 In 2008, I heard from a friend that this Broadway producer was trying to set up a Chinese production of the American musical fame, especially in China's own fame school, the Central Academy of Drama, where many international stars graduated from such as Gong Li and Zhang Ziyi. So I immediately thought this is going to be a great angle to see how a quintessentially American concept like fame, like self-made person, like spotlight, would translate in a Chinese environment. I want to per star. Super star? Yeah. In terms of the dreams, how much of these dreams for fame for success are really owned by the kids themselves versus being pressured to them by their parents? That's a very interesting question because when I try to explain China to my American friends, especially for the urban youth generation, sometimes I cannot tell really any major differences between them versus their American peers. But if there's one thing that really stands out, it's the pressure they feel from their parents, the filial piety, and the pressure they feel like they have to make their parents proud. So every family right now has only in urban areas, only have one kid. As one of the characters said in the documentary Chen Lei said, all hopes on us, even though these kids are really spoiled, are caught, but then the parents are looking for a return, which is like we're investing in you, make us proud. Because a family is just one of us, all our hopes are on us.