Subtitles section Play video
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ca*singing tl;dr intro song* pa pa pa pa pa pa pa pa...
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[Simon] Old school viewers will know what this pig stool is about.
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[Martina] I'm quite tiny. Not really, I'm 5'7" and a half but Simon is very large.
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[Simon] And I'm actually doing the splits as well right now in order for Martina to fit
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[Martina] So it is the return of the pig stool. [Simon] Hey!
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[Martina] This pig stool took us a long time to find, you know? It was the correct height for both of us.
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[Simon] So I just finished getting my tattoo done here in Japan and we figured, since we both have tattoos
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and we both live in Japan, we could talk a little bit about what it's like to have tattoos in Japan.
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[Martina] To begin with, I know a lot of people seem to think that Japanese people are terrified of tattoos
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[Simon] *gasps* OH! [Martina] Right?
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It seems like everyone we see online – “I have tattoos and I'm worried about coming to Tokyo. Are people gonna run from me?”
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[Simon] "I have a little butterfly on my wrist and I worry that somebody's gonna see it and they're gonna be really really scared,
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and I'm not gonna be able to go anywhere and they won't even let me off the airplane."
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[Martina] Ok so, that is a total false – I was gonna say “it's a false lie!” but doesn't that already mean false?
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[Simon] This is actually perpetrated in music as well. [Martina] Oh yeah, that Frank-
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[Simon] Frank Ocean, I love you to pieces. 'Blonde' is one of my favorite albums of all time,
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but in 'Chanel' you said “Hide my tattoos in Shibuya. Police think I'm of the underworld”.
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Frankie –we're on first name terms now-, the police don't think you're of the underworld.
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You're in Shibuya! You're in the tourist central! [Martina] It's like being in New York's Times Square.
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[Simon] Nobody thinks that you're part of the underworld!
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[Martina] Let's just dispel this mist immediately, ok? *silence* Well… I said “mist”, didn't I?
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[Simon] You said “mist”. Dispel the mist! [Martina] Dispel this myth.
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Let's dispel this myth immediately.
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There's Japanese people that live in Japan, they look Japanese, they talk Japanese.
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When you show up in Japan and you don't look like a Japanese person, they immediately think to themselves “You're not part of the underworld”.
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[Simon] Right?
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[Martina] It doesn't matter if you're black and you speak Japanese, if you're white and you speak Japanese,
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or even if you're East Asian but you don't look Japanese, they're gonna say “You guys are foreigners”.
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[Simon] People don't think that we're part of the yakuza, they don't think we're part of the underworld.
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I'm not part of the Ducky Squad, you're not part of the Cupcake Crew. ([Martina] The Puppy Crew!)
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[Simon] Alright? So don't be worried about people thinking that you're a bad person for having tattoos.
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[Martina] In our neighborhood we have a lot of old people… [Simon] Yeap.
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[Martina] And when they saw my tattoos, a lot of people were intrigued. They wanted to touch it or talk about it
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[Simon] Older people! Not just people in their 30's and 40's, but people in their 70's, 80's… 170's…
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People live to a really ripe old age here.
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[Martina] Yes. But, for real, they're very interested. Somebody asked me once “oh, is this paint?” and they literally reached out and touched my arm,
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and I remember a couple of times we went to izakayas, and there was a guy working there who clearly looked like HE was part of a gang...
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He was Japanese and he had his sleeves covered up to here, but we could see his tattoos dripping underneath a little bit
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and he was really stern faced. The two of us were kinda like “We're new to Japan, where did we wander?”.
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Actually, for those who listen to our podcast, it was on the dark side of Kichijoji.
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[Simon] Yes. *laughs* LISTEN TO OUR PODCAST! [Martina] *whispers* Listen to our podcast!
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When I took off my sweater this guy comes over, and then he went “Kawaiiiiii!!!”.
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Literally broke into almost a Honey Senpai voice and then he asked to see it.
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And I had to pull up my sleeve further, and he was like “oh my god, this is so cute!”
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So it doesn't even matter that he's got representation of his own tattoos that mean something to him. He wasn't offended that I had tattoos.
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[Simon] So people visiting Japan, stop sh****ng your pants about this. You're not gonna have a rough time.
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There are some things you might be limited from experiencing because of some archaic tattoo laws that a lot of people don't necessarily agree with.
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[Martina] There are a lot of problems with going to onsens, which is the hot springs. A lot of them have that sign up that says “NO TATTOOS”.
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You can get around it in some ways if you have a small tattoo and you can put a bandage on it or a waterproof sticker bandage.
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But just to be honest with you guys, if you have a teeny tiny tattoo – some people are like “I have a small tattoo on my lower back”.
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You're getting into an area with a towel on, you're taking this towel off, rinsing off and getting into hot water.
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It's not like people are going -tah!- and zeroing in on your butt cheeks and then rushing off to the authorities at the front desk.
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[Simon] There are some onsens, like the one we did a video about, that's totally okay with people having tattoos.
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[Martina] There's Dogo Onsen, which is one of the most famous onsens,
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apparently that's where Studio Ghibli had its inspiration for Spirited Away,
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and in that place tattoos have always been fine, they've never placed a ban on it.
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[Simon] And there are some onsens that kind of operate in the gray area,
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for places that I haven't actually taken you yet, but I've been planning some secret places.
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[Martina] *gasp* Is it for my birthday? Is it 'cause it's gonna be my birthday? Are you making plans for my birthday?
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[Simon] AND… what they said is that they don't overtly say that they're ok with tattoos but they say they're ok with tattoos.
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But it's always nice for you to call and make sure you check if they're ok with it beforehand.
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[Martina] If you're living in Japan, one of the bigger problems can be getting a gym membership.
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[Simon] Here in Kichijoji there are a few major gym chains that I tried to apply for membership,
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and I was completely covered up, nobody saw anything, and on the form they said “do you have any tattoos?”,
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and Martina said “you should just lie about it,” but I'm an honest person and I hate lying in every situation.
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[Martina] Chotto matte kudasai (Wait a moment). Let me explain why.
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Because Simon works out in long sleeve shirts and he wasn't planning on showering there,
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I said if you're covering up your tattoos, which P.S., I looked up online-
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many foreigners living in Japan lie about their tattoos and never show it.
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But some people said they covered up their tattoos and then in the change room when they took their shirt off they were reported because they had tattoos.
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[Simon] And there are people like me that operate with a moral compass and don't wanna lie under any circumstances,
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[Martina] Ok... [Simon] so I couldn't get a gym membership here.
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There are supposedly other gyms- I hear that Gold's Gym, from what people have told me, is ok with tattoos.
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[Martina] in more of the foreign neighborhoods. [Simon] Yeah, that's a little bit too far from where we are
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so I just built a gym in my backyard and I had my little rinky dink squat rack, rusted…
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[Martina] He works out in the snow…
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[Simon] Working out in the rain is sad. Let me tell you, it's sad.
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[Martina] I go to the community center which is- every city and every local area will have...
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[Simon] A rec center. [Martina] Like a rec center.
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I was told that I REALLY have to cover up all my tattoos because it's considered to be an area for children and for old people.
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They are gonna be a lot more uncomfortable and nervous if they see these tattoos,
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so when I went to the gym I made sure that I wore hoodies, zipped up. AND IT WAS AWFUL!
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[Simon] If you sweat more, you burn more calories, I guess…? It's good for you
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[Martina] No, I was so sweaty, and I remember doing one of the weight things
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and my sleeve went up and I was so terrified that somebody would notice.
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[Simon] Actually, the music stopped, there was a record player scratch, and everyone was like *GASP* “Yakuza!”
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[Martina] There was actually no music. [Simon] That didn't happen. Nobody did that.
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[Martina] No. But I do go swimming, -That's a lie, I went once.- at my local rec center.
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I plan to go more, ok? [Simon] You should go more, girl.
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[Martina] I have to wear a- like a skinsuit. [Simon] a body condom.
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[Martina] A body condom, that's the correct term. *joking*
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It's a long sleeved one that goes from here to here. Zips up to my neck,
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and I have to wear that when I go swimming, but you also have to wear a shower cap, that little- not a shower cap.. *laughs*
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[Simon] Swim cap. [Martina] A swim cap.
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[Martina] Asia loves their swim caps. Korea, obsessed with swim caps, Japan…
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[Simon] I have more hair on my chest than on my head, am I gonna wear a swim cap on my chest?
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[Martina] The last time we went to Korea we stayed at a hotel and Simon got into the pool without a swim cap on.
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–'Cause he's bald!- And they were like “you have to wear a swim cap”,
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and I'm like, *points at bald head* “but… it doesn't… make sense”.
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[Simon] Where is the logic in this right here?
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[Martina] Another place where we had a little bit of problem with our tattoos is when we went to the beach,
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and we were able to sit on these little tiny café side huts and they were serving food and beer and snacks and stuff,
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and when I went to try to go into one of them, the guy at the door said I have to put a towel or something just to cover my tattoo.
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[Simon] As did I. I had to cover mine up as well.
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[Martina] Yeah. And they had sings that said “No Tattoos”.
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[Simon] The logic behind it is that “all yakuzas have tattoos” so if you just ban all tattoos no yakuza will be able to come,
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but that also winds up hurting the people that aren't yakuza.
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[Martina] What was interesting was the guy that was telling us that we can't come in
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also said to us when we were leaving “Can I see your tattoos?”, “I really like it, it so cute”. ([Simon] He was totally cool with it!)
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[Martina] So even though the Japanese people know that the tattoos aren't necessarily taboo or worrisome,
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they still have to enforce these kinds of archaic laws . [Simon] that people don't fully agree with.
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When it comes to getting tattoos in Japan, you might've realized that I haven't actually told you where I got my tattoo in Japan
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because I actually asked the studio if it's ok for me to do so and they said that they don't want that much publicity.
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A lot of tattoo shops, when they become too popular get raided by the police because there's a weird law in Japan
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that kind of makes it illegal to do tattoos, even though it doesn't necessarily target tattoos themselves.
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[Martina] It is NOT illegal to have a tattoo parlor in Japan, it's NOT illegal to get tattoos in Japan.
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The illegal thing is that Japan has made it a law that in order for you to give tattoos,
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to do hair removal, and to do chemical peels, you have to have a doctor's license. ([Simon] Yes)
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[Martina] But tattoo artists are saying, “You want me to go for 5 to 6 years to get my doctorate so that I can give a tattoo?”
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and on top of that, just because you have your doctorate's degree doesn't mean you're an artist. And that doesn't mean you can draw.
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[Simon] So the big argument in Japan is: Are tattoos a medical procedure or are they art?
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I tend to think it's art, you think it's art, a lot of people think it's art, but according to the law
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they're still treating it like a medical procedure so you're not allowed to give or do tattoos in Japan.
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[Martina] So, in 2015 there was a famous court case that was going on in Osaka.
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A tattoo artist was raided by the police, and they charged him $3000, so he decided to go to court and fight it.
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Unfortunately, he did lose his court case.
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He ended up halving the price of the fine, but he said he's still not giving up on this fight, and so there are a lot of websites that are petitioning
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and trying to get people to talk more about Japanese tattoo culture and trying to keep it going.
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And one thing that I read that I thought was actually pretty moving was that people keep thinking of it as just, like, a tattoo thing,
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but people in Japan are saying “This is historical, this is part of our culture”.
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This aspect of Japanese culture is going to get lost as this law is causing people to shut down and close their shops.
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Japan's been tattooing for hundreds and hundreds of years, and they've been tattooing- and it WASN'T illegal. And it wasn't even made for criminals.
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[Simon] But this is just our perspective form the research that we have.
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I'm sure there're many more nuances to the argument that we're not aware of, so please let us know in the comment section bellow.
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We wanna have a healthy discussion about this and see what you guys think about it as well.
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[Martina] So what do you guys think about tattoo culture?
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Even if you don't have a tattoo, do you think that tattoos should still be banned in the onsens and on beaches?
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[Simon] So that's it for our video on tattoos in Japan.
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For those of you that wanna know what this tattoo of mine means, because I just got it done,
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make sure you click on the link here and then I'll tell you my very emotional story about what this tattoo means to me.
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Do you know what was a fun memory? Doing these videos again. We haven't stood up and done a TL;DR like this in…
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[Martina] I know! [Simon]… a very long time.
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[Martina] And look! It's our old- it's a kitchen, it's kinda like our old one.
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[Simon] we used to sit in the kitchen when we did our first…
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[Martina] If you guys are joining us and you're new, when we were in Korea we used to do these videos
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in our kitchen and then it slowly moved depending on the houses. ([Simon] I had red hair back then.)
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[Martina] You had hair back then [Simon] … True. [Martina] Yes.
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[Simon] It's gone now. [Martina] It's gone!
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Now let's edit this monster of a video. Ha! It's so long, we talk so much.