 We do have a list of our top five comrades of 2017 doing up. We do. So these are people who are not politicians who we feel have in some way further the discourse. Aaron, if you want to kick off. Let me, I'll kick off, right? So we've got number, let me get this up. Number five we've got Ed Sheeran. What? Ed Sheeran, let's get a picture of Ed Sheeran. I, we didn't discuss this. No, no, it's Ed Sheeran. It's Comrade Ed Sheeran. Did you know Ed Sheeran's a comrade now? I love his music. You know his music? I love his music. I've always liked his music. Very catchy. This is the difference between someone in their 20s and someone in their 30s. Number five we have Jamie Adonuga. J-M-E. Thank you. That isn't Ed Sheeran. Thank fuck for that. I mean he's a lot better looking, right? A lot better looking. And a lot more talented. You know he grew up in my end? Oh really? Yeah. Him and his family moved to Palmer's Green. They went to Winchmore School. I remember when Sirius came out. We were all very excited. The reason why Jamie is number five and not Ed Sheeran is that I feel that Grimeford Corbyn stepped up where the political classes fell apart. And what they did was take on that role of political and civic education of the youth. And I think that's paid dividends in terms of an unusually high youth turnout. No, Grimeford Corbyn was massive. It will go higher. And I think what they've also done is show that you don't need a very lazy form of identity politics in order to see the interests of young working class people of colour being reflected in the Labour Party policy. Jeremy Corbyn is probably, you know, the oldest and whitest dude I've seen in a long time but he's doing a damn good job of appealing to young people of colour. Right. Number four. Who've we got? We've got Lily Madigan. Do you want to say something about Lily Madigan? A late comment to the list. A very, you know, a new entry in the Navarra media top comrade charts. Lily Madigan is a 19-year-old Labour Party activist, I think based in Rochester. She's the women's officer. And she has spectacularly talented a real asset to the movement. She unfortunately has come under a huge amount of fire from the right-wing gutter press aided and abetted by even so-called voices of the left and radical feminists because she's trans and said that a trans woman has no place in the movement and we at Navarra media could not disagree more. She has held herself with grace, poise, a political intelligence that I don't have now at 25. She's what, 18, 19? 19. I mean, as a teenager, obviously nobody should ever be subjected to that but at 19 and to respond like that is very commendable. So congratulations. Top comrade. I don't think anybody could have, could have responded any better to that kind of nonsense to be honest. Would you like to introduce our third top comrade? We've got Big Neve. Big Neve. We've got Neville Southall. I must be honest, my first memories of Neville Southall were the 1995 FA Cup final for Everton. I think Graham Stewart scored the winning goal. Maybe it was Paul Rideout, I think it was Graham Stewart. And yeah, I just thought of him as kind of like a has-been goalkeeper playing for Wales in Everton. Turns out he fucking hates the Tories. And he just loves tweeting kind of weird woke haiku about skeletons. I don't quite get it, but I mean it's kind of cool and it's certainly unexpected. And you know what I really love about Neville Southall is that he is so willing to learn. And so he's been educating himself on trans issues. And he's learning what words like cisgender mean. And he's just incredibly open to new ideas. And I find myself incredibly charmed by this. May I introduce our second top comrade of 2017? Please do. Again, another new entry is Tarana Burke. Now you might not have heard the name Tarana Burke. Hopefully that's changed in the last couple of weeks, but you may not have heard her name. You've definitely heard of the movement that she started well over a decade ago. Hashtag me too. So while the hashtag me too was popularised around the time of the Weinstein revelations, as many women in Hollywood came forward with their accounts of sexual harassment, abuse and violence. This phrase me too, as a way of creating a sense of solidarity and sisterhood, actually stems from the activism done by Tarana Burke. She was working with young girls. This came from working at a youth camp where a girl who'd been intensely troubled, socially isolated and excluded later said, I was the victim of sexual abuse. And Tarana Burke said, why couldn't you just say me too? And so it was really kind of drawn from that kind of emotional moment and it's found its rebirth. And I think it's really important to celebrate Tarana Burke as well as all those brave women who have come forward with their experiences of sexual violence. Because so far, and this is not to take away from their experiences at all, those women who've been most prominent have been very wealthy. They've been generally white and I think that's why they've been listened to in this way. Whereas actually what Tarana Burke's work shows is that those well-placed women are only able to reach that kind of cultural tipping point because of the years of largely unrecognised work done by women of colour in the community. There was a Latino cleaner and it was a French politician. Oh, Dominique Strauss-Kahn. Strauss-Kahn, that's right when he was at the IMF previously. Do you know her name? I can't recall her name and that shows you the difference between very prominent, very powerful man and obviously if you look at the way her allegations were responded to in a nice different era, okay? Fine, but also like you say different kinds of people are making the claims. So our top comrade. Top comrade, who do you think it is? I don't know. Begin to the J. Jeremy Corbyn? No. John McDonald? It's Jiru. Jiru. Jiru. This is the model by the way for the Navara IRL event. Fire Festival. It was beautiful. So in case you guys have forgotten because it's been a very wavy couple of weeks, at least for us. Yeah, it has been, yeah. I didn't leave the house until today, since Navara passed. Man's just been in his bedroom turning up to D&B on his ones. But Jiru, who had organised, I think it was something like $10,000 or $12,000 a ticket. A luxury festival in the Caribbean. So all these very wealthy white American teens got flown out, expecting a five star festival experience. Instagram models all over the shop. Migos performing an exclusive set. What they found was disaster relief tents. Some plasticky cheese sandwiches. Passports got stolen. People started passing out. And at one point I think they were surrounded by feral walls. This is what a radical redistribution of wealth really looks like. Comrade Jiru. And for anyone out there who doubts his dedication to the cause and says, well look, he was just running a scam. One, I've said this for a long time. Scamming is counter hegemony. And two, can we pull up this tweet from Jiru? Radical criminality. Social media has ruined socialism. 17th of October. Is that actually real? That is a real Jiru tweet. What a fucking great guy. No wonder he's our comrade of the year.