 So I'm Dallas Harris, and I am a Policy Fellow here at Public Knowledge. My name is John Gasperini. I am a Policy Fellow here at Public Knowledge sponsored by the George Washington University Law School. My fellowship is funded by George Washington University, the law school that I graduated from. And without funding from GW, I wouldn't have the opportunity to come to Public Knowledge and work on important issues like access to broadband, privacy, lifeline, tech transitions, and many other really important things that are essential to consumers in the telecom space. I've been here at Public Knowledge for almost a year, and in that time I've worked in a number of areas from legislative advocacy on the Hill to substantive legal work before the Federal Communications Commission and in writing briefs for courts on a variety of communications and technology policy issues. I work particularly on video competition, wireless spectrum policy, and general competition issues within the telecommunications marketplace. So working here at Public Knowledge has given me a great stepping stone to whatever I'm going to do in my future career. I've gained a bunch of advocacy skills that will be transferable to all kinds of future positions. And with the clout that comes with the Public Knowledge name and the substantive experience that I've gotten here, I have no doubts that the next step of my career will be largely impacted by the work that I've done here at Public Knowledge. There's so much more to being a public interest advocate than simply being a skilled attorney. And I have been exposed to a wide variety of skills from advocacy work and hands-on and in-person on Capitol Hill and federal agencies to different types of drafting other than traditional legal drafting to communications outreach with allies and building coalitions. The types of work that I do here is so much more than simply being a good lawyer. It's being a good advocate and being a good contributor to the work of this organization. At George Washington University, I got a great basis legal education, giving me the basics, the understanding, the ability to think through problems and legal solutions. And working at Public Knowledge has been a great next logical step and a good supplement to that education that I've received at GW, giving me a holistic view of working in the public interest advocacy space. One of the coolest experiences I had early in my time at Public Knowledge was the opportunity to visit a class that I actually took at GW Law now that I'm working and have graduated alongside my boss, Jean Kittleman, who co-taught that class to talk about telecommunications law and policy. The opportunity to sort of see things come full circle and see that from the other side and to meet people in that class who worked as PK interns later or are applying for the next round of PK fellowships has been really remarkable to me and shown me really the wonderful path that I've had the fortunate opportunity to start down and that others hopefully will have the opportunity to continue on in the future.