
Earthquake Terror
Last night I was in an earthquake. I was laid in bed reading my [book](https://www.amazon.co.uk/Slash-Autobiography/dp/0007257759/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1204107905&sr=8-1) and suddenly the room started shaking, everything rattling and my bed shaking from side to side. It lasted about 3 seconds but was quite freaky. Which exotic location was this?
…*Wolverhampton*.
[No tell of a lie](https://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/7266136.stm).
An emergency fund has been set up to send blue pop and fish scraps to the devastated area. Thankfully it looks like the quake will have not affected the pork scratching industry, and pig snacks will continue to be distributed across the nation. Phew.

LugRadio Birthday Drinks
Just a quick note – the chaps on the show (Aq, Adam and Chris) and I are heading out with ex-presenters Matthew Revell and Ade Bradshaw for a few celebratory birthday drinks this Friday (29th Feb). Everyone is welcome.
We will meet at 8pm at The Varsity in central Wolverhampton (address is Stafford Street, Wolverhampton, WV1 1LZ). If you can get along, let us know.

LugRadio – Four Years Old Today
[DIGG](https://digg.com/linux_unix/Lug_Radio_Hits_4_Years_Old)!
Well, today [LugRadio](https://www.lugradio.org/) turns 4. Quite a roller-coaster it has been too.
Just over four years ago, in the far corner of The Moon Under Water pub in Wolverhampton, we hatched the idea of LugRadio. For a while I had been thinking of doing on online radio show about Open Source, and when Matt Revell joined Wolves LUG, he mentioned he had had thoughts of doing an online radio show too. We roped in a few loud characters from Wolves LUG (namely Aq and Sparkes), and LugRadio was born. It would be a few months before we finally got round to recording our first show in my tiny home studio in my house. Although my home studio was reasonably kitted out, it was nothing compared to the current setup – we were using a cheap multi-tracker running on a PC, four drum mics (with socks as pop-shields), and all four of us crammed into an extremely small space. The first show was 22 minutes and 38 seconds long and was frankly…rubbish by today’s standards, but at the time I think it genuinely brought something new to the Open Source community, and the core LugRadio formula was there in its rawest form. Knowing we could not afford to distribute the shows, we concocted a devious scheme of allowing our listeners (assuming we would *get* listeners) to mirror the show and therefore share the bandwidth hit. That system is still in place now, and a typical show will have 15+ mirrors pumping out shows to an estimated 20,000 listeners.
We were all pretty nervous if LugRadio would go anywhere; we figured it would either generate some interest or really piss some people off and last only a few shows – we knew the recipe would be somewhat controversial for some people. In fact, in the early days, I was a full-time freelance journalist, and I will never forget going to karate with this deep uncertainly about whether LugRadio would be a wise idea for my career. At that point, my work was starting to become fairly public (due to my magazine work), but my voice was always carefully written, edited, crafted and refined before it ever went to the editor – LugRadio however, was balls-to-the-wall frankness, largely un-edited and up-front. As I mulled on this over a few days I came to the conclusion that I am my own person, and I should never hide my personality; I figured that as a journalist, and eventually as an advocate and community manager, being frank and truthful with people is essential, not optional. Fortunately, LugRadio has had the opposite effect and helped grow all of our careers, as opposed to hinder them.
We are all amazed at where LugRadio has gone in the last four years – none of us ever expected it to grow like it has. There are many milestones that have freaked us all out – people who we respect listening to the show, showing up at conferences all over the world and people saying they like the show, winning a marketing award, topping magazine reviews of podcasts – each of these was a huge surprise as we have always seen the show as fundamentally four loud blokes rambling on in a room; our benchmark has always been other shows, and we have always felt somewhat amateur and still do to this day. To see formal recognition like this is a very strange experience, but a huge buzz too.
The community that has grown around the show is stunning, and it always amazes us that we have such a thriving community and importantly, a culture that has been defined around the show in the [forums](https://forums.lugradio.org/), [planet](https://planet.lugradio.org/), [facts](https://planet.lugradio.org/facts/), [quotes](https://quotes.lugradio.org/index.cgi), [clan](https://clan.lugradio.org/index.php), `#lugradio` IRC channel, and with [hashlugradio](https://planet.lugradio.org/hashlugradio/). People contribute to the show in many ways – we have nearly 1000 members on the forums, and around 100 people constantly in `#lugradio` on Freenode, and people constantly contributing emails and ideas to the show. The emails segment in the show has always been my personal favorite segment – it is really great to have some fun with the emails people send in, and we get some truly interesting and amusing mails. One thing I love about our listeners is that they don’t take themselves too seriously and are more than happy to put the boot in where required – it always provides fun and exciting content. Our incredible community has helped with all aspects – the content, the website, the system administration, the mirroring, the promotion and more.
Thanks must also go out to the 100+ interviews that have been conducted in the last four years, and some of the frankly bizarre questions we may have asked people – these include *Simon Willison, Quim Gil, Lennart Poettering, Rob McQueen, Christian Tismer, Niall “digitaldeath” O’Brien, John Alfred Knottenbelt, Alan Cox, Sean McGrath, Greg Kroah-Hartman, Adam Williamson, Havoc Pennington, Colin Walters, Will Stephenson, Sacha “Sago” Goedegebure, Alexandre Juillard, Gavin Henry, Lee Jordan, Jeff Waugh, Miguel de Icaza, Sven de Marothy, Aaron Seigo, Mike Hearn, Seth Nickell, Kevin Carmony, Michael Meeks, Ralph Giles, Edward “lamb-burning surrender monkey” Hervey, Ryan Quinn, Henrik Nielsen Omma, Carl Worth, Joe Shaw, Paul Leonard, Adrian Keward, Paul Sladen, Caroline Yates, Jonathan Riddell, Maria Blackmore, Hubert Figuere, Alex Hudson, Aquarion, Schwuk, Digit0, Mozrat, Richard Allan MP, Howard Berry, Russ Phillips and Jen Phillips, Mark Shuttleworth, Dave Camp, Yannick Pellet and Carlos Guerreiro, Ian Brown, Sarah Ewen, Greg Mancusi-Ungaro, Ian Wilson, John Leach, MrBen, Adam Leventhal, Philip Copeman, Bill Hilf, Jeremy White, Jacob “jimmac” Steiner, Dave “pig-carrying Irishman” Neary, Chris Messina, Simon Phipps, Timothy Miller, Cliff Brereton, Jeremy Katz, Matthew Garrett, Michael “mdk” Dominik, Ted Haeaeaeaeaeaeagear, Rory McCann, Matthew East, Gareth Bowker, Mirco MΓΒΌller, Aaron Bockover, Robert Love, Luis Villa, Bastian Nocera, Philippe Normand, Jan Schmidt, Graham Taylor, Justin “juski” Hornsby, Peter Hollingsworth, Justin Davies, Cory Ondrejka, Sava Tatic, Stephen “SheepEatingTaz” Garton, Pia Waugh, Scott James “Three Shot” Remnant, John Cherry, Eric Raymond, Alan “Popey the sailor man” Pope, Matt Wilson, Andrew “spline” Lewis, Chris DiBona, SteΓΒphane Marchesin, Mickey Lauer, Wouter van Heyst, David “tyrion” Dolphin, Christian Schaller, Becky Hogge, Ian “Howlin’ Mad” Murdock, James Governor, Matt Lee, Chris Jones, Jeremie Zimmerman, Neuro, Branden Holtsclaw, Bradley M. Kuhn, Zeth Green, Barbie*…
Of course, LugRadio has also spawned [LugRadio Live](https://www.lugradio.org/live) which has seen three UK shows (*2005, 2006, 2007*) and the up-and-coming [LugRadio Live USA 2008](https://lugradio.org/live/USA2008/) and [LugRadio Live UK 2008](https://lugradio.org/live/UK2008/). We delved into and analysed the ethos and formula behind the audio show and worked to convert into *conference form* and every LugRadio Live has has been an utter blast. Particular thanks must go to the people who believed in LugRadio Live back in 2005 when we had no reputation behind us – and specifically to our good friends at [Bytemark Hosting](https://www.bytemark.co.uk/) for supporting us *every* year. Two particular things stick in my mind with LugRadio Live. Firstly, I will never forget in the build-up to the first LugRadio Live – Aq and I would have lunch together in Birmingham to discuss and make plans, and we were both hugely terrified that no-one would show up. We came to the conclusion that if around 60 people attended, we would be happy. When it got to the big day, we had over 200 people attend in our tiny little venue. We were stunned. The second memory was the unbelievably heartening feeling that ran through my veins when we ran the 2007 event – we had over 12 crew (all LugRadio fans and volunteers) get to the venue at 7am and within minutes of us getting in, *every single crew member* was chipping in, working hard and doing their best. With all of the crew adorned in yellow t-shirts, it was like a pack of animals dispersing – they shot out across the venue and started constructing the entire event in two hours. With the months and months of build up, stress and tension that we had put in, seeing the crew put in every ounce of energy they could that weekend, was simply stunning.
I am so proud of what LugRadio has gone onto achieve – we are not the most insightful, we are not the best produced, we are not the funniest, but I am hugely proud to see the sheer amount of content around LugRadio and LugRadio Live, and every bit of it has been entirely volunteer based, done in spare time, fueled by caffeine and late nights. To be honest, we were half-expecting that the energy from the listeners and us would wain after the first year or so, but four years on, it is just as exciting as ever – LugRadio would be nothing if it were not for our incredible listeners. Thank you everyone for sticking with us. π
I would love to hear people’s fave memories from the show, LugRadio Live or anything else – head over to [this forums thread](https://forums.lugradio.org/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=3954) to add yours. π

Season 5 Episode 12
*Can’t see the vid, click [here](https://blip.tv/file/686565)*
[LugRadio Season 5 Episode 12](https://lugradio.org/episodes/95) is out. It features a royal Chris kicking, discussion of Open Source celebrity, results of the [Pimp My LugRadio](https://lugradio.org/pimpmylugradio) competition (of which the above video is one entry), a [brand new competition](https://lugradio.org/hat/), discussion of [LugRadio Live USA 2008](https://lugradio.org/live/USA2008/start) which of course has [registration open](https://lugradio.org/live/USA2008/register).
Bring it on, and babble about it [here](https://forums.lugradio.org/). π

February 2008 Ubuntu Report
I am pleased to announce that the February 2008 Ubuntu community report [is out](https://wiki.ubuntu.com/TeamReports/February2008)!
As well as a range of general Ubuntu team reports, this report is pumped with a stack of [LoCo Team](https://wiki.ubuntu.com/LoCoTeams) reports too! Thanks for all teams who contributed.
If your team is not contributing to the monthly reports, see [this page](https://wiki.ubuntu.com/BuildingCommunity/TeamReporting) to get involved – it is great exposure for your team and genuinely useful for the wider community. π

Open Music Required
At LugRadio Live in the UK, we traditionally play a lot of rock music in-between talks – it keeps the atmosphere loose and fun. With [LugRadio Live USA 2008](https://lugradio.org/live/USA2008/start) on the horizon, and well aware of the dictatorship that is the RIAA, I am keen to find a collection of good rock and metal that is suitable for legal public performance at LugRadio Live USA 2008. As such, musicians, I am looking for your help here – please add a comment on this blog entry pointing to bands and music that produce music licensed that will allow us to publicly play it at the event.
The kind of music we are looking for is good-time party rock and roll, like AC/DC, Beastie Boys, Rage Against The Machine etc, but also heavier music and metal is very welcome too. Get those suggestions in – this is an excellent way to get your music played at one of the premier Open Source events in the USA. π
Oh, and don’t forget [registration for LugRadio Live USA 2008 is open](https://lugradio.org/live/USA2008/register)!

Wine Tasting Approach To Death Metal
It is fairly well known to readers of this blog that I like metal. This is no surprise. And it is fairly well known that many people think metal is just a noise; a collection of angry individuals coming together with more of an emphasis on volume than artform. Of course, this is crap. Although I am not expecting anyone like appreciate the interests that I have, all I expect is that people appreciate that creativity exists in places that they may not admire. In the same way, I am not a huge fan of Anime, but I recognise that a huge amount of art and imagination is present in that artform. And a huge amount of tentacles. π
One style of music I am a particular fan of is *Death Metal*. There are in fact many forms of metal out there, and death metal is on the more extreme side – death metal is very much about energy; producing music that is laced with excitement, like a chugging train shooting through a sleepy train station. the other aspect of death metal is that it is intensely technical. This technicality on the guitar and bass front is perfectly demonstrated by [this video from Cannibal Corpse](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QOb6JSQd-Qw), and for the drumming side of things [this video from Derek Roddy](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ehxkUVaWvI) details the level of physical dexterity required in the artform.
Aside from the technical chops going on, what I really enjoy in many death metal songs is how a solid death metal band can architect a song to go through variations in theme and texture, with so much going on at any one time – in musician terms this is known as an *arrangement*, and writing good arrangements is incredibly difficult, and only comes with good experience. To demonstrate what I am talking about, I have picked a few of my favorite examples of the genre and explained what runs through my mind when I listen to them – I admire each of them for the innovate arrangements and techniques the bands use. Of course, other people have their own examples, and this may be completely uninteresting to the masses, but I am sure some of you will see new things when listening to the songs – we all interpret music our own way, this is my way.
So, onto the songs:
* All Shall Perish – The True Beast (from *The Price Of Existence*) – [YouTube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gCFM4TPVv6s) – I absolutely love this song. As soon as it kicks off, you hear a ripping pig squeal (this is a common death metal vocal style) and simple yet intense drums that roll the guitars along, sending heads spinning from the get go. As the vocals come in, the band begin to chug, but still maintaining a very simple, borderline predictable pace. Then, as the pre-chorus kicks in, one of the trademark All Shall Perish booms brings in some half-time drums and the guitars fatten up, providing a thicker texture to grip onto. From this point onwards, the tune sets into a definitive Hatebreed-esque groove, and you begin to tap your feet. The groove continues to refine and grow and the drums lighten up, with short stabby guitars kicking out the groove even further. the song evolving with each 20 seconds. Although the groove is simple and definitive, the drums are textured with little splashes and crashes thrown into the mix and tom rolls that define the excellent execution of this impressive drumming. The song continues to wedge into even more groove, with the drums becoming even more randomised and satisfying to listen too. Midway through the song, the band come to a halt, guitars ring out and we hear an incredibly percussive set of drum fills that don’t rely on hammering the hell out of the drums, but are instead sparse, and seemingly random, but clearly well thought out. With the trademark All Shall Perish echoey revolution-esque shout, the band set into one of the fattest grooves I have heard, with the drums again incredibly random and complex, the guitars simple, and the whole sound just oozing perfection in execution. The off-time china crash thrown into this part of the song gives it a percussive regularity within all the madness. All Shall Perish are one of the most promising technical death metal bands out there on the circuit, and every aspect of their sound is incredibly well written, clearly drawing from experience and producing some incredible musical textures. This song is a great example of how they take the listener through a journey – from the all out thrashing at the beginning, right through a series of levels, and onto an incredibly groovy, accessible, satisfying conclusion.
* Anata – The Great Juggler (from *The Conductors Departure*) – Where I find Anata a fascinating band to listen to is that they have carved out an incredibly unique style, that extensively uses dissonance and harmony to produce music that can be fascinating to listen to, and incredibly emotive at times. I have no idea what they put in the water in Sweden to produce such incredibly unique music, but they need to produce more of it, for Anata are bloody brilliant. The Great Juggler is an excellent example of an Anata song, filled with plenty to get your teeth into. When I listen to Anata, I often find myself zoning in on the drums, and this song is no different. The song kicks off with a simple beat, but with the random little musical textures thrown in that Anata are known for. In come the guitars with a fat, yet unexpected riff that keeps your attention focused, then the song cuts back, changes page and in we go with the full band thrashing. The thrash then goes through two levels of simplification, the drums setting the pace effectively. The song then changes pace totally, hitting you with a satisfying dissonant guitar sound and deliciously machine-like drums that accentuate it, with plenty of off-timing to throw your mind into a frenzy. Nearly a minute and a half in there has been no vocals, just a satisfying musical progression, but then the vocals come in, nice and simple, matching the rhythm. As the chorus beckons, the song takes a melodic, yet still heavy and uncompromising turn, the drums adding pace while the guitars lift you up. Back to the verse the song moves forward, and comes the vocals with the chorus, which add to the emotion of the section. The chorus then grows, using harmony to raise the pressure and then back to the intro riffs, as if the song is moving back in time; it is satisfying getting to hear those changes earlier in the song again, and a third verse and chorus combination, and the song takes us through these familiar steps before drawing to a close.
* Nile – Lashed To The Slave Stick (from *Annihilation Of The Wicked*) – [YouTube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7J5YdDoppoc) – Nile are well known for producing pretty brain-crunching death metal, with their ultra low-tuned guitars, and thundering drums. Complete with the incredibly well researched Egyptology lyrical content, the band manage to kick you in the balls and conjure up eerie, ancient visions while doing so. Lashed To The Slave Stick is a pretty accessible song from the Nile back catalogue, and demonstrates their musical prowess effectively. Kicking off with a satisfying, thrashy rhythm, with an eastern feel to it, the drums feel particularly satisfying to listen to – listen to how the snare randomises through the guitars as the rhythm grows and expands, with lots of little cymbal splashes and crashes thrown in to add texture. I love it how the china is used to lighten up this segment. Before the verse kicks in, we get the trademark Nile eastern vibratos on the guitars. As the vocals kick in, try to listen to the lyrics, his vocal style sounding like a beast from years ago. The chorus feels particularly interesting to listen to, and is one of my favorite parts of the song. The song then switches on some incredible, exotic ringing out guitars, again a popular device in a Nile song. The song then picks up the pace, becoming slightly mad, clearly marking a change in the story, before it flips back to our familiar post-chorus ringing out. As the songs draws to a conclusion, we get another chorus, with some eerie echoey screams over the top – concluding with a reverse vocal effect. Incredible work by an incredible group of musicians.
* Cannibal Corpse – Death Walking Terror (from *Kill*) – [YouTube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r6XUteAxFV0) – Cannibal Corpse are easily one of my top five death metal bands, and always provide a satisfying grindy sound. The most definitive part of the band for me is George “corpsegrinder” Fisher’s vocal style. Though mono-tonal in pitch (he basically has two sounds – high and low), his talent is in how he rhythmically crafts his sound – his voice is less of a melodic device such as with normal singing, and more of a rhythm instrument and is incredibly percussive. Cannibal Corpse are an incredibly technical band, with insane amounts going on, much of it unfortunately lost in the mix, but Death Walking Terror is all about simple, flat-out chugging. The song kicks off with a low sounding chug as the band builds together, and them bam! the band drops the key down a few notches to an awesome, grindy, low, guttural sound. Fisher kicks in with his rhythmic vocals and we have an awesome sound chugging along like a train. As the chorus kicks in, the band provide a little more variety, but then it is back to basics – the chugging train of the band moving along – this song is about simple, fat, chugging. After a little while the songs kicks up a notch and provides a familiar Cannibal Corpse flaying at speed, before lightening the pace with a driving energy behind the technical guitar playing.
* Decapitated – Day 69 (from *Organic Hallucinosis*) – [YouTube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kIB9mSbD67k) – You can listen to Decapitated and take much away, but for me there is one primary area to listen for – the drums. Vitek, who very sadly [recently passed away](https://archivedblog.jonobacon.com/?p=1085) in a tour bus accident, has long been my favorite drummer for his phenomenal, machine-like double bass drumming, it really does walk up behind you and kick you square in the spuds with its fat, fervent sound, perfectly executed. The beginning of this song is a perfect example of Vitek in full form. Off it kicks with blasts of double bass and plenty of little splashes and other textured cymbal effects, and onwards we hear the machine-like double bass drums varying in theme as the guitars also accentuate the feel with eerie bends. In we then kick with an all out blast-beat laden death metal riff before the band pull it up into a big fat defined sound, the drums always pulling the guitars along. Onwards into a suitably typical Decapitated guitar solo which sounds abstract near the end and then back into the big unified rhythm. This song is all about aggression through every bar. Then, out of nowhere, we have a common Decapitated device – a drum solo in the middle of the song, and this does not sound as out of place as you would expect, with the bass drums continuing their machine-like presence. We then return for another few familiar sections before the song ends.
Love it. π

Quickies
* We announced [5-A-Day](https://wiki.ubuntu.com/5-A-Day) and got it [Dugg pretty well](https://digg.com/linux_unix/Make_a_real_difference_to_Ubuntu_with_5_A_Day). The number of members in the [Launchpad Team](https://launchpad.net/~5-a-day) doubled and it seems *lots* of bug work is going on as part of the scheme. If you have no idea what I am talking about, or are not involved yet – go and [read this page](https://wiki.ubuntu.com/5-A-Day). And remember…normal users *can* contribute to 5-A-Day, that page will explain how. If you are uncertain, drop me a mail. π
* Ubuntu Developer week has been kicking arse. I am so incredibly proud of everyone who has been involved in the making of it, and I am pleased it has been useful to so many of the attendees. Today is the final day, so be sure to [check out the schedule](https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UbuntuDeveloperWeek).
* Today is the dealing for Ubuntu monthly report content. Go and add your team’s content to [this months report](https://wiki.ubuntu.com/TeamReports/February2008).
* [LugRadio Live USA 2008](https://lugradio.org/live/USA2008/start) registration is [now open](https://lugradio.org/live/USA2008/register). Go and get your ticket for the awesome event on the 12th and 13th April 2008. I also added a Facebook page for it. We are building up the gears on the promotion of LugRadio Live USA 2008, but I need your help. If you can help me promote it online or in the area, please get in touch with me. π
* We are looking for exhibitors for LugRadio Live USA 2008 – if you want to exhibit, contact us at show AT lugradio DOT org.

Announcing 5-A-Day
[DIGG THIS AND SPREAD THE WORD!](https://digg.com/linux_unix/Make_a_real_difference_to_Ubuntu_with_5_A_Day)
Ladies and Gentlemen, Boys and Girls, Dick and Dom(1), I am pleased to announce a brand new initiative in the Ubuntu community that we have been working on for a little while, and one that has been alluded to by [some](https://daniel.holba.ch/blog/?p=86) [members](https://daniel.holba.ch/blog/?p=89) [of](https://stompbox.typepad.com/blog/2008/02/the-number-five.html) [our](https://archivedblog.jonobacon.com/?p=1137) [incredible](https://blog.nixternal.com/2008.02.18/41-5-v-five-gimme-5/) [community](https://cody.zapto.org/?p=12). It is of course…[5-A-Day](https://wiki.ubuntu.com/5-A-Day)!!
One of the most incredible things about any community is that when you unite people around a concept – it is incredible what a large collection of individual users can achieve, when they come together as one consistent force. With enough feet marching in the same direction, stunning things can happen, and with this in mind, we have produced a united method of Ubuntu contributors helping to improve and refine Ubuntu – via our bug list. This initiative is called 5-A-Day.
The idea for this came from a recommendation in many countries that to stay healthy and fit, it is recommended that you eat five portions fruit or vegetables *every day*. If you make a conscious effort to do this, your body will thank you for it. It is a simple concept that a variety of manufacturers have supported, and it provides an easy metric for normal people to determine how to contribute to a healthy lifestyle. Many people try to stick to the five portions of fruit or veg a day, and it is simple and easy to get involved, with long-term benefits for people in general. Lets apply the same ethos to Ubuntu…
The idea with 5-A-Day is simple – everyone in the Ubuntu community works to tend to at least five bugs every day. When we say *tend to*, this naturally depends on the kind of contributor you are. As such:
* If you are a **developer** – you could fix five bugs, package fixes etc.
* If you are a **user** – you can help triage and confirm bugs, contribute your experience to bug reports. Test bugs and share your experiences.
* If you are an **upstream contributor** – you could help forward bugs upstream and help to get these bugs fixed.
To make things ultra-cool, and to spread the word, we have some rather nifty methods of [automatic reporting which bugs you have worked on for 5-A-Day](https://wiki.ubuntu.com/5-A-Day#Log) and we have a [Launchpad Team](https://launchpad.net/~5-a-day) you can all join. This gives us an idea of how many people are participating in 5-A-Day. People are already starting to contribute their 5-A-Day bugs in their email signatures, and I would love to see the 5-A-Day bugs that people contribute to shown in weblogs, IRC channels and more. If you have a nifty little script to do this, do get in touch.
It is time to take 1000 boots and kick 2000 arses. All set? [Let’s go](https://wiki.ubuntu.com/5-A-Day).
* (1) Obscure British TV [reference](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dick_and_Dom_in_da_Bungalow)

Support Him
Can’t see it? [Click here](https://lessig08.org/).