{"ai_pass_count":5,"analysis_step_count":14,"confidence":0.885333675891161,"created_at":"2026-07-14T04:56:14.585179+00:00","id":161568,"node_number":"66296","processing_time":4.698469161987305,"recent_steps":["net.store_session","net.llm_structured_analysis","net.rules_detect","net.context_window","net.store_session"],"recording_id":165035,"text":"in theater, even though she's a quiet, but not silent, key. Anyway, she saw the sound of music 14 times. I don't think on 14 consecutive days, but she saw it at the theater, just showed over and over and over again when she was a little girl. And so she imbued us with a lot of sound of music isms throughout life. And last thing, Jones, Japanese is easy to spell, easy to pronounce is A-E-U-A-O, this goes by sound. And I is always E, I-A is always R, and you is always who? And so there's no English gets us all confused because there's all these variations in the vowels and rules about what follows and all that stuff. But yeah, one thing easy about Japanese is the syllabary is very, very simple. And it lends itself to E, learning."}