Presentation from the online edition of SPIN:

he way it
works is you meet Thom last. Better, safer, to start with Phil or
Ed. The Greenwood brothers, Colin and Jonny, are another option, as
they seem only mildly nauseated by the thought of public
self-reflection. Regardless, it isn’t until the third drink that I
begin to consider the possibility that Radiohead are slowly, surely,
trying to destroy me.
The facts: Within seconds of first meeting
them, each member, separately but like clockwork, practically shoves
a drink in my hand: 1) Colin Greenwood (bass/white wine); 2) Ed
O’Brien (guitar/champagne); 3) Phil Selway (drums/beer); 4) Jonny
Greenwood (lead guitar, electronic stuff/beer); 5) Thom Yorke
(vocals, guitar, piano/champagne).
It’s June and Radiohead are in Greece for a three-show leg of a
short European tour, the band’s first since taking off most of the
last two years to relax, regroup, and record what is the most highly
anticipated rock record since Nirvana’s In Utero. Titled
Kid A, it’s as aggressively indulgent, sophisticated, and
art-ful (rather than merely art-y) a record made by a band at the
crest of its mass-market popularity in a long time. A predominantly
ambient experiment largely absent of guitars, traditional song
structures, and lyrics, it still manages to sound distinctly
Radiohead: cerebral and haunting, sweeping and fierce. Is it great?
Yeah, but the trickier question is: How many people will be willing
to take the jump? And perhaps more important, if only to the band
itself: Does it matter?
Regardless, the drinks are coming fast,
already opened or poured. I tell myself, “Relax, Radiohead are
British, extremely British, from Oxford; offering people
drinks is just what British people do.” Moreover, Radiohead are
bewilderingly polite, possibly the most well-mannered rock group
ever to roam the Earth’s midsized arenas.
But I can’t shake the
Fear: After all, I am the rock writer and they are the rock band
most likely to politely offer a journalist a bunch of opened, and
hence possibly spiked, drinks. Finally, I flatly ask Selway if the
band is fucking with me. “Now, that wouldn’t be very nice, would
it?” he says. “Besides,” he adds with a smile, “we don’t know you
that well. Yet.”
You, however, probably
know them. Radiohead, a brief recap: The band whose career was
launched via the mod-rock success of 1993’s “I’m a loser” anthem
“Creep” and who then, somewhat surprisingly, followed with 1995’s
The Bends and 1997’s OK Computer, both dense,
bombastic masterpieces about pain, menace, and alienation.
The
band that, thanks to OK Computer—delivered at a time when
rock, at least sophisticated and inspiring rock, was nearly left for
dead—is now the most revered rock band around, with a certifiably
obsessive cult of fans.
The band that many of those people now
secretly, and not-so-secretly, hope will save rock once again from
stupidity and lameness.
The band most likely to secretly, and
not-so-secretly, believe it can save rock once again from
stupidity and lameness.
The band that once inspired DJ Shadow to
ring up Yorke’s cell phone at Christmastime, and tell him, “I know I
don’t have the right to do this, but I just wanted to say keep doing
what you do--try and keep that honesty.” (“He was probably, like,
‘Uh, okay, thanks, I’m trying to shop,’” Shadow says. “But I felt
like I had to do it.” )
The band that commissioned the 1999
documentary film, Meeting People Is Easy, an epic screed of
media/music industry paranoia masquerading as a chronicle of the
group’s 1997–98 world tour. In it, the bad guys are played
flawlessly by camera flashes and real-life members of the press.
Armed with an endless supply of brain-deadening, soul-sucking,
planet-raping questions about—eek!—Radiohead, these villains’
apparent motivation is to make the band, and particularly its
brooding prince, Thom Yorke, cry.
A lowlight: An aural montage of
banal, repetitive interview questions is capped by a moment—shot in
black and white for goth-horror effect—in which a squirming Yorke is
asked what he thinks about his band being a celebrity favorite.
(Brad Pitt, for instance, has called Radiohead “the Kafka and the
Beckett of our generation.”) He fake-smiles and stutters his way
through a non-answer, but the reporter pushes him. “So, have you met
any of these celebrities?” he asks.
Yorke’s shoulder begins to
subtly twitch. His lazy left eye narrows a millimeter or so. It’s
hard to tell whether he’s about to break down or, with one
frighteningly fast motion, jab his hand through the inquisitor’s
chest and rip out his heart.
That Radiohead. That Thom
Yorke.
So then, the barrage of drinks. What is the band’s plan?
To fatten me before slaughter? Or am I just being paranoid and
self-obsessed? Every ambiguity is suddenly open to menacing
interpretation, shameless narcissism, delicious melodrama. Remember
the movie The Usual Suspects, where Keyser Soze says that the
greatest trick the Devil ever pulled was getting people to believe
he didn’t exist? Well, spend some time around Yorke and you realize
that his big trick is getting you to start thinking just like
him.
Radiohead are playing a small outdoor amphitheater in
Thessaloníki, a bustling, working-class port city in the north of
Greece. About 5,000 people stand on rising steps of concrete running
up a stony hill facing the stage; another 700 or so are comfortably
packed in an open area down front, swaying to the music and singing
along phonetically. Guys selling beer from wicker baskets step
gingerly among them, and beefy security personnel in alarmingly
tight T-shirts are nowhere to be found. It’s such a relaxed
atmosphere that even Yorke seems loose, prancing about and, as one
long-time band observer put it, “bobbing his head like a new waver,
which means he’s digging it.
Yorke, 32, is small and wiry thin,
but it’s from him and his alternately
quiet-like-mouse/fierce-like-lion voice that the band’s enormous
presence seems to flow. It’s not just because he’s the lead singer;
he drips with the kind of suffering-protagonist anti-charisma
charisma that makes both his highs and lows fascinating to ogle. His
highs are on particular display tonight during the closing number,
“Everything in Its Right Place,” an exhilarating Kid A
whoosh. Yorke begins the song standing at an organ, recording his
riff and brief lyric onto a computer, then moves to the front of the
stage for a little jig-like dance, his looped voice swirling around
the amphitheater like a hot wind. Suddenly still, he stands facing
the transfixed crowd as if it were an oncoming train, then clasps
his hands and raises them high over his head, an odd gesture of both
triumph and vulnerability.
Backstage after the show, Yorke looks
utterly drained. We make brief eye contact, but he walks quickly
past me to his tiny dressing room. I’d been expecting this, told
that the band, and Yorke in particular, didn’t want to do any
“normal” interviews. Instead, they were hoping for more of a
“hanging out” scenario. But Yorke is far from the hanging-out type.
Most of the time. I see him in Greece, he’s either alone, or at
least acting like he wishes he were. Even in a crowded room,
surrounded by his band, his is a bubble that few seem particularly
inclined to pop.
So instead I talk to the personable, doe-eyed
Colin Greenwood, who upon introducing himself immediately offers me
a drink. “Wasn’t that really amazing out there?” he asks, referring
to the venue and crowd. Before I can answer, Ed O’Brien approaches,
flashing a thousand-watt smile. (Note to groupies: He closely
resembles the actor Hugh Grant. Really.) He offers me a drink
(though I’m obviously holding one) and adds, “This is what we’ve
always wanted—to play small, cool venues; to have fun. Not to do it
the old way.”
True enough, the vibe of the Greece shows couldn’t
be any further from the horrific touring abyss—a blur of sterile
hotel rooms, boring bus rides, and bad fluorescent
lighting—portrayed in Meeting People Is Easy.. “It’s funny,”
O’Brien says later. “While we loved the movie, it was mostly shot
over the winter, when it was cold and awful. Right after that we
went to Australia and New Zealand where we were really
happy—sun-tanning, go-carting, having a blast. But this tour has
been different. And that’s the whole idea—to do things totally
different, or not at all.”
This
concept has become a band mantra, especially with regard to Kid
A. Says producer Nigel Godrich, who also oversaw OK
Computer, “Thom really wanted to try and do everything
different, and that was...bloody difficult.” Specifics about the
nature and degree of that difficulty are not easily
elicited.
”Musically, I think we all came to it a bit vague,”
O’Brien says. “Thom didn’t know exactly what he wanted the new
record to be either, but he did know what he didn’t want it
to be, which was anything that smacked of the old route, or of being
a rock’n’roll band. He’s got a low boredom threshold and is very
good at giving us a kick up the ass. But at the same time, sometimes
you need a softer approach.” He sighs, then laughs.
Phil Selway
says there was “a lot of tension, personality issues. Things that we
hadn’t really even gotten close to discussing in years.” Like what?
“Let’s just say the shouting got louder.”
Finally O’Brien, who
admits that he’s “the softy in the group, sort of the band mother,”
offers a little more. “The initial sessions of Kid A were
really sort of make-or-break for us as a band. We had to think long
and hard about whether we wanted to continue at all. For me, at
least, it was about growing up. If there was a trade-off, my bottom
line was I was not willing to become a completely inept asshole for
the sake of the music.
“So we had a meeting, and there was a scary, unspoken sort of
fear,” he continues. “We were really serious. I mean, why not go out
on top? But we’ve known each other for 15 years, and here we are now
just getting to the point where we can do things the way we want. So
now it’s like, We’re going to make mistakes, but let’s retain a
degree of calmness.” He laughs.
“We really can be quite
hysterical at times.”
Despite the turmoil, Radiohead finally
completed Kid A in late 1999 at the band’s home
studio/hideout in pastoral Batsford, England. It will likely
surprise even the most devoted fan, full of thick, beat-heavy,
nonlinear arrangements, and layers upon layers of electronic sounds.
Says Godrich, “In the same way the Beatles and the Stones wanted to
sound like black American R&B, but couldn’t, and produced
something special anyway, Radiohead now want to sound like
Kraftwerk, but can’t, and that’s good in the same way.” But two
Kid A songs, “How to Disappear Completely,” a beautiful,
eerie wail, and the album’s rambling, mostly instrumental closing
track, “Motion Picture Soundtrack,” still capture much of the band’s
trademark allure: enabling masochists to indulge the pain of feeling
small (and desperately wanting to feel even smaller), blown up
silver-screen big. Deft, angsty mood music for the self-pitying
art-movies in your head.
Of course, some people at Radiohead’s
American label, Capitol, consider Kid A uneasy listening for
other reasons. “When I first heard it,” says one Capitol insider, “I
thought, ‘It’s amazing, but weird, there aren’t any radio singles,
and they hate doing press.… Roy Lott is going to shit.”
Roy Lott is the president of Capitol, and he
claims he didn’t shit. “I had no expectations of what the record
would or should sound like,” he says. “Is it a challenge for us?
Sure. But the record is great. In fact, the analogy that comes to
mind is the Beach Boys’ Pet Sounds, and we still sell a lot
of those.” In order to warm up Capitol’s L.A. staff, Lott instructed
them to listen to Kid A over portable CD players as they rode
in rented vans to the beach in Malibu.
But Lott can’t rent a van
for everyone, and recently fans have been less than loyal when
artists tinker with their sound (see Nine Inch Nails). “People do
seem more open to this band,” argues Godrich. “I mean, if Oasis made
a record like this, I don’t think anybody would go for it. But, you
know, it isn’t something to put on at a dinner party.” He pauses. “I
don’t really expect people to like it.”
Doing things “different”
also means no plans to release any Kid A songs as singles,
and though the band made several award-winning clips for OK
Computer (including the creepily animated “Paranoid Android”),
they will not be making any traditional videos. Instead, they’ve
commissioned dozens of 30 second “blips,” which Meeting
People director Grant Gee describes as “interstitial-type stuff,
some live footage and animation, very artistic and cool.”
Not
exactly MTV fodder. Or is it? Tom Calderone, senior vice president
of music programming for MTV Networks: “Here’s why Radiohead are
important to the channel—they’re a special band.”
So will MTV be playing the blips?
“We’re certainly
going to try.”
Is Radiohead above the rules?
“Well, not
above…maybe beside.”
“People think we’re control freaks, and
maybe we are a bit,” O’Brien says. “But there’s an awful lot that’s
just horrible about the process of the music business, and when
you’re a young band, you can’t do much about it. Now we can. And
we’ve stopped having that conquer-the-world sort of feeling. It’s
less important to us than doing things our way.”
Still, Radiohead
couldn’t, or wouldn’t, buck the system entirely and are doing some
things they really rather wouldn’t—like (albeit very limited)
interviews, and (coming soon) the obligatory spot on SNL. But
you don’t have to be J.D. Salinger or Captain Beefheart to simply
refuse to do press. Despite their anti-media image, Yorke and his
mates clearly want their Boswells—not that they’re unaware of the
hypocrisy that entails. As Yorke sings on “Paranoid
Android,”“Ambition makes you look really ugly.”
I ask one of the
band’s managers, Bryce Edge, about the Radiohead Way. He shrugs and
says, “Sometimes I’m not sure if Thom and the boys think they’re in
a rock band or an art project. Somewhere in between, I suppose.”
Radiohead leave ThessalonÍki for Athens, a city they’ve never
been to before. The first night there, Yorke plays ironic tour guide
as the band’s bus passes some ruins. “Look everyone, to your left,
extremely old columns!” It’s one of the few times I’ve actually
heard him speak to anyone in the three days I’ve been with the band;
he spends most of his down time alone in his hotel room, watching
CNN.
After tonight’s show, he briefly attends a backstage party
for Colin’s 31st birthday, a very adult (as opposed to, say, Def
Leppard) affair. The only individual remotely resembling a groupie
is a young Japanese fan whose father is apparently wealthy enough to
subsidize her attendance at nearly every Radiohead concert in the
world for the past several years. “One time after we played a show
in Detroit, she hired a cab to take her to our next gig in Toronto,”
O’Brien says. “Thom is very good about chatting with her.”
A lot of people ask if
I’ve “chatted with Thom yet.” It’s a query usually phrased with an
upturn of understanding and hopefulness. They may be quick to assure
me that Yorke is actually “quite a jolly person,” but everyone’s
well aware how impenetrable he can be. So after watching him say
good-bye to his number one Japanese fan, I follow him to his
dressing room, where he sits with Jonny.
After an uncomfortable
moment, Jonny introduces me, if only to avoid seeming impolite.
Yorke is slouched in a folding chair, clutching a plastic glass
half-filled with birthday champagne. He slowly turns toward me, says
hello, and…offers me a drink. Jonny, like a knowing mother realizing
her son is chatting up a girl for the first time, quickly excuses
himself. Yorke’s despair at being accosted by anyone not part of the
immediate Radiohead family is palpable, and the room is overcome by
a painfully awkward silence.
Normally I’m pretty good at
navigating painfully awkward silences , but I’m unable to think of a
single thing to say that won’t make me another one of them. I
scroll through what I know of Yorke’s upbringing: father a chemical
engineering equipment salesman, mother a teacher. He was teased
some, got into a few fistfights, but admits to having had a
relatively nontraumatic childhood. He felt lonely a lot but liked
Legos, drawing, and his bike. At age eight, he got a guitar....
Pretty normal, right? At the same time I can’t help but think:
Don’t make any sudden moves. Because though I sense real fragility,
I also get the feeling that if cornered or in some way startled he
might try and take my eye out. The more I’m merely around him—he’s
the type of person intense enough to reshuffle the energy of a
crowded room without saying a word—the more I wonder to what extent
he cultivates both these responses. After all, he’s simply too
self-obsessed not to be aware of the Yorke Effect—which can
basically be defined as Him inducing increasingly intense
feelings of anxiety, alienation, frustration, and, finally, anger in
You. His psychoses become yours. Some cryptic people are
merely mirrors of those around them. Yorke functions in exactly the
opposite way, which is a big reason why he’s a rock star and why his
music is so compelling.
Trying to break the ice, I tell him that
the crowd seemed to respond well to the new songs. “Yeah,” he says
expressionlessly. “I was surprised.”
Conversation stalls. We’re
on a bad date. I move to travel small talk. He says his girlfriend
(she’s a doctoral student studying—shock!—Dante’s Inferno)
recently spent time in Brazil. I say that I’ve heard Brazil can be
dangerous. He says he was a little worried for her, but that
everything was fine.
He runs a hand over his head, darts his eyes
to the floor, and clears his throat: “Where are [long pause] you
from?”
I tell him New York. “I was in New York once,” he says,
“driving down 42nd Street, in a limo actually, and we saw a dead
body lying on the street. We stopped the car and called an
ambulance, but I remember looking out and seeing other people on the
street just walking by, not doing a thing. It was the most crazy
bloody thing.”
I tell him I’ve never seen anything like that in
New York. “Hmm,” he says, then mentions traveling with Jonny through
Israel sometime last year. One morning they took a dip in the Dead
Sea, the world’s saltiest body of water. “I looked over at Jonny,”
Yorke remembers, “and said, ‘Jonny, does your asshole hurt?’”
Apparently it did. Then Yorke says it was nice meeting me, and I
realize he’s asking me to leave.
I depart Athens, as scheduled, the next day. But I’m told I can follow up with Yorke when I get back, as “Thom is very into email.” Not really a surprise: like his songwriting, email allows him to express emotions other than fear and loathing without physically interacting with anyone. Interpretation is limited solely to his words—words he has time to shape. The more distance, the more control. Even so, it took Yorke almost two weeks to respond to my questions (an edited transcript of our email follows). In the interview, I’m allowed (manipulated?) to see several new sides to him. Yes, he’s still combative and inscrutable, but also unassuming, earnest, goofy, even sweet. And when we finish, I’m more sure than ever that I don’t know the guy at all. Yorke, of course, might take this as a compliment, which would be unfortunate.
Spin: The buzz about the new record is that it’s “difficult”. By difficult, what people really mean is, “It doesn’t sound like the last one/it’s not likely to sell as many copies as we’d like.” How conscious of that were/are you?
Yorke: We do not sit down and write a song or a piece of music considering any of these things—if we did I would have left the group a long time ago. You have a sound in your head, or a melody or a word or a rhythm and you need to get it out. You get it out because you need to give it to other human beings, otherwise you crumple up and disappear. Your question assumes that other people don’t believe sounds and textures are in any way emotional or evocative, which I think is retarded and symptomatic of what is holding back music in the mainstream. If you set about making music or sounds to alienate people then that can express as much as drawing them in; extreme sounds go with extreme emotions, or do we not have those? Am I simply in the business of creating the wallpaper to emptiness?
Art doesn’t always come from that place. It can come
from places less dark, less extreme, less angry and guilt-ridden.
Humor can produce art; exhilaration and joy, too. Is it wrong to
assume that this isn’t also true of you and your
lyrics/music?
Coool.
I stopped relying on extremes to get
me through when OK Computer finished.… It made me nervous
that the music was not coming initially from extremes, and for a
long time I was kind of numb and in nonsense land. But then actually
things only started working when I stopped thinking about it and
just let it happen, guilt free. A lot of what I’m singing or saying
I think is funny even if it’s only to me. A lot of it is on the edge
of madness I’d say but when it works the nonsense sticks in your
head and rings bells.
6:49 p.m. Tired now.
Meetings/debates/arguments all day. Feels like work to me. All I
need is the briefcase and the suit. Oh but which briefcase? Which
suit?
About business matters, what compels you get involved as you
do?
My fantasy has been to claim it all back for ourselves
coz its all part of the same thing.... The politics still does my
head in—especially with magazines and radio, wherever the celebrity
thing comes seeping through the cracks. It’s kind of like a hall of
mirrors at the fair. Lots of echoes and images that reflect and
distort [and that] you become answerable to. Becoming answerable for
stuff that you were not involved in, becoming a moving target, does
my head in.
Your manager said that he sometimes wondered if you thought of
the band as “more of an art project than a rock group.”
I
never wanted to be in a fucking rock group. The Pixies were not a
fucking rock group. Neither are R.E.M. Sonic Youth are not a rock
group and neither were Nirvana. We use/have used electric guitars
therefore we are a rock group?! Bryce was making a joke about me I
suppose. What is an art project? An exercise? A kind of dabbling? Do
we rig up and play in galleries? Are we relishing the stroking of
critics’ contemplative chins? No. I don’t believe I’m being
difficult. I am being protective of my sanity, regardless of the
consequences. I’ve felt my energy sucked in ways that have fucked me
up for years afterwards and nobody is coming close to me with that
shit again. Is that the Art you mean?
I’m not using “art” as a nasty, pissy word. In my opinion, all
great bands (see your list above) are rock bands and art
projects. They can’t help it. I think what he meant was that you
consciously approach the band—its dynamics, its output, even its
business—in a way that is fundamentally different, more artful, from
most other bands.
Apologies for my over-reaction, I misread
your point like it’s easy to do in emails and bulletin boards.
Special? no. Lucky? yes.
When I was at college I could never
understand the desire to hang your life’s work in places that looked
like pristine hospital waiting rooms.... I get so sleepy in
galleries. I like the idea that our work gets to people reproduced
1000s and 1000s of times over for everyone to see. I can’t stand the
idea of it being something exclusive like that.
Regarding you feeling your “energy sucked”—who or what did
this to you?
I really mean that after touring whenever it was
(1997/8?) I had lost all confidence, all faith in myself, I didn’t
understand anything, no connection etc.… I had a mental block for
about two years after OK Computer when I wrote everything
down and immediately tore it up or erased it. I got my confidence
back going on long walks in forbidding English landscapes, in storms
getting soaking wet and sheltering in broken down buildings.… When I
say “sucked” I mean my reason to write had gone; it was someone
else’s property. I was never sure who exactly, so I had no one (or
everyone) to blame.… D’you reckon Britney Spears will have this
problem?
You once said of OK Computer: “At the llth hour, when
we realized what we had done, we had qualms about the fact that we
had created this thing that was quite revolting.” Any similar (or
otherwise) thoughts about the new record?
When we finished it
made me cry sitting in the back of a car from start to finish...does
that help?
People who work with you mentioned that they believe you are
as comfortable and generally pleased with things—both personal and
band-related—as they could ever recall. Is that the case? (This
would be my dressed-up version of the insipid “Thom, are you happy?”
query.)
……. (пауза?)
Okay, while I sympathize with your hating such questions, I
think the general despair inherent in your music, combined with the
face you often choose to present to the public, makes them relevant.
Those who know you say it’s a shame people think Thom is so unhappy
all the time because he’s not. It’s fair to ask someone if they are
currently enjoying their life, especially when that person seems to
go to some lengths to avoid displaying/admitting it.
I’ve
straightened stuff out in my head. But my head is my space. I don’t
grin for my masters (paraphrasing Miles Davis). I feel alive again
now. Not scared. That’s it zzzzziiiipp. Here’s a smile :)
Grant Gee said he thought the band, you in particular, were
becoming more comfortable with, as he put it, “Being to other people
what bands like R.E.M. were to you.”
I would not call it a
comfort. I am English, this is a country where I got beaten up
recently on the street for being Thom Yorke. For me guilt has been
the most destructive force I have had to deal with. So I think I’m
lucky to have gotten to know Michael [Stipe] so well as to feel okay
about this place I’ve ended up in, he could see what was happening
to me and that it was okay.
I did sessions with PJ Harvey and
Björk recently and it was great to share experiences, it makes you
feel slightly less of a freak and that maybe your motives are really
genuine despite the doubting voices in your head all the time. But I
don’t feel part of no royal family, I’m here to do my stuff then
leave.
You got beat up. Who? Why? When? Where? How?
I
don’t want to give them the satisfaction of that, sorry.
Which
of your motives do you generally doubt?
mmmmmmmmmm. The model
rock star motives. The desire to be famous.
And, finally, I don’t know if this is as a question as much as
a thought. Because I’m guessing that you won’t get involved with any
serious back- and-forth with me here, I’m in the awkward position of
having the overwhelming majority of my exchanges with you to be
mostly surface-level. This, of course, will mean that I will most
likely write something that is at least somewhat surface, featuring
yet another wasted column inch about how difficult it is to write
about you all. All of this will only further sullen you on the
entire process, and ensure its repeat. A vicious and slightly
ridiculous cycle (like the panic of 1859!). Perhaps you’re used to
it, but all in all, I see it as a waste. Why do press at all? I can
see you making the argument: Let the music speak for itself. That
way the cycle stops, for you and for everyone. The record will still
get reviewed, the people who do marketing will still do marketing.
If the music is compelling enough it will still demand
attention.
Oh, yeah, one more thing: if you were an animal, what
animal would you be?
It has come to my mind, too. I am bored
of being fucked around* with by major monthly publications.
(*Compromised)
A komodo dragon. If he comes and sits in your
living room to watch TV you’d be too scared to shoo him out coz he’d
break your arm or your neck. So you sit there and don’t move and
leave him to it. He’ll leave when he’s ready.
Re: your choice of animal representation. Were you in a lousy
mood, or do you really want to be a huge lizard other people should
be afraid of? Isn’t it possible to be outraged at the infinite
outrageous things of the world, without being consumed by it? I hope
so.
This was the first interview I’ve done about well...me,
since I fell to pieces. It felt weird and…I was certainly not in a
lousy mood, I was having a pretty good day, just like today. Like
the komodo dragon in your lounge, I just came in to watch the TV,
I’m just chilling
Personality. Personality.
Personality.
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Nice to meet you. Good luck piecing this
together into bite-sized chunks.
:) Thom x

