Lab Mistakes

0:00
[Music]
0:01
welcome to the worst of the best podcast
0:04
you wanted the best well they didn't
0:08
freak him naked so here's what you get
0:12
from Canada Ryan and Reuben
0:16
[Applause]
0:25
welcome to the worse of the best podcast
0:29
thank you live thank for it's a live
0:34
broadcast yes so we always start live
0:36
and then I take that live video audio
0:38
and I edited a fry tune so if you're
0:40
listening you're earbuds welcome if
0:42
you're watching this video live on our
0:44
Facebook feed welcome and yeah let's get
0:47
into a room today is the worst of the
0:49
best 10 lab mistakes that became
0:53
everyday items so these were what they
0:55
call a happy accident yes
0:57
had the accident in the lab so unlike
1:00
children these are happy accidents I'm
1:06
sorry I love my job I stuff like this I
1:08
think it's very interesting what do you
1:10
mean well you say our to do one thing
1:12
nothing happens right okay that's all
1:14
life but then it turns out to be
1:16
something maybe good Reuben is there
1:18
anything
1:19
was there anything you driven in your
1:20
life that became maybe a happy accident
1:22
something you set out to do or wanted to
1:23
do but it became something my career
1:25
okay my family had the plans they fell
1:29
through we went to Wales let's go to
1:33
we're on our work and I was there as a
1:36
man I thought of this the owner said hey
1:38
were retiring happened on that day it's
1:41
kind of a happy accident you know I mean
1:43
they sure okay the course of life
1:44
changed right yeah I mean that's the
1:47
closest thing I had to come up with an
1:49
example that's the closest thing I could
1:50
think of it's something that I was going
1:51
one way but something else happened it's
1:54
not like I answered questions on tasks
1:55
of them wrong sit and study and then
1:57
magically got more right right that's
2:00
right yeah so these are a little bit
2:02
specific though these are actually items
2:04
everyday items so that everything on
2:05
this list you will know what I've heard
2:07
of the end if not we've all used all
2:09
right so it's interesting that they
2:11
worked made on purpose that's what makes
2:13
this list interesting is this was not
2:14
the intention of the part that we enjoy
2:16
all the time these are failures these
2:18
are failures yes yeah there you go
2:20
okay nonstick cookware Reuben this was
2:26
an accident
2:27
yes do you know this I think that's what
2:29
I did no I did not know that but I'm
2:31
aware of the health risks for Teflon
2:34
yeah sure well Teflon or PTFE as it is
2:38
known in the scientific world would have
2:41
to rank as one of the most useful
2:42
kitchen inventions sure however poly
2:45
tetra for ethylene I was it's called
2:49
PTFE a four Ferger okay was actually
2:52
invented by mistake in 1930 when dupont
2:55
scientist Roy Plunkett was developing a
2:58
new CFC refrigerant so he was signed
3:02
open a gas canister used in his
3:04
experiments so he saw an open the gas
3:06
cancer which I wouldn't recommend sign
3:08
open nah but he was the scientist that's
3:11
right he discovered our reaction have
3:14
occurred between the PTFE gas and the
3:17
iron shell the canister the result was a
3:19
waxy repellent substance for which he
3:21
initially saw no use for he's like the
3:24
substance came out of this crack and
3:26
opened this combination he's like okay
3:28
but it was so it was until 54 that
3:30
anyone thought to coat cookware with
3:32
that substance to stop food from
3:35
sticking to pots and pans Wow
3:37
this is what I find crazy this is
3:39
probably something you wouldn't want to
3:40
just put in your mouth and in debt and
3:41
Jess is that right yeah I was linked to
3:43
a cancer a smaller genitalia to name a
3:47
couple but most cookware rubber today is
3:50
used yeah or coated with a variety of
3:52
Teflon so maybe they have practices
3:54
today me there's some sort of protection
3:55
perhaps yeah I could imagine with the
3:58
substance first came out they put it on
3:59
put it on a frying pan hey look honey I
4:01
could cook eggs on the single yes it's a
4:03
miracle miracle who've all enjoyed it
4:05
Ruben have you ever used a post-it note
4:06
I use them everyday I have those colors
4:08
and many more at work did you know that
4:10
50 billion of these are made every year
4:14
I was unaware of the number 50 Billy I'm
4:17
not surprised he's even 50 billion are
4:19
made and then disposed of like there's
4:21
Sutter Durrell Powell's and offices and
4:23
cabinets it's crazy yeah post-it notes
4:26
would have to be one of the most useful
4:27
items that people use today and you just
4:29
said that and I use them all the time at
4:31
work - they're great to say you know
4:32
sign here attention to this or something
4:35
like that a reminder on your computer
4:37
screen you'll have to put them on a
4:39
co-worker's screen you can put them on
4:41
their screen and say hey go see soma so
4:43
they came by to see you there's lots of
4:45
uses but this is a really interesting
4:47
one this was developed by mistake dr.
4:49
Spencer silver was a chemist working for
4:52
three
4:52
em that some company 3m in 1968 his
4:56
research into a soup though he was
4:58
trying to research into a super strong
5:00
glue yeah but it failed instead he came
5:06
up with a very weak adhesive that would
5:09
all these stick things together for a
5:10
short time and basically he didn't do
5:12
any damage when his pull off it was
5:14
sticky just sticky enough to make a
5:16
sticky stick but you know sure risk you
5:19
just could hold them a piece of paper
5:21
like what a great failure such a weak
5:24
adhesive that you're looking at it's as
5:25
strong as he could make it was you can
5:30
put paper on it
5:32
they'll hold up a piece of paper well it
5:35
wasn't until 1973 that the worth of this
5:37
new adhesive was recognized Arthur fry
5:39
when a doctor silvers colleagues began
5:41
using this temporary glued to bookmark
5:43
the pages and his hymnal so he's using
5:46
it for church and yeah I like this song
5:48
here so he'd used to sit he take this
5:51
adhesive put it on paper like now cuz
5:54
you'd recognize you could tear it off
5:55
though damage not to get too deep here
5:57
but it took somebody else to see his
6:01
mistake will that happen the first one
6:02
oh yeah the first one the scientists
6:04
made the mistake you know what to do
6:06
with it and then somebody else came
6:07
along 20 years later so that I could do
6:09
some with this mistake probably written
6:11
as some notes or imagined mistake right
6:13
now I wonder if any mistakes I've made
6:16
would become something all right room is
6:19
safety glass
6:20
now you think hasn't glass always been
6:22
safely thing about glass okay you're
6:24
your average glass and your cupboard or
6:27
a mug it's not safety glass it hits hits
6:29
the floor it hits the floor it's a
6:31
million pieces of all car glass used to
6:33
be that crazy you know weird so when
6:36
windshields smashed they smashed they
6:39
don't anymore they kind of crack yeah
6:41
yeah they hold together much better yeah
6:43
but you're the old movies people fly
6:45
through windshields and and the scanner
6:47
glass well let's see how this was made
6:50
by accident so we have French chemist ed
6:52
wad Benedictus accidentally knocked a
6:55
glass beaker onto the ground in 1903 he
6:58
was oh yeah he's it was surprised to
7:00
find that it's shattered but it did not
7:02
actually break so the cracking happened
7:05
but he didn't break
7:05
because inside of it contained cellulose
7:08
nitrate there's a film of that inside
7:11
the glass oh that's crazy so he just so
7:14
happened to knock over a beaker that had
7:17
a film inside of it that was cellulose
7:20
nitrate and that cellulose nitrate was
7:23
the stepping stone to figure out how to
7:25
break glass without shattering it well
7:29
you know it's gonna break yeah there's a
7:31
breaking point but it won't those like
7:33
cue pieces yeah yeah
7:35
so this plastic coated glass was further
7:37
developed during the early nineteen
7:38
hundreds and was first used for lenses
7:40
and gas masks or World War one and then
7:43
various forms of safety glass and now
7:45
it's in every car building cookware yeah
7:48
yeah édouard number seven microwave oven
7:52
now Rueben growing up do you recall ever
7:54
been growing up we never owned a
7:56
microwave oven and I used to think no I
7:59
thought was just the rich people that ya
8:00
know everyone we were by no stretch of
8:06
the imagination like destitute or oh
8:08
yeah we were going to dis line every
8:10
year but we weren't destitute but we
8:14
never our family with four boys never
8:16
had a microwave to reheat anything now I
8:18
think the reason could be will you get
8:19
arguably never had leftovers after this
8:21
trip we ate every morsel of food on our
8:24
table I'd suffered wait wait we have her
8:26
leftover we had powdered milk yeah
8:29
remember we have to make four liters of
8:32
powdered milk in the middle software
8:33
sometimes yeah we have to make milk
8:35
during supper clearing stuff for
8:38
yesterday making milk guys yeah that's
8:40
right anybody relate to that other than
8:42
ralph was listening to this yeah I
8:45
wonder if I never listeners had powdered
8:47
milk growing up so not only did we have
8:48
powdered milk but we also did not have a
8:50
microwave I didn't have my first
8:51
microwave were used until hello I must
8:54
have been close to 20 I can't remember
8:55
the first time using microwave I just
8:57
looked at friend's house yeah first time
9:00
Jake milk of a carton was at a friend's
9:01
house it's this it was the creepy rich
9:05
dessert why the hobbits are ants yeah
9:09
and I couldn't I couldn't drink it was
9:11
like this is gross too thick
9:14
I think it's 2% bra alright so Michael
9:19
how do I was this accidentally made yeah
9:22
this was an accident
9:23
Percy Spencer our radar engineer was
9:25
conducting experiments on a magnetron a
9:28
new vacuum tube in 1945 so during the
9:31
experiment Spencer noticed that a choco
9:33
bar at his pocket had melted yeah the
9:36
safety protocols back then so basically
9:39
he was getting radiated on his leg so
9:42
talk about melted he grabs some popcorn
9:45
and to his surprise found that that
9:47
magnetron also made the popcorn pop
9:49
what's crazy as is you know ruin
9:51
microwaves do you know they're heating
9:53
up a moisture okay so he thought my
9:57
understanding is if you could put it in
9:58
like something this completely dry like
9:59
I'm not a piece of paper maybe it
10:01
wouldn't be hot but there's no moisture
10:03
it heats the moisture in the item
10:05
probably the mesh on the microwave glass
10:08
breaks the radiation from coming out
10:10
yeah it makes sense so this poor guy he
10:13
was sacrificing his body for so he had
10:15
popcorn pop outside of the radiation was
10:18
in the room after make popcorn bodies
10:19
but he had accidentally stumbled upon a
10:22
new way of cooking radiation baby
10:24
so Raytheon marketed the new microwave
10:26
oven as a right arranged 1946 and the
10:29
initial ovens were costly too bulky for
10:31
most kitchens they were the size of a
10:33
modern refrigerator it took 20 minutes
10:36
to warm up before you could actually
10:37
cook anything in them yeah if you want
10:39
to heat up last night's dinner in the
10:41
oven you heat up the oven to time so
10:43
here you could have this heat up to 20
10:45
minutes of an hour or 45 minutes but he
10:48
majendie there her Beatrice in YouTube
10:52
actually have first microwave
10:53
well I mean how rich those people would
10:55
have been oh we have if we thought other
10:57
people had honey is having a microwave
10:58
yeah the 40s and 50s again my if your
11:00
the microwave 1950 oh man you can reheat
11:03
last night's dinner 20 minutes of
11:05
yesterday's pizza man
11:07
plastic Reuben was an accident Wow so
11:11
ironically reward with will be with all
11:13
plastic while plastic was really
11:15
developed to protect wildlife by
11:17
reducing the need
11:25
so that's Hilarion but you might have
11:28
heard this before maybe some of our
11:29
listeners are for those before but
11:31
classic was developed to protect
11:32
wildlife by reducing the need for ivory
11:35
tortoise shells horn and other animal
11:38
products as well as minimizing the
11:40
industrial use of our natural resources
11:42
whole air so in 1869 John Hyde answered
11:46
to New York firms call to find a
11:48
substitute for ivory billiard balls and
11:50
he found that combining cellulose again
11:52
billiard balls remained from I yes you
11:55
didn't know that no yeah that's why
11:57
Britta this was a rich man's game that's
11:59
kind of gross not anymore well not
12:01
legally anymore but yeah
12:03
I'll fit tusks were looking at kill an
12:06
elephant chop off his tusks and then
12:08
play pool oh yeah so he found that
12:13
combining cellulose derived from cotton
12:15
fiber with camp four produced a
12:17
substance which was flexible strong and
12:19
moldable he is newly discovered
12:21
celluloid could be used manufactured
12:23
instead of animal by-products ooh it was
12:25
used for filmmaking and then the new
12:27
synthetic product would reduce the
12:29
slaughter of animals for the use of
12:30
their horns tusks and shells
12:31
manufacturing so chemical companies soon
12:34
began researching developing new classes
12:35
for every use imaginable from wartime
12:37
equipment to furniture cookware motor
12:39
vehicles the applications for plastic
12:41
are endless given the origins of
12:44
plastics it is ironic they have become
12:45
an environmental concern with more
12:47
people were returning to natural produce
12:49
products so yeah I'm going to be smart
12:51
tortoises elephant well we try to
12:55
recycle we recycle our plastics but
12:57
there's been some arguments are saying
12:59
that transported paper takes more room
13:01
both plastic as squishin is smaller they
13:04
can transport more plastic than they can
13:06
paper so ironically it takes less to
13:09
less emissions and natural resources to
13:13
transport plastic than paper so when
13:16
they ask you paper plastic you should
13:19
almost say plastic as we delicately a
13:20
pasta kit can be combined in such a
13:22
small amount for a lot of wares papers
13:24
harder okay
13:26
it just you can't win for Triano it's
13:29
essentially it's a that's it Wow yeah
13:31
we're thinking about the animals then
13:32
you're listening the very least when
13:34
they asked me paper plastic I always say
13:36
can you give me a elephant tusks yeah
13:40
all right
13:41
number five super glue yeah ironically
13:44
the guy that was making this was trying
13:45
with the weakest glue possible yeah it's
13:47
gonna say this guy where was this guy
13:49
when they look for the hardest glue so
13:51
151 two guys
13:53
Henrique uber and Fred Joyner we're
13:55
looking for a temporary COO Fred Joyner
13:57
and Fred Joyner is working on glue
14:01
what winner is oh oh sorry yeah that's
14:04
like God Harry Coover but yeah I got you
14:07
his name is Joyner all right but they
14:09
smell a joy you know Jo why but sure so
14:12
they were working for temperature
14:14
resistant coating for jet cockpits after
14:17
spreading the saya nose cry lay between
14:22
two lenses during scientific expresses
14:24
they were alarm to find that they could
14:25
uphold the lenses apart which ruined
14:28
expensive laboratory equipment so they
14:30
create this product again it was what
14:32
was it was a coat jet pic so it's
14:35
some sort of protective coating but it
14:37
turned out to be an adhesive that was so
14:38
strong they couldn't pull it apart
14:39
temperatures disability yeah that's our
14:41
temperature is that's right thank you oh
14:43
oh yeah so when they're in yeah he
14:45
bounces off the cockpit okay so it was
14:47
then they realized the potential for
14:49
this glue which almost instantly bonded
14:50
two surfaces together so superglue Lewis
14:52
first marketed in late 50s and has
14:54
become sensitive popular remedy for many
14:56
small household repairs today my I use
14:58
it all huh do you ever get super glue
15:00
stuck in your like this you know you're
15:03
like and then it gets the point was just
15:04
pulling your skin you like Oh on the
15:05
trouble yeah yeah Dan must steel was an
15:08
accident really no do you recognize that
15:11
billing ring is that the EMP it is yeah
15:13
stainless steel is something we take for
15:16
granted
15:16
EMP is the experience music project
15:18
Museum in Seattle built in 2000 I was
15:21
open it to them we were there for the
15:23
opening yeah we were there for the
15:24
opening day opening concert great show
15:26
Metallica right now Chili Peppers filter
15:29
Eminem dr. Dre Snoop Dogg and this is
15:31
somebody he's he filter yeah I thought
15:34
that is great show this is a fantastic
15:37
car service you know those last time
15:39
that
15:39
these were the songs that's right they
15:41
did where the song I was the very last
15:42
show and I didn't recognize John
15:44
Frusciante as I should have liked I
15:46
didn't appreciate him the way yeah yeah
15:47
well he really shined right after those
15:49
I know I didn't appreciate the way I
15:51
should have okay
15:51
moving forward alright so in 1912 Mayor
15:54
ologist Harry Brewer Lee was
15:55
experimenting to find a rust-proof gun
15:57
barrel and but during his research he
16:00
added chromium to multi metals and he
16:02
eventually noticed that previously
16:03
discarded metal samples were not rust in
16:05
like other metals he's discarded stuff
16:07
and he's really this that's not rusting
16:09
so bassist Sheffield the home of silver
16:11
cutlery brilliant began marketing his
16:13
Russell Steel to cover early
16:14
manufacturers in place of the
16:16
traditional silver or nickel-plated
16:18
cutlery you see that old-time stainless
16:20
steel and stainless steel which always
16:22
been it can trust yeah well thanks the
16:24
Harry Thank You Harry no more a rusty
16:27
suborder let's not call it should be
16:29
called silverware it's actual stainless
16:31
steel where yeah all right number three
16:33
bubble wrap I know this one do you yeah
16:36
you tell me this is what I believe I
16:37
know okay it was first invented to be
16:40
wallpaper okay and then fail this
16:42
wallpaper and then was used the
16:45
insulation and then failed to be
16:46
insulation and then it was used to pack
16:49
IBM computers what and then became an
16:51
overnight success
16:53
bubble wrap Wow ribbon did this without
16:56
looking at the Lissie let's see and 57
16:59
scientists Alfred and Mark put two
17:01
shower curtains through a heat shrink
17:03
machine in an attempt to develop a
17:05
textured wallpaper good job thank you
17:07
result was a sheet of plastic covered in
17:09
tiny air bubbles their effort to use the
17:12
product as a greenhouse installation
17:14
also proved to be a failure in 1960 IBM
17:18
was looking for a way to protect
17:19
delicate computer components during
17:21
transport feeling is Chavannes cushion
17:24
plastic was the perfect solution to the
17:26
problem the usefulness of bubble wrap
17:28
soon caught on and it's the world's most
17:30
common packaged material today Rubin I
17:34
didn't have to read that you did a great
17:35
job you're welcome cling wrap we all
17:39
love cling wrap yeah this is a often
17:42
produced saran wrap that's the brand
17:44
yeah by the cleane roughly an axon
17:46
that's right he's weird buddy saran wrap
17:48
flat for me we're when
17:51
the sticky film Saran was discovered in
17:53
1933 in the dow chemical laboratories
17:56
ralph while he was working in the lab
17:59
developing dry cleaning products and
18:01
discovered the substance when trying to
18:02
clean used beakers another beaker i
18:05
guess other labs last time you used to
18:08
be called g or high yeah junior high
18:10
beaker I was so excited science class
18:12
yeah but I got the Tron the Bunsen
18:14
burner yeah yeah like you put together
18:21
it was originally used as a protective
18:24
spray in fighter jets again and in motor
18:26
vehicles it was even used in soldiers
18:29
boots so saran wrap was introduced into
18:31
household as a food wrap in 53 concerns
18:34
about the chemicals in the film being in
18:36
contact with who led to further research
18:37
and the development of safer plastic
18:39
films I held savers in quotation yeah
18:41
this effectively wrapped up the array of
18:43
plastic food packaging we use every day
18:45
it too was an accident
18:47
he found the substance while he was
18:49
trying to clean used beakers interesting
18:52
in number one I can't believe this
18:56
ribbon but the safety pan was an
18:57
accident how could that be an accident I
18:59
accidentally bent metal I'm probably so
19:02
here we go in 18-49 New York mechanic
19:04
Walter hunt was sitting in his office
19:06
fiddling with a piece of wire as he
19:09
tried to come up with a way to pay a
19:11
fifteen dollar debt oh wow he found that
19:14
he had successfully twists to the wire
19:16
into a useful object he could see how
19:18
the item in his hands can be used as a
19:20
pin the piece of wire now had a coiled
19:23
spring at the bottom had to add of the
19:25
class to the top allowing the pointy end
19:27
of the safety pin to be secured at the
19:30
top and preventing the users from being
19:31
stabbed with the sharp end of the pin a
19:34
clever inventor hunt was unfortunately
19:37
not a sharp businessman a few years
19:42
earlier he had invented an AI pointed
19:44
needle sewing machine he failed to
19:47
patent his invention as he feared that
19:49
he would cause people to lose her jobs
19:51
his design was later copied and marketed
19:53
by others while he did patent the his
19:56
safety pin a vision he sold the rights
19:58
to the patent to the
19:59
to whom he owed the money oh oh all
20:03
those poor guys dogs I go psycho talk
20:06
about plenty of the pin in your future
20:07
let's go hunt but yeah so get a heart of
20:11
gold
20:12
he had a $15.00 debt and he's twiddling
20:15
with metal thinking how do I pay this
20:17
guy back
20:18
he event to be useful item they he
20:20
thought people could enjoy news sold
20:23
that patent for $15 to the guy he owed
20:26
money to that guy makes millions and
20:29
then he rented the sewing machine but
20:31
him when people lose jobs like a robot's
20:34
taking over their hand sewing right yeah
20:36
oh recipes what a good man I hope Walter
20:41
Walter high life my hat's off to you I
20:44
feel terrible his whole time I use this
20:47
hip-deep in I will think of yes answer
20:50
yes everyone you deserve a spot in
20:53
heaven with everyone they have a mother
20:56
silence hey everyone this is pockets you
20:59
have used a safety pin this man was
21:01
robbed has found the robbed shame on
21:04
those people
21:05
shame they healed the debt to no it's
21:08
not shame on him hidden did he think
21:10
himself I oh wow really I can run with
21:13
this you know I don't yeah you never
21:15
know if the Walter might not have been
21:16
too bright they just say here there was
21:18
a clever Betty's business business
21:20
African might have been off yeah he
21:22
sounds like well I have to say if you're
21:24
a nice person you're probably on
21:25
business oh thanks I'm doesn't know but
21:28
I mean I hear ya it's pretty like I
21:31
couldn't be a used car salesman sure not
21:33
to say they're mean people
21:34
I can't say to people this is what I
21:36
know it isn't constant the value of this
21:38
thing isn't what I'm saying I just can't
21:39
do it yeah yeah yeah okay well that's it
21:42
everyone we are pick which one is the
21:44
worst
21:44
what's her what's her criteria for worse
21:47
so that we use the Li something we could
21:48
do it maybe the thing that we could do
21:50
without so if it was never invented like
21:53
all these things we use so if you picked
21:55
the thing we can't do without means it's
21:58
the best of the best so we had that
22:00
wouldn't makes sense what's the worst
22:01
these are all the best yes what's the
22:04
worst worst invention out of these best
22:06
okay yeah I'm overthinking it sorry I
22:08
think the worst one
22:11
yeah I have my pick me too mine's Teflon
22:16
and the reason being because like that's
22:18
what I'm trying to get to a criteria if
22:20
one of these inventions didn't exist
22:22
that's what I meant to say if one of
22:24
these avenches didn't exist could I live
22:27
my life okay without it and I would find
22:29
Teflon something I could live without
22:31
just I have a sticky pan I might move a
22:34
shrub a little bit more I'll agree with
22:35
you on the Teflon I use everything else
22:37
also no use that one
22:39
yeah I do you I see things I kind of do
22:41
use it but I figure I feel like I'm sure
22:43
that I do on something but or cookware
22:45
is mainly stainless steel yeah just use
22:48
love butter poster notes we use safety
22:49
glass we definitely need micro Evans yes
22:51
plastic of course I mean what superglue
22:54
sure I'm stainless steel everyday yeah
22:56
all right yeah yeah cling-wrap your
22:58
horse safety then like you need safe
23:01
safety Waldo there's no way Walter a
23:03
month so yeah there you go
23:05
today the worst of the best is uh Teflon
23:08
your teeth the kids were used for a bit
23:10
for to show that you're a safe person
23:11
yeah
23:12
they're a regular Walter hunts you don't
23:14
want anybody to get hurt that's right
23:15
Walter hunt may his name never be
23:19
forgotten yes
23:20
tell them to your children folks so
23:22
remember in front of every silver lining
23:25
there's a cloud and we're here to help
23:27
you find it thanks for listening you
23:28
remember to review us on iTunes like us
23:30
on facebook follow us on twitter thanks
23:38
for listening guys thanks for watching
23:40
all of our podcast episodes if you're a
23:42
first-time listener they're available on
23:43
every podcast app if you have a smart
23:46
device and I can't imagine you don't
23:48
it's an iPhone Android phone any kind of
23:51
smartphone pad just look for podcast
23:54
feeds and we're on there worse the best
23:56
podcast thankful thank you for those
23:57
saying thanks for being here thank you
23:58
brother all right
23:59
one Mouse thanks everybody buy it we're
24:02
leaving that's crazy I'm fun little
24:06
surprise I didn't read that one
24:09
[Music]
24:34
you

Lab Mistakes
Broadcast by