Welcome to Men on Fire, a podcast about what it means to be a man. Well, coffee sorted. Yeah, it's nearly half. Yeah. Early for a fireside out there, I think. Yeah. I mean, they don't need to know how we record it. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. They don't need to know how early is. Yeah. Yeah. Maybe one the side. Yeah. It's definitely turning as well. Feeling a bit more autumnal here at barbecue school. It's a storm Agnes thing today. Right. And if any model for still. Yeah. I think it's quite easy to get your name right to get names of the storm. Yeah, I think so. After the old days, this would look like this would be a mild blow. It would be mild, but yeah, I like quite like a storm for me. Like, um, adverse weather conditions are an opportunity to, um, get out and barbecue because, like, when it's a nice sunny summer's day, afternoon, evening, whatever, then it's easy for me and like a bit more of a challenge. And, you know, just to feel that I'm pushing myself. So quite often you see some real hardcore barbecue people get out in the snow or in a storm and they get all excited. I've seen a few. Oh, he's cooking install magnets. It's like, yes. Oh, it's like a badge of honour to get outdoors and cooking. I can see and ideas appeared. Show some if there's any juice out there. Yeah right. Extreme barbecue it basically Marcus gets all all over the world in different extreme environments. Lavender bar Winchester. I'd be up for that. Yeah. Yeah. Like wing walking on a plane. Yeah, I'm pretty on down with that. Yeah, I'm definitely dying with that. So, top of the pyramids. Yeah. Underwater barbecue. That would be. I think it's. I saw somebody do that. You know what I think? I think it was in some sort of air bubble thing, actually. Yeah. Yeah, they did this underwater barbecue. Yeah. I mean, they must be probably is. Is there not an element that could be heated underwater and you could wear a diving suit and you technically cook off it? What? The air happened with that. Yeah. You could think with the world war would get really hot. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's not I've not thought it through entirely, but, you know, it could be something that could really leave. And television legacy. Yeah. Yeah. That's what we're going to talk about again. You know, we. I was fishing around for a few ideas, and some of the guys came up with an idea for talk about legacy and oneness. What legacy can be handed down to us and what we pass on to guests. The next lot of people who come along, that's probably already here. But yeah, let's let's start with the definition man was legacy. Me. I think it's what you, what you take from previous like I said and what you hand on to next generations what is that so or whoever comes on from that you know, doesn't have to be a generation next. But you know so if you did you have to be multiple people to carry the legacy. Oh, because if you know, because I think we were talking before and would say like this might be difficult episode for me to be positive. I've got some negative feelings about certain things that happen in the world and how easy it is to even leave a legacy, but as an individual. But of course, sir, so my focus now is not that that will be my legacy. Is this doing my best for him and hoping that, you know, he's in a comfortable, good place and. Oh. But that's important. Also, if you're not a parent, you as a you, you could argue that if you just made one person's life better or impacted one area, even if it's really narrow within your community. Is that that to me that you could still count that as a legacy in commission? Oh, absolutely. Absolutely. I think so. And I think I think yeah, for me, it's really a big legacy. Yeah. For me, if if you can, um, work out a way of leaving a positive impact on the world and those about you, then that's a good legacy. Whatever it is you do, then you've left things better than what they were. We can get here now. I'm feeling. I don't know what th