 We're talking a lot about accessibility here and as the age of closed captioning is a part of accessibility. Let's imagine that we're meeting someone who hears for the first time this word accessibility. How would you explain what accessibility is about? It's a tricky one and it's quite a wide word, obviously, accessibility. You are right. But when we talk about captioning, it's basically the ability to understand everything that you have said. The ability to understand your message and to reach to me through that message, obviously, through captioning. Because it's like talking to the wall, basically. You don't want to talk to the wall. You want to have a meaningful conversation. You want to have a meaningful engagement. To have that meaningful engagement, unfortunately, closed captioning is needed. Not unfortunately, but for that person who doesn't understand it. If you want to reach out to this person, you want to have a really engagement. And you want to reach out to as wide as possible audience when yes. Yes, I would agree. You're right. It's actually fortunate because for those filmmakers or broadcasters, they want to reach you with their content, with their message, with their information. And captioning is a tool that allows them to reach you. So it's also a great tool for them.