When they were reminiscing about their first meeting, I felt like I was watching an episode of "Spaced". 😄👍 Ian would make a pretty good Tim Bisley, and Mira reminds me of Daisy Steiner.
Chris Wraight is becoming one of my favourite 40K authors. Even in his most serious stories you get funny gems like this: „One wall was entirely taken up by Sanctioners‘ play things: Mauls, rechargers for mauls, maul cleaners, extended mauls, holsters for extended mauls - the usual stuff.“
I read ~200 Warhammer 40k books. But this book is not only my favorite one, its the one book i actually handed somebody who isnt a Warhammer 40k fan. Namely ... my MOTHER. She enjoyed it very much. Being a non-Warhammer 40k story in the 40k universe it goes a long way of describing the Imperium and how its citizens are facing the harsh reality of the 41st millenium to somebody who doesnt know or cares about 40k itself.
I love these book club videos so much, one of the few regular posts I look forward to every few weeks. Both of you bring such good energy along with random Warhammer novels I never considered picking up.
Mainly read this book because Chris also wrote Scars & Path of Heaven. While it's not about the White Scars, this book did not disappoint. I highly recommend it
Arbeiter Ian has an excellent memory for characters and their names, How he instantly recalled Cally Samstag and Stefan - the couple from Titanicus - very impressive!
I've read a half dozen or so of the Warhammer crime novels and enjoyed every one. The Vorbis Conspiracy is one of my favorite Warhammer books. I highly recommend it.
Chris is one of my favourite BL authors. I'm in awe of his ability and would have fangirled as much as Mira did in her interview 😂. It's a great shame much of his earlier output is now out of print. I've always assumed his surname is actually Wright but he had to change it since the name was already taken by another author. Would love to know if that's true!
You two have great energy together, really enjoyed your chat. :) Interesting hearing your views about reading Vs Audible. I can read but struggle to follow sentences just reading the individual words rather than the sentence, all words joined together if that makes sense. Audible had been a game changer for me personally as i can follow and enjoy books now.
This is such a fun episode of the always excellent Book Club. Warhammer Poirot, with his "little grey cells", would need to be a Sanctioned Psyker. Miss Lemon would make a perfect 40k character. "They fuck you up, your mum and dad. They may not mean to, but they do. They fill you with the faults they had And add some extra, just for you." is Phillip Larkin.
Columbo references? I'm in! I quite enjoyed The Vorbis Conspiracy. Holmes did all his own fighting! He was a master martial artist. He studied in the 'orient' and used a victorian art called Baritsu
I've just started reading the Warhammer Crime books. King of the spoil and the Anthology Once a Killer. Brilliant stuff! I can get into them far more than any of the Space Marine focused novels I've tried to read before. On a sidenote I also find the Imperial Guard novels more relatable. I read Longshot and Deathworlder on holiday and they are a lot of fun- Deathworlder particularly.
Something that I was surprised even Chris Wright didn't mention in terms of influences, but I'm getting Martin Cruz Smith / Gorky Park vibes. * Depressed cop - check * Urban dystopia in corruption-filled authoritarian dictatorship - check * Everyone's Russian - check Thoroughly expecting Zidarov to cross the line and get tactically reassigned to Siberia, I mean the Ash Wastes, next.
I definitely got chaos vibes from the scar he can't remember getting, but I had just read the first three books in the Horus Heresy with a serpent lodge. That's said it makes waaay more sense for it to be genestealers when everyone reacts so negatively to the idea of cell sucking because surely you'd get discovered as a genestealer if you're cells were sucked.
Plus, they keep coming back to genestealers in casual conversation. They get brought up as conspiracy theories or urban legends to be dismissed, but Wraight is still drawing attention to them. Feels kind of like signposting to me.
I am relentlesly curious about your opinion on Eidolon after his last novel. First time I thought him actually compelling instead of constantly wondering why this dude is in charge.
Read and listened to all the warhammer crime books, love them. 2 favourites are - Carrion Call short story from The Vorbis Conspiracy And Flesh and Steel. 2 of the best examples of Warhammer Crime (all are amazing, just my 2 personal favourites) Great channel, keep up the good work.
Also the sequel to this book starring the same protagonist is called Outside Powers and it's the last story in the Warhammer Crime book The Vorbis Conspiracy.
Ian, are these not coming out on the podcast feed anymore? This book and I believe Nemesis are not on the podcast feed. Did something break? Love the show and I appreciate the podcast feed of these book clubs!
Well, I am glad I stopped the video and mainlined the book before resuming, because boy howdy was I ever convinced this book was going to End Horribly for literally everyone in Zidarov's family.
Death on the Nile could be done on a luxury "cruise ship" taking the elite to a pleasure World in the system. Sublight only. So the trip can be as long as needed.
Yay! finally audiobook reviews! But yeah its the future! 😉😉 recommend Jonathan Keeble narration for 40k he pours on the awesome sauce! as ever the Miras 'movie plot summery' 🤣🤣
37:00 on the gimdark golden era detective fiction; Brian Lumely had something in that vein, didn’t he? That was more Holmes plus Cthulhu with occasional Dune worms,but it’s a vibe. Some of his vampire stuff is very genestealers, too; lots of pseudopods. The \classic drawing room gathering for statement of case would be complicated slightly if one of the suspects knew no fear and therefore did not have any tells to help the Poirot/Marple type out.
I listened to the audiobook of this book only 3 months ago, and can't remember a damn thing. Should pick up a physical copy, audio books just don't 'stick' for some reason in my brain.
If you’re in a committed relationship... and you’re thinking about doing something that you wouldn’t want your significant other to know about... best bet? Don’t do it.
I hope that you cover all of the Varangantua books. I really enjoyed most of them, particularly when listening to them while I painted space cops a couple of years ago. Street level 40k is fascinating. FWIW #1: I find audiobooks great when I am painting or prepping miniatures. No good in traffic though :) FWIW #2 Varangantua feels like crime behind the Iron Curtain in the 80s to me, while early Eisenhorn feels like Roger Moore era James Bond. Anyway, more of these please!
+1 for the iron curtain reference. Both the names and the setting recall novels set in cold war Moscow, East Berlin etc. I've always thought living in the imperium must be like living behind the iron curtain, but if the orthodox church was the official religion. Even as the political set up is more the holy roman empire.
Lemme guess (at 5 min 30 into the video) - one of them used the word 'informer' and the other had the words 'you no say daddy me snow me I'll go blame' (or best offer) wrenched from the depths of their memory as though some wholly-autonomic reflex arc had just closed? Edit: goddammit. Right song, wrong setup.
I see Chris Wright, I click. His Crime stuff is so interesting. I -frankly- find non-shark Astartes and most xenos really bland and uninteresting. The tale he wove with the Vorbis Conspiracy is my favorite. At the moment.
…and the Nothern cop is making me wonder about grimdark gradely. Gradelydark? Grimgradely? Based on the northern country house hotel I first met the term, I’m thinking Nugley chintz. Or paisley where the floral motifs have bloodsucking thorns.
Love the Warhammer 40k crime novels and short stories. Look forward to listen to your talk about the rest of them. They are all pretty different and with different characters. I just really like knowing how normal people (or abhumans) in a made up grim sci-fantasy world behave and feel. And the crime is added spice!
You mentioned the accents in the audiobooks; I've been listening the Gaunt Ghosts series in Audiobook and all the Tanith Characters have the Irish accent😅
It kind of depends on how combined your finances are. Me and my wife have a joint account for household spending and our own accounts for our general daily expenses so any lego warhammer expense comes from my own account I would probably still tell her because her major annoyance is the lack of space in the apartment . So she wouldn't be bothered by the money spent but by how there's a drawer that should have been empty but is actually full of hobby boxes.
Most 40k books are pretty forgettable. Even the fun ones mostly do not, bear re-reading. Bloodlines, however, is terrific. I've re-read it so many times. Apart from anything, it bucks the annoying BL style of needless exposition and instead of telling us exactly how everyone feels at every point, Chris Wraight credits the reader with enough intelligence to read between the lines, and it's so much more satisfying as an experience for it. As you guys mentioned, Bloodlines feels like a proper grown-up novel that could be enjoyed by fans of Inspector Rebus or Scandi noir TV series. I'm saddened there's been so little follow-up to much of the Crime entries, especially this one. A BL author told me once that so-called "domestic 40k" books don't sell as well as those based on the tabletop factions. Bloodlines might have been a slow burn but it sounds as though plenty of people feel the same as me about this book. Hopefully it's growing cult following will buck that trend and result in enough demand that Black LIbrary commission Chris Wraight to write another Zidarov novel.
Bloodlines was a fantastic read. I very much enjoyed the short stories. Chris Wraight's "Flesh and Steel" WH40k crime novel was amazing. I strongly recommend that you read it!
@@HistoritorJimaldus Oh, no! You're absolutely right, it was written Guy Haley! Did you like Flesh and Steel as much as I did? I hold out forlorn hope of a sequel, which was set up in the novel.
If Mira likes detective novels then I highly recommend the Daidoji Shin novels by Josh Reynolds. Set in the L5R game world it is very accessible and you don't need to be an L5R fan already.
Its been a while since i read it but i think the reason the cult is probably genestealery is they refer to the Emperor as the four armed emperor and that is very genestealery
@ i think, but its implied that he is someone that was converted by “the genestealers kiss” he has a scar on his chest that is referenced repeatedly and when asked he doesn’t know when he got it. Its also mentioned that there is something unusual with his internal organs but the doctor doesn’t seem to think there is something wrong, just strange. so i think the implication is that he was converted sometime during his service, so maybe it was after his daughter was born. his wife isn’t in the cult and implies that him shutting her out or not telling her things is a resent change so maybe it happened in the last few years.
If you're spending £130 on bits of plastic, make sure your partner knows about and knows you didn't pay full price. You shouldn't be paying full price in this day and age
Came for a book review, stayed for the Mira and Ian deep lore origin story
When they were reminiscing about their first meeting, I felt like I was watching an episode of "Spaced". 😄👍 Ian would make a pretty good Tim Bisley, and Mira reminds me of Daisy Steiner.
Interesting that Mira didn’t seem recall the night that she met Ian. I may have had nights like that, but I don’t seem to recall. 🤓
Also goes to show you that Ian's recall of random historical tidbits isn't just limited to warhammer but extends to personal history as well.
Chris Wraight is becoming one of my favourite 40K authors. Even in his most serious stories you get funny gems like this: „One wall was entirely taken up by Sanctioners‘ play things: Mauls, rechargers for mauls, maul cleaners, extended mauls, holsters for extended mauls
- the usual stuff.“
I read ~200 Warhammer 40k books. But this book is not only my favorite one, its the one book i actually handed somebody who isnt a Warhammer 40k fan. Namely ... my MOTHER. She enjoyed it very much. Being a non-Warhammer 40k story in the 40k universe it goes a long way of describing the Imperium and how its citizens are facing the harsh reality of the 41st millenium to somebody who doesnt know or cares about 40k itself.
I love these book club videos so much, one of the few regular posts I look forward to every few weeks. Both of you bring such good energy along with random Warhammer novels I never considered picking up.
I see an increase in UA-camrs interviewing Black Library authors. Mira has started a trend!
And she set the bar pretty high!
That's great for you...pretty bad for me! It's the one thing I do!!
@@miramanga You are the best at it, and you have the relationships going. You are the leader in this field ;)
Mainly read this book because Chris also wrote Scars & Path of Heaven. While it's not about the White Scars, this book did not disappoint. I highly recommend it
I LOVE the crime books and I'm totally with Ian on the I preferring this type of Warhammer 40k book to the endless bolter action.
Mira did such a great interview with Chris about this book :)
The cars have a servitor in them! Body horror never ends in warhammer.
9:27 The Arbitor seems to have a pretty cool undercover backstory
Arbeiter Ian has an excellent memory for characters and their names, How he instantly recalled Cally Samstag and Stefan - the couple from Titanicus - very impressive!
cally samsung
As I recall, in Mira's interview Chris Wraith seems to hint that Agusto's cult is something endemic to the plant and older than the Imperium.
Like many religions in real life of conquered people its worship just went under ground and over time mixed with the conquers religion.
That twist made me pause.
The Warhammer Crime imprint has been a ton of fun.
Love being home in Scotland, perfect time for videos dropping so. . How did I miss this one lol.
Incredibly rich people draining young people to extend their lifespan.
Peter Thiel, anybody?
Yes, definitely. also where does rejuvenat come from normally? I bet its still sucking except off world, at least... knowing 40k as a setting
I've read a half dozen or so of the Warhammer crime novels and enjoyed every one. The Vorbis Conspiracy is one of my favorite Warhammer books. I highly recommend it.
"Non-stop Sucking" -Arbitor Ian
Giga suck is so grim dark 😂😊
Mira: “Is everybody bloody sucking on this planet?”.
Pretty sure she asked the same question when she met Ian at Electroworks.
Slaanesh approves of this
These book clubs and Mira's author interviews are my favourite things on youtube, thank you :)
I absolutely love you two. Especially when Ian starts using the fword!!!! Cheers
Wow, only 6 minutes in and I'm already now nostalgic for Lovejoy, Cadfael and Funny Bones!
Chris is one of my favourite BL authors. I'm in awe of his ability and would have fangirled as much as Mira did in her interview 😂. It's a great shame much of his earlier output is now out of print.
I've always assumed his surname is actually Wright but he had to change it since the name was already taken by another author. Would love to know if that's true!
If Ian was ever in a band it had/has to be a Devo cover band and he played/plays the keyboard like a demon!
You two have great energy together, really enjoyed your chat. :)
Interesting hearing your views about reading Vs Audible.
I can read but struggle to follow sentences just reading the individual words rather than the sentence, all words joined together if that makes sense.
Audible had been a game changer for me personally as i can follow and enjoy books now.
So glad you got into the crime series. It's probably the best imprint in Black Library, and given yinz' interests I think you will love it especially.
This was one of my favorite warhammer books of the last 5 or so years, the crime books and the horror ones really knocked it out of the park.
This is such a fun episode of the always excellent Book Club.
Warhammer Poirot, with his "little grey cells", would need to be a Sanctioned Psyker. Miss Lemon would make a perfect 40k character.
"They fuck you up, your mum and dad.
They may not mean to, but they do.
They fill you with the faults they had
And add some extra, just for you." is Phillip Larkin.
Fantastic timing. I only finished this a week ago.
Same lol
Columbo references? I'm in!
I quite enjoyed The Vorbis Conspiracy.
Holmes did all his own fighting! He was a master martial artist. He studied in the 'orient' and used a victorian art called Baritsu
I've just started reading the Warhammer Crime books. King of the spoil and the Anthology Once a Killer. Brilliant stuff! I can get into them far more than any of the Space Marine focused novels I've tried to read before.
On a sidenote I also find the Imperial Guard novels more relatable. I read Longshot and Deathworlder on holiday and they are a lot of fun- Deathworlder particularly.
Mira's noir voice is amazing!
Mira’s talent knows no bounds.
"Nah, see!"
Really enjoyed seeing you guys do a crime novel! I enjoyed that one as well.
Hello from America, friends 💚
Something that I was surprised even Chris Wright didn't mention in terms of influences, but I'm getting Martin Cruz Smith / Gorky Park vibes.
* Depressed cop - check
* Urban dystopia in corruption-filled authoritarian dictatorship - check
* Everyone's Russian - check
Thoroughly expecting Zidarov to cross the line and get tactically reassigned to Siberia, I mean the Ash Wastes, next.
Also - great chat as always, guys.
love the Warhammer crime books, King of the Spoils is my favorite of them. great love story in it too.
I definitely got chaos vibes from the scar he can't remember getting, but I had just read the first three books in the Horus Heresy with a serpent lodge.
That's said it makes waaay more sense for it to be genestealers when everyone reacts so negatively to the idea of cell sucking because surely you'd get discovered as a genestealer if you're cells were sucked.
Plus, they keep coming back to genestealers in casual conversation. They get brought up as conspiracy theories or urban legends to be dismissed, but Wraight is still drawing attention to them. Feels kind of like signposting to me.
I am relentlesly curious about your opinion on Eidolon after his last novel. First time I thought him actually compelling instead of constantly wondering why this dude is in charge.
Wait - wait - wait. it might not be a Genestealer cult.
It could also be a Chaos cult.
Or Chaos Genestealers!
Great review. Is there a fine line between 40K crime and Necromunda 🤔
10:54 that was the X-men cartoon theme 😂❤
Mind you the Perry Mason music as a similar beat.
What was in that tea? The energy in this episode is next level.
This is a great episode 😄
Slimelight shout out. Awesome!
Woot warhammer crime!
No way, I read this book like a few months ago.
I thought it was... fine? Little too grounded for me, but I liked the end reveal...
The poem was Philip Larkin, world's best depressed librarian
Read and listened to all the warhammer crime books, love them.
2 favourites are -
Carrion Call short story from The Vorbis Conspiracy
And
Flesh and Steel.
2 of the best examples of Warhammer Crime (all are amazing, just my 2 personal favourites)
Great channel, keep up the good work.
Also the sequel to this book starring the same protagonist is called Outside Powers and it's the last story in the Warhammer Crime book The Vorbis Conspiracy.
Flesh and Steel goes into The Glided (posh people) in great detail and shows you how insane there world is compared to the average person.
Under a Killing Moon was the only 90s adventure game I actually completed.
Ian, are these not coming out on the podcast feed anymore? This book and I believe Nemesis are not on the podcast feed. Did something break? Love the show and I appreciate the podcast feed of these book clubs!
Came for the Warhammer.
Stayed for the Funny Bones reference.
They did a full book club episode for it on Patreon 😂
Well, I am glad I stopped the video and mainlined the book before resuming, because boy howdy was I ever convinced this book was going to End Horribly for literally everyone in Zidarov's family.
Ah i'd love you two to read Flesh and Steel (basically 'the bridge')
More Warhammer Crime in bookclub please!
The Warhammer crime books are just outstanding. As you said, you don’t have to be a GW fanatic to enjoy these books.
This book is so good. Im such a sucker for spy, scifi and detective media so having them all in one was just cheating for me.
Tex Murphy reference! I see, Mira is a woman of culture! ;)
Love Tex Murphy
chris wraight wrote the best book, watchers of the throne!
Death on the Nile could be done on a luxury "cruise ship" taking the elite to a pleasure World in the system. Sublight only. So the trip can be as long as needed.
Yay! finally audiobook reviews! But yeah its the future! 😉😉 recommend Jonathan Keeble narration for 40k he pours on the awesome sauce!
as ever the Miras 'movie plot summery' 🤣🤣
37:00 on the gimdark golden era detective fiction; Brian Lumely had something in that vein, didn’t he? That was more Holmes plus Cthulhu with occasional Dune worms,but it’s a vibe. Some of his vampire stuff is very genestealers, too; lots of pseudopods. The \classic drawing room gathering for statement of case would be complicated slightly if one of the suspects knew no fear and therefore did not have any tells to help the Poirot/Marple type out.
I listened to the audiobook of this book only 3 months ago, and can't remember a damn thing. Should pick up a physical copy, audio books just don't 'stick' for some reason in my brain.
If you’re in a committed relationship... and you’re thinking about doing something that you wouldn’t want your significant other to know about... best bet? Don’t do it.
For the £130 question. Does the missus admit when she spend a similar amount on clothes/makeup etc. For £130, both should admit.
I hope that you cover all of the Varangantua books. I really enjoyed most of them, particularly when listening to them while I painted space cops a couple of years ago. Street level 40k is fascinating.
FWIW #1: I find audiobooks great when I am painting or prepping miniatures.
No good in traffic though :)
FWIW #2 Varangantua feels like crime behind the Iron Curtain in the 80s to me, while early Eisenhorn feels like Roger Moore era James Bond.
Anyway, more of these please!
+1 for the iron curtain reference. Both the names and the setting recall novels set in cold war Moscow, East Berlin etc. I've always thought living in the imperium must be like living behind the iron curtain, but if the orthodox church was the official religion. Even as the political set up is more the holy roman empire.
Speaking of “Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep”; Von Geller must be a Vangelis ref, right?
Love me some Warhammer Crime!!!!!
How to say your over 40 without saying your over 40, mumbing Snow lyrics.
Hey I’m 39! 😂😅
Lemme guess (at 5 min 30 into the video) - one of them used the word 'informer' and the other had the words 'you no say daddy me snow me I'll go blame' (or best offer) wrenched from the depths of their memory as though some wholly-autonomic reflex arc had just closed?
Edit: goddammit. Right song, wrong setup.
@@vdate informer Blum nomini blame nama naaaah I kick your boom boom down.
@@drinksanddice9528 wait it’s not ‘I licky bumbum down’?? 😳😂
I agree with Mira, lying to your partner puts you on the Bastard Scale. It never ends well.
Also: who else still has "Informer" stuck in their head?
Wait, isn't this basically what Bryan Johnson, that guy that's trying to live forever, is doing to his own son?
I see Chris Wright, I click. His Crime stuff is so interesting. I -frankly- find non-shark Astartes and most xenos really bland and uninteresting. The tale he wove with the Vorbis Conspiracy is my favorite. At the moment.
…and the Nothern cop is making me wonder about grimdark gradely. Gradelydark? Grimgradely? Based on the northern country house hotel I first met the term, I’m thinking Nugley chintz. Or paisley where the floral motifs have bloodsucking thorns.
Ok what now?? Ian was in a band?? Tell me more!
They both were in bands 😊
Love the Warhammer 40k crime novels and short stories. Look forward to listen to your talk about the rest of them. They are all pretty different and with different characters. I just really like knowing how normal people (or abhumans) in a made up grim sci-fantasy world behave and feel. And the crime is added spice!
You mentioned the accents in the audiobooks; I've been listening the Gaunt Ghosts series in Audiobook and all the Tanith Characters have the Irish accent😅
It kind of depends on how combined your finances are. Me and my wife have a joint account for household spending and our own accounts for our general daily expenses so any lego warhammer expense comes from my own account I would probably still tell her because her major annoyance is the lack of space in the apartment . So she wouldn't be bothered by the money spent but by how there's a drawer that should have been empty but is actually full of hobby boxes.
Best review ever. Blarrrrgh!
Double comment in Yorkshire tea appreciation
Give us funny bones
yay, I know who Tex Murphy is
Most 40k books are pretty forgettable. Even the fun ones mostly do not, bear re-reading. Bloodlines, however, is terrific. I've re-read it so many times. Apart from anything, it bucks the annoying BL style of needless exposition and instead of telling us exactly how everyone feels at every point, Chris Wraight credits the reader with enough intelligence to read between the lines, and it's so much more satisfying as an experience for it. As you guys mentioned, Bloodlines feels like a proper grown-up novel that could be enjoyed by fans of Inspector Rebus or Scandi noir TV series. I'm saddened there's been so little follow-up to much of the Crime entries, especially this one. A BL author told me once that so-called "domestic 40k" books don't sell as well as those based on the tabletop factions. Bloodlines might have been a slow burn but it sounds as though plenty of people feel the same as me about this book. Hopefully it's growing cult following will buck that trend and result in enough demand that Black LIbrary commission Chris Wraight to write another Zidarov novel.
Ian is a musician!?
Dammit all, I completely missed the scar thing
Bloodlines was a fantastic read. I very much enjoyed the short stories. Chris Wraight's "Flesh and Steel" WH40k crime novel was amazing. I strongly recommend that you read it!
Flesh and Steel is Guy Haley 😊
@@HistoritorJimaldus Oh, no! You're absolutely right, it was written Guy Haley! Did you like Flesh and Steel as much as I did? I hold out forlorn hope of a sequel, which was set up in the novel.
If Mira likes detective novels then I highly recommend the Daidoji Shin novels by Josh Reynolds. Set in the L5R game world it is very accessible and you don't need to be an L5R fan already.
I have dyslexia I found the easiest way to read is to listen to the audiobook and read the physical book at the same time at 1.6-1.7x speed
I thought Assasinorum: KIngmaker was supposed to be next after the last Horus Heresy book?
For the record: lying to your spouse about spending too much money on 40K is a Dick Move.
Ireland? Tanith.
Its been a while since i read it but i think the reason the cult is probably genestealery is they refer to the Emperor as the four armed emperor and that is very genestealery
So someone should do the Genestaler generational math about the daughter, since she's an IG officer cadet or something.
@ i think, but its implied that he is someone that was converted by “the genestealers kiss” he has a scar on his chest that is referenced repeatedly and when asked he doesn’t know when he got it. Its also mentioned that there is something unusual with his internal organs but the doctor doesn’t seem to think there is something wrong, just strange. so i think the implication is that he was converted sometime during his service, so maybe it was after his daughter was born. his wife isn’t in the cult and implies that him shutting her out or not telling her things is a resent change so maybe it happened in the last few years.
Isn't this the one with
Spoiler
The very old nobles from DAOT?
Ian was in a band?
This was the first crime book I read, but sadly all the rest feel so same-ish that I started mixing them up.
Yay BECTU
Electro works home of torture garden slaneshs party 😂
SALVIA??? 😂
BIG MONEY SALVIA IS HERE!
If you're spending £130 on bits of plastic, make sure your partner knows about and knows you didn't pay full price. You shouldn't be paying full price in this day and age
Afair partner???
Wait are they married?
No, Ian has a girlfriend. They’ve been friends for years.
8:20… the video starts at 8:20, you’re welcome.
and miss the action movie plot summary? Never!
For the Algorithm, and BEYOND 🫡