MuggleCast 106 Transcript (continued)
No Offspring Named After Sirius
Audience Member: Maddy from Pittsburgh. My question is, why didn't Harry name a kid after Sirius?
[Audience cheers]
Audience Member: I mean, he named one after every single person in the world except for Sirius.
Jamie: She actually posted on her website that Albus Severus - she missed out his third middle name. It was Albus Severus Sirius.
Mikey: And didn't they get a black dog named Sirius too? I'm making that up.
Jamie: We're joking, by the way, yeah.
Mikey: I'm sorry, they made that up. They didn't call it Padfoot or Sirius. It's called Ben Schoen.
Foreshadowing in Movie 3
Andrew: Next question? Hi, where are you from? Here's a party hat. Let's all celebrate the festivities today!
Audience Member: Hi, I'm Spencer from Pittsburgh. I was wondering, I don't know how long ago it was that J.K. Rowling said that she saw something in the Prisoner of Azkaban movie that she thought people would look back on and think was foreshadowing something from Deathly Hallows. I was wondering what it was and if it could be that she thought people would think Snape conjured the Patronus...
Jamie: Yeah.
Audience Member: ...at the lake with the Dementors. Because he has a doe Patronus and it might be mistaken for a stag.
Jamie: Oh!
Mikey: Huh.
Andrew: That's an interesting question, because...
Emerson: Something someone else pointed out at another event we did was maybe it was when - it was either Fred or George was joking about after Harry falls off his broom, that they made a joke about falling off of the Astronomy Tower, which then in Half-Blood Prince, Dumbledore obviously falls off of. So they were saying maybe that's the foreshadowing that they did unintentionally.
Jamie: That's quite a small hint, though. That's like...
Emerson: Yeah.
Jamie: I know what you mean, though, yeah.
Emerson: But if it was unintentional, then it probably wasn't anything major.
Jamie: I like the doe thing, though.
Andrew: Yeah, yeah.
Jamie: I think that's a good idea. Very good idea.
Andrew: Yeah.
Mikey: He thought it was his dad, though.
Jamie: It was the Shrunken Head!
Andrew: Someone's got to ask Jo.
Jamie: That was...
Andrew: Yeah, the Shrunken Head.
Mikey: Shrunken Head's like a Horcrux. [imitating the Shrunken Head] "Take it away, Ern!"
Jamie: Take a question from that side.
Mikey: Yeah, a question from this side.
What If Snape Had Died Sooner?
Audience Member: Hi. I'm Katie from Pittsburgh, and my question was just - Harry seemed to be in the right place at the right time when Snape died. And what do you think would have happened if he had gotten there after Snape died?
Jamie: He'd be covered in the memories and he'd just have to scoop it up off his body and put it into a glass.
Mikey: Wow.
Jamie: Sorry.
Mikey: That's kind of gruesome, Jamie.
Ben: Had he not died, I think - had Harry not been there, I mean. He probably would've faced Voldemort and - I mean, he never would've known Snape's true loyalty, obviously, and he wouldn't have known that he was a Horcrux, but - I mean, I don't know if it - would it have changed the outcome, you think?
Jamie: Yeah, because he wouldn't - he wouldn't have found out everything about him, so he wouldn't have wandered into danger knowing he had to die and all that kind of thing. It was instrumental, but it was just luck, as you say, that Harry was there at the right time.
Mikey: Yeah. He also wouldn't have known he was a Horcrux, too. So he wouldn't have been able to open the Snitch and all those wonderful things...
Jamie: [laughs] Yeah.
Mikey: ...that just coincidentally happened because Harry is so lucky as the Boy Who Lived and gets everything handed...
Emerson: The Boy Who Lucked Out.
Jamie: Yeah, that's his new name.
Mikey: Yeah, he has a murderer after him. He's a very lucky boy.
What Happened to the Resurrection Stone Ghosts?
Andrew: What's your name, where are you from?
Audience Member: Oh, it's my turn? My name's Mary and I'm from Pittsburgh. Do I get a party hat?
Andrew: Sure.
[Audience laughs]
Audience Member: Sweet.
Mikey: That's why she came up here. She just wants a party hat. I still got the blow thingys, though.
Audience Member: Okay. Did anybody else wonder what happened to the people that the
Resurrection Stone was used on? Because it said that they came back sort of as ghosts, but do you think they stayed like that, or they went back to being dead? Because as...
Ben: I think that they went back to being dead.
Audience Member: Because everybody's argued...
Jamie: Yeah. I agree.
Audience Member: ..."oh, he didn't actually die, he was in limbo." But he assumed that they would go away after he sacrificed himself and died. So what happened to them then?
Mikey: They went away when they dropped the Stone. So the Stone itself is what gave him the power to bring them back, but he doesn't actually bring them back to life. And since he dropped the stone - Jo actually answered in her transcript what happened to it - since he dropped it somewhere in the Forest, she's like, "I imagine one of the centaurs stepping on it, and it getting buried, and no one ever finding it again." So I hope that kind of answers your question where it's like, the Stone is what has the power, because it's one of the three Deathly Hallows.
Jamie: I always imagined it like a Priori Incantatem thing, when they came out, but they were vapory, and they didn't last long, and you knew they weren't real, but then they went away, you know.
Mikey: I thought of them as like pudding because it's kind of tasty.
[Audience laughs]
Emerson: By the way, that hat looks a bit like...
Mikey: Bad joke.
Emerson: ...a bit like an erumpent horn. And those are bad news...
Jamie: Yeah, they are.
Emerson: ...so be careful with that thing. Be careful with those.
Jamie: That's very true.
Back to Harry Using Unforgivable Curses
Audience Member: Okay. Hi, my name's Josh from Pittsburgh, and I've sort of have a question and a sort of thing. And I sort of agree with you guys when you said that Harry was a Horcrux, because technically he does follow the definition of one. Part of his soul cut out into something.
Jamie: Are you going to "but"?
Audience Member: Huh?
Jamie: But...
Audience Member: No, I'm not going to say "but." I'm just agreeing with you guys.
Jamie: Oh, okay. [laughs]
Ben: Okay, good. Well...
Jamie: Thank you.
Audience Member: Well, also, she said that Harry didn't mean the curses in the books. And that just sort of, kind of, makes me confused. Because when he did the Cruciatus Curse on Bellatrix, I think he would have meant it because his godfather had just died and she had killed her. I don't really know what's up with that.
Jamie: I think - I always thought the point was that you have to want to hurt them, whereas she just wanted - sorry - whereas Harry just wanted revenge. He didn't...
Ben: Well, she said that...
Jamie: ...actually cause pain.
Ben: ...sheer emotion alone isn't enough to actually make the curse work.
Jamie: Yeah.
Ben: I think it has to be something you're conditioned to do. You have to be conditioned to be just at the art of hurting people. I mean, I really think that's what it is.
Jamie: Yeah. And he just wanted to get her out of the way. He didn't want to cause her pain. He just wanted to kill her. That's probably it. But...
Mikey: Okay.
Andrew: Okay.
Jamie: Next one.
The Mandrakes
Andrew: What's your name, where are you from?
Audience Member: I'm Lani. I'm from Pittsburgh.
Andrew: Say that again.
Audience Member: I'm Lani. I'm from Pittsburgh.
Andrew: Woo! Anyone here from Exton? Exton? Murrysville? Yes! I used to live there. All right.
Mikey: Wow.
Audience Member: When Neville and Professor Sprout and all of the people who are carrying Mandrakes to throw at the Death Eaters, they all have earmuffs on. But Harry passes them and he doesn't have earmuffs. And all of the others on the castle and grounds, why don't they die? Because the cry of the Mandrake is fatal.
Andrew: See, J.K. Rowling, when she writes these books, is not perfect.
[Audience laughs]
Andrew: I don't - is there a good explanation for that? I mean, I guess that's why that chapter was called "The Flaw in the Plan."
[Audience laughs]
Emerson: Maybe - did they cast Muffliato and he didn't hear it perfectly?
Andrew: Do you have to really hear it?
Audience Member: The Mandrakes were in the pots.
Emerson: Oh, yeah.
Audience Member 2: They were in the pots, and they were going to pull them out of the pots.
Audience Member: Well, yeah, but when they throw them, why doesn't everyone else on the grounds die? [laughs]
Andrew: Rar!
Audience Member 2: Because...
[Audience laughs]
Audience Member 2: Didn't Flitwik cast the Muffliato curse - charm on the castle? Wasn't that one of the things he was doing?
Audience Member: I don't think so.
Andrew: I don't know, let's keep an eye on these two. I have a feeling there's going to be a brawl after the show.
Mikey: I've got an answer. I've got an answer for that.
Audience Member: We know each other.
Andrew: Oh, okay. They know each other, folks. All right, I don't...
Mikey: It's a book. It's not perfect.
Andrew: ...maybe they were in the pot. Maybe they still were in the pot. Maybe they weren't pulled out yet. But they did have earmuffs.
Emerson: See, I always feel like the - they're kind of like one of those little creatures that can be used - if it was real for whatever reason - they could just throw one of them in the middle of the Hogwarts grounds, and it would be like a magical bomb. Because everybody around them would just drop.
[Andrew laughs]
Emerson: Okay.
Andrew: What's your point?
Emerson: I'm done.
Mikey: Could you imagine just going [makes multiple sounds] and then you die.
Andrew: They were flying around his head, I'm sure.
Jamie: They should pack a hundred Mandrakes into a bomb and then just drop it. That would work. That would cover everywhere.
Andrew: By the way, this guy right here - I can't help but notice - he's wearing the MuggleNet shirt from the England podcast. Were you there? Yeah, you were there, yeah, I recognize you. What are you doing here? Just out of curiosity.
Audience Member: I work at the airport.
Andrew: Oh, nice. Wow. Check that out, Jamie.
Jamie: That's pretty cool. That's very cool.
Andrew: Waterstones called the podcast - can you turn around and show the audience? - "MuggleNet's" - what does it say? - "biggest ever podcast event." That was the name of it.
Audience Member: It was the 100th episode.
Andrew: Yeah, it was the 100th episode, yeah. Yeah, nice shirts. Not for sale, sorry, folks. All right. Oh, hold on. On the right there.
Jamie: Well, he can sell it if he wants to. It's not ours.
Andrew: Yeah, he could sell his, sure. On the right.
Jamie: We'll start the bidding at...
Andrew: On the right, Mikey?
Is Snape Still Evil?
Audience Member: Hi, I'm Allie. I'm from Manaka, Pennsylvania, and my question is, Voldemort killed Snape, but do any of you think Snape is still evil?
Andrew: No.
Mikey: He's a jerk.
Andrew: I'm going to refer to the web-chat again. J.K. Rowling sees Snape as a hero. An anti-hero, yeah, exactly. So if J.K. Rowling doesn't think he's evil, then I don't think we should.
Jamie: I agree.
Emerson: After the event yesterday, someone actually came up and asked a really good question that made me think for a second. They said, "Which character do you think had the worst life?" And I was thinking about all the characters who might've had bad childhoods, like Voldemort, and Dumbledore, and Harry, and I was thinking, it has to be Snape.
Jamie: I agree, yeah.
Emerson: Because Voldemort was obviously in a different kind of ball game, because he wasn't capable of feeling love, and he didn't feel that hurt that Snape must have been feeling every minute of everyday by not having - by never being able to get Lily, and by being mistreated, and always being an outcast.
Jamie: Voldemort enjoyed his life near the end, as well. He liked the power, he liked operating alone; whereas Snape, you know, he went from the horrible childhood that you just described into a life where he was playing double agent. He didn't know who to trust, everyone else hated him, so - and then he died with Hogwarts thinking that he was a traitor. So I agree, he had the saddest life, easily.
Ben: What about Harry, though? I mean his was pretty bad, too, wasn't it?
Jamie: Yeah, but at least he's now grown up with a person he loves, and the children he loves, as well. And he saved the day.
Andrew: And not dying early at the hands of Voldemort.
Jamie: Yeah, exactly. I think Snape. I agree.
Andrew: Okay, next question.
Jamie: That was a nice moment.
Who Helped Harry the Most?
Audience Member: I'm Jess from Pittsburgh, here. And my question is, throughout the books we've seen so many people help Harry. Who do you guys think helped him the most? Like...
Ben: Hermione.
Audience Member: ...the absolutely most?
Jamie: Hermione, yeah.
Ben: Oh, wait, Dumbledore a lot, too, though.
Jamie: Yeah.
Andrew: Dumbledore, too.
Ben: But he wouldn't be able to - he wouldn't have been able to win, had Hermione not been there, so...
Andrew: Yeah.
Ben: ...I'm going to say Hermione.
Audience Member: He would be dead the first [unintelligible] without Hermione there.
Jamie: Yeah, he would.
Emerson: He would have died about ten thousand times by now without Hermione. Hermione just - she's read so many books. She always knows the right spell for the situation. And Harry - his strategy is just to go barging into whatever house, or whatever thing he's trying to figure - like Godric's Hollow, whatever. Hermione said, "No, Harry, slow down. We need a plan. And make sure we cast all the right spells and we've covered all of our angles." But Harry, he's such a Gryffindor. He doesn't really plan things out, like maybe he should. Like in the fifth book, when he gets this image of Sirius in his head, and, "Oh, I know what I've got to do. I've got to go by myself into the Department of Mysteries to go face Voldemort. And, yeah, I'm going to go take him down. I don't know how, but I'm going to do it."
Jamie: Well, I've always seen it...
Ben: And then Hermione's like, "no, Harry, you need us," and she was absolutely right.
Harry would have been completely screwed on his own.
Jamie: I've always seen it as like a triangle, so at the top you have Harry, then you have Dumbledore and Hermione. Dumbledore gives Harry the clues but he's too stupid to figure them out, so then they go down to Hermione, she figures them out then tells Harry.
Andrew: That's a good one.
Jamie: That about sums up every book.
Mikey: Except in Deathly Hallows where Harry figured out the Deathly Hallows before
Hermione.
Jamie: Wow, one thing in seven books.
Emerson: And Hermione kept him alive through the first 500 pages, so...
Ben: And something that's bugging me, by the way...
Mikey: I'm just saying, Harry figured out.
Ben: Something's bugging me. It's Hallows, not Hollows, by the way.
Mikey: Hallows, hallows, hallows.
Andrew: I'll never get it right.
Ben: Just to clear that up.
Mikey: I keep messing it up, I'm sorry.
Jamie: Wait, what is it? It is Hallows.
Ben: Hallows.
Mikey: Hallows.
Andrew: Hallows.
Emerson: I just feel weird saying Hallows. I don't know why.
Mikey: Hallooows! Ha-ha, that's a funny joke, right, everybody? No, okay. We have a few
more people.
Ben: Good one, Mikey.
Elder Wand Rules
Audience Member: Hi, I'm Justine from Pittsburgh. At the end of the book, Harry said that if he dies a natural death that the Elder Wand's powers will go away, but Malfoy gets the wand from disarming Dumbledore and then Harry gets it from disarming Malfoy, so if someone disarms Harry won't they get the...
Jamie: Yeah, they will.
Ben: So is it really as simple as disarming somebody though? I mean...
Jamie: Well, no, they say that wand-lore is very precise, so it might work sometimes, it might not work the next time. So I think it just depends on the context of the situation. That's what Ollivander said.
Mikey: Really, do you guys think anyone in the Wizarding World's going to be like, "All right, Harry beat Lord Voldemort, I want to go duel Harry," because, come on. I'm going to be like, "Yeah, I'm going to disarm you, and..."
Ben: I'd want my shot, I don't know about you.
Jamie: Yeah.
Mikey: You know what? I wouldn't want to try even! I would rather shake his hand, be
like, "Good job, guy, I don't think I could do that." Who knows. We'll have to see
from Book 12 or something like that to come out.
Andrew: Next question?
Emerson: See one question I'd like to ask J.K. Rowling is what happened to the wand? After he uses it to fix his own wand, would he destroy it? Would he - I wouldn't imagine - he's going to bury it? Like...
Jamie: That is so stupid and rash, I know.
Emerson: I mean, in the magical world, you're just going to bury something? I think he
would like...
[Audience Member talks]
Jamie: Yeah, that's a fair point.
Emerson: What?
[Audience Member talks]
Emerson: But I feel like Voldemort already got it out of there once, why would he really just decide to leave it in the tomb and then hope no one goes and digs up the tomb, like one person just did a hundred pages ago. I feel like Harry - I feel like he should destroy the wand.
Jamie: Hermione will be there and cast all the charms over it that protect it, and
she'll help him out. That's what'll happen.
Voldemort Opening Dumbledore's Tomb
Andrew: One thing that really bothered me in the book, that I sort of found like borderline disgusting, was when Voldemort opened up Dumbledore's tomb to get the wand out. That was just like...
Ben: That was kind of bad, yeah.
Andrew: It was so disrespectful. Not that Voldemort cares, but still, I felt offended. I was like, "What!? Why open it up?" Not cool.
Emerson: Well, he's Voldemort, what do you expect?
Jamie: I didn't expect him to drop down and kneel and pray before his grave, you
know...
Ben: The point that he was trying to make is just that it was kind of like a gross
thing that happened.
Andrew: It was gross, yeah.
Jamie: Oh it was, yeah.
Andrew: Eww.
Emerson: I mean, this is the same guy who's chopping his soul up into like - to
make a soul kind of soup so he doesn't care about looking at another corpse. He's already killed so many people.
Andrew: Yeah.
Mikey: He also used his Dad's bone to come back to life, which is kind of gross too, when you think about it. Dad, bone.
Andrew. Yeah. Okay, moving on. Next question.
All Four Marauders Died
Audience Member: I'm Jordan from Princeton, West Virginia, and I know before Book 7 came out there was lots of speculation that all four of the Marauders had to die, and I wondered what you guys thought about that, especially since Lupin wasn't originally intended to die but then he did.
Ben: And did anyone else notice that they did end up dying in reverse order? Moony, Wormtail, Padfoot, Prongs? Yeah.
Andrew: They did or didn't?
Ben: They did end up dying in reverse order.
Andrew: Yeah, that was a big theory. Everyone was really relying on that for some reason.
Ben: Who here - I was kind of disappointed with Wormtail's death. I expected it to actually be something really sacrificial, rather than him just killing himself.
Jamie: I didn't think you could strangle yourself either.
Ben: Well, I think it was the hand, the magic ability behind the hand, that did it.
Jamie: I agree.
Andrew: All right, two more quick questions and then we'll wrap it up. Sorry, guys, sorry! I know, I suck.
Harry's Ability to Get Into Grimmauld Place
Audience Member: I'm Jolie from Shaler, outside of Pittsburgh. I wanted to know how Harry was able to just get into Grimmauld Place simply by saying, "I didn't kill you." Wouldn't Snape have been able to say the same thing and get in?
Mikey: Harry was always able to get into Grimmauld Place, just like Snape was, but
it was the - kind of the dust Dumbledore was the way to repel that, was to say that you didn't kill Dumbledore.
Audience Member: Didn't Snape say that?
Jamie: Exactly, that's what I thought. What would Snape had said if he'd come in?
Mikey: Well, I would assume Snape would just conjure a dust buster and.... [makes vacuum noise] Bye, Dumbledore.
Andrew: Dust buster. [laughs]
Jamie: Probably, Mikey, that would be a good one.
Mikey: That would be kind of cool...
Andrew: Dust Buster!
Mikey: ...seeing that in the movie or something like that.
Jamie: That would be very cool.
Mikey: But no, to get into Grimmauld Place, you just had to know where it was at, and he was able to get in, but we did find out in the chat that Snape did go back to Grimmauld Place, but right after Dumbledore's death, to get the second part of the letter. So before Moody had...
Jamie: Had the chance to put those enchantments on, yeah.
Mikey: Yep, exactly.
Andrew: All right, last question for today from this guy right here. Happy Birthday. It's not really your birthday. Anyway, what's your question, where are you from?
Audience Member: Hi, I'm...
Andrew: Whoops, sorry.
Dumbledore's Letter to Petunia
Audience Member: Hi, I'm Tyler from Bradford, and in the book we learn that Petunia wrote a
letter to Dumbledore, and Lily said that it was really kind, so what do you think his
response was?
Andrew: Lily said that it was really kind?
Audience Member: The return letter from Dumbledore. The letter Dumbledore wrote back was really nice.
Andrew: Oh, oh, so you're asking what the response was? Any theories?
[Audience members talk]
Jamie: Actually, yeah, yeah...
Andrew: Right, because it was – her original letter was asking to go to Hogwarts,
right?
Audience Member: Yeah.
Andrew: So Dumbledore's - okay. Maybe it was just like, "Sorry, but you're not..."
Ben: "A witch"?
Andrew: "...fit for this." A witch, yeah.
[Audience members talks]
Andrew: What's that?
Mikey: No, but she didn't have any bags with her. I wouldn't go to Hogwarts with no
bags. Who knows? We'll find out in the encyclopedia maybe.
Andrew: Good question, though. I'm sure whatever it was, Dumbledore was working his
magic, and he probably sent little chocolate covered frogs, or something like
that.
[Audience laughs]
Jamie: Yeah.
Emerson: So, we have a girl right here who came all the way from Connecticut, so I say we should give her a question.
[Audience applauds]
Andrew: Yay!
Mikey: One more question. Eight-hour drive. Seriously. Or Remus, I guess you should say.
Dumbledore and Aberforth Live Near Each Other
Audience Member: Hi, I'm Sarah from Connecticut, and I was just wondering, since Dumbledore's brother, Aberforth, he didn't like Dumbledore, why did he live so close to him? He
lived like right down the street.
Mikey: I think real estate was probably cheap in Hogsmeade.
[Andrew and audience laugh]
Mikey: He had the Hog's Head there, plus there was probably an abundance of goats
around.
[Audience laughs]
Mikey: I don't know. I can't answer that. Jamie?
Ben: Maybe his job thrusted him into living there.
Jamie: Yeah. He moved away to Hogsmeade and he had to be a bartender there instead...
Mikey: Yeah.
Jamie: ...of somewhere else where he was. And he just liked being there. And, on a serious note, he was part of a greater plan and I'm sure even though Dumbledore and him hadn't reconciled, I think he probably told him a bit of stuff about the plan.
Ben: Yeah, and the distance is really as far as you make it anyways. I mean, just because they were that close to each other doesn't mean they actually had to see each other, so...
Jamie: And distance isn't really important in the Wizarding World when you can disappear and reappear a thousand miles away in one second.
Andrew: Yeah.
Mikey: Yeah, I guess that makes sense.
Jamie: Everyone is everyone's neighbor.
Mikey: We do have one more person to come on up here.
Andrew: Alex, man.
Alex: Hi.
Mikey: Hi.
Andrew: It's the end of the road for us. I'm getting a little emo right now.
Alex: Don't be sad. It's all right.
Mikey: We'll see you guys in a - whoa.
Book 7 Page Count
Audience Member: I came all the way from Virginia, and I was wondering, according to your site, Book 7 is supposed to have 784 pages, but...
Andrew: I got an answer to that.
Ben: Actually, I gave you that answer, so...
Andrew: Yeah, okay. [laughs] Go for it.
Ben: When Scholastic does the page counts, they don't do the number - the number doesn't matter. They count every individual page, so including the acknowledgements, including the dedication, including all that, because Order of the Phoenix was originally listed as 898 pages, but the last page number is actually 870, so there you go.
Jamie: That explains that one.
Show Close
Andrew: Thanks for playing. You're welcome. So, we've been on tour for the past eight shows. I got to say, we've all really enjoyed it. Thank you for letting us come on.
Alex: Thank you guys for coming and talking about Harry Potter.
Andrew: I'm going to cry.
Alex: Don't cry, Sims.
Andrew: I'm not crying. Just kidding.
Alex: Okay.
Mikey: We'll see you in two days, really.
Alex: Yeah, we're going to see each other in a couple days. But I wanted to bring up one person, who's a very special person who came all the way out for our last show. You guys, Sean Astin is here.
Mikey: Sean Astin, from Lord of the Rings, everybody!
Alex: Sean Astin, ladies and gentlemen.
[Audience cheers]
Mikey: Get on my back, Mr. Frodo!
Alex: And Sean wanted to say something.
[Audience applauds]
Sean: I just wanted to say that I think that J.R.R. Tolkien was the original writer of Harry Potter.
Andrew: Aw, come on now.
Sean: I mean, the whole thing with Samwise, and...
Andrew: I'm pretty sure you haven't read the books so I don't think you have any room to talk.
Alex: It is pretty similar. Sean, "Mr. Frodo" and "Harry." It's like the same exact thing, basically.
Sean: It's the exact same thing.
Mikey: Wow.
Alex: Thanks, Samwise.
Ben: RUDY, RUDY, RUDY, RUDY! [laughs]
Andrew: Thanks for letting us come on this tour, seriously.
Mikey: Anyway...
Andrew: Brandon, thank you for your help with all the technical thingys over there that you're doing. Also, thanks to Mikey for organizing this thing for us. Mikey, you're the man.
Jamie: Thank you, Mikey.
[Audience cheers]
Emerson: And before we let you all go, the Remus Lupins are going to come up here in
a minute and they're going to rock, hardcore, all you guys, but after the show we are going to have merchandise for sale. You can buy all the Remus Lupins' CDs and buttons and t-shirts. MuggleCast tour t-shirts; you can only buy them here. And also, six months ago Warner Brothers made us stop selling t-shirts, MuggleNet
t-shirts on the website, but tonight we have a few left for sale, so after the show you'll have an opportunity to buy those for $15 each.
Mikey: And that's after the Remus Lupins play.
Andrew: Yeah, so stick around.
Mikey: So, after everything is done, so we don't have to worry about missing them at
all.
Andrew: Then we'll do the merchandise and the meet and greet, so meet and greet,
merchandise after the Remus Lupins play. They have a great show coming up. You guys
are going to love this music. It's a lot of fun, so thank, everyone, for coming out.
Jamie: Thank you for coming!
Emerson: Thank you!
[Audience cheers]
Mikey: Yes! MuggleCast Episode 193.
Andrew: We'll see you guys in a little bit.
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Written by: The Transcribers
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