 So James B. Stewart in this new book unscripted, he calls the Redstone family, some of the Redstone, Sherry Redstone, deeply religious. I mean is that a hoot? I notice I've interviewed over 200 Jews in the media and Hollywood and entertainment industries and I notice the early ones refer to themselves as having been raised deeply religious or used the label deeply religious. They're never orthodox Jews. It's only the reform reconstructionist and conservative Jews who call themselves deeply religious but those who actually take Judaism seriously, they never call themselves deeply religious. It's like one of those compensation things. When you do the real deal, you don't have to use dramatics, so if you really are religious and you're orthodox Jew, you're highly unlikely to refer to yourself as deeply religious because from a traditional Jewish perspective it's not really a religion, it's more of a way of life. It's a set of obligations that God has given to a particular people and you don't feel there's a voluntary component. These are obligations from heaven and you do them and it's just not thought of by those who take Yiddish card most seriously, it's just not thought of as a religion. But those who do the minimal, very quick to call themselves so deeply religious, it's like when I encounter someone, usually a woman, describing her relationship as very serious. It's an inevitable sign that it's not long for this world. So out of the women I've known who have called their relationship very serious, none of them have lasted even to marriage. So when you've got the real thing, you don't have to shore it up with all sorts of dramatic bulwarks. So one way that I often get a read on people is if they're using overly dramatic language or if they're saying words that are unnecessary, like you can trust me, believe me, I'm honest. People who say those things, warning bells go off in my head. If you've got the real deal, you don't need to proclaim it usually, you don't need to pronounce upon it, you don't need to make claims about it, you don't need to categorize it, you don't need to verbalize it. It's like people who have good boundaries, they never talk or it's never about their boundaries. It's just taken for granted. It's people who are struggling to establish boundaries who are always going on and on about their boundaries. So LA is a lot friendlier place than New York, which I like. But yeah, a lot of it is fake. It's a lot of, you know, have a fantastic day out of attitudes, which I enjoy as opposed to kind of the more dour New York gritty attitude of FU. But Nicole Simpson was famous for giving the breath word hello, which was, you know, a B.J. to show that when you say hello, you really mean it. You're really glad to see someone. This is downtown. There's the Griffith Observatory in the middle of the picture. There's the Hollywood sign. There are the snowcap mountains.