 You were talking about the salon being different, maybe sending out forms that your guests can fill out or whatever. And this guy, Chris Harker, who says he's also a palmatial focus artist, says, when there is a vaccine, how much of these measures do you think we should be doing? So everything that you're talking about changing in the salon, would you continue that after this vaccine? Obviously, if there's a vaccine. It becomes the new standard. I know everybody's saying the new norm. I don't love that term. It's already overused. It was already overused before this epidemic. Right. But just to be honest, that's really how I feel about it. I think that there's a new standard just like in the whatever, 40s or 50s, it would be a state board or whatever. Somebody sets standards and I'll have to be honest again with the whole world of hairdressing. Our salon's number one thing a client looks for is it clean and we all go, yeah, it is. Haven't we noticed how dirty our houses are? I mean, let's be honest people. Right. They learned these measures of security and I'm not saying we got to look like the doctor's office, but they're going to want to feel it. So if it used to be about 2000 square feet, I'm going to put 17 stations in it. We would want to rethink that just to be a little more open space. So it's changing the business plan and model. And that's the thing to think about. But after the vaccine, I just think these best practices will hold. I would expect just because I've been paying a lot of attention to this. There'll be future episodes of similar things. I think this is a thing that can reoccur. And I think being prepared for it is the thing. And if it's already said, then the effects will be even less. And maybe businesses wouldn't have to close down. So it's kind of like a protection like every house in Israel has an heritage shelter in it. Right. You didn't know you get that for me today, did you? No, I didn't see that. What surprising things I've ever heard in one of my interviews. Okay, wait.