky ways. 50 00:02:28,840 --> 00:02:30,239 Speaker 2: What you're saying, yeah. 51 00:02:30,040 --> 00:02:31,519 Speaker 3: Pretty much pretty much. 52 00:02:31,600 --> 00:02:34,800 Speaker 2: And should we terraform it or I mean great. 53 00:02:34,600 --> 00:02:38,359 Speaker 3: I love this topic, this is I think terraforming. There's 54 00:02:38,360 --> 00:02:40,680 Speaker 3: a debate in the scientific community. I get so excited 55 00:02:40,680 --> 00:02:42,160 Speaker 3: when I talk about this. I geek out on this. 56 00:02:42,280 --> 00:02:45,280 Speaker 3: But there's a debate in the scientific community right now 57 00:02:45,360 --> 00:02:51,960 Speaker 3: about if terraforming Mars is you know, humans altering and 58 00:02:52,000 --> 00:02:55,760 Speaker 3: it's not our place to change a planet, or if 59 00:02:55,760 --> 00:02:58,120 Speaker 3: it's that's the negative side of it, or if you're 60 00:02:58,240 --> 00:03:01,799 Speaker 3: for terraforming Mars, that is set Actually we're restoring it, 61 00:03:01,880 --> 00:03:04,639 Speaker 3: and we are taking a planet. If you've ever seen 62 00:03:04,680 --> 00:03:07,400 Speaker 3: an old beat up house and then it's a fixer 63 00:03:07,480 --> 00:03:10,560 Speaker 3: upper almost, and you go and you restore it because 64 00:03:11,000 --> 00:03:14,040 Speaker 3: the science indicates that, you know, millions of years ago, 65 00:03:14,160 --> 00:03:17,240 Speaker 3: Mars looked a lot different. There might have been oceans 66 00:03:17,280 --> 00:03:20,840 Speaker 3: on the planet, just like there might have been water 67 00:03:21,360 --> 00:03:24,120 Speaker 3: on it. There could have been it, you know, candidly, 68 00:03:24,520 --> 00:03:27,120 Speaker 3: probably did look very different. And if we're restoring it 69 00:03:27,680 --> 00:03:30,119 Speaker 3: back to what it looked like that that's a good thing. 70 00:03:31,040 --> 00:03:34,720 Speaker 3: I believe in that. I'll be honest, My bias is 71 00:03:34,720 --> 00:03:38,280 Speaker 3: that I think that humans will be able to take 72 00:03:38,320 --> 00:03:41,080 Speaker 3: care of Planet Earth as well as other parts of 73 00:03:41,120 --> 00:03:45,200 Speaker 3: the Solar System if we are able to look at 74 00:03:45,240 --> 00:03:48,840 Speaker 3: and explore different parts of the Solar System, because the 75 00:03:48,880 --> 00:03:52,920 Speaker 3: properties and the rules and the way that gravity works, 76 00:03:52,920 --> 00:03:56,240 Speaker 3: for example, on different planets, and air works, and you know, 77 00:03:56,320 --> 00:03:58,240 Speaker 3: if we're able to create air so that you wouldn't 78 00:03:58,240 --> 00:04:02,360 Speaker 3: have to wear a spacesuit, all those topics, that science 79 00:04:02,520 --> 00:04:06,320 Speaker 3: is just going to make life for humans way more better. 80 00:04:06,520 --> 00:04:10,320 Speaker 2: I would argue we're talking to futurists. Kevin surreally, all 81 00:04:10,360 --> 00:04:13,400 Speaker 2: his information is linked up at coast to coast A 82 00:04:13,760 --> 00:04:17,080 Speaker 2: m talking about the future, and I'm kind of wondering 83 00:04:17,160 --> 00:04:19,240 Speaker 2: as you're talking, I'm kind of sizing us up as 84 00:04:19,279 --> 00:04:24,080 Speaker 2: America against other countries. Is it like the Moon race. 85 00:04:24,279 --> 00:04:26,600 Speaker 2: I'm going to do that in quotes there. Whoever gets 86 00:04:26,640 --> 00:04:32,039 Speaker 2: there first with Mars has power? Or is it just 87 00:04:32,120 --> 00:04:36,559 Speaker 2: kind of like the we're we're just evolving, we should 88 00:04:36,560 --> 00:04:37,480 Speaker 2: all be working together. 89 00:04:37,800 --> 00:04:40,560 Speaker 3: Well, I think it's a great question. I mean, America 90 00:04:40,880 --> 00:04:46,200 Speaker 3: is definitely the number one space force, right now, but 91 00:04:46,360 --> 00:04:49,800 Speaker 3: China and Russia are catching up. Last month, I interviewed 92 00:04:49,800 --> 00:04:51,880 Speaker 3: one of the top generals of the US Space Force 93 00:04:52,200 --> 00:04:55,840 Speaker 3: at the National Press Club in DC, and Major Gagnon, 94 00:04:56,000 --> 00:04:57,839 Speaker 3: and he and I asked him, you know, what do 95 00:04:57,880 --> 00:05:00,840 Speaker 3: you want people to know about the work that you do, 96 00:05:00,920 --> 00:05:04,960 Speaker 3: And he said that China and Russia are a real 97 00:05:05,120 --> 00:05:08,000 Speaker 3: threat in outer space. And if you're listening, you might 98 00:05:08,040 --> 00:05:09,880 Speaker 3: be thinking to yourself, Okay, well, what do I care 99 00:05:09,880 --> 00:05:14,839 Speaker 3: about outer space? The average American interacts with space more 100 00:05:14,880 --> 00:05:17,600 Speaker 3: than two dozen times per day. Because if you think 101 00:05:17,600 --> 00:05:20,000 Speaker 3: about every device, even you and I, I mean, there's 102 00:05:20,000 --> 00:05:23,920 Speaker 3: some satellite up there that is bouncing our communication off 103 00:05:23,920 --> 00:05:28,480 Speaker 3: of And so if if the Russians in the Chinese 104 00:05:28,520 --> 00:05:31,280 Speaker 3: are able, the Communist Party of China are able to 105 00:05:31,920 --> 00:05:36,120 Speaker 3: go up to these satellites and hack into our communication systems, 106 00:05:36,360 --> 00:05:39,240 Speaker 3: that's a huge problem. But then you talk about things 107 00:05:39,560 --> 00:05:44,400 Speaker 3: not just from a human standpoint, but space weather and sunstorms. 108 00:05:44,400 --> 00:05:46,799 Speaker 3: There was a huge sunstorm in the last seven days 109 00:05:46,800 --> 00:05:51,000 Speaker 3: that actually people talk about the Aurora lights, but it 110 00:05:51,080 --> 00:05:54,560 Speaker 3: took out some satellites and mess up some communications. It 111 00:05:54,600 --> 00:05:57,080 Speaker 3: wasn't a major disaster by any means. I'm not trying 112 00:05:57,120 --> 00:06:01,040 Speaker 3: to be you know, over dramatic about the thing. 113 00:06:01,160 --> 00:06:04,080 Speaker 2: Well, you know, I think that's a that's an ongoing 114 00:06:04,080 --> 00:06:06,960 Speaker 2: conversation here on coast to coast, A MR. What what 115 00:06:07,440 --> 00:06:09,840 Speaker 2: what solar flare is going to take us out? Because 116 00:06:10,000 --> 00:06:12,840 Speaker 2: I'm sure that's coming at some point. I think about 117 00:06:12,880 --> 00:06:13,360 Speaker 2: that all. 118 00:06:13,240 --> 00:06:17,440 Speaker 3: The time, because there was the there was the last 119 00:06:17,440 --> 00:06:22,160 Speaker 3: major sunstorm there was one was in the eighteen hundreds, 120 00:06:22,360 --> 00:06:25,159 Speaker 3: so we're kind of due for one. But this and 121 00:06:25,160 --> 00:06:27,520 Speaker 3: and but the difference between now and the eighteen hundreds 122 00:06:27,560 --> 00:06:29,440 Speaker 3: is we have so much more technology. So if there 123 00:06:29,480 --> 00:06:33,200 Speaker 3: were to be that sunstorm, or a solar flare or 124 00:06:33,240 --> 00:06:36,920 Speaker 3: a corona mass ejection as they're called a CME, that 125 00:06:37,000 --> 00:06:40,919 Speaker 3: would that would work? That would you know, arguably the 126 00:06:40,920 --> 00:06:43,080 Speaker 3: big question is that would make the pandemic look like 127 00:06:43,120 --> 00:06:46,279 Speaker 3: a you know, a vacation. And I hate to be 128 00:06:46,360 --> 00:06:49,960 Speaker 3: so flippant about referring to the pandemic in that way, 129 00:06:49,960 --> 00:06:52,919 Speaker 3: but it's the reality. I think a lot about asteroids, 130 00:06:53,040 --> 00:06:57,680 Speaker 3: And you know, we just learned in the last two weeks. 131 00:06:57,720 --> 00:06:59,840 Speaker 3: This is never on the news either, by the way, 132 00:07:00,200 --> 00:07:04,280 Speaker 3: we just learned in the last two weeks that Venus 133 00:07:03,880 --> 00:07:09,320 Speaker 3: is hiding asteroids. It's gravitational pull. There are asteroids that 134 00:07:09,360 --> 00:07:15,560 Speaker 3: are orbiting it that our satellite imagery can't even see 135 00:07:15,880 --> 00:07:18,440 Speaker 3: because it's, you know, the Sun, it's the glare of 136 00:07:18,480 --> 00:07:21,600 Speaker 3: the Sun blocks it. So all of the technology with 137 00:07:21,720 --> 00:07:24,920 Speaker 3: artificial intelligence that's developing in quantum that's coming after that 138 00:07:25,320 --> 00:07:29,160 Speaker 3: just to be able to map our own solar system. 139 00:07:28,560 --> 00:07:30,840 Speaker 2: Well what about that? What about just mapping the weather 140 00:07:31,120 --> 00:07:34,200 Speaker 2: of the Sun. Is there any is I guess that's 141 00:07:34,240 --> 00:07:37,120 Speaker 2: more important now than ever. In the eighteen hundreds, you 142 00:07:37,160 --> 00:07:39,840 Speaker 2: didn't have as much stuff that could be taking offline. 143 00:07:40,000 --> 00:07:42,360 Speaker 2: But now do we have a way? Is there an 144 00:07:42,360 --> 00:07:45,640 Speaker 2: app for that that you can monitor the Sun's weather 145 00:07:45,720 --> 00:07:47,400 Speaker 2: and know when a flar's coming up? 146 00:07:48,040 --> 00:07:52,080 Speaker 3: Well, the government has a lot of you know, I 147 00:07:52,200 --> 00:07:54,080 Speaker 3: like to say, I'd love to be the al Roker 148 00:07:54,120 --> 00:07:55,760 Speaker 3: of the future. Here's what's happening in our neck of 149 00:07:55,800 --> 00:08:00,360 Speaker 3: the galaxy. Because the government does track what's happened with 150 00:08:00,400 --> 00:08:04,080 Speaker 3: the Sun. But they also just announce more funding to 151 00:08:05,000 --> 00:08:07,040 Speaker 3: truly have a weather report on the Sun. It's a 152 00:08:07,040 --> 00:08:10,040 Speaker 3: little bit more complicated then it's hot, you know, I mean, 153 00:08:10,080 --> 00:08:13,960 Speaker 3: it's it's they have it has cycles and we're living 154 00:08:14,000 --> 00:08:16,640 Speaker 3: through right now every eleven years or so, I want 155 00:08:16,640 --> 00:08:19,520 Speaker 3: to say every eleven years or so, the sun goes 156 00:08:19,520 --> 00:08:24,520 Speaker 3: through a cycle, and right now it's the most active 157 00:08:25,240 --> 00:08:28,160 Speaker 3: part of that cycle, which is why there's a lot 158 00:08:28,280 --> 00:08:31,040 Speaker 3: of aurora lights on planet Earth and in parts of 159 00:08:31,040 --> 00:08:33,720 Speaker 3: the country where you're not able to see typically the 160 00:08:33,760 --> 00:08:38,679 Speaker 3: aurora lights, and it's because of what's happening in the sunstorm. 161 00:08:38,679 --> 00:08:41,280 Speaker 3: But the good news is that I don't when people 162 00:08:41,360 --> 00:08:44,280 Speaker 3: hear sunstorm they think of I think they think of, 163 00:08:44,520 --> 00:08:48,079 Speaker 3: you know, a doomsday situation. That's not really what happens. 164 00:08:48,120 --> 00:08:52,440 Speaker 3: It's it's you can't really see the flares, but the 165 00:08:52,640 --> 00:08:56,280 Speaker 3: energy travels to the planet and then our atmosphere is 166 00:08:56,320 --> 00:08:59,600 Speaker 3: actually able to protect us from a lot of these 167 00:08:59,840 --> 00:09:04,640 Speaker 3: things that are happening our planet. Candidly, I'm Catholic, but 168 00:09:04,679 --> 00:09:10,600 Speaker 3: it was almost designed to protect us, and so you 169 00:09:10,640 --> 00:09:14,440 Speaker 3: know it. But the but the stronger the storm, the 170 00:09:14,520 --> 00:09:17,800 Speaker 3: riskier it gets. And all it takes is one event 171 00:09:17,960 --> 00:09:20,720 Speaker 3: like what happened in the eighteen hundreds to really reak havoc. 172 00:09:21,760 --> 00:09:24,240 Speaker 2: I think your your website's one of those things that 173 00:09:24,280 --> 00:09:27,600 Speaker 2: people should should keep meet the future dot TV we 174 00:09:27,600 --> 00:09:30,080 Speaker 2: should say, linked up at coast I think it's one 175 00:09:30,080 --> 00:09:32,040 Speaker 2: of those things that you should almost look at every day, 176 00:09:32,320 --> 00:09:34,800 Speaker 2: because thank you, you're kind of getting a little glimpse. 177 00:09:34,840 --> 00:09:38,440 Speaker 2: It's almost like a day or so ahead. And wasn't 178 00:09:38,480 --> 00:09:41,280 Speaker 2: I seeing even on your website that the Sun was 179 00:09:41,360 --> 00:09:44,360 Speaker 2: taken off some of the some of that like burning 180 00:09:44,400 --> 00:09:46,600 Speaker 2: through some of the tech on some of the satellites, 181 00:09:46,920 --> 00:09:49,720 Speaker 2: rendering them kind of useless. Is that I kind of 182 00:09:49,840 --> 00:09:51,760 Speaker 2: you kind of alluded to that. But that's sort of 183 00:09:51,760 --> 00:09:54,400 Speaker 2: a big deal, isn't it. Those can't be cheap to replace. 184 00:09:54,600 --> 00:09:58,840 Speaker 3: No, exactly, And and and even just you know, China's 185 00:09:58,880 --> 00:10:01,480 Speaker 3: looking into this where they're they're sending some of their 186 00:10:01,520 --> 00:10:03,800 Speaker 3: satellites to the Sun to study it and get really 187 00:10:03,800 --> 00:10:06,640 Speaker 3: really close. NASA has as well, and just you know, 188 00:10:06,720 --> 00:10:08,720 Speaker 3: to be able to to do that, to to to 189 00:10:08,880 --> 00:10:15,120 Speaker 3: explore this this huge star is super important, and and 190 00:10:15,200 --> 00:10:17,840 Speaker 3: to be able to to understand what it's doing. The 191 00:10:17,880 --> 00:10:23,960 Speaker 3: meteorology of of this massive thing in our solar system 192 00:10:24,000 --> 00:10:27,120 Speaker 3: that we all revolve around is really really important because 193 00:10:27,160 --> 00:10:30,680 Speaker 3: again there's sunstorms and space weather, and it's not just 194 00:10:30,760 --> 00:10:32,880 Speaker 3: the Sun either, if you go out to the asteroid 195 00:10:32,880 --> 00:10:36,200 Speaker 3: belt or even the Wark Cloud. We just learned I 196 00:10:36,240 --> 00:10:39,280 Speaker 3: think in the last this decade for sure, just the 197 00:10:39,320 --> 00:10:43,640 Speaker 3: way that other planets and the asteroids that are around them, 198 00:10:43,800 --> 00:10:47,400 Speaker 3: how they can be a deterrent from other objects coming 199 00:10:47,400 --> 00:10:51,680 Speaker 3: to Planet Earth. It's it's really fascinating stuff that, you know. 200 00:10:51,760 --> 00:10:56,760 Speaker 3: I again, I'm just stunned that the traditional media doesn't 201 00:10:56,800 --> 00:11:01,160 Speaker 3: cover there was a planet. There was more than one 202 00:11:01,240 --> 00:11:05,280 Speaker 3: hundred moons that were just discovered this year alone in 203 00:11:05,320 --> 00:11:07,640 Speaker 3: our Solar system. How did we not know there was 204 00:11:07,679 --> 00:11:10,040 Speaker 3: more than one hundred moons just floating around other planets? 205 00:11:10,320 --> 00:11:12,040 Speaker 3: You know, I mean, well, you know what. 206 00:11:13,800 --> 00:11:16,640 Speaker 2: I think is so fascinating about that too, is how 207 00:11:16,679 --> 00:11:20,080 Speaker 2: did we get the biggest moon as far as its 208 00:11:20,160 --> 00:11:25,080 Speaker 2: size to Earth or our planet? There's really nothing like 209 00:11:25,440 --> 00:11:29,040 Speaker 2: our moon in around any of the other planets, Which 210 00:11:29,440 --> 00:11:31,960 Speaker 2: what are the odds of that? Has anybody calculated that? 211 00:11:32,679 --> 00:11:34,400 Speaker 3: Well? No, what are the odds of that? But then 212 00:11:34,480 --> 00:11:39,880 Speaker 3: also the fact that it doesn't it doesn't rotate, and 213 00:11:39,920 --> 00:11:42,320 Speaker 3: so you know the dark side of the Moon and 214 00:11:42,360 --> 00:11:45,360 Speaker 3: how cold it is, and then there's actually so if 215 00:11:45,400 --> 00:11:47,960 Speaker 3: you think of and if you think of the Moon 216 00:11:48,040 --> 00:11:53,000 Speaker 3: as a potential place for colonization, there are now like 217 00:11:53,280 --> 00:11:55,760 Speaker 3: the scientists are studying the parts of the Moon that 218 00:11:56,040 --> 00:12:02,200 Speaker 3: would be the most the most applicable to modern life, 219 00:12:02,200 --> 00:12:04,360 Speaker 3: for where they would be able to mine, where they 220 00:12:04,360 --> 00:12:07,439 Speaker 3: would be able to get I want to say rare 221 00:12:07,520 --> 00:12:09,920 Speaker 3: Earth minerals, but rare Moon minerals for lack of a 222 00:12:09,920 --> 00:12:14,000 Speaker 3: better word. And and the real estate on the Moon 223 00:12:15,080 --> 00:12:18,160 Speaker 3: that you know you asked me earlier about about, you know, 224 00:12:18,240 --> 00:12:21,880 Speaker 3: the United States having dominance in the space race against 225 00:12:21,960 --> 00:12:26,080 Speaker 3: adversaries like the Communist Party of China. The positioning on 226 00:12:26,240 --> 00:12:31,400 Speaker 3: the Moon is so incredibly important because obviously whoever has 227 00:12:31,520 --> 00:12:35,280 Speaker 3: the proper domain and geography on the Moon will have 228 00:12:35,320 --> 00:12:39,240 Speaker 3: a lot of advantages, not just for influence on the Moon, 229 00:12:39,320 --> 00:12:41,839 Speaker 3: but also influence on planet Earth. 230 00:12:43,559 --> 00:12:46,840 Speaker 1: Listen to more Coast to Coast AM every weeknight at 231 00:12:46,880 --> 00:12:49,800 Speaker 1: one a m Eastern and go to Coast to coastam 232 00:12:49,880 --> 00:12:50,959 Speaker 1: dot com for more