 Let's start with the freshest one because they just watched it tonight or this afternoon. I watched Top Gun, the new Top Gun movie in the theater. I loved it. What can I say? It's a fun movie. It has no great potentials. If you actually analyzed the plot and thought through the different things that were happening there, a lot of it just doesn't make complete sense. It's full of silly plot holes. But it's not pretending. It's not trying to be realistic. It's super fun. It's unapologetically heroic. It's what I said about sports and it's so rare in movies where you have a hero that's just a hero. He's just pretty much perfect. He just pretty much does the right thing. He's capable. And the fact that he's doing things that a 20-year-old, 20-something-year-old would find super impossible to do in East 50, this is where you have to just accept it for what it is. But you know Maverick is a heroic character, an unbelievable, efficacious character. A man of tremendous ability and courage. A man who cares, cares about the people that he loves. So you know Maverick is somebody you want to admire, respect, put up on a pedestal. He is truly a hero. He makes choices. This is not a deterministic movie. This is not just him playing along. There's a point in the movie without giving it away where he might be losing his assignment. He takes the initiative. He proves everybody wrong. He proves himself right in an amazing, dramatic, spectacular way. Yeah, I mean it's just one fun, hell of a ride that presents, you know, fighter pilots as heroic, efficacious, good, basically. There's not bad guys in the movie. There's an arrogant kind of prick who plays one of the fighter pilots. You have to have one of those. And of course that fighter pilots are all a little bit arrogant pricks. But he's a good guy, right? And in the end, you know, no matter what happens, he's with the good guys and there's no question he'll do the right thing at the end of the day. There's a little bit of a personal drama that's involved with, that goes back to the first movie, Top Gun movie. So I do recommend watching the first Top Gun movie before you watch this, even though I think this is by far better movie. And watch it on a big screen. Watch it on a, I saw it on one of these screens where they also using the sides of the theater to project images. So it was really cool. It was a big screen. Go see it on IMAX if you can. But you know, it's beautifully made, beautifully photographed. Oh, so some of the plot refers to the first movie. It's worth seeing the first movie just to have the emotional carry on into the second. And you can connect easier to the different characters and what happened to them. Although they do a good job reminding you of what happened in the second movie. It's mostly compelling. You get too yanked a few times during the movie. You care for the characters. Again, they're not deep. They're not sophisticated, but they're robust. And you know, while it plays a little bit to politically correctness, like a woman has to be one of the fighter pilots to get chosen. But it's not, it's not that horrible, right? It's not in your face in any kind of way. What else can I say about the movie? The only thing I disliked about the movie was the music. I thought the music was mediocre at best and didn't rise up to the drama that is created in the movie. It needed a John Williams score and it didn't get one, but I guess they were trying to mimic the music from the first one. But part, you know, and so I just, that's the only part I didn't really like. The acting is good. I mean, I like Tom Cruise. He's a Scientologist, which is an evil ideology. It's horrible and they really do horrible things to people. And Tom Cruise is partially responsible for that and he gets moral blame and he should get moral blame for being a part of this horrific cult. But he's a good actor. He's really good. He's charismatic on screen. He has that look. He's unbelievably masculine, you know, and a fighter pilot is an unbelievably masculine activity. And it's about controlling this machine and in that sense controlling nature and defeating nature and overcoming nature and going up against massive physical, physical obstacles. You know, they go up to 10 G's in this movie and all kinds of stuff. So it is really, really, really, you know, he's a good actor. He's a good actor. Probably a horrible human being, but a good actor. And, you know, you get a little Val Kilmer in there, you know, a very old and very sick Val Kilmer. And you get other good actors ham from, what do you call that movie? I forget that TV series. I forget the name of it. But yeah, thumbs up. Thumbs up. If you just want to have fun, don't think about it too much. And there's nothing wrong with the movie, except the plot is full of holes, but there's nothing really wrong with the movie. I don't think it says anything about American follow policy. I don't think it project any good phone policy or anything like that. Mad Men is the show. Yes, a ham for Mad Men. You know, I could critique the, you know, the military aspect of it to no end, but I'm not going to because that's not the point. It's just, no, I didn't just mean the 10 mach 10, I mean, 10 G's when they come up, when he's, when he's flying up, he gets the 10 G's in terms of the, what do you call it? Gravitational 10 X the gravity. So it's, yeah, it's pretty spectacular, pretty spectacular and fun and exciting and, you know, well done a movie. And it's just fun because they're using real F 18s that, you know, you get to see it all the special effects on me. I mean, it's not special effects. These are real pilots. Everything they do in that is truly amazing. Thank you very much.