Kevin Reacts to Goodnight Sweetheart S2E4

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00:00Hello, everybody, welcome back to the channel. My name is Kevin, I'm a geek, you are watching
00:15Kevin the Geek and welcome back to the second part of my good night, sweetheart, doubleheader
00:20day. Of course, earlier on today, I did series two, I did episode number three. Now we're
00:25doing episode four. Of course, if you are new, please subscribe to channel to please
00:30turn on notifications. And of course, you can check out my Patreon where you can get
00:33early access to footage amongst other stuff as well. But for right now, we're checking
00:38out episode four. And this one is apparently called who's taking you home tonight.
00:44I left a message I wanted you to phone me. Yes, and instead I decided to call around
01:02in person. profound apologies, but that's the sort of ignorant get I am. So what's the
01:08panic? I spent last night stuck in an air raid shelter with an accordion player who
01:13did nonstop George form the impressions. So I was like, I've forgotten the cover story.
01:19We agreed to tell Yvonne that was supposed to be working in Basildon or Braintree. I'm
01:26losing it. Yeah, I don't get your knickers in a twist. I haven't spoken to Yvonne yet.
01:31You could tell you were running guns to Guatemalan rebels if you want. Ever since I said you
01:36could pretend to be working for me to cover your jaws to war torn London. You've abused
01:41the privilege and been home late every night. You don't know that's true. It's what Yvonne
01:45told Stella. All right, so you do know that's true. Okay, so I've been taking liberties,
01:52but it's not much fun for me in 1994. At the moment. Yeah, well, I'm afraid it can't go
01:56on anymore. I'm gonna have to sack you. Reality check Ron. It's not a real job. Remember?
02:05Yeah, it is as far as the girls are concerned. Stella thinks I'm a slave driving ogre who's
02:10putting your marriage on the line by making you work too hard, but I'm already unemployed.
02:15Do you realize what it'll do to my self-confidence if I can't even hold down a pretend job? I
02:21insist on a peaceful home life. If I'd want to turmoil, I'd have married for looks. Stella
02:28is even making me do my own ironing. I'd never have guessed. I'll sort it out. I'll make
02:33sure everybody knows that the hours I've supposedly been working are down to me. All right? Yeah,
02:37I'll do it soon, okay? Scout something. My God. You don't give your employees a chance
02:44to rest, do you, Ron? I'm only sorry we haven't got any children you could send up a chimney.
02:50And I hope you don't make a habit of hassling Gary before eight in the morning. I normally
02:54like to eat my muesli as God intended. Without sugar? Without clothes. If I have to start
03:00dressing, I'll have to start paying the window cleaner. Good morning, Gary. Good morning.
03:05Look, it's not Ron's fault I'm working late. My hours are down to me. And I'm a salesman
03:11without a car, so I'm at the mercy of British Rail. Really? And selling's a very time-consuming
03:16business, especially if you're new to it. I can't go anywhere until Ron and I have had
03:20exhaustive discussions. So where are you off to today? Um, we haven't exhaustively discussed
03:26that yet. Reading? Reading sounds good. I'll make sure I'm home early. What? You mean you
03:32can actually spend some of your precious time with little me? Yeah. Well, tough. There's
03:36a wine and nibbles party after work. So tonight, I'm going out. Whoa. He likes the sound of
03:43that. He gets more sunk with Phoebe. It's all right. I think we've lost him. Oh, Gary,
03:54you are a terror. Fancy knocking up an ARP warden's home, eh? Well, if you was asking
03:59for it, pompous little twit. Excuse me, would you mind not obstructing the alleyway? There
04:04could be emergency services trying to get through. You give these guys a tin hat, they
04:08think they're Churchill. Can I have to start knocking off ARP helmets on a regular basis?
04:18That's for a lovely afternoon. There's only what you was after down that alley. You'll
04:26Well, I'd better get you back to the pub. You're literally around the corner. I don't
04:33want to go in there just yet. Well, going in there, back to Red and all the others means
04:38the afternoon's over. I want to hang on to it for a little bit longer. It's been the
04:43first time, oh, God knows, that I, well, I actually forgot about the war for a little
04:48while. Nice. Do you know what I mean? War? What war? Smashing film, wasn't it? I've wanted
04:58to see Gone With The Wind for ages. I've never seen it. You look a lot like Vivian Lee. Oh,
05:04stop it. Well, go on then. What? You're supposed to say I look a lot like Clark Gable. There's
05:12a touch of a Stan Laurel about you. You can go off people, you know. What are you doing
05:18tonight? Not a lot. I want to cook you a meal. Oh, nice. Oh, don't look like that. I can
05:25cook, you know. Come up to the flat at about eight o'clock. But aren't you worried about
05:31what the neighbours might think? You know, a married woman entertaining another man.
05:35No, I'm past caring what anyone thinks. Most of them round here think we're already at
05:40it, like rabbits anyway. True. Dirty-minded lot. Well, I suppose I'd better go in then.
05:50I'll see you at eight. On the dot. Oh, he found you. All right, quick bath. No, I'd
06:12better just check. Oh, yeah. Chances are there's no air raids. The window cleaner you've been.
06:24If you could see what good that George Formby, when he gets in the house. I don't believe
06:35Air raid, half past nine tonight. That means we're going to have to share our pudding course
06:45with 20 rejects from Help the Aged. That means I'm going to be late home again. Oh, why should
06:53I feel guilty? She's gone out, flaming wine and nibbled. Whining about me and nibbling
07:01on some blokes ear, I suppose. Hello, Gary. I heard you singing. Has something happened?
07:10No, it's just a tune that was going around my head. What are you doing here? I mean,
07:13what happened to the wine and nibbles? Didn't fancy it. Ouch, crap. Something wrong? You
07:21seem a bit down. No, it's nothing much. It's just one of those days when you look at your
07:25life and you realise it's a complete and utter mess. Shall I get you some evening primrose?
07:31I'm not having a period, Gary. PMT is not the major cause of depression in women. And
07:36it's not likely to be as long as there are men in this world. Well, I'm sorry. What for?
07:42I'm not 100% sure. It just seemed the safest thing to say. It's about me working all these
07:49hours, isn't it? Yes, it's about you working all these hours. I had realised it was getting
07:54on your nerves. No, you hadn't. Ron told you it was. And I know because I told Stella,
07:59knowing she'd tell him and knowing he'd tell you. Why not just tell me? Because I'm your
08:03wife. I like to give you the chance to give the impression that you're capable of original
08:07thought. I'm perfectly capable of original thought. What about that invaluable electronic
08:12personal organiser I surprised you with on your birthday? Poor fool. You really believe
08:16you were sent that brochure on a random mail shop? So once I'd behaved like a well-manipulated
08:23little puppet and told you I'd be home early, why did you throw it in my face? To get back
08:27at you. You really don't understand women at all, do you? Of course he don't. Apparently
08:32not. Look at me. Now I want you to be honest. Is all this time you're spending at work just
08:39an excuse to get away from me? Now I know I gave you a hard time about wanting a baby
08:44and you're losing your job. Oh, don't be silly. Then why are you late home every night?
08:48And I don't believe all that rubbish about selling being a time-consuming job. You have
08:52never let work rule your life. It's Ron. You're right. He's a bloody slave driver. Well, don't
08:59let him do it to you. Put your foot down. From now on, I promise. I don't want to lose
09:05what I love, Gary. No, nor do I. Look, let's go out for a meal together. Yes, tonight.
09:12No, not tonight. Well, I promised Ron. You said you were going out. And you said you
09:18were going to put your foot down. Yes. Right. I will. Oh, God. Two birds and they both want
09:28you in different places at the same time. It's the classic adulterous dilemma. I'm not
09:33an adulterer. I never have been, I never will be unfaithful to Yvonne. Well, not in the
09:38same space-time continuum. The only course of action I can see open to you is to bite
09:44the proverbial bullet and choose between one or the other. You have an incredible knack
09:49for stating the obvious and taking 20 minutes to do it. I know I've got to choose, but
09:54which one? Whichever one I reject, I lose. Yvonne already thinks I'm giving her the cold
10:00shoulder. And this invitation from Phoebe is a pivotal moment in our relationship. It's
10:05clear you don't love Yvonne anymore. Just sack her off if you're that unhappy with her,
10:10bloody hell. If I cry off, she'll take it as rejection. Surely not. Women back then
10:15were a lot more sensitive. Even so. Ron, have you ever been romantically involved with a
10:21girl born during the First World War? Follow partial to the older woman, Gary. Even my
10:26upper age limits fall somewhere short of 79-year-old. I'll leave it to one of these,
10:32eh? God, fate really loves to paint you into a corner, doesn't it? The night Phoebe invites
10:39me to dinner is the same night my wife decides to save our marriage. God, listen to me, I'm
10:44turning into such a chauvinist. I think your average Cosmo reader would be reaching for
10:48the castration scissors. But your fellow man knows where you're coming from, pal. If I
10:53was a full-blooded chauvinist, it'd be a lot easier. Oliver Reed would seduce Phoebe over
10:58the hors d'oeuvres. Then cold-bloodedly see to Yvonne between the coffee and the after-eats.
11:03Even a date with both of them. Now, that'd be cool. And I could do it. Can you? There's
11:12an Indian restaurant at the present-day end of Duckett's Passage, right? So that is where
11:16I take Yvonne. Then I pretend I've got a dodgy tummy, right? Keep going to the toilet, nip
11:22out of the window, go to Phoebe's, then make a similar excuse to Phoebe and spend the night
11:27flitting between the two. That is not going to work. That double-breasted suit Yvonne
11:34made me get for her cousin's wedding, that should just about cut it in both eras. I'd
11:38only have to keep it going till I pass nine. There's an air raid then. I can tell Phoebe
11:42I'm needed back at work. Ah. It's bold. It's audacious. It verges on the lunatic. Yeah.
11:50But if you can pull it off, it will belong in the pantheon of man's achievements, along
11:55with landing on the moon and making sure women are the ones who get pregnant. I wouldn't
12:01go quite that far. If the bog in the Indian doesn't have a window, you'll be barred.
12:07The toilet's through there, isn't it? Yeah, that's right, Gary, where it says toilet.
12:19What's the matter with you? Oh, I just feel a bit... Well, then isn't Indian the best
12:23place to be? Go home if you want. No, no, no, it's fine. Ooh, what are you having for
12:28starters? Oh, whatever you're having. Good evening. Evening. Can I get you something
12:34to drink? Yeah, I'll have a lager, please. Gary? Ah, yeah, fine. Please don't be put
12:41off by our lack of custom. We've only been open for 18 months. Well, I suppose it takes
12:48time for word to get round. Absolutely. I've got an ad in the local paper, but I think
12:52I need something more direct. You know, leaflets through the letterbox, that sort of thing.
12:56Well, if it's sleeveless you're after, my husband can help. He's a sales executive
13:01for a printing firm. He'd be delighted to help, wouldn't you, Gary? Nice!
13:07Well, yeah, I was just going to go to the toilet. It can wait, can't it? You don't want
13:10to lose a sale. What such thing did you want? Say, 3,000 double pages, A5 brochures with
13:16full colour and laminated paper front and back. Well, go on then, Gary. How much?
13:25Well, I need to work it out and I really must go to the toilet. Excuse me. Don't worry,
13:32if I'm a little while. A window, yes! Surely you'd research that before you booked a restaurant?
13:45I mean, that's just common sense, isn't it? What the hell is he doing?
13:54Now that is commitment. That is commitment, isn't it? And again, well, what's the bathroom?
14:17The bathroom would have been upstairs, because I've got an Indian place near me where it's
14:22literally upstairs. So you wouldn't be able to climb out the window and get out for that
14:26one. Well, you might, but you'd be struggling to get back in.
14:31What? FAB Scott. I thought disguise would be appropriate. If Yvonne caught a glimpse
14:37of me, the whole operation would be blown. Yeah, did you get the wine? Vintage Chateau
14:44Take your time.
14:47Invited into Phoebe's private quarters, I thought you might be planning to finally consummate
14:51your relationship with her tonight. Ron, in the course of the next 80 minutes, I've got
14:57to have two three-course meals with two different women whilst commuting between an Indian restaurant
15:02and an East End pub that are 200 yards and 53 years apart. Now, trying to fit a meaningful
15:07sexual encounter into that kind of schedule might just be considered pushing my luck.
15:12Yeah.
15:15The boy's tense. It's not a good sign. You think?
15:27Hi. Eight on the dot, you said. You're late. Sorry.
15:33You look hot. Have you been running? Yeah, well, I knew I was late, you know, so I bought
15:39some wine. Oh, very posh. You look nice. Oh, thanks. I'm wearing those stockings you
15:45got me. They look all right. Yeah, terrific.
15:50Come and sit down.
15:55So, what are you cooking for us, then? Well, um, to start, there's MI5 soup.
16:02MI5 soup? Yeah. Best you don't know what's in it.
16:07I'm having lamb chops. Lamb chops? Where'd you get those? Don't you know there's a war on?
16:12Well, the butcher always has a few things under the counter and I just happened to have
16:16a spare barrel of beer at a knock-down price for his daughter's wedding. Ah. I'm not the
16:20only one with contact, you know. I want tonight to be special. Yeah. Um, I'm going to have
16:26to keep nipping out to the phone box at the end of the street. Why? Well, there's a bit
16:31of a flap on at work. They want me to keep in touch. Well, you can phone from here.
16:35Well, public lines are more secure. Careless talk, all that. I won't let it spoil the evening,
16:41I promise. You're going to let it spoil the evening? Let's open the wine, eh? Rather.
16:46I've got a corkscrew in the kitchen. Gary, this wine? Yeah, well, I know strictly speaking
16:54we should have red with dark meat, but I don't think it really matters, do you? Well, to
16:58with the colour, it's German. Oh! Oh, is it a measling or something? I'm going to kill
17:07you, Ron. Who's Ron? Ron's my wine merchant. He's obviously got lumbered with the stuff
17:14and tried to fob it off on me. Sorry. You ought to abort him, he could be a fifth columnist.
17:19No, no, no, he's not. He's just very, very stupid. No, I'm not drinking anything that's
17:24been trod by a nasty jackboot, I'm throwing it down the sink. Yeah, of course. Your lucky
17:32dad's not here. Remember what he was like? He'd have you shot for catching German measles.
17:38Good old rational Eric. I do miss him. Ooh, table looks nice. You're going to have to
17:47get your best china out for me. It's not my best china, it's my only china. A bomb went
17:52off three streets away, the cat went berserk and knocked all the crockery off the dresser.
17:57You can't get my face dresser for nothing, can you? Ah. God, the time. Hope you like
18:08it. It's a mock oyster, actually. Mock oyster? Mock oyster. Yeah. It's made from cod's heads
18:17Oh, mate. Lovely. Careful, it's very hot. No, it's fine. Delicious. Well, I'm going
18:34to have to check in at work, OK? I won't be a tick. Great start. You haven't even ordered
18:46yet. So far, so good. Where did that wine come from? Freshers. Try Germany. Oh, that's
19:10where the music's coming from. Oh, no. Don't you think you should slow down a bit? Yeah.
19:29Gary, you're not, are you? I do. I'm playing footsie. You're not complaining, are you?
19:40He didn't even know he was. Gary, why is one of your feet soaking wet? Oh, yeah. I filled
19:52up the hand basin in the gents, you know, to wash my hands, and I put my foot up on
19:56it to tie my shoelace, and it slipped in and got wet. Reasonable answer. Well, you
20:01never done that. Can't say I have. Is everything all right? Are you enjoying your meal? Yes,
20:09it's gorgeous. Yeah, lovely. Really, really lovely. Oh, have you done that quote for Sanjay
20:13yet? Oh, no, please, don't let me interrupt you. No, it's OK. Give it five minutes, check
20:21with Rowan. So, you wanted 3,000. 3,000. And then just carry that through. Is that all
20:38right? You're joking. Oh, no, all right, not 50 off that, then. I was going to say that's
20:43really cheap, but if you can knock off another 50, that's even better. Thank you. Sunil,
20:52more chicken tikka here, please. Shut up, Gary. You don't look a gift course in the
20:57mouth. Yeah. Oh, she's pissed. What's up, Gary? Don't you like my cooking? No, it's delicious.
21:09I'm just not a very big eater. Well, don't you waste it. Remember what Potato Pete says.
21:16Wasting food's as good as giving it to Adolf. Who's Potato Pete? What? It's like the Christmas
21:27lunch incident from Vicar Dibbley. I'm worried about you. One minute you bolt your food,
21:39now you can't face it, and in between you're rushing to the timer. What are you, bulimic
21:43or pregnant? I'm fine, thanks. Yum, yum. Oh, he's going to have a bad summer tomorrow.
21:58Are we on top of the underground? Is the soup pudding all right? Yes. It's lovely. I wish
22:24every night could be like this, Gary. I don't think he does. Sorry about that. I was listening
22:40to live commentary from the match at Highbury. I suppose it was inevitable that I'd doze
22:44off. Yep. Terrible. I'm a total embarrassment. And I hope to God I'm suffering from chronic
22:51indigestion, otherwise I'm in the middle of a major coronary. Which way are you headed?
22:55Past or present? Present. I've just shared the world's largest suet pudding with Phoebe.
23:00Mmm, suet pudding smashing. Not on top of soup, but double chicken tikka, lamb chops,
23:05potatoes, peas, mutton vindaloo, and bindi bhaji. I mean, there's nothing to you. You
23:13built like a whippet. I've seen more meat on a butcher's pencil. Now listen, I've got
23:20to go back to Phoebe's once more. I think if you're going to the toilet for 15 minutes,
23:24the excuse is running out of gas. If you'll pardon the pun. So I need to switch to plan
23:28B, all right? No, you give me five minutes, then come into the restaurant. You didn't
23:32tell me exactly what plan B entails. No, I didn't, did I? You say you like suet pudding?
23:38Yeah.
23:42Nice.
23:53Oh, at last. Gary, get the bill.
23:55Oh, we can't go now. We haven't had our coffee and our hot flannel yet.
23:59You've spent half the night in the loo. You're obviously ill, so let's go home.
24:02No, I'm fine, honest. I won't be going again tonight.
24:05You shouldn't have to go for another fortnight.
24:09I don't believe it.
24:13Did the end judge itself?
24:16The few minutes we spent together have been nice.
24:18Yeah, a few minutes.
24:20I don't believe it.
24:22You're fine.
24:23How could you do this? I saw him earlier and he said he had to discuss business, but I
24:29said no. I put my foot down. I said, I am taking my wife to dinner. So what does he
24:33do? This tyrant follows us here.
24:37Yeah, Ron.
24:52Yeah.
24:54Yeah, but Ron would have looked like it.
24:57Yeah.
24:59Poor Ron.
25:01I told you I wanted tonight to be special.
25:04It has been.
25:05You've spent your whole time rushing out of here.
25:07I'm sorry, but like I said, there's a flap on at work.
25:10You sure that's not just been an excuse?
25:12For what?
25:13Avoiding me.
25:16I wanted...
25:19I wanted us to spend the night together.
25:21Oh.
25:22Tonight.
25:24Can you guess that's what this meal was all about?
25:27Of course not.
25:28Of course not.
25:29You don't understand women very well, do you?
25:31No.
25:32Doesn't seem to be a particular strength of mine.
25:36Perhaps you're just not interested in me.
25:38Of course I am.
25:40It's all I've thought about for...
25:42Well, not all I've thought about, but...
25:45I've thought about it a lot.
25:48Look, Phoebe, if I have been slow on the uptake, it's because I didn't want to start something
25:52I couldn't finish.
25:54I didn't think you'd have that problem at me.
25:57The reason I've had to keep checking in tonight is because...
26:01we're almost certain there's going to be a raid.
26:03What's new?
26:05We think the Germans might be using a different kind of bomb.
26:09I'm going to have to go.
26:11They want me for evaluation purposes.
26:14And what time can we expect this raid?
26:19Any second now.
26:26I'm sorry, you should have told me.
26:29Didn't want to spoil our evening.
26:31This bloody war spoils everything.
26:33Look, there'll be other evenings, I'll make sure of that.
26:36I even went to the chemist for you.
26:40Chemist?
26:41No need for you to do that, eh?
26:43Why?
26:44Do you always carry a spare toothbrush?
26:46Oh!
26:53All sorted, then?
26:55I suppose so.
26:57Congratulations, old son.
26:59Men all over the world will be taking a bit more of the duvet tonight.
27:02Ron, I've spent the entire evening lying to and deceiving
27:06the two most important women in my life.
27:08How do you think that makes me feel, eh?
27:10A bit?
27:12Married, with a bit on the side?
27:15Listen.
27:17Tonight could have ended in three shattered lives.
27:20But you've managed to sort it,
27:22so that there's been no casualties.
27:26Excuse me.
27:30Hello?
27:37I think I've just become the evening's first fatality.
27:40The voice you hear, ranting,
27:42on the other end of this phone,
27:44is Stella.
27:46Yvonne has just phoned her and told her
27:48how I seemingly dragged you out of the restaurant.
27:51Consequently, I'm going to go through an experience
27:54which can only be likened to
27:56Dante's journey through purgatory,
27:58sitting next to Graham Taylor
28:00on a long-haul flight.
28:03But I'm not like that.
28:05Precisely.
28:07Now, the only thing that will sustain me through my misery
28:10is the knowledge that I have helped others.
28:12So I want you to smile,
28:14go back into that restaurant,
28:17and enjoy the rest of the evening.
28:21You're a good mate, Ron.
28:23Right now, I think I'm the best mate in the world.
28:27He definitely is.
28:29If somebody asked you to print
28:313,000 double-page A5 brochures
28:34with full-colour and laminated paper front and back,
28:37could you do it for that?
28:39Yeah, of course.
28:41If I wanted to go bankrupt.
28:45I'll tell you later.
28:52Oh, wow.
28:59It's been apparent for a little while,
29:02but I think that line towards the end
29:06really sums up Gary as a person.
29:12You're a married man,
29:14with a bit on the side.
29:16I think it's very easy with this show
29:19to forget
29:21that, you know,
29:23because of the whole time travel thing,
29:25and, you know, yeah, it's quite a funny thing and everything,
29:28in reality,
29:30Gary's not a good person.
29:32He's...
29:34He's not. He's not a good guy.
29:38And yet there's something about him
29:40that manages to make him so charming
29:42that you forget that he's actually
29:44a little bit of a piece of shit at times.
29:46You know, he's married,
29:48and he's having an affair.
29:50With the added, you know,
29:53caveat of that affair being
29:5550-odd years in the past.
30:00Yeah, I mean,
30:02had this been
30:04like any other kind of
30:06normal affair,
30:08you'd be thinking,
30:10I'm not rooting for him.
30:12I'm really not.
30:14And I don't know what it is.
30:16At the same time I'm rooting for him,
30:18at the same time I'm not rooting for him.
30:20I almost want to see him get his
30:22just desserts.
30:24Just not a suet pudding.
30:26But it's not likely to happen
30:28unless we manage to find
30:30some way that either
30:32Yvonne travels to the past
30:34or Phoebe travels to the future.
30:36They're never gonna meet.
30:38They're never gonna have, you know,
30:40that revelation of them meeting
30:42and them having this,
30:44you know,
30:46this kind of them finding out.
30:48Unless Gary physically
30:50tells them,
30:52it isn't gonna happen.
30:54So, I don't know
30:56what's gonna occur.
30:58Whether it's more that
31:00Gary breaks down as a result
31:02of the lies and the deceit.
31:04But,
31:06again,
31:08if you try and tell either of them,
31:10yeah, I'm a time traveller,
31:12I'm having an affair, but with someone
31:14of a different time period to you,
31:16they're gonna think it's fucking nuts.
31:18So, I just don't know.
31:20I really don't know.
31:22But obviously we've got the end of this series
31:24and then another, you know,
31:26three series left to go.
31:28So what, three series and a Christmas special
31:30and six more episodes of this series.
31:32So, yeah, at the moment I've no idea
31:34where they're gonna go with this show.
31:36I kind of spoke with the last episode,
31:38maybe go down the route of a
31:40you know,
31:42potential that Phoebe
31:44may get pregnant,
31:46which would obviously throw in
31:48its own set of complications.
31:50Or if Yvonne does,
31:52either of them gets pregnant,
31:54then trying to just
31:56juggle two women becomes
31:58immaterial
32:00in a way, because you're then juggling
32:02two women and a baby.
32:04So, I don't know.
32:06I just do not know where we're going with this show.
32:08But I do know that I'm loving it.
32:10So, join me next month,
32:12when I do my next double header
32:14for Goodnight Sweetheart,
32:16where I will do episodes five and six
32:18of the second series.
32:20Of course, I'll be doing two episodes a month
32:22all the way through to November.
32:24Then it'll be the Christmas month,
32:26where I will do the Christmas special
32:28at some point.
32:30And then the first episode of the third series,
32:32because I've found out that it basically
32:34takes place at New Year's Eve,
32:36so, yeah, that's where we're going to go
32:38with the future of this show.
32:40But I hope you're enjoying it.
32:42Of course, do subscribe if you're new.
32:44Please drop your comments below, as always.
32:46And of course, if you haven't done so already,
32:48please check out my Patreon, where, if you would like to,
32:50you can support the channel by becoming
32:52a member of the Patreon, getting early access
32:54to videos, amongst other stuff as well.
32:56But that's going to do it for today.
32:58So, thank you very much.
33:00For now, my name's Kevin. I'm a geek.
33:02And you've been watching Kevin the Geek.
33:04Bye!