36:16 Then just 2 years later in 2019, NOAA reported that record was broken. The amount of the country experiencing drought was down to 2.3%. Again, if there's a drought in some small part of the country and climate activists try and say it's caused by climate change, no. It's not. It's exactly the opposite.
16:33 And the one for Greenland ended in 2012, and the one for Antarctica ended in 2016. Well, 10 years of data for Greenland and 14 years for Antarctica, that's not very complete. Not only does it not go back very far, but it also his talk was in 2019. Why are you presenting data that ended in 2012 and 2016? So I went and looked up the actual data.
11:52 Now seeing that this is a, this is a topic that is hotly debated, they said, well, you know, we we we'd be in a little trouble if we chose one side and half the audience doesn't agree with it. So let's have a debate, which was a first for them. So they, invited professor Harold Wanless from the University of Miami to give a presentation, warning about a climate crisis, and then they asked me to give the other side. What was really interesting was before this debate, I went online and looked to see if professor Wanless had spoken on the topic before. Sure enough, I found, couple YouTube videos, the latest one being in 2019, as well as several idle either, several articles items in which he was quoted.