 I joined I-24 News in the summer of 2013, right, when the network went on air. And I was 21, a baby. So the channel and I really grew up together, evolved together. There's so many momentous events in the past decade from the White House, the Kremlin, Europe, Africa, war, peace, elections, rapprochement. But the final push of the Iran nuclear talks in Vienna in the summer of 2015, definitely a major one. Well, the parties continue to negotiate the terms of an agreement. We were originally sent there for three days. It was supposed to be the finale, but one extension followed the other and another one. So we ended up being there for 21 days, alongside journalists from all over the world, of course. And I was the only full Israeli on the ground for the entire period. And by the way, the precedent right across the Pelle Kuburg where negotiations took place, ironically enough, was the Theodore Herzl Square. So it was a constant reminder that I, too, am a Jewish journalist. But unlike Herzl, I'm an Israeli as well. And at some point you get in the rhythm, you know, that the first time the top diplomats of all global superpowers came out to speak to us, I was in complete awe. But on the fourth day, and the tenth day, and the nineteenth, you get used to it. And then it was the day, the P5 plus one, and Iran, of course, finally reached a nuclear deal. Tectonic geopolitical shifts, you really cannot underestimate the gravitas of such an event. And when taking over the podium, before even announcing they actually reached a deal, US Secretary of State John Kerry said thank you to the journalist for powering through. So I know this has been a long couple of weeks for everybody, including above all the press who waited long hours during the day for very little news, and we're very grateful for your patience. And then it hit me. I wasn't just witnessing history. I was part of it.