 Good morning everybody at, you know what, Sarah? I should show you the picture she sent me of where she is, but she's not home and she's not going. She's a slacker. She's not gonna be with us this morning. So it's just Mindy and I. So we just thought we'd come on and say hi and then we're gonna leave. But no, no, I'm just kidding. We're gonna try and cover everything. Yeah, Joe, what's up with this? Sarah, disappearing on us this morning, huh? Joe, good morning, everybody. We've got quite a few people in here this morning. I noticed Thomas Coonalign was in early. Hey, Chris and Kathy Nava. Lynette, hey, Lynette. Chris Ferriolo. Hey, Kay Knight. Joe, I already said good morning to Joe. Tommy Buck, Betsy Coe. Let's see, David. Hi, David. Are you new? Hi, nice to see you. Steve made it. Good morning, Steve. I don't see Steve yet. I haven't made it down that far. Hey, Lynette. Hey, Lewis Kessler. How are you doing? Behold genealogy. Ben Mollsworth. Hey, Hillary. And then Steven. Hey, everybody. Morning ladies. Steven, you wanna join us? You can come in if you'd like. Do you guess that Sarah needs a day off? Do you think Sarah needs a day off? I don't think so. Hey, Janine. How are you doing? So we're here today. And hey, Donna. And we're waiting for people to come in. I don't know what it's like down your way. Let's see. People are talking about how cold it is everywhere. It was so cold. How cold was it? It was so cold here in Ottawa that my furnace turned on night before last and tonight. Yes. I haven't tried that coffee cake yet, but Lynette Jester just asked me, she sent me a really cool blueberry coffee cake. I have not tried it yet, but it's on my list of things to do. It is. Oh, and Steven says no, he can't, but he's driving. So keep your hands on the wheel and don't focus on it, Steven. Don't text. Don't text. Don't text and drive. Don't text and drive. So cool. And Joe, are you wowing because people are being mean that your daughter gets to have a day off? I'm not sure about that. It's the Mags and Mindy show or the Mindy and Mags. It's the M&M show. M&M show today. Wait, wait. My M&M's haven't come home yet. They're still at the store. They're still at the store. Oh, it's warming up in Wales. Cold, it's not. Now, Mags, did she send you the coffee cake recipe or the coffee cake? She sent me the coffee cake recipe. If she had sent me the coffee cake, it'd be gone. I would definitely have tried it right away, but can you imagine a coffee cake coming in the mail? No. It would take weeks to get here. It would be a hot mess. No. So I don't know what you guys have been up to all week, but we've been up to all sorts of good stuff. Mindy's had the challenge gone on. We'll cover that in a minute. I'm gonna start off with the question of the week. Let me get my screen situated here and find my screen. There we go. The question of the week was a really good question. We had 65 answers. And what was really cool about it was the question of the week is, who in your family lived the longest? So not only did we ask you to figure it out on your own, but Jamie Nelson, our fun little app person, did a quick little app for us to do. I'm gonna show you that. Up, up, there we go. So you click on her little app and it will spin and it'll spit out your longest living, oldest living ancestor. And mine, out of all the questions so far today, is the oldest guy. He died at 113 years, three months and 12 days. And that is taken from his obituary or the letter. So 113 years, three months and 12 days. Now he was the great grandfather of my grandmother who lived to be 99.9 years old. So that's pretty cool. So back to our question of the week. Who lived the longest? So there's lots of great answers. And crazy people like John Shulkowski actually has this really cool gene variant, the SIRT1 showing that he's got all of this stuff going on. And he actually answered the question twice, but he's got 90. He's got Evelyn Donato at 103 who would be his highest. I was working on actually going through and writing down all of the answers and I was gonna average out the information until I got a last minute call saying that I needed to do other stuff this morning. So I didn't finish doing that, but maybe I will and I'll post it later. So Ben Malmsworth, Ben's got the first answer for us and he has a 98 rolling on down the way here. There's some good pictures too of Seth Marvin lived to 105. Am I still sharing? Yeah, okay. And there were also great comments afterwards as well. 97 for Tommy Buck. Let me roll on down here. Thomas Kerneline has a great one down here. His Newton Lafayette Pa Gentry. And he, look at that great picture. How old was he in this picture? Pretty cool. 98 years old, he lived to. Look at that nose. Look at that hat. He was dapper. Yes, he was. So we had lots of great answers. I'm looking, I'm scrolling through here to look for some of the pictures. Let's see. There's one. She lived to the ripe old age of 100. Two things I adore about her. Super cool name, Free Love Douglas. And one story where she'd moved to Ohio with her family at the age of 13. I'm on the way back to New Hampshire, age of 16. Free Love, I guess a judgment of her elders brought along the family cow, caring for the animal herself on the way. Is that sweet? That would, Sarah should be here because she likes stories about animals. So she just missed that one. More pictures. Here we go. This is from Marianne's, the Rudy. And this is a picture of her 90, forgotten how old she was, 94 year old. That's such good pictures there. Oh, kiddokey. More pictures coming up. Look at that. Jerushia Adeline Gregory Isleman. Who does this belong to? Janine, I wonder. She lived to 97. I have pictures of my family with that exact same haircut. It was from the 1880s. So if she was born in 1880s, these pictures must be in the 1920s or 1910s. Cool. Some more great things. Simon Jacob Dudzik. Live to be 106. So here's his birth information. This was the second posting from John. Oh, more pictures. There we go. That's a great picture. Now, Sarah's not here, but there's a dog. If Sarah, if you're watching, we're still talking animals, just for you. So there's a little puppy dog in this picture, but isn't that cute? See the article to Worthing Times use paper, my daughter's paternal third great grandmother was 96 to 102 years old. This picture is of my daughter's paternal grandfather with his great grandmother, Rebecca Goodman-Gones. How about that? That is just adorable. Let's see. Oh, and this one, this was posted twice. This is Christina Leonardo Roof Hall. Live to 101. That's a great picture there. Now that has to be 1870s. Look at that brooch. Beautiful picture. That's from Eileen. And there's the second posting for that one. And then the fourth page we had. Here's the same picture again. Some of them got posted twice. So those were the ones. And if I get around to adding up all of these numbers and figuring out the average age, it's pretty good. But I won. I actually won with John Sloan in 114, or 113 years, three months and 12 days. Wow. I was shocked. I was shocked, but it makes sense because my doodle, my grandmother lived quite long and my dad is 91 and going strong. So yeah, pretty cool. You wanna flip and do photo of the week now, Nindy? Do you wanna do it that way or you want me to do connection finder? Oh, sorry. It's me doing photo of the week. We did it. The photo sharing theme of the week. So this week it is Memorial Day weekend and we have all been enjoying reading articles. And if you're on Facebook or any kind of social media you're seeing lots of great posts. Memorial Day weekend is the weekend that we share information and we celebrate the heroes who never made it out of their uniforms. They never made it home from war. These are the guys who were killed in action or killed because of something that happened in the war and they never made it home. And I think it's very apropos that the picture for the photo sharing theme of the week is this great photo of the unknown tomb at Arlington National Cemetery. If you have never been to Arlington National Cemetery in Washington, DC to watch the changing. I've got chills just talking about it. Go and watch the changing of the guards at Arlington. It is really impressive. So here are our photos of the week. Let's see, should be able to do this better. Where are you, Sarah, when I need you? So this is Sam Aubrey Briggs. I should be able to go to these images. Images, yeah. I got it. Thank you, madam. Samuel Aubrey Briggs in a uniform there. He's got a medal on his chest too. John C. Morrow aboard the LST 617 in World War II. Now, it looks to me like he's holding his tummy in but I don't think he probably was old enough that he had to worry about his dad body. Paul Walter Steen. Nice picture. I love a man in uniform. I love this one. A bugler, Matthew Jerome Mayer, Jr. 16, 16 years old in World War I. Wow, what year was that? Do we know what date that was? No, that was early. Roy Perkins, 1918, World War I. Beautiful picture. Look at his blue eyes. Henry Cicero Ward in uniform headed for the Philippines. This is 1899. Cliff Gilso Navy CB 1942. He was a CB enlisted in 1942 who served as a fighting CB. He built runways in the South Pacific and the 95th construction battalion and was an expert marksman. Those civil engineers, those CBs during the war, that's crazy cool. Wow, this is visiting beautiful Vietnam. It's a man in uniform that is, who is that? Mike, we don't know who Mike is. Mike Freeland, there he is. Ooh, this is cool. Lawrence Vick Tutti in Oz. They look sharp. Who do you think gets in the most trouble in this family? I think it's probably Tutti. Look at the face, that's a great picture. Alfred Truslow, Dr. Samuel A. Richardson and this is Civil War. I want to say. That's Mike's picture. Isn't that a beautiful picture? He's a union doctor. Boy, I bet you saw some stuff. David Wayne Dodge. How old is this person? He looks too young. 1943. Oh my gosh. Oh, gorgeous. Walter Hardin Jr. Beautiful picture. Oh wow. Now this is another, this is actually not a Civil War enlistment photo. These photos, what the guys did was when they enlisted and they finally, when they enlisted, they didn't have their uniforms and stuff. Uniforms were hard to come by. They went and they got their picture taken and they had it put into this little binder, little thing that was about this big and their wives could stand them on their dresser at home and have it. I have one of my great, great, great grandfathers. Oh wow. And it's the exact same thing, but these weren't the enlistment pictures. These were pictures that were taken after they were enlisted once they were given their uniforms and stuff. And uniforms sometimes were whatever they could make up. Sometimes their family had to send them pieces of uniform because they couldn't, especially if they were Confederate soldiers. It's hard to tell which side, but I'm assuming this might have been a Confederate soldier. I think so too. Okay. Frank Kirkpatrick, dad died of wounds in Normandy on D-Day, wow. Thank you so much, Frank, for that sacrifice. Wonderful uniform. Bobby Kirkpatrick during the Korean War. Now, we didn't say that these pictures had to be of people who we are memorializing, although we are definitely thanking any veteran that has their picture in this list. Wow. Conrad E. Nielsen Marine, Choisin Reservoir Korea. If you don't know about the Choisin Reservoir Korean Battle, it was one of the worst defeats of U.S. forces ever. And it was a horror, a horror story. The troops were cut off and the Chinese and Koreans really were not very helpful in letting them escape at all. There was a big escape and I hope that this gentleman was one of them. December 1950. Jim in a Marine Corps uniform, beautiful Marine Corps dress uniform. Oh, cool. Private Ruby Roberts served in the Women's Army Air Corps, the wax. That's great. That's a great photo. Yeah, that is. And look, she's actually wearing nylons. That's fun. Stanley Jerome and Thaddeus wears bikki. Flyer meets death, sailor is wounded. Very sad to hear, but aren't these beautiful pictures of these boys? One of three Navy sons of Mr. and Mrs. Victor. That's nice. Nice image. Andrew McFarland, who served in the Civil War. Not a picture in uniform, but it's still a beautiful photograph. James C. Gilbert, 1926 to 1969. Look at those ribbons. Nice. And is that patch an Army Ranger patch with cross swords? I'm not sure about that. Tennessee. Oh, now this is a sweetheart photo. Joe, this is a sweetheart photo. Who is this? Clarice Lovelace. Clarice Clarice and Claire? No, Wichita Falls Wichita. John Williamson Anandale. He is an Anzac? Anandale killed in action. Somewhere in France, private J.W. Anandale on the 20th of June, 1918. He answered his country's call inserted by his loving wife and family, Annie Anandale-Cawley. Nice. Spiles in uniforms. This is Stalag 383 Hohenfeld's Baffaria. So if you don't know what a Stalag is, that was a German POW or internment camp for prisoners of war. And I'm assuming these are prisoners of war. Those do not look like German uniforms. That's a rare photo, I would say. So look at this. First Lieutenant, I.J. Kerneline. 324th Field Arterillary. Oh, and he signed it too. How great is that? See, Frank Williams Cartwright? That's a beautiful picture. Yeah, it is. With a great background. Grandma and Uncle Joe. And they get double duty from this because there's pictures there. There's old family pictures that probably aren't around anymore in the background too. That's fun. Oh, that's fun. Richard, the picture of Richard. The flight crew from Korea, 1953. Lee Wright, Marie Gleason, Anna Wright, August 1943. Look at that. Very proud. Uncle and nephew in U.S. Army. The Allison, Dale Allison and John A. Rammel. Great pictures. I love the way that the hats turn swanky. You couldn't get away with that these days, can you, even in those pictures? Myself, Deke, somebody, somebody, somebody, and this is at a beer party. Wow, somebody's having fun. And this is the real South Pacific. Got to take a break from the fighting, that's great. Second Lieutenant Peter William Rutherford. West Yorkshire Regiment. Reconnoitered in daylight letter, later led a successful raid. I would say that's World War II. Let's see, Korean War. I have a picture of my dad, just like that. 1952, but we don't know who it is to do. John Thompson, this is a beautiful picture. Beautiful youth. The bald one. Yeah. This uniform reminds me of what Harry was wearing in his wedding picture to Meghan. John Thompson, image one. Just says United Kingdom. Howard Leslie Alexander. Look at that fun. He's got some ribbons on his chest. Let's see, Jonas Gustaf Nelson. The World War I uniform, I want to say, US. And William Ferris Dale. Nice uniform. Got some ribbons on her medals on the other one. John Connolly and Larry Lemieux. Getting into their aircraft. I would say they're Australian. Karat Tylen, George Connolly. Let's see, which number are we up to? So William McFarland during World War II. Beautiful uniform. William Isleman. Hey, Janine. Vera Baldwin Isleman and Walker T. Sines. They all seem to be leaning. Yeah, they do. That's a cute photograph. Oh, fun. Robert B. Sewell and Isleman. How fun. Boot camp. He's happy, he's got, he's done boot camp. That's what that's about. Robert Colerright and his mother Jeanette Pageright. Oh, wow. Wow. All from TRFMW October 1943 prior to heading to the South Pacific. So the sons and the mom. That's great. Family and fiends. I think that's supposed to be friends. World War II. Nice. Colonel Nelson Nathaniel Fuller. Civil War vet and his grandson Emmett Fuller-Wright in his World War I uniform. That's a cool picture. That's a really cool picture. Robert Colerright on Maritime with Matt Slattery, Fred Vargas and Bob Wright. Nice. Northeast Indies. Harold John Mikulik. Men always look so good in uniform. Oh, look at the cute little boys. Aw. Aw. That is so sweet. Wanted to dress in the little boy standing at attention. Oh, let's see. Jack McMurray ready for action. That's a World War I uniform. He's ready to go. Let's see. J. Robert Wolff or L. Robert M. Wolff. John Willard Shaver. Drive Store, Keep First Class. Wow. That's quite a USS Whitney, Whitley Battle of Iwo Jima. Thank you for your service. Technical Staff Sergeant George Lobb Curly Adams, Career Military. World War II in Korea. Here is James Aaron Fitch, U.S. Naval Construction Battalion. Oh, wow. Europe 1917, that's a rare photo. Wow. South Pacific during World War II. And that is Charlie Lindsey, Warren Maddox, injured, came home. Fort Sill, Oklahoma. I don't know what these guys are doing. That's it. That's it. Nice photos. Thank you all for your service, gentlemen. That's very nice. Mindy, rescue me. Are you tired of talking, Megs? I am. Let me stop sharing. I gotta bring my thing up. Yeah, I have pictures of my dad and stuff in uniform, but since he's still around, I just kind of don't want to post a bunch of stuff about him until it's, until he's not around. Boy, I didn't say that right, did I? That's okay. Hey, Greg. They're not giving me this window. Sorry, give me a second. It's a little cold for my patio office today. Absolutely. It cooled off here, but it never actually got, you know, cold, cold. Okay, now it's gonna let me. There you go. It does not like my multiple monitors. There we go. Okay, so the question or the connection finder we're doing is a course for military heroes staying in that theme. And I just want to show this real quick just cause I can, cause I have my screen shared. This is, this is my husband's dad's family. And so his grandpa had 16 children. Wow. And out of the eight boys that made it to adult age, all but one were in the military. And so we did a, see, I'm trying to show it. I'll lose myself again. Not what I wanted. Oh, it's not gonna show me the other one. I think I accidentally closed it out. At any rate, we did a big board for a family reunion one year. And we actually put all the men around it. And then we put a big flag, a globe in the middle. And we pinned where all of them had done their various service. And then we did the grandchildren as well. So it was really a lot of fun. Let me close that out. But now we're gonna go to our profiles which have been improved. And there's some really great ones. We have William Avery Bishop and he was credited with 72 victories. He was a World War flying ace, made him the top Canadian ace of the war. I love that hat there. He was two in that picture, right? This was the one I was trying to show you. Oh yeah, that's cool. Okay. Now this one was Benjamin Davis. And he was the son of Louis Davis and the father of General Davis, the U.S. Air Force's first African-American general. So he was also an important military professional himself. Says he was in the armed forces for a span of 50 years. That's some serious lifetime career. And he was awarded an honorary degree of LLD from Atlanta University in Georgia. This one has a long name. Carl Willem-Frederick Marie Dorman. And this is a Netherlands one. I love that bust. And these are all profiles of the week? Yes. This one here was the son of Carl Willem-Frederick Dorman, first Lieutenant-Cordermaster. I love these pictures too. Boy, these have some really great pictures. Some good profiles. Yeah. Somebody's done some really nice work on these. And then we have Carl Nelson-Gorman. And this one is talking about the Code Talkers. And if you've never watched any of the movies, there's a couple of really good ones out there about the Navajo Code Talkers. Oh, 1944, that was taken. Northern Mariana Islands. Connection Finders. Yay. I can't say the name on this. No, me either. And she's my closest relation supposedly. Oh, really? Yeah. Died in 1944 in a concentration camp, executed for espionage. Wow. Well, I am so proud to have a spy as my closest friend. In your branches. Let me see what mine was. I know I looked at it earlier. Mine was 19 degrees from Billy Bishop. How close were our chat people? How close were you to the Connection Finders this week? Nobody is saying yet. I saw somebody say up there. And then John Kirkpatrick. He was kind of cool because he was a stretcher-bearer. So it's not that he had, you know, that he was a famous soldier or anything else. But I mean, how important is that job, you know? He had to be out there with all of the wounded and caring for them. Here's a great picture. Australian force battalion troops landing in Anzac Cove. Nice. Yeah. Here's another one. Oh, I can say Spud. His nickname is Spud. Here you go. Spud Munamori. He was born in Los Angeles, California, the fourth of five children and the youngest son of Japanese immigrants. He grew up in California called Spud due to his preference of potatoes over rice. Okay, that'd be my husband. He doesn't eat rice. He enlisted one month before the attack on Pearl Harbor. And I've been to Pearl Harbor and walked through some of those like the little subs and stuff. It's just really, it's just kind of leaves you speechless. Yeah. Helmuth, Johannes Ludwig von Moltke. Yay. Yay, we got through that one. Usually called Helmuth, was born into the noble Mecklenburg family, von Moltke. His father was an administrator in a region that was Danish and became Prussian after that. And he entered the Prussian army and participated as a second lieutenant in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870. Decorated, definitely. Then we have Captain Nancy Grace Augusta Wake forward. She was a British agent during World War II. She became a leading figure in the French resistance. Look how serious she isn't like this one though. People have some great pictures that they found. This one's a member. So this is our connection to the member, Neil Reed. Did he serve or is he just our member of the week? At any rate, if you don't know who Neil is, click on his profile, take a look at it and stop being to say hi. Here we have Violet Rain, Elizabeth Bushell, Sabo, and she was actually a prisoner of war during World War II. She was awarded the George Cross and born in Paris. A lot of curlies on that, but... A lot of whaties on that? The curly, sorry. Oh, yeah, yeah, the borders. A lot of line borders. That's a nice profile. Somebody did some intense work. I mean, broken out into missions, her capture, execution, executed age 23, wow. Thank you for your service. Yeah, thank you to all of them for their service. These are intense. Okay, we have Douglas Roberts, Stuart Bader. He was born in London, England. Not as much on this, but a lot on his time in World War II. That's a great picture. He looks like he's not very tall, huh? Or is that just me? Yeah, unless his friends are very tall. That was back when people actually wore for coats out in public, or owned them even. Okay, and the last one, oh, that was mine. That was my oldest. So that was all of our connection finder people. Now, this is the pilot who lost both legs. Not sure what was he referring to one of the... Ben, was it the last one I showed? I hadn't read that one yet. The last couple, I hadn't read through them. Hey, Mindy, what's up with the challenge this week? What's up with the challenge? Well, they are doing good. We do have some bounty points this week. I will say in three different countries. So we have people working on different parts of the tree. Three different countries? Three different countries. Do you want to know where they were? Yeah, yeah. Quebec, Germany. Germany. United States. Ah. So there are a few different people working on the lines that Gina really wants to see. She wants to see her paternal grandmother's lines really fleshed out. But they've also been going in and making some really nice Quebec profiles, so. Nice. And then if you're here and you don't know what the wiki tree challenge is, go to wikitree.com and the links to that are right up in the very top of our G2G forum. Genealogist to genealogist. Louis Kessler is combating on a touchy subject. There were three different countries, Canada. Part of the United States. But it was... Quebec is a province of Canada still. They haven't separated yet. Right. I think of it as separate. I'm sorry. No way. Okay. Actually, I was mostly thinking of them as French lines. So French, German and American. There you go. But yeah, I don't know if that's politically correct to do it that way. Yeah. I can see Quebec from my backyard. Very cool. See, we, you know, no. So I apologize. I should have said three different locations. There you go. So what, and it's Gina, Phillip Ortega. Who is that? Yes. I'm drawing a total blank. She's a genealogist? Yes, she is. She is. And she brought up something interesting, you know, that we talk about every time is that the people that actually do genealogy all of the time never have time to work on their own trees. No, never. Yeah, they don't. I never do. I don't work on mine. Yeah, but in one of the other challenges we have this week is that she actually has her tree as, you know, as we call it on three different sites. So, yeah. So we're kind of combating that, you know, we're going ahead and using. Since holiday. Well, and we can't because technically the rules are we get one primary tree. So we're comparing to Ancestry. And then there are other places that you can look like family search and find some more of her lines. Interesting, interesting. So, and who is our going to be our next person in our connection and our. In our wiki tree challenge, we have a vet hoytink. And I think I know we've had a couple of challenging we love events. Yeah, we've had a couple of really challenging weeks this year. You know, we had Dr. Gates where his stuff was pretty much brick walls, but at least they could expand laterally, you know, and still add a lot of ancestors. We had Judy Russell's and she had some really solid brick walls, but I think more of it was that people were kind of afraid to work on her tree. You know, so nobody wanted to put something on there that she might not think was right. And so we didn't have it quite as big in numbers as we could have on her week. But with the vets, she's actually got her genealogy solid past like the 10th generation. Wow. So, yeah. So you're looking at, you're looking at 10 to 15th generation to even do ancestors. Yeah. Did she do a blog series recently about Catherine of Aragon? Was that Yvette? I think that was Yvette. That might have been. Yeah. Greg wants to know if there's still work that needs to be done on the French-Canadian lines for Gina. Well, there is still work, yes. So yes, Greg, but you won't get any points unless you signed up. Thomas says that he tries to work on his own tree, but y'all are right, rarely get the chance. Yeah. I know I have cousins that ask me about mine and they're like, what have you found recently? And I'm like, oh, nothing. Oh, Ben, you do have a well-known genealogist. Go to genealogy down under and you will see people. There's Jill Ball. There's lots of people in Australia who are recognized professional genealogists. Yes. And we've actually had, Jill wasn't on, but we had a New Zealander, we had a Qeon recently, or back a year ago or so. It was Yvette. Okay, she was the one who was saying that she had ties back to Catherine of Aragon. So that's, yeah, that's crazy. Yeah, her tree right now is just incredible to look at, you're speechless after you see it the first time. I didn't even put up links of ancestry shots. I had to put up full fan charts to show what our ancestors were. I mean, then one of the other things that's been a little bit different and not really surprising, I guess, since we're so far into the year now is that we're seeing a trend of guess or future guess joining the challenge. So, Lewis, of course, and we love to have you. It's great, has joined in and he will be on the future schedule for the challenge. Yes, another great Canadian. And then we have another one. I'm not gonna say her name because she hasn't completely agreed yet, but we do have another possible one that has joined the challenge. And I think we're gonna wind up featuring her as a guess one week too, so. Cool, cool, that's fun. Well, lots of great things happening around the tree. Do we have any questions from any of the peanut gallery over in the chat? Chris, you're related to everybody. I think so. Nice, no questions. Nobody has a question. You only have questions when Sarah's here. But then again, there is that lag, so people may be maybe. Yeah, they may have asked. They may have asked I'm just on all that yet. Who did not like the live cast today? We get that every week. There's one person that does a downvote every week, but the rest of you go out and like the video. Yes, and this person downvotes every wiki tree video. No matter what show it is, they downvote it because they're just mean. There we go, I said it. Yeah. They're mean and they're hiding behind their thumb. And anymore they're doing it before we even start. So it's actually not a reflection of our live cast because they go in and downvote it immediately. It does happen. Yeah, we agree. That is rude and it's kind of cowardly. Okay, there we go. Frank said it. No, Mindy said it. Mindy typed it and said you really shouldn't say this. All right. Well, we're done unless you people come up with some questions. No, thank you, Chris. So yeah, we missed having Sarah here, but she is enjoying some beautiful beach time in Florida. How unusual, thank you so much, Greg. How unusual for Sarah to have some time off and she's enjoying her weekend with friends. So that's exciting. So have fun, Sarah, and we'll see you back here next week. Thank you, Mindy, for stepping up and stepping in. And I appreciated it. I would have, but it would have been really boring if it was just me here alone. Yeah, that's no fun. No, no. So thank you very much for being here. Bye.