The Lost Civilization of Tartaria with Guy Anderson
What if everything you know about history is a lie?
What if entire civilizations have been erased, their achievements buried under layers of deception? Welcome to one of the most controversial and mind-bending mysteries in alternative history: The Legend of Tartaria—a lost empire that some believe stretched across continents, wielded advanced technology, and was deliberately erased from the history books. But why? And by who?
Guy Anderson is our guide to this fascinating mystery. An expert in hidden history, secret societies, and suppressed knowledge, he’s going to dive with us into one of the greatest mysteries of all time… The Lost Civilisation of Tartaria.
Takeaways from this episode
- The concept of Tartaria challenges the established historical narrative, suggesting a lost civilization with advanced technologies.
- Guy Anderson discusses the implications of hidden histories and the potential motives behind their erasure from mainstream records.
- The discussion introduces the idea that the architectural similarities around the world may indicate a shared historical culture linked to Tartaria.
- Historical inquiry into Tartaria raises questions regarding the motivations of powerful families in concealing knowledge for financial gain.
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Transcript
What if everything you've been taught about history is a lie?
Speaker A:What if entire civilizations have been erased, their achievements buried under layers of deception?
Speaker A:One of the most controversial and mind bending mysteries in alternative history is the legend of Tartaria.
Speaker A:A lost empire that some believe stretched across continents, possessed advanced technology and was deliberately wiped from the history books.
Speaker A:But why?
Speaker A:And by who?
Speaker A:Let's find out.
Speaker A:Hey, I'm Luke.
Speaker A:I'm an author of archaeological adventure novels.
Speaker A:I travel the world looking for stories to put into my books and to share with you right here on on the Adventure Story podcast.
Speaker A:Guy Anderson is our guide to this fascinating mystery today.
Speaker A:He's an expert in hidden history, secret societies and suppressed knowledge.
Speaker A:He's going to dive with us into one of the greatest mysteries of all time, the lost civilization of Tartaria.
Speaker B:Guy, thanks for joining me today.
Speaker B:How are you doing?
Speaker C:I'm good, thank you.
Speaker C:Thanks for having me on, Luke.
Speaker C:I really appreciate you talking to me.
Speaker B:Oh, you're so welcome.
Speaker B:I'm looking forward to this conversation.
Speaker B:So for those unfamiliar, which I think are a good proportion of people actually, because I've mentioned I'm talking about this and not many people knew what it was.
Speaker B:What is the legend of Tartaria and why do you think it has captured so many people in their imagination?
Speaker C:I've been researching conspiracy theories for years and it was actually watching max eigen on YouTube, a few interviews with him and his own channel, not that he puts much up now.
Speaker C:And he started talking about this empire that to me he was describing the Mongolian empire and I, I think the reason that it's captured so many people's imagination and also their attention.
Speaker C:I had no idea how many people on Facebook had groups about this either that I thought I was on my own.
Speaker C:I really did.
Speaker C:I think because it's a historical mystery what the claim is.
Speaker C:This is an empire that goes back to Gog and Magog and includes people like King Solomon and Genghis Khan.
Speaker C:It's got a very high profile to it.
Speaker C:The implications are that some of the biggest names in history are connected to it.
Speaker C:The fact that there is a possibility that an empire has been wiped out of our history books just gives a distrust of the mainstream historical narrative.
Speaker C:You're instantly asking why, why would they do this?
Speaker C:And I think people do have a desire for hidden knowledge and this appeals massively to those.
Speaker B:I love that.
Speaker C:Yeah.
Speaker B:So tell me a little more about it then.
Speaker B:Where, where was it, when was it, what period did it span?
Speaker B:Those sorts of things.
Speaker C:I'm interested to know The Tartarian Empire was really covering what.
Speaker C:What we now call Russia and Asia, but going into Eastern Europe as well.
Speaker C:So really the Northern hemisphere was under the control of the Tartarian Empire.
Speaker C:But.
Speaker C:But I think to call it an empire is wrong.
Speaker C:I think it was a way of life or an era, perhaps that would be better.
Speaker C:But a lot of religious people refer to the same period of time as the millennial reign of Christ.
Speaker C:And this was where we suddenly saw cathedrals emerging from it.
Speaker C:It was that shedding architecture, because all over the world we've got these cathedrals and the building technique, the style and the architecture appears to be shared.
Speaker C:And the same is true of.
Speaker C:You could look at St.
Speaker C:Paul's Cathedral, the Vatican and the White House and see similarities there built by people who'd never visited any of the other, any of the other locations.
Speaker C:So it's a sort of shared understanding of sacred geometry.
Speaker C:And that went from the Northern hemisphere and then sort of spread globally as far away as South America, Samoa, Australia, New Zealand.
Speaker C:It's everywhere.
Speaker C:The evidence is all over the world.
Speaker B:That's fascinating.
Speaker B:I love this.
Speaker B:But it's often argued, you know, in the mainstream historical narrative that this is a conspiracy theory, this is a myth.
Speaker B:What are people missing?
Speaker B:Why isn't this in every textbook in a history classroom?
Speaker C:Well, I think first of all, the whole terminology around the word conspiracy or the words or phrase conspiracy theory are what I have an issue with.
Speaker C:And that is that a lot of the public people who are, as I call them, normies, what they don't realize is that we're not just looking into things for fun or because we wear a tinfoil hat.
Speaker C:What we're doing is we're looking to see if.
Speaker C:If the powers that be, world leaders, the, the bloodline families, the cabal, the Vatican, the Jesuits, whoever you want to.
Speaker C:To refer to these people as.
Speaker C:I personally call them parasites.
Speaker C:I think they're a parasitic race of people.
Speaker C:They have, over the years, and a lot of it's been proven now, they've conspired against us.
Speaker C:And, and the conspiracy theory is to research something.
Speaker C:It is just a theory we're researching.
Speaker C:The possibility that we've been conspired against this is important.
Speaker C:This is not some, you know, something that people do because they're mad or bored.
Speaker C:So it's actually, you know, the whole conspiracy thing, I think, has got a bad name.
Speaker C:I also think that the reason that there is an issue with, with the whole Tartarian topic is because what it does is it throws out our historical narrative completely.
Speaker C:I Mean it, it's going to change.
Speaker C:Every single history book, every single lecture, every exam paper, every qualification or form of research into history is just thrown out the bath.
Speaker B:And that's what makes it compelling, I think, to learn about and to try and understand, doesn't it?
Speaker C:Yeah.
Speaker C:I mean, you'd have to rewrite encyclopedias, atlases, our understanding of how these buildings were actually designed and who built them.
Speaker C:Everything would, would, would be opened up and, and then of course the knock on effect from that is we're going to start questioning everything else.
Speaker C:If they're going to wipe a thousand years worth of a very significant and advanced civilization off the face of our, our history and our, our history books, then what else have they done?
Speaker C:And you've only got to see what happened with Graham Hancock when he started talking about the Younger Dryas period to see how, you know, how he was attacked.
Speaker C:I think the observer newspaper in particular really went for him and five minutes later this theory he had becomes proven.
Speaker C:A lot of people with egg on their faces out there.
Speaker B:I love that.
Speaker B:Yeah.
Speaker A:Do you feel that it's because we.
Speaker B:Have a quite a sort of Eurocentric historical narrative?
Speaker C:I think it's not just that.
Speaker C:I think to, to doubt if you start doubting your past and of course there are people over the years that have said, you know, if you can control someone's past or deny them of their past, then you can control their future.
Speaker C:So I think there are lots of different reasons for it.
Speaker C:I think we're pushed into following the mainstream.
Speaker C:I think that that's an issue.
Speaker C:And I think the reason that a lot of scientists and researchers and archaeologists are loathed to start picking away at this to see if there's anything to it, is because they fear the lack.
Speaker C:Well, first of all being ostracized, ridiculed, and then of course, ultimately lack of funding.
Speaker B:That makes sense.
Speaker B:That makes sense.
Speaker B:So you've mentioned briefly the buildings, you know, the structures of cathedrals the world over.
Speaker B:What other evidence is there?
Speaker B:You've got to have, you know, what tangible stuff is there that suggests this was a real place or a real, what did you call it, an era.
Speaker C:I started looking at maps.
Speaker C:That was really where I began looking at maps.
Speaker C:But, but when I started digging and I find that Yandex, Russian search engine, found more maps than I could find anywhere else.
Speaker C:And when I started researching, DuckDuckGo was a good independent source, but I stumbled across something called a comprehensive system of modern geography and history.
Speaker C: written by Edwin Williams in: Speaker C:And I stumbled across this.
Speaker C:It was a huge document.
Speaker C:But what I suddenly realized after maybe just an hour or so of looking through it was the question started to appear in there about Tartary, because it's also referred to as Tartary or Great Tartary.
Speaker C:It was full of questions in an exam paper all about the empire that apparently never existed.
Speaker C:What are the geographical boundaries of Tartary?
Speaker C:What's the main cultural and religious aspects to the Tartarian religion?
Speaker C:Sorry, the Tartarian practices.
Speaker C:Any other.
Speaker C:Any notable events during the Tartarian reign?
Speaker C:They're in an exam paper.
Speaker B:That's great.
Speaker B:That's so fascinating.
Speaker B:That's what, what a little sort of insight into something you've got there.
Speaker B:So, so your thoughts are that, that that's something that it wasn't erased in the way other things might have been.
Speaker C:I don't think that they can erase everything.
Speaker C:I think that that's a mammoth task.
Speaker C:But that was just one thing that I found that I stumbled across.
Speaker C:But I've been collecting books for years, old books.
Speaker C:And when I discovered Tartaria, I started to look in very old encyclopedias.
Speaker C: las or an encyclopedia that's: Speaker C:And they are, you know, like, like hen's teeth.
Speaker C:They're very, very rare.
Speaker C:But I actually ended up managing to find a few and got sent one anonymously.
Speaker C:I just.
Speaker C:It just came through my letterbox.
Speaker C:I don't know how they had my address, but it was so.
Speaker C:So I've.
Speaker C:I've actually got a.
Speaker C:A few here that I can refer to.
Speaker C:But these are, these are some of the books I've got where it talks about Tartaria, the Tartarian people, the region, their wealth, their.
Speaker C:The way they lived, the architecture.
Speaker C:One is A History in a Changing World by Barraclough.
Speaker C:The second that I bought was the Story of England, Makers of the Realm by Arthur Bryant.
Speaker C: A history of Europe,: Speaker C:News from Tartary by Peter Fleming.
Speaker C:Now you probably recognize Peter Fleming's brother as being the creator and writer of the James Bond stories.
Speaker C:Close associations with MI5.
Speaker C: He traveled in: Speaker C:He wrote about them.
Speaker C:Yeah, and.
Speaker C:And I have that book.
Speaker C:So that News from Tartary by Peter Fleming was a damning one.
Speaker C:But the one that sent.
Speaker C: es and Travels of Marco Polo,: Speaker C:And he talks about when he first went to Tartaria and meeting the people and seeing these incredible temples with gold roofs and how they worked with the ether and understood chakras and frequencies and vibration.
Speaker C:He's talking about it.
Speaker C:This is Marco Polo.
Speaker C:So yeah, I ended up with a lot of written evidence in front of me, some of which I already had and didn't know.
Speaker B:And that's very interesting, isn't it?
Speaker B:Because in a lot of ways Marco polio is a very.
Speaker B:Is a trusted source for travel of that era.
Speaker C:Yeah.
Speaker C:And.
Speaker C:And spent time with Genghis Khan who I have another theory on.
Speaker C:But, but to me, Genghis Khan was the ruler of the Tartarian Empire and they changed the name to the Mongolian Empire.
Speaker C:Again, just throwing us off slightly because the Mongols were part of the Tartarian Empire.
Speaker C:But by removing Tartaria and just calling it Mongolian Empire, then it all ties up.
Speaker C:You haven't got to look too deep.
Speaker C:It's another way of dismissing or, or hiding Tartaria from people's minds.
Speaker B:So you've, I think you've sort of covered it slightly or you've mentioned it, you've touched upon it there.
Speaker B:If this was erased from history, who benefited from it and why do it?
Speaker B:Because it's a massive amount of work, isn't it, to, to remove the books, to destroy the buildings, to all of these things.
Speaker C:Why for me, it's that that one comes down to.
Speaker C:Ultimately comes down to greed.
Speaker C:You see, the Tartarians worked using energy that, that they used energy that was harnessed from the ether.
Speaker C:So using the electromagnetic energy that that's created from the north and South Poles, they were harnessing that in.
Speaker C:In a similar way, I suppose, to how a lightning rod.
Speaker C:Everyone's probably seen back to the future when they rig up the clock tower to get enough energy to the cut.
Speaker C:So it kind of working on the same basis but without the need for, you know, a lightning storm.
Speaker C:And a lot of buildings had copper roofs and unfortunately they do become green over time, but that can be accelerated with horse urine.
Speaker C:So a lot of them were covered with horse urine to, to hide the fact that they were once copper.
Speaker C:And inside you had a coil sat in a mercury tank that stored the energy.
Speaker C:And cathedrals were considered then to be cathode rouse, which is, you know, great center of center of energy and, and used to, to store energy.
Speaker C:And they were storing energy in red brick as well.
Speaker C:It's the same chemical reaction that creates rust.
Speaker C:So a lot of buildings and old prisons in particular, red and white brick.
Speaker C:Red brick predominantly, but with Rows of white that denoted it was a battery and a source of energy.
Speaker C:The Tartarian empire was, it's also known as the empire of free travel and the empire of free energy.
Speaker C: en he founded standard oil in: Speaker C:So the first thing that you're going to want to do if you are looking at fossil fuels and oil, petroleum is get rid of electric and get rid of free, certainly free energy.
Speaker C:So I, I believe it was Rockefeller and his friends that were, that had ultimately the desire to get rid of.
Speaker B:That to create the need for their product essentially.
Speaker C:Yeah, he was closely aligned with Henry Ford, obviously with the, you know, the Model T and the internal combustion engine.
Speaker C:But it didn't just stop there because going into, into a cathedral cathode route, if you were feeling unwell, the pipe organs and the bells in churches too were set to a certain frequency, 432Hz, which basically made healed your organs, it balanced your chakras, so to speak.
Speaker C:Now nobody really wants, that's financially involved in pharmaceuticals, which he was.
Speaker C:Rockefeller was.
Speaker C:No one really wants people to be well when there's money to be made out of them being sick.
Speaker C:And of course the pharmaceutical ingredients, you know, a lot of them are synthesized from petrochemicals, including the packaging, you know, blister packs, bottles, tubing, etc.
Speaker C:So I believe that greed and control keeping us low, keeping us sick, they don't want us paying too much attention.
Speaker C:They want us to do what we're told, dumbed down.
Speaker C:And this is all achieved by us struggling to make ends meet by having to buy fossil fuels to run our car heat, our home, and then relying again on fossil fuels indirectly through pharmaceuticals to maintain our health through ultimately through the desire for them to bloody poison us.
Speaker B:We talk briefly about Nikola Tesla and his and his fitting into this story.
Speaker B:He's a name that's often banded around in these circles.
Speaker B:How do they fit together then?
Speaker C:Yeah, Nikola Tesla is a strange one.
Speaker C:And it wasn't until I started looking into Tartaria and the technology where they were harnessing energy from the ether that Tesla popped up to many it's a car manufacturer.
Speaker C:One strange thing about him is I've been looking for about five years now for any video footage I can of him.
Speaker C:And I've not been able to.
Speaker C:I've tried, even tried the museum and there's nothing anywhere.
Speaker C:And I find that strange because apparently he gave lots of talks and lectures, he was in a lot of newspapers, he was hanging out with celebrities and powerful people.
Speaker C:Yet you can find it of Edison and Einstein.
Speaker C:Einstein claimed Tesla to be more intelligent than he was, but at the forefront of technology.
Speaker C:Why is there no video footage?
Speaker C:And you know what the museum said to me?
Speaker C:They think he might have been camera shy.
Speaker C:I thought, thank you very much for that.
Speaker C:The man actually occasionally said he was from Venus.
Speaker C:But there are two things with Tesla.
Speaker C:One is, did he exist?
Speaker C:I'm not saying he didn't, but did he?
Speaker C:Because there's an awful lot of patents put to this person and he spent his life's work trying to harness energy from the ether to give the world free energy.
Speaker C:Well, to me that's reverse engineering Tartarian technology, or it's finding a way of saying we know it's possible or could be possible to achieve this.
Speaker C:So we're going to clump all of the research and give it to one man.
Speaker C:And then at the same time, we're going to also credit him with the X ray, neon lights and so many sort of over 300 different patents.
Speaker C:But of course, he did patent that.
Speaker C:So for it to be patent, to have a patent, sorry, it has to work.
Speaker C:You can't get a patent on something that doesn't work.
Speaker C:But all of the people that have since tried to create a device that will operate on free energy of accidentally died.
Speaker C:I do have a quote somewhere from him yet.
Speaker C:22 years ago, while experimenting in Colorado with wireless energy, my wireless energy power plant, I obtained an extraordinary experimental evidence of the existence of life on Mars.
Speaker C:I had, I had perfected a wireless receiver of extraordinary sensitiveness far beyond anything known.
Speaker C:And I caught signals which I interpreted as meaning 1, 2, 3, 4.
Speaker C:I believe the Martians used numbers for communication because numbers are universal.
Speaker C:So this man claims to be talking to Martians.
Speaker C:He sometimes said he was from Venus.
Speaker C:Everything came to him in a vision when he had a sort of bit of a blackout and there are no living members of his family around to talk to.
Speaker C:My point is, if he existed, where did he get this desire for free energy from?
Speaker C:Was he reverse engineering Tartarian technology or was this information that was shared to him?
Speaker C:There's also a whole mystery with him and Donald Trump's Uncle John, who stole the Tesla files on time travel and never handed them in.
Speaker C:And his hotel room was Broken into just after Nikola Tesla died.
Speaker C:But.
Speaker C:But there are other conspiracies with him as well, connected to actually Frank Zappa.
Speaker C:My point is, was he doing this?
Speaker C:Was he.
Speaker C:Was he inventing things that just came to him in these visions like he claimed?
Speaker C:Or was someone sharing this information and who or what was that?
Speaker C:But ultimately, did he exist?
Speaker B:Now, that's an interesting spin that I've never had, that I've never had someone ask.
Speaker B:I've never considered.
Speaker B:And you're right.
Speaker B:You're absolutely right to.
Speaker B:To think about that because, you know, there's a lot of talk about work of the great artists and writers being several people.
Speaker B:And the.
Speaker B:The artist or writer themself is just really a figurehead, like a, you know, like a.
Speaker B:I don't know, like.
Speaker B:Like the head of a business might be today, you know, and they're not the one who actually does the work.
Speaker B:They're just the sort of director, I suppose.
Speaker C:Yeah, I mean, that.
Speaker C:That's.
Speaker C:They.
Speaker C:They do say that.
Speaker C:I mean, James Delingpul said that to me about Shakespeare, that it was actually a collective.
Speaker C:And that Da Vinci.
Speaker C:And a few people have mentioned this, that Da Vinci was actually a family.
Speaker C:It wasn't one person.
Speaker C:It was actually quite a large number of people doing everything.
Speaker C:And then some people say, well, Napoleon didn't exist.
Speaker C:There was someone called Napoleon who.
Speaker C:But the Napoleon that we've been taught, the one who in his 20s, is writing romantic novels and then being asked to come and, you know, lead an army and.
Speaker C:And win a war, and then is the ruler of France, and he does this all within a few years with the odd break for yet another romantic novel to be churned out is a little bit hard to believe.
Speaker C:So I sometimes wonder if there are phantom events and phantom people that have been put in place to give a backstory to certain events that have happened.
Speaker C:Now, I've mentioned that a few times.
Speaker C:I've never said that these people don't exist.
Speaker C:I've just said, I wonder if they're phantom.
Speaker C:And I'm often answered by people saying, of course he existed.
Speaker C:Of course Napoleon existed.
Speaker C:My answer.
Speaker C:Sorry, my question to that would be, you've got to be pretty bloody old and you're looking good for your age, because the only way you could possibly know that is if you met him.
Speaker C:How could you possibly know?
Speaker B:Well, let's focus on Tateria, actually, because that's the topic of our conversation today.
Speaker B:Say, that was revealed tomorrow, a lost document.
Speaker B:I don't know anything, whatever it might be.
Speaker B:What would the reaction be from historians, scientists, world leaders, general population.
Speaker B:What would happen?
Speaker B:How would things change?
Speaker C:First of all, we'd have to rewrite our history.
Speaker C:And, and that would mean therefore, by definition, that if you had a degree in, let's say, history of the Mongolian empire, that that becomes worthless overnight because you've studied a lie.
Speaker C:And, and this qualification you have is based on something that isn't true.
Speaker C:So I, I think that there are ramifications certainly for, for having to revise our history, but it would also make us question everything that we've been told.
Speaker C:We would have an even bigger distrust in what we hear and what we're told because ultimately it doesn't matter who you vote for and who's running what country.
Speaker C:The strings are pulled much higher up than that.
Speaker C:We've got forums and think tanks that really seem to be controlling.
Speaker C:And above them you've then got Council of thirteen, Club of Rome and so on.
Speaker C:So there is this pyramid of power.
Speaker C:And, and so we would have a far greater distrust on everything.
Speaker C:And I think that then we start questioning the moon landings, what happened with Princess Diana.
Speaker C:You know, everything's up, becomes up for debate and you're just not going to hear believe anything on the news again.
Speaker C:But then of course, you'd have, you'd actually have an identity crisis because there would be people out there that think they're Mongolian, that suddenly find out they're Tartarian.
Speaker C:You'd have people from Russia and Asia that think they're Asia, but actually that region is called Tartaria.
Speaker C:You've still got Tartarians around actually in Crimea and Russia and Asia now, but they still are a recognized race of people.
Speaker C:But of course, we're also going to suddenly realize that there is missing technology.
Speaker C:If they were working with free energy, why have we been paying for energy for solar?
Speaker C:What happened?
Speaker C:Who was behind it?
Speaker C:And all of this that I mentioned earlier on with Rockefeller and his, and his friends or cousins, all of this would come out, we'd realize that we've been paying an awful long time for energy when actually it could have been free.
Speaker C:We might want our money back.
Speaker B:What an interesting concept.
Speaker B:And I like how you sort of tied identity into that as well.
Speaker B:That's.
Speaker B:It goes further, doesn't it, than the law and order, you know, when it, when it comes to thinking about, about you think all the things that are tied into identity, you know, who gets what, who lives where, who, who, who gets treated like this or that or the other.
Speaker B:And, and that has all turned up on its head.
Speaker B:You know.
Speaker C:Yeah.
Speaker C:Geographical boundaries.
Speaker C:I mean, suddenly to realize that the country you're in is not the country or the region that you thought it was.
Speaker C:I mean, my.
Speaker C:My mother's father, and we only found this out a few years ago, was from Ukraine.
Speaker C:Well, when it was Crimea.
Speaker C:So, you know, now that was a significant part of.
Speaker C:Of Tartaria.
Speaker C:So that would mean that not only have I been researching this for five years, but my grandfather was a Tartarian.
Speaker C:So, you know, people will start looking at their family trees and thinking, wow, you know, I'm actually part of this.
Speaker C:My history actually includes a lie.
Speaker C:That means that I, you know, where my family are from, where my descendants are from, has been totally fabricated as well.
Speaker C:So this is now personal.
Speaker C:You know, it's.
Speaker C:It's personal.
Speaker C:And we would look at, of course, at construction methods.
Speaker C:How are they able to build these things and how did they share that information?
Speaker C:So you have a building in Argentina or Rio de Janeiro, for example, that looks almost identical to the White House.
Speaker C:How did that happen?
Speaker C:How were they communicating before communication and before travel was as accessible and easy as it is now?
Speaker C:What else have they lied about?
Speaker B:Fascinating stuff, Guy.
Speaker B:That is all we've got time for today, unfortunately.
Speaker B:But I would love to talk to you about some of these other points that you've made today.
Speaker B:In the meantime, where can people find you, your research, your books, all of the things that you do online?
Speaker C:Well, as somebody said to me the other day, you can find your book on a Mason.
Speaker C:But yeah, so I publish through Amazon, so you know that that's where most people buy my book from.
Speaker C:But I do sell signed copies quite regularly.
Speaker C:But if they want to reach out to me, they can email me, but I also have a YouTube channel and a Facebook group, and everything's called the same.
Speaker C:Tesla and the Cabbage Patch Kids.
Speaker B:Search for you online.
Speaker B:Tesla and the Cabbage Patch Kids by Guy Anderson.
Speaker B:And they'll find you there.
Speaker B:Thanks so much.
Speaker C:Thanks for having me on.
Speaker A:Wow, what a story.
Speaker A:So many questions, so much intrigue.
Speaker A:That's definitely, definitely going to have to be part of one of my adventure stories at some point in the future.
Speaker A:This is the Adventure Story podcast.
Speaker A:Thank you so much for hanging out today.
Speaker A:I love sharing these stories with you.
Speaker A:It's great to spend this time with you.
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Speaker A:Enjoy the adventure and I can't wait to see you again next time.