A few days after their show at Subrosa on April 1st, DJ Carbonate of KZSC sat down with the band Raue at our station. The alternative-grungey two piece consists of lead guitar and vocalist Paige Kalenian and drummer Jax Huckle. Although currently based in San Diego, the band found its roots right here in Santa Cruz. In this interview, you’ll find talkings of tour activities, outward identity, kick drum jumping, tea flavors, and more. While I highly recommend listening to the recording, a transcription is provided below.
Interview Recording
Interview Transcription
Gabriel: I’m here with the band Raue, if you’d like to introduce yourselves.
Paige: Hi, my name’s Paige. I sing and play guitar for the band.
Jax: I’m Jax. I play drums and hit my head on things.
Paige: Jax has his podcast voice going.
G: Raue, that’s your middle name right?
P: Yeah
G: Did that just stick one day or did you have other ideas in the workshop?
P: I had a few other ideas, but I just liked Raue cause it felt like the most unique thing I came up with and it felt simple even though in retrospect it’s not. Like at the time, some of the other words I had felt a little bit more complicated to piece together if you saw it once. I liked how it was four letters and when you search it, it’s the only thing that comes up.
G: Did you predict having to explain the pronunciation a lot?
P: Honestly I guess I didn’t give it too much foresight.
G: Cause I did my research and looked at other interviews you guys did. Each one, the first sentence is “it’s pronounced roo-ay”.
P: Straight up, straight up
J: You gotta drill it y’know
P: Even growing up I struggled to remember how to spell it, cause I knew how it was pronounced from my family saying it. But in school, I have vivid memories of being a wee little lad just not remembering how to spell my own name. So I guess I had the knowledge that it was confusing, but I didn’t think about the implications of that until we were using it as our band name all the time and getting interviewed and having the first question be “How do you pronounce your band name?”
G: Jax, you were brought on right? Cause I read that something fell through last minute and you had a parent put out a message.
J: That was, okay so, my, okay-
P: Rewind, from the top
J: I gotta rewind
G: Origin story
J: Family friend, Paige’s mom, works at Universal Audio in Scott’s Valley. Amazing audio company, we owe our souls to Universal Audio. She sent out an email. I think the description of the email was “Looking for local drummer age 17-21, must be interested in rock music and ready to travel”.
G: They wanted you to pack your bags.
J: I had to get my passport the day I joined the band, fun fact. I got global entry, and I’m still waiting for them to approve me.
P: The government’s suspicious of Jax.
J: Very suspicious, you know I got a lot of alter egos.
P: TSA has some beef with Jax, we don’t know what happened.
J: Something must’ve happened a while ago. Anyways, she sent out an email to I think all the local staff at that company. My dad’s good friend Mark, shoutout to Mark, he also works at UA, got the email, was like this sounds like Jax, forwarded it to my parents.
P: “This sounds just like Jax”
J: “Looking for drummer interested in rock music, that sounds like Jax.” Then I got the email, and I was under a tree with a bunch of friends, doing things that high schoolers do when they hide under a tree. And I got this message from my mom, and I remember I was like “This is my band. This is my band now!” and I was like I’m in this band. I went to audition, and me and Paige were like “Hi.”
P: I remember the first time we talked on the phone, we both had our big kid pants on for some reason. We were like two scrawny little teenagers and I was like “You’re gonna wanna pull up to audition probably around 7pm” and I remember Jax was like “Yeah, my dad will have to drop me off”.
J: I just had my permit at the time.
P: He’s pulling up in the driver’s seat and his dad gets out the passenger’s seat to meet us there.
J: I learned how to drive stick on Highway 9 because of going up to band practice at Paige’s house. Highway 9 is a brutal road to learn stick shift on. Improvise, adapt, overcome.
P: Now you have that skillset in your pocket. He was the only person that responded to any of those things.
G: Unchallenged, made it easy.
J: I remember she was like “Yeah send a video over of you drumming” and I put my phone to the side.
G: Were you psyched out?
J: I was like this is really serious, this is like top quality entertainment that’s gotta go down. I took like twenty videos and they were probably all so bad. I sent them over, and I was like “Lord, guide this message”, like fingers crossed. And she was like “Alright, seems great!” and I was like f*** yeah.
P: Booyah
J: Booyah, clicked my heels.
G: Do a little dance
J: Yeah, do a little dance
G: That’s so cool.
G: You did a talk thing with 100percentrock magazine in 2023. They asked you “What question have you always wanted to be asked in an interview?” and your answer was like “I haven’t done a lot of interviews yet, I have no idea.”
P: It’s hella ambiguous
J: Three years later, still the same.
G: Really, we got nothing? Nothing you wanna be asked? No questions for the questioner? You never pictured “Oh I hope they ask me this, I have this ready”?
J: That’s a good question. I mean we could start yapping about food or something.
G: You would love to yap about food?
J: If you asked me if I’m tryna go to Big Sur later today, I’d be like yeah.
P: Didn’t we talk about avocado? Somehow in one of our interviews, we got talking about avocado toast.
J: That makes sense, we do that. We go on tangents. I feel like it’s good that we don’t have control of the questions that we’re asked because we would go on major tangents and this interview would be three hours long and none of it would air.
P: I feel like it’s hard, cause being an artist, you have to create a brand identity around your soul and your persona and you. At least for me, I struggle to get a third person perspective, even making social media content. There’s this huge push to make lifestyle content, and it feels so hard to be the one to plan that. It feels easier if someone’s approaching me to naturally create a moment versus me putting up a phone.
J: Yo guys, this is such a moment right now bro, let’s all film it on our phones.
P: This is such a moment, let’s all film it, post it, reply to all the comments.
J: Guys I need to put this on my story right now.
P: Anyways, I feel like that when you ask that question, like I don’t even know. I more try to think about how I can ask better questions, not what questions I want to be asked. It also feels like when someone asks you what you’ve been listening to lately and you have to pull out your Spotify, it lapses your brain until you open your phone to look at your listening history.
G: Do you ever second guess yourself and are like “Okay, what do I want to give them though”?
P: Hahah yeah. “Katy Perry? No, they can’t know.”
J: You read the book by its cover and go like “Mm, you’d like this kind of music”.
P: I used to do that but now I’ve hit an era in my life where I don’t give a hoot or holler. Let the people know. Let the people know that I was jamming to. I don’t even know.
J: Tigers Jaw.
P: What did you listen to on the way here?
J: Oh I listened to The Rolling Stones
P: I listened to The Rolling Stones too!
J: And then a little bit of Tom Petty at the end, it was great.
P: Let’s see, I’m gonna go backwards, we got Foo Fighters…
J: See we’re going on a tangent again.
G: That’s so fine.
P: …Stuck in the Middle With You Stealers Wheel, Band of Horses, Tyler the Creator…
G: Is this like the recently searched?
J: I think recently played, she’s going backwards. You know how you can go forward in the shuffle, she’s just going back.
P: …PJ Harvey, Faye Webster, Beatles, Radiohead…
G: Like lately?
P: This is just on the drive down here.
G: Ohh okay.
J: Dang, you’re getting the real update.
G: Real time reaction.
P: Yeah real time. Me thirty minutes ago.
J: Yeah I got my airpods in right now and I’m listening to Mick Jagger.
G: Live Raue reaction, and it’s just that slug.
(Paige strikes a pose)
G: Hahah, would you like to describe verbally what you just did.
P: So everybody that’s listening, you gotta take your hands right now, put them on the side just above your ears, both your hands on each side of your head-
J: We’re all doing this by the way. Here in the studio, everybody has their hands on their head.
P: We’re all doing it, just look shocked and surprised, your jaw drops a little bit.
J: And suddenly you’re a surprised slug, great job guys.
P: And now you look just like us. How to start a band 101.
J: If you’re driving, don’t do that.
P: If you’re at a red light maybe, for just a moment. Put the knee on the steering wheel.
J: I wanna see some surprised slugs in the building.
P: I wanna see the banana slug hitting that emote.
G: We’ll commission that, we have some artists.
G: You touched on social media. As an artist and creator, someone in a public space, you have a following of course. What you say gets heard, what you say gets seen. It of course gets curated, it kinda has to be, can’t really blame anyone for that. What power is there in having that platform and are there any obligations that come with it that you feel?
P: For me, I feel that part of our purpose in the scene today and creating art is to remain human. Like I feel like that’s gonna become the utmost valuable thing with the changes in technology that are happening right now, and I feel like that’s what I try to honor. I try to wear my heart on my sleeve and that’s just naturally how I am as a person. I try to talk to everyone as if they’re already my friend and I try to convey that through our socials. I try not to fabricate a lot of stuff, like I think there is a big culture to having things be really right, but I’m hoping that as the technology progresses and perfection is being chased that we actually come back to being grounded and being human and being humble in all of that and being kind and peaceful. I feel like it’s just part of the experience to learn and grow, and as long as you’re a good person throughout all of that, whatever. People can see the cringey post from three years ago, it’s part of the process. Hopefully that inspires someone else. I think it’s really easy, especially as an artist but I’m sure it applies to a lot of fields, to see someone five steps ahead of where you’re at in your career and be like “I want to be doing exactly that” and you start to gain the momentum and realize they too took time and progress to get to where they are and growth and development in their identity and their creative vision. I hope to remain transparent and try to not fabricate anything. This is just who we are. Even right now, I have been not loving the social media experience. It takes a lot to curate a brand and maintain a consistent identity and keep track of what’s working and what’s not working and how can we film a show and make it a whole new thing that you haven’t seen before and hopefully people like it online. I don’t mind doing that, but it ends up taking so much time that I end up not writing a song or drawing our merch or something like that. Lately I’ve been, to the dismay of my marketing team, kind of a little more flippant of “Well, I don’t need to post every day right now”. I want to get back on that horse. It’s a huge part of creating a marketing campaign today, but at the same time, that’s just how I’m feeling you know, whatever. Whatever
J: It all comes around.
G: Eric Cartman
P: Whatever, whatever, I do what I want
G: You draw the merch?
P: Yeah
G: That’s all you, the little scribbles?
P: Yeah, most of all of it. We have commissioned a few other artists, but yeah like ninety five percent of it.
J: Pretty much anything you buy at a show merchwise was made by Paige, literally everything.
P: Except for like a shirt.
J: Did you do the compilation album?
P: Yeah. The only thing I didn’t draw was the Too Scared to Explain cover. We had an artist do that with us. I had a vision and was like hey can you make this and he was like yes, and that is on a shirt. We have another t-shirt one of our friends in San Diego, I guess she doesn’t technically live in San Diego, but she’s in that circa of cool artists that helped us out to make a shirt with a cat’s face on it. But everything else, that’s me.
J: She cooks up crazy designs while we’re on tour and she’ll just be like head into the ipad for three and half days straight.
P: What do you know about the ipad.
J: What do you know about the Procreate. Dude, she’s like a Procreate wiz. I don’t understand Procreate nearly enough, I’ll sometimes make little doodles on there, but like she knows.
P: Jax got Picsart down, I got Procreate down, just let us know what you need. Jax might be able to make the banana slug- maybe I’ll draw the banana slug hitting the pose and Jax can put the flames behind it and do it up with the text on screen.
J: You ever heard of Picsart?
G: I love Picsart
J: I know Picsart!
G: Let me check my phone.
J: It’s that Chinese editing software where like- yup there it is.
G: Yup, that’s my boy.
J: Yeah, where they make you pay for everything.
G: I recently made a flyer for a thing at my house. Picsart my goat.
P: That’s actually tough. You should see the things Jax makes. They’re pretty horrendous.
G: Watcha got?
P: They lean more on the whimsy side, they’re cool but they’re more whimsy.
J: I made this for our last tour across the US. This is everyone we were touring with.
G: That’s cool, we have a collage. Is that everyone?
J: Yeah this is the whole gang in their appropriate places.
G: Is that Paige?
J: Yeah that’s Megatron Paige.
G: This is so sick. So you need to mentally imagine this, we’ve got the body of Megatron and Paige’s oval face on the shoulders- oh what’s that?
J: It’s in D.C., Austin our photographer is the statue of liberty. This is what I make on Picsart.
G: I want to see some of those on a shirt.
P: There’s some more rated R ones in there. Bro, he just put down his phone and swiped to the next one, and it’s just a fat bottle of vodka.
J: This is our camera man photoshopped into the clouds in the heavens with a big bottle of Absolut.
G: What was this for?
P: Just for fun.
J: Dude, I was just on tour, bored on the bus. Getting inspired.
G: No yeah, but if I did that to my friends it’s cause I hate them.
J: This is Paige.
G: That’s you?
P: Yeah
J: With a mustache on, hella throwback. Anyways, shoutout Picsart. Picsart if you’re listening, give me a free premium subscription please.
P: Jax will sell his soul for a free premium subscription to Picsart. “If you love me right now-”
J: Any generous donors out there right now want to give me that seventeen dollars a month?
P: Maybe I need to download picsart.
J: Dude, I’m saying.
P: So I can pay seventeen dollars a month.
J: Oh.
G: Is it actually seventeen dollars?
J: I wanna say that’s the premium. It’s something brutal. It’s something that’s expensive enough to be like I’ll just stick with the free version.
G: What happened to 2.99 once? Like I buy the app itself and I’m done.
J: Dude don’t even get me started on video games with that, like outta my face with that, and then you stop supporting the servers.
G: What are some examples?
J: I don’t even game, I just pay attention to that.
P: What? No.
J: I play Roblox.
P: Bro, this guy, he’s a screenager. He will be on his Roblox, you should see the like airplane games, his drifting games.
J: I be playing Roblox because it’s so simple. I don’t need to think, I just go on there and I clip six year olds. You try playing Call of Duty these days, it’s just brutal. Everybody just has so much more time-
G: Oh, so you need to go to Roblox and be like “I need to stand a chance against these six year olds.”
J: Yeah, I’m fighting the twelve year olds and next thing you know I’m pretty good at that.
G: I’m in the wrong servers, I’m in the wrong competition.
J: There are sweat Roblox games.
P: I’m gonna tell Austin you said you’re not a gamer.
J: I guess, does Roblox constitute gaming?
P: Bro, you hella game. We tour in an RV so we have a little tv and all he does-
J: When there’s only Texas to look at, I’m on that Xbox.
P: It’s not only Texas, it’s the whole tour he’s on that Xbox.
J: Okay, Vermont I take a break because it’s pretty.
P: Whatever, fake news.
G: Fake news
J: Fake news
P: Set the record straight, Jax is a gamer.
G: Made by AI, don’t trust it.
P: Don’t trust it, it’s all propaganda.
G: In those interviews that I looked at, there’d be a promotional picture. Half of them are Paige jumping all the way up here. How do you do that? I don’t know if it’s just camera tactics, but you look like you’re all the way up there, in like a big ol’ jump.
P: So actually, what I do is I go into ChatGPT- no I’m just kidding. I jump off the kick drum. Austin, our photographer, he’s pretty good at getting a low angle so you can exaggerate.
J: She also puts her knees up high so it really looks yeah. If she was to jump off this desk, her head would hit the ceiling. And you would get a picture of that and you’d be like woah, how’d she jump so high.
P: I did it in a music video one time and it just became the bit after that. People were so pressed when I first started doing that, about standing on the drum kit.
G: Oh yeah, like “Erm, you’re gonna damage it”.
P: “I wouldn’t stand on your guitar.”
J: “Your guitarist was asking to get pushed off of the kick drum right there. Me personally I would’ve-”
P: Yeah, I’m like thank you for your opinion. But when Jax first started playing in the band, he was actually drumming on my drum kit.
G: Oh it was yours.
J: It was her drum kit.
P: Yeah, so I was like whatever I’ll stand on it. It just became a bit, so when he got his kit- I don’t know if this became an actuality, but I remember when you were talking about…
J: I’ll reinforce the kick
P: Yeah I was like make sure you reinforce the kick drum.
G: You were gonna put armor on it and make it more jumpable?
P: Yeah, like inside of it like yeah
J: They built me a custom kit and I was gonna ask them to put a few more plywood on the top part. I forgot to do that, but it’s held up, knock on wood. Remarkably well.
P: I feel like I’m not the most like, I got a light foot.
J: You just can’t start your body building arc or we’re gonna be screwed.
P: It’s over
G: Live on stage, you just eat it.
P: Caved into the kick drum.
J: Paige, if you become 240 lean we’re gonna be f***ed. It’s gonna be over, our kick drum through.
G: Before the show at Subrosa, you said that day in preparation for the show, it felt more relaxed as opposed to other shows at bigger places you said are more chaotic. I don’t know if you wanted to touch on that more. Why did that feel different?
P: There’s some layers to this. I’ve been on a big like health journey- no not really.
J: “Taking my fish oil supplements.”
P: Yeah, it’s always been a priority for me. More recently in my adulthood I’ve been disciplined.
J: Guys, she stopped drinking caffeine. This speaks.
P: I stopped drinking caffeine, and it’s been crazy the difference of my nervous system’s response to our lifestyle. Touring is such a niche thing. I think about how my feet are rarely actually touching the literal ground because we’ll just be in a car for so long. You’ll just be like jittering, vibrating, you’re sleeping in a jittering moving van. Rarely do you get still time. In general, I just have low tolerance and am pretty sensitive, but pounding caffeine on top of that was obviously not productive for me. So this has been the first show that I have not been- I’m also like a huge like I love coffee and I love caffeinated beverages, so it’s really sad for me. I’ve matured and realized that decaf coffee beans are still valid, so I still drink coffee but decaf. And now I don’t freak out before a show.
J: Boom.
P: And I also think it’s cause we were headlining too.
J: There’s levels, like different venues have different energies too. Sometimes you’re on tour, you show up at like 7am and you sit around til 3 to load in exactly. You’re just kinda in a city, haven’t really showered.
P: Everything’s just far enough that you can’t really go and come back in time.
J: You’re like brushing your teeth on the street like a crackhead. Families are walking by, and you’re just shirtless brushing your teeth.
P: You get used to it after a while. When we support other bands, the typical run of show is we load in, as they’re putting their gear on the stage we’re building ours on the side, we get on stage, we soundcheck, and then we have thirty minutes to an hour before we play. And that time for me is always spent like rushing to put my outfit on, get my makeup going. By the time you’re doing all that, you’re rushed and we gotta be on stage in five minutes. So I think it was that at that show, we didn’t have that and we had like three hours to hang out.
J: It depends, sometimes it flip flops for me too. Because sometimes if we’re playing late for a big crowd, there’s so much time to sit and think about the crowd. That’s what happens to me sometimes. I’ll soundcheck and be like this is gonna be the best night ever, everything sounded so good, I’m so excited. And then about an hour and a half after doors, I’ll poke my head in and it will be filled and I’ll be like “oh”. For some reason, my brain then flips from the yay to the “Aw hell naw, run”.
P: “Be free.”
J: “Get out of here, you don’t have to be judged by these people.” And then it’s always fun.
P: Lately for me, I don’t know if you’ve had it, but after doing so many shows, and granted I think this will probably change as we level up, but my stage fright has changed from a mental dilemma to a literal physical. Like my body reacts to it, but my brain is fine and not nervous.
J: Yeah, you know you’re gonna be fine.
P: I can feel it in my muscles and stuff, that I’m kind of a little anxious. But my mind and my spirit’s all happy and content to walk on stage. But I’m sure that will change as we hopefully play bigger venues and tier up more.
G: Only way is up.
P: Always have room to grow.
J: I want to play a venue so big I have to puke before I play.
G: Okay.
P: Okay. Cool story bro.
G: My show, Soda Tab, it’s based on how every week we pick a different drink to base the playlist off. This week’s gonna be your week, so what drink do you think symbolizes your sound, who you are, your band? What’s your spirit drink?
P: Are you thinking what I’m thinking?
J: I think I’m thinking what you’re thinking.
G: Ooh are we trying to lock in mentally?
P: Is it mint flavored?
J: Yes! This has probably already been nominated, most definitely.
P: I’m sure, especially here in Santa Cruz.
J: Wait, you can guess.
G: Mint flavored? That threw me off.
J: C’mon, you go to the school that it reigns on.
G: Is it one of many flavors?
P: Yeah.
J: It is one of a line of many flavors, they’re always adding new ones, and getting quirky with it.
P: Yellow can.
G: Is it Yerb?
J: The Yerba Matte! Mint Yerba Matte, Mint-elation
G: Mint-elation, alright.
P: Enlighten-Mint.
G: Enlighten-Mint, that’s it.
J: Shout outs to Enlighten-Mint, shout outs to Yerba Matte.
P: I feel like it’s like cool and kind of mysterious, but it also feels good…
J: It’s familiar but something new.
P:… it’s not a kiki, it’s a boubou, you know what I mean.
G: Oh, like kiki bouba.
P: Yeah, still boubou but cool and mysterious a little bit, but approachable. Approachable, digestible…
J: And delicious.
P: Yeah, refreshing.
G: I’m gonna unfortunately have to say I don’t like the mint.
P: Do you like the orange one?
J: Ohh. How do you feel about the lemon one?
G: I haven’t had the orange one. I like the berry, big berry fan.
J: Ah, a Rebel Berry person.
P: Try the orange one.
G: I’ve tried the peach before.
P: What I love about the mint…
J: Peach? The zero calorie ones are like eh.
P: I like the mango one.
J: Oh the mango one, Mucho Mango? Not too bad.
P: What I like about the mint is the actual flavor of the tea and not necessarily the mint essence around it, and I feel like the other ones don’t always have that, but the orange one does and it’s without the mint. So maybe if it’s the mint that’s throwing you off, try the orange one.
J: The orange is incredible and so is the lemon.
G: It might be, it’s weird and it stays in my mouth and I don’t know if I like that. I don’t know, and I don’t want to be slandering y’all’s spirit drink.
P: No it’s okay, to each their own taste.
J: That’s alright, it’s whatever yerb floats your boat.
G: Last one. You have a time machine, you go back ten years ago. You get to tell ten years ago yourself something.
P: Eleven years old. How old were you? Four years?
J: Ten. I’m four years old haha.
P: “I’m four years old.” “You are the youngest person ever.”
J: Hahah. Okay, ten year old Jax meets twenty year old Jax who needs to tell him something.
G: You get to tell them something.
J: Oh I get to tell them something.
G: And since this is such a broad scope, you can’t just be like “Invest in crypto”.
J: “Buy bitcoin, buy bitcoin”
P: “Make sure to put a deposit on that house right now, the market’s gonna crash”
J: “Put a hundred dollars a month into the S&P 500”
G: But musically, you get to tell them something. It could be advice…
J: Can I give them a Spotify playlist?
G: Sure.
J: I’d give him a playlist. I’d be like “Boss up now.”
G: “You gotta get started, you got some homework.”
J: Yeah, homework. Cause I was listening to crap when I was ten. I just had a Spotify account, and this was beginning algorithm of Spotify when they really wouldn’t show you new things, it was just whatever you look for. No wait, at that point I had an Ipod and it was all my parents’ music. Which is a lot of good music, but I think there was a lot of expansion to be done, which I’ve done over the last ten years. But it would’ve been nice to get the jump on it.
G: What about you, Paige?
P: What grade of school are you in when you’re eleven?
J: Fourth?
G: When you’re eleven? I think eighth grade is like thirteen.
P: So sixth grade?
G: Yeah. Cause I think you’re either thirteen or fourteen in eighth grade. I forget whether I was fourteen going into high school.
J: I feel like fourteen fifteen is freshman year.
G: Yeah, so somewhere around 6th or 5th.
P: I don’t know. I don’t know if I’d want to disrupt what I had, I kinda liked it. I was a weird emo, My Chemical Romance, Green Day, Gorillaz, like I don’t know if I would disrupt that process cause I feel like it was very formative.
G: What about advice though? Like “you need to practice more”.
J: Yeah, you could be like you’re not a dog.
P: I don’t know. Cause I loved music, I knew I wanted to be an artist in some capacity, I knew I probably wasn’t gonna go to college. But I wasn’t really like “I’m gonna start a band, I’m gonna…”. That was very formative stages of my love for music happening. I was watching Green Day and being like I want to be like Billie Joe Armstrong when I grow up. And I don’t know if I’d want to disrupt that process because I think it was exactly what I needed it to be for me. I’d go up and be like “Yeah, keep it up”.
J: You gotta be like “Ay you know Dave Grohl? We met Dave Grohl, we did it.”
P: Exactly. Probably words of encouragement, I don’t know if I’d change anything.
G: Yeah, words of encouragement. “You’re doing good, kid.”
P: Yeah, “Keep it up you little weirdo.”
J: I guess you have to be like “Buy bitcoin right now”.
P: “Consider investing”
J: “Yeah you’re doing great kiddo, by the way invest some money”
G: Thank you for coming, any parting words?
P: Gooodbye
J: Thank you for having us. Thank you for listening to our probably interesting sound bytes. Hope you enjoy the music, hope it connects with you like a mint Yerba Matte. Live laugh love.
P: If you don’t like mint Yerba Mattes, maybe a different one.
J: Yeah, whatever Yerb, I just hope it reminds you of us. And if you don’t like caffeine…
P: I’m sorry
J: …maybe a nice La Croix.
P: La Croix? We can do better than La Croix.
J: McDonald’s Sprite.
G: Hah. Well alright.
J: Hell yeah.
This transcription has been edited for readability.
