 The Eagle that we chose or that I nominated was Captain Victor Glover, Jr. NASA astronaut, also naval aviator. But the cool thing about him was that not only did he start out in the Navy and his story about how he joined the Navy and how it kind of fell into his lap, but he also went to test pilot school. So he got to test out a bunch of new aircraft, new things. So he was certified in that. And then come to find out when we were actually interviewing him, he came here to Air Command and Staff College. So we had that linkage there. But then he also applied to be an astronaut. He's been up to the International Space Station, done a bunch of space walks. And he's also part of the Artemis mission. So possibly being able to go back to the moon and Mars down the line. But his biggest thing when we interviewed him about that was, even if he doesn't get picked, being a part of that team at NASA, just going back to space was a good thing. He's actually the first African American to spend a long duration up at the International Space Station, about 168 days in space, along with doing those space walks. He's very personable, very open in the stories that he weaves about his life, about how he got there was amazing. His stories about space, because he spent a birthday up in space. He walked us through. They have a mock-up at Johnson Space Center in Houston. He walked us through the whole International Space Station. So he's like, here's where we sleep. Here's how we do meals. And then on special occasions, here's how we cook special meals. Because we have all the different astronauts, here's the different training we go through. So it was just amazing. He was just very open and honest. And I will say the one coolest thing that he actually allowed us to do, we went back into the NASA vault, and we actually got to touch and see Moon rocks. They actually opened up one of the last containers from one of the last Moon missions. So myself and Kim Atkins got to see something that not a lot of people had to see. After our interview, he kind of gave some advice. He said, hey, you're going in the command. Here's my leadership philosophy, but even though I'm in the Navy, here's some little nuggets. Again, just showing people grace. Not everybody wakes up in the morning saying they're going to mess up or going to do X, Y, and Z. But even if you do make a mistake, if you do something, just show yourself a little bit of grace. Show people grace, and it'll take you a long way. The other thing is just communication, being open and honest. I know myself, that's what I expect, not expect, but I ask from my leaders, supervisors that I work for, is, hey, open and honest communication. Tell me what you want, and we can go forth.