►
From YouTube: Bruno Freitas Interviews Brie Carranza | GitLab Support
Description
In this video Support Engineer Bruno Freitas interviews Senior Support Engineer Brie Carranza, with intention of sharing Brie's tips and strategies with the world!
A
B
A
Awesome
awesome
and
other
Engineers
like
me,
okay,
so
what
we're
doing
here
just
for
context?
What
we're
doing
here
is
like
during
our
amazing
pairing
sessions
together
I
noticed
that
you
have
so
many
valuable
skills
and
practices
and
your
entire
workflow.
You
know
amazed
me
so
I'd
like
you
to
share
a
bit
of
that
experience
and
knowledge
and
workflow
with
other
people
around
the
world,
like
our
team
members
first,
but
then
other
people
around
the
world,
so
I'm
gonna
ask
you
a
couple
of
questions
and
yeah.
A
A
B
For
sure,
so
in
terms
of
Education
got
a
lot
of
on-the-job
learning,
so
my
first
job
in
Tech
I
was
like
16
well,
my
first
official
job
in
Tech
I
was
like
16.
I
did
networking
jobs
getting
paid
under
the
table
from
like
when
I
was
13.,
so
I've
learned
a
lot
of
things,
just
hey
you're
the
you're,
the
intern.
You
get
to
go.
B
Do
this
not
glamorous
job,
but
I
learned
a
lot
about
how
important
production
is
like
I
was
16
and
I
was
pulling
network
cables
in
a
Data
Center
and
I
understood
that
if
you
pull
the
wrong
cable,
bad
things
happen,
and
so
that
was
like
really
the
introduction
to
like
this
is
what
is
important
about
prod
and
it's
very
like
on
the
job.
I
did
study,
I.T
type
stuff
so,
like
I,
went
I
studied
it
in
undergrad
at
Slippery,
Rock
University.
After
that,
I
worked
for
two
years
as
a
web.
B
Hosting
company
talk
a
little
bit
about
like
hardships
and
stuff
there,
but
just
to
finish
like
the
education
I
did
then
get
my
graduate
degree
in
cyber
security
from
Carnegie
Mellon.
So
that's
sort
of
like
what
educate
formal
education
looks
like
for
me.
My
first
job
out
of
college,
like
I
mentioned,
was
on
a
web
hosting
company
hardships.
I
worked
at
night,
I
work
nights
so
like
midnight
to
8
A.M,
and
that
was
not
all.
It
was
like
cool
in
some
ways.
You
know
driving
home
at
eight
o'clock
in
the
morning.
B
B
Right
yeah
there
were
fewer
tlds
then,
but
that's
for
another
time,
yeah
memorable
experiences
I
do
want
to
mention
a
cool
thing.
I
did
in
undergrad
that
I've
been
able
to
I
try
to
build
on
whenever
I
can
so
I
had
a
professor
at
Slippery
who
taught
programming
to
Girl
Scouts
and
he
was
seeking
volunteers
to
help
and
I
was
like
done.
B
B
B
B
A
B
Like
we
could
have
a
hold
on
conversation
about
like
what's
different
and
similar
between
the
two
and
what
is
the
systems
administrator
and
all
that
kind
of
stuff,
but
yeah
I
read
the
values
page
and
I
was
like
if
this
is
all
what
it
says.
This
is
amazing.
This
is
the
place.
I
was
looking
for
and
an
amazing
product
three
years
in
I
love
it.
It's
awesome.
A
Awesome
wow
like
wow,
that
was
that
was
amazing.
Thank
you.
So
much
for
sharing
your
story.
Yeah
I
also
worked
at
nights
like
and
I.
Remember,
yeah
I
remember,
driving
back
home
when
roads
were
like
empty.
No
cars
been
sleepy
as
well.
Wow
wow,
that's
wow!
That's
that's
amazing!
Thank
you.
So
much
for
sharing
I
do
have
other
questions.
So,
let's,
let's
us,
let's
go
straight
to
them.
So
I
am
extremely
curious,
extremely
curious
about.
How
do
you
structure
your
days
like
your
weeks
or
careers?
Are
your
weeks
and
like
all
areas
in
your
career?
A
Sorry,
like
you,
have
such
an
organized
way
of
working
right
that
I'm
that
I
I
like
to
know
if,
if
it's
intentional
or
if
it's
something
that
you
do
when
you,
when
you
start
your
day
or
is
it
something
that
you
do
when
you
start
the
week
like
how?
How
does
it
all
work
like?
Can
you
can
you
tell
us
a
little
bit
about
that.
A
B
Prior
to
joining
gitlab
I
was
in
grad
school
and
I.
Had
two
roles
at
CME
like
I
was
one
full-time
person.
Obviously,
but
I
had
two
distinct
roles,
so
Bruno
I
had
to
be
organized
yeah
I
didn't
have
a
there's,
no
choice.
There's
no
I
was
like
I'm,
not
gonna,
do
anything
poorly,
so
I've
gotta
have
some
organization
and
structure
and
I've
brought
a
lot
of
that
structured
thinking,
I
guess
with
me,
so
I
do
it
fairly?
B
B
A
B
A
B
A
B
A
B
Come
up
like
eight
different
days:
that's
bad!
What
is
happening!
It's
probably
a
very
annoying
ticket.
You
know,
and
it's
all
in
markdown
and
I,
so
that
just
it
makes
me
happy.
I
use,
Google
Calendar,
Google
Calendar
boring
solution,
but
let
me
tell
you
how
I
use
it
I
use
it
to
like
visualize.
This
is
obvious,
but
I
use
it
to
visualize
my
time
so
I
put
on
my
calendar
working
on
if
I
have
like
two
tickets,
that,
like
I,
need
to
focus
on
I'll
put
nrt
for
ticket
number.
That's
90
minutes!
B
B
Yeah
now,
obviously,
if
something's
going
to
take
five
minutes
or
15
minutes,
I
don't
put
it
on
my
calendar.
What
I
say
about
structured
organization
is
you
should
have
as
much
structure
as
is
necessary,
no
more
and
no
less
I.
Think
it's
really
right
to
like
get
that
right,
because
too
much
structure
and
all
you're
doing
is
busy
work,
but
not
enough
structure
and
you
could
be
more
efficient.
You
could
do
a
better
job.
Another
thing
that
is
super
helpful,
clockwise.
A
A
B
I,
don't
do
it
a
ton
of
what
do
I
saying,
I,
usually
I,
always
start
my
day
by
looking
at
my
calendar.
Obviously,
when
I
before
I
sign
off
I,
look
at
my
calendar
for
the
next
day,
I,
don't
use
the
calendar
for
much
of
The
week-long
View
for
plant
for
week-long
planning
for
that
I
use
my
one-on-one
issue
with
my
manager,
so.
B
A
B
B
Many
many
years
ago,
I
would
say:
oh
yeah,
I'm
gonna,
take
my
lunch
later.
I'm
gonna
take
my
lunch
at
two
and
take
my
lunch
at
three.
Now
it's
4
30.,
you
just
didn't
take
a
lunch
break
yeah
and
clockwise.
I
am
so
thankful
to
clockwise,
because
I
take
a
lunch.
Sometimes
I
skip
it,
but
I
usually
take
a
lunch
break
and
I
walk
away
from
my
computer
I
leave
this
room
I
pet.
My
cat
I
go
for
a
walk,
yeah.
A
A
B
So
I
don't
know
if
you
I'll,
we'll
find
a
way
to
put
a
screenshot
or
something
for
my
stand
up
threads,
but
Bruno
I
put
what
I'm
doing
in
chronological
order,
so
I
have
all
my
pairing
sessions
and
meetings
and
whatever
from
my
calendar
I'll
also
have.
This
is
what
capacity
I
have
for
frt.
This
is
a
quick
summary
of
the
nrt
tickets
I'm
working
on
and
if
it's
something
like
oh
I,
have
this
weird
ldot
problem.
I
can't
solve
I'll.
Put
a
little
note
about
that.
That
way.
B
B
Other
thing
I
do
is
use
my
socks.
I
am
very
deliberate
with
my
slack
status,
so
you
can
tell
what
I'm
doing
one
other
thing
that
I
do
that's
like
organizational,
sometimes
if
it
gets
the
end
of
the
day
and
my
brain
is
just
going
I'll
say
you
know
what
I'm
gonna
come
back
and
wrap
up
later,
so
I'll
set
a
slack
size
like
back
in
a
bit
to
wrap
up
when
I
come
back.
A
Yeah
yeah
yeah
I've,
seen
yeah
I've,
seen
your
your
your
your
your
slack
status
and
it's
yeah
you
do
it
manually
right
like
I've
that
this
this
bugs
me
a
bit
like.
Are
you
doing
it
manually?
Are
you
doing
yeah?
Do
you
have
some
sort
of
automation
to
do
that
for
you
or
like
how'd,
you
call
you
over
there.
A
It
got
it
awesome,
awesome,
brilliant,
brilliant
I
also
noticed
that
you
are
first
of
all
you're,
always
learning
new
stuff,
and
this.
This
is
still
part
of
that
same
question,
but
yeah
you're,
always
learning
something
you're,
always
growing
and
I
noticed
that
you
have
some
kind
of
exposure.
You
know
in
the
in
the
what
would
I
call
it
in
the
support.
Community
like
as
a
whole,
so
I've
seen
I've
read
your
talks.
A
Basically
I've,
seen
slides
from
your
talks,
so
I've
seen
your
like
you're
doing
the
work
here,
but
you're
also
growing
and
you're,
also
exposing
yourself
so
I'd
like
to
know.
How
do
you
like
manage
your
time
in
order
to
be
able
to
do
those
things
regularly,
because
I've
seen
that
you
from
time
to
time,
you'll,
post,
something
you
know
and
and
it'll
not
affect
your
your
work?
You
know
ability,
so
it's
brilliant,
so
I'm
just
curious
on
like
how
do
you
do
it.
B
I
love
this
question
so
much
there's
there's
a
I'm
I'm
rather
deliberate
about
this.
So
there's
two
big
things
I
put
in
this
category,
but
before
that
I
want
to
say
something:
the
always
learning.
B
A
B
A
B
I,
thank
you.
I
I
gave
this
like
speech
to
audition,
to
be
a
student
speaker
when
I
graduated
and
in
that
speech
one
of
the
things
that
I
said
was
about
how
important
it
is
to
retain
a
sense
of
curiosity,
yes
about
the
world
and
how
well
that
will
serve
people.
That
was
like
three
years
ago
now
and
I.
Don't
want
to
like
sit
here
and
quote
myself,
but
that.
B
To
answer
your
question
so
two
things,
the
blog
I
believe
I
believe
in
public
goal,
setting
for
some
things
and
my
blog
is
a
little
bit
of
that.
I
started
writing
a
little
bit
more
frequently
towards
the
end
of
last
year
and
I'm,
a
big
New,
Year's
resolution
kind
of
a
person
and
I,
so
it's
May
and
I've
still
stuck
to
it
Bruno.
My
resolution
was
to
publish
one
at
least
one
blog
post
on
bree.dev
every
month.
A
B
In
measurement
Clarity
there's
a
thing
about
changing
scope,
not
due
date
and
I
have
planted
that
into
my
brain.
So
yes,
it
is
so
here's
the
thing
it
is
sometimes
10
p.m.
My
time,
okay,
11
p.m,
11
30
p.m.
My
time
and
I'm
typing,
because
I
need
to
publish
in
30
minutes.
I
have
not
yet
gone
past.
The
time
I've,
just
like
that's
just
I'm,
committing
to
that.
The
other
thing
that
I
do
is
shrink
the
thing.
So
do
you
know
the
like?
The
til
today
I
learned,
yeah.
A
B
Yeah,
so
I
will
put
these
links
also
somewhere,
but
I
found
there's
this
guy
Simon
Willison
one
of
my
favorite
people
on
the
entire
internet.
He
has
a
til
sites
and
what
it
is
is
Snippets.
So
when
you
learn
something
like
some
weird
cool
thing
about
out
app
search
or
whatever
you
write,
a
Mark
I
write
a
markdown
file.
It's
maybe
five
lines
and.
B
It
on
til.breen.dev-
and
sometimes
it's
it's
not
always
something
I
learned
that
day
it's
something
I
wanted
to
have
written
down
to
refer
to
later.
I
was
playing
around
with
image
magic
and
found
some
cool
image
magic
stuff.
So
I
was
like
well
I,
gotta,
put
it
somewhere
and
that
practice
one
it
having
all
of
those
Snippets
is
like.
Oh
yeah,
I
am
learning
things.
A
B
Brilliant
one
other
thing,
I'll
mention
I,
do
monthly
I
have
a
standing
meeting
with
my
manager
to
focus
on
professional
development,
and
that
is
separate
from
what
I
want.
We
did
not
just
bundle
that
into
one-on-ones
and
we
don't
skip
it.
There
was
one
remember
there
was
one
time:
I
was
like
Eric
I'm,
so
busy
I
just
want
to
skip
this.
Can
we
do
this
later
and
we
decided?
No?
No,
that's
not
a
good
idea.
Don't
skip
your
own
professional
development
that
doesn't
make
sense.
B
A
Yeah
yeah,
brilliant
wow.
That
was
an
amazing
answer.
Thank
you.
So
much
for
doing
that.
Yeah
awesome,
like
my
take,
is
that
it's
it's
not
so
much
about
like
how
the
the
volume
of
your
content
like
it's
like
setting
setting
dates
and
then
trying
to
post
whatever
you
have
at
that
specific
time.
Brilliant
awesome!
Amazing!
Thank
you.
So
much.
Thank
you.
So
much
I'm
loving
this.
B
A
A
A
B
B
So
I
think
there's
I,
don't
know
because
I'm
on
the
other
side
of
it,
I
think
there's
some
of
that.
Here's.
What
I
will
say
us
being
all
remote
makes
this
very
interesting.
What
you
don't
see
is
when
Zoom
is
off
when
I'm
sitting
here
like.
Why
doesn't
that
work?
I
have
no
idea.
I'm
extremely
frustrated
I
just
want
to
unplug
my
keyboard
and
throw
it
out
the
window,
you
don't
and
that
Bruno
that
happens,
but
then
I
just
take
a
deep
breath.
A
B
Hang
out
with
pop
come
back
and
what
you
do
see
is
me
running
on
slack
hi
everybody
has
anyone
ever
seen
this
super
weird
thing:
here's
what
I'm
seeing
here's,
what
I've
tried!
That's
the
end
result
of
that
frustration
and
Bruno.
We
all
go
through.
You
can
look
at
anyone
who
you
think,
like
is
amazing.
Everyone
is
like
a
human
being
at.
A
A
B
A
B
A
A
B
A
B
That's
the
other
thing
you
don't
see
when
I'm
stressed
out
and
I
have
too
many
things
to
do.
I'm,
like
okay,
take
10
minutes
to
plan
out
what
you
need
to
do.
What's
the
right
priority,
how
much
time
approximately
to
spend
on
whatever
draw
a
line?
These
are
the
things
that
happen
tomorrow.
Okay,
you've,
you've
planned.
Your
work
now
go
work
that
plan
the
stress
goes
away
because
you've
made
a
lot
of
the
decisions
about
the
things
that
are
stressing
you
out,
yeah.
A
B
A
B
A
B
A
B
I
would
say:
exercise
it's
not
just
so.
I
can
do
half
marathons
right
exercise
it.
For
me,
personally,
is
amazing
for
my
mood
and
for
stress.
The
best
feeling
is
like
when
you
go
over
for
me
is
when
I
go
work
out
when
I
don't
feel
like
it,
I
never
am
done
exercising
and
like
oh,
that
was
terrible.
I
really
hate
that
I
did
that
I
was
like
oh
I,
feel
great
and
today
was
awesome
exactly.
B
A
Was
brilliant
that
was
brilliant
wow
like
I'm
amazed?
Thank
you
so
much,
especially
the
part
where
you
said
that
okay,
so
some
days,
that's
my
understanding,
you're
working
longer
right,
but
you're,
still
working
on
that
right,
you're
still
adjusting
it
so
yeah
days
are
different,
so
yeah
same
awesome
like
brilliant.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Thank
you
for
sharing
we're.
Okay,
I
I
promise
that
these
questions
will
eventually
stop,
but
for
now,
let's.
A
A
B
I
feel
like
habit
is
good.
Ruts
are
not
good,
so
I'm,
yeah
I'm,
always
curating.
My
habits
right,
so
I'm
dropping
old,
bad
habit,
old
habits
that
no
longer
serve
me
and
adding
new
habits.
I
would
so
my
habits
are
I
always
have
habits,
but
what
they
are
differs
I've.
The
thing
I've
learned
about
myself
is
habit
and
structure.
Make
me
happy
I,
just
they.
They
not
everyone
feels
that
way.
But
for
me
it
helps
burn
out.
I
just
want
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
that
yeah.
You
you
had
asked
like.
B
How
do
you
make
sure
you
don't
burn
out
my
hot
take
on
this
Bruno?
Is
you
don't
like
ideally
yeah,
but
burnout
happens?
Let's
not
pretend
that,
like
the
end
goal
is
prevent
burnout
cool,
we
prevented
burnout,
it'll,
never
happen.
We
don't
have
to
talk
about
the
rest
of
it.
Burnout
happens,
so
I
think
it's
important
to
prevent,
but
it's
sort
of
like
security,
defense
and
depth
prevent
it.
If
you
can
detect
it.
A
B
Treat
it
recover
and
then
go
about
your
life.
I've
I
mean
I,
really
like
the
hbr
Harvard
Business
Review
books,
I'm
a
big
airport
book
person,
but
they
have
one
on
burnout,
and
that
was
really
what
got
me
thinking
about
identifying
and
recovering
burnout
in
addition
to
just
preventing
it,
because
I
think
we're
we're
really
missing
an
important
conversation.
If
we
only
talk
about
preventing
burnout.
A
For
sure
yeah
yeah
yeah
excellent.
This
reminds
me
of
driving
a
car
like
when
I
was
learning
the
only
way
to
know
the
limits
of
the
car
was
to
slowly
bump
into
something
like
slowly
and-
and
everyone
goes
through,
that
I
think
at
some
point
like
or
at
least
you
almost
hit
something
like
you're
I,
don't
know:
you're
parking
your
car,
for
example
right
so
and
you
you
start
doing
it
really
slowly
and
like
for
a
moment.
I
remember
like
one
one
time,
I
bumped
into
another
car
I
think
like,
but
it
was.
A
It
was
really
slowly.
Nothing
happened,
but
I
knew
oh.
This
is
the
limit
like
this
is
the
limit
like
so
when
my
rear
view
mirror
looks
like
this
I'm
really
close
or
I'm
about
to
hit
something
yeah,
so
that
that
that
reminds
me
of
it.
Okay,
so
yeah
detect
it
like
you
bumped
into
something
right,
detect
it
and
then
like
treat
it
like
yeah.
B
A
A
B
I
would
just
say
two
things:
I
love
that
story
and
sort
of
thinking
about
the
rear
view
mirror,
because
that's
a
good
way
to
you
know
just
think
about
your
mental
rear
view
mirror
yeah.
The
other
thing
is
I
would
just
say
like
since
we're
recording
this
yeah.
The
goal
is
avoid
burnout,
but
also
be
kind
to
yourself.
B
If
you
are
like
hey
I'm
burned
out,
don't
stress
yourself
out
further
about
the
fact
that
you're
burned
out
it's
okay,
do
what
you
need
to
do
to
come
back,
but
I,
always
sort
of
like
say
to
people
like
my
sgg
is
like
we'll
get
through
the
day,
I
care
about
you
being
there
and
like
able
to
be
the
best
engineer
you
can
be
in
the
long
term
day-to-day
we'll
get
through
the
day-to-day.
This
is
about
like
sustainable
yeah,
Excellence
yeah,.
A
For
sure
yeah
for
sure
awesome,
so
this
this
will
be
the
hardest
question
I
think
on
okay,
for
today,
okay,
we're
we're
ending
I,
think
but
yeah
this.
This
is
going
to
be
a
little
bit
tough,
but
it's
gonna
help
a
lot
of
people
I'm
sure.
So
what
I
I
like
to
know
like
what?
What's
your
view
on
like
there's?
There's
this
sidekick
culture
right,
side,
gig,
culture,
sorry
on
on
the
web
right
now
like!
A
A
It's
it's
more
apparent
now
so
I'd
like
to
know
your
your
take
on
it,
because
I
I
see
you
as
a
very
focused
person
right
so
I'd
like
to
know
like
how
do
you
deal
with
that
and
also
those
those
those
kind
of
like
insecurities
right
so
I
think
that
this
culture
evolved
because
of
some
insecurities
right.
So
yeah
I,
just
I'd
like
to
know
your
your
thoughts
about
that
for.
B
Sure
yeah,
so
I
think
you're
right
that
it's
not
new,
this
hustle
culture,
but
it's
definitely
much
more
prominent
given
like
recent
events.
Like
caveats,
we
all
know
I
think
this
is
an
extremely
individual
situational
question,
but
I'm
individual
that
you're
asking
the
situations
that'll
proceed,
yes,
I
personally,
I,
don't
think
it
should
be
necessary
I,
don't
think
it
should
be
necessary
to
have
a
side
gig
to
support
yourself
I,
don't
think
that
should
be
necessary,
but.
B
We
don't
live
in
Utopia,
so
I
fully
understand
that
for
some
people
that
having
that
side
gig
or
that
hustle
or
whatever
is
what
helps
them
deal
with
the
insecurity
of
what
could
happen
at
any
time
personally,
I
put
that
sort
of
insecurity
in
the
life
is
hard.
Unexpected
things
happen,
and
this
feels
like
not
great
but
I
kind
of
think
about
all
as
well.
That
ends
well,
it's
incredibly
painful
I.
B
But
I
do
believe
that,
like
if
it's
not
okay,
it's
not
the
end
right.
Okay,
I
do
I'm
a
focused
person
but
I'm.
Also
an
enthusiastic
person
I
like
to
do
computer
related
things
that
are
not
my
job
I
like
that
very
much.
It's
sometimes
I
hate
it
sometimes
I
hate
computers,
I
think
they
should
go
away,
but
I
love,
making
websites.
Now
that
I'm
not
doing
it
for
other
people.
B
For
my
it's
funny,
I
like
websites
specifically
when
they
are
not
a
side
Hustle
being
paid
to
make
websites
for
people
I
don't
want
to
do
it
and
I
won't.
Do
it.
Okay,
probably
for
the
right
amount
of
one,
but
I
don't
want
to
do
it
for
myself
for
fun,
I
love,
it
I.
Do
it
all
the
time
you
have
no
idea
how
many
sub
domains
I
have
off
of
my
websites
I.
Just
it's
fine.
A
B
I,
do
my
blog
comes
to
mind.
I
will
say
I'm
very
conscious
of
my
blog
as
my
representation
of
myself
to
the
world
and
it's
utility
for
people
to
understand
who
I
am
and
like
what
I
can
do
when
I'm
capable
of
you
mentioned
insecurity.
Imposter
syndrome
is
real.
You
know
every
time
I
publish
a
blog
post
every
time,
it's
very
hard
for
me
to
not
delete
it.
B
A
B
A
And
and
like
oh,
my
God
I
loved
it
I
love
that
phrase,
because
it's
so
true
is
it's
it's
not
about
like
okay,
what
you
know
matters
Point,
okay,
you
know
it
cool,
but
what
you
can
figure
out
like
what
you
can
discover
what
you
can
find
out.
What
you
like?
Thank
you
so
much
for
not
deleting
that
article
I
mean
yeah
you're.
B
A
B
A
B
A
B
A
Yeah,
that's
that's
that's
so
true,
so
yeah.
My
understanding
is
that
you
focus
your
attention
on
what
you're
doing
and
you
prepare
yourself
mentally
for
whatever
might
come,
knowing
that
you
can
always
figure
something
out
right.
Like
then
yeah
you
can
always
go
through
stuff.
You
cannot
yeah.
That's
that's
fantastic
yeah
amazing!
Well!
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
So
much
for
sharing,
because
I
I
just
want
to
say
this.
This
question
is
is
is
really
important
because
there's
a
lot
of
conflict
inside
me
at
least
I,
don't
know
about
other
people.
A
Other
Engineers
there's
a
lot
of
conflict
about
like
I,
know
that
I
I'm
a
person
that
thrives
on
Focus
right,
but
this
culture,
sometimes
you
know
they
hit
some
weak
spots
and
I
tend
to
like,
should
I
do
this
or
should
I
not
do
this
or
should
I
do
this
like
yeah?
So
thank
you
so
much
for
sharing
that
I'm
sure
that
it'll
be
also
valuable
for
other
engineers
and
and
people
in
general
for.
B
B
A
B
A
B
B
A
B
So
this
one
is
really
hard
and
I'm
gonna
cheat
a
little
bit
and
say
the
most
fun
recent
thing
of
dedicate
lab.
So
we
formed
a
team
for
trivia
for
intergenerational
week.
There's
another
word
to
the
week.
We
formed
a
trivia
team.
The
team
name
was
all
Emoji.
Obviously
everyone
and
it
was
all
get
loud
support
people,
so
that
was
extremely
fun
Bruno
and
like
Yay
support,
so
yeah
yeah.
A
Yeah
yeah
awesome
awesome,
oh
brilliant,
brilliant,
I
love
it
I,
love
it
yeah
and
you're.
Let
me
tell
you
like
your
your
your
love
for
emojis
I
can
call
it
that
like
yeah,
it's
it's
so
good
because
it
sets
the
tone
for
the
things.
You're.
Writing
you
know
like
before.
Emojis
we
didn't
have
that
right
and
and
because
we
now
have
them.
A
We
can
say
something,
write,
something
and
then
put
a
little
emoji
and
sets
the
tone
for
the
whole
like
sentence
or
paragraph
or
whatever
and
I
love
when
you
do
it
and
when
you
do
that,
like
Yeah
because
it
oh,
this
is
supposed
to
be
something
light.
Oh,
this
is
supposed
to
be
serious,
or
this
is
supposed
to
be
fun
like
yeah.
So
thank
you.
Thank
you.
So
much
for
doing
that.
Yeah.