{"version":"1.0.0","episode":{"title":" The IN'S-N-OUT'S with Mike Rice","url":"http://getcarcurious.com/episodes/the-in-s-n-out-s-with-mike-rice","audioUrl":"https://anchor.fm/s/10dfcaa68/podcast/play/118420228/https%3A%2F%2Fd3ctxlq1ktw2nl.cloudfront.net%2Fstaging%2F2026-3-14%2Fd3461afe-3339-3e9f-4555-6bdc59e079a9.mp3","description":"Special guest Mike Rice will be appearing on our show tonight. Troy and me are eager to dive into Mike's history, NHRA and potential improvements for the sport. Also a little post race recap on what was Pomona\n"},"annotations":[{"startTime":43.7,"endTime":52.7,"type":"concept","title":"drag racing","url":"/glossary/drag-racing","quote":"talking about drag racing.","canonicalId":"concept:drag-racing","priority":0.9,"confidence":0.95,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Drag racing is a motorsport where two vehicles accelerate from a standing start (or near it) and race over a short, measured distance. The goal is to achieve the quickest elapsed time and/or highest speed in their class.","simplifiedExplanation":"Drag racing is when two cars race side-by-side down a short strip to see which one is faster. It’s mostly about acceleration and getting the best time."}},{"startTime":246.3,"endTime":252.7,"type":"company","title":"NHRA","url":"/glossary/nhra","quote":"My, uh, my father was a division six starter, uh, for NHRA for almost 30 years.","canonicalId":"company:nhra","priority":0.9,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"NHRA stands for National Hot Rod Association, the major sanctioning body for drag racing in the United States. It organizes events, sets rules, and runs categories/classes for competitors.","simplifiedExplanation":"NHRA is the big organization that runs and organizes drag racing events. They help decide how races are run and what kinds of cars compete."}},{"startTime":297.4,"endTime":306.3,"type":"term","title":"Bill Donner","quote":"...the donor days of drag racing in the Northwest and the West Coast. Bill Donner was one of the different tracks with him...","canonicalId":"term:bill-donner","priority":0.2,"confidence":0.6,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Bill Donner is referenced as a key figure involved in drag racing events in the Northwest/West Coast era. Mentions like this point to the people who organized and promoted regional racing before modern national media coverage.","simplifiedExplanation":"Bill Donner is a person the speaker credits with being involved in drag racing events. He’s mentioned as part of the history of racing in that region."}},{"startTime":323.4,"endTime":328.0,"type":"term","title":"water box","url":"/glossary/water-box","quote":"...I was pushing a broom in the water box. Uh, I've got lots of old pictures...","canonicalId":"term:water-box","priority":0.9,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A water box is the designated area on a drag strip where track staff apply water to the surface. The goal is to reduce tire spin and help the car hook up during the launch.","simplifiedExplanation":"A water box is an area on the drag strip where they put water down. It helps the tires grip better when the car starts moving hard."}},{"startTime":328.0,"endTime":333.2,"type":"term","title":"Funny Car","url":"/glossary/funny-cars","quote":"...all those guys doing burnouts at the old 60 War Funny Car shows.","canonicalId":"term:funny-car","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Funny Car is a drag racing class known for highly modified cars with short wheelbases and powerful engines. They typically use a lightweight body mounted over a purpose-built chassis, designed for maximum acceleration.","simplifiedExplanation":"Funny Car is a type of drag racing car built to go extremely fast in a straight line. They’re specialized race cars with strong engines and a design meant for quick launches."}},{"startTime":328.0,"endTime":333.2,"type":"term","title":"Tom McEwen","quote":"...John Forrest, Tom McEwen, all those guys doing burnouts at the old 60 War Funny Car shows.","canonicalId":"term:tom-mcewen","priority":0.2,"confidence":0.6,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Tom McEwen is mentioned as one of the well-known drag racing figures in the speaker’s old photos. McEwen is historically associated with Funny Car racing, so his name helps listeners understand the class and era being discussed."}},{"startTime":328.0,"endTime":333.2,"type":"term","title":"John Forrest","quote":"...I've got lots of old pictures of, you know, John Forrest, Tom McEwen, all those guys doing burnouts...","canonicalId":"term:john-forrest","priority":0.2,"confidence":0.55,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"John Forrest is named among notable drag racers appearing in the speaker’s old photos. In drag racing history, drivers like Forrest are often associated with specific eras and classes, helping listeners place the stories in context.","simplifiedExplanation":"John Forrest is one of the racing names the speaker recognizes from old photos. It’s a way of showing the era and caliber of people involved in those events."}},{"startTime":358.82,"endTime":364.28,"type":"car","title":"Pontiac Firebird","url":"/cars/pontiac/firebird","image":"https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a6/1972_Pontiac_Firebird_Formula_7.5L_V8_2.jpg","quote":"...oing through one of my dad's old photo albums of  Firebird Raceway in Idaho in the, in the late 60s, you kno...","canonicalId":"car:pontiac:firebird","priority":0.5,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"The Pontiac Firebird is a classic American muscle car produced by Pontiac, especially popular in the late 1960s. The podcast reference to “Firebird Raceway in Idaho” and old photo albums ties it to motorsport history and the era when these cars were commonly raced. That’s why it’s discussed—it's a recognizable name connected to performance culture.","simplifiedExplanation":"The Pontiac Firebird is an older American sports car. The podcast talks about it in connection with a raceway and photos from the late 1960s, which means it was part of racing events back then. It’s mentioned because it’s a well-known muscle-car model from that time.","imageAttribution":"Calreyn88 (CC BY-SA 4.0)"}},{"startTime":377.4,"endTime":383.1,"type":"term","title":"starter","url":"/glossary/starter","quote":"...when I was, uh, 15, uh, became the starter at Seattle. I couldn't even drive yet...","canonicalId":"term:starter","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.8,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A drag strip starter is responsible for initiating the race sequence—typically controlling staging and the start procedure so cars launch at the right time. It’s an important safety and operations role on race night.","simplifiedExplanation":"The starter is the person who helps run the race start. They make sure the cars are staged correctly and the race begins properly."}},{"startTime":655.0,"endTime":673.0,"type":"concept","title":"nationally televised event","url":"/glossary/nationally-televised-event","quote":"Whether you've got car counts, you've got curfews, you've got weather, and then if you've got a nationally televised event, as you're sitting there on Monday and Tuesday thinking about, how can I get all these things to a point that when we have a window right on Sunday","canonicalId":"concept:nationally-televised-event","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A nationally televised event adds production constraints on top of normal race operations, such as fixed broadcast windows and the need to have specific classes/teams ready at certain times. That’s why staff talk about aligning advancement and results so the “TV package” is coherent.","simplifiedExplanation":"If the event is on TV, the schedule has to match what producers need to film. That can mean everything must be ready at specific times."}},{"startTime":659.3,"endTime":663.7,"type":"concept","title":"weather","url":"/glossary/weather","quote":"Whether you've got car counts, you've got curfews, you've got weather, and then if you've got a nationally televised event","canonicalId":"concept:weather","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Weather is a major operational variable in motorsports because it can force delays, change track conditions, and alter whether sessions can be completed as planned. When weather disrupts the schedule, it can also break the planned “TV package” timeline.","simplifiedExplanation":"Weather can shut things down or slow them down. If the track is wet or unsafe, the event has to adjust the schedule."}},{"startTime":789.6,"endTime":802.6,"type":"concept","title":"entry numbers","url":"/glossary/entry-numbers","quote":"...then I can start altering that a little bit. And typically a normal event where entries close Monday. And then that's when I do the final daily schedule...","canonicalId":"concept:entry-numbers","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Entry numbers are the final count of cars/competitors registered for the event. They directly determine how long each category needs on track, which is why the daily schedule is often finalized after entries close.","simplifiedExplanation":"Entry numbers are how many cars actually signed up. More cars usually means longer sessions, so the organizers update the day’s schedule after the deadline."}},{"startTime":796.3,"endTime":802.6,"type":"concept","title":"entries close Monday","url":"/glossary/entries-close-monday","quote":"...typically a normal event where entries close Monday. And then that's when I do the final daily schedule for the competitors...","canonicalId":"concept:entries-close-monday","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Entries close Monday” indicates the registration deadline after which organizers get the final competitor list. That cutoff enables the final daily run schedule to be built accurately for each category.","simplifiedExplanation":"Entries closing Monday means the sign-up deadline. After that, organizers know the final list and can lock in the schedule for the event day."}},{"startTime":802.6,"endTime":818.3,"type":"concept","title":"contingencies","url":"/glossary/contingencies","quote":"...because you guys have done all this planning, you've got these contingencies built in...","canonicalId":"concept:contingencies","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Contingencies are pre-planned responses to likely problems (like weather changes) so the event can adapt quickly. They’re built into scheduling to reduce delays and keep sessions safe and fair.","simplifiedExplanation":"Contingencies are backup plans. If something changes—like rain—organizers already know what they’ll do next to keep the event running."}},{"startTime":1096.7,"endTime":1103.4,"type":"concept","title":"extended our curfew","url":"/glossary/extended-our-curfew","quote":"got both lanes, it was almost two hours, got through that extended our curfew, you know, that's one of the biggest issues we have at Pomona is curfews,","canonicalId":"concept:extended-our-curfew","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Extending a curfew means the venue grants additional time beyond the original cutoff to accommodate event delays. This is common when incidents (like spills) require cleanup, and it affects how late teams can run sessions or complete procedures.","simplifiedExplanation":"Sometimes the event can’t finish on time because of delays. If the venue allows it, they extend the curfew so the race operations can continue."}},{"startTime":1103.4,"endTime":1114.0,"type":"concept","title":"curfews","url":"/glossary/curfews","quote":"got through that extended our curfew, you know, that's one of the biggest issues we have at Pomona is curfews, but luckily, you know, the Fairplex and the, and the city are, you know, they know what that race brings in, you know, so they, they go to bat for us and give us an extension if we need to,","canonicalId":"concept:curfews","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A curfew is a time cutoff imposed by the venue/city that limits how late an event can run. In motorsports, curfews can force teams and officials to manage delays carefully and can extend or compress race operations.","simplifiedExplanation":"A curfew is a rule that says the event can’t go past a certain time. If something goes wrong on track, it can be stressful because you may have to finish before the deadline."}},{"startTime":1832.1,"endTime":1847.3,"type":"concept","title":"push performance, push innovation","url":"/glossary/push-performance-push-innovation","quote":"a balance between providing a minimum x\n[1840.7s]  that's low enough to push performance, push innovation, right, and allow people to really get\n[1847.3s]  the most out of these these vehicles","canonicalId":"concept:push-performance-push-innovation","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"This describes the balancing act in motorsports rules: set targets low enough to encourage teams to develop faster cars, but not so restrictive that competition collapses. The speaker links rule changes to both performance gains and technological experimentation."}},{"startTime":2030.4,"endTime":2035.9,"type":"concept","title":"combo class","url":"/glossary/combo-class","quote":"“…to where it's basically just a combo class, just like stock, super stock, it's kind of the same thing…”","canonicalId":"concept:combo-class","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A “combo class” is when multiple categories are combined into one race group. The speaker compares Top Comp being run as a combo class to how Stock and Super Stock are run together.","simplifiedExplanation":"A combo class means different types of cars race together in the same bracket. It’s a way to combine competition instead of splitting it into separate groups."}},{"startTime":2035.9,"endTime":2045.9,"type":"concept","title":"48","quote":"“…the 32 car field… I always pushed for the 48. And the reason for that was more cars…”","canonicalId":"concept:48","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“48” is the speaker’s preferred car-field size for the top categories. Increasing the field size generally means more entries qualify, which can change competitive dynamics and how quickly slower cars are eliminated.","simplifiedExplanation":"The speaker wants more cars in the top races—48 instead of 32. That usually means more teams get a chance to compete, and the event feels more competitive."}},{"startTime":2190.0,"endTime":2206.8,"type":"concept","title":"entry list","url":"/glossary/entry-list","quote":"There's guys I know now that you, I see it in the national event entry list, you know, I don't know if you remember the, the first few years we ran those, we didn't post the entry list for top and top just because we didn't want, okay, well, these guys are all going, hell, I'm not going to qualify. I'm not going now. And they would withdraw and bail.","canonicalId":"concept:entry-list","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"An “entry list” is the published list of competitors entered for an event. The speaker describes a strategy where they didn’t post the entry list early on to prevent racers from withdrawing if they thought they wouldn’t qualify.","simplifiedExplanation":"The entry list is basically who’s signed up to race. The speaker says they sometimes avoided posting it so people wouldn’t get discouraged and decide not to show up."}},{"startTime":2263.1,"endTime":2268.9,"type":"concept","title":"screw blowers","url":"/glossary/screw-blowers","quote":"I can see it from that side where it's like, okay, I want to be racing other people with, you know, screw blowers and, and turbos hanging off the sides of these things.","canonicalId":"concept:screw-blowers","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A screw blower is a positive-displacement supercharger (often a twin-screw design) used to force more air into the engine for higher power. The host contrasts this with other forced-induction setups to describe the kinds of hardware seen in faster classes.","simplifiedExplanation":"A screw blower is a supercharger that pumps extra air into the engine to make more power. It’s one of the performance parts racers use when they want to go faster."}},{"startTime":2263.1,"endTime":2268.9,"type":"concept","title":"turbos","url":"/glossary/turbo","quote":"...screw blowers and, and turbos hanging off the sides of these things. And let's see, let's get out there, right?","canonicalId":"concept:turbos","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Turbos” refers to turbochargers, which use exhaust energy to spin a turbine and compress intake air. Turbocharging is a common way to make big power in drag racing, and the host is using it to illustrate the escalating hardware arms race at the top end of classes."}},{"startTime":2588.5,"endTime":2622.9,"type":"concept","title":"red light","url":"/glossary/red-light","quote":"Worst red light or whatever they call it. Port of trees got real red, I think is what it's called.","canonicalId":"concept:red-light","priority":0.9,"confidence":0.95,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A “red light” in drag racing is a start-line foul caused by leaving before the green light. The conversation contrasts how different rulesets treat red lights and how that affects strategy, especially in bracket classes where consistency is everything.","simplifiedExplanation":"A “red light” means you left the starting line too early. It’s a penalty/foul, and depending on the rules, it can end your run."}},{"startTime":2778.8,"endTime":2813.0,"type":"concept","title":"sponsorship","url":"/glossary/sponsorship","quote":"It was, it was never, I guess it was never brought up back when we did the original agreement with, you know, with Lucas oil when they came on board to sponsor the sportsman series...","canonicalId":"concept:sponsorship","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Sponsorship in racing is when a company funds or supports a series/class in exchange for branding, promotion, and other benefits. Here, the speaker ties the championship schedule to the presence and terms of a sponsor deal.","simplifiedExplanation":"Sponsorship is when a company pays to support the racing. In return, they get their name involved and help make the event possible."}},{"startTime":4205.9,"endTime":4211.4,"type":"term","title":"legends","url":"/glossary/legends","quote":"But there is just so much going on, the legends that are coming to the events. These are people I grew up watching, so it's fun.","canonicalId":"term:legends","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.84,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Legends” in this context means famous, well-known racers who have established reputations over time. Their presence at events is often a draw for fans and a morale boost for competitors.","simplifiedExplanation":"Here, “legends” means really famous racers—people the speaker grew up watching. They show up at events to say hi and add to the excitement."}},{"startTime":4211.4,"endTime":4218.3,"type":"term","title":"race control","url":"/glossary/race-control","quote":"Typically, they'll come into race control, at least at some point during the weekend, whether to just take a load off for a few minutes and relax, getting some air conditioning, or just come in to say hi.","canonicalId":"term:race-control","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Race control” is the operations center at a motorsport event where officials manage the race day—things like flags, safety decisions, timing, and communications. When legends “come into race control,” it usually means they’re visiting the officials and event staff rather than the paddock.","simplifiedExplanation":"Race control is the command center for the event. It’s where officials run the show and make safety and race management decisions."}},{"startTime":4281.0,"endTime":4287.9,"type":"concept","title":"race tracks","url":"/glossary/race-tracks","quote":"You've been to a lot of race tracks, and one of the things that Troy and I have talked about is our favorite track, Snacks.","canonicalId":"concept:race-tracks","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"The hosts are talking about visiting race tracks, which is where motorsport fans and competitors gather. Different track types (drag strips, road courses, ovals) create different driving challenges and fan experiences.","simplifiedExplanation":"They’re discussing going to race tracks. A race track is where cars compete, and different tracks feel different depending on the layout and type of racing."}},{"startTime":4315.7,"endTime":4322.7,"type":"concept","title":"Woodburn Dragstrip","url":"/glossary/woodburn-dragstrip","quote":"That is Woodburn Dragstrip as the best corn dogs ever. We're all famous, baby.","canonicalId":"concept:woodburn-dragstrip","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Woodburn Dragstrip is a specific venue for drag racing, where cars accelerate in a straight line over a measured distance. The hosts are using it as a reference point for the best “track snacks,” showing how local traditions become part of the racing culture.","simplifiedExplanation":"Woodburn Dragstrip is a place where drag racing happens—cars race down a straight track. They’re talking about it because the food there (corn dogs) is a big part of the experience."}},{"startTime":4487.1,"endTime":4499.0,"type":"concept","title":"sanctioning body","url":"/glossary/sanctioning-body","quote":"And I think in a different time, I might have been more willing to throw shade at the sanctioning body. And they do have certain responsibilities and expectations from the racers that they should try to meet and responsibilities to uphold.","canonicalId":"concept:sanctioning-body","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A sanctioning body is the organization that governs a racing series or event. It sets rules, safety standards, and expectations for how racers and promoters must operate. In the segment, the speaker is talking about how the sanctioning body has responsibilities beyond just making decisions.","simplifiedExplanation":"In racing, a sanctioning body is the group that “runs the rules” for an event or series. They make sure safety and regulations are followed. The speaker is saying they have duties to racers, not just opinions."}},{"startTime":4887.4,"endTime":4892.5,"type":"concept","title":"dialed in","url":"/glossary/dialed-in","quote":"[4887.4s]  pretty good early on this season. So, you know, he's clearly got his spot dialed in and he's driving\n[4892.5s]  the stripe good.","canonicalId":"concept:dialed-in","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Dialed in” means the driver and team have the car set up and the strategy tuned so the car consistently performs as expected. In drag racing, that often includes launch technique, tire prep, and matching the car’s behavior to the dial-in. The host uses it to suggest the racer’s current form is reliable.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Dialed in” means everything is working the way it should—car setup and driving are both on point. The host is saying the driver seems to have the car figured out right now. That usually leads to better, more consistent runs."}},{"startTime":4917.8,"endTime":5042.5,"type":"concept","title":"Pomona","url":"/glossary/pomona","quote":"[4917.8s]  And Jared Jordan did not lay down a bad lap 29 total in a final round at Pomona. Pretty dang good\n[4923.6s]  lap, just not good enough for JL. ...\n[5042.5s]  A perfect run in general. Any round is impressive, but in the finals of the Winter Nationals in\n[5049.1s]  Pomona, couldn't ride it up any better.","canonicalId":"concept:pomona","priority":0.9,"confidence":0.95,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Pomona refers to the drag racing venue in Pomona, California, which hosts major NHRA events. It’s mentioned here in connection with the Winter Nationals and finals, indicating a high-profile meet where qualifying and round performance matter. Listeners will recognize it as a recurring stage for top-level drag racing.","simplifiedExplanation":"Pomona is a famous drag-racing location in California. Big events are held there, and the finals are where the best runs of the weekend happen. The host is pointing out how well these racers did at that major event."}},{"startTime":4917.8,"endTime":5049.1,"type":"concept","title":"final round","url":"/glossary/final-round","quote":"[4917.8s]  And Jared Jordan did not lay down a bad lap 29 total in a final round at Pomona. Pretty dang good\n[4923.6s]  lap, just not good enough for JL. ...\n[5042.5s]  A perfect run in general. Any round is impressive, but in the finals of the Winter Nationals in\n[5049.1s]  Pomona, couldn't ride it up any better.","canonicalId":"concept:final-round","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"In drag racing, the final round is the last head-to-head race that determines the event winner. The segment repeatedly references finals and “total in the final,” highlighting that these drivers are not just running well in early rounds—they’re winning or reaching the last matchup. It’s a key metric for evaluating a racer’s season.","simplifiedExplanation":"The final round is the last race of the event. Whoever wins that race is the event winner. The host is using it to show who’s really performing at the highest level."}},{"startTime":5098.0,"endTime":5106.9,"type":"concept","title":"walk it off","url":"/glossary/walk-it-off","quote":"...grand slam homerun to walk it off. Mike Wibbler-Schalzer, my MVP of the week, because he can't get better than perfect.","canonicalId":"concept:walk-it-off","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.88,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Walk it off” is another baseball term for finishing the game with a decisive hit. Here it’s used as a metaphor for a race win that seals the result late.","simplifiedExplanation":"In baseball, “walk it off” means you win right away at the end. In this context, it means the person finished strong and secured the win."}}],"speakers":[{"id":"s1","name":"Bracket Breakdown","role":"host"}],"transcripts":[{"url":"http://getcarcurious.com/episodes/the-in-s-n-out-s-with-mike-rice/transcript.vtt","type":"text/vtt"}]}