 Oh, Vinyl's back, I guess. Yeah, Vinyl's definitely back, you know. There are people. Such a pure sound. Well, no. Don't you think? No. No, Vinyl could. Well, you're the sound engineer amongst us, so all right. Yeah, Vinyl completely ruins the sound of things in that when things, well, here's sort of an interesting historical fact. Vinyl, you lose a bunch of high end, right, when you master for vinyl or when you print to vinyl. So what you have to do is over, you goose the high end before you master it to vinyl. And then you can get a nice, you know, even sound and all of that good stuff. They took those masters, the vinyl masters, and the very first CDs that we all bought were just made from those vinyl masters. So that's why when CDs first came out, they sounded like harsh and awful because you were getting what the master had directly to your speakers. And so then they started remastering things, remember? For CDs. Remastered audio. Correct. And then it was like, OK, well, we can pull out all this extra high end that we added. And look, if you like vinyl with audio, confirmation bias is actually a good thing. Because if you like what you have, if you like holding the record, if you like putting the tone arm on the thing and watching the record spin, and or if you simply believe that vinyl sounds better, it will sound better to you and you will therefore enjoy it more and that's OK. Like, there's nothing wrong with confirmation bias when it comes to sound. People that buy $25,000 speakers like them better than the $500 speakers that somebody else might buy. Also, OK, one cool thing about vinyl is having listening parties where people bring vinyl over and now it makes music more interactive. You put on vinyl, each side is only 20 minutes or so. And so there's a lot of things. I at times have had a turntable in my office and I really like the ritual of every 30 minutes having to get up and go and flip it. It gives me something to do while it gives me a break of what I'm doing and listening to music when I'm alone in the office just grinding stuff out. So yeah, but yes, vinyl is back. We just released the latest Better Pill record, Live and Ain't Cheap, Die and Ain't Free, is available on vinyl and it's all red. It's awesome, so. Now, isn't there some science in the cartridge? Is that what it's called? Absolutely, yeah. That will affect the input quality or playback quality, I guess. Correct, yeah. And you can change out the cartridge, the needle, if you will, although the needle is part of the cartridge. So there are two separate things, but yeah, you can change out the cartridge on this turntable and put something. I believe they told me what cartridge is in it. I'm looking here. It is an Audio-Technica ATVM95E cartridge. But if you have a cartridge that you like better then you can replace it, that would be fine.