 Dale, it's the 40th anniversary this year of the WMPG. Tell us a little bit about the history of the station. Well, we have an interesting beginning, Brian. We started as a pirate radio station out of a dorm room in Gorham at the university. The fellow who started this whole thing, Howard Allen. He's still around in Portland. I guess it started with a Mr. Microphone Toy. Broadcasting to the dorm there. And then it moved on to having a turntable set up with those stackable, remember how turntables used to be with a big spindle? And when they'd go to class, they'd just put on a stack of records and then come back and change them in between classes, that kind of thing. Well, it was a pirate radio station. And here's something that really speaks to USM and the kind of community it is when it finally came to the attention of the administrators that there was this pirate radio station, rather than shutting them down. They said, well, if you want to make radio, let's do it right. And they got the license. And WMPG went on the air, legitimate and legal, in 1973. And what's the relationship with the university today? You're on their campus, but are you part of the university? We are. We operate somewhat independently. And that's good because we're a radio station that's devoted to free speech. So nobody tells us what to say or play. But we really work with the university in that we have a lot of students around. There's an audio production course that's taught here. We have work study students and interns. We involve students every way we can. We have one of our rock and roll shows in the afternoons. On Tuesday afternoons, it's called Husky Tunes. And it features a different USM student every week. Just gets to come in and try out a little radio. And talk about the range of programming that you have on the station. Well, I always say we play everything from folk to death metal and everything in between. And it's true. We're run by volunteers, as you know. And so people who have a passion for a certain kind of music, or we also have a lot of public affairs programming and spoken word, people get to follow their passions here. And they get to share the material, the discussions, the music, the audio drama, the movie reviews that don't get heard on mainstream media. So it's very varied. It's very eclectic, which makes it a little hard for me to actually market it and explain what it is, because it's not a simple answer. We have a few hundred volunteers that help run the station with the staff of three people who actually professionally work here. And it's quite sometimes the chaos, but it's a beautiful kind of chaos. It's a lot of creativity and energy in this place. And the goal is to have the unheard heard, have the underrepresented represented. We have programming in languages other than English. We have a Cambodian show and a couple of Spanish shows. We have a show that's partially in Russian. We have other programming that's not in English to reach out to the communities in our neighborhoods. And really, everyone is invited to come be a part of radio here, much the way it is at community television. And how do you pay for all that? You're in the middle now of the shamelessly named Megathon, so talk about that for a bit. Yeah, well, now that you mentioned it. Yeah, we're here today. We've had a busy morning as you got to see before we could have even a moment to sit down together. Yeah, this is Megathon right now. We run through the 30th of September, and we go on the air and ask our listeners to help pay for this. Now, I always like to remind people that we have to have a Megathon, twice a year at least, not because Dale Robin forgot to do something else. But it's actually part of our design. Our design is to ask our listeners to support it. Because if the community is not engaged in many ways in making radio and in supporting the radio by doing different work around it, but also by donating money, if there's not that community commitment to community radio, then either we're doing it wrong or the community doesn't need it. And as you heard this morning, our phones were ringing off the hook. And that tells us, undoubtedly, that people are listening and hearing something that they can't hear elsewhere. And they're willing to ante up and help us pay those bills. Now, for this drive, we're trying to raise $50,000 to run a radio station that's not that much money, really. And for an area like Southern Maine, it really is a very affordable campaign. And we keep it affordable because we want community radio to be accessible to this community and not to be a financial burden to it. And if people want to send you money or donate or volunteer, how do they contact you? Oh, OK. Well, during Begathon, it's 874-3000, of course, in the 207 area code. If somebody wants to volunteer, we always welcome new faces. And there's on-air, there's off-air ways to get involved. And I would say, oh, just go ahead and call me, 780-4151. That's direct line. To me, I'm Dale Robin Goodman. And I'm the development director, as you know. If there's a great way to learn more about the station to donate, to even listen right online, is our website, WMPG.org. So it's simple and easy to remember. Maine Community Radio. It is. And the community means you. I mean, it means everyone. And we really mean that. Yeah, we really do.