 I was doing P.A., I must have been around 24, 25, starting doing P.A., and even before that, I was doing P.A. for the WNBA. So my first year, and again, my career trajectory, I didn't anticipate doing P.A. announcing. They asked me, and as a Pacer fan growing up, the only answer was yes. You know, I remember one of the last games I went to as a Pacer fan was, you know, in the upper deck with my mom, and watching Reggie Miller go against Allen Iverson in a big game, and so to be asked to do P.A. and then be right there, courtside, announcing the team that I grew up cheering for, it was a no-brainer, and I remember early in one of the seasons, Eduardo Nahara, who played for the Dallas Mavericks at the time. And I'm at the Scores table doing my thing, and he comes in to check in. He's the guy that came off the bench, and he's sitting there, and he keeps, like, glancing over at me. No dead ball, plays continuing to go, and he just kind of keeps glancing over at me. And then there isn't dead ball, and then I announce in for the Dallas Mavericks, Eduardo Nahara. And then he looks over to his coach, which I believe was Rick Carlisle at the time, and he goes, look like a boy, sound like a man. And the whole Scores table erupted like in last year. And I just, what? Look like a boy, sound like a man, as he checks in into the floor, and then he goes, look like a man. And then every time he's on the bench, he's like, man, you're looking like a boy. So I'm like, well, that's just what I'm seeing. So I'm like, I can't see, I'm like, I can't see. I can't see it. He's looking like a boy, and it's like, he's just sitting there, looking like a man. And he's like, and he looks like a boy, and he says, hey, what's up, and he's like, hey, I'm just sitting there.