 The Filipino community, you have the Sudanese community, an Armenian, an Iranian community. Hopefully in the future, maybe some of our developmental players for the Kings will be from those communities. It'd be a great success story that one of those kids turns out to be a high level NBL player. One thing about the Filipinos, they love their basketball. They're quick, they can play the game. Yeah, there's definitely talent out there. The thing that different communities bring is just a little bit more flair and I know watching the Filipino community and definitely watching the Asian community, they bring a different style of basketball and different type of basketball to Australia. Basketball is, you know, a very, very big sport in the Philippines. So, you know, we said let's do this night, let some people play on the court so they get a taste of what it's like to play at the entertainment center. Josh McDonough, he's a 21 year old, towering six foot five and a half power forward and he started off playing with the Sydney Kings in one of these basketball nights and he's on his way to the Philippines in August to apply for the Philippine Basketball Association Graph. The Filipino community in Sydney, like all of us love basketball. We've got a lot of comps on throughout Sydney and it's just like a combination of every area sort of coming together. What the Sydney Kings is doing is great. It's getting Sydney Kings involved with other communities and sort of bringing this all together. I know it's for all Australians but it just brings everyone in together. It's all because of that round ball or that football or that soccer brings multicultural people together in sport and it turns out to be a success story. I'm a prodigy or a result of that process and the game has been great to me. For myself, my father was Lebanese so I've got into the Lebanese community a fair bit. I've gone out to a fair bit of schools and once the kids know that that's your background then they love it because it looks like they can go to the next step as well. Sometimes in those communities they don't feel like they can make that next step but when they see someone who's done it they're definitely more appreciative of something that they can aspire to. Sport breaks down barriers very, very fast. Sport and music worldwide are two of the ingredients that if you want to do something and you go to a sports game or your music it does break down cultures and breaks down barriers very fast. Dancing is a fantastic way of breaking down these barriers. It's a form of expression. If you're angry you want to bring out those kind of emotions. If you're happy you kind of joke around. If you want to enjoy yourself, it's another sport as well if you look at it too. What we're trying to do with the crew at the moment is to give the same opportunity to the kids that we're in the same state, which is on the streets and that sort of stuff and we're just trying to send out good message, good behaviour, be humble. Someone came along and said, you know, we're looking for a player. Would you like to come to Australia? I said, yeah, where's Australia? And, you know, I came out here for two years. It's now almost 36 years that I've been here. You know, I mean Australia has been fantastic for me and hopefully I've contributed a little bit to Australia as well.