Every time I see an old house like that, I always wonder about the people who lived there. I wonder if they are still alive, what kind of people were they, the struggles they faced, and how many kids grew up in that old shack. Simpler times but, definitely harder times.
At some point some dude wiped his brow, held his wife and looked at what they had done. Darn well done sir.... Just because it it didn't last was no reflection....
Back in a time where you worked hard for what you got and it wasn't a participation trophy! These were some of the generations that helped build the USA into the best country in the world.
The old house is beyond any repair. But you have to think of the family’s that grew in that little house. I hope all that lived there have had success in life. Thanks for the great videos Sir. Hope all are well and safe.
I can’t begin to tell you how satisfying I find your videos. With so much junk on media out there I find it hard to find anything that can hold my attention. As one who made his living operating heavy equipment, just being able to follow your channel brings back many memories. Thank you for taking the time to share with us.
Dang I'm coughing up dust. What a mess. Nice house with big rooms. You really made quick work tearing down house and barn. The metal roof was here to stay. No leaking in grandma's house. Property looking good. Even with rain and soggy mud all the equipment did well. Thanks Chris.
It always saddens me to see so many of these old farmsteads being demolished. Another slice of your country's history gone. Inevitable given their construction. Best from the UK
Lololol... Knew it !! You was gettin' it there Drift King !! lolol... Crazy how those Off Road trucks will Twist !! lolol... Glad you was able to get the house and barn and that big pile hauled out before it got to bad across there in the mud !! Getting it cleaned on up a little at a time here between rains... Great as always Chris !! Have a Great Evening Man, And, On too the Next....
Thank u for ur thoughtful comments regarding "if this house could talk." I think that too when houses r torn down. Barney and other equipment would astound our forefathers. Thank u so much for video. God's blessings and take care.
Back in the early 60’s we moved into a old 20’x22’ house that was built sitting on railroad ties. 4 rooms. Electric with no running water. My parents and three brothers. Those were the days, so they say. Whomever they are.
Wow Chris, when the bucket went in the house where you had the camera, I thought I was watching Jurassic Park and the T- Rex was in the house! Great work taking down the buildings and hauling a la drift mobile.
I am always amazed at how much dust and dirt accumulates in those old houses . Looked like about a ton of dirt fell in with the ceiling on that inside shot.
I love the precise touch of ripping tin off barn roof... take the tin leave the tar paper underneath... Great interior camera work for house demo, and the predemolition tour! well there's a leak... 😂😁
Chris have you ever considered getting tracks for the rear of the truck? You can put them on when your running through mud like that and remove them when you have jobs that aren’t swampy. They give great traction like your dozers. Stay safe out there.
A couple months ago I tore down a similar house. No electricity but 2 fire places. I was told it was a summer house for some people. The girls would make clothes and the boys would work the land. Watching let's dig is one reason I have a Takeuchi 290 now and do this kind of work on the side. Good job Chris
I always wonder what secret treasures are hidden in those old houses. My neighbor lives in an old house from the 1800's , No telling how many families lived there over the years. He was doing some painting in the bedroom closet and found a loose board in the wall, behind it was an old flint lock rifle and some other interesting antique stuff.
@@btpearce The a cool story Brooks. There are some good channels here on RUclips of people exploring abandoned houses and they are super interesting to watch.
I wonder when that house was built and what it saw in its life? I used to do land surveying in Texas and came across so many cool things that people hadn't laid eyes on in hundreds of years. We would find homesteads buried in woods that a land owner didn't even know existed.
Good point my fellow Texan ... in that Chris's videos span the Globe in reach and most folks only know Texas from Movies and think it's all "Desert" ... as we know, in East Texas, you can't take a step and not run into a Tree ... LOL
@@craigsowers8456 I'm not a Texan I'm a Hoosier from Indiana and I can tell you that I've been to Texas and I've never even seen the Desert in Texas but I've been up and down the east side of Texas and mainly Houston. Ohh and people think that the only thing in Indiana is just cornfields but that's 60% true.
@@TomBennett1 Yep, Texas' topography is quite diverse. As a native Texan living in the French Riviera and worked/lived in 38 Countries thus far, I can only give my opinion on "attitudes" I grew up with (Austin now is NOTHING like the Texas I grew up in) and only wish I could be a fly on the wall if/when she tells her Dad about her "Account".
I was waiting for Boss Hog and Kleatous to come swooping in when you were cruising on down the road! You mention the off road truck being your best purchase and if someone saw what it looked like when you got it and what it looks like now I would bet they would think 2 different trucks. But when the equipment is your billboard it already looks like a class act.
Doing the walk through that old house made me think of the old homestead and school on my uncle's farm. We kids were not allowed to walk through by ourselves (way too dangerous) but with adults along we could pick through the detritus of the years. It's so funny, when we did that, everything was so old (turn of the century) and it seems like yesterday we did that, but the time distance is the same (1960s to today). Thanks so much for a walk through memory lane, Chris.
Them.metal.sheets on that roof were put on at alot later date than when the house was built,there wasn't them box profile tin sheets around in 1920s,there would only of been corrugated tin sheets back then ,that roof probs went.on in about the 60s-70s I'd imagine!!!
Nice job looks really good glad your six-wheel drive was working I enjoy watching these videos and like many others I often wonder about the old homes what they went through and seen during their lifetimes thanks for the video Chris oh and by the way don't worry too much about Metal down in the burn pit once it gets hot it will Rust away in that hole
Most of the lumber that was used to build that house was probably sawed and milled at a steam driven sawmill and plainer. The timber was cut with an ax and transported with mule pulled sleds. It was probably delivered to the house site with a model A ford truck. Then the house was built by carpenters using hand saws, recycled nails. framing squares a pencil and a hammer.
I loved the video of the truck going sideways the opposite direction you're steering... I love going through those old houses... you can almost feel some of the old history of them...
Hi Chris! I was wondering if you ever do any metal detecting around the old buildings that you teardown for interesting or valuable things... I like watching you work...I'm an LETSDIG18 addict... Ron...
"If the house could talk" It does. Everytime I see these old places torn down, I see an opportunity. I found glassware in these type of homes from mid to late 1800s, as well as coins and other artifacts. But in the area of demolition, it's not even a second thought. What I didn't have back then was a metal detector.
Tin roof was holding the building together. Termites holding hands underneath. Nice shot from inside as the walls come tumbling down. Parents of mine got married right after WWII and bought a farmhouse in Michigan with no running water or plumbing. They would go down to the local creek and fill up steel milk jugs to clean themselves and boil water over a wood stove. Nothing was easy even to start the old pickup was a hand crank. When they moved to Illinois to a house with running water and plumbing mom was so thrilled it even had built in electricity and oil heat furnace cause winters would get bitterly cold and freezing to death was always a concern. I imagine the house they lived in may have looked similar to that one.
That was a great shot from the inside! I had to wipe the dust off my screen when the roof came down! Keep up the good work love supporting your channel.
The oldest of the old houses are best for metal detecting around,like stone foundations from 200+ years ago so sunk in and so covered over they are hard to find in the woods. The first settlement in NC was before 1600,so yeah,there's some neat old stuff around those places in the easten USA. Accross the big pond(Pacific Ocean)is where the oldest treasures are but hey,we got what we got here and it's ok.
Could anyone else literally taste/smell that dust when the ceiling fell in? I've done so much demo of old houses in my life that I could taste / smell it when it boiled up.
Chris drifting the haul truck😂, and I thought he was going to be like uncle John and put the truck on its side with the load dump.. great driving Chris. Thanks for the content, I appreciate you sharing your day with us.
Really enjoyed this video bro it had everything but Raccoons running out of the house demo. 6x6 is real handy but still looks like you were having fun. Safe travels.
Chris, based on the monster Fires you have done, I can't wait to see how large the pit is going to be with all of the house and barn wood is going to be, that will be a hot fire for sure.
I feel your pain on fuel costs……. 10 mpg and diesel is still at $5/gal in SC. I barely wanna drive 5 miles to the dump because of fuel cost. We live in the country so everything is at least 5 miles away so it’s minimum $5 to even get to the closest gas station in my truck. If I was to go into the city I’m looking at 20 miles there and 20 back so needless to say my truck stays parked most the time
Hey Chris, for your future reference… a couple of years ago we were faced with tearing our old house down after Hurricane Harvey. We entered into a contract with Habitat for Humanity to do the recovery and demo. After that we were talking to a fireman friend of ours and he said that in some cases the fire department would like to use houses that are going to be demo’d for practice. Don’t know if you have some fireman friends, but if you ever have an opportunity to chat with one you can see if they do that up there. We were locked into our contract by that time and could not make it work any more. Hope to not be in that position again!
I thought you would have used the grappler for the demo. Probably would have taken that roof off a lot easier. Seeing the inside of the house reminded me of when I bought my house. Built in the mid 1800's. Had wood lath and horsehair plaster walls. Plumbing, heating and electricity was added years later.
Maybe I am overly sentimental,but I always feel a bit sad at seeing a house torn down. Who knows what the story is ? When first completed, the house was the pride and joy for someone. What dreams did they have for the house, their family?Where they realized? Yea, old houses have lots of stories; great joy, great sadness. Life!
Old House destructions are always fun to watch! You could make a 6"x6"x6" box to hold the GoPro if you use one 2x6 with some metal brackets and a piece of plexiglass on the front for the GoPro to film through. The Mobile home destructions are funny also, I still laugh about the one where the lady left her toy behind 🤣
Every time I see an old house like that, I always wonder about the people who lived there. I wonder if they are still alive, what kind of people were they, the struggles they faced, and how many kids grew up in that old shack. Simpler times but, definitely harder times.
At some point some dude wiped his brow, held his wife and looked at what they had done. Darn well done sir.... Just because it it didn't last was no reflection....
So do I.
So do I.
Me too.
Back in a time where you worked hard for what you got and it wasn't a participation trophy! These were some of the generations that helped build the USA into the best country in the world.
The old house is beyond any repair. But you have to think of the family’s that grew in that little house. I hope all that lived there have had success in life.
Thanks for the great videos Sir. Hope all are well and safe.
LD18 u did a great job tearing-down the house and getting those stomps dug-up.
It makes me smile every time you say ‘back back there’ 😄
That looks like such fun 😄 Chris you're a bad mama jamma working with your equipment. 😆
I LOVE watching you tearing down buildings and trailers! Brings out the kid in me!
I can’t begin to tell you how satisfying I find your videos. With so much junk on media out there I find it hard to find anything that can hold my attention. As one who made his living operating heavy equipment, just being able to follow your channel brings back many memories. Thank you for taking the time to share with us.
Dang I'm coughing up dust. What a mess. Nice house with big rooms. You really made quick work tearing down house and barn. The metal roof was here to stay. No leaking in grandma's house. Property looking good. Even with rain and soggy mud all the equipment did well. Thanks Chris.
It always saddens me to see so many of these old farmsteads being demolished. Another slice of your country's history gone. Inevitable given their construction. Best from the UK
Never saw a dump truck drift!! Nice job!!. A real hold my beer moment.
Lololol... Knew it !! You was gettin' it there Drift King !! lolol... Crazy how those Off Road trucks will Twist !! lolol... Glad you was able to get the house and barn and that big pile hauled out before it got to bad across there in the mud !! Getting it cleaned on up a little at a time here between rains... Great as always Chris !! Have a Great Evening Man, And, On too the Next....
Thank u for ur thoughtful comments regarding "if this house could talk." I think that too when houses r torn down. Barney and other equipment would astound our forefathers. Thank u so much for video. God's blessings and take care.
Goodness that truck is big enough to put a barn in. Great video. Enjoyed watching 😎
I don't know how you have time to video record and work at the same time, but you do an amazing job at it.
Back in the early 60’s we moved into a old 20’x22’ house that was built sitting on railroad ties. 4 rooms. Electric with no running water. My parents and three brothers. Those were the days, so they say. Whomever they are.
Wow Chris, when the bucket went in the house where you had the camera, I thought I was watching Jurassic Park and the T- Rex was in the house! Great work taking down the buildings and hauling a la drift mobile.
So true 🎄 simpler times back then ! 🎄🎄🎄
Chris you were dancing all over the place,your six wheel drive worked great. Great job great videos. 👍
I am always amazed at how much dust and dirt accumulates in those old houses . Looked like about a ton of dirt fell in with the ceiling on that inside shot.
I was thinking that. The smell of that dust would also be choking, gawd-awful horrible. Thank goodness for fully enclosed cabs
Also, all of the asbestos in that house.
I love the precise touch of ripping tin off barn roof... take the tin leave the tar paper underneath... Great interior camera work for house demo, and the predemolition tour! well there's a leak... 😂😁
The house talk!! it would say " Aaaaaawwwwrr! I'm being crushed by a big metal arm!!! That hurts!!!!!
How dare you!!!!
🤣🤣
Chris have you ever considered getting tracks for the rear of the truck? You can put them on when your running through mud like that and remove them when you have jobs that aren’t swampy. They give great traction like your dozers. Stay safe out there.
Grandpa would be impressed with that effort to save the metal. That roof was one good swing from coming down right away!! Always good to see a demo!!
He always does that. Can't burn the metal so it goes to scrapyard.
@@JCrook1028 I realize that. His grandpa always made a point to remove any metal.
Geeesss a few tarps and some sticks out of the woods would make me a nice little home! And your going to tear it down! 😲, 🤣🤣👍🏻👍🏻
A couple months ago I tore down a similar house. No electricity but 2 fire places. I was told it was a summer house for some people. The girls would make clothes and the boys would work the land. Watching let's dig is one reason I have a Takeuchi 290 now and do this kind of work on the side. Good job Chris
Great Video of taking down the House and Barn ! More Stumping and Great Progress Today - we love the Video and many Cheers from us in Australia !!!!
I actually enjoyed the quick walk through before the demolition.
I always wonder what secret treasures are hidden in those old houses. My neighbor lives in an old house from the 1800's , No telling how many families lived there over the years. He was doing some painting in the bedroom closet and found a loose board in the wall, behind it was an old flint lock rifle and some other interesting antique stuff.
@@btpearce The a cool story Brooks. There are some good channels here on RUclips of people exploring abandoned houses and they are super interesting to watch.
I like your channel you got good videos
My mother & dad got electricity on the farm 1947 western Oklahoma. We got AC in 1964.
I would have love to metal detected around that old house before it was tore down! Probably some real old treasures under that ground?!
Coming along nicely Chris 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Enjoy the walk thur of the house, they had enough of nails to hold down the tin. Looks like the dump might need a wiper blade thanks for the video
Glad you are having two cabinets on this
Land and a pond and good cleaning job
A good place to raise a family 👪
Just gotta love that old history. Don't think you could have made another load.
I wonder when that house was built and what it saw in its life? I used to do land surveying in Texas and came across so many cool things that people hadn't laid eyes on in hundreds of years. We would find homesteads buried in woods that a land owner didn't even know existed.
Not an expert, but I agree with him circa 1920. I've found treasures in these old places, but you have to look for them.
Good point my fellow Texan ... in that Chris's videos span the Globe in reach and most folks only know Texas from Movies and think it's all "Desert" ... as we know, in East Texas, you can't take a step and not run into a Tree ... LOL
@@craigsowers8456 I'm not a Texan I'm a Hoosier from Indiana and I can tell you that I've been to Texas and I've never even seen the Desert in Texas but I've been up and down the east side of Texas and mainly Houston. Ohh and people think that the only thing in Indiana is just cornfields but that's 60% true.
@@TomBennett1 Yep, Texas' topography is quite diverse. As a native Texan living in the French Riviera and worked/lived in 38 Countries thus far, I can only give my opinion on "attitudes" I grew up with (Austin now is NOTHING like the Texas I grew up in) and only wish I could be a fly on the wall if/when she tells her Dad about her "Account".
I was waiting for Boss Hog and Kleatous to come swooping in when you were cruising on down the road!
You mention the off road truck being your best purchase and if someone saw what it looked like when you got it and what it looks like now I would bet they would think 2 different trucks. But when the equipment is your billboard it already looks like a class act.
Doing the walk through that old house made me think of the old homestead and school on my uncle's farm. We kids were not allowed to walk through by ourselves (way too dangerous) but with adults along we could pick through the detritus of the years. It's so funny, when we did that, everything was so old (turn of the century) and it seems like yesterday we did that, but the time distance is the same (1960s to today). Thanks so much for a walk through memory lane, Chris.
Can’t believe how slippery that dirt got that even with 6 wheel drive you were sliding all over!!😮
That looks like FUN!! Drifting in a hall truck!! Yippe!
I'm impressed that a home from ©1920 had amazing central air conditioning!
Say what you might about a metal roof - but this one outlasted everything else.
Indoor camera was AWESOME! (camera survived!)
Love it when you terar down the house
@@mattwisniewski4896
It’s called progress
Them.metal.sheets on that roof were put on at alot later date than when the house was built,there wasn't them box profile tin sheets around in 1920s,there would only of been corrugated tin sheets back then ,that roof probs went.on in about the 60s-70s I'd imagine!!!
There’s something so soothing about the gentle sound of modern excavators with their hydraulic and engine sounds. Could be an asmr sound 😂
Nice job looks really good glad your six-wheel drive was working I enjoy watching these videos and like many others I often wonder about the old homes what they went through and seen during their lifetimes thanks for the video Chris oh and by the way don't worry too much about Metal down in the burn pit once it gets hot it will Rust away in that hole
Thanks for the walk through, very good video!😊
Good evening from the UK 🇬🇧 Chris best of luck 👍
Love the inside footage
Most of the lumber that was used to build that house was probably sawed and milled at a steam driven sawmill and plainer. The timber was cut with an ax and transported with mule pulled sleds. It was probably delivered to the house site with a model A ford truck. Then the house was built by carpenters using hand saws, recycled nails. framing squares a pencil and a hammer.
Got us a "Wheel MAN" about rolled half of poor Barney... I like the pond jobs and clearing jobs Love the DEMO jobs Great work Chris !
Uber Now that was just fun. When I was younger I operated a Trackhoe, it was a Tonka 35. Together we played hell with the flower beds.
Yeah good thing you got the holler over there. Cleaned up quite well. 👍👍🙂🇨🇦
That Volvo was hungry for an old house HAHA
That video of the inside collapse was EPIC!!!
at the end... love you doing an impression of a paddlewheel :)
I loved the video of the truck going sideways the opposite direction you're steering... I love going through those old houses... you can almost feel some of the old history of them...
Yes. Chris' decision to get that truck was a very good one!
Liked the interior shots... 😀
Drifting in a haul truck looks like a blast! I just wish we could have heard the in cab play by play! 😂
The first time you do it is a real OH ST moment.🤣
Slick'en it off, slick'en it off. The place is looking pretty clean. Love watching your demos.
Awesome video . I think that sheetmetal was most of what held that house togetther
Great job lestdigt 👍🏻💪🏻
Thanks for taking us along for this job. I loved it.
Help a monster is trying to get me! Oh no it is coming through the other window. 🙂 That was a close call roll over. Thank you and have a good day.
That 6 wheel drive is a game changer this time of year ,money well spent chris $
Hi Chris! I was wondering if you ever do any metal detecting around the old buildings that you teardown for interesting or valuable things... I like watching you work...I'm an LETSDIG18 addict... Ron...
Great video this morning! I needed it to wake up
I would like to go metal detecting around those old houses..
"If the house could talk" It does. Everytime I see these old places torn down, I see an opportunity. I found glassware in these type of homes from mid to late 1800s, as well as coins and other artifacts. But in the area of demolition, it's not even a second thought. What I didn't have back then was a metal detector.
Goodness Chris, with the weather you have had lately, how was that old house still standing? Barney did very well😊 Take care & cheers 🐨🦘🥰
6 wheel drifting !!! to from dumping - nice save when dumping, I thought you were going to tip it ~49 min point - good work
Nothing like doing a little drifting there Chris. Good thing it wasn't any muddier. Property is looking good. Thanks very much for sharing.
Awesome view with the camera inside 🤟😎
Tin roof was holding the building together. Termites holding hands underneath. Nice shot from inside as the walls come tumbling down. Parents of mine got married right after WWII and bought a farmhouse in Michigan with no running water or plumbing. They would go down to the local creek and fill up steel milk jugs to clean themselves and boil water over a wood stove. Nothing was easy even to start the old pickup was a hand crank. When they moved to Illinois to a house with running water and plumbing mom was so thrilled it even had built in electricity and oil heat furnace cause winters would get bitterly cold and freezing to death was always a concern. I imagine the house they lived in may have looked similar to that one.
That was a great shot from the inside! I had to wipe the dust off my screen when the roof came down! Keep up the good work love supporting your channel.
Drifting in a loaded haul truck! I like it!!!!
You could probably pick up a dime with the excavator, LOL. Nice touch!!
The oldest of the old houses are best for metal detecting around,like stone foundations from 200+ years ago so sunk in and so covered over they are hard to find in the woods. The first settlement in NC was before 1600,so yeah,there's some neat old stuff around those places in the easten USA. Accross the big pond(Pacific Ocean)is where the oldest treasures are but hey,we got what we got here and it's ok.
Chris, that's a fixer upper mate, rustic you might even say. Quiet get-away retreat for the weekend. 😂
Could anyone else literally taste/smell that dust when the ceiling fell in? I've done so much demo of old houses in my life that I could taste / smell it when it boiled up.
Yep... stinky dust
Yeah I actually held my breath!🤣🤣🤣
Yup, as I said before, "Choking, gawd-awfull horrible. Thank goodness for fully enclosed cabs".
I had to go get my respirator before he finished taking it down! Lol
A new meaning to crunch time always great video thanks
It would be interesting (no pun!) to see how much of that old wood stove is still there. They make good collector items.
Nice job Cris love the teardown on the old house and barn. Looks like you’re getting the new 2020 figured out Ray from Oregon.
Good clean work my friend.
Great way to get to work still was a strong old house it fought you a bit but great video thanks Chris
Chris drifting the haul truck😂, and I thought he was going to be like uncle John and put the truck on its side with the load dump.. great driving Chris. Thanks for the content, I appreciate you sharing your day with us.
Hey Chris excellent job today bro love it keep up the great work 👍👍👌💯❤️😊.
Never stop. Admire that
great job buddy and great video as always buddy 😎👊🏻👍🏻
Really enjoyed this video bro it had everything but Raccoons running out of the house demo. 6x6 is real handy but still looks like you were having fun. Safe travels.
Chris, based on the monster Fires you have done, I can't wait to see how large the pit is going to be with all of the house and barn wood is going to be, that will be a hot fire for sure.
That’s fun as long as you don’t get stuck
I feel your pain on fuel costs……. 10 mpg and diesel is still at $5/gal in SC. I barely wanna drive 5 miles to the dump because of fuel cost. We live in the country so everything is at least 5 miles away so it’s minimum $5 to even get to the closest gas station in my truck. If I was to go into the city I’m looking at 20 miles there and 20 back so needless to say my truck stays parked most the time
Hello there Chris 🚧🔥🚧. Not much insulation in that house.
It doesn't get that cold there, but it was probably a bit cold in the winter.
Hey Chris, for your future reference… a couple of years ago we were faced with tearing our old house down after Hurricane Harvey. We entered into a contract with Habitat for Humanity to do the recovery and demo. After that we were talking to a fireman friend of ours and he said that in some cases the fire department would like to use houses that are going to be demo’d for practice. Don’t know if you have some fireman friends, but if you ever have an opportunity to chat with one you can see if they do that up there. We were locked into our contract by that time and could not make it work any more. Hope to not be in that position again!
I would’ve burned it right where it stood.
Nice drifting, must be fun.
At least this one didn't have any phallic looking surprises inside!! 😂🤣
Nice video work. Glad the camera did not get broken, and you did not have the house fall in on you.
I thought you would have used the grappler for the demo. Probably would have taken that roof off a lot easier.
Seeing the inside of the house reminded me of when I bought my house. Built in the mid 1800's. Had wood lath and horsehair plaster walls. Plumbing, heating and electricity was added years later.
Maybe I am overly sentimental,but I always feel a bit sad at seeing a house torn down. Who knows what the story is ? When first completed, the house was the pride and joy for someone. What dreams did they have for the house, their family?Where they realized? Yea, old houses have lots of stories; great joy, great sadness. Life!
Its sad it was left to rot like that- there's a fair few people out there who'll pay hand-over-fist to live/rent in an old cabin in the woods.
Great job. I love how you just peel that tin off, I'd be up there with a bar prying it off.
Chiming in with like #99. "ol farm house, now you see it, now you don't. Chris you made quick work of getting that house off to the burn pile.
Old House destructions are always fun to watch!
You could make a 6"x6"x6" box to hold the GoPro if you use one 2x6 with some metal brackets and a piece of plexiglass on the front for the GoPro to film through.
The Mobile home destructions are funny also, I still laugh about the one where the lady left her toy behind 🤣
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Expertly disassembled. Great work!
I’m sure the truck has already paid for it self in convenience.
I TOTALLY ENJOYED WATCHING THE VIDEO CHRIS