 This trustee August is hotter than ever at Appalachian Wireless, as they are slashing all normal contract pricing on all smartphones by 50% when you sign up for service. Better service, bigger saving, serving you for the last 25 years at Appalachian Wireless. There was a significant crowd today at the Kmart in Pikeville for a drive down initiative event aimed at making drivers more safety conscious when dealing with commercial vehicles. What we're doing, this is kind of a two-part deal with a tax program and tax stands for ticketing aggressive cars and trucks. The first portion of that's going to be education, and that's largely what we're doing here. That's the way we'd rather do things other than enforcement, just to let people know what it takes to safely cohabitate with the trucks when they're traveling up and down Kentucky's roadways. Car weighs about 3,000 pounds, compare that to 80,000 pounds. When those two pieces of metal tangle, it's never good. So we're trying to teach people how they can function well around the trucks, rules such as proper distancing, and to make sure whenever you have a truck in front of you, if you can't see their mirrors, then they can't see you. There are many, many blind spots around a truck, and we're trying to teach people to stay out of those blind spots. Today's event was aided by the KSR radio show and Matt Jones, Nurkruh doing a live broadcast from the parking lot. Listen, I'm from eastern Kentucky, so I feel a connection to folks here, and we have a lot of big fans of the show, so I always look forward to coming to eastern Kentucky. It's my favorite week of the tour. We do Prestonburg, Paintsville, Whitesburg, Hazard, et cetera, and I always look forward to it. Any time you can bring a public figure like them around, it increases the crowd, and that means that's more people than we have here listening to what we have to say as far as our educational program with the TAC program. Authorities say they will be pulling motorists over for aggressive driving around commercial vehicles. Education at first, but later, that education will turn into tickets. Reporting from Pikeville, for EKB News, I'm Jackson Ladder.