The Dry Diaries

Planning a Wedding in Tuscany, Newlywed Chat, Beyond The Ice Wall with Carly and Phillip

Alex Dry Season 1 Episode 20

This entry is for all the girls planning weddings—and anyone who’s ever dreamed of tying the knot in Tuscany (without breaking the bank). Alex is joined by newlyweds Carly Lind and Phillip, who share how they scored a stunning Italian venue for under 1k, the dos and don’ts of destination weddings, and how they’ve tackled the challenges of being newlyweds. Carly’s a musician with features on Armada, while Phillip’s an award-winning producer and guitarist who’s worked with everyone from the Backstreet Boys to Kendrick Lamar and Avril Lavigne. From wedding disasters to conspiracies beyond the ice wall in Antarctica, we covers it all.

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Speaker 1:

So one of our friends a long time ago said weddings are just music videos. For people that have never done a music video. And once she said that I was like, oh my God, she's actually right Because, like you are the star of the show. You are going to be in hair and wardrobe, You're going to be starving because you haven't really eaten and it's all about you. But at the end you're like, can we not have it all be about me? I'm tired.

Speaker 1:

We not have it all be about me I'm tired, yeah, and so I felt like I had already done music videos enough to be like all right, I know what to expect hey guys, what's up?

Speaker 2:

it's alex and I am back with another dry diaries entry. Today I have one of my best friends, carly, and husband now yeah, philip.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I've upgraded, yes.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I was just in Europe for Carly and Phillip's wedding, which was really fun and we will get into that. But Carly is my longest friend I've known in LA, which is crazy. It's like dog years.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, in LA, tell them how we met. I don't even really remember the exact way, but I just remember when we were still dancing, we were at the old millennium and you like, let me use some of your makeup before a class, and I was like, oh, she knows a lot about makeup, I don't know anything and then I don't even know how we just kept seeing each other.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I think we just kept seeing each other and then you know, but I just remember you're like your makeup bag is so big.

Speaker 1:

I was like um, I know how to put on mascara, yeah.

Speaker 2:

I do remember that, wow, um, yeah. So Carly as a dancer musician, she also does social media marketing. Yes and yes. And then Philip does tech sound engineer right, I don't sure you can give your intro because it's it's super complicated and beyond me.

Speaker 3:

I spent a long time as well. I'm a Grammy nominated guitarist and I've done a lot of touring and playing live and working on people's music. But then I went on to work in the tech world with game companies like naughty dog, wonder, storm, uh currently with meta, but I also do live streaming and uh content creation on the outside.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, isn't it gaming.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, it's. It's mostly it's gaming music, and then I'll occasionally sprinkle in some things about life that upset people. So that's fine.

Speaker 1:

But really I just watch him throughout the day going into the metaverse talking to like five-year-olds, because all the kids are in there and they're like wow oh my god so I'm like, what are you doing over there?

Speaker 1:

with like the goggles yeah, I use the vr headset like one of his, one of his things, uh, one of his like daily tasks I remember was he had to go in and check out, like Sabrina Carpenter's metaverse concert, and I was like let me see those, those goggles. I put up the oculus and I was like, oh wow, she's really big yeah, I was like this is so terrible.

Speaker 3:

Random kids would run up to me and they'd be like, like I love Sabrina Carpenter and I'm like that's, that's great kid. I I'm just trying to make sure this place works. Oh my god yeah, wait, like run up to you in the metaverse yeah, well, they just run up to each other and they'll just say random stuff, yeah wait, can I?

Speaker 1:

cuss whatever I don't know, yeah, yeah random shit yeah, yeah, he, he like makes, he goes into the game to like or whatever, whatever the metaverse, to make sure that everything is sounding properly like if there's like a like he has to make sure that it's working okay, but I think it's the metaverse is live it's well, it's horizon worlds. It's a game, yeah kids mostly like bopping around yeah, but they're all using the parents that okay it's everyone in the metaverse, are they?

Speaker 2:

everyone puts ready player one oh, I love that movie, right yeah and like. The real world that they're in is like completely trashed yeah and so everyone puts it on and they live in like trailer bunkers yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, it was.

Speaker 3:

Uh, they were all trying to like compete to get the fortune at the end yes, yes yeah, I love that movie. The books I think about even better oh I didn't know it was a book.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it was a book. First good movie. Yeah, cool actually. Wait, isn't the girl from game of thrones the main character the the side?

Speaker 3:

oh, I don't remember. I don't remember any actors actually I'm pretty sure that's the main character. Yeah, it's a pretty old movie oh, don't do that to me, don't I remember when it was so big? No, it was after college.

Speaker 2:

God, don't do that to me, but like if they were making that then, and now it's just happening well, I still well, no, no, no.

Speaker 3:

I mean it's not scary to me yet, because it still looks like a busted version of it. It's like we we literally just put legs in the metaverse, like not even a year ago, oh yeah, and so it's just like there are moments where it's just like wow, here's going to be this new thing. But I think the thing that makes it so difficult is there's such a uh high point of entry. So it's like in Ready Player One, everyone just had goggles, everyone just had a thing. But you still have to like. What it was a couple years ago is you had to have a strong PC, you had to have the goggles, which cost $1,000.

Speaker 1:

It's going to be so much money for people that want to do it Right. Even the Oculus Like how much was the brand new Oculus Like $1,500?.

Speaker 3:

No, well, that was the Pro. The new one is like $300. Oh, not sponsored, I just work for them. But no, that's the thing that they're trying to do is they're trying to make the point of entry so low so everybody could have one. But it's hard to do that at a high level of fidelity like that, right, yeah, because then you'd have to if you want something really mind-blowing.

Speaker 2:

It's going to cost thousands when do you think it's going to get there?

Speaker 3:

oh, I'd say like a decade yeah, 10, 10 between 10 to 15 years, like, yeah, yeah, just because the hardware is just putting it all in a thing that that's yeah compact, is you know? It's a stretch? Yeah, yeah, then our ai overlords will come and take care of thing that that's compact, is you know?

Speaker 2:

it's a stretch, yeah.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, then our AI overlords will come and take care of us. So that's fine, hi Kat Perfect.

Speaker 2:

Do you want to add anything to your intro?

Speaker 3:

That was my intro.

Speaker 1:

My intro yeah, I moved out to LA to sing and write. Yeah, I moved out to LA to sing and write. Um, I've been on a bunch of different tracks with DJs. I've I've had releases under Armada, um. And yeah, I've, like, danced professionally and god, I'm so bad at this. I dance professionally, dance for artists like Kanye, we, um. Then, yeah, I've just taken on social media marketing and it's my thing now.

Speaker 2:

And Phillip, you were a musician for artists.

Speaker 3:

Yes, I've worked with Justin Bieber, kendrick Lamar that's the Grammy nomination with Good Kid Mad City on Kendrick Backstreet Boys, randy Jackson if anybody remembers him, the Band Perry, tyler Cruz, Talib Kweli yeah, nelly, I worked with Nelly way back. When All my millennials shout out what?

Speaker 2:

is it Country Grammar? Is that Nelly? Yeah, yeah, odom beckwin, all my millennials shout out um what's the country grammar? Is that?

Speaker 3:

no, yeah, yeah, yeah uh, odom, uh, oh, he leslie odom jr he didn't even know who he was at first no, I had no clue he's really big in the broadway scene yeah, super nice he's.

Speaker 3:

He's probably one of the nicest actors I've worked with, who can flip it on an instant Like we'll be hanging out, and they're like, okay, we're going to shoot in like three, two, and you see him like manifest this, like actor, strong, bold presence, and it's just like out of nowhere. But yeah, I don't know, I forget my resume sometimes I think that was a pretty sharp.

Speaker 3:

Julia Michaels, love her. Yeah, did I say Tyler Cruz? Yeah, okay, yeah, well, okay, I'm starting to repeat myself yeah, that's. And then a bunch of other artists in LA. Like you know, mom and dad have too much money, so they just hire a band for some rich kid, yeah, which those actually pay more, believe it or not?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I can believe it. Yeah, yeah, anything to make him sound good, yeah exactly.

Speaker 3:

I feel like what's your price? I'm like probably way more than I should be getting paid right now, right yeah.

Speaker 2:

Okay, before we get started, we're just going to do a little icebreaker, okay, and just so that everyone can get to know you guys a little bit better as a couple and like individually. It's something crazy, carly, so I can see your face and be like, oh God, here we go, here we go.

Speaker 3:

You're like who are you voting for this year? I'm joking, no, the girls got.

Speaker 2:

I had some of the girls from Europe and they were literally going at it in politics and I was like, okay, we're going to have to cut all this out like oh, yeah, yeah, because it starts getting heated yeah, and then one girl's energy just completely shifted and I was just like okay, let's just like I know, that's why I was.

Speaker 1:

We were talking about like on the way to the car I was like we're gonna talk about conspiracy theories and he was like I don't believe in hell and I was like this is gonna be controversial and he's like I think that that's the point. Yeah, what I didn.

Speaker 3:

I didn't say that. I was like. I'm pretty sure Alex is not trying to avoid some level of controversy.

Speaker 2:

I haven't avoided anything. Yeah, I'm kind of like concerned, but it's okay.

Speaker 1:

Well, I mean, I guess that's like essentially, when you host a podcast, you are like an interviewer and that's like what you're doing yeah.

Speaker 2:

Getting people's perspective and like they don't want me. Oh my God, what? No, like they, like the Illuminati, like they don't want me.

Speaker 1:

Oh, oh, oh.

Speaker 2:

They're not going to come after me. I cannot the Dry Diaries.

Speaker 3:

I just watched a whole interview as the singer system moved down and literally had. I think it was the Turkish military possibly sending snipers to take him out during one of his shows. Wow, for who? Uh?

Speaker 1:

System of a Down do you remember the wake up?

Speaker 2:

oh my god, yes so there.

Speaker 1:

I listened to them growing up and I always loved them, but I was so young that I didn't really realize they are really political, but kind of in the best way, because they basically are like how long did that take you? Whatever I was like, I was like 10, I was like two angels, I like didn't know, and so I just learned it, right now, oh no oh god, but again in the best way, because they're like the government, like do you know what the government's doing?

Speaker 1:

and so yeah, like if you read through the lyrics, you're like, oh, they're like really saying some deep shit here, and so yeah.

Speaker 3:

I mean the opening track of their biggest album. Literally has him just reading statistics about overpopulation in the prison system.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, wait, so they're sending snipers to take them out.

Speaker 3:

Well, it was during the. It was during the. It was when, I think, the United States was finally acknowledging that the genocide over there had occurred, and so Serge and the band in general was very outspoken about acknowledging that that genocide had happened and so because of that the opposing military was getting really pissed off. So he had some friends in the FBI that were like, hey, they know about you and just you know. So he was talking about in this interview one of the shows that he did where he was like running around the stage, real frantic, because he was like, if you're going to take me out, I'm going to make it really hard. So, like that performance when they found out that they might have snipers trained on him, he was just like oh my God, snipers trained on him.

Speaker 2:

He was just like, oh my god, that's so funny. Okay, so getting into it as a couple, what's the craziest argument you have had? But you look back now and laugh about because you're like that was just so stupid I know mine.

Speaker 3:

I said it yesterday. I don't know if carla wants me to say which one?

Speaker 1:

the one where I went down the street?

Speaker 1:

yes, oh my god, there's covid was hard I'll just say that, um, covid was hard on so many levels. One of them, we did not agree on a lot of what was going on together, so we argued about it a lot. We actually almost broke up over it. But my therapist was like, carly, I'm breaking up with philip and he's like, is that what you truly want? And I was like, no, but I'm breaking up with him. And so then we we actually went to couples therapy and we like worked it all out and figured out that, like it had nothing to do with covid, it was a lot of other things, yeah. And so now, yeah, we look back at it and we laugh about it because we're like, honestly, we probably will never argue about politics, ever again. Um, but then also, I can't even do you want me to say it?

Speaker 2:

wait, was it more of politics?

Speaker 1:

no vaccine, no oh or both, I think it was like, okay, how the government was handling it, how the government was handling people, vaccinations, vaccinations, like all of it.

Speaker 2:

I feel like that's kind of one reason that they brought COVID to us To separate people. Yeah separate people, seclude people, make people feel like they're going crazy. You know, maybe issues happen or arise because, like you're literally stuck in a box. No, literally, for such a long period of time with the same people. So, of course, like if I'm with the same people for more than a few days, I'm like all right, I need to be alone.

Speaker 1:

I mean, it was just funny, because our couple service was literally like okay, let me break it down for you. This has nothing to do with COVID. He was like Carly, you have an issue with authority.

Speaker 3:

And Phillip, you have an issue with authority and Philip, you have um existential dread. Was this that's true? Was, was this Jordan or was this your guy? Jordan, yeah, jordan, okay, yeah, yeah, like he was, like this has nothing to do with what you're even arguing about.

Speaker 1:

It literally has like you and you. This is it. Well, and then?

Speaker 3:

he would always end our sessions with he's like I love both of you so much. He's like y'all make me laugh because everything to to him was just like this is just petty. Yeah, to us it was so big.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and just politics in general Anyway. But that was an everlasting theme that would show up and now we just laugh at it, we're like can you believe? Because I can't. And then there was one night. It was right when we all started going out again, but I was definitely very depressed and COVID and so I think one night I got like wasted and oh, which story is this?

Speaker 3:

Was this a hair tie? Was this a hair tie? When I brought you the hair tie and you, like, cried no, we didn't fight that night. No, but that was cute.

Speaker 1:

There was one night. I got so drunk that I started crying about having lost my hair ties.

Speaker 3:

And I was started crying about having lost my hair ties and I was like, where are my hair? And I? I flipped the whole apartment over and I finally went down to the car and I found like one under the car seat and I brought it back and I ran upstairs and she was in the bathtub and I handed it and she was like oh my gosh, that's so cute though no, there was one where I I showed up at his house after we had gone out, me and my friends but I was

Speaker 3:

drunk and I don't even know what we how this argument even started no, I just remember because I, you, you showed up at the doorstep and then I said something like like, oh, hey, and, and I don't, it was just something so casual and it, whatever it was, hit something with you and you were just like you know what I'm done, I'm out of here, and and she was like I'm walking home, I'm like you live four miles away, and she was like I lived in Boston.

Speaker 1:

I can walk all the time Drunk, yeah, and so in heels, and so I was like and I start walking, but like I forgot, I'm in Van Nuys.

Speaker 3:

You don't walk home there.

Speaker 1:

And so I started walking and then I had like my little backpack and all of a sudden this like man with a backpack started coming up to me and I was like he's going to kill me. And so I literally took my bag and I like pop him. But then yeah, he probably was trying to sell me drugs, but I was like get away from me.

Speaker 3:

He was like please, I'm just your kind everyday neighborhood dealer. Literally.

Speaker 1:

And then I called him and I was like come.

Speaker 3:

Well, I was driving around looking for her and I couldn't find her. Oh my God, yeah.

Speaker 1:

And then he drove me home and I was upset.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, she was like why are you going away from your house? I was like I don't think we need to stay at the same place tonight. And you were like how dare you? Yeah, she was really mad bringing it up okay.

Speaker 2:

Well, because you guys are both in the music industry I think I'm really excited to hear this answer. If your relationship had to be a song or, like you, had a theme song, what?

Speaker 1:

would it be? Um, I don't know if it would be like a theme song, because of the meaning of the lyric.

Speaker 3:

Well, okay, this is two she's thought about this more since we've talked about it listen to justice these two French DJs like literally it's our go to.

Speaker 1:

We listen to that album over and, over and over. I don't know why. Why? Because it's just so good because I love you. I don't know. Oh, I think it's something we just always bonded on.

Speaker 3:

They're so good, and then we finally saw them live that's probably why, honestly, we saw them live and I was like you don't get it.

Speaker 1:

They are real musicians who actually know how to dj, because a lot of djs are like ha ha, look at me I press the button, but they're like programming everything live, and I remember being like you're going to love them. Just shut up and get in the car.

Speaker 1:

We're going to coachella I was so cranky that day and so, yeah, we like finally saw them, and he was like, okay, cool, I'm obsessed. But then also I remember we were there and I don't know if I can say this, but I was tripping on acid, and when I I am on acid, I have these like big realizations. And so there's a song where it's like because we are your friends.

Speaker 1:

you'll never be alone again. And I remember being like I'll never be alone again because we're together. Oh my gosh, and then literally Coachella, like panned to us and then posted that moment.

Speaker 3:

Which not only went viral but a lot of people were just like I hope that guy got that girl's number and I was like we're engaged, that's cute.

Speaker 1:

But yeah, I think that's probably it. I don't know what yours would be.

Speaker 3:

Oh no, mine would have been Generator off that same album. I don't know why. It's just like whenever I think about us, I think about like something pulsing and dark, but it's like Generator goes to this thing that has that's crazy, pulsing and dark.

Speaker 3:

Yeah you know, but it's got this organic baseline that comes in at the end. That's just so funky and like it just kind of describes. Like we love wearing black and we're both kind of like dark with our humor and and so I feel like it just fits our mood and our soundscape really well, yeah, so yeah, I've never heard either educate yourself.

Speaker 1:

No, they're good you have to check them out, even if you like, don't like the music. They're just solid musicians.

Speaker 3:

Well, I love djs you're a solid musician solid yeah, I'm just gonna hit on you this whole podcast. What are you doing later?

Speaker 2:

well, do you guys want kids in the future?

Speaker 1:

I think I'm like 85. Sure I don't want them, but it's interesting because when we first met he did want kids oh, I was. I was like I need to have them in the next like three years yeah, and I was like, oh no, if I have them it'll be 40, and he was like 40, I'll be old. And I was like, yeah, okay, well, that's the deal.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, um, just because even now I'm like too soon, I I don't know like I love kids, I'm really good with them, like I do love them and I have the patience for them. I just feel like I grew up half my life like already raising my parents and like my sister, and then we got an Australian shepherd and there was one moment where I was like with our, I was like I don't think I can do it.

Speaker 3:

I think it was when I was vacuuming poop out of the carpet. Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

I was like, if I can't deal with this dog, like if cause it was like I didn't have the, we hadn't like, we hadn't slept, we hadn't really eaten that much, I hadn't like had any time to myself and I'm like a major introvert. And so I was driving in the car and I was like I don't think I like myself like this, so if I don't like myself like this, I wouldn't want to put it on a child, right?

Speaker 2:

so yeah, well, so like to be fair. Having a dog is like having a kid yeah, the responsibilities of it, but then, like a kid, is times two and that's like what stresses me out about it and they talk back, true, like even.

Speaker 1:

Well, I don't know if he ever sees us, but we also had a younger sister live with us and like there were points where we would kind of set boundaries in our household and sometimes I felt like, not that she is a teenager, I just would feel like I was dealing with a grown adult in my house that wasn't listening and respecting the boundaries, and so I was like, oh hell, no, like you put your time and like energy into a child and then they grow up and they treat you like this.

Speaker 2:

No, no, I would rather have my double income right, go on a vacation every year like I'm good oh what I just heard, something stirring outside but I think that is a whole misconception or, like people really put emphasis on, like oh, if you get married, you need to have kids like if you don't have kids. It's kind of looked down on in some way.

Speaker 3:

I need to tell you how much crap we get. In one of my live streams somebody was like could you imagine being married and not wanting to like carry on your DNA? And I'm like that's so selfish.

Speaker 1:

It's selfish, like people's reasoning for having kids is just so selfish. Like people's reasoning for having kids is just so selfish, and I was a product of, like, a pair of parents that shouldn't have had kids. So, like, if I am going to have kids, I want to be 100 percent sure, because otherwise I don't want to put myself or my kid through what I went through Like it's not fair.

Speaker 2:

And yeah, I was going to say like I think that's fair what you're saying, cause it's not fair to like the kid if you aren't ready for it Totally, and so, yeah, Like why I don't know, and if someone doesn't understand that that's fine.

Speaker 1:

Like you can hate on me all you want, but I've just haven't had that dying urge yet, like probably, it probably won't happen, so why would I have a kid if I'm like not fully invested?

Speaker 2:

yeah, I think it's fine to be selfish and wait till you're ready, like yeah, mentally, emotionally, financially, whatever the reasons are yeah and the whole time clock thing. Like obviously you can like free my dad's. Like alex, you should think about getting your eggs frozen. I was like dad, I'm three years old.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, I'm gonna be okay.

Speaker 2:

We know someone who had a child at 50 by accident so I think she was a little bit older than that she might have been yeah but and adoption is always an option, which I'm I know that I want to have kids and like at least adopt one of them yeah. And I think that's perfectly fine. If you aren't able to have kids at a certain age, adoption is always an option, totally.

Speaker 1:

But yeah, yeah, I've seen enough kids that need homes. Great, there's plenty and I'm sure there will be plenty more.

Speaker 3:

I also feel like there's become this whole overarching hyper-masculine vibe that's like somehow reached parenting spaces, cause there's a lot of dudes that are just like, well, you're only a real man if you get married, and then you're only a real man if you have kids, and then you're only a real man if you teach these kids this stuff, and so it's like it almost kind of develops out of the snowball of just like real men do x, y and z, when really I feel like, if you don't have the willingness outside of yourself to want to be that like like we have a friend dura dura and her husband are both two people that really wanted to have kids because they wanted to pour their love out in that way, and that is something so organically beautiful that I'm like, yes, please have more children, because you are spreading something good.

Speaker 1:

But then a lot of other people just my god, like the guy that just got arrested for leaving his kid in the car because he wanted to go play video games and watch porn and what yeah, yeah, yeah no, I didn't hear about that I just don't understand why society like puts this major pressure on everyone to have children. And for why? Because y'all follow the blueprint and you're miserable.

Speaker 1:

I don't know that might also upset a lot of people. But like I just have never been one to follow the rules and I've always been one to like think for myself. So I've like sat with it a lot and been like, do I really want to do this? And like, all all people aside, like, do I want to have them For you personally? Yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 3:

Agreed. Yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 2:

And finding someone that agrees with that too Cause that's another thing Like some people find someone and they say I may not want kids. And they're like find someone and they say I may not want kids and they're like well, I want kids.

Speaker 3:

And then that causes them to break up. Well, and it's like I when I originally wanted kids, when we first started dating, I was like super churchy, like super, super ingrained in the church, and part of the reason I had it in me was because the they kind of beat into you like family, family, family, everything's family, everything needs to be family. And it wasn't until I started taking some time and this is actually where, weirdly, where COVID helped me I took a little bit of a step out and I realized that it wasn't something that I actually wanted right away. It was just kind of yelled at to me to need to have it.

Speaker 1:

This is what you do. Yeah, this is just. You buy a house.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, with a white picket fence Exactly.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, with a white picket fence, exactly yeah.

Speaker 3:

And then you go into debt, you go into debt, All this stuff.

Speaker 1:

But I was like I don't think I want to do it like that.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, what is a couple's tradition that you have? Like some people do date nights, you know, every Friday, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3:

Every day is a date day with us, every day is a date day with us.

Speaker 1:

What is our tradition to traveling at least one cool place a year, yeah, but also I feel like we every mother's day because we both lost our mom we always say let's turn off our phones because we don't want to like look at what everyone's posting. Um, and then we usually do drive out to like malibu and just kind of like turn off yeah. Yeah, and kind of like have our grieving moment.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, eat some good fish. Yeah, neptune's, we love you.

Speaker 1:

Neptune's not. Is that, malibu? Yeah?

Speaker 3:

It's right off the PCH, I don't know.

Speaker 2:

No, it's fine, it's a fish. So.

Speaker 3:

I mean it's not great.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, go get some. Okay, what is your favorite conspiracy theory right now?

Speaker 3:

Go. You have such a loaded gun on it.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, I have so many conspiracy theories. Well, I have a few, but the main one that I'm like is that there is an entry into the middle of the earth and that there is some entry into middle, the middle of the earth, and that there is like some sort of portal that brings you into, possibly like a what is it? Like another version of earth, like another reality what are you?

Speaker 1:

thinking well, it's like the kong movies, like a second earth inside of earth but inside of the earth, where there's like also another sun and just like a whole nother civilization within the earth, yeah, okay if you watch the kong movies, you'll get it.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, there's, they've made movies on it and I've read about it and it just sounds so fascinating. But I also I also believe in like string theory. So I know you've seen loki, but basically it's like talking about how there's a string and then there's like string theory. So I know you've seen loki, but basically it's like talking about how there's a string and then there's like multiple realities, so like there's probably hundreds of thousands of different carly's living different lives and yeah. So anytime I have deja vu like that's another carly being here already, whatever, yeah, that's actually a really good one too, that I believe so where do you think the portal is in like?

Speaker 3:

the middle of antarctica yeah.

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