 It was a great summer in Houston. The weather was incredibly hot and humid, like always. And lo and behold, we get a storm that pops up in the Gulf. Looks like the storm is going to go south of here. But then Harvey started drifting north, and it just sat there. Hurricane Harvey will be the first or second most costly natural disaster in our nation's history. It was absolutely historic, and it was catastrophic. When you're dealing with an emergency, communication is everything. The ability to let folks know what's going on, where's the water rising? Where can you find help? That's absolutely essential to managing a crisis. If those communications break down, it has the potential to affect not only the lives of first responders, but of the people that we are responding to, the citizens' lives. When people think about PBS stations, they think about NOVA, or they think about kids programming. They don't necessarily think about emergency response. But we are in the business of 24-7 communication, and it makes us a perfect partner in the community in emergency situations. PBS was absolutely essential to the response to Hurricane Harvey. It allowed us to be able to share information from the Emergency Operations Center to the first responders where they're needed. We typically utilize LTE cellular communications to push a lot of data up and pull a lot of data down. When that starts to falter or completely fails, I need that next iteration of data communication, and that PBS antenna provides that to us. It's called WARN, PBS WARN. And it really fills the gaps for primary responder communication. But also, if you get an alert on your phone, that's a wireless emergency alert. We work with the FCC and FEMA to make sure that system never goes down. I think PBS is uniquely suited to public safety across the country because they have those relationships with the communities they serve. There was a lot of loss and a lot of pain, but I think that there is a sense of community more so than there was before the hurricane. We are the voice of the community, and there are hundreds of stations around the country, each playing that same role. It's really part of our mission to make sure communities across the country are safer.