Show
Show Notes
Jen and Katrina share about callbacks, unusual and variety of responses, and change the photo on the wall.
Links to content discussed:
Credits
Starring:
Katrina Charles as Katrina Charles
Jen deHaan as Jen deHaan
Music & Sound FX: Katrina Charles
Set/Video Design & OBS Button Pusher: Jen deHaan
Production: Jen deHaan / FlatImprov.com
Theme song:
Title: WNIS (Weenis) Theme
Written by: Katrina Charles
Performed by: Katrina Charles and the Katrina Charles choir
Executive Producer:
Will Hines’ photo
End Credits:
Music by Patrick Richmond from Pixabay
Special thanks to:
World’s Greatest Improv School (WGIS) (weegis)
Transcript
Life’s too normal and you need a change from something totally expected to something strange. Assigned to go to a. Place where dreams come true. And all we need is you. It’s the world’s. Nerdiest improv show. That you and I as weenies don’t you know? Get your internet connected and your screen aglow. And we’ll make it up as we go. The world’s dirtiest improv show.
Jen: Hello and welcome. This is the world’s nerdiest improv show. Parentheses weeniss. Parentheses weenus. The parentheses are set out loud.
Katrina: And we are your hosts. I’m Katrina Charles
Jen: And I’m Jen de Haan. This is the show where we talk about improv.
Katrina: Yep. And maybe one day we’ll have guests or something.
Jen: I hope we have guests one day.
Katrina: Me too. It’d be nice.
Jen: It’d be nice. Yeah, it would be. I mean, as much as I love our voices and everything, it would be nice to have somebody else talking on here about improv nerd stuff.
Katrina: Yeah. You know, that’s the best part about being an improv nerd is discussing it with other voices.
Jen: Other improv nerds. I want improv nerds on here. The nerdiest people possible.
Katrina: Please, please. More nerdy than us. Possibly.
Jen: Maybe. I mean, that’s a challenge, really.
Katrina: You know, I would, uh, I would watch that. That duel. Yeah.
Jen: Oh, a nerd off an improv nerd off.
Katrina: Improv nerd off.
Jen: A nerd off. I like that word. Yeah. So how’s your week been?
Katrina: Oh. Fine. Good. Yeah. It’s that week between holidays, you know, it’s, uh. I don’t understand how time works. I don’t usually, but this week it’s worse.
Jen: Oh, what day is it? I don’t even know. I have no idea.
Katrina: Yeah, I have not known what day it is all week.
Jen: Yeah, I’ve been like that, but for years. Yeah. Fun times. You know, I was not planning to share this one, but this kind of speaks to the whole not knowing what day it is. Uh, Christmas Eve, I went over to my mom’s place, which is 30ft away from my place, uh, for a great big Christmas Eve banger. A banger almost as big as that intro song that you made us. Uh, yeah, it’s a real banger I haven’t used. That. Sounds like a word that I should not be using at my particular age.
Katrina: Or I think banger is for everyone.
Jen: Yeah, okay. Well, I’ll. I’ll use it. I’ll use it for the Christmas Eve. Christmas Eve. Went over, ate the dinner. Great. Big Christmas Eve party with my mom. And then we’re sitting there watching, you know, the screensaver on an Apple TV, how it sort of scrolls through the different, uh, geographies and stuff. Watching that for a good half hour. Uh, just like looking up. Oh, I wonder where that. Pom pom pom pom pom pom. Look up the facts where that is. And then after half an hour, I’m going like, wow, I never even realized that we’re just watching screensavers for the past half hour. And my mom goes, oh, I noticed what we were doing. And that was all she said. And I’m like, that’s good. And I killed myself laughing the most. I laughed all week and I’m like, mom, you should be doing some improv right now.
Katrina: Seriously, seriously, I think I love the fact that she didn’t stop it. She knew what was happening and she was like, we are, we are committing to this.
Jen: We are. She was she was committed to it. But like fully self-aware still and then just deadpan, just like just deadpan insult me. Oh, I, I notice what we were doing. I was like, oh yeah. She knew how sad and pathetic it was, and I was completely oblivious for a good hour.
Katrina: But did you learn a lot?
Jen: I did actually learn quite a bit. I like, but I now question that because I’m trying to remember any of the facts I did learn at the time, like I learned them, but they’ve all kind of just gone right out of the head.
Katrina: They’ll probably come at the most inconvenient time. You’ll be like, I remember.
Jen: Yeah, at 3 a.m., usually.
Katrina: At 3 a.m.. Yeah.
Jen: 3 a.m. is usually my thinking time. My thinking hour. That is a.
Katrina: Good thinking hour. Mines around like 1230. But that’s because I try to keep it a general, normal human schedule. Oh, it doesn’t work, but I try.
Jen: You try?
Katrina: Yeah, I try.
Jen: So is it a waking up thinking or. It’s just a you’re trying to get to sleep thinking.
Katrina: It’s more of I don’t want to sleep yet, so I’m going to think until I fall asleep, right?
Jen: Yeah yeah.
Katrina: Yeah.
Jen: Yeah. That’s good.
Katrina: Yeah
Jen: Yeah.
Katrina and Jen: Yeah yeah yeah yeah. Yeah yeah yeah
Jen: okay okay. All right. So, uh, we’ve got, uh, this episode brought to us by soup again.
Katrina: Soup! Soup. Our sponsor soup.
Jen: Soup is our sponsor. And, uh, do you know what kind of soup we have this week? I can bring it up.
Katrina: Oh, I think I do.
Jen: Uh, can I bring it up? I’m looking at my buttons. I’m like, I need to color code these things because they’re hard to see. All right, next soup. We have that one right there.
Katrina: Well, that looks like a delicious chick’n noodle.
Jen: Uh, I love it. Chick’n.
Katrina: Chick’n noodle.
Jen: Chick’n. I’m eating the vegan chicken noodle soup.
Katrina: Yeah, yeah. Chick’n. Chick’n.
Jen: Yeah. Uh, it’s fun to. Say it that way. Butter chicken. Chicken. Yeah. Chicken. It feels fancier. Like. Yeah. Yeah. Chicken. Have you ever had a chicken?
Katrina: I have.
Jen: Good.
Katrina and Jen: Yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah.
Jen: Oh, we could do that all day I’m sure, I’m sure our people staying around. Are you sticking around for this? Are you here? Yeah. We’ll see if they’re here. Oh, anyways, we’re having fun. And I guess that’s one thing that we got. All right, well, should we, uh, now that we’ve talked about, uh, chick’n noodle soup being what is bringing you this episode, we’ve got a couple of ads with our non sponsorship. Should we roll those ads?
Katrina: Let’s roll those ads.
Jen: Let’s roll those ads. All right. Here we go. Oh my God. There we go.
Ad one- Katrina: Still looking for the perfect thing to wear to your online WGIS improv class? Look no further than: sweatshirt. Get cold? Sweatshirt. Spill something on yourself? Sweatshirt. Hair get messy fighting a fake lion? Sweatshirt. Sweatshirt. Find one in your closet.
Ad two- Jen: Do you find yourself generally wistful? Rather empty, quite possibly living a joyless life, constantly fearing that you’re missing out. Aimlessly scrolling the internet like this guy, or this one who just finished building a fan site for 1980s sneakers made before he was even born. After ordering bananas and Raisin Bran from his local grocery store, his favorite breakfast, or this guy who just won $25,000 on a scratcher but missed the last bus to his job in the Financial district. Maybe you’ve committed a horrific crime and you don’t remember when or how it even happened. As you weep next to your bed with a bloody rag in the background, or you’re like this person who got so distracted taking a selfie on the upper deck of the B.C. ferry, heading to the horseshoe Bay, and they fell off before they even got to order the Whitespot Legendary Burger, which tastes so much better on the ferry than in a brick and mortar restaurant. Do you find yourself making up stories for stock photos you found on a stock photo site on the internet? It’s time to make everything great again. Hi, I’m Jan de Haan, and I’m here to tell you about improv. If you’re a never improviser, your life could be as empty as the photos on this advertisement, but it could potentially be as joyful as the life of this dog. This dog who just ate a bowl of kibble and took a giant shit before fleeing his awful humans because it was Purina puppy Chow that they fed him. And who feeds a dog that shit anyway? I mean, look at him. The joy of fleeing those crap humans who are never improvisers, so don’t be like them. Obviously it was this person because this person is someone who would buy puppy chow, do improv, and don’t be a never improviser.
Jen: Hello and welcome back. Oh. You’ve changed.
Katrina: Yes. Mm.hmm.
Jen: Just like I changed our chicken noodle soup. Chicken noodle soup. Nice hoodie, by the way.
Katrina: Thank you so much.
Jen: Yeah. Nice ad for sweatshirts.
Katrina: Thank you.
Jen: I’m a fan of sweatshirts. That’s pretty much what I wear. This is a new Christmas sweatshirt from Costco.
Katrina: I’m so jealous because you get the soft inside of a new sweatshirt.
Jen: Yeah, yeah. Haven’t washed it.
Katrina: It’s never known. Fabric softener.
Jen: Yeah. Hasn’t. I don’t use fabric softener. Are you supposed…
Katrina: I don’t either, it also feels like a scam.
Jen: It does. Yeah. All right listeners, if that is a scam, let us know in the comments or something like that. We have our next segments coming up don’t we, on our slides here. All right. So let’s bring us some slides. It worked. Oh the buttons worked. So this is a segment called.
Sound effect: As seen on the internet
Katrina: we have the sound effects. So I don’t have to say it.
Jen: That’s right. Well, we can say it anyways.
Katrina: Yeah we can say it anyway. Um, so anyway, yes, this article I found on the internet this week, uh, it is from cideshow with a c.com. So cideshow.com. It’s about the magic of callback humor, which, uh. I don’t know about you, Jen, but I love a good callback.
Jen: Love it. Yeah, yeah.
Katrina: Um, so this this article tells you a little bit about how to how to do a callback and the dangers of callbacks. Um, so basically the main point is to have a callback to have a successful callback, it has to be a memorable joke. It has to be something, a memorable fact, uh, something memorable about the scene. And then you have to forget about it. So this might also be considered resting the game. So you just have to, like, move on from what’s funny so everyone can forget about it a little bit. So when it comes back, it has that impact. Because if you don’t rest it, um, that’s where the dangers come in. Because you could. Oh, uh, the joke could could die. Yeah. It could become not funny anymore. Oh, if you don’t rest it. Yeah, yeah. Um, and, uh, one of the other concerns is, uh, if you do a callback from, like, too long ago from another show, per se. You could alienate the audience.
Jen: Mm.
Katrina: Yeah. Which you don’t want to do. You want everyone to feel involved. So make sure to try to keep callbacks within, uh, within your show, within the show that’s happening. So.
Jen: So no, like, inside jokes for the audience. Yeah. That would be like an inside joke.
Katrina: Kind of. Exactly. I mean, maybe if you have, like, really consistent audience members, you can do a little bit of a callback, but, uh, just to, you know, try to keep that in mind that not everyone knows where that came from.
Jen: Yeah. Yeah.
Katrina: I just thought it was interesting, and I, I think we could all do a little bit more call backing.
Jen: Yeah. I like a good callback. I like call backing, but I mean, I have to listen to that danger of not overdoing something because I sure love to overdo something and just really, you know.
Katrina: I do to.
Jen: Keep going with it.
Katrina: Or if I forget about it, I just never remember it again. Yeah.
Jen: Yeah, yeah. And then. And then the danger is just. You never do the callback.
Katrina: Exactly, exactly. So there’s a little bit of a challenge there. It’s a little bit of a skill to build, but, uh, I think every, every show could benefit from a little bit more call backing.
Jen: Yeah. So call back everybody do them callbacks. All right. Next slide. So this one is one that I’ve brought, uh, as seen on the internet. I saw this originally, I believe, on TikTok, this video reference. So I went and looked at the original video, which is from this, a doctor, Todd Agouron. And now it’s not about improv, but it relates to improv. And it also relates to the improv article that I brought in last week’s show, talking about callback into shows that were not in. That’s like a callback to the last thing we just talked about. It is did.
Katrina: We rest it long enough? We did.
Jen: Not. Absolutely not. Because it’s sequential slides. Dang it. Oh well. So last week I will explain I love to explain a thing. It was uh, talking about initiations that always work. So getting the same initiation. And one thing that I talked about was actually practicing this in a jam. And despite having the same initiation, we had all sorts of different responses. It was great. Every scene was completely unique, despite getting the same initiation, like, pass me the scalpel, or do we really want to buy this or whatever it was? Um, and this video is talking about how people with various personality profiles, personality disorders will respond to the same thing in completely different ways. So the different initial thoughts of exactly the same scenario. One of the scenarios given in this is finding a, say, $100 bill on the ground. And what do what does each person’s what are their first thoughts in seeing this $100 bill? So it’s kind of like an improv scene, right? You have one game, you have one thing that happens. And how is your scene partner going to respond? Everybody’s first initial thought might be wildly different, and that’s what this video is talking about. So. We’ll add the links to these things if you want to go listen to it, but I found it quite improv related because it it shows us how, you know, our ideas of what’s unusual can all be very different and varied. It’s our responses to something can be very varied. And and I think the improv thing to think about this is really keyed into your scene partner about and watching their reaction to what you’re dropping and it going both ways and really connecting in that way to see like, is this something that you find unusual? Is this, you know, kind of keying into your scene partner about what their thoughts might be on that versus game and unusual. What do you think?
Katrina: I am curious about what you would do if you found $100 on the ground.
Jen: Oh, no. Oh, we’re personality profiling me.
Katrina: Because I know, I know what I do because I did it, and I kind of regret it a little bit because, no, once I was at a Safeway and I, uh, I found just a wad of cash by the check register, and no one was there. So I was like, okay. So I walk out to the parking lot and I count it, and it’s like $200. And I’m like, I cannot take this. So I walk back to customer service and I’m like, hello, I found this wad of cash. And they’re like, we don’t know what to do with that. And I’m like, I don’t know if someone comes and asks for it, give it to them. Yeah. Um, and then multiple people later told me they’re like, yeah, they don’t, they don’t know who had that. So they’re probably just I don’t know what they’re, you know, you should have just kept it. And I’m like, but I would have felt bad if I just kept it. Yeah. So I did the right thing for me. But I honestly like, who knows what happened.
Jen: The money was a tough one because you don’t know I to I would be wracked with guilt keeping it so I know like but then I guess that’s saying something of I’m thinking about myself and I would feel bad, but. Then I would be like, I feel like somebody else might need it more. So yeah. Well, I know it in and hope.
Katrina: I know how I feel. Gets it exactly like I know how I’d feel if I dropped that much money. So I’m like, there’s no way I’m keeping that. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I don’t know.
Jen: And that’s empathy. You’re thinking about what someone else would feel. Yeah, yeah, that’s an interesting question. But there’s a lot of different scenarios they go through in this video, which is kind of interesting to think about. What is your first honest reaction to each of these scenarios? Yeah, yeah, I think that’s why I like improv so much, because you get so many scenarios thrown at you all the time.
Katrina: Yeah, it’s very true. And you learn a lot about yourself. You do some you wish you didn’t know.
Jen: That is also very true. All that reflection we do between improv sessions. Yeah, yeah. All right. Are we ready for the next slide?
Katrina: Yeah, let’s go for it.
Jen: Are these even slides I don’t know if they’re slides. Next slide. Where do the weak word of the week. Yes. So word of the week Katrina what’s our word. Why why do we have a word of the week Katrina.
Katrina: Well, we have a word of the week so we can, you know, expand our vocabulary. Um, and you perhaps use a new word in an improv scene.
Jen: And I think it’s a very, very nerdy thing to be looking out for words that you run across during the week that you might be able to use in a scene. Scene. Yeah. Yeah. I think this is probably a personality profile as well, the type of person that would do this.
Katrina: So there are probably several people watching, taking notes.
Jen: Taking notes. Are you taking notes? We’re personality profiling you right now, Soledad. And there’s lots of different pronunciations for this word. It is a emotion. Um, I believe that is Portuguese and Brazilian. I hope I’m remembering that. Right. I might not be. Please correct me in the comments.
Katrina: I think Portuguese is the language of Brazil, so that there we go.
Jen: That makes sense. Yeah. All right, well, we’ll go with that. We’re improvising. Yeah. And, uh, so this word is, is used in English as well to note the emotional state of longing, melancholy or profound nostalgia for a person or thing that is absent. That’s it. Yeah, yeah.
Katrina: Do you do you feel sauledad about anything?
Jen: Um. Probably I could. I could see, I could see when I’m doing a bad one, I don’t know.
Katrina: That’s true, that’s true. Yeah.
Jen: Yeah. Emotions are tricky. Putting words to emotions can be tricky. It can be. Yeah. How about you?
Katrina: This is the worst I could choose, but, um, Trader Joe’s used to have this maple maple oat milk, and it tasted really good. And then a couple years ago, they changed the formula, and it doesn’t taste as good. And so every time I buy it, I like, have that hope. And then it’s always crushed. Yeah. And, um. I feel like I have saudades over that.
Jen: Yes. Yeah. Now that you bring up food things, I immediately have a whole bunch of saudades. Which reminds this word reminds me of sausage. I keep thinking sausage.
Katrina: Yeah, just take out those DS and add a s and a g s and a G.
Jen: Yeah. Wild berry nibs is number one. And Quaker Oats used to have these little tiny or nature Valley had these little tiny round Nature Valley uh, pucks I used to call them that I would put in cereal when you dampen them enough in the milk the right way. They were absolutely legendary. Fascinating slide scene. Sprinkles from anywhere.
Katrina: Scene sprinkles.
Jen: So why do we have seen sprinkles in our show? Katrina. I’ll give you all of these.
Katrina: It’s a very similar reason to why we have the word of the week. Um, just little tidbits to spice up your scenes. Yes. Yeah.
Jen: It is a good idea to listen anywhere you go for new information. It’s it’s you can, you know, go out there and live life. I hate that phrase. But anyways, go out there and and, you know, do things that are not improv, uh, to bring those things into your scene, be inspired, have pieces of information to share, and you don’t need to go out. You can actually look at media, you can look at the internet, you can look at TikTok, and you can get those facts from anywhere. And that’s what we’re bringing into the show. All right. Next slide Katrina can you share your share.
Katrina: So my scene sprinkle from this week is from the Museum of Science on TikTok. Uh, where they tell a little bit about how NASA. NASA has, uh, launched an asteroid mission, uh, called psyche to the asteroid called psyche, uh, which I believe is in the asteroid belt.
Jen: Same name. That’s not confusing at all.
Katrina: Not confusing at all? No, not at all. Uh, but the cool thing about this asteroid is it’s incredibly dense of metals, and it’s estimated that the metals. Because, of course, we have to put a dollar amount to everything here. Uh, it’s estimated to be about $10,000 quadrillion worth of metals on this asteroid. Um, and it’s also, uh, thought that maybe it, uh, is the exposed core of a failed planet, and maybe that’s how it formed. So. Wow. I thought that was pretty cool. Uh, you can go check out the TikTok at Museum of Science on TikTok. Uh, for a little, a little bit more information, but, yeah, I, I love I love space stuff. I love that we’re out there and exploring.
Jen: I love that too. And I think I’ve seen premises that are almost exactly this idea in shows that I’ve seen about things that are floating through space, and we have to get it because it’s worth so much money, right? Yeah, yeah. I mean, our scenes are definitely real life somewhere. And here on TikTok, it’s real life.
Katrina: It is. Yeah it is. Can you imagine being on that spaceship just going to an asteroid? I mean, it’s I believe it’s unmanned, but yeah. What if it wasn’t?
Jen: Yeah. What if it wasn’t? And there’s your scene. What if it wasn’t?
Katrina: What if it wasn’t? It is going to be a six-year mission, and it’s, uh, expected to orbit the asteroid in 2029.
Jen: Ah, nice.
Katrina: Now we know something to look forward to.
Jen: Exactly. Because we need something to look forward to. Let’s face it, we do. We do. Yeah. But I think is quite, um, interesting is we have some mind meld going on because my thing that I found and we don’t coordinate on any of this, I just get mine for Katrina. I have mine in there. And, um, mine is also involving kind of space. Uh, the world’s first conversation between humans and whales could help us talk to aliens someday, say, scientists. So this was kind of an interesting article. I first saw the reference on TikTok, and then I went and looked for the actual article that they were referencing. And this is what it was, and it was a Star Trek episode. So kind of like very a lot of similarities to your share. I believe it was there was a Star Trek episode that was similar to this idea of underwater communication, but they were using the scientists were using kind of like a a. Uh, beam a sound that they sent out into the ocean at a particular cadence to the that something that the whales could understand. And the whales actually replied to it. And there and matching the same cadence that the scientist had. So they had a 20 minute conversation back and forth with the whales. And the scientists then said, hey, we could maybe talk to aliens this way. And that just I don’t know, because I was like, hey, Star Trek question mark and stuff. This seems like it would potentially have some sort of fact that you could drop into a scene that may be about something related to aliens or conversation. I don’t know, I found it interesting.
Katrina: Definitely. No, I, I can just imagine, like going up to an alien and beeping at them for multiple times and hoping they respond.
Jen: Did you say. Beeping or beep?
Katrina; Beeping beeping because like beep beep. You know like yeah.
Jen: I would like to I would like to hear a scene that was having a beef with each other but only communicated using beeps. Yeah, yeah.
Katrina: I would like to see that too.
Jen: I mean it would be just about as confusing as your, uh, asteroid thing. The asteroid and the asteroid. Uh, both of those being called psyche.
Katrina: It feels like a when those comedy of errors type of things. Yeah. You’re on the psyche. I’m on the psyche. But which psyche? The asteroid or the spacecraft.
Jen: And then you’d have a real beep off about it. Then you’d have a real beep off. Yeah, I’m giving myself a rimshot for that. Yes. And while we’re doing buttons production value, you’re valuing up my production. We got to try. We have. We’re a new show. We got to try. All right.
Katrina: I do have to. Maybe now’s not the time. But I do have to say, Jen has put so much production value into this show. This whole set, this this whole studio. Is that Jen’s mind? Mind craft.
Jen: No mind puke. Mind barfing. Mind barfing. Oh, now’s always the time.
Katrina: So, yeah, I just have to to, uh, commend, um, Jen’s amazing pukey mind because it’s it’s all very cool.
Jen: Well, we’ll commend it now before it all breaks apart. Maybe later in the show. We’ll see if it lasts to the end, and then you’ll be like, I’m taking that back. It broke. What’s our next slide? Submit to WNIS. It worked. I know where the buttons are now. Submit to WNIS. And that will forward to our page. And it has a form in it. And you can submit whatever you want to the show. Links, ideas, criticisms. We will take whatever it is other than dick pics. Let’s not get any dick pics. Can I say that on Twitch?
Katrina: I don’t know.
Jen: Yeah, don’t. Um, but WNIS yes, you can send stuff to us. Uh, and you can find old episodes. We only have one old episode, but you can find it on there. Uh, okay. What’s our next slide? Oh, we’re back to the beginning. So that was as seen on the internet. I think that’s what we have. Oh, we have one more very important part of the show. Let’s take us back here because we have well, let’s first do our plugs because we forgot plugs last week. We completely forgot that we have plugs. I’m looking for the plug button. I don’t even know. I moved everything and I should have I don’t know, I got the sound plugs. Plugs. Do you have any plugs?
Katrina: Yeah, I was just thinking about that too. I’m like, do I have do I have any? I mean, you have you have a class coming up next month or February. You could plug that.
Jen: Oh sure. Yeah. Yeah. February 11th, which is a Sunday at 11 a.m.. I have a character class on doing point of view drills. So if you like doing characters and you’d like to practice getting that character’s philosophy in quickly and efficiently, that’s what we’re going to be doing in that class. It’s on we just so WG improv school.com and you can find it on there under the online classes. It’s online. That’s a plug for it.
Katrina: It is a plug. It’s a great plug. Our first plug.
Jen: Our first plug. All right. I guess I was just about to make fun of, like, it benefiting me, but that’s like what? That’s what a plug is.
Katrina: That’s what a plug is. And when I have something that will benefit me, I will let you know.
Jen: Yes, absolutely. Write it down. So we remember it for this section of the show. We’ll do I’ll find the button. We have a little a nice little graphic somewhere that I don’t even know where I put the buttons, so.
Katrina: Oh, I guess maybe we should also say, um, on TikTok, we’re trying to get to a thousand followers so we can live stream our show there. Yeah. So follow us. I think it’s WN improv show at TikTok.
Jen: W N improv show.
Katrina: Improv show.
Jen: That’s right.
Katrina: We’re not a school. We’re a show.
Jen: We are a show.
Katrina: With a very similar name to an improv school that’s associated with.
Jen: Totally, totally, very random and unplanned, let’s say unrelated. And so that’s leading us right into our next bit. I think if I could find the buttons, I should have like, really, uh, probably practiced the button pushing a little bit, but here we go. Complete muscle memory. Completely unrelated to the school. We’re going to change the Will Hines to.
Katrina: Oh, nice.
Jen: Yeah.
Katrina: Guitar.
Jen: Guitar. Guitar.
Katrina: I love a good guitar.
Jen: Oh. Me too. It’s a good instrument. Very good. All right, so that’s our show. Everybody, thank you very much for coming by and nerding out on some improv stuff. Katrina.
Katrina: Jen.
Jen: Should we roll those credits?
Katrina: Let’s roll those credits.
Jen: Let’s roll those. Credits. Roll the credits. There we are. Credits. Rolling. I know you can’t hear the music, but it’s that 80s buddy cop music. And we have executive producers. This week our theme song is by Katrina. Special thanks to WGIS And we’re going to see all of you, I hope, next week for our episode number three. And we will be planning and, uh, blackout.
Homepage: http://ween.is
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