I'm Charlotte Mloud with investingnews.com and here today with me is Doug Casey. He is a best-selling author and you can find him online at internationalman.com and also right here on YouTube. His podcast is Doug Casey's Take. Thank you so much for being here. Great to have you. >> Well, it's a pleasure to be here with you, Charlotte. Although for me here is out on the farm in Uruguay at the moment. >> Well, and for me as usual, I am here in rainy Vancouver. So, I'm glad to hear


you're somewhere with a little bit better weather. >> Oh, it is. Trust me. >> Well, happy new year. We've made it to 2026 and we've got a lot of directions that I think we can go in today. I want to start with gold because that's always of of high importance to our audience. And looking back at 2025, it's had a really strong year, of course. I'm wondering as we look forward to the new year, when it comes to gold, what what factors are you watching most closely?


Is there a single thing you point out that's driving it? Or is it more a confluence of factors at this point? >> Well, for years, for the last several years, I should say, I've pointed out that gold is reasonably priced relative to everything else in the world. suit, a clothes, a meal in a restaurant, a house, whatever. As it got into the 2500, $3,000, $3,500 range, that's where it kind of should [clears throat] be. Uh it's kind of caught up with everything, but now it's at 4500 more or less. So,


uh it's in real uh terrain incognita and is it overpriced? And the [clears throat] answer to the question is that uh I don't think there's any way out of this. corner that these governments have painted themselves into except to um eventually back their currencies and make them exchangeable. Uh there's a difference between backing and exchangeability. Backing is theoretical and they can defraud you on that. But when it's exchangeable, take the paper to the bank, bank gives you


speci. Yeah, I think they're going to have to go to that eventually because you can't have the monetary break system breakdown in a highly interconnected industrialized world like we have today. So answer to the question uh central banks have been the buyers of gold by the official numbers which are not always reliable but still they're indicative for years. [clears throat] Why? Because these central banks have assets. What kind of assets? Well, mainly it's been US dollars. They don't


want to hold US dollars. The US dollar is the unsecured liability of a bankrupt government. So what are they going to hold for assets? Well, they don't want to hold each other's currencies either. So what else can they gold? [clears throat] That's what they've been doing is buying gold. And I think that the price of gold is going to have to go a lot higher um just to get rid of all the dollars that these central banks have. the public is not involved in gold at all yet [clears throat] at all. So, uh this


is uh this gold bull market is coming from a whole different sector than past ones have. And at some point the public will get involved. Uh yeah, gold is going higher 5,000 6,000 something like that this year. not entirely unreasonable, but I I I hate to make predictions when the situation is so unstable and chaotic, but going higher. Yeah. >> Yeah. Yeah. I appreciate it. Is a very uncertain situation right now. And I think I've asked you this in the past when it comes to that public participation element in gold. What do


you think is the trigger that pushes more people toward gold? Because it kind of feels like we should have been seeing that by now. H good point. The public is very involved as best as I can tell with the stock market because of course the stock market is also at all-time highs and by uh all the standard uh uh measures of what's cheap and what's dear. Stock market is grossly overpriced. price to book value, price to dividend ratio, [gasps] parabolic rise, on and on and on. Uh that's where the public is. So the


question is what's going to happen when the stock market goes down because nothing goes straight up and the stock market's riding for a fall. Well, that's my opinion. So I think there's going to be a panic into gold. And why do I think that gold will be the beneficiary? Because, and I've said this many times before, but it it should be repeated many many times again, it's the only financial asset that's not simultaneously somebody else's liability. And when debts are defaulted on, the


stock market's crashing, and uh all this stuff is cyclally happens, uh people will once again rediscover gold. It's not just a pet rock like like uh Warren Warren Buffett famously liked to say. I mean, he was right about a lot, but that's one thing he was not right about or well, he's still alive obviously. >> Let's talk a little bit more about what's going on with the stock market because I think we last spoke a little over a year ago and at that time we were talking about the bubble in the stock


market, what was going on with AI stocks and it it just seems to have continued going. So, what's what's [laughter] the tripping point for the stock market at this point? What are we waiting for here? >> Well, listen, that is a ride that I have missed. I mean, I could have bought a ticket. I I remember, look, I I'm on a couple of Zoom calls with with hedge fund managers and uh guys like that. And everybody was asking themselves, God, should I buy Nvidia now? Should I buy Nvidia? Well, they everybody should have


bought it because it's tripled or whatever since then. and a triple in a year is good. But, you know, uh I don't like to buy something that I don't really understand and has already gone on to a parabolic high. You want to bet it's going higher? Well, maybe you'll be right. But in in today's world, I think it's more important not to lose what you have than to try to make a little bit more. Okay? And there is a mania where everybody's [clears throat] talking about AI.


Everybody's talking about AI and these companies are talking about invent investing not just millions, not just not just billions, not just tens of billions, not hundreds of billions of in in in these data centers and so forth. I I think it's gotten a little bit out of control. Let me uh understate it [clears throat] by saying that. >> Yeah. Yeah, I do agree. I think out of control is an understatement and I'm sure that has to reverse course at some point. So when >> yeah it's easy to get caught up with


these things cuz you know you go to cocktail parties and your neighbor says oh I doubled my money last week on XYZ tech stock or whatever it might be. Well, this has happened lots before and it [laughter] is usually this type of thing starts happening usually just before a catastrophe like in in the late60s this happened and around 2000 that happened and especially with the world financial situation is uh unstable as it is more unstable than it's ever been in the past. [clears throat] Uh I I'm especially


uh loathed to be in the stock market when it's in bubbleicious territory. I think that makes a lot of sense. And so we're heading toward this panic into gold. What about silver? We've seen also I probably should have started this with silver instead of gold because we've seen such a big move in silver to end the year. When you're looking at silver, we know that silver follows gold higher. Is this move silver following gold higher or are there more silver specific factors that are at play driving this


move? >> Well, both. And silver is a whole story. We could do an hour just talking about the the history of silver, both from a monetary point of view and from a from a use a technological point of view. And you know, it wasn't actually so long ago that there were a whole bunch of newsletters that were just silver newsletters. I I think they've all disappeared. Maybe I'm wrong. But um can't you can't be a one-trick pony in the investment world. Uh that's the first mistake that s silver people are


like a a special class of people the people that have always believed in silver. You're not supposed to believe in an investment. Okay, that's it's like you don't love anything that can't love you back. It's silver's silver's like that. Anyway, uh answer to the question is uh I I've always always been friendly towards silver for various different reasons. I own a whole bunch of it. I've accumulated it over the years in cash form, physical form. Only problem with


silver is that if if you're going to have enough of it to be of real value, you got to find someplace to store it. I mean, it's it's heavy, bulky stuff. So uh [sighs] answering the question look silver it's the most reflective the most conductive uh both uh uh uh electrically and uh uh heatwise of all the naturally occurring elements that naturally makes it a high tech element. Another point of view that you might bear in mind is that the annual production of silver is is trivial in dollar terms even relative


to gold. Uh the demand for silver every year is these numbers are very flexible as far as what they count in what column and where it comes from and all this. But let's say there's a billion ounces of silver that are demanded by the market. But there's only 200 million ounces of the stuff that's mined every year. And there used to be huge inventories of silver. The governments, the US government once owned two billion ounces of silver and all the silver in coins before 1965. It's all gone. I mean, it doesn't exist.


There are no big hordes of silver anymore. And because of its unique chemical properties, silver's kind of coming into its own as a high-tech metal. So, uh, answer to the question, yeah. Uh, is silver at a new high where it's going to stay there? Yeah, very possibly. Not a not a prediction, but I'm not selling my silver. I mean, why should I sell it? I'm holding it as an asset, not as a speculative device. So, is it going to 100 or 200? It's possible. I don't really care


because I'm mainly involved in silver other than just having a bunch of silver uh in silver stocks and gold stocks. I mean, I'm not I don't use either my silver or my gold as speculative vehicles. That's not what they're about to me. Uh I treat the gold and silver mining stocks that way though cuz they're very cheap and very volatile and very interesting at this moment. >> Well, in that case, let's talk a little bit more about the gold and silver mining [clears throat] stocks. So, my my


impression for the gold stocks is that they have started to catch up with what the price is doing. Silver stocks probably not so much because we've just had this big price move right now. Where where are you focusing when it comes to the gold and silver stocks? Where's the most potential? Well, there are not that many silver stocks out there. Not that many at all. I mean, I haven't tried to count them up, but uh I'd say that the number of companies that say they're in the gold


mining business or have gold on the on their uh share certificate, although few of them have any gold in the ground, uh probably outnumber silver stocks by about 10 to one, something like that. So silver is a much smaller universe than uh than gold is. But uh yeah, I own some silver stocks and they've done fine. I mean getting doubles, triples, quadruples, quintuples. Uh listen, in a year that's fantastic. Everybody loves that. I mean [clears throat] [laughter] u same thing has happened with gold


stocks. But I'll point out that in past gold and silver, because they usually do run together, of course, uh, bull markets since 1971 when the dollar was, uh, uh, freed use Nicholas's term, from gold. Uh, there have been about five major precious metals bull markets. when these crappy little stocks and most of them are crappy little stocks. They're not legitimate investors don't care about precious metal stocks. They're uh they're too small. They're too volatile. They rate Mother Earth. Uh the native


people hate them. I mean, you got to play with big yellow machines in the dirt. And who wants to do that when you can, you know, move electronic bits on your computer and make a zillion times more money? So, nobody cares about these things and their market caps are very very small. They're not they're not uh small caps. They're not micro caps. They're they're nano caps. Some of them are pico caps. They're so tiny. So, yeah, I think that the public is going to move into them. they're going to


discover them uh at some point and they're going to explode upwards cuz they're they're [clears throat] so volatile uh so thinly held and uh yeah so I'm I'm looking for one more big bull market in the precious metals and then I hope to sell at the top maybe I don't know how I'll figure out when the top is maybe that's when uh slime or newspeak which probably won't even exist by then as magazines. I always figured they they were the perfect contrary indicators. I


figure I'd see a picture of a golden bull tearing apart the New York Stock Exchange on the front cover of one of those magazines and at that point I hope to sell all my precious metal stocks and buy something prudent and intelligent and maybe at that time the regular stock market will be really really cheap and I'll feel comfortable doing that. That'd be a happy coincidence. Yeah, I was going to ask, you know, if you have any thoughts on what could be the next thing that you move into after this this last


push into gold and silver? Any any thoughts? >> Well, will it be real estate? That's always something you got to consider. H maybe not. The problem with real estate is it floats on a sea of debt today. And I don't know where that debt's going to go to. And all the local governments in North America are bankrupt. and they get most of their money from real estate taxes. So, I don't know, no particular opinion on that. And I I speak of somebody for whom real estate's been very very good to me.


Bonds, no, I don't want to own uh I don't want to own a paper obligation in a fiat currency. And uh bonds are triple threat to your capital. Interest rates are going up. uh there's going to be more bankruptcies and the currency uh the dollars or whatever it is are are going to be going down. So bonds are a speculative vehicle. Not interested in them. Uh no, it'll be the stock market for me. Uh, and I don't know what the place in the stock market will be when this magic time happens when I dump all


my metal stocks and buy into stock. I'll I'll find something something looks cheap. I mean, like right now, what what part of the stock market other than the metal stocks which have already gone up, you know, pretty well. I think the cheapest part of the stock market is the energy complex, uh, oil, gas, uranium, and coal. And uh everybody hates oil and gas in particular at the moment. Uh I'm a longtime uranium bull for lots of good technological reasons. I still I think that uranium is going higher along with


its stocks. I like coal which absolutely everybody hates as much as you can hate anything. I mean it's like uh but I kind of like it. Some of these nobody even nobody even knows this. It's, you know, you got you got coal stocks various places in the world that are yielding 10% and more in current dividends selling two or three times earnings. So that's a good time to buy it when everybody hates it and you're getting paid to wait. Uh so I'm looking at Yeah, I look at things like that. But uh the


main thing I don't want to do is I don't want to lose money because uh that that's actually, you know, I think that's underrated as a uh something to keep in mind. Everybody's saying, "Oh, I'm going to double my money tomorrow on the next Nvidia supplier or whatever the hell it is." I think that's the wrong question. I'm I'm saying, "Well, God, I just want to make sure I don't lose what I have cuz that's that's really unpleasant. Missing a missing a double."


Yeah, nobody likes to do that. But losing all your money, no, nobody likes to do that. That's hard to make a comeback from that. >> Absolutely. there is always that that push to have more, but there's certainly the case for maintaining what you have. Let's let's go in some of the directions that you mentioned there. I'm curious to know a little bit more about oil and gas. I think for the sector right now, people are looking at the US Venezuela situation and wondering what that could


mean for the oil and gas sector. So, any thoughts you would share on that note? >> This is an interesting question. Why did Trump uh kidnap this criminal that runs Venezuela? I mean I mean he's Maduro. Stupid guy. He you know just just a zero kind of guy. Okay. So So Trump kidnaps him at great expense and great risk. And the government is still in place in Caracus. Who's going to take over the government? Well, they got this vice president who's running it, who who's no prize, but


maybe a general or maybe the head of the secret police will take it over. And will anything change in in Venezuela? Who knows? Maybe there will be a civil war in Venezuela as one or more of the people that want to be president and their pals fight each other. Who knows? So, I don't at the moment I don't really understand [clears throat] the point of what Trump has done. just capturing this this this one completely. He's a dumb bunny. He's a worthless criminal. So, okay, what's going on


there? Uh the question is it's all about oil. It's not about drugs. I mean, Venezuela is not Now, I' I've been down there three or four times at least over the years. And it's not like Colombia where they grow coke and that's a major industry. Yeah. There's probably drugs that come out of Col out of out of Venezuela. is drugs that come out of everywhere to everywhere else. It's no big deal. So, it's about the oil, I guess. But wait a minute. What's that oil worth? Uh in the uh oil world,


there's lots of grades of oil going from, you know, ultra light sweet crude, which is almost like getting gasoline out of a pump to tar. I mean, lit actually literally tar. and the costs of of mining it and refining it vary greatly. And it's I it's true what they say about Venezuela, greatest oil reserves in the world. Well, that's great. You the greatest oil reserves in in the solar system are probably on Titan, the moon of Jupiter. I mean, but what's that mean? You [clears throat]


can't get it. It's it's it's too expensive. So I don't understand what Trump is doing to to produce the oil in Venezuela used to produce 3 or 4 million barrels a day and of course the socialists ran it and the industry into the ground produces about a million right now. Uh is it profitable? Well, not at $60 oil where we are right now. I mean they're just trading dollars. They're paying worker workers in Venezuela with worthless pesos to to to export it. And if he can't make money in Venezuela on


Venezuelan oil at $60, that's all there is to it. So, I don't understand what Trump is doing. Is he going to get American oil companies to go down there and ramp production up to five million barrels a day? I mean, it's going to cost them billions and billions of dollars to do it. And they're in a politically unstable place, especially after what Trump has just done. I mean, if I ran a big oil company, I don't want to go down there and mess around with that. So, you know, this is like


everything Trump does. I mean, I'm very pleased with his anti-dei stance. I mean, that alone is probably worth the price of ad admission. But when it comes to anything else that Trump does, he's proving himself to be a a narcissist and a megalomaniac. And he he I think he mainly wants to be the most famous man in world history. And he could succeed in that, too. He could succeed. He wants to be the modern Julius Caesar, but it's not going to end well, as Julius proved. >> Right. Right. I I mean I could certainly


see that happening. So Venezuela is still a bit of a question mark. One one thing I've heard said about what's going on is maybe this is a test to see how the world reacts to this move from the US. They see they see what happens and maybe then can make moves on other countries. I know he's been talking about Greenland. Any any thoughts on the merits of that idea? >> Yeah, it's really funny. I mean Greenland has been sitting there forever. Nobody's paid any attention to


it forever. There's only 50,000 people in it. Uh, and most of them are Eskimos. Uh, so, okay, the US used to have, you know, dozens of bases of one type or another there. Now they just have that one. So, I guess Trump can take it over. Well, I guess he can do it. But what what are the consequences of that going to be? Well, it's part of Denmark and Denmark's part of NATO. So, I like to look at the bright side of everything. And the bright side of Trump taking over Greenland is maybe it'll act


towards the dissolution of NATO, which should have been dissolved 30 years ago when the Soviet Union fell. It serves no useful purpose whatsoever except to uh [sighs] except to uh provoke the Russians who and I we can get into this thing with the Russians and the Ukrainians, but uh uh [sighs] yeah, so I think it's going to work towards the destruction of NATO and of course the European Union is going to fall apart because it serves no useful purpose. It used to be a good idea when it was uh a customs union to get rid of


customs and enable free travel between people in Western Europe. Great idea. Okay. Decreasing uh the impingement to the government on your life in those two. But since then it's mutated like a monster and most people are unaware of the fact. Do you know how many people work for the EU in and around Brussels mostly? Take a wild guess. Can you? Most people have no idea. I have no idea. Tell me. >> 80,000 80,000 people that serves no useful purpose at all except to try to regulate French cheese and impose new


layers of regulations and taxes. The EU the EU run by that that horrible person uh Ursula Shewolf of the Shewolf of the EU. It should be abolished. I mean it serves it's crazy. It's it's just grown like topsy and they should go back to a simple c customs union where they don't tax each other and let people cross borders easily between the but you know the the EU is acted actively to destroy Europe itself and western civilization what's what's left of it along with it. So yeah, the good news about Greenland,


which I guess Trump is going to take, is it will act to uh imminentize the escaton in that area. So that's okay. And I guess he's going to go after the Panama Canal too, which is other it's a different situation actually because you know Panama was the creation of the US. The Panama Canal was financed and built by the US. Uh you can see yeah it was stolen from we can go into all this type of thing but yeah he's he's got there's some reason for the US taking that over. What else does he want to take over? Uh


what else has he been talking about? Panama, the Panama Canal, Greenland. Oh, I know. Uh we're we could talk about Alberta. I mean as far as I'm concerned I I love Alberta. That's my favorite province in Canada. always has been. I've spent a lot of time in Canada. I at least live in Canada. Uh so I'm a big fan of Alberta and it is different from most of the rest of Canada and I think Alberta would be way better off if it left uh if it left Canada. And the same is true of Saskatchewan. It ought to it


ought to cut out and leave Ontario on their own and leave Quebec on their own. No more welfare to to Quebec. Sorry. you know, you'll have to make it on your own. And I don't know what BC would do, but you know, Canada Canada's going to break up. No question about it, in my mind eventually. So, that's part of it, too. I think Canada, that's how Canada fits into it. For for Trump to say, "Yeah, we're going to make Canada the 51st thing." That's really stupid.


It would be stupid for the United States because it would uh the US would turn hard left if Canada was combined with the US, but Alberta better if it became independent, not part of the US, but that's a different story. >> Yeah. Yeah. Well, clearly we can we can tell we're heading into a year and years ahead that we're going to have a changing geopolitical landscape. And I wanted to make sure to bring up so for you, you've you've talked in the past about how this is all building toward a


greater depression. So I want to make sure we touch on that before I let you go and how people can prepare. I know you have a a new book that's geared at young men and how they can make moves in in this environment. So I wonder if we can touch on on that right now. Yeah, I I think that the world is look for the last 50 years, it's been obvious the direction that things were going and there have been a number of times in the last 50 years when things could have gone over the edge and almost did. I'm


afraid that this time for a lot of reasons that we don't have can't go into in the detail they deserve right now. I think this is the biggie we're looking at right now. this is that probably so um this idea of the greater depression uh which means it'll be different and uh longerlasting uh and more unpleasant than the experience of 1929 to 1946. Yep. That's right in front of us actually. But rather than trying to change the world, I think it's better to change yourself. And one group of people that are really


in trouble in the West are young men especially. And um you know they're they're they're hated and persecuted and living in their mom's basement playing video games and turning into losers. So a lot of it's the education system and for years uh I've been saying do not go to college allocation at best of four years of your time and a lot of your money and the time is the most important thing because those years between 18 and 22 are the most important in your life really uh


for lots of reasons and people go to college to sit in a classroom and basically not even learn nothing but be indoctrinated with really egregiously stupid and destructive ideas and and pay a lot of money for it too. It's really stupid and everybody thinks they have to do it. So this book anyway the preparation tells people exactly why I said what I said but more important it tells people young men in particular and their parents and grandparents what you should do with those four years of time what should you do it's possible


I'd say necessary in today's world to transform yourself into a renaissance man in effect so that You can you not only know much more than the average college graduate would about academic subjects. We go into all this and how you do it and what it costs, but also we divide the 4-year time frame of college into 16 quarters. And in each quarter, you'll learn something really important about doing stuff in the world. By the time you're finished with it, you'll be a pilot. You'll be a professional


qualified sailor. You'll know how to weld. You'll know how to drive heavy machinery. You'll know how to build a house. You'll know how to be a professional chef. You'll spend a month in uh Florence. Uh learn to be a professional chef. Not that you're going to use it or become Gordon Ramsay, but you could if you wanted to. And you'll have skills that almost nobody else is going to have. uh you'll have the many of the skills of a a lawyer uh an MBA this is better than MBA course all this


stuff uh so it goes on and on but and we show where to go what it costs how long it takes um anyway that's this is a very important book people should go on Amazon and buy it and make sure that somebody who's in high school or or for that matter or grade school or you know anybody this I mean it's it's a question of turning around the culture and the civilization college should be washed away it's a disaster it's a negative value and I'm not just saying don't go to college that doesn't solve the


problem here's what you do instead okay that's the pitch on the book Charlotte so >> well I'm curious to know I know I know it just recently came out but what's the reception been so far have you heard from people who maybe started trying it out. >> Yeah. As a matter of fact, uh cuz my co-author, uh Matt Smith, who I do my podcast with, his son Maxim started doing the preparation when he was 18. Ex. He was our guinea pig. Our guinea pig. He's done he's doing this stuff


now. In fact, [snorts] uh I think as we speak, he's now in the Orient and he's going to spend three months learning to learning Muay Thai in a Thai gym. So this is one of the 16 things. So in addition to everything else, you'll be a competent fighter. And this is important. I mean, if you have to know how to fight, you should. And you know how to use guns and all all there's all kinds of stuff in this uh that you can and should do. So uh answer to the question, it's working and it's


transformed Max's life. uh he has a blog uh about this where you know he monitors himself uh in addition to gaining skills in writing and reporting [clears throat] and stuff like that which is worthwhile skills. Um but lots of other young men that have read the book are doing this as well and they reach out to him and us and they tell him, "Yeah, I want to do this. I'm tired of screwing around and wasting time and being a dope head, you know. So, answer to the question is initial uh indications are pretty good.


Will it change the world? I don't know. Don't really care. I'm interested in individual people changing themselves. The world has a life of its own. >> Well, that's that's great to hear. And I like the focus on changing yourself versus the world because I think that can just overwhelm people if they think that's what they have to set out to do. So, thank you for sharing and I know I don't want to keep you too long, but any final thoughts that you would share with


investors heading into the year? [snorts] >> Well, I hate to say this after gold and silver have both hit all-time highs. Although you should hasten to point out that silver in real terms is still only 40% of its previous all-time high which it hit back in 1980 $50. But um it's a different world now um [clears throat] as far as who's buying and all the rest of this as we talked about before. Uh and the action I think is in these stocks. People don't know they exist. They don't care about them. and if they


learn about them, you know, they're poo pooed and they hate them. So, um I plan on staying long these stocks and you know, I'm picking away at um gold at um oil, gas, especially gas. I like gas more than oil. uh because [clears throat] uh at let's let's say $60 oil uh the energy content of natural gas is three times as great and natural gas is arguably a better fuel much better in some applications. So, especially like gas stocks, world is a washing gas. You got a lot of nice gas


stocks in Alberta, too. Um, and uranium stocks. Um, nuclear power is the safest, the cheapest, and the cleanest form of mass power generation. Uh, so I'm I'm bullish on them. Uh, but other other than that, and these are speculative areas. uh and I hate to recommend speculative areas in a time when at the same time I'm telling people look the most important thing is don't lose money. It sounds like a contradiction and it kind of is a contradiction because the problem is that um with the government and it's not


just the US government which is clinically insane with the amount of money that Trump is printing up. I mean, it's he's he's just gone berserk, especially when the new Federal Reserve guy gets in there. This is this is going to be like Germany in 19 the 1920s. I certainly hope not. But uh when as he does all these crazy things in the economy, you're the average guy is going to be kind of forced to be a speculator just to stay ahead of the inflation and all these things that are going on. So uh I


don't know if you can avoid being a speculator. I don't think you can. So you got to try to get competent at it. Uh, and that' s my advice for how to play a speculative game. >> Well, I think that's a great place to wrap up and thank you for explaining how those those two things that seem different work together. I I totally understand. Thank you so much for coming on to help us head into the new year. This was great. >> Pleasure to see you, Charlotte. >> Of course. And once again, I'm Charlotte


Mloud with investingnews.com and this is Doug Casey. Thank you for watching. [music] If you like this video, make sure you hit the like button and subscribe to our channel. We'd also love to hear your thoughts, so leave us a comment below.