 I start my day, every day, at 4 o'clock in the morning. I have to come here at the station to do the side-on program. And it is the Johnny Pusong program. The idea is we have to make the people happy and alive in the early morning. Typhoon Yolanda changed my work. I got jobless. But I move on. I was changed from the traditional media and became now a humanitarian broadcaster. On the eve of Typhoon Yolanda, I was the one on board at Rajudewa from 7 o'clock in the evening to 10.30 in the evening. After my program, I rushed to the house. I was afraid it was already flooded because of the very heavy rain. Luckily, we were able to run to the second floor because the whole ground floor was occupied by dark water. It almost killed us. We were lucky enough. We survived the typhoon. I said to myself, when I saw Tacloba, when I move around, I said, Tacloba, this is a new city. Yeah, it's a new city. No power, no communication. We stayed that way for several days. Very hard. It was really necessary to have emergency broadcast in Tacloban because there was no information at all. It was Pico John who looked for partners to provide us the equipment and Pico John, us as survivors in Tacloban, they engaged us for this work at Raja Banting. The name Pico John comes from Peace and Conflict Journalism Network. They are journalists for journalists. Because of the trainings that Pico John conducted on us, we were able to absorb the humanitarian way of broadcasting. We go to the communities. We get the voice of the people, the concerns of the people and bring their voices to the humanitarian agencies and the government agencies as well. Toway communication is very important. We set up our feedback mechanism. We have SMS lines. We have this call line. Anyone can just walk in and tell us their concern. Most of the issues that are coming from the communities are related to humanitarian response. Not being given relief goods, not being given construction materials, has no relocation site, not included in the bank house, no medicine, no money. We are the bridge. We call ourselves bridge. Once we get a concern from this community, we bring the problem to the concerned humanitarian organization or government agency for possible resolution of that concern. Our wish is to make Raja Banting a regular humanitarian registration. We hope to increase the power. So we can increase also our reach. But we cannot do that without partners. The partners of PICO zone are humanitarian organization. I can't say that the Taliban is recovering now. I can't say it's a very slow-paced one. Still, it's moving. We have not fully recovered, but maybe little by little we can do it. Thank you, thank you, thank you. Good night, everyone.