 Because you're going to hear from Stephen that we are hobbit haters, which is absolute rubbish. We're objected to changing our domestic labour laws to suit Warner Brothers, but we've never been against the hobbit and the making of movies, because after all, we did start the big movie production funding that went into the Lord of the Rings. I'm sorry, can I have a word here? The voters can't let this go on. Just let me ask you a question of history. The reality is they opposed the deal, and if they had succeeded with their opposition, then Annette might have been going to the Premier, but it would have been in Edinburgh or somewhere, because it wouldn't have been done here. They refused to accept that, but that is the reality. Peter Jackson actually said that yesterday. He said the reality was around making sure governments give tax breaks. We could have lost it. You're making it up, because actually he said that the change in the law was very important, otherwise we wouldn't have done it. And we had all the criticism about the meetings and the cars and everything else, all from the Labour Party, all saying it was grubby deals for mates. It was changing the law for international companies. The reality is, no, it was actually changing it for everybody, but the reality is those movies would not have been made here without that. And for Annette to sit there saying today, oh, we did so much in support of it, I'm sorry. You've got to say it. Actually, Stephen, I never said that. Let's be a little bit honest on this part of it. I have supported filmmaking in my electorate in many ways, over many years, longer for you every... No one disputes that. No one disputes that, but you did oppose... And I support... You opposed the Warner deal, though, didn't you? We opposed the change of the law for Warner. We said don't resolve from that. The law was passed. The movies wouldn't have been made here. They've made the movies. I mean, I suppose, you know, people that once opposed the Springboks tour are not allowed to like rugby. Is that what we're saying? Oh, it's going to get a bit down. That's a nonsense of what you're saying. But the fact of the matter is, in opposing the Warner deal, the movie would not have been made in this country. Yeah, that's an interesting argument. Everyone involved would have been gone. Yeah, and it's interesting that everybody knows that Warner's would be driving a very hard deal. What if you'd taken it to the bottom line? What's that sorry? I said everyone knows that Warner's drive a very hard deal. Well, of course they do. And actually, I think we drove a hard deal back the other way. And as you know, I was making the tea while I was on, so I had probably a reasonably good view of it. Yeah, and we provided through the taxpayers funding to help with that. And we've done that before under a Labour government. And what we objected to was changing our domestic. So it was interesting that some of those who worked on the Hobbit objected to it too, Mike, if you remember. That's fine. No one's arguing that there were people who didn't like it to object, but the fact remains that the movie would not have been made if it hadn't been for that deal. It would have been made to somewhere else. Exactly. It would have been made in Edinburgh or the other side of the world. And you said they had it all located it. They'd shot it. They had it every location sorted out. It would have been gone.