 I started as a filmmaker in the ski industry. Originally, I just wanted to make movies of my friends and I, and then I broke way too many bones. And I've had some very severe injuries, including breaking my back and both arms at the same time. Your back and both arms. Yeah. Is this from skiing? Skiing. Yeah. Oh my God. Yeah. I was in the hospital for like two or three weeks. I shattered my left wrist and had to have reconstructive surgery and I was doing physical therapy for about six months and yeah, great times. But that's just crazy because when I think of skiing accidents, I always think the knee or the hip or the foot. Yeah. Yeah. I've done those too. Yeah. Yeah. My list of injuries is like I've broken my back and both arms, broke my right wrist again and had to have surgery on that. I dislocated my kneecap. I broke my leg. I tore three or four muscles in my upper leg. I broke my eye socket. So I have a plate in my eye now instead of a bone. And you know, the more that you keep talking about this, the more that I get where you come from about not doing that stuff anymore. Yeah. So I ended up, my parents are like, we can't afford the medical bills anymore and you're really going to regret these injuries as you get older. So instead of being filmed, I ended up becoming the one behind the camera and I started filming my friends at the time and they, I mean, they are some of the top pro skiers in the world right now. They compete in the Olympics, the X Games. Wow. They're in big ski movies and I developed a name for myself in the ski industry and I kind of got tired of the ski industry and because there's not much of a career in that, it's just more fun, but I ended up finding myself doing documentary work and that's when I made my first film, Autism One Man's Journey and that connected with a lot of people. It made it into like 10 film festivals or something as well as one winning a few awards and then. Congrats. Thank you. And then I did the disability film challenge in 2020 and the theme was documentary and I won best editor out of like 87 films. Nice. And then. You need to, you need to come out of my videos. Yeah. Can you do it for free please, Scott? I can't do it for free, but I can definitely be for hire and help out. I did a few films for disability film challenge and then I made a newer documentary this past year and it was called Thriving on the Spectrum. And it was about what it was like to be autistic and the autism community in Colorado during the pandemic and how there were so many struggles with like, I lost all my supports almost in the beginning and just lost so much structure and I had to find new supports and it ended up working out in the end, but just there were so many changes that just made everything so rough and that film has won, I think, three or four awards and been in 20 film festivals now. I mean, here's some of my awards right here. Wow. Is that an Oscar at the top? It looks like an Oscar, but so that was for this other film festival in LA and it's actually the same company that makes the Oscar trophy, but it's 24 karat gold, so that's pretty cool. Oh my god. As you can see, I'm in my office right now. I obviously like film. I've got the film poster behind me. I even have it tattooed on my arm, like a film reel there. Nice.