Meeting Title: Internal AI <> Ops Sync Date: 2026-01-12 Meeting participants: Gabriel Lam, Elizah Joy, Rico Rejoso


WEBVTT

1 00:00:36.620 00:00:37.670 Rico Rejoso: Hey guys.

2 00:00:38.190 00:00:40.850 Gabriel Lam: Oh… How are you?

3 00:00:41.710 00:00:44.530 Rico Rejoso: Good, I’m good. How are your Mondays?

4 00:00:45.310 00:00:49.369 Gabriel Lam: It’s good, lots going on for me, Chin, so…

5 00:00:51.790 00:00:53.949 Elizah Joy: That’s good for me as well.

6 00:00:54.980 00:01:00.800 Gabriel Lam: Alright, yeah, I know, I think, Rico, you have, or you both have a call.

7 00:01:00.980 00:01:05.020 Gabriel Lam: In 30 minutes, so I will try to keep it short.

8 00:01:05.690 00:01:14.100 Gabriel Lam: But mostly I wanted to chat about the Notion proposed structure?

9 00:01:14.710 00:01:17.950 Gabriel Lam: And, first of all, see what you guys have thoughts on…

10 00:01:18.430 00:01:25.010 Gabriel Lam: Or any feedback that you guys have received, or whether you think, you know, that’s the… the…

11 00:01:25.460 00:01:33.119 Gabriel Lam: Proposed… the reorganization proposal is… is good, and then also, I’m curious on my end.

12 00:01:33.330 00:01:38.569 Gabriel Lam: sort of the documents that you guys are writing, and what I can help with on the platform side as well.

13 00:01:40.380 00:01:45.889 Gabriel Lam: But we can start with the Notion. I’m curious about, like, what you guys have thought of for the Notion reorg.

14 00:01:46.280 00:01:46.980 Gabriel Lam: Yeah.

15 00:01:47.780 00:02:06.449 Elizah Joy: Alright, so let me start first. I think with the, Notion reorganization structure, I’ve also, read your feedback on the document that we have, so let me just answer those very quickly. So, for,

16 00:02:07.670 00:02:24.639 Elizah Joy: For the recommended notion structure, right? So yeah, databases, they live separately, so it’s like, they’ll have… they will have, like, a separate hub, and then for each, pages that we have, we’ll embed those databases that we have, and then…

17 00:02:25.800 00:02:29.439 Elizah Joy: For the number 3 section, I think…

18 00:02:29.550 00:02:37.750 Elizah Joy: When I, embed here means, Yep, embedding the notion.

19 00:02:38.230 00:02:42.469 Rico Rejoso: I mean, I’m sorry to cut you off, do you have any visuals so we can take a look as well?

20 00:02:43.430 00:02:47.769 Elizah Joy: I don’t have those yet…

21 00:02:47.770 00:02:49.309 Gabriel Lam: I can share screen.

22 00:02:50.610 00:02:52.690 Rico Rejoso: I think Gabe has some.

23 00:02:52.690 00:02:54.979 Gabriel Lam: Yeah, oh, sorry, wrong.

24 00:02:55.380 00:02:57.109 Gabriel Lam: This one, you’re talking about this one.

25 00:03:00.780 00:03:03.469 Elizah Joy: That one. So yeah, number 3…

26 00:03:04.410 00:03:09.989 Elizah Joy: Yep, embedded database, so yeah, embedding Notion Database, so that’s correct for that.

27 00:03:11.110 00:03:25.500 Elizah Joy: the only… one of the few things that we were being careful of here in Notion is there’s a lot of documents that people are currently working on, and we’re trying to not, like.

28 00:03:25.730 00:03:31.749 Elizah Joy: disrupt anything, especially we don’t want to disrupt their workflows if they’re using Notion on that.

29 00:03:32.160 00:03:34.179 Elizah Joy: On their end.

30 00:03:35.070 00:03:35.730 Gabriel Lam: Yeah.

31 00:03:35.730 00:03:36.260 Rico Rejoso: Yeah.

32 00:03:38.480 00:03:38.950 Gabriel Lam: Yeah.

33 00:03:38.950 00:03:41.679 Elizah Joy: Anything you’d like to add to that? Oh, sorry, sorry, go ahead.

34 00:03:41.680 00:03:45.089 Gabriel Lam: No, no, no, no, please, please, I’ll wait till… till the end.

35 00:03:46.030 00:03:49.140 Elizah Joy: Anything you’d like to add to that recall?

36 00:03:50.160 00:03:51.240 Rico Rejoso: Yeah,

37 00:03:51.450 00:04:13.220 Rico Rejoso: I mean, I think beforehand, before the new year, before the, holiday, we’re also looking at it, since we also are having a hard time, you know, organizing everything, everyone is working on it. One thing would be, like, each pages or department, like, for sales, for operations, we all have our documentation database, right? But…

38 00:04:13.220 00:04:20.129 Rico Rejoso: It’s just everything is separate. Maybe we can try to, you know, consolidate everything into one,

39 00:04:20.130 00:04:34.070 Rico Rejoso: you know, documentation database, and just filter out for per department or per department page. So, you know, everyone can just know where to put all the documentation that they’re doing, and just…

40 00:04:34.150 00:04:38.470 Rico Rejoso: Putting in what type of documentation that they’re, that, they created, and…

41 00:04:38.850 00:04:47.740 Rico Rejoso: That’s one thing, I guess. Then, from then, we can just start cleaning up everything once we, consolidate all those database documentations.

42 00:04:48.130 00:04:52.690 Gabriel Lam: Yeah, I think that’s great. I think, I mean, I…

43 00:04:53.980 00:05:05.489 Gabriel Lam: Yeah, I think that’s great. I think my main, like, feedback was more maybe technical about, like, what the structure looks like, or what exactly happens when you, you know, for example, when you nest databases. That was really this question.

44 00:05:05.560 00:05:20.820 Gabriel Lam: when you, like, embed a database, and you… let’s say you have a database on, like, all the leads, but you have leads per… you know, some are go-to-market, some are recurring deals. Like, if you look at it from a data side, are they the same table? Do they…

45 00:05:20.950 00:05:36.179 Gabriel Lam: see them as different tables. That was really more my question. I think the way that the reorg has done has been really good, because, I mean, a lot of the way I do it is, like, I will search. Like, a lot… personally, how I do it is, like, hey, I’m trying to find, like, a prompt in.

46 00:05:36.180 00:05:37.110 Elizah Joy: Yeah.

47 00:05:37.110 00:05:39.910 Gabriel Lam: the right prompt, as opposed to, you know, going.

48 00:05:39.910 00:05:45.449 Elizah Joy: going here, and then going to documentation, and I really have just been using search.

49 00:05:45.690 00:05:46.460 Gabriel Lam: So I think that’s.

50 00:05:46.460 00:05:46.980 Elizah Joy: Hmm.

51 00:05:46.980 00:05:52.260 Gabriel Lam: Great idea for the reorg, just to have each department have its own hub.

52 00:05:52.390 00:05:57.960 Gabriel Lam: So yeah, I think most… most of my questions have really been, like.

53 00:05:59.190 00:06:08.459 Gabriel Lam: you know, are clients separate from tasks? Are services separate from tasks, which are separate from clients? Like, are they… are they all part of one, you know, giant…

54 00:06:08.590 00:06:10.389 Gabriel Lam: Page for each.

55 00:06:12.040 00:06:12.440 Elizah Joy: the mortgage.

56 00:06:12.440 00:06:16.380 Gabriel Lam: That was really more the questioning that I had, and that’s why I wanted to.

57 00:06:16.380 00:06:17.130 Elizah Joy: Check it to see.

58 00:06:17.860 00:06:31.459 Gabriel Lam: you know, when you talk about client hubs, and department hubs, and service hubs, like, what does it look like? And yeah, if you guys have, if you also have, like, a timeline for when you think this is gonna happen, that would be also great to know.

59 00:06:32.320 00:06:45.109 Elizah Joy: Yep. As for my conversation with Clarence, because, aside from the Notion reorganization, we’re also working on, for this quarter, one of their projects is,

60 00:06:45.400 00:07:05.069 Elizah Joy: an employee, like, dashboard for, like, their starting journey for when they restarted recruiting them up until where are they at, but currently, currently, like, the stage they’re currently at in the business, and how long have they been with Brainforge. So, like, mapping out their journey from the beginning to the present.

61 00:07:05.070 00:07:19.390 Elizah Joy: And then one of the projects as well is having that consolidated client health tracker, so from, the beginning, like, when they’re just a lead, and up until they’re already a client, so…

62 00:07:19.430 00:07:25.230 Elizah Joy: My, understanding with the database is that they’re all, nested.

63 00:07:25.300 00:07:33.899 Elizah Joy: So that it shows the, correlation from each of the database, and we see those. I mean, when…

64 00:07:34.440 00:07:37.880 Elizah Joy: The thing with the database that we have now is that

65 00:07:38.350 00:07:57.519 Elizah Joy: I think even before Ricoh came in, they’re already, set up in a certain way, so I think that’s one of the, challenges that we have today when it comes to the databases that we have, is that there are a lot of, for example, properties that we have in there that,

66 00:07:58.410 00:07:59.500 Elizah Joy: Can I say…

67 00:07:59.630 00:08:06.790 Elizah Joy: The person who did that database, was the only one who knows about that specific property or something like that.

68 00:08:06.820 00:08:21.210 Elizah Joy: So yeah, I think with the database, so yeah, they’re gonna be relational. What I can say is that with client, it’ll be linked with the services that we have, the sales that we have from the beginning, and then team would be related to tasks.

69 00:08:21.630 00:08:30.070 Elizah Joy: And then leads to the campaigns that we do. So yeah, this… the one that we have here for relational database, they’re…

70 00:08:30.240 00:08:38.310 Elizah Joy: Just an example of the few databases that we’re gonna do. Of course, it’ll be… still be ever-evolving.

71 00:08:38.830 00:08:46.050 Elizah Joy: Yeah, I think that’s where I see that currently at. And when it comes to the timeline of this.

72 00:08:46.150 00:08:51.049 Elizah Joy: We are assuming that it’s… let me just pull up the Gantt chart for this.

73 00:08:59.140 00:08:59.770 Rico Rejoso: Hmm.

74 00:09:32.630 00:09:33.110 Elizah Joy: Yay.

75 00:09:36.720 00:09:38.370 Elizah Joy: Okay, one…

76 00:09:43.570 00:09:58.550 Elizah Joy: Okay, and here, there’s the initial plan for this. I don’t, yeah, I think you can see my screen now. This was the initial plan for this, right? But, Utam wanted to move this up to a higher priority, so we’re gonna be moving this up to,

77 00:09:58.960 00:10:07.929 Elizah Joy: one month ahead, so it’s gonna be one of our priorities, so the best case scenario is by the third, third week of February.

78 00:10:07.960 00:10:15.219 Elizah Joy: hopefully we’ve started to set that structure, in Notion so that we have the backbone for everything, especially

79 00:10:15.220 00:10:29.919 Elizah Joy: Now that we’re also in the phase we’re in, we’re restructuring Rain Forge itself with the new positions that we have, new leadership roles that we have, so… Okay. Yep, but, it’ll be, we’re currently starting on it today.

80 00:10:29.950 00:10:43.990 Elizah Joy: Because, especially now that, we’ve gotten an overview, and on my end, we’re getting feedbacks from the team, from our team members, so that we also know how we design the restructuring.

81 00:10:43.990 00:10:51.170 Elizah Joy: To cater, you know, their experience with Notion, because I agree with you. At the moment, I also do use the search function.

82 00:10:51.650 00:10:55.409 Elizah Joy: Notion to find stuff, so yeah.

83 00:10:55.530 00:10:57.920 Elizah Joy: Anything you’d like to add to that, Rika?

84 00:11:02.100 00:11:04.589 Rico Rejoso: Yeah, I was just thinking about the,

85 00:11:04.810 00:11:23.960 Rico Rejoso: everything, because for, I think, for the employee profile stuff, we have that… the swim lane in the people operations. For the client journey, I think that’s on HubSpot. So, if in… if in case we will have to migrate it from HubSpot to Notion, which… I don’t know if that will be…

86 00:11:24.010 00:11:32.069 Rico Rejoso: necessary, rather than just putting up the client, or putting the client information once we onboard them on the client hub or client page in Notion.

87 00:11:32.190 00:11:35.300 Rico Rejoso: So I think that’s a few things that we can discuss further as we…

88 00:11:35.300 00:11:38.200 Elizah Joy: try to reorganize Notion.

89 00:11:38.290 00:11:39.199 Rico Rejoso: What do I think?

90 00:11:40.310 00:11:44.649 Elizah Joy: Yeah, yeah, I do… yeah, I do agree on that.

91 00:11:44.930 00:11:48.610 Elizah Joy: Because, yeah, if we were using HubSpot, and if it’s working…

92 00:11:48.790 00:11:51.790 Elizah Joy: as well as it should be. I don’t think…

93 00:11:52.330 00:11:54.690 Elizah Joy: we should move that to Notion, too.

94 00:11:57.300 00:12:03.179 Rico Rejoso: Yeah, I think we can, you know, take a look at it.

95 00:12:04.380 00:12:17.109 Rico Rejoso: And see if we can… if the plan that we had for reorganizing or restructuring Notion would be ideal further, or if there should be any changes that would be ideal for, for that project.

96 00:12:18.120 00:12:19.359 Elizah Joy: okay.

97 00:12:22.070 00:12:22.930 Gabriel Lam: Got it.

98 00:12:23.390 00:12:26.710 Gabriel Lam: Yeah, I think for me mainly.

99 00:12:27.190 00:12:29.460 Gabriel Lam: A part of it has been figuring out

100 00:12:32.550 00:12:38.480 Gabriel Lam: like, if there’s best practices for me to then connecting from Notion onto the AI platform.

101 00:12:38.690 00:12:49.060 Gabriel Lam: I can show you an example of… Let me… Let’s see…

102 00:12:49.250 00:12:58.510 Gabriel Lam: if I share screen quickly, you probably have seen me trying to share a cursor, and so one of the things that I want to do is

103 00:12:58.860 00:13:11.200 Gabriel Lam: you know, in this case, I was like, I have a… I have a document on AI slide generating… slide generator tools, and I’m having a meeting with Hannah later, so I wanted it to look through Notion.

104 00:13:11.240 00:13:19.560 Gabriel Lam: And it’s not very good at looking for Notion. So I was like, oh, is there a way for me to do it quickly? And then the goal would be…

105 00:13:20.010 00:13:21.050 Gabriel Lam: you know.

106 00:13:21.590 00:13:29.810 Gabriel Lam: ultimately, what I was working with the CSOs earlier was, like, how do I write SOW.

107 00:13:29.930 00:13:36.050 Gabriel Lam: And so this is something that we were able to write for… for Hedra, and we were able to show,

108 00:13:36.270 00:13:39.910 Gabriel Lam: like, Zaran and some of the other CSOs.

109 00:13:40.310 00:13:42.700 Gabriel Lam: And that’s sort of my…

110 00:13:43.350 00:13:50.689 Gabriel Lam: my… my desire, for the Notion to also come into this, so it’s easier for… for you to unlocks.

111 00:13:50.820 00:14:02.280 Gabriel Lam: to also write this stuff. I guess my question here as well is also, like, what kind of tools do you usually… also, not tools, what kind of, like, documents that you also like to…

112 00:14:02.480 00:14:07.510 Gabriel Lam: need to write often, and maybe you put it into Notion after, or what that might look like.

113 00:14:07.760 00:14:13.260 Gabriel Lam: Any of that feedback is also very much, appreciate it.

114 00:14:14.730 00:14:31.059 Gabriel Lam: So, I’m also continuously working to make sure, you know, especially people who don’t know how to use these programs, to use it in ways that are similar to, you know, ChatGPT, or Claude, or Gemini, or all those other tools. And so, my hope

115 00:14:31.180 00:14:44.639 Gabriel Lam: is to also, like, set up more regular calls with you two, just to see, you know, as you’re working through the Notion reorg, to also understand what are the documentation that you two are writing to help that reorg, as well as, like, generally

116 00:14:45.030 00:14:50.360 Gabriel Lam: Any future processes that you guys are doing to stay in the loop with that as well.

117 00:14:50.940 00:15:02.790 Rico Rejoso: Great. Actually, Gabe, I have some, that I started with the sales team since I was onboarded to sales. A few of it was, like, the how-to documents, tutorials, explanation documents.

118 00:15:03.390 00:15:14.349 Rico Rejoso: generally, those are all SOPs that I’ve been writing for the sales team, which I also added to the documentation tab in Notion. So I think that’s what we need help to. And also, can we get

119 00:15:14.760 00:15:17.529 Rico Rejoso: How do we access the SOW?

120 00:15:17.720 00:15:20.060 Rico Rejoso: Creator, or problem that you created.

121 00:15:21.520 00:15:29.009 Gabriel Lam: Yeah, no problem. So… it should all… I… I can rock,

122 00:15:29.340 00:15:31.700 Gabriel Lam: make a loom tonight, I can also…

123 00:15:32.450 00:15:35.830 Gabriel Lam: I can also… oh, sorry, that’s the wrong one.

124 00:15:41.060 00:15:46.040 Gabriel Lam: I can also write it out, I can also set up another Paul.

125 00:15:47.280 00:15:56.390 Gabriel Lam: What I’ve been using is something called GitHub, Desktop. It looks a little confusing, but this is basically…

126 00:15:56.680 00:15:59.570 Gabriel Lam: a way to connect cursor to…

127 00:15:59.820 00:16:05.820 Gabriel Lam: sorry, to GitHub, which is… I’m sorry, it’s a bit of a mess, my computer.

128 00:16:06.050 00:16:07.070 Rico Rejoso: No worries, yeah.

129 00:16:07.070 00:16:11.920 Gabriel Lam: But yeah, so if you look at our…

130 00:16:12.930 00:16:24.160 Gabriel Lam: organization. We have a lot of documents, especially for clients here. So, for example, we have Pedra, we have Default, we have, Element, I think is another one. And so.

131 00:16:24.510 00:16:29.280 Gabriel Lam: We have a lot of these documentation that’s on…

132 00:16:29.800 00:16:34.069 Gabriel Lam: that is on this, platform, this, this GitHub.

133 00:16:35.050 00:16:40.449 Gabriel Lam: Website, which basically is usually used to store, code for writing apps.

134 00:16:40.730 00:16:44.089 Gabriel Lam: what Utam and I have been talking about was, like, hey.

135 00:16:44.390 00:16:53.069 Gabriel Lam: we don’t have to just write code, we can also write SOWs, we can also write other documentation, and GitHub Desktop is a very good way that connects

136 00:16:53.340 00:16:57.540 Gabriel Lam: all this, this complexity to cursor.

137 00:16:59.030 00:17:06.090 Gabriel Lam: And because we already have… we already are paying for Cursor, we’re like, why don’t we just, you know, get everyone to use it, and…

138 00:17:06.700 00:17:13.900 Gabriel Lam: we can set it up in a way so that people who are not as technical can use it well. And so an example here would be if I…

139 00:17:14.619 00:17:20.720 Gabriel Lam: If I go to the very top, you know, I… the…

140 00:17:21.300 00:17:25.809 Gabriel Lam: We have this playbook, and in the playbook, we have a lot of examples, we have…

141 00:17:25.920 00:17:31.630 Gabriel Lam: a lot of, prompts, and so I’m here, I’m being a little,

142 00:17:32.800 00:17:40.010 Gabriel Lam: specific, but I can also just say, you know, if I wanted a new one, Sorry, I…

143 00:17:40.370 00:17:43.119 Gabriel Lam: blocked by my own Zoom toolbar.

144 00:17:43.510 00:18:00.540 Gabriel Lam: So we have, you know, we have something called agents, which are basically prompts, like you have in ChatGPT. We put a template, we put a checklist, but I could also just say, like, hey, I want you to write an SOW for me for Hydra.

145 00:18:01.070 00:18:05.530 Gabriel Lam: And because I already have one.

146 00:18:05.640 00:18:09.910 Gabriel Lam: I want it totally new and from scratch.

147 00:18:10.780 00:18:18.299 Gabriel Lam: And I put it in plan mode, and this is… It will ideally look through

148 00:18:18.800 00:18:20.750 Gabriel Lam: You know, everything that you have.

149 00:18:20.940 00:18:25.630 Gabriel Lam: And, be able to start writing with the documentation that exists.

150 00:18:25.750 00:18:29.860 Gabriel Lam: And so this is a good way, instead of, you know, you know, in ChatGPT, when you…

151 00:18:30.720 00:18:35.599 Gabriel Lam: Like, you know, instead of having to, like, add files and, like, make projects.

152 00:18:35.600 00:18:36.420 Elizah Joy: Hmm.

153 00:18:36.420 00:18:44.840 Gabriel Lam: You can have everything set up, and, you know, when other people save things, or when you save your own documents, it’s a good way to…

154 00:18:46.390 00:19:01.310 Gabriel Lam: make that a lot easier for us. And so, this is something that I personally am trying to get more people to be aware of and to use, and so just now, because I’ve already done one here, it’s like, hey, is this a new one? Is this a totally different one?

155 00:19:01.490 00:19:04.949 Gabriel Lam: Do you want, like, a reiteration? So I’ll just…

156 00:19:05.320 00:19:24.160 Gabriel Lam: And we are also connecting it to, you know, our Slack and Zoom meeting histories. I don’t have it set up at the moment because I was doing it on my other computer. But yeah, I basically did that, and it does come up with SOWs. So for you, Rico, if you want a more, like.

157 00:19:24.770 00:19:26.929 Gabriel Lam: detailed.

158 00:19:27.130 00:19:34.050 Gabriel Lam: walkthrough, I’m more than happy to make a loom and send it out to you and to the rest of the team as well. But just.

159 00:19:34.050 00:19:34.550 Rico Rejoso: Like, some…

160 00:19:35.050 00:19:43.250 Gabriel Lam: just the… this is just, like, a preview of the hope that I have for you guys to make your life easier.

161 00:19:43.720 00:19:49.180 Rico Rejoso: Yeah, I think that’s a few, type of documentation that we need.

162 00:19:49.180 00:20:04.679 Rico Rejoso: If… and also, if you can add it to cursor, yeah, the how-to tutorials, explanation reference documentation, because, another thing that I have in mind is that if you’re trying to migrate some of the files from other department database to one

163 00:20:04.680 00:20:10.889 Rico Rejoso: documentation database. Might as well format them in a way that the same with everything, right?

164 00:20:10.890 00:20:11.770 Gabriel Lam: Yeah, yeah, exactly.

165 00:20:12.050 00:20:27.979 Rico Rejoso: We can reformat it and use just a singular template on how… on GPT, if in case. I created one already last week. I was… I wasn’t able to have Eliza check on it yet, because I haven’t implemented it yet as well. I’m trying to do an experiment on sales first.

166 00:20:28.180 00:20:30.299 Rico Rejoso: Yeah, that’s thinking of that thing.

167 00:20:30.790 00:20:38.820 Gabriel Lam: Awesome. Okay, yeah, I… I will reach out more often, and please, I will keep you posted.

168 00:20:38.820 00:20:47.839 Rico Rejoso: Do you need the prompts to the type of documentations? I mean, I already created the projects in GPT, so I might as well just send a prompt to you if you need any.

169 00:20:47.840 00:20:57.170 Gabriel Lam: Prompts would be great if you have them in, like, a library, or you can just send them directly up to you, however you wanted to, yeah.

170 00:20:57.350 00:21:03.229 Gabriel Lam: I… my work schedule is going to be more irregular moving onwards, so…

171 00:21:03.400 00:21:13.309 Gabriel Lam: I’ll try to schedule times that work for everyone, for sure, but I will let you know. I’ll just look at your calendars, and I will try to find the time.

172 00:21:13.310 00:21:14.259 Rico Rejoso: Alright, thank you so much, Gary.

173 00:21:14.780 00:21:21.289 Gabriel Lam: But yeah, thank you, and if you want to meet again this week or next week, happy to make this more weekly, just so…

174 00:21:21.360 00:21:35.530 Gabriel Lam: the communication between us is more often, and then you can also feel free to give me feedback anytime along the way. Don’t be… I want you to feel comfortable just being like, hey, this isn’t working, or like, how do I do this? Like, that’s perfect for me. Yeah. Yeah, that’s cool. Okay.

175 00:21:36.430 00:21:38.830 Elizah Joy: Yeah, thank you so much, Gabe. This is very…

176 00:21:38.830 00:21:39.530 Gabriel Lam: insight.

177 00:21:39.530 00:21:40.210 Elizah Joy: Cool.

178 00:21:40.450 00:21:46.530 Gabriel Lam: I appreciate it, and thank you for the insight to the Notion reorg. I think it’s great, and I’m excited to see it.

179 00:21:47.580 00:21:50.389 Elizah Joy: Yeah, thank you so much for your time.

180 00:21:50.390 00:21:51.409 Gabriel Lam: Thank you, bye.

181 00:21:51.410 00:21:53.120 Elizah Joy: Thank you, bye.